A NEW 

CLASSICAL DICTIONAEY 

OP GREEK AND ROMAN 

BIOGRAPHY, MYTHOLOGY AND GEOGRAPHY, 

PARTLY BASED UPON THE 

DICTIONARY OF GREEK AND ROMAN BIOGRAPHY AND MYTHOLOGY. 

BY WILLIAM SMITH, LL.D., 

EDITOR OF THE DICTIONARIES OF GREEK AND ROMAN ANTIQUITIES, AND OF GREEK AND 
ROMAN BIOGRAPHY AND MYTHOLOGY. 

3&cbfse&, toitt) numerous Corrections anti ^trtutious, 
i 

BY CHARLES ANTHON, LL.D., 

PROFESSOR OF THE GREEK AND LATIN LANGUAGES IN COLUMBIA COLLEGE. 



NEW-YORK: 
HARPER k BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS, 
FRANKLIN-SQUARE. 
1854. 




Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year one thousand! 
eight hundred and fifty, by 
Harper & Brothers, 
in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the Southern District 
of New York. 



TO 

CHARLES KING, LL.D., 

PRESIDENT OF COLUMBIA COLLEGE, 

THE STAUNCH FRIEND OF CLASSICAL LEARNING, 

AND 

WHO HAS RETAINED AMID THE BUSY SCENES OF PUBLIC LIFE 
SO ACCURATE A PERCEPTION OF, AND SO KEEN A 
RELISH FOR, THE CHARMS OF 



PREFACE OF THE AMERICAN EDITOR. 



The volume here presented to the American public is, one of a series of Diction- 
aries prepared under the editorial supervision of Dr. William Smith, aided by a 
number of learned men, and designed to present in an English dress the valuable 
historical and archaeological researches of the scholars of Germany. For it is a 
fact not to be denied, that classical learning has found its proper abode in the 
latter country, and that whatever of value on these subjects has appeared in 
England for many years past, has been, with a few honorable exceptions — rari 
nantes in gurgite vasto — derived immediately or remotely from German sources. 
Eor instance, an English " Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge " desires 
a "History of Greek Literature; " none but a German can be found competent to 
prepare it, and when death removes him in the midst of his noble efforts, a 
continuator can not be found on English soil, and the ablest history of Greek 
literature (as far as it goes) remains a fragment. Turn over the pages of the most 
elaborate and valuable English histories of Greece, and how few names are there 
quoted as authorities out of the limits of the land of antiquarian research. Thirl- 
wall's and Grote's splendid superstructures rest on Teutonic foundations. The 
text-books used even in the Universities, which claim a Bentley and a Porson 
among their illustrious dead, and where Gaisford still labors in a green old age, 
the Nestor of English scholarship, are mere reprints from, or based on, German 
recensions. The University press sends forth an Aristotle, an ^Eschylus, a 
Sophocles, and what English alumnus of Oxford or Cambridge performs the critical 
revision — we read on the title-page the Teutonic names of Bekker, Dindorf, &c. 
As in every other department of classical learning English scholarship is indebted 
to German labors, so, until the appearance of the present series of dictionaries 
(mostly the result of German erudition), she had nothing to put in comparison 
with the valuable classical encyclopaedias of Germany but the miserable compen- 
diums of Lempriere and Dymock — compilations in which the errors were so glaring 
and so absurd, that when the American editor of the present work prepared a 
revised edition of Lempriere, pruning away many of its faults, correcting many of 
its misstatements, supplying many of its deficiencies, and introducing to his coun- 
trymen the latest results of German scholarship, his work was immediately 
reprinted, and found extensive circulation in England. Though he had to work 
single-handed, and amid many discouragements and disadvantages, yet his labors 
seemed to meet with favor abroad, and this approbation was distinctly manifested 
in the fact that his last revision of Lempriere was republished in its native land in 
several different forms and in abridgments. What he sought to do unaided, and 
in the intervals of laborious professional duties, has now been undertaken on a 
more extended scale by an association of scholars, both English and foreign. The 
increased attention paid to this department in Germany, the recent discoveries 
made by travellers in more thorough explorations, the vast amount of literary 



vi PREFACE OF THE AMERICAN EDITOR. 

material collected in separate works, or scattered through the published proceed- 
ings of learned societies, at length suggested to these scholars the propriety of 
exhibiting in one body the latest results of German learning. An able and useful 
guide was found at hand in the learned and copious " Real-Encyclopadie der Alter- 
thumswissenschaft von Aug. Pauly." Following in the footsteps of Pauly and his 
fellow-laborers, and using freely the materials and the references of these writers, 
as well as other works of. standard excellence not otherwise accessible to English 
students, Pr. William Smith, aided by some twenty-eight collaborateurs, English 
and German, prepared, 

1st, A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities, London, 1842, in one vol. 
Svo., of 1121 pages; reprinted in a new edition, London, 1850. 

2dly. A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, in 3 vols. 
Svo., of about 3600 pages ; to be followed by, 

odly. A Dictionary of Ancient Geography, now in preparation. 

After the completion of the second of these works, Dr. W. Smith and his 
brother, the Rev. Philip Smith, from that work, from Pauly's Encyclopadie, and 
other works, drew up a " Classical Dictionary for Schools" (of Greek and Roman 
Biography, Mythology, and Geography), which should by its size and price be 
accessible to all students, and present in a brief and convenient form the latest and 
most reliable results in these departments. The plan and detail of the work are 
stated at length in the preface of the English editor, subjoined to this, on p. xiii.- 
xv., to which the reader is referred. When the printing of this work commenced, 
the publishers of the American edition immediately made an arrangement with the 
English publishers, and purchased at a considerable cost the sheets in advance, to 
be revised and edited for circulation in this country ; and the two books were to 
appear nearly simultaneously. The present work is the revised edition of the 
English one, and will be found, the editor believes, greatly improved, as well as 
much more complete. It is not, however designed to, and, in the editor's opinion, 
will not supersede his own " Classical Dictionary" published in 1841, since the 
articles are purposely brief; and results only are stated, without that fullness of 
detail which is desirable to the more advanced scholar and the educated man 
of leisure ; but it is intended for the use of those whose means will not allow a 
more expensive, or their scanty time the use of a more copious work ; in other 
words, it is meant to take the place, by reason of its convenient size and low price, 
of Lempriere's old dictionary, which, with all its absurd errors and defects, still 
has a lingering existence in certain parts of our country on account of its cheapness. 
On this head the English editor speaks strongly ; in point of literary or scientific 
value, Lempriere's dictionary is dead — " requiescat in pace" — and to put it into a 
boy's hands now as a guide in classical matters would be as wise and as useful as 
giving him some mystic treatise of the Middle Ages on alchemy to serve as a text- 
book in chemistry. The present work contains all the names of any value to a 
schoolboy occurring in Lempriere, and a great many not in that work, while the 
information is derived from the fountain-head, and not from the diluted stream of 
Erench encyclopedias. 

As regards the plan pursued in revising the work, the editor has been guided by 
\the wants of the class for whom it is specially designed ; he has therefore inserted 



PREFACE OF THE AMERICAN EDITOR. 



more fully than in the original the names occurring in the authors most frequently 
read by younger students, as Caesar, Sallust, Virgil, Cicero, Ovid, Xenophon, Hero- 
dotus, Homer, &c, and has endeavored to give briefly such information as a boy 
meeting with any of these names in his author would seek in a classical dictionary. 
For this purpose he has used freely the most recent and most reliable authorities ; 
he has added brief notices from Dr. Smith's Dictionary of Biography and Mytho- 
logy, and from his own Classical Dictionary, of course, abridging to suit the 
character of the work ; he has also, among other works less frequently consulted, 
and single books on special topics unnecessary to be enumerated, derived materials 
from Ersch and Gruber's Allgemeine Encyclopadie (A-F, H-Italien, O-Phokyl- 
ides), 97 vols. 4to, from Kitto's and Winer's Bible Cyclopaedia, from the indexes 
and notes to the best editions of the classic authors, especially the valuable index 
to Groskurd's translation of Strabo, and the Onomasticon Ciceronianum and Pla- 
tonicum of Orelli, from Gruber's Mythologisches Lexicon, 3 vols. 8vo, from Man- 
ner's, Ukert's, and especially Forbiger's Alte Geographie, from Cramer's Ancient 
Greece, Italy, and Asia Minor, from numerous recent books of travel in classic and 
sacred lands, from Grote's and Thirlwall's Greece, and Niebuhr's Rome and Lec- 
tures ; but particularly would he acknowledge, in the most explicit terms, his obli- 
gations to Pauly's Real-Encyclopadie der Alterthumswissenschaft ( A-Thymna), and 
to Kraft and Miiller's improved edition of Funke's Real-Schullexicon (of which, 
unfortunately, only the first volume, A-K, has appeared) : from these two works 
he has derived many of his own articles, and has been enabled to correct many of 
those in the English work taken from the same sources. In this connection, the 
editor regrets to find that Dr. W. Smith and some of his coadjutors have studi- 
ously avoided, in all their dictionaries hitherto published, making any direct 
acknowledgment of their indebtedness to the former of these two works. Although 
the plan and much of the detail of the works in question are taken from Pauly's, 
there is no indication of the existence of such a book in the preface to the Diction- 
ary of Antiquities, or to the Dictionary of Biography and Mythology, and this 
omission has led a distinguished German scholar, in a notice of the latter work in 
the Leipziger Repertorium for February, 1846, to complain of this conduct as 
unscholarlike and reprehensible : he says, " Under this head the editor (Dr. W. 
Smith) ought not to have omitted stating of how great service to him and several 
of his coadjutors the ' Encyclopedia of Classical Antiquity,' begun by Aug. Pauly 
and continued after his (Pauly's) death by Chr. Walz and W. TeufFel, has been, 
and especially since we can show that the above-named production of German 
scholars has been actually adopted as the basis of the English Dictionary, although 
the plan of the latter is considerably altered." . ..." In regard to its (Smith's 
Dictionary of Biography and Mythology) relation to the Stuttgard (Pauly's) Ency- 
clopaedia, we have still further to remark, that the articles which have been bor- 
rowed from it, namely, by Dr. Schmitz and the editor, have been revised, and in 
some respects considerably enlarged." * 



* K Hier hatte der Herausgeber nicht verschweigen sollen, von wie grossem Nutzen ihm 
und mehreren seiner mitarbeiter die von Aug. Pauly begonnene und nach dessen Tode von 
Ch. Walz and W. TeufFel forgesetzte ; Real-Encyclopadie der Classischen Alterthumswis- 



vm PREFACE OF THE AMERICAN EDITOR. 

The present edition is called an enlarged and corrected one, and the editor thinks 
he may justly claim to have improved as well as enlarged the work: his own addi- 
tions are inclosed in brackets, and amount to more than 1400 independent articles,. 
w r hile the additions to articles already in the work, but either too briefly or incor- 
rectly stated, or omitting some important matter, are not a few. The editor has- 
bestowed considerable care on the department of bibliography, and under this head 
many additions will be found. Dr. Smith has been content in most cases- to copy 
the statements in the Dictionary of Biography and Mythology, without noticing 
many valuable books which have appeared since the publication of that work. 
Many corrections of names, or erroneous statements too short to be marked in the 
text, will also be found on a comparison of the two editions ; we have kept a list 
of these, and subjoin some of the more important of them here, that the public may 
see that the revision of the work has been pretty thorough. Many mere verbal 
alterations and corrections of oversight or carelessness in reading the proofs might 
also be adduced. 

Abje is said to be in Phocis, on the boundaries of Eubcea ! 

yEsACUs ! Thetis is used for Tethys, and the error is very frequently repeated, in most 
cases copied from the Dictionary of Biography and Mythology, in the present instance 
adopted by Dr. Schmitz from Pauly, s. v. 

Alexandria : oftener ia, rarely ea, a statement just the reverse of the fact, and for cor- 
rection, vide the article in the Dictionary. 

Ancsus : the Greek quotation is wrong : the line as given by us from the scholiast is a 
hexameter verse, as it is also given by Thirlwall in the Philological Museum, vol. i., page 
107, quoted by Dr. Schmitz for his authority, though he copies the altered Greek from 
Pauly. 

Anius : Dryope is copied erroneously from the Dictionary of Biography and Mythology, 
and the account of the daughters of Anius is taken incorrectly from Kraft and Miillei, 
though right in the Dictionary of Biography and Mythology. 

Antonia 1 is called husband of L. Domitius Ahenobarbus, and Antonia 2, the husband 
of Drusus ; where the editor, copying from the German of Kraft and Miiller, has taken Ge- 
mahlin (wife) for Gemahl (husband) ; and so again under 

Cretheus, by way probably of compensation. Kraft and Miiller' s Gemahl (husband) is 
translated wife, and Cretheus is made " wife of Tyro:'' 

Aphroditopolis, No. 3, 1. from Kraft and Miiller, Aphroditopofos Nomos for -lites. 

Apis (the city) is said to be 10 stadia west of Parsetonium for 100, which erroneous 
statement, probably a typographical slip in the German work, is copied from Kraft and 
Miiller. 

Assus : ruins near Beram, a typographical error from Kraft and Miiller for Beram or 
Beiram. 

Arcadia (p. 70), the greatest river of Peloponnesus is said to be the Achelous ! ! 
Argonauts (p. 76) : " And when Pollux was slain by Amycus," copied from an article 

senschaft,' gewesen ist, und zwar um so weniger, da wir diese Arbeit deutscher Gelehrten 
geradezu als die Grundlage des englischen Dictionary bezeichnen diirfen, obschon der Plan 
derselben vielfach anders angelegt ist." * % # " Ueber das Verhaltniss zu der Stuttgarter 
Encyklopadie ist noch zu bemerken, das die Artikel, welche daher entlehnt sind, namentlich 
von Schmitz und dem Herausgeber, aufs Neue durchgesehen und zum Theil schatzbar erwei- 
tert sind/' 



PREFACE OF THE AMERICAN EDITOR. 



in the Dictionary of Biography and Mythology by Dr. L. Schmitz, who has compiled 
the account from Grotefend's in Pauly, and falls into Grotefend's unaccountable blun- 
der of making Amycus slay Pollux, though Apollodorus, whose narrative both profess to 
follow, says plainly enough the reverse (Ro?.vdevK7]g 6'e, vKoaxofievos irvnTevouv irpbq avrov, 
ntyZas /card tov av^va aireKTetve, i., 9, 20 / . $ 2), and yet Dr. Schmitz, at the end of his article, 
quotes Schcenemann, de Geogr. Argonaut, j Ukert, Geographic der Griech. und Rbmer ; Mul- 
let, Orchomenos, &c, but says not a word about Pauly's Encyclopedic or Grotefend. 

Other instances of similarity to Pauly's work are frequent in the articles of this contri- 
butor, but this is not the place to point them out. 

Aulis : a strange fatality seems to hang over this unfortunate place : the editors, 
infected with the American spirit of annexation, transfer it, port and all, from the main 
land to the island of Euboza ! ! 

Bebryces, after Craft and Miiller, for Bebryces, or, at least, Bebryces ; and in the 
account of their king, the editor, copying hastily from Pauly, has mistaken the German 
Ihren for Ihrer. Pauly has " Ihren Kbnig Amycus erschlug Pollux/' the termination of 
the accusative indicating sufficiently the object : but Dr. Smith, in following the same 
order in English, has made quite a difference in the result : " whose king, Amycus, slew 
Pollux I" 

Cesar, No. 5 : L. Caesar is called the uncle, and afterward nepheiv, of M. Antony in 
the same article. 

Chares (at the end), the colossus, overthrown B.C. 224, and removed A.D. 672; of 
course it could not have remained on the ground 923 years, as stated. 
Chion : thirteen letters for seventeen. 

Cocalus: it is said that he received Daedalus, and afterward killed him, when Minos 
came in pursuit of him. It was Minos that was killed; the error is taken from Dr. 
Schmitz, in the Dictionary of Biography and Mythology. 

Cratos : " Uranus and Ge" for " Pallas and Styx; 7 ' taken from Dr. Schmitz, in the Dic- 
tionary of Biography and Mythology. 

Cyme, in iEolis : it is said to have been Hesiod's birth-place ! though, under Hesiod, it 
is correctly stated that " we learn from his own poem that he was born in the village of 
Ascra, in Bceotia." 

Eristnyes : reference is made to Eumenidtf / for a feminine plural ; and so again r 
under Pha'ethon, his sisters are called Heliadce / the same error occurs under Tisiphone 
(Eumenidtf /) and under Valens (the islands Staechad<e / for des), in part from the Diction- 
ary of Biography and Mythology. 

Halesus : he is said to have been slain by " Evander^ for "Pallas," copied from Dr. 
Schmitz in the larger dictionary. 

Halmyris : we have 'A7i.fj.vptg, sc. Xiixt]v for ?u/xvtj. 

Halosydne : Thctys (or Thetis), as usual, for Tethys ; from Dr. Schmitz, in the Diction- 
ary of Biography and Mythology. 

Helios: Phaefusa, and, under Heliades. Phaeton, for u thP 

Hercules (p. 310) : he is said to have taken Pylos and slain Periclymenus, a son of 
Neleus : elsewhere, all the sons of Neleus, except Nestor. 
Ithome: "last" Messenian war for " first." 
Leander: "Herois" is made the genitive of "Hero." 
Leontiades: Spartan" exiles for " Theban." 

Leucippus : his birth-place is inferred to be Elis ! ! because he was of the " Eleatic " 
school, instead of " Elea," in Italy ! copied from the Dictionary of Biography and 
Mythology. 

Maximus, No. 2: Dionysius is styled Halicarnassus / 



x PREFACE OF THE AMERICAN EDITOR. 

IfffcxBJB : the treasury of Atreus, in Mycenae, is called the treasury of Athens! and the 
same error is repeated under Pelasgi (near the end). 

Mtronides : Ifegara is used for Megarw. 

Neretts : just as Proteus, in the story of Ulysses, for Menelaus. 

Nitrle : vends has the feminine adjective Bfepunfr! agreeing with it. 

Oasis : al 'Oaolrai is used for oi 'Oacr. 

Ogtris : 2000 stadia = 20 geographical miles for 200. 

Pades : Mount Vesu/a for - bes! 

Panda : the Siraas for Siraa. as used by Tacitus. 

Pa^itigris : it is said to be now Karoon. which name is given to the Eulaeus, s. v. 

Paulines (p. 531) : a Nero's" for B Others." 

Peloponnesus : in the enumeration of its provinces. Argolis is strangely omitted. 
Phocls : Daphnus is placed on the Eubcean Sea, between the Locri Ozola ! t and 
Opuntii. 

Phocis : The Crissaan plain is placed in the southeast, on the borders of Locri Ozolae ! 

and antz-historical for ante-historical. 

Picentm : along the northern ! coast of the Adriatic for western. 

Pirithous : Theseus is said to have placed Helen at JEthra ! " under the care of 
K Phadra !" 

Poseidon (p. 610) : Pasiphae is made daughter ! n of Minos. 
Sassula : Tiber for filter / 

Scopas. No. 1 : he is put to death B.C. 296. though alive in B.C. 204 j copied from the 

larger dictionary. 
SiLANtrs. No. 6 : the dates refer to B.C. for A. D. 

T avium : now Boghaz-Kieni for Kieui is a typographical error copied from Pauly. 
Theophrastts (p. 763) is said to have presided in the Academy! (for Lyceum), 35 years. 
Terentia. the wife of Cicero, is called TuUia. and this error is copied from the Diction- 
ary of Biography and Mythology. 

In some instances references are made to articles which are omitted ; these the 
editor has been careful to supply, while in other eases important names have been 
passed over altogether : a few of these are given in the English work in the 
addenda, and many others not there supplied might be quoted, but any one running 
over the additions marked with brackets can judge of the extent of this improve- 
ment in the American edition for himself The editor ought to add on this point, 
that, before receiving the page of addenda, he had already inserted in their proper 
places the only important articles there given. The biographical and mythological 
notices in the present work, which have been chiefly taken from the Dictionary of 
Biography and Mythology, have been compared with the corresponding ones in 
that work, and several errors are found to have been made in the process of 
abridgment, e. g., 

Feronia (p. 263) is said to have had her chief sanctuary at Terracina, mar Mount 
.Soracte ! ! Now Terracina is in Latium southeast of Rome, while Mount Soracte was in 
Etruria, some distance north of Rome : the larger dictionary says. >; Besides the sanctua- 
ries at Terracina and near Mount Soracte, she had others at." kc. 

Other errors from the same cause will be found (in the English work, corrected in this) 
under Octavius No. 8. Masinissa, Orestes. Tissaphernes, &c. 

Another great blemish in the English work is the utter carelessness exhibited in 



PREFACE OF THE AMERICAN EDITOR. xi 

the accentuation of the Greek names. If it be desirable to have the Greek 
accented at all, it should be done correctly. The editor has carefully revised this 
portion of the work also, and hopes no gross error will be found uncorrected. In 
the historical and mythological names the errors are copied from the Dictionary 
of Biography and Mythology, which exhibits the same carelessness in this respect, 
and these errors are not of that nature that they might result merely from haste, 
or a disinclination to turn to the pages of a lexicon or an author to find the place 
of the accent, but such as the slightest acquaintance with the principles of Greek 
accentuation would indicate to the eye at once ; e. y., dissyllables with long penult 
and short final syllable having the acute on the penult ; the circumflex placed on 
the antepenult ; the acute placed on the penult of feminine adjectives in ig and ag ; 
or final syllable long by nature, with circumflex on the penult, &c. ; as instances 
almost at random, Bou§aCr»s, KXs'avd^, KT^tfjas, 'Apyjr/aj, FsMSra'iog, TXavxog, KaX- 
Xijasowv, 'ItfjuL^vo^, "IXo£, Mldag^ Kp^vou, MoipoxX^, ©aXarra, UsX'iadsg, &c. &c. In 
the English edition the Greek names of the Greek divinities are commonly given, 
but with considerable inconsistency; e. g., Ge is usually employed, though it does 
not occur in the work as a separate article at all, Gssa being the form in the alpha- 
betical order, and this is frequently used instead of Ge ; Pluto or Aidoneus some- 
times instead of Hades, Bacchus interchangeably with Dionysius ; while, on the 
other hand, ^Esculapius and Hercules, Ulysses and Pollux, Ajax, and other heroes, 
are uniformly written after the Latin form of the name ; these the editor has 
allowed to stand, and so, too, he has retained the Greek names of the divinities, 
but has placed by the side of this form the more usual one inclosed in parentheses, 
or has placed the parentheses around the former. The change, familiar enough to 
the Germans and those well acquainted with German literature, seems yet, among 
us, too great and radical a one to be made at once. Time may effect this, but at 
present, as a matter of expediency, " sub judice lis est." 

To impart additional value to the work, and render it still more complete as a 
classical guide and book of reference, the editor has appended from the Dictionary 
of Biography and Mythology the " Chronological Tables of Greek and Roman 
History" subjoined to that work, and which have been drawn up with great care 
from the Fasti Hellenici and Romani of Clinton, the Griechische and Romische 
Zeittafeln of Fischer and Soetbeer, and the Annales Veterum Regnorum et Popu- 
lorum of Zumpt, and in addition to these, the " Tables of Weights, Measures, 
and Money," from the Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities. With these 
various improvements and additions, the editor now presents the book to the American 
public, and ventures to recommend it as a reliable guide to those, for whom it is 
designed, in the various departments which on its title-page it professes to comprise. 

In conclusion, the editor would be guilty of great injustice were he not to 
acknowledge in the warmest terms the obligations which he is under to his learned 
and accurate friend Professor Drisler, whose very efficient co-operation has been 
secured in the revisal and correction of the entire work. Every article has been 
read over and examined in common, and a frank interchange of opinions has been 
made wherever any point occurred of sufficient importance to warrant this. And 
it is on this account that he ventures to recommend the present volume with more 
confidence to the young student, than if it had been the result merely of his own 
individual exertions. 

Columbia College, December, 1850. 



PREFACE. 



The great progress which classical studies have made in Europe, and more espe- 
cially in Germany, during the present century, has superseded most of the works 
usually employed in the elucidation of the Greek and Roman writers. It had long 
been felt by our best scholars and teachers that something better was required thau 
we yet possessed in the English language for illustrating the Antiquities, Litera- 
ture, Mythology, and Geography of the ancient writers, and for enabling a diligent 
student to read them in the most profitable manner. It was with a view of sup- 
plying this acknowledged want that the series of classical dictionaries was under- 
taken ; and the very favorable manner in which these works have been received 
by the scholars and teachers of this country demands from the editor his most 
grateful acknowledgments. The approbation with which he has been favored has 
encouraged him to proceed in the design which he had formed from the begimiing, 
of preparing a series of works which might be useful not only to the scholar and 
the more advanced student, but also to those who were entering on their classical 
studies. The dictionaries of " Greek and Roman Antiquities " and of " Greek and 
Roman Biography and Mythology," which are already completed, and the " Dic- 
tionary of Greek and Roman Geography," on which the editor is now engaged, 
are intended to meet the wants of the more advanced scholar ; but these works 
are on too extended a scale, and enter too much into details, to be suitable for the 
use of jun^p students. For the latter class of persons a work is required of the 
same kind as Lempriere's well-known dictionary, containing in a single volume 
the most important names, biographical, mythological, and geographical, occurring 
in the Greek and Roman writers usually read in our public schools. It is invidious 
for an author to speak of the defects of his predecessors ; but it may safely be 
said that Lempriere's work, which originally contained the most serious mistakes, 
has long since become obsolete, and that since the time it was compiled we 
have attained to more correct knowledge on a vast number of subjects comprised 
in that work. 

The present dictionary is designed, as already remarked, chiefly to elucidate the 
Greek and Roman writers usually read in schools ; but, at the same time, it has 
not been considered expedient to omit any proper names connected with classical 
antiquity, <>f which it is expected that some knowledge ought to be possessed by 
every person who aspires to a liberal education. Accordingly, while more space 
has been given to the prominent Greek and Roman writers, and to the more dis- 
tinguished characters of Greek and Roman history, other names have not been 
omitted altogether, but only treated with greater brevity. The chief difficulty 
which every author has to contend with in a work like the present is the vastness 
of his subject and the copiousness of his materials. It has therefore been neces- 
sary in all cases to study the greatest possible brevity, to avoid all discussions, 
and to be satisfied with giving simply the results at which the best modern scholars 



xiy PREFACE. 

have arrived. The writer is fully aware that in adopting this plan he has fre- 
quently stated dogmatically conclusions which may be open to much dispute ; but 
he has thought it better to run this risk, rather than to encumber and bewilder the 
junior student with conflicting opinions. With the view likewise of economizing 
space, few references have been given to ancient and modern writers. In fact, such 
references are rarely of service to the persons for whom such a work as the pre- 
sent is intended, and serve more for parade than for any useful purpose ; and it 
has been the less necessary to give them in this work, as it is supposed that the 
persons who really require them will be in possession of the larger dictionaries. 

The present work may be divided into the three distinct parts, Biography, Myth- 
ology, and Geography, on each of which a few words may be necessary. 

The biographical portion may again be divided into the three departments of 
History, Literature, and Art. The historical articles include all the names of any 
importance which occur in the Greek and Roman writers, from the earliest times 
down to the extinction of the Western Empire, in the year 476 of our era. Very 
few names are inserted which are not included in this period, but still there are 
some persons who lived after the fall of the Western Empire who could not with 
propriety be omitted in a classical dictionary. Such is the case with Justinian, 
whose legislation has exerted such an important influence upon the nations of 
Western Europe ; with Theodoric, king of the Ostrogoths, at whose court lived 
Cassiodorus and Boethius ; and with a few others. The lives of the later Western 
emperors and their contemporaries are given with greater brevity than the lives 
of such persons as lived in the more important epochs of Greek and Roman his- 
tory, since the students for whom the present work is intended will rarely require 
information respecting the later period of the empire. The Romans, as a general 
rule, have been given under the cognomens, and not under the gentile names ; but 
in cases where a person is more usually mentioned under the namefof his gens 
than under that of his cognomen, he will be found under the former. Thus, for 
example, the two celebrated conspirators against Caesar, Brutus and Cassius, are 
given under these names respectively, though uniformity would require either that 
Cassius should be inserted under his cognomen of Longinus, or Brutus under his 
gentile name of Junius. But in this as in all other cases, it has been considered 
more advisable to consult utility than to adhere to any prescribed rule, which 
would be attended with practical inconveniences. 

To the literary articles considerable space has been devoted. Not only are all 
Greek and Roman writers inserted whose works are extant, but also all such as 
exercised any important influence upon Greek and Roman literature, although their 
writings have not come down to us. It has been thought quite unnecessary, how- 
ever, to give the vast number of writers mentioned only by Athenseus, Stobeeus, 
the Lexicographers, and the Scholiasts ; for, though such names ought to be found 
in a complete history of Greek and Roman literature, they would be clearly out 
of place in a work like the present. In the case of all writers whose works are 
extant, a brief account of their works, as well as of their lives, is given ; and at 
the end of each article one or two of the best modern editions are specified. As 
the present work is designed for the elucidation of the classical writers, the Chris- 
tian writers are omitted, with the exception of the more distinguished fathers, who 
form a constituent part of the history of Greek and Roman literature. The 



PREFACE. 



Byzantine historians are, for the same reason, inserted ; though in their case, as 
well as in the case of the Christian Fathers, it has been impossible to give a com- 
plete account either of their lives or of their writings. 

The lives of all the more important artists have been inserted, and an account 
has also been given of their extant works. The history of ancient art has received 
so little attention from the scholars of this country, that it has been deemed advi- 
sable to devote as much space to this important subject as the limits of the work 
would allow. Accordingly, some artists are noticed on account of their celebrity 
in the history of art, although their names are not even mentioned in the ancient 
writers. This remark applies to Agasias, the sculptor of the Borghese gladiator, 
which is still preserved in the Louvre at Paris ; to Agesander, one of the sculptors 
of the group of Laocoon ; to Glycon, the sculptor of the Farnese Hercules, and 
to others. On the contrary, many of the names of the artists in Pliny's long list 
are omitted, because they possess no importance in the history of art. 

In writing the mythological articles, care has been taken to avoid, as far as pos- 
sible, all indelicate allusions, as the work will probably be much in the hands of 
young persons. It is of so much importance to discriminate between the Greek 
and Roman mythology, that an account of the Greek divinities is given under their 
Greek names, and of the Roman divinities under their Latin names, a practice 
which is universally adopted by the Continental writers, which has received the 
sanction of some of our own scholars, and which is, moreover, of such great 
utility in guarding against endless confusions and mistakes as to require no apology 
for its introduction into this work. 

For the geographical articles the editor is alone responsible. The biographical 
and mythological articles are founded upon those in the " Dictionary of Greek and 
Roman Biography and Mythology," but the geographical articles are written 
entirely anew for the present work. In addition to the original sources, the editor 
has availed himself of the best modern treatises on the subject, and of the valua- 
ble works of travels in Greece, Italy, and the East, which have appeared within 
the last few years, both in England and in Germany. It would have been impos- 
sible to give references to these treatises without interfering with the general plan 
of the present work, but this omission will be supplied in the forthcoming " Dic- 
tionary of Greek and Roman Geography." It is hoped that in the geographical 
portion of the work very few omissions will be discovered of names occurring in 
the chief classical writers ; but the great number of names found only in Strabo, 
Pliny, Ptolemy, and the Itineraries, have been purposely omitted, except in cases 
where such names have become of historical celebrity, or have given rise to 
important towns in modern times. At the commencement of every geographical 
article the Ethnic name and the modern name have been given, whenever they 
could be ascertained. In conclusion, the editor has to express his obligations to 
his brother, the Rev. Philip Smith, who has rendered him valuable assistance by 
writing the geographical articles relating to Asia and Africa. 

WILLIAM SMITH. 

London, August 12th, 1850. 



A 



CLASSICAL DICTIONARY, 

BIOGRAPHICAL, MYTHOLOGICAL, AND GEOGRAPHICAL. 



AARASSUS. 

[Aarassus (' Aapaacoc), a city of Pisidia ; more 
correctly, perhaps, Arassus, as given in some 
MSS.; the old Latin version of Strabo having 
also Arasum.] 

[Aba ("A6a), daughter of Zenophanes, made 
herself queen of Olbe in Cilicia; her authority 
was confirmed by Antony and Cleopatra: she 
was subsequently deposed and driven out.] 

[Aba ("A6a), more usually Abce, q. v.~\ 

ABACiENUM ('ASanalvov or rd 'ACdnaiva : 'A6a- 
tcaivlvoc : ruins near Tripi), an ancient town of 
the Siculi in Sicily, west of Messana, and south 
of Tyndaris. 

Abje ('A6ai : 'A6alog : ruins near Exarcho), 
an ancient town of Phocis, on the boundaries 
of Boeotia, said to have been founded by the Ar- 
give Abas, but see Abantes. It possessed an 
ancient temple and oracle of Apollo, who hence 
derived the surname of Abceus. The temple 
was destroyed by the Persians in the invasion 
of Xerxes, and a second time by the Boeotians 
in the sacred war. : it was rebuilt by Hadrian. 

[Abalus, an island in the North or German 
Ocean, where amber was said to have been 
washed up by the waves, and used by the in- 
habitants for fuel. The more usual name was 
Basilta."] 

[A bann^e or Abanni, a people of Mauretania, 
brought into subjection to the Roman power by 
Theodosius, father of the Emperor Theodosius.] 

[Abantes ("ASavrec), the ancient inhabitants 
of Euboea. (Horn., 11., u\ 536). They are said 
to have beon of Thracian origin, to have first 
settled in Phocis, where they built Aba, and 
afterward to have crossed over to Euboea. The 
Abantes of Euboea assisted in colonizing several 
of the Ionic cities of Asia Minor. 

Abantiades ('ABavTiddTjc), any descendant of 
Abas, but especially Perseus, great-grandson of 
Abas, and Acrisius, son of Abas. A female de- 
scendant of Abas, as Danae and Atalante, was 
called Abanlias. 

Abantias. Vid. Abantiades. 

Abantidas ('Afovndaf), son of Paseas, be- 
<came tyraut of Sicyon, after murdering Clinias, 



ABAS. 

the father of Aratus, B.C. 264, but was soon 
after assassinated. 

[Abantis ('ASavrts), an early name of Eubcea, 
from the Abantes.] 

[Abarbarea ('A6ap6ape7]), name of a Naiad, 
mother of iEsepus and Pedasus.] 

[Abaris ("Adapcg), son of Seuthes, was a Hy- 
perborean priest of Apollo, and came from the 
country about the Caucasus to Greece, while 
his own country was visited by a plague. In 
his travels through Greece he carried with him 
an arrow as the symbol of Apollo, and gave 
oracles. His history is entirely mythical, and 
is related in various ways : he is said to have 
taken no earthly food, and to have ridden on 
his arrow, the gift of Apollo, through the air. 
He cured diseases by incantations, and delivered 
the world from a plague. Later writers as- 
cribe to him several works ; but if such works 
were really current in ancient times, they were 
not genuine. The time of his appearance in 
Greece is stated differently: he may, perhaps, 
be placed about B.C. 570. [Abaris occurs in 
Nonnus, Dionys., 11, 132, but the short quantity 
seems preferable. — 2. A Latin hero, who fought 
on the side of Turnus against JEneas : he was 
slain by Euryalus. — 3. Called Caucasus by Ovid, 
a friend of Phineas, slain by Perseus.] 

[Abaris ("A6apLg or Avaptg), a city of Egypt, 
called, also, Avaris. Manetho places it to the 
east of the Bubastic mouth of the Nile, in the 
Saitic nome, while Mannert identifies it with 
what was afterward called Pelnsiuni.] 

Abarnis ('A6apvtg or "Adapvog: 'Adapvevg), a 
town and promoutory close to Lampsacus on 
the Asiatic side of the Hellespont. [Abarnis 
was also the name of the country lying around 
and adjacent to the city.] 

[ Abartus ("ASaprog), one of the Codrida, chosen 
king of the Phocseans.] 

Abas ('A6ag). I. Son of Metanlra, was chang- 
ed by Ceres (Demeter) into a lizard, because 
he mocked the goddess when she had come on 
her wanderings into the house of his mother, 
and drank eagerly to quench her thirst. — 2. 



ABASITUS. 



ABORRHAS. 



Twelth king of Argos, son of Lynceus and Hy- 
permnestra, grandson of Dauaus, and father of j 
Acrisius and Prcetus. When he informed his ; 
father of the death of Danaus, he was rewarded | 
with the shield of his grandfather which was , 
sacred to Juno (Hera). This shield performec 
various marvels, and the mere sight of it could , 
reduce a revolted people to submission He is 
described as a successful conqueror and as the j 



founder of the town 



of Abse in Phocis, and of 



the Pelasgic Argos in Thessaly.— [3. A centaur, 
son of Ixion and Nephele, a celebrated hunter, 
one of those who escaped the fury of the Lap- 
ithffi in the fight that arose at the nuptials of 
Pirithoiis and Deidamia. — 4. A follower of Per- 
seus, who slew Pelates in the contest with Phin- 
eus.— 5. A warrior in the Trojan army, son of 
Eurydamas, slain by Diomede— Others of this 
name occur in Virgil and Ovid, who probably 
derived their accounts of them from the Cyclic 
poets.] 

[Abasitis ('ABaalTis), a district of Phrygia 
Major, on the borders of Lydia.] 

[Abatos ('ABcltoc ; now Biggeh), a small rocky 
island near Philse in the Nile, to which priests 
alone were allowed access, whence the name.] 

[ A bdageses, a Parthian nobleman who revolt- 
ed from his king Artabanus, and aided Tiri- 
dates.] 

Abdera (rd "A66r]pa, Abdera, se, and Abdera, 
orum : 'ASdvptrvg, Abdeiites and Abderita). 1. 
(Now Polystilo), a town of Thrace, near the 
mouth of the Nestus, which flowed through the 
town. According to mythology, it was founded 
by Hercules in honor of his favorite Abderus ; 
but according to history, it was colonized by 
Timesius of Clazomense about B.C. 656. Time- 
sius was expelled by the Thracians, and the 
town was colonized a second time by the in- 
habitants of Teos in Ionia, who settled there 
after their own town had been taken by the 
Persians, B.C. 544. Abdera was a flourishing 
town when Xerxes invaded Greece, and con- 
tinued a place of importance under the Romans, 
who made it a free city. It was the birthplace 
of Democritus, Protagoras, Anaxarchus, and 
other distinguished men ; but its inhabitants, 
notwithstanding, were accounted stupid, and an 
M Abderite" was a term of reproach. — 2. (Now 
Adra), a town of Hispania Bastica on the coast, 
founded by the Phoenicians. 

Abderus ('Ao^poc), a favorite of Hercules, 
was torn to pieces by the mares of Diomedes, 
which Hercules had given him to [guard while 
he himself] pursued the Bistones. Hercules is 
said to have built the town of Abdera in honor 
of him. 

Abdolonymvjs or Abdalonimus, also called 
Ballonymus, a gardener, but of royal descent, 
was made king of Sidon by Alexander the Great. 

Abella or Avexxa ('A6eUa : Abellanus ; now 
AveUa Vecchia) a town of Campania, not far from 
Nola, founded by a colony from Chalcis in Eu- 

^•i /J* 8 c .? le 5 ra1 ; ed fol ^ apples, whence 
Virgil {JEn vn., 740) calls it malifera, and for 
its great hazel-nuts, nuces Avellance. 

Abellinum (Abelllnas : now Avellino), a town 
of the Hi rpini in Samuium, near the sources of 
the Sabatus.— [2. (Now Marsico Vetere), a town 
of Lucania, near the sources of the Aeiris, called, 
for distinction' sake, Abellinuru Marsicum.] 



Abgarus, Acbarus, or Augarus ("A6yapog r 
'An6apog, Avyapog), a name common to many 
rulers of Edessa, the capital of the district of 
Osrhoene in Mesopotamia. Of these rulers, one 
is supposed by Eusebius to have been the author 
of a letter written to Christ, which he found in 
a church at Edessa and translated from the 
Syriac. The letter is believed to be spurious. 

Abia (rj A6la : near Zarnata), a town of Mes- 
senia on the Messenian Gulf. It is said to 
have been the same town as the Ire of the Iliad 
(ix., 292), and to have acquired the name of 
Abia in honor of Abia. the nurse of Hyllus, a 
son of Hercules. At a later time Abia belonged 
to the Achaean League. 

Abii ("A6iot), a tribe mentioned by Homsr 
(//., xiii., 6), and apparently a Thracian people. 
This matter is discussed by Strabo (p. 296). 

Abila (rd *A6i/.a : 'ABtf^vog, probably Nebi 
Abel), a town of Coele-Syria, afterward called 
Claudiopolis, and the capital of the tetrarehy of 
Abilene (Luke iii., 1). The position seems 
doubtful. A town of the same name is men- 
tioned by Josephus as being sixty stadia east of 
the Jordan. — [2. A mountain of Mauretania: 
Vid. Abtla.] 

[Abilene ('A6tlr]V7j), vid. Abila, No. 1.] 

Abisares ^AStadprjg), also called Embisarua, 
an Indian king beyond the River Hydaspes, sent 
embassies to Alexander the Great, who not only 
allowed him to retain his kingdom, but increased 
it, and on his death appointed his son his suc- 
cessor. 

[Ablerus ("A6?*7ipog), a Trojan, slain by An- 
tilochus.] 

Abnoba Moxs, the range of hills covered by 
the Black Forest in Germany, not a single 
mountain. 

[ Abobrica (now Bayonne), a city of Gallsecia in 
Hispania Tarraconensis, near the mouth of the 
Mini us.] 

[Aboccis (now Aboo Simbel), a city of Ethi- 
opia, on the western bank of the Nile, with very 
remarkable ruius.] 

Abonitichos ('ABuvov relxog), a town of Paph- 
lagonia, on the Black Sea, with a harbor, after- 
ward called Ionopolis ('luvorco/ac), whence its 
modern name Ineboli, the birth-place of the pre- 
tended prophet Alexander, of whom Lucian has 
left us an account. 

Aborigines, the original inhabitants of a 
country, equivalent to the Greek avroxOove^ 
But the Aborigines in Italy are not in the Latin 
writers the original inhabitants of all Italy, but 
the name of the ancient people who drove the 
Siculi out of Latium, and there became the pro- 
genitors of the Latini. 

Aborrhas ( , A66p'pac : now Khabur), a branch 
of the Euphrates, which joins that river on the 
east side near Arcesium. It is called the Arax- 
es by Xenophon (Anab^ i., 4, § 19), and was 
crossed by the army of Cyrus the Younger in 
the march from Sardis to the neighborhood of 
Babylon, B.C. 401. A branch of this river, 
which rises near Nisibis, and is now called Jakh- 
jakhah, is probably the ancient Mygdonius. The 
Khabur rises near Orfah, and is joined near the 
Lake of Khatuniyah by the Jakbjakhah, after 
which the united stream flows into the Eu- 
phrates. The course of the Khabur is very in- 
correctly represented in the maps. 



ABRADATAS. 



ACACETES. 



Acradatas (' Afymdarac), a king of Susa, and 
an ally of the Assyrians against Cyrus, accord- 
ing to Xenophon's Cyropaedia. His wife, Pan- 
tbea, was taken on the conquest of the Assyrian 
camp. In consequence of the honorable treat- 
ment which she received from Cyrus, Abrada- 
tas joined the latter with his forces. He fell in 
the first battle in which he fought for him, while 
fighting against the Egyptians in the army of 
Croesus at Thymbrana, on the Pactolus. In- 
consolable at her loss, Panthea put an end to 
her own life. Cyrus had a high mound raised 
in honor of them. 

[Abrettene ('A6peTT7]V7/), a region of Mysia, 
on the borders of Bithynia, said to have been 
so called from the nymph Abretia.] 

Abrincatui, a people of Gallia Lugdunensis, 
in the neighborhood of the modern Avranches. 

Abrocomas (' ASpoKofiac), one of the satraps 
of Artaxerxes Muemon, was sent with an army 
to oppose Cyrus on his march into Upper Asia, 
B.C. 401. He retreated on the approach of Cy- 
rus, but did not join the king in time for the 
battle of Cunaxa. 

[Abrocomes ('ASpo/co/ivc, Ion.), son of Darius 
and Phratagune, accompanied the army of Xerx- 
es to Greece, and was slain at Thermopylae.] 

[ Abron (*A6pu)v), sou of the Attic orator Ly- 
curgus. — 2. Son of Callias, of the deme of Bate 
in Attica, who wrote on the festivals of the 
Greeks.] 

Abronychus (' A(jp6vvxog\ an Athenian, who 
served in the Persian war, B.C. 480, and was 
subsequently sent as ambassador to Sparta, with 
Themistocles and Aristides, respecting the for- 
tifications of Athens. 

Abrotonum, mother of Themistocles. 

Abrotonum ('A6poTovov : now Sabart or Old 
Tripoli), a city on the coast of Africa, between 
the Syrtes, founded by the Phoenicians ; a colony 
under the Romans. It was also called Sabrata 
and Neapolis, and it formed, with GSa and Lep- 
tis Magna, the African Tripolis. 

[Abronius Silo, a Latin poet of the Augustan 
age, pupil of Porcius Latro. According to Vos- 
sius, there were two of this name, father and 
son.] 

[Abrozelmes ('AOpo&fyijs), a Thracian, inter- 
preter of the Thracian king Seuthes, mentioned 
in the Anabasis of Xenophon.] 

Absyrtides or Apsyrtides, sc. insulee ('Aipvp- 
rides ■ now Cherso, Osero, Ferosina, and Chao), 
the name of four islands off the coast of Illyri- 
cum, [the principal one of which was Absorus, 
with a town of the same name.] According to 
one tradition, Absyrtus was slain in these isl- 
ands by his Bister Medea and by Jason. 

Absyrtus or Apsyrtus ("Aipvproc), son of 
Metes, king of Colchis, and brother of Medea. 
When Medea fled with Jason, she took her 
brother Absyrtus with her ; and when she was 
nearly overtaken by her father, she murdered 
Absyrtus, cut his body in pieces and strewed 
them on the road, that her father might thus be 
detained by gathering the limbs of his child. 
Tomi, the place where this horror was com- 
mitted, was believed to have derived its name 
from TEfivu, " to cut." According to another tra- 
dition, Absyrtus did not accompany Medea, but 
was sent out by his father iu pursuit of her. He 
overtook her iu Corey ra, where she had been 



kindly received by king Alcinous, who refused 
to surrender her to Absyrtus. When he over- 
took her a second time in certain islands off the 
Illyrian coast, he was slain by Jason. The son 
of JEetes, who was murdered by Medea, is called 
by some writers ^Egialeus. 

Abulites ('A6ov?.ltt]c), the satrap of Susiana, 
surrendered Susa to Alexander. The satrapy 
was restored to him by Alexander, but he and 
his son Oxyathres were afterward executed by 
Alexander for the crimes they had committed. 

Aburnus Valens. Vid. Valens. 

Abos (now Humber), a river in Britain. 

[Abus ("A6oc : now Aghri-Dagh), a mountain 
chain of Armenia Major, and believed by the 
natives at the present day to be the Ararat of 
Scripture.] 

Abydenus ('ASvStjvoc), a Greek historian, who 
wrote a history of Assyria. His date is uncer- 
tain : he made use of the works of Megasthe- 
nes and Berosus, and he wrote in the Ionic di- 
alect. His work was particularly valuable for 
chronology. The fragments of his history have 
been published by Scaliger, Be Emendationc 
Temporum ; and Richter, Berosi Chaldceorum 
Histories, &c, Lips., 1825. 

Abydos ( "A6v5oc : 'ASvdvvoc). 1. A town of 
the Troad on the Hellespont, and a Milesian 
colony. It was nearly opposite to Sestos, but a 
little lower down the stream. The bridge of 
boats which Xerxes constructed over the Hel- 
lespont, B.C. 480, commenced a little higher up 
than Abydos, and touched the European shore 
between Sestos and Madytus. The site of Aby- 
dos is a little north of Sultania or the old castle 
of Asia, which is opposite to the old castle of 
Europe. — 2. (Ruins near Arabat el Matfoon and 
El Birbeh), a city of Upper Egypt, near the west 
bank of the Nile ; once second only to Thebes, 
but in Strabo's time (A.D. 14) a 6mall village. 
It had a temple of Osiris and a Memnonium, both 
still standing, and an oracle. Here was found 
the inscription known as the Table of Abydos, 
which contains a list of the Egyptian kings. 

Abyla or Abila Mons or Columna ('ABvXn or 
'A6'i?in or^ln or bpoc : now Jebel Zatout, i. e., 
Apes' Hill, above Ceuta), a mountain in Maure- 
tania Tingitana, forming the eastern extremity 
of the south or African coast of the Fretum 
Gaditanum. This and Mount Calpe (Gibraltar), 
opposite to it on the Spanish coast, were called 
the Columns of Hercules, from the fah 'e that they 
were originally one mountain, whici was torn 
asunder by Hercules. 

Acacallis (' AKaKalliq), daughter of Minos, 
by whom Apollo begot a son Miletus, as well as 
other children. Acacallis was in Crete a com- 
mon name for a narcissus 

Acacesium ('AKaKTjouv : 'A/ca/cTjeioc), a town 
of Arcadia, at the foot of a hill of the same name. 

Acacesius ('AKaKTjcLoc), a surname of Mer- 
cury (Hermes), for which Homer uses the form 
Acacetes. Some writers derive it from the Ar- 
cadian town of Acacesium, in which he was be- 
lieved to have been brought up ; others from a 
priv. and naKoc, and suppose it to mean " the 
god who does not hurt." The same surname 
is given to Prometheus, whence it may be in- 
ferred that its meaning is that of benefactor "or 
deliverer from evil. 

Acacetes. Vid. Acacesius. 

3 



ACACUS. 



ACCA LAURENTIA. 



[Aclcus CAkokos). son of Lycaon, a king in 
Arcadia, who brought up Mercury (Hermes), 
and founded Acacesiuin: vid. Acacestus.] 

AcIdemia ('AKadjjfieia or 'AffOKtiftife : also 
Academia in the older Latin writers), a piece oi 
land on the Cephissus, six stadia from Athens, 
originally belonging to the hero Academus, and 
subsequently a gymnasium, which was adorned 
by Cimon with plane and olive plantations, 
statues, and other works of art. Here taught 
Plato, who possessed a piece of land in the 
neighborhood, and after him his followers, who ; 
were hence called the Academici, or Academic 
philosophers. When Sulla besieged Athens in ; 
B.C. 87, he cut down the plane trees in order to 
construct his military machines ; but the place , 
was restored soon afterward. Cicero gave the f 
name of Academia to his villa near Puteoli, ' 
where he wrote his " Quasstiones Academicae." 

Academici. Vid. Academia. 

Academus ('A/vadfyuoc). an Attic hero, who be- 1 
trayed to Castor and Pollux, when they invaded : 
Attica to liberate their sister Helen, that she | 
was kept concealed at Aphidnae. For this the 
Tyndarids always showed him gratitude, and | 
whenever the Laeedaamonians invaded Attica, j 
they spared the land belonging to Academus. 
Vid. Academia. 

Acalandrus (now Salandrella), a river in Lu- 
cania, flowing into the Gulf of Tarentum. 

[Acalanthis ('AKa/.avdtc), daughter of Pierus, 
changed by the muses into a thistle-finch. Yid. j 
Pierus.] 

[Acamaxtis (' AnafiavTig), one of the Attic i 
tribes, so named from the hero Acamas I.] 

Acamas (' And/lag). 1. Son of Theseus and 
Phaedra, accompanied Diomedes to Troy to de- j 
mand the surrender of Helen. During his stay 
at Troy he won the affection of Laodice, daughter 1 
of Priam, and begot by her a son, Munitus. He 
was one of the Greeks concealed in the wooden 
horse at the taking of Troy. The Attic tribe ; 
Acamantis derived its name from him. — 2. Son 
of Antenor and Theano, one of the bravest Tro- 
jans, slain by Meriones. — 3. Son of Eussorus, one 1 
of the leaders of the Thraciaus in the Trojan 
war, slain by the Telamouian Ajax. — [4. Son of 
Asius, fought on the side of the Trojans, slain by 
Meriones.] 

[Acamas (JAnd/uag : now Cape Salizano or St. 
Pifano\ a promontorv at the northwest end of 
Cyprus.] 

[Acampsis ('Anafiipig : now Tschorah or Bitu- 
mi), a river of Asia forming the boundary be- 
tween Pontus and Colchis, and so named from 
its impetuous course, a priv. and Kafiizru. It was 
called by the Datives themselves Boas.'] 

Acanthus {'AKav6^ : 'AKuvdtog). I. (Ruins 
near Erso). a town on the Isthmus, which con- 
nects the peninsula of Athos with Chalcidice, on 
the canal cut by Xerxes (vid. Athos). It was 
founded by the inhabitants of Andros, and con- 
tinued to be a place of considerable importance 
from the time of Xerxes to that of the Romans. 
—2. (Now Dashur), a town on the west bauk of 
the Nile, 120 stadia south of Memphis, with a 
temple of Osiris. 

[Acanthus ( r Anavdog), a LacedsmoDian, victor 
at Olympia in the dtav/.og. was said to have beeu 
the first who i-an naked at these games.] 

A car nan (Anapvdv, -dvog), one of the Epigo- 1 
4 



ni, son of Alcmaaon and Callirrhoe, and brother 
of Amphoterus. Their father was murdered by 
Phegeus when they were very young, and Callir- 
rhoe prayed to Jupiter (Zeus) to make her sons 
grow quickly, that they might be able to avenge 
the death of their father. The prayer was grant- 
ed, and Acarnan with his brother slew Phegeus, 
his wife, and his two sons. The inhabitants of 
Psophis, where the sons had been slain, pursued 
the murderers as far as Tegea, where, however, 
they were received and rescued. They after^ 
ward went to Epirus, where Acarnan founded 
the state called after him Acarnania. 

Acarnania (Anapvavia : 'Anapvdv, -uvog), the 
most westerly province of Greece, was bound- 
ed on the north by the Ambracian Gulf, on the 
west and southwest by the Ionian Sea, on the 
northeast by Amphilochia, which is sometimes 
included in Acarnania, and on the east by /Eto- 
lia, from which at a later time it was separated 
by the Achelous. The name of Acarnauia does 
not occur in Homer. In the most ancient times 
the land was inhabited by the Taphii, Telebuae, 
and Leleges, and subsequently by the Curetes, 
who emigrated from ^Etolia and settled there. 
At a later time a colony from Argos, said to 
have been led by Acarnan, the son of Alcmaeon, 
settled in the country. In the seventh century 
B.C. the Corinthians founded several towns on 
the coast. The Acarnanians first emerge from 
obscurity at the beginning of the Peloponuesian 
war, B.C. 431. They were then a rude people, 
living by piracy and robbery, and they always 
remained behind the rest of the Greeks in civili- 
zation and refinement. They were good sling- 
ers, and are praised for their fidelity and courage. 
The different towns formed a league with a 
strategus at their head in time of war: the mem- 
bers of the league met at Stratos, and subse- 
quently at Thyrium or Leucas. Under the 
Romans Acarnania formed part of the province 
of Macedonia. 

[Acaste ('Akugt})), a daughter of Oceanus and 
Tethys.] 

Acastus ('AtiaoTos), son of Pelias, king of 
Iolcus, and of Anaxibia or Philomache. He 
was one of the Argonauts, and also took part ir 
the Calydonian hunt. His sisters were induced 
by Medea to cut up their father and boil him, 
in order to make him young agaiD. Acastus, 
in consequence, drove Jason and Medea from 
lolcus, and instituted funeral games in honor 
of his father. During these games Astydamia, 
the wife of Acastus. also called Hippolyte. first 
saw Peleus, whom Acastus had purified from 
the murder of Eurytioa When Peleus. faithful 
to his benefactor, refused to listen to her ad- 
dresses, she accused him to her husbaud of im- 
proper conduct. Shortly afterward, when Acastus 
and Peleus were hunting ou M"uut Peliou, and 
the latter had falleu asleep, Acastus took his 
sword from bim, and left him alone. He was, iu 
consequence, nearly destroyed by the Centaurs ; 
but he was saved by Chirou or Mercury (Hermes), 
returned to Acastus, and killed him, together 
with his wife. — [2. A kiug of Duliehium, men- 
tioned iu the Odyssey.] 

Acbarus. Vid. Abgarus. 

[Acca, a companion of the Volsciau heroine 
Camilla.] 

Acca Laurentia or Larentia, a mythical 



ACCIUS. 



ACH^EI. 



woman in early Roman story. According to 
one account, she was the wife of the shepherd 
Faustulus, and the nurse of Romulus and Remus 
after they had been taken from the she-wolf. 
Another account connects her with the legend 
of Hercules, by whose advice she succeeded in 
making Carutius or Tarrutius, an Etruscan, 
love and marry her. After his death she in- 
herited bis large property, which she left to the 
Roman people. Ancus Marcius, in gratitude 
for this, allowed her to be buried in the Vela- 
brum, and instituted an annual festival, the 
Larentalia, at which sacrifices were offered to 
the Lares. According to other accounts, again, 
she was not the wife of Faustulus, but a pros- 
titute, who, from her mode of life, was called 
lupa by the shepherds, and who left the property 
she gained in that way to the Roman people. 
Thus much seems certain, whatever we may 
think of the stories, that she was of Etruscan 
origin, and connected with the worship of the 
Lares, from which her name Larentia seems to 
be derived. 

L. Accius or Attius, an early Roman tragic 
poet and the son of a freedman, was born B.C. 
170, and lived to a great age. Cicero, when a 
young man, frequently conversed with him. 
His tragedies were chiefly imitated from the 
Greek, but he also wrote some on Roman sub- 
jects (Pratextata) ; one of which, entitled Brutus, 
was probably in honor of his patron, D. Brutus. 
We possess only fragments of his tragedies, 
but they are spoken of in terms of admiration 
by the ancient writers. Accius also wrote An- 
nates in verse, containing the history of Rome, 
like those of Ennius ; aud a prose work, Libri 
Didascalion, which seems to have been a his- 
tory of poetry. The fragments of his tragedies 
are given by Bothe, Poet. Scenici Latin., vol. v., 
Lips., 1834; and those of the Didascalia by 
Madvig, De L. Attii, Bidascaliis Comment., Haf- 
nise, 1831. 

Acco, a chief of the Senones in Gaul, who in- 
duced his countrymen to revolt against Csesar, 
B.C. 53, by whom he was put to death. 

Ace. Vid. Ptolemais. 

[Aceratos ('AKrjparoc), a priest and prophet 
at Delphi, who with sixty men alone did not 
abandon the place on the approach of Xerxes and 
his army.— 2. A poet of the Greek anthology.] 

Acerbas, a Tyrian priest of Hercules, who 
married Elissa, the sister of King Pygmalion. 
He had concealed his treasures in the earth, 
knowing the avarice of Pygmalion, but he was 
murdered by Pygmalion, who hoped to obtain 
his treasures through his sister. The prudence 
of Elissa saved the treasures, and she emigrated 
from Phoenicia. In this account, taken from 
Justin, Acerbas is the same person as Siehajus, 
and Elissa the same as Dido in Virgil (JEn., i., 
343, seq.). The names in Justin are undoubtedly 
more correct than in Virgil • for Virgil here, as in 
other cases, has changed a foreign name into one 
more convenient to him. 

Acerr^e (Acerranus). 1. (Now Acerra), a 
town in Campania on the Clanius, received 
the Roman franchise in B.C. 332. It was de- 
stroyed by Hannibal, but was rebuilt. 2. (Now 
Qerra), a town of the Insubres in Gallia Trans- 
padana. 

Acersecomes ('A/cepo-eno/inc), a surname of | 



Apollo, expressive of his beautiful hair, which 
was never cut or shorn. 

[Aces ("Aktjs), a river in the interior of Asia, 
from which the country of the Hyrcanians, Par- 
thian6, Chorasmians, &c, was watered by means 
of canals. On the conquest of this region by 
the Persian king, the stoppage of this irrigation 
converted many fertile lands into barren wastes. 
This river has been supposed to be the same 
with the Ochus or Oxus, <md Wilson (Ariana, p. 
129), following Gatterer, inclines to the latter.] 

[Acesamenus ('A/c eaafievug), a king of Thrace, 
father of Peribcea, and said to have founded the 
city Aeesamenae in Macedonia.] 

[Acesander (' AKeoavdpog), a Greek historian, 
who wrote an account of Cyrene.] 

Acesas CAneodc), a native of Salamis in Cy- 
prus, famed for his skill in weaving cloth with 
variegated patterns (polymitarius). He and his 
son Helicon were the first who made a peplus 
for Minerva (Athena) Polias. They must have 
lived before the time of Euripides and Plato, 
who mention this peplus. 

[Aoesimbrotus ('AKeai/LcSporoc), an admiral of 
the Rhodians, and a delegate to the conference 
between T. Flamininus and Philippus.] 

Acesines ('AKeoivrj^; : 'Atcealvog). 1. (Now 
Chenaub), a river in India, into which the Hydas- 
pes flows, and which itself flows into the Indus. 
— 2. (Now Alcantara), a river in Sicily, near 
Tauromenium, called also Onobalas. 

[Acesics CA/ceacog), an appellation of Apollo, 
" the healer," from a/ceo/uai.] 

[Acesta. Vid. Segesta.] 

Acestes ('AKeoTTjg), son of a Trojan woman 
of the name of Egesta or Segesta, who was sent 
by her father to Sicily, that she might not be 
devoured by the monsters which infested the 
territory of Troy. When Egesta arrived in Sic- 
ily, the river-god Crimisus begot by her a son, 
Acestes, who was afterward regarded as the 
hero who had founded the town of Segesta. 
iEneas, on his arrival in Sicily, was hospitably 
received by Acestes. 

[Acestodorus (' AicECTodopoc), a Greek histo- 
rian from whom Plutarch quotes some incidents 
relating to the battle of Salamis, in his Life of 
Themistocles.] 

Acestor (' AneoTup). 1. Surnamed Sacas, on 
account of his foreign origin, was a tragic poet 
at Athens, aud a contemporary of Aristophanes. 
— 2. A sculptor of Cnosus, who flourished about 
B.C. 452.] 

[Acestorides (' AicecToptdnc), a Corinthian 
chosen general by the Syracusans, but banished 
from Syracuse by Agathocles.] 

Acelea CAxata, from dxog , " grief"), " the 
distressed one," a surname of Ceres (Demeter) 
at Athens, so called on account of her sorrow for 
the loss of her daughter. 

Ach^ei ('Axacoi), one of the chief Hellenic 
races, were, according to tradition, descended 
from Achseus, who was the son of Xuthus and 
Creusa, and grandson of Hellen. The Achsei 
originally dwelt in Thessaly, and from thence 
migrated to Peloponnesus, the whole of which 
became subject to them, with the exception 
of Arcadia, and the country afterward called 
Achaia. As they were the ruling nation in 
Peloponnesus in the heroic times, Homer fre- 
quently gives the name of Achasi to the collect- 

5 



ACH^EMENES. 



ACHATES. 



ive Greeks. On the conquest of the greater 
part of Peloponnesus by the Heraclidse and the 
Dorians eighty years * after the Trojan war, 
many of the Achsei under Tisanienus, the son 
of Orestes, left their country and took posses- 
sion of the northern coast of Peloponnesus, then 
called JEgialea, and inhabited by the Ionians, 
whom they expelled from the country, which 
was henceforth called Achaia. The expelled 
Ionians migrated to Attica and Asia Minor. The 
Achaei settled in twelve cities : Pellene, ^Egira, 
jEo-ge, Bura, Helice, iEgiurn, Rhypae, Patrae, 
Pharffi, Olenus, Dyme, and Tritaea. These 
cities are said to have been governed by Tisa- 
nienus aud his descendants till Ogyges, upon 
whose death a democratical form of govern- 
ment was established in each state; but the 
twelve states formed a league for mutual de- 
fence and protection. In the Persian war the 
Acheei took no part ; and they had little influ- 
ence in the affairs of Greece till the time of 
the successors of Alexander. In B.C. 281 the 
Achsei, who were then subject to the Macedo- 
nians, resolved to renew their ancient league for 
the purpose of shaking off the Macedonian yoke. 
This was the origin of the celebrated Achaean 
League. It at first consisted of only four towns, 
Dyme, Patrae, Tritaea, and Pharae, but was sub- 
sequently joined by the other towns of Achaia, 
with the exception of Olenus and Helice. It 
did not, however, obtain much importance till 
B.C. 251, when Aratus united to it his native 
town, Sicyon. The example of Sicyon was 
followed by Corinth and many other towns in 
Greece, and the league soon became the chief I 
political power in Greece. At length the Achaei | 
declared war against the Romans, who destroyed j 
the league, and thus put an end to the independ- 1 
ence of Greece. Corinth, then the chief toAvn 
of the league, was taken by the Roman general ! 
Mummius, in B.C. 146, and the whole of south- 
ern Greece made a Roman province uuder the 
name of Achaia. The different states composing 
the Achaean League had equal rights. The 
assemblies of the league were held twice a year, 
in the spring and autumn, in a grove of Jupiter 
(Zeus) Homagyrius near JSgium. At these 
assemblies all the business of the league was 
conducted, and at the spring meeting the public 
functionaries were chosen. These were : 1. A 
strategus (arparnyoc) or general, and a hippar- 
ehus (iTTrrapxog) or commander of the cavalry ; 
2. A secretary (ypa/ifiarevg) ; and, 3. Ten demi- 
urgi {drjuLovpyoi, also called upxovrec), who appear 
to have had the right of convening the assembly. 
For further particulars, vid. Diet, of Ant., art. 
Achaicimi Fcedus. 

Ach.tEmexes ('Axai/iivTjc). 1. The ancestor of 
the Persian kings, who founded the family of the 
Achcet7ienid.ee ('Axaifievidcu), which was the no- 
blest family of the Pasargadae, the noblest of the 
Persian tribes. The Roman poets use the adjec- 
tive Acheemenius in the sense of Persian. [Some 
writers identify him with the Djeynschid of the 
Oriental historians.] — 2. Son of Darius L, gover- 
nor of Egypt, commanded the Egyptian fleet in 
the expedition of Xerxes against Greece, B.C. 
480. He was defeated and killed in battle by 
Inarus the Libyan, B.C. 460. 

Acblemenides or Achemenides, son of Ada- 
mastus of Ithaca, and a companion of Ulysses, 
6 



who left him behind in Sicily, when he fled from 
the Cyclopes. Here he was found by ^Eueas, 
who took him with him. 

AchjEus ('Axatoc). 1. Son of Xuthus, the 
mythical ancestor of the AcmEi.— 2. Governor 
under Antiochus III. of all Asia west of Mount 
Taurus. He revolted against Antiochus, but was 
defeated by the latter, taken prisoner at Sardis, 
and put to death B.C. 214.— 3. Of Eretria in 
Eubcea, a tragic poet, born B.C. 484. In 447, he 
contended with Sophocles and Euripides, and 
though he subsequently brought out many dra- 
mas, according to some as many as thirty-four 
or forty, he nevertheless only gained the prize 
once. In the satyrical drama he possessed 
considerable merit. The fragments of his pieces 
have been published by Urlichs, Bonn, 1834; 
[and by Wagner in his Fragnienta Tragicorwxi 
Grcecorwn (in Didot's Biblioth. Graec), p. 36-52. 
The satjric pieces have been published sepa- 
rately in Friebel's Grcecormn Satyrographorum 
Frag77\enta, Berlin, 1831. — 4. A Greek tragic 
poet of Syracuse, who flourished at a later period 
than the foregoing, belonging to the Alexandrine 
period : he was said to have written ten or four- 
teen tragedies.] 

Achaia ('A^cuoc : 'Axaid). 1. The northern 
coast of the Peloponnesus, originally called JEgi- 
alea (Aiyt^eia) or iEgialus (AiytaAog), i. e. the 
coast land, was bounded on the north by the 
j Corinthian Gulf and the Ionian Sea, on the south 
j by Elis and Arcadia, on the west by the Ionian 
! sea, and on the east by Sicyonia. It was a nar- 
I row slip of country sloping down from the moun- 
! tains to the sea. The coast is generally low, and 
j has few good ports. Respecting its inhabitants, 
vid. AchjEI. — 2. A district in Thessaly, which 
| appears to have been the original seat of the 
Achaei. It retained the name of Achaia in the 
! time of Herodotus. — 3. The Roman province in- 
j eluded Peloponnesus and northern Greece south 
of Thessaly. It was formed on the dissolution 
, of the Achaean League in B. C. 146, and hence 
I derived its name. 

[Achaia, ('Axaia), a city and harbor on the 
| northeastern coast of the Euxine, mentioned by 
i Arrian in his Periplus.] 

[Achaeaca ('Axupana), a village near Xysa in 
' Lydia, having a celebrated Plutonium, and an 
j oracular cave of Charon, where intimations were 
I given to the sick respecting the cure of their 
j maladies.] 

[ A chaedel's ('Axapdeog : now Egorlik), a river 
j of Asiatic Sarmatia, flowing from the Caucasus 
' into the Palus Maeotis] 

Achar>~.£ ('Axapva'c : 'Axccpvsvg, pi., 'Axapvqg), 
the principal demus of Attica, belonging to the 
tribe OZne'is, sixty stadia north of Athens, pos- 
sessed a rough and warlike population, who were 
able to furnish three thousand hoplitae at the 
commencement of the Peloponnesian war. Their 
land was fertile, and they carried on considerable 
traffic in charcoal. One of the plays of Aristo- 
phanes bears the name of the inhabitants of this 
demus. 

Achakr^e, a town in Thessaliotis in Thessaly, 
on the River Pamisus. 

[Achates, a friend and companion of iEneas, 
so remarkable for the fidelity of his attachment, 
that " fidus Achates " became subsequently a 
proverb.] 



ACHATES. 



ACHILLES. 



Achates (now Dirillo), a river in southern 
Sicily, between Camarina and Gela, in which the 
first agate is said to have been found. 

A cheloides, a surname of the Sirens, the 
daughters of Achelous and a Muse ; also a sur- 
name of water nymphs. 

Achelous ('A^eAwof : 'A^eXwi'of in Horn. : now 
Aspro Potamo), more anciently called Thoas, 
Axenus, and Thestius, the largest river in 
Greece. It rises in Mount Pindus, and flows 
southward, forming the boundary between Acar- 
nania and JStolia, and falls into the Ionian Sea 
opposite the islands called Echinades, [which 
were supposed to have been formed in part by 
the depositions of this very rapid river.] It is 
about one hundred and thirty miles in length. 
The god of this river is described as the offspring 
of Oceanus and Tethys, and as the eldest of their 
three thousand sons. He fought with Hercules 
for Deianlra, but was conquered in the contest. 
He then took the form of a bull, but was again 
overcome by Hercules, who deprived him of 
one of his horns, which, however, he recovered 
by giving up the horn of Amalthea. According 
to Ovid. {Met., ix., 87), the Naiads changed the 
horn which Hercules took from Achelous into 
the horn of plenty. Achelous was, from the 
earliest times, considered to be a great divinity 
throughout Greece, and was invoked in prayers, 
sacrifices, &c. On several coins of Acarnania, 
the god is represented as a bull with the head 
of an old man. Achelous was also the name of 
a river in Arcadia, and of another in Phthiotis 
in Thessaly. 

AcHEMENIDES. Vid. ACH,£MENIDES. 

Acheron ('A^tpwv), the name of several riv- 
ers, all of which were, at least at one time, be- 
lieved to be connected with the lower world. — 1. 
[Now Gurla, or River of Suli.~\ A river in Thes- 
protia in Epirus, which flows through the Lake 
Acherusia into the Ionian Sea. — 2. A river in 
Eiis, which flows into the Alpheus. — 3. [Proba- 
bly Lese or Arconti.] A river in southern Italy, 
in the country of the Bruttii, on which Alexan- 
der of Epirus perished. — 4. The river of the 
lower world, round which the shades hover, and 
into which the Pyriphlegethon and Cocytus flow. 
In late writers the name of Acheron is used, in 
a general sense, to designate the whole of the 
lower world. The Etruscans were acquainted 
with the worship of Acheron (Acheruns) from 
very early times, as we must infer from their 
Acheruntici libri, which treated of the deification 
of souls, and of the sacrifices (Acheruntia sacra) 
by which this was to be effected. 

AcherontLy. 1. (Now Acerenza), a town in 
Apulia, on a summit of Mount Vultur, whence 
Horace (Carm., iii., 4, 14) speaks of celsce nidum 
Achero?ituv.—2. A town on the River Acheron, 
in the country of the Bruttii. Vid. Acheron, 
No. 3. 

Acherusia ('Axepovcta Mfmf or 'Axepovcig), 
the name of several lakes and swamps, which, 
like the various rivers of the name of Acheron, 
were at the same time believed to be connected 
with the lower world, until at last the Ache- 
rusia came to be considered to be in the lower 
world itself. The lake to which this belief 
seems to have been first attached was the Ache- 
rusia in Thesprotia, through which the Acheron 
flowed. Other lakes .or swamps of the same 



name were near Hermione in Argolis, between 
Cumae and Cape Misenum in Campania, and 
lastly in Egypt, near Memphis. Acherusia was 
also the name of a peninsula, near Heraclea in 
Bithynia, with a deep chasm, into which Her- 
cules is said to have descended to bring up the 
dog Cerberus. 

Achetum, a small town in Sicily, the site of 
which is uncertain. 

Achilla or Acholla ('A^oAAa : 'A^oAAaZof : 
Achillitanus : now El Aliah, ruins), a town on 
the sea-coast of Africa, in the Carthaginian ter- 
ritory (Byzacena), a little above the northern 
point of the Syrtis Minor. 

Achillas ('A^AAdc), one of the guardians 
of the Egyptian king Ptolemy Dionysius, and 
commander of the troops when Pompey fled to 
Egypt, B.C. 48. It was he and L. Septimius 
who killed Pompey. He subsequently joined 
the eunuch Pothinus in resisting Caesar, and 
obtained possession of the greatest part of Alex- 
andrea. He was shortly afterwards put to 
death by Arsinoe, the youngest sister of Ptolemy, 
B.C. 47. 

[Achille'is, a poem of Statius, turning on the 
story of Achilles. Vid. Statius.] 

Achilles ('A^/Mfuc), the great hero of the 
Iliad. — Homeric story. Achilles was the son of 
Peleus, king of the Myrmidones in Phthiotis, in 
Thessaly, and of the Nereid Thetis. From his 
father's name, he is often called Pelides, Pele'ia- 
des, or Pellon, and from his grandfather's, AEaci- 
des. He was educated by Phoenix, who taught 
him eloquence and the arts of war, and accom- 
panied him to the Trojan war. In the healing 
art he was instructed by Chiron, the centaur. 
His mother, Thetis, foretold him that his fate 
was either to gain glory and die early, or to live 
a long but inglorious life. The hero chose the 
former, and took part in the Trojan war, from 
which he knew that he was not to return. In 
fifty ships, he led his hosts of Myrmidones, Hel- 
lenes, and Acbaeaus, against Troy. Here the 
swift-footed Achilles was the great bulwark of 
the Greeks, and the worthy favorite of Minerva 
(Athena) and Juno (Hera). Previous to the dis- 
pute with Agamemnon, he ravaged the country 
around Troy, and destroyed twelve towns on 
the coast and eleven in the interior of the coun- 
try. When Agamemnon was obliged to give 
up Chryse'is to her father, he threatened to take 
away Briseis from Achilles, who surrendered 
her on the persuasion of Minerva (Athena), but 
at the same time refused to take any further 
part in the war, and shut himself up in his tent. 
Jupiter (Zeus), on the entreaty of Thetis, prom- 
ised that victory should be on the side of the 
Trojans, until the Achaeans should have hon- 
ored her son. The affairs of the Greeks de- 
clined in consequence, and they were at last 
pressed so hard, that an embassy was sent to 
Achilles, offering him rich presents and the res- 
toration of Briseis ; but in vain. Finally, how- 
ever, he was persuaded by Patroclus, his dear- 
est friend, to allow him to make use of his men, 
his horses, and his armor. Patroclus was slain, 
and when this news reached Achilles, he was 
seized with unspeakable grief. Thetis consoled 
him, and promised new arms, to be made by 
Vulcan (Hephaestus), and Iris appeared to rouse 
him from his lamentations, and exhorted him 
7 



ACHILLES. 



ACHILLZUS DROMOS 



to rescue the body of Patroelus. Achilles now 
rose, and his thundering voice alone put the 
Trojans to flight When Ks new armor was 
brought to him, he hurried to the field of battle, 
disdaining to take any drink or food until the 
death of his friend should be avenged. He 
wounded and slew numbers of Trojans, and at 
length met Hector, whom he chased thrice 
around the walls of the city. He then slew 
him, tied his body to his chariot, and dragged 
him to the ships of the Greeks, After this, he 
burned the body of Patroclus, together with 
twelve yoivg captive Trojans, who were sac- 
rificed ta appease the spirit of his Mend ; and 
subsequently gave up the body of Hector to 
Priam, who came in person to beg for it Achil- 
les himself fell in the battle at the Scaean gate, 
before Troy was takea His death itself does 
net occur in the Iliad, but it is alluded to in a 
few passages i'xxi:_ £ 5 3 ; xxL, 278). It is ex- 
pressly mentioned in the Odyssey (xxiv., 36), 
where* it is said thai his fail — bis conqueror is 
not mentioned — was lamented by godfe and men 
that his remains, together with these of Patrc- 
elns, were buried in a golden urn, which Bac- 
chus (Dionysus) had given as a present to The- 
tis, and were deposited in a place on the coast 
of the Hellespont, where a mound was raised 
over diem. Achilles is the principal hero of 
the Iliad : he is the handsomest and bravest of 
all the Greeks; he is affectionate toward his 
mother and his friends: formidable in battles, 
which are his delight ; open-hearted and without 
fear, and, at the same time, susceptible of the 
gentle and quiet joys of home. His greatest 
passion is ambition, and when his sense of hon- 
or is hurt he is unrelenting in his revenge and 
anger, but withal submits obediently to the will 
of the gods. — Later traditions. These chiefly 
consist in accounts which fill up the history of 
his ye nth an d death. Hie m ether, wishing to 
make her son Immortal is said to have con- 
cealed him by night in the fire, in order to de- 
stroy the mortal tarts he had inherited from hie 
father, and by day to have anointed him with 
ambrosia. But Peleus one night discovered his 
child in the fire, and cried out in terror. Thetis 
left her son and fled, and Peleus intrusted him 
to Chiron, who educated and instructed him in 
the arts of rtauur. h anther, and plaviui* the ph:: 
minx, and also changed his eiiriaai^name. Li- 
gyron. i. e, the c whining,"' into Achilles. Chi- 
ron fed his pupil with the hearts of lions and the 
marrow of bears. According to other accounts, 
Thetis endeavored to make Achilles immortal 
by dipping him in the River Stvx and succeed- 
ed with the except: :n ■:: the ankles. bv -hi:h 
she held him. When he was nine years old, 
Calehas declared that Trev could net he taken 
with eat his and. ani Thetis. knowing that this 
war would he fatal v-^ disguise! him as a 
maiden, and introduced him among the daugh- 
ters of Lyeomedes ef So-tt-.s. where he was 
called by the name of Pyrrba on account of his 
golden locks. But his real character did not 
remain concealed long, for one of his compan- 
ions, Deidamia. became mother of a son, Pyr- 
rhus or >~eoptolemus, by him. Ulysses at last 
discovered his place of concealment, and Achil- 
les immediately promised his assistance. Bor- 
ing the war against Trov, Achilles sl-w Pen- 
8 



also fought 
e accounts of his 
jugh all agree in 
y human hands, or, 
rference of the god 
traditions, he was 
eeording to others, 
ice of Paris in kill- 



| by L lyases anc 
: mor was pron 
am ones the Go- 
test between tl 
his body. Fiti 
les became cue 
and dwelled in 
he was united ] 
son ef the Zarti 
fied for refuge f 
and whe persua 
deity. Jupiter 



: 



iia — [2. A 
mo (Hera) 
ter (Zeus), 
narrv that 



the time to come should be illustrious person- 
ages.— 3. The preceptor of Chiron, after whom 
Chiron named the son of Peleus. — 4L The in- 
ventor of the ostracism in Athens, according 
to one account — 5. Son of Jupiter (Zens) and 
T^Tnia ) so beautiful that Pan awarded to him 
the prize ef heauty ever every competitor. Ve- 
nus was so offended at this, that she inspired 
Pan with a fruitless passion for the nymph 
Echo, and also wrought a hideous change in his 
person.] 

Achilles Taxtcs, or, as others call him, Achil- 
les Statins, an Alexandrine rhetorician, lived in 
the latter half of the fifth or the beginning of 
the sixth century of our era. He is the author 
of a Greek romance in eight books, containing 
the adventures of two lovers. Clitophon and 
Leucippe, which has come down to us. The 
best elides is by xr. Jacobs. Lips. 15-21. 5ui- 
das ascribes to this Achilles a work on the 
sphere (-tpt cooipoc), a fragment of which, pro- 
fessing to be an introduction to the Phenomena 
of Aratus, is still extant But this work was 
written at an earlier reeled. It is printed in 
Petavius, ZTranologio, Paris, 1630, and Amster- 



trai (A^tA/^iov). a fortified place near 
ntory Sigeum in the Troadl [founded 
tfleneans, and in the neighborhood of 
hflles was simposed to have been 
There was a place of the same name 
amerian Bosporus, Strait* of Kajfa, on 



whieh^Abhilh 
buried.] The; 
on the Cimme 
the Asiatic sic 

Aemnnzrs 
der Diocletian 
time. He wa 
ef eiirbt neenti 



title of emperor 
over Lgypt for 
;•>:•! etian after a siege 
rea. and put to death 

ruXewg ipbuor : now 
>w tongue of land in. 



ACHILLEUS. 



ACRJEA. 



the Euxine Sea, not far from the mouth of the 
Borysthenes, where Achilles is said to have 
made a race-course. Before it lay the cele- 
brated Island of Achilles {Insula AchittU) or 
Leuce (AevKTj), where there was a temple of 
Achilles. 

Achilleus Portus ('A^/Uaof Mfirjv), a har- 
bor in Laconia, near the promontory Tsenarum. 

Achillides, a patronymic of Pyrrhus, son of 
Achilles. 

A chillis Insula. Vid. Achilleus Dromos. 

Achiroe ('AxipoT]), daughter of Nilus and wife 
of Belus, by whom she became the mother of 
jEgyptus and Danaus. 

Achivi, the name of the Achaei in the Latin 
writers, and frequently used, like Achsei, to sig- 
nify the whole Greek nation. Vid. Achsei. 

Acholla. Vid. Achilla. 

Acholoe. Vid. HaRPYLjE. 

Achradina or A cr a din a. Vid. Syracuse.' 

Acichorius ('AKix^piog), one of the leaders of 
the Gauls, who invaded Thrace and Macedonia 
in B. C. 280. In the following year he accom- 
panied Brennus in his invasion of Greece. Some 
writers suppose that Brennus and Acichorius are 
the same person, the former being only a title, 
and the latter the real name. 

Acidalia (mater), a surname of Venus, from 
the well Acidalius, near Orchomenos, where she 
used to bathe with the Graces. 

[Acidas ('A/ca5af), a small river of Triphylian 
Elis, which ran into the Anigrus.] 

AcIdinus, L. Manlius. 1. One of the Roman 
generals in the second Punic war, praetor ur- 
banus, B. C. 210, served against Hasdrubal in 
207, and was sent into Spain in 206, where he 
remained till 199. — 2. Surnamed Fulvianus, be- 
cause he originally belonged to the Fulvia gens, 
praetor B. C. 188 in Nearer Spain, and consul in 
179 with his own brother Q. Fulvius Flaccus, 
which is the only instance of two brothers hold- 
ing the consulship at the same time. 

[Acidon ('A/aoW), same as the Acidas, q. v.] 

Acilia Gens, plebeian. Its members are 
mentioned under the family names of Aviola, 
Balbus, and Glabrio. 

[Acilisene {'AklIcg^vt}), a district of Armenia 
Major, between Antitaurus and the Euphrates.] 

[Acimincum or Acumincum (now Peterward- 
ein), a town in Lower Pannonia, on the Danube.] 

[Acincum or Aquincum (now Buda or Old, 
Ofen,) a strongly fortified town of Pannonia, on 
the Danube.] 

[Acinipo (ruins near Rondo), a town of His- 
pania Baetica, of which some remarkable remains 
still exist] 

[A ciris (* AKLptg : now Agri), a river of Lu- 
cania, flowing into the Sinus Tarentinus.] 

Acis ( T Ai«f) son of Faunus and Symaethis, was 
beloved by the nymph Galatea: Polyphemus 
the Cyclops, jealous of him, crushed him under 
a huge rock. His blood, gushing forth from un- 
der the rock, was changed by the nymph into 
the River Acis or Acinius (now Fiume di Jaci). 
at the foot of Mount iEtna. This story, which 
is related only by Ovid {Met, xiii., 7 50, seq.), is 
perhaps no more than a happy fiction suggested 
by the manner in which the little river springs 
forth from under a rock. 

[Acis ( T A/af), a river of Sicily. Vid. the fore- 
going.] 



[Acmon {'Ak/iuv). 1. A companion of Dio- 
medes, who was changed into a bird for disre- 
spect to Venus. 2. Son of Elytius of Lyrnes- 
sus, a companion of ^Eneas.] 

A cm oni a {'An/iovta : 'AKfioviTr/^ : Acmonensis), 
a city of the Greater Phrygia. 

Acmonides, one of the three Cyclopes in Ovid, 
is the same as Pyracmon in Virgil, aud as Arges 
in most other accounts of the Cyclopes. 

Accetes {'Akoittis), son of a poor fisherman 
of Maeonia, who served as a pilot in a ship. 
After landing at the Island of Naxos, the sailors 
brought with them on board a beautiful boy 
asleep, whom they wished to take with them ; 
but Acoetes, who recognized in the boy the god 
Bacchus, dissuaded them from it, but in vain. 
When the ship had reached the open sea, the 
boy awoke, and desired to be carried back to 
Naxos. The sailors promised to do so, but did 
not keep their word. Hereupon the god dis- 
closed himself to them in his majesty; vines 
begau to twine round the vessel, tigers appear- 
ed, and the sailors, seized with madness, jump- 
ed into the sea and perished. Acoetes alone 
was saved and conveyed back to Naxos, where 
he was initiated into the Bacchic mysteries. 
This is the account of Ovid {Met, iii., 582, &c). 
Other writers call the crew of the ship Tyrrhe- 
nian pirates, and derive the name of the Tyr- 
rhenian Sea from them. 

Acontius {'AnovTiog), a beautiful youth of the 
Island of Ceos. On one occasion he came to 
Delos to celebrate the annual festival of Diana, 
and fell in love with Cydippe, the daughter of a 
noble Athenian. In order to gain her, he had 
recourse to a stratagem. While she was sitting 
in the temple of Diana, he threw before her 
an apple, upon which he had written the words, 
" I swear by the sanctuary of Diana to marry 
Acontius." "The nurse took up the apple and 
handed it to Cydippe, who read aloud what was 
written upon it, and then threw the apple away. 
But the goddess had heard her vow, and the 
repeated illness of the maiden, when she was 
about to marry another man, at length compel- 
led her father to give her in marriage to Acon- 
tius. This story is related by Ovid {Heroid., 
20, 21), who borrowed it from a lost poem of 
Callimachus, entitled " Cydippe." 

Acoris {"Aicopic ), king of Egypt, assisted Evag- 
oras, king of Cyprus, against Artaxerxes, king 
of Persia, about B. C. 385. He died about 374, 
before the Persians entered Egypt, which was 
in the following year. 

[Acra {"Aupa), a name of many places situ- 
ated on heights and promontories. 1. A vil- 
lage on the Cimmerian Bosporus. — 2. A town 
in Eubcea.— 3. A town in Arcadia.— 4. Acra 
Leuce {levari), a town in Hispania Tarracon en- 
sis, founded by Hamilcar Barcas.] 

Acrjs {"A/cpac). 1. (Ruins near Palazzalo), a 
town in Sicily, west of Syracuse, and ten stadia 
from the River Anapus, was founded by the Syr- 
acusans seventy years after the foundation of 
their own city. — 2. A town in JStolia, 

[ Acr^a {'Atcpa'ia), a daughter of the river-god 
Asterion (near Mycenae), one of the nurses of 
Juno. A mountain in Argolis, opposite to the 
Heraeum, was named after her Acrcea.] 

Acr^a {'A/cpata) and Acr^eus are surnames 
given to various goddesses and gods whose 

9 



ACEJEPHEUS. 



ACTiEUS. 



temples were situated upon hills, such as Jupi- 
ter (Zeus), Juno (Hera), Venus (Aphrodite), 
Minerva (Pallas), Diana (Artemis), and others. 

ACRJSPHECS. Vid. ACBJEPHIA. ^ 

Acr^phia, Acr^pui^ or Acr^phion' ( knpac- 
6ta, 'AKpatfcai, > Anpa&ov : 'AKpat^tog Anpat- 
Laiog: now Kardhitza) a town m Bcetia on 
the Lake Copais, said to have been founded by 
Acraapheus, the son of Apollo. 

[ACR^US. Vid. ACR/EA.] 

f Acragas ('AKpayag : now Girgenti or Fmme 
di S Biagio). a small river of Sicily, on which 
was the celebrated city of Acragas or Agrigen- 
tum.] 

Acragas. Vid. Agrigentum. 

[Acrathos ('AKpudug uKpov, i. e., "Anpog 
'A6ug : now Cape Monte Santo), the northeast- 
ern promontory in the peninsula Acte in Mace- 
donia.] 

Acratus, a freedman of ISTero, sent into Asia 
and Achaia (A.D. 64) to plunder the temples 
and take away the statues of the gods. 

Acri.e ('AicpiaL or 'AKpalai), a town in La- 
conia, not far from the mouth of the Eurotas. 

AcbilljE, a town in Sicily between Agrigen- 
tum and Acrse. 

Acrisione (' AKptaiuvTj), a patronymic of Da- 
nae, daughter of Acrisius. Perseus, grandson 
of Acrisius, was called, in the same way, Acris- 
loniades. 

Acrisius (' AKptciog), son of Abas, king of Ar- 
gos, and of Ocalia, grandson of Lynceus, and 
great grandson of Danaus. His twin-brother 
was Prcetus, with whom he is said to have quar- 
relled even in the womb of his mother. Acris- 
ius expelled Prcetus from his inheritance ; but, 
supported by his father-in-law Iobates, the Ly- 
cian, Prcetus returned, and Acrisius was com- 
pelled to share his kingdom with his brother by 
giving up to him Tiryns, while he retained Ar- 
gos for himself. An oracle had declared that 
Danae, the daughter of Acrisius, would give 
birth to a son who would kill his grandfather. 
For this reason he kept Danae shut up in a sub- 
terraneous apartment, or in a brazen tower, 
but here she became mother of Perseus, not- 
withstanding the precautions of her father, ac- 
cording to some accounts by her uncle Prcetus, 
and according to others by Jupiter (Zeus), who 
visited her in the form of a shower of gold. 
Acrisius ordered mother and child to be ex- 
posed on the wide sea in a chest ; but the chest 
floated toward the Island of Seriphus, where 
both were rescued by Dictys. As to the man- 
ner in which the oracle was subsequently ful- 
filled, vid. Perseus. 

Acritas ('AKpetrag : now Cape Gallo), the 
most southerly promontory in Messenia. 

Acroceraunia (rd 'Anpofcepavvia, sc. bpn : 
now Cape Linguetta), a promontory in Epirus, 
jutting out into the Ionian sea, was the most 
westerly part of the Ceraunii Montes. The 
coast of the Acroceraunia was dangerous to 
ships, whence Horace (Carm. 1., 3, 20) speaks 
of infames scopulos Acroceraunia. 

AcROCORINTHUS. Vid. CORINTHUS. 

Acrolissus. Vid. Lissus. 

Acron. 1. King of the Caeninenses, whom 
Romulus slew in battle, and whose arms he 
dedicated to Jupiter Feretrius as Spolia Opima. 
— 2. An eminent physician of Agrigentum in 
10 



Sicily, is said to have been in Athens during 
the great plague (B.C. 430) in the Peloponne- 
sian war, and to have ordered large fires to be 
kindled in the streets for the purpose of purify- 
ing the air, which proved of great service to 
several of the sick. This fact, however, is not 
mentioned by Thucydides. The medical sect 
of the Empirici, in order to boast of a greater 
antiquity than the Dogmatici (founded about B. 
C. 400), claimed Acron as their founder, though 
they did not really exist before the third cen- 
tury B.C. — [3. An Etrurian of Corythus, an ally 
of iEneas, slain by Mezentius.] 

Acron, Helenius, a Roman grammarian, 
probably of the fifth century A.D., wrote notes 
on Horace, part of which are extant, and also, 
according to some critics, the scholia which we 
have on Persius. 

[Acronius Lacus. Vid. Brigantinus Lacus.] 

Acropolis. Vid. Athene. 

ACROPOLITA GEORGIUS (Teupyiog 'A/CpOTTO/lf- 

Tng), a Byzantine writer, was born at Constan- 
tinople in A.D. 1220, and died in 1282. He 
wrote several works which have come down 
to us. The most important of them is a his- 
tory of the Byzantine empire, from the taking 
of Constantinople by the Latins in 1204, down 
to the year 1261, when Michael PaUeologus de- 
livered the city from the foreign yoke. Edited 
by Leo Allatius, Paris, 1651 ; reprinted at Ven- 
ice, 1729. 

Acrorea (?) -AnpupELa), a mountainous tract 
of country in the north of Elis. 

Acrotatus CAKporarog). 1. Son of Cleome- 
nes IL, king of Sparta, sailed to Sicily in B.C. 
314 to assist the Agrigentines against Agatho- 
cles of Syracuse. On his arrival at Agrigen- 
tum, he acted with such tyranny that the in- 
habitants compelled him to leave the city. He 
returned to Sparta, and died before his father, 
leaving a son, Areus. — 2. Grandson of the pre- 
ceding, and the son of Areus L, king of Sparta ; 
bravely defended Sparta against Pyrrhus, in B.C. 
272; succeeded his father as king in 265, but 
was killed in the same year in battle against 
Aristodemus, the tyrant of Megalopolis. 

Acrothoum or Acrothoi C Anpodcoov , 'A/cpo- 
dooi : 'AKpodutrrig : now Lavra), afterward call- 
ed Uranopolis, a town near the extremity of the 
peninsula of Athos. 

Act^a ('A/cram), daughter of Nereus and 
Doris. 

AcTiEON ('AKTalov). 1. A celebrated hunts- 
man, son of Aristseus and Autonoe, a daughter 
of Cadmus, was trained in the art of hunting by 
the centaur Chiron. One day as he was hunt- 
ing, he saw Diana (Artemis) with her nymphs 
bathing in the vale of Gargaphia, whereupon 
the goddess changed him into a stag, in which 
form he was torn to pieces by his fifty dogs on 
Mount Cithseron. Others relate that he pro- 
voked the anger of the goddess by boasting 
that he excelled her in hunting. 2. Son of Me- 
lissus, and grandson of Abron, who had fled 
from Argos to Corinth for fear of the tyrant 
Phi don. Archias, a Corinthian, enamored with 
the beauty of Actseon, endeavored to carry him 
off; but in the struggle which ensued between 
Melissus and Archias, Actseon was killed. Vid. 
Archias. 

ActuEUS ('Auralog), son of Erisichthon, and 



ACTE. 



ADHERBAL. 



the earliest king of Attica. He had three daugh- 
ters, Agraulos, Herse, and Pandrosus, and was 
succeeded by Cecrops, who married Agraulos. 

Acte, the concubine of Nero, was originally 
a slave from Asia Minor. Nero at one time 
thought of marrying her ; whence he pretend- 
ed that she was descended from King Attalus. 
She survived Nero. 

Acte ('A/ctt?'), properly a piece of land run- 
ning into the sea, and attached to another larger 
piece of land, but not necessarily by a narrow 
neck. 1. Au ancient name of Attica, used espe- 
cially by the poets. — 2. The eastern coast of 
Peloponnesus, near Trcezen and Epidaurus. — 
3. The peninsula between the Strymonic and 
Singitic gulfs, on which Mount Athos is. 
Actiacus. Vid. Actium. 
[Actis, one of the Heliada?, who, according 
to Diodorus, migrated from Rhodes to Egypt, 
fouuded Heliopolis, which he named after his 
father, and taught the Egyptians astrology. The 
same writer states that the Greeks, having lost 
by a deluge nearly all the memorials of previ- 
ous events, became ignorant of their claim to 
the invention of this science, and allowed the 
Egyptians to arrogate it to themselves. Wesse- 
ling considers this a mere fable, based on the na- 
tional vanity of the Greeks.] 

Actisanes ('Aktiouvtjs), a king of ^Ethiopia, 
who conquered Egypt and governed it with jus- 
tice, in the reign of Amasis. This Amasis is 
either a more ancient king than the contempo- 
rary of Cyrus, [or else we must read Ammosis 
for Amasis.] 

Actium ("Aktiov : 'An-canoe, "Aictioc : now 
La Punta, not Azio), a promontory, and likewise 
a place in Acarnania, at the entrance of the 
Ambracian Gulf, off which Augustus gained the 
celebrated victory over Antony and Cleopatra, 
on September 2, B.C. 31. At Actium there was 
originally no town, but only a temple of Apollo, 
who was hence called Actiacus and Actius. This 
temple was beautified by Augustus, who estab- 
lished, or rather revived a festival to Apollo, 
called Actio, (vid. Diet, of Ant., s. v.), and erect- 
ed Nicopolis on the opposite coast, in commem- 
oration of his victory. A few buildings sprung 
up around the temple at Actium, but the place 
was only a kind of suburb of Nicopolis. 

[Actius ("Aktioc), an appellation of Apollo 
from his temple at Actium.] 
Actius. Vid. Attius. 

Actor ("A/crwp). 1. Son of Deion and Dio- 
mede, father of Mencetius, and grandfather of 
Patroclus. — 2. Son of Phorbas and Hyrmine, 
and husband of Molione, — 3. A companion of 
jEneas, of whose conquered lance Turnus made 
a boast. This story seems to have given rise 
to the proverb Actor is spolium (Juv., ii., 100) 
for any poor spoil. 

^ Actorides or Actorion ('AnToptdjjc or 'A/cro- 
pluv), patronymics of descendants of an Actor, 
such as Patroclus, Erithus, Eurytus, and Ctea- 
tus. 

Actuarius, Joannes, a Greek physician of 
Constantinople, probably lived in the reign of 
Andronicus II. Palseologus, AD. 1281-1328. 
He was the author of several medical works, 
which are extant, [and most of which have been 
published by Ideler in his " Physici et Medici 
Grasci Minores," Berlin, 1841, seq.] 



Aculeo, C, an eminent Roman lawyer, who 
married the sister of Helvia, the mother of Cic- 
ero : his son was C. Visellius Varro ; whence it 
would appear that Aculeo was only a surname 
given to the father from his acuteness, and that 
his full name was C. Visellius Varro Aculeo. 

[Acumenus ('Anov/xevoc), a celebrated physi- 
cian of Athens, who lived in the fifth century, be- 
fore Christ, a friend and companion of Socrates.] 

Acusilaus {'Akovol7moc), of Argos, one of the 
earlier Greek logographers, flourished about B. 
C. 525. Three books of his Genealogies are 
quoted, which were, for the most part, only a 
translation of Hesiod into prose. He wrote in 
the Ionic dialect. His fragments are published 
by Sturz, Lips., 1824, and in Didot's Fragment 
Histor. Grcec, p. 100, seq. — [2. An Athenian, 
who taught rhetoric at Rome in the time of 
Galba, and having amassed there great wealth, 
left it at his death to his countrymen.] 

[An. This preposition was often prefixed by 
the Romano to some natural object on the line 
of their marches, to indicate their stopping-place, 
especially when encamping in any quarter where 
they did not find any habitation or settlement by 
which the spot might be designated. Sometimes 
the preposition was prefixed to the ordinal num- 
ber, designating the distance in miles. Thus, 
Ad Aquas indicated a spot near which there was 
water, or an encampment near water ; Ad Quar- 
tum, " at the fourth mile-stone :" supply lapidem, 
<fcc] 

Ada ("Ada), daughter of Hecatomnus, king of 
Caria, and sister of Mausolus, Artemisia, Hi- 
drieus, and Pixodarus. She was married to her 
brother Hidrieus, on whose death (B.C. 344) she 
succeeded to the throne of Caria, but was ex- 
pelled by her brother Pixodarus in 340. When 
Alexander entered Caria in 334, Ada, who was 
in possession of the fortress of Alinda, surren- 
dered this place to him. After taking Halicar- 
nassus, Alexander committed the government 
of Caria to her. 

Adamant! a. Vid. Amalthea. 

Adamantius ('Ada/idvTLoe), a Greek physician, 
flourished about A.D. 415, the author of a Greek 
treatise on Physiognomy, which is borrowed in 
a great measure from Polemo's work on the 
same subject. Edited by Franzius, in Scrip- 
tores Phyaiognomiai Veteres, 1780, 8vo. 

[Adamas ('Addftac), a Trojan hero, slain by 
Meriones.] 

[Adamas ('Add/nag), a river of India, where 
diamonds were found. It is now the Soank, 
but near its mouth is called Bratnmi. 

[Adana (rd "Adava : 'Adavevc : now Adana), 
a city in the interior of Cilicia, on the west side 
of the River Sarus, in a fruitful district of coun- 
try.] 

Addua (now Adda), a river of Gallia Cisal- 
pina, which rises in the Rsetian Alps, and flows 
through the Lacus Larius (now Lago di Como) 
into the Po, about eight miles above Cremona. 

Adherbal ('Ardpdac), son of Micipsa, and 
grandson of Masinissa, had the kingdom of Nu- 
midia left to him by his father in conjunction 
with his brother Hiempsal and Jugurtha, B.C. 
118. After the murder of his brother by Ju- 
gurtha, Adherbal fled to Rome, and was restored 
to his share of the kingdom by the Romans in 
117. But he was again stripped of his domin- 

11 



ADIABENE. 



ADRASTIA 



ions by Jugurtha, and besieged in Cirta, where 
he was treacherously killed by Jugurtha m 112. 
[According to Gesenius, the more Oriental form 
of the name is Atherbal, signifying " the wor- 
shipper of Baal:" from this the softer form Ad- 
herbal arose.] 

Adiabe.ve CAdiatovy), a district of Assyria, 
east of the Tigris, and between the River Lycus, 
called Zabatus in the Anabasis of Xenophon, 
and the Capras, both of which are branches of 
the Tigris. 

AniMA-vrus ('Adet/iavrog). 1. The commander 
of the Corinthian fleet when Xerxes invaded 
Greece (B.C. 480), vehemently opposed the ad- 
vice of Themistocles to give battle to the Per- 
sians. — 2. An Athenian, one of the command- 
ers at the battle of JEgospotami, B.C. 405, where 
he was taken prisoner. He was accused of 
treachery in this battle, and is ridiculed by Aris- 
tophanes in the "Progs." — 3. The brother of 
Plato, frequently mentioned by the latter. 

Adis ('Adtc : now Rhades /), a considerable 
town on the coast of Africa, in the territory of 
Carthage (Zeugitana), a short distance east of 
Tunis. Under the Romans it appears to have 
been supplanted by a new city, named Maxula. 

Admete ('AdfnjTij). 1. Daughter of Oceanus 
and Tethys. — 2. Daughter of Eurystheus and 
Antimache or Admete. Hercules was obliged 
by her father to fetch for her the girdle of Mars 
(Ares), which was worn by Hippolyte, queen of 
the Amazons. 

Admetus ("Adfir/Toc). 1. Son of Pheres and 
Periclymene or Clymene. was king of Pherse in 
Thessaly. He took part in the Calydonian hunt 
and in the expedition of the Argonauts. He sued 
for the hand of Alcestis, the daughter of Pelias, 
who promised her to him on condition that he 
should come to her in a chariot drawn by lions 
and boars. This task Admetus performed by 
the assistance of Apollo, who served him, ac- 
cording to some accounts, out of attachment to 
him, or, according to others, because he was 
obliged to serve a mortal for one year for hav- 
ing slain the Cyclopes. On the day of his mar- 
riage with Alcestis, Admetus neglected to offer 
a sacrifice to Diana (Artemis), but Apollo recon- 
ciled the goddess to him, and at the same time 
induced the Moirae to grant to Admetus deliver- 
ance from death, if at the hour of his death his 
father, mother, or wife would die for him. Al- 
cestis died in his stead, but was brought back 
by Hercules from the lower world. — 2. King of 
the Molossians, to whom Themistocles fled for 
protection, when pursued as a party to the trea- 
son of Pausanias. 

Adoxis ('Aduvig), a beautiful youth, beloved 
by Venus (Aphrodite). He was, according to 
Apollodorus, a son of Cinyras and Medarme, or, 
according to the cyclic poet Panyasis, a son of 
Theias, king of Assyria, and Smyrna (Mvrrha). 
The ancient story ran thus : Smvrna had neg- 
lected the worship of Yenus (Aphrodite), and 
was punished by the goddess with an unnatural 
love for her father. With the assistance of her 
nurse she contrived to share her father's bed. 
When he discovered the crime he wished to 
kill her ; but she fled, and on being nearlv over- 
taken, prayed to the gods to make°her invisible. 
They were moved to pity and changed her into 
a tree called cuvpva. After the lapse of nin* 
12 



\ months the tree burst, and Adonis was born. 
Venus (Aphrodite) was so much charmed with 
! the beauty of the infant, that she concealed it in 
! a chest which she intrusted to Proserpina (Per- 
i sephone) ; but the latter refused to give it up. 
! Zeus decided the dispute by declaring that dur- 
j ing four months of every year Adonis should be 
left to himself, during four months he should 
• belong to Proserpina (Persephone), and during 
the remaining four to Venus (Aphrodite). Ado- 
i nis, however, preferring to live with Venus 
(Aphrodite), also spent with her the four months 
over which he had control. Adonis afterward 
1 died of a wound which he received from a boar 
j during the chase. The grief of the goddess at 
I the loss of her favorite was so great, that the 
gods of the lower world allowed him to spend 
six months of every year with Venus (Aphro- 
dite) upon the earth. The worship of Adonis, 
which in later times was spread over nearly all 
the countries round the Mediterranean, was, as 
the story itself sufficiently indicates, of Asiatic, 
or more especially of Phoenician origin. Thence 
; it was transferred to Assyria, Egypt, Greece, 
■ and even to Italy, though, of course, with vari- 
ous modifications. In the Homeric poems no 
: trace of it occurs, and the later Greek poets 
changed the original symbolic account of Ado- 
nis into a poetical story. In the Asiatic religions 
Venus (Aphrodite) was the passive or vegeta- 
tive principle of nature. [Adonis represented 
the sun as the fructifying principle, while the 
boar, said to have killed him, was the emblem 
of winter, during which the productive powers 
of nature being suspended, Venus (Aphrodite) 
was said to lament the loss of Adonis until he 
was again restored to life.] Hence he spends 
six months in the lower and six in the upper 
world. His death and his return to fife were 
celebrated in annual festivals (Adonia) at By- 
blos, Alexandrea in Egypt, Athens, and other 
places. 

Adoxis ('Aduvic : now Xahr Ibrahim), a small 
river of Phoenicia, which rises in the range of 
Libanus. [At the anniversary of the death of 
Adonis, which was in the rainy season, its wa- 
ters were tinged red with the oehrous particles 
from the mountains of Libanus, and were hence 
fabled to flow with his blood.] 

Ade am yttium ('Adpafivrreiov or 'ASpa/ivrnov : 
'Adpafiv—7}v6g : now Adramyti), a town of Mys- 
ia, near the head of the Gulf of Adramyttium, 
and opposite to the Island of Lesbos. 

Adraxa (now Eder), a river in Germany, 
which flows into the Fulda, near Cassel. 

Adraxum or Hadraxum ("Adpavov, "Adpavov, 
'AdpaviTT/c: now Aderno), a town in Sicily, on 
the river Adranus, at the foot of Mount iEtna, 
was built by Dionysius, and was the seat of the 
worship of the god Adranus. 

Adraxcs ( 'Adpavoc). Vid. Adraxum. 

Adrastja (' Adpuareia). 1. A Cretan nymph, 
daughter of Melisseus, to whom Rhea intrusted 
the Infant Jupiter (Zeus), to be reared in the 
Dictaean grotto. — 2. A surname of Nemesis, de- 
rived by some writers from Adrastus, who is 
said to have built the first sanctuary of Nemesis 
1 on the River Asopus,and by others from a,prii\ 
' and diSpdofcetv, i. e., the goddess whom none 
can escape. 

[Adrastia CAdpuGTeta), a district of Mysia, 



ADRASTUS. 
t 

along the Propontis, through which the Granicus 
flowed, containing a city of the same name, said 
to have been founded by a King Adrastus, in 
which were a temple and oracle of Apollo and 
Diana.] 

Adrastus (" kfyaorog). 1. Son of Talaus, 
king of Argos, and Lysimache, or Lysianassa, or 
Eurynome. Adrastus was expelled from Argos 
by Amphiaraus, and fled to Polybus, king of 
Sicyon, whom he succeeded on the throne of 
Sicyon, and instituted the Nemean games. Af- 
terward he became reconciled to Amphiaraus, 
and returned to his kingdom of Argos. He 
married his two daughters, Deipyle and Argla, 
the former to Tydeus of Calydou. and the latter 
to Polynices of Thebes, both fugitives from their 
native countries. He now prepared to restore 
Polynices to Thebes, who had been expelled by 
his brother Eteocles, although Amphiaraus fore- 
told that all who should engnge in the war should 
perish, with the exception of Adrastus. Thus 
arose the celebrated war of the " Seven against 
Thebes," in which Adrastus was joined by six 
other heroes, viz., Polynices, Tydeus, Amphia- 
raus, Capaneus, Hippomedon, and Partheno- 
pseus. Instead of Tydeus and Polynices other 
legends mention Eteocles and Mecisteus. This 
war ended as unfortunately as Amphiaraus had 
predicted, and Adrastus alone was saved by the 
swiftness of his horse Arion, the gift of Hercu- 
les. Creon of Thebes refusing to allow the 
bodies of the six heroes to be buried, Adrastus 
went to Athens and implored the assistance of 
the Athenians. Theseus was persuaded to un- 
dertake an expedition against Thebes ; he took 
the city, and delivered up the bodies of the fallen 
heroes to their friends for buriaL Ten years 
after this, Adrastus persuaded the seven sons of 
the heroes who had fallen in the war to make a 
new attack upon Thebes, and the oracle now 
promised success. This Avar is known as the 
war of the " Epigoni" ('ETrlyovot), or descend- 
ants. Thebes was taken and razed to the 
ground. The only Argive hero that fell in this 
war was ^Egialeus, tho son of Adrastus: the 
latter died of grief at Megara, on his way back 
to Argos, and was buried in the former city. 
He was worshiped in several parts of Greece, 
as at Megara, at Sicyon, where his memory was 
-celebrated in tragic choruses, and in Attica. 
The legends about Adrastus, and the two wars 
against Thebes, furnished ample materials for 
the epic as well as tragic poets of Greece. — 2. 
Son of the Phrygian king Gordius, having un- 
intentionally killed his brother, fled to Croesus, 
who received him kindly. While hunting, he 
accidentally killed Atys, the son of Croesus, and 
in despair put an end to his own life.— [3. Son 
of Merops, an ally of the Trojans, probable 
founder of the city Adrastia, q. v.] 

Adria or Hadria. 1. (Now Adria), also call- 
ed Atria, a town in Gallia Cisalpina, between 
the mouths of the Po and the Athesis (now 
Adige), from which the Adriatic Sea takes its 
name. It was originally a powerful town of 
the Etruscans. — 2. (Now Atri). a town of Pice- 
num in Italy, probably an Etruscan town origin- 
ally, afterward a Roman colony, at which place 
the family of the Emperor Hadrian lived. 

Adria ('Adptag, Ion. 'Adptqg : 'Adpiavog) or 
Mare Adriaticum, also Mare Superum, so call- 



JEACIDES. 

ed from the town Adria [No. 1], was, in its 
widest signification, the 6ea between Italy on 
the west, and Illyricum, Epirus, and Greece on 
the east. By the* Greeks the name Adrias was 
only applied to the northern part of this sea, the 
southern part being called the Ionian Sea. 

[Adrianopolis. Vid. Hadrianopolis.] 

Adrianus. Vid. Hadriamjs. 

Adrianus ('Adpiavog), a Greek rhetorician, 
born at Tyre in Phoenicia, was the pupil of He- 
rod es Atticus, and obtained the chair of philos- 
ophy at Athens during the lifetime of his mas- 
ter. He was invited by M. Antoninus to Rome, 
where he died about A.D. 192. Three of his de- 
clamations are extant, edited by Walz in Rhe- 
tores Grceci, vol. i., p. 526-33, Stuttg., 1832. 

[Adriaticum Mare. Vid. Adria.] 

Adrumetum. Vid. Hadrumetum. 

Aduatuca, a castle of the Eburones in Gaul, 
probably the same as the later Aduaca Tongro- 
rum (now Tongem). 

Aduatuci or Aduatict, a powerful people of 
Gallia Belgica in the time of Caesar, were the 
descendants of the Cimbri and Teutoni, and 
lived between the Scaldis (now Schelde) and 
Mosa (now Maas). 

Adula Mons. Vid. Alpes. 

Adule or Adulis ('Adovfy, "A6ov?ug, and also 
other forms : 'Adov?aT7ig, Adulitanus : ruins at 
Zida), a maritime city of Ethiopia, on a bay 
of the Red Sea, called Adulitauus Sinus ('Adov- 
"kiTLK.bg KoXirog, Annesley Bay). It was believed 
to have been founded by slaves who fled from 
Egypt, and afterward to have fallen into the 
power of the Auxumitae, for whose trade it 
became the great Emporium. Cosmas Indico- 
pleustes (A.D. 535) found here the Monumentum 
Adulitanum, a Greek inscription recounting the 
conquests of Ptolemy II. Euergetes in Asia and 
Thrace. 

A d yrma uhid-iE V Advpfiaxi&at), a Lybian peo- 
ple, who appear to have once possessed the 
whole coast of Africa from the Canopic mouth 
of the Nile to the Catabathmus Major, but were 
afterward pressed further inland. In their man- 
ners and customs they resembled the Egyptians, 
to whom they were the nearest neighbors. 

^Ea (Ala), sometimes with the addition of 
the word Colchis, may be considered either a 
part of Colchis or another name for the country. 
(Herod., i., 2.) [According to the scholium on 
Apoll. Rhod., the royal city of iEetes, on the 
Phasis, in Cholcis.] 

^Eaces (AluKTjg), son of Syloson, and grand- 
son of iEaces, was tyrant of Samos, but was de- 
prived of his tyranny by Aristagoz-as, when the 
Ionians revolted from the Persians, B.C. 500. 
He then fled to the Persians, who restored him 
to the tyranny of Samos, B.C. 494. 

^Eaceum (AidKeiov). Vid. J2gina. 

^Eacides (AiaKid7/g), a patronymic of the de- 
scendants of ^Eacus, jvs Peleus, Telamon, and 
Phocus, sons of iEacus ; A chilles, sou of Peleus, 
and grandson of iEacus ; Pyrrhus, son of Achil- 
les, and great-grandson of iEacus ; and Pyrrhus, 
king of Epirus, who claimed to be a descendant 
of Achilles. 

^Eacides, son of Arymbas, king of Epirus, 
succeeded to the throne on the death of his 
cousin Alexander, who was slain in Italy, B.C. 
326. ^Eacides married Phthia, by whom he had 

13 



MGJEON. 



the celebrated Ptrrhus. He 
part in fevor of Olympias 
but his subjects disliked the war, rose against 
their king, and drove him from the kingdom. 
He was recalled to his kingdom by his subjects 
in B.C. 31 S : Cassander sent an army against 
him under Philip, who conquered him the same 
vear in two battles, in the last of which he was 
killed 

.Eicrs (Alaxoc), son of Jupiter (Zeus) and 
iEgina, a daughter of the river-god Asopus. 
He" was K"~u in the Island of OEmme or CEno- 
pia, whither JEgina had been carried by Ju- 
piter (Zeus), and from whom this island was 
afterward called JEgina.. Some traditions re- 
lated that at the birth of JEaeus. JEgina was not 
yet inhabited, and that Jupiter (Zeus) changed 
the ants (jtvpuificec) of the island into men (Myr- 
midon es\" over whom JEaeus ruled. Ovid {Jltt„ 
vii, 520) relates the story a little differently. 
jEacus was renowned in all Greece for his jus- 
tice and piety, and was frequently called upon 
to settle disputes not only anions men. but even 
among the gods themselves. He was such a 
favorite with the g;ds. that, when Greece was 
visited by a drought, rain was at length sent 
upon the" earth in consequence of his prayers. 
Respecting the temple which JEacus erected to 
Jupiter (Zeus) Panhellenius, and the JEaceum, 
where he was worshiped hy the JE^inetans. see 
JEgdca. After his death. JEaeus became one of 
Hie three judges in Hades. The JEginetans re- 
garded him as the tutelary deity of their island. 

JELea ^A.h.c\ 1. A surname of Circe, the 
sister of JEetes. Her son, Telegonus, likewise 
bore the surname JEasux. — 2. A surname of Ca- 
lypso, -who was believed to have inhabited a 
small island of the name of JEaea in the straits 

[JEAxes (Aha-;', a Locrian. slain by Patro- 
clus, to whom a grove (Aiaveiov reiievoc) near 

[JEi.>us iA.'u.o. a Celebrated fountain near 
Opus, in Locris.] 

[ JEa>-teo£ (A/ovtcmw), a tomb and temple of 
the Telamonian Ajax. on the Rhcetean promon- 

jRtcsBBES (AiavrCdrig), tyrant of Lampsacns, 
to whom Hippias gave his daughter Arch e dice 
in marriage — 2. A tragic poet of Alexandres, 
one of the tragic Pleiades. He lived in the time 
of the second Ptolemy.] 



ventum. 

JEu'Epscs a' 
a town on the 
of Chalets, with 
ered to Hercules 

ZrhesuV. wife "t 
mother of Itylu 
14 



i vit, in B.C 



of her brother Amphion, who had sis sons and 
six daughters, she resolved to kill the eldest of 
iiiobe's sons, but by mistake slew her own son 
Itylus. Jupiter (Zeus) relieved her grief by 
changing her into a nightingale, whose melan- 
choly notes are represented by the poets as 
Aedon's lamentations about her child. Aedon's 
story is related differently in a later tradition. 

JEnri or Hedo, one of the most powerful 
people in GauL lived between the Liger (now 
Loire) and the Arar (now Saone). They were 
the first Gallic people who made an alliance 
with the Romans, by whom they were called 
"brothers and relations."' On Caesar's arrival 
in GauL B.C. 58, they were subject to Ariovis- 
tus, but were restored by Caesar to their former 
power. In B.C. 52 they joined in the insurrec- 
tion of Yercingetorix against the Romans, but 
were at the close of it treated leniently by Cae- 
sar. Their principal town was Bibracte. Their 
chief magistrate, elected annually by the priests, 
was called Yergobretus. 

JEetes or JEeta (AJjjnj^ son of Helios (the 
Sun) and Perseis, and brother of Circe, Pasi- 
phae. and Perses. His wife was Idyia. a daugh- 
ter of Oeeanus, by whom he had two daughters, 
Medea and Chalciope. and one son, Absyrtus. 
He was king of Colchis at the time when Phrix- 
ns came thither on the ram with the golden 
fleece. For the remainder of his history, see 
Abstrtts. As go xactje, Jasox, Mctt;a : and 
Phsests, — [2. This name was also borne by 
later kings of Colchis, as mentioned by Xeno- 
phon in the Anabasis, and Strabo. who* says it 
was a common appellation of the kings of Col- 
chis.] 

-Plums. JE'Ztias.. and JEstIne. patrcnymics cf 
Medea, daughter of JEetes. 

JEga (A/717), daughter of Olenus, who, with 
her sister Helice, nursed the infant Jupiter 
(Zeus) in Crete, and was changed by the god 
into the constellation Capella. 

JEg.e (Auyai 1: A/Vafoc). 1. A town in Acha- 
ia on the Crathis, with a celebrated temple of 
Xeptune (Poseidon), was originally one of the 
twelve Achaean towns, but its inhabitants sub- 
sequently removed to JEgira. — 2. A" town in 
Emathia, in Macedonia, the burial-place of the 
Macedonian kings, was probably a different 
place from Edessa. — 3. A town in Eubeea with 
a celebrated temple of Xeptune (Poseidon), who 
was hence called JEgaeus. — L Also uEg^ue (AS- 
jalai : Aiyeurtjs), one of the twelve cities of 
JEolis in Asia Minor, north of Smyrna, on the 
River Hyllus : it suffered greatly from an earth- 
quake in the time of Tiberius. — 5. (Now Ayas}, 
a sea-port town of Cilieia Campestris, at the 
mouth of the Pyramus. 

TJEg-ea (Acyata), an appellation of Yen us 



m her 
an.] 



Envious of Mob. 



being worshiped in the 

on of Uranus by Gaea. 
rs Gyges and C ottos are 

of the Uranids, and are 
rasters with a hundred 

fifty heads. Most writ- 
Uranid under the name 
Egaeon, which is explain- 
D3), who says that men 

the gods Friareus. Ac- 
icient tradition, JEgaeon 



J3GJEUM MARE. 



^EGIMIUS. 



and his brothers conquered the Titans when 
they made war upon the gods, and secured the 
victory to Jupiter (Zeus), who thrust the Titans 
into Tartarus, and placed Mgseon and his broth- 
ers to guard them. Other legends represent 
JSgajon as one of the giants who attacked Olym- 
pus ; and many writers represent him as a ma- 
rine god living in the ^Egean Sea. JSgaeon and 
his brothers must be regarded as personifica- 
tions of the extraordinary powers of nature, 
such as earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, and the 
like. 

JEgmxm Maee (to Aiyalov ireXayog, 6 Aiyalog 
■Kovrog), the part of the Mediterranean now 
called the Archipelago. It was bounded on the 
north by Thrace and Macedonia, on the west 
by Greece, and on the east by Asia Minor. It 
contaius in its southern part two groups of 
islands, the Cyclades, which were separated 
from the coasts of Attica and Peloponnesus by 
the Myrtoan Sea, and the Sporades, lying off 
the coasts of Caria and Ionia. The part of the 
^Egasan which washed the Sporades was called 
the Icarian Sea, from the Island Icaria, one of 
the Sporades. The origin of the name of JEgse- 
an is uncertain ; some derive it from JEgaeus, 
the king of Athens who threw himself into it ; 
others from iEgaea, a queen of the Amazons, 
who perished there : others from Mgee in Eu- 
boea ; and others from alylc, a squall, on account 
of its storms. 

^Eg^us (Aiyaloc). Vid. JEgje, No. 3. 

jEgaleos {A'cyd?.€ug , to AiydXeuv bpoc : now 
Sharmanga), a mountain in Attica, opposite Sal- 
amis, from which Xerxes saw the defeat of his 
fleet, B.C. 480. — [2. (to Alyateov, now Mali), 
a mountain of Messenia, extending to Cory- 
phasium.] 

JEgates, the goat islands, were three islands 
off the west coast of Sicily, between Drepanum 
and Lilybseum, near which the Romans gained 
a naval victory over the Carthaginians, and 
thus brought the first Punic war to an end, 
B.C. 241. The islands were ^Egusa {Alyovcaa) 
or Capraria (now Favignana), Phorbantia (now 
Zevanzo), and Hiera (now Maretimo). 

^Egekia or Egeria, one of the Camenae in 
Roman mythology, from whom Numa received 
his instructions respecting the forms of worship 
which he introduced. The grove in which the 
king had his interviews with the goddess, and 
in which a well gushed forth from a dark re- 
cess, was dedicated by him to the Camenae. 
The Roman legends point out two distinct 
places 6acred to ^Egeria, one near Aricia, and 
the other near Rome, at the Porta Capena, in 
the valley now called Caparella. ^Egeria was 
regarded as a prophetic divinity, and also as the 
giver of life, whence she was iuvoked by preg- 
nant women. [Niebuhr places the grove of 
Egeria below S. Balbina, near the baths of Car- 
acalla. Wagner, in a dissertation on this sub- 
ject, is in favor of the valley of Caffarella, some 
few miles from the present gate of 8. Sebastian.] 

jEgesta. Vid. Segesta. 

^Egestus. Vid. Acestes. 

-*Egel's (Aiyevg). 1. Son of Pandion and king 
of Athens. He had no children by his first two 
wives, but he afterward begot Theseus by 
iEthra at Troezen. When Theseus had grown 
up to manhood, he went to Athens and defeated 



the fifty sous of his uncle Pallas, who had made 
war upon .^Egeus, and had deposed him. JSg- 
eus was now restored. When Theseus went to 
Crete to deliver Athens from the tribute it had 
to pay to Minos, he promised his father that on 
his return he would hoist white sails as a signal 
of his safety. On approaching the coast of At- 
tica he forgot his promise, and his father, per- 
ceiving the black sail, thought that his son had 
perished, aud threw himself into the sea, which, 
according to some traditions, received from this 
event the name of the ^Egean. iEgeus was one 
of the eponymous heroes of Attica ; and one of 
the Attic tribes (JEgeis,) derived its name from 
him. — 2. The eponymous hero of the phyle 
called the JEgidae at Sparta, son of QLolycus, 
and grandson of Theras, the founder of the col- 
ony in Thera. All the ^Egeids were believed 
to be Cadmeans, who formed a settlement at 
Sparta previous to the Dorian conquest. 

JEgLe (Alyeiai, Aiyalai), a small town in La- 
conia, not far from Gythium, the Augise of Ho- 
mer {11., ii., 583). 

^Egiale or ^Egialea (AlyidXrj, Alytdleia), 
daughter of Adrastus and Amphithea, or of 
iEgialeus, the son of Adrastus, whence she is 
called Adrastine. She was married to Diome- 
des, who, on his return from Troy, found her 
living in adultery with Cometes. The hero at- 
tributed this misfortune to the anger of Venus 
(Aphrodite), whom he had wounded in the war 
against Troy : when ^Egiale threatened his life, 
he fled into Italy. 

jEgialea, ^Egialos. Vid. Achaia : Sicyon. 

JEgialeus (AiytaXevg). 1. Son of Adrastus, 
the only one among the Epigoni that fell in the 
war against Thebes. Vid. Adrastus. — 2. Son 
of Inachus and the Oceanid Melia, from whom 
the part of Peloponnesus afterward called Acha- 
ia [was fabled to have] derived its name JEgia- 
lea : he is said to have been the first king of 
Sicyon. — 3. Son of ^Eetes, and brother of Medea, 
commonly called Absyrtus. 

JSgides (Alyetdric), a patronymic from JEg- 
eus, especially his son Theseus. 

JEgila (rd Alyika), a town of Laconia, with 
a temple of Ceres (Demeter). 

JSgilia {AiyiTua : AiytXievc). 1. A demus 
of Attica belonging to the tribe Antiochis, cele- 
brated for its figs. — 2. (Now Cerigotto), an island 
between Crete and Cythera. — 3 [^Egilla (Alyt- 
\ua, Hdt.).] An island west of Euboea and op- 
posite Attica. 

JSgimius (Aiytficoc), the mythical ancestor of 
the Dorians, whose king he was when they were 
yet inhabiting the northern parts of Thessaly. 
Involved in a war with the Lapithas, he called 
Hercules to his assistance, and promised him 
the third part of his territory if he delivered 
him from his enemies. The Lapithas were con- 
quered. Hercules did not take the territory for 
himself, but left it to the king, who was to pre- 
serve it for the sons of Hercules. ^Egimius 
had two sons, Dymas and Pamphylus, who mi- 
grated to Peloponnesus, and were regarded as 
the ancestors of two branches of the Doric race 
(Dymanes and Pamphyliaus), while the third 
branch derived its name from Hyllus (Hylle- 
ans,) the son of Hercules, who had been adopt- 
ed by ^Egimius. There existed in antiquity an 
epic poem called JEgimius, which described the 

15 



iEGIMURUS. 



JEGOSTHENA. 



war of ^gimius and Hercules against the La- 
pithae. „ . 

JSgimurus (ALyifiovpoc, ^Egimori Arse, Phn., 
and probably the Arse of Virg, ^n., i, 108 ; 
now Zowa?nour or Zembra), a lofty island, sur- 
rounded by cliffs, off the African coast, at the 
mouth of the Gulf of Carthage. 

JSgina (Myiva : AiytvijTTjc : now Eghina), a 
rocky island in the middle of the Saronie Gulf, 
about two hundred stadia in circumference. It 
was originally called OEnone or CEnopia, and is 
said to have "obtained the name of iEgina from 
JEo-ina, the daughter of the river-god Asopus, 
who was carried to the island by Jupiter (Zeus), 
and there bore him a son, JEacus. As the island 
had then no inhabitants, Jupiter (Zeus) changed 
the ants into men (Myrmidones), over whom 
JEacus ruled. Vid. xEacus. It was first colo- 
nized by Achseans, and afterward by Dorians 
from Epidaurus, whence the Doric dialect and 
customs prevailed in the island. It was at first 
closely connected with Epidaurus, and was sub- 
ject to the Argive Phidon, who is said to have 
established a silver mint in the island. It early 
became a place of great commercial importance, 
and its silver coinage was the standard in most 
of the Dorian states. In the sixth century B.C. 
jEgina became independent, and for a century 
before the Persian war was a prosperous and 
powerful state. The iEginetans fought with 
thirty ships against the fleet of Xerxes at the 
battle of Salamis, B.C. 480, aud are allowed to 
have distinguished themselves above all the 
other Greeks by their bravery. After this time 
its power declined. In B.C. 429 the Athenians 
took possession of the island and expelled its 
inhabitants, and though a portion of them were 
restored by Lysander in B.C. 404, the island 
never recovered its former prosperity. In the 
northwest of the island there was a city of the 
same name, which contained the iEaceum or 
temple of JEacus, and on a hill in the northeast 
of the island was the celebrated temple of Jupi- 
ter (Zeus) Panhellenius, said to have been built 
by iEacus, the ruins of which are still extant 
The .sculptures which occupied the tympana of 
the pediment of this temple were discovered in 
1811, and are now preserved at Munich. In 
the half century preceding the Persian war, and 
for a few years afterward, iEgina was the chief 
seat of Greek art : the most eminent artists of 
the jEginetan school were Callow, Anaxagoras, 
Gladcias, Simon, and Onatas. 

[^Egina (Alyiva), daughter of Asopus, and 
mother of ^Eacus, q. v. and foregoing article.] 
iEGINETA Paulds. Vid. Paulus ./Egineta. 
■^Eginium (A'tytviov ; Alyivievg : now Scagus), 
a town of the Tymphaei in Thessaly, on the con- 
fines of Atharaania. 

^Egioohus {Aiyioxog), a surname of Jupiter 
(Zeus), because he bot e the aegis. 

^Egipan (Aiy'iTvav), that is, Goat Pan, was, 
according to some, a being distinct from Pan, 
while others regard him as identical with Pan. 
His story appears to be of late origin. Vid. Pan. 

JEgiplanctus Mons (to AlylnXayKTOv bpog), 
a mountain in Megaris. 

^Euira (AiyEtjja : Aiysipurjig), formerly Hy- 
peresia {'Xitep^ata), a town in Achaia on a steep 
hill, with a sea-port about twelve stadia from 
the town. Vid. Mgjr, No. 1. 
16 



[-^Egirds (Alyeipog), a village in the island of 
Lesbos, supposed by some scholars to be the 
town of jEolis alluded to by Herodotus under 
the name ^Egirussa, but Herodotus says expli- 
citly that the towns there mentioned were on the 
main land.] 

JEgirltssa (Alyipoeatya, Aiyipovaaa), one of 
the cities of ^Eolis in Asia Minor. 

jEgisthus (Alyiadog), son of Thyestes, who 
unwittingly begot him by his own daughter Pe- 
lopia. Immediately after his birth he was ex- t 
posed, but was saved by shepherds, and suckled 
by a goat (<u|), whence his name. His uncle 
Atreus brought him up as his soa "When Pe- 
lopia lay with her father, she took from him his 
sword, which she afterward gave to iEgisthus. 
This sword was the means of revealing the 
crime of Thyestes, and Pelopia thereupon put 
an end to ner own life. ^Egisthus murdered 
Atreus, because he had ordered him to slay his 
father Thyestes, and he placed Thyestes upon 
the throne, of which he had been deprived by 
Atreus. Homer appears to know nothing of 
these tragic events ; and we learn from him 
only that JEgisthus succeeded his father Thy- 
estes in a part of his dominions. According to 
Homer, iEgisthus took no part in the Trojan 
war, and during the absence of Agamemnon, 
the son of Atreus, JEgisthus seduced his wife 
Clytemuestra. iEgisthus murdered Agamem- 
non on his return home, and reigned seven 
years over Mycenae. In the eighth, Orestes, 
the son of Agamemnon, avenged the death of 
his father by putting the adulterer to death. 
Vid. Agamemnon, Clytemnestra, Orestes. 

^Egithallus (AlyWa?^og : now C. di S. Teo- 
doro). a promontory in Sicily, between Lily- 
baeum and Drepanum, near which was the town 
iEgithallum. 

jEgitium (Alytrcov : near Varnakova, Leake), 
a town in ^Etoha, on the borders of Locris. 

-^Egium (Alytov. Alyievg: now Vostitza), a 
town of Achaia, and the capital after the de- 
struction of Helice. The meetings of the 
Achaean League were held at iEgimn in a grove 
of Jupiter (Zeus), called Homarium. 

J5gle (Alylj}), that is, " Brightness" or " Splen- 
dor," is the name of several mythological fe- 
males, such as, 1. The daughter of Jupiter (Zeus) 
and Neaera, the most beautiful of the Naiads. — 
2. A sister of Phaethon. — 3. One of the Hesper- 
ides. — 4. A nymph beloved by Theseus, for 
whom he forsook Ariadne. — 5. One of the daugh- 
ters of iEsculapius. 

JEgletes (AiyAq-njc), that is, the radiant god, 
a surname of Apollo, 

^Egocerus (A'tyofcepug), a surname of Pan, 
descriptive of his figure with the horns of a 
goat, but more commonly the name of one of 
the signs of the Zodiac, Capricornus. 

jEgos-Potamos (Aiyog Tzorap.bg [more usually 
in good authors, Alydg irorapoi; in Latin writers, 
^Egofi Flumen: Acyog Trora/Liir^g]), the "goat's 
river," a small river, with a town of the same 
name on it, [now probably Galata], iu the Thra- 
cian Cbersonesus, flows into the Hellespont. 
Here the Athenians were defeated by Lysander, 
B.C. 405. 

uEgosthena (Alybadeva : Aiyoodsvevg : Alyo- 
odevlryg), a town in Megaris, on the borders of 
Boeotia, with a sanctuary of Melampus. 



JSGUS. 



JEGYPTUS. 



JEgus and Roscillus, two chiefs of the Allo- 
broges, who had served Ca;sar with fidelity in 
the Gallic war, deserted to Pompey in Greece 
(B.C. 48). 

^Egusa. Vid. JSgates. 
^Egypsus or JSgysus, a town of Mcesia on 
the Danube. 

[^Egyptius (Ab/vTTTtoc), an Ithacan hero, of 
noble descent and much experience, who open- 
ed the first assembly of the people called after 
the departure of Ulysses for Troy.] 

JSgyptus (Ar/vivToc), a son of Belus and An- 
chinoe or Achiroe, and twin-brother of Danaus. 
Belus assigned Libya to Danaus, and Arabia to 
^gyptus, but the latter subdued the country of 
the Melampodes, which he called Egypt, after 
his own name. ^Egyptus by his several wives 
had fifty sons, and his brother Danaus fifty 
daughters. Danaus had reason to fear the sons 
of his brother, and fled with his daughters to 
Argos in Peloponnesus. Thither he was fol- 
lowed by the sons of ^Egyptus, who demanded 
his daughters for their wives, and promised 
faithful alliance. Danaus complied with their 
request, and distributed his daughters among 
them, but to each of them he gave a dagger, 
with which they were to kill their husbands in 
the bridal night. All the sons of iEgyptus were 
thus murdered, with the exception of Lynceus, 
who was saved by Hypermnestra. The Danaids 
buried the heads of their murdered husbands in 
Lerna, and their bodies outside the town, and 
were afterwards purified of their crime by Mi- 
nerva (Athena) and Mercury (Hermes) at the 
command of Jupiter (Zeus). 

^Egyptus {t] AlyvKTog : Aiyv-nTLOc, ^Egyptius : 
now Egypt), a country in the northeastern cor- 
ner of Africa, bounded on the north by the Med- 
iterranean, on the east by Palestine, Arabia Pe- 
traea, and the Red Sea, on the south by Ethiopia, 
the division between the two countries being at 
the First or Little Cataract of the Wile, close to 
Syene (dow Assouan: lat. 24° 8'), and on the 
west by the Great Lybian Desert. This is the 
extent usually assigned to the country ; but it 
Avould be more strictly correct to define it as 
that part of the basin of the Nile which lies be- 
low the First Cataract. 

1. Physical Description of Egypt. — The River 
Nile, flowing from south to north through a nar- 
row valley, encounters, in lat. 24° 8', a natural 
barrier, composed of two islands (Philee and Ele- 
phantine), and between them a bed of sunken 
rocks, by which it is made to fall in a series 
of cataracts, or rather rapids, (rd Karddovna, 6 
pucpbc Kara^dKTTjc, Catarrhactes Minor, com- 
pare Catarrhactes). which have always been 
regarded as the southern limit assigned by na- 
ture to Egypt. The river flows due north be- 
tween two ranges of hills, so near each other 
as to leave scarcely any cultivable laud, as far 
as Silsilis (now Jebel Selseleh), about forty miles 
below Syene, where the valley is enlarged by 
the western range of hills retiring from the 
river. Thus the Nile flows for about five huu- 
dred miles, through a valley whose average 
breadth is about seven miles, between hills 
which in one place (west of Thebes) attain the 
height of ten or twelve hundred feet above the 
sea, to a point some few miles below Memphis, 
where the western range of hills runs to the 
2 



northwest, and the eastern range strikes off to 
the east, and the river divides into branches 
(seven in ancient time, but now only two), which 
flow through a low alluvial land, called, from its 
shape, the Delta, into the Mediterranean. To 
this valley and Delta must be added the coun- 
try round the great natural lake Mceris (now 
Birket-el-Keroun), called Nomos Arsino'ites (now 
Faioum), lying northwest of Heracleopolis, and 
connected with the Valley of the Nile by a break 
in the western range of hills. The whole dis- 
trict thus described is periodically laid under 
water by the overflowing of the Nile from April 
to October. The river, in subsiding, leaves be- 
hind a rich deposit of fine mud, which forms 
the soil of Egypt. All beyond the reach of the 
inundation is rock or sand. Hence Egypt was 
called the " Gift of the Nile." The extent of the 
cultivable land of Egypt is in the Delta about 
4500 square miles, in the valley about 2255, in 
Faioum about 340, and in all about 7095 square 
miles. The outlying portions of ancient Egypt 
consisted of three cultivable valleys (called Oa- 
ses), in the midst of the "Western or Libyan 
Desert, a valley in the western range of hills on 
the west of the Delta, called Nomos Nitriotes 
from the Natron Lakes which it contains, some 
settlements on the coast of the Red Sea, and in 
the mountain passes between it and the Nile, 
and a strip of coast on the Mediterranean, ex- 
tending east as far as Rhinocolura (now El- 
Arish), and west as far (according to some of 
the ancients) as the Catabathmus Magnus (long, 
about 25° 10' E.). The only river of Egypt is 
the Nile. Vid. Nilus. A great artificial canal 
(the Bahr-Yussouf, i. e., Joseph's (3a?ial) runs 
parallel to the river, at the distance of about six 
miles from Diospolis Parva, in the Thebais, to 
a point on the west mouth of the river about 
half way between Memphis and the sea. Many 
smaller canals were cut to regulate the irriga- 
tion of the country. A canal from the eastern 
mouth of the Nile to the head of the Red Sea 
was commenced under the native kings, and 
finished by Darius, son of Hystaspes. There 
were several lakes in the country, respecting 
which vid. Mozris, Mareotis, Butos, Tanis, 
Sirbonis, and Lacus Amari. 

2. Ancient History. — At the earliest period to 
which civil history reaches back, Egypt was 
inhabited by a highly civilized agricultural peo- 
ple, under a settled monarchical government, 
divided into castes, the highest of which was 
composed of the priests, who were the minis- 
ters of a religion based on a pantheistic worship 
of nature, and having for its sacred symbols not 
only images, but also living animals and even 
plants. The priests were also in possession of 
all the literature and science of the country, and 
all the employments based upon such knowl- 
edge. The other castes were, second, the sol- 
diers ; third, the husbandmen ; fourth, the art- 
ificers aud tradesmen ; and last, held in great 
coutempt, the shepherds or herdsmen, poulter- 
ers, fishermen, and servants. The Egyptians 
possessed a written language, which appears to 
have had affinities with both the great families 
of Lauguage, the Semitic and the Indo-Euro- 
pean ; and the priestly caste had, moreover, 
the exclusive kuowlege of a sacred system of 
writing, the characters of which are known by 
17 



^EGYPTUS. 



JEGYPTUS. 



the name of Hieroglyphics, in contradistinction giving orders for the building of Alexandres la 
to which the common characters are called En- the partition of the empire of Alexander after 
chorial (Le., of the country). They were ac- his death in B.C. 323, Egypt fell to the share 
quainted with all the processes of manufacture of Ptolemy, the son of Lagus. who assumed the 
which are essential to a highly civilized com- 1 title of King in B.C. 306, and founded the dynas- 
munitv : they had made great advances in the ; ty of the Ptolemies, under whom the country 
fine arts, especially architecture and sculpture greatly flourished, and became the chief seat of 
(for in painting their progress was impeded by a Greek learning. But soon came the period of 
want of knowledge of perspective) ; they were \ decline. "Wars with the adjacent kingdom of 
deterred from commercial enterprise by the poli- Syria, and the vices, weaknesses, and dissen- 
cy of the priests, but they obtained foreign pro- sions of the royal family, wore out the state,. ' 
ductions to a great extent, chiefly through the i till in B.C. 81 the Romans were called upou to 
Phoenicians, and at a later period they engaged interfere in the disputes for the crown, and in 
in maritime expeditions; in science they do not B.C. 55 the dynasty of the Ptolemies came to 
seem to have advanced so far as some have be entirely dependent on Roman protection, and. 
thought, but their religion led them to cultivate at last, after the battle of Actiutn and the death 
astronomy and its application to chronology, and of Cleopatra, who was the last of the Ptolemies, 
the nature of their country made a knowledge Egypt was made a Roman province, B.C. 30. 
of geometry (in its literal sense) indispensable, (4.) Egypt under the Romans, down to its con- 
and their application of its principles to architect- : quest by the Arabs in A.D. 638. As a Roman 
ure is attested by their extant edifices. There i province, Egypt was one of the most flourish- 
can be little doubt that the origin of this remark- ■ ing portions of the empire. The fertility of its- 
able people and of their early civilization is to ' soil, and its position between Europe and Ara- 
be traced to the same Asiatic source as the I bia and India, together with the possession of 
early civilization of Assyria and India. The such a port as Alexandrea, gave it the full bene- 
ancient history of Egypt may be divided into | fit of the two great sources of wealth, agricul- 
four great periods : (1.) From the earliest times ture and commerce. Learning continued to 
to its conquest by Cambyses ; during which it ; flourish at Alexandrea, and the patriarchs of the 
was ruled by a succession of native princes, into I Christian Church in that city became so power- 
the difficulties of whose history this is not the \ ful as to contend for supremacy with those of 
place to inquire. The last of them, Psammen- \ Antioch, Constantinople, and Rome, while a 
itus, was conquered and dethroned by Cambyses j succession of teachers, such as Origen and. 
in B.C. 525, when Egypt became a province of j Clement of Alexandrea, conferred real lustre 
the Persian empire. During this period Egypt | on the ecclesiastical annals of the country, 
was but little known to the Greeks. The Ho- j When the Arabs made their great inroad upon 
meric poems show some slight acquaintance ; the Eastern empire, the geographical position 
with the country and its river (winch is also ' of Egypt naturally caused it to fall an imme- 
called AlyvTtroc, Od., xiv., 25). and refer to the j diate Victim to that attack, which its wealth 
wealth and splendor of " Thebes with the Hund- and the peaceful character of its inhabitants in- 
red Gates."' In the latter part of the period vited. It was conquered by Amrou, the lieu- 
learned men among the Greeks began to travel j tenant of the Calif Omar, in A.D. 638. 
to Egypt for the sake of studying its institu- ] 3. Political Geography. — From the earliest 
tions; among others, it was visited by Pythag- times the country was divided into (1.) The 
oras, Thales, and Solon. (2.) From the Persian Delta, or Lower Egypt (to AeZra, y Karo x^pa 
conquest in B.C. 525. to the transference of their ; now El-Bahari, El-Kebit) ; (2.) The Heptanomis, 
dominion to the Macedonians in B.C. 332. This or Middle Egypt ('E-ravojuic, ?) fiera^v ^wpa, now 
period was one of almost constant struggles be- j Mesr Mostani) ; (3.) The Thebais, or Upper Egypt,, 
tween the Egyptians and their conquerors, until (Qn6aic, rj dvcj x^pa, now Said) : and it was fur-- 
B.C. 340, when Nectanebo II, the last native ! ther subdivided into thirty-six nomes or govern- 
ruler of Egypt, was defeated by Darius Ochus. ' ments. [Under the Ptolemies the number of 
It was during this period that the Greeks acquir- i nomes became enlarged, partly by reason of the 
ed a considerable knowledge of Egypt. In the j new and improved state of things in that quar- 
wars between Egypt and Persia, the two leading ! ter of Egypt where Alexandrea was situated, 
states of Greece, Athens and Sparta, at different partly by the addition of the 'Greater or Lesser 
times assisted the Egyptians, according to the ; Oasis" to Egypt and partly, also, by the altera- 
state of their relations to each other and to Per- \ tions which an active commerce had produced 
sia ; and, during the intervals of those wars, ! along the borders of the Sinus Arabicus. A 
Egypt was visited by Greek historians and phi- j change also took place about this same period 
losophers, such as Hellanicus, Herodotus, An- \ in the three main divisions of the country, 
axagoras, Plato, and others, who brought back ; Lower Egypt, now no longer confined itself to 
to Greece the knowledge of the country which ; the limits of the Delta, but had its extent en- 
they acquired from the priests and through per- larged by the addition of some of the neighbor- 
sonal observation. (3.) The dynasty of Mace- ing nomes. In like manner, Upper Egypt, or 
donian kings, from the accession of Ptolemy, ' the Thebais. received a portion of what had 
the son of Lagus, in B.C. 323, down to B.C. 30, , formerly been included within the limits of Mid- 
when Egypt became a province of the Roman die Egypt, so that eventually but seven nomes 
empire. When Alexander invaded E^ypt in B. remained to this last-mentioned section of the 
C. 332, the country submitted to him "without a country, which, therefore, received the name 
struggle ; and while he left it behind him to re- ; of Heptanomis. The number of nomes became 
turn to the conquest of Persia, he conferred upon still further increased, at a subsequent period,, 
it the greatest benefit that was in his power, by by various subdivisions of the older ones. Atr 



JEGYS, 



JENEADES. 



a still later period we bear little more of the 
nomes. A new division of the country took 
place uuder the Eastern empire. An imperial 
prefect exercised sway not only over Egypt, 
but also over Libya as far as Cyrene, while a 
Comes MiliUm* bad charge of the forces. From 
this time the whole of Middle Egypt, previous- 
ly named Heptanomis, bore the name of Arcadia, 
in honor of Arcadius, eldest son of Theodosius. 
A new province had also arisen, a considerable 
time before this, called Augustamnica, from its 
lyiug chiefly along the Nile. It comprised the 
eastern half of the Delta, together with a por- 
tion of Arabia, as far as the Arabian Gulf, and 
also the cities on the Mediterranean as far as 
the frontiers of Syria. Its capital was Pelu- 
sium.] Respecting the Oases, vid. Oasis. 

jEgys (Jiyuff, AlyvTtm kiyvevg: near Ghior- 
gitza), a town of Laconia on the borders of Ar- 
cadia. 

jElana (AiAava : AiAavirnc : now Ababa), a 
town on the northern arm of the Red Sea, near 
the Bahr-el-Akaba, which was called by the 
Greeks ^Elanltes, from the name of the town. It 
is the Elath of the Hebrews, and one of the sea- 
ports of which Solomon possessed himself, to 
carry on trade with Ophir and the remote East. 

^Elia Gexs, plebeian, the members of which 
are given under their surnames, Gallus, Lamia, 
P^etus, Sejaxus, Stilo, Tubero. 

Mlia, a name given to Jerusalem after its 
restoration by the Roman emperor ^Elius Ha- 
drianus. 

[JElia, a name of females of the iElia gens. 
h Wife of Sulla. — 2. Pajtlna, of the family of 
the Tuberos, and wife of the Emperor Claudius. 
She was repudiated by him in order to make 
way for Messalina.] 

JEliaxus, Claudius, was born at Prseneste 
in Italy, and lived at Rome about the middle of 
the third century of the Christian era. Though 
an Italian, he spoke and wrote Greek as well as 
a native Athenian. He never married, and lived 
to the age of sixty. Two of his works have 
come down to us : one a collection of miscel- 
laneous history (Uoikc?.ij 'laropla), in fourteen 
books, commonly called Varia Historia; and 
the other a work on the peculiarities of animals 
(TLepl Z6cjv idiorriToc), in seventeen books, com- 
monly called De Animalium Natura. The for- 
mer work contains short narrations and anec- 
dotes, historical, biographical, antiquarian, &c, 
selected from various authors, generally with- 
out their names being given, and on a great 
variety of subjects. The latter work is of the 
same kind, scrappy and gossipping. It is part- 
ly collected from older writers, and partly the 
result of his own observations both in Italy and 
abroad. There are also attributed to him twen- 
ty letters on husbandry ('AypoiKiical 'Ett icroAac), 
written in a rhetorical style and of no value. — 
Editions : Of the Varia Historia, by Perizonius, 
Leyden, 1701 ; by Gronovius, Leyden, 1731 ; 
and by Kiihn, Leipsic, 1780. Of the De Ani- 
malium Natura, by Gronovius, London, 1744; 
by J. Schneider, Leipsic, 1784; and by Fr. Ja- 
cobs, Jena, 1832. Of the Letters, by Aldus 
Mauutius, in the Collectio Epistolarum Grceca- 
rttm, Venice, 1499, 4to. 

[.Eliaxus, Lucius, one of the thirty tyrants 
■Oder the Roman empire, about 267 A.D., who 



assumed the imperial purple in Gaul, but was 
killed by his own soldiers.] 

JSlianus Meccius, an ancient physician, who 
! must have lived in the second century after 
Christ, as he is mentioned by Galen as the 
oldest of his tutors. 

JEliaxus Tacticus, a Greek writer, who lived 
in Rome and wrote a work on the Military Tac- 
tics of the Greeks (TLepl IrpaTnyiKuv Td£euv 
'E/.Atjvckuv), dedicated to the Emperor Hadrian. 
He also gives a brief account of the constitu- 
tion of a Roman army at that time. — Editions : 
By Franciscus Robortellus, Venice, 1552 ; and 
by Elzevir, Leyden, 1613. 

Aello, one of the Harpies. Vid. Harpyle. 

Aellopus ('AeAAoTrovg), a surname of Iris, the 
messenger of the gods, by which she is described 
as swift-footed as a storm-wind. 

^Emilia. 1. The third daughter of L. ^Emil- 
ius Paulus, who fell in the battle of Cannse, was 
the wife of Scipio Africanus I. and the mother 
of the celebrated Cornelia, the mother of the 
Gracchi. — 2. ^Emilia Lepida, Vid. Lepida. — 
3. A Vestal virgin, put to death B.C. 114 for 
having violated her vows upon several occa- 
sions. 

jEmilia Gexs, one of the most ancient patri- 
cian gentes at Rome, said to have been descend- 
ed from Mamercus, who received the name of 
^Emilius on account of the persuasiveness of 
his language (6Y aifivAiav ?mjov). This Mamer- 
cus is represented by some as the son of Py- 
thagoras, and by others as the son of Numa. 
The most distinguished members of the gens 
are given under their surnames, Barbula, Lep- 
idus, Mamercus or Mamercixus, Papus, Pau- 
lus, Regillus, Scaurus. 

JEmilia Via, made by M. JEmilius Lepidus> 
cos. B.C. 187, contiuued the Via Flaminia from 
Ariminum, and traversed the heart of Cisalpine 
Gaul through Bononia, Mutina, Parma, Placen- 
tia (where it crossed the Po) to Mediolanum. It 
was subsequently continued as far as Aquileia. 

JEmiliaxus. 1. The son of L. ^Emilius Pau- 
lus Macedonicus, was adopted by P. Cornelius 
Scipio, the son of P. Cornelius Scipio Africanus, 
and was thus called P. Cornelius Scipio ^Emil- 
ianus Africanus. Vid. Scipio. — 2. The govern- 
or of Pannonia and Mcesia in the reign of Gal- 
lus, was proclaimed emperor by his soldiers in 
A.D. 253, but was slain by them after reigning 
a few months. — 3. One of the thirty tyrants 
(A.D. 259-268), assumed the purple in Egypt, 
but was taken prisoner and strangled by order 
of Gallienus. 

JEmilius Probus. Vid. Nepos, Corxelius. ; 

[^Emod^e IxsuLjE. Vid. Hjsmodje.] 

^Emoxa or Emoxa (now Laibach), a fortified 
town in Pannonia, and an important Roman 
colony, said to have been built by the Argonauts^ 

JExaria, also called Pithecusa and Lxarime 
(now Ischia), a volcanic island off the coast of 
Campania, at the entrance of the Bay of Na- 
ples, under which the Roman poets represent- 
ed Typhoeus as lying. 

^Exea (Aiveta : Aiveievg, Alveidr^g), a town 
in Chalcidice, on the Thermaic Gulf. — [2. JExea 
Vetus, a city near the Achelous, in Acarnania, 
in Strabo's time destroyed : further south was 
^Enea Nova, now in ruins, near Palazo CatovAia.'] 

yExEADES (Alvetadqc), a patronymic from 
19 



AENEAS. 



^ENUS. 



iEneas given to his son Aseanius or lulus, and ' after Lavinia, the daughter of Latinus, whom he 
to those who were believed to be descended 
from him, such as Augustus, and the Romans 
in general. 

jEneas (Aiveiac). 1. Homeric Story. JEneas 
was the son of Anchises and Venus (Aphrodite) 



married. A new war then followed between 
Latinus and Turnus, in which both chiefs fell, 
whereupon iEneas became sole ruler of the 
Aborigines and Trojans, and both nations were 
united into one. Soon after this iEneas fell in a 



and born on Mount Ida. On his father's side battle with the Rutulians, who were assisted 
he was a great-grandson of Tros,_and thusjiear- j by Mezentius, king of the Etruscans. As his 



ly related to the royal house of Troy, as Priam i body was not found after the battle, it was be- 
himself was a grandson of Tros. He was edu- j lieved that it had been carried up to heaven, 
cated from his infancy at Dardanus, in the house or that he had perished in the River Numicius. 
of Alcathous, the husband of his sister. At first | The Latins erected a monument to him, with 



he took no part in the Trojan war ; and it was 
not till Achilles attacked him on Mount Ida, 
and drove away his flocks, that he led his Dar- 
danians against the Greeks. Henceforth he 
and Hector are the great bulwarks of the Tro- 



the inscription To the father and native god. 
Virgil represents iEneas landing in Italy seven 
years after the fall of Troy, and comprises all 
the events in Italy from the landing to the death 
of Turnus, within the space of twenty clays. 



jans against the Greeks, and iEneas appears j The story of the desdent of the Romans from 



beloved by gods and men. On more than one 
occasion he is saved in battle by the gods : 
Venus (Aphrodite) carried him off when he was 
wounded by Diomedes, and Neptune (Poseidon), 
when he was on the point of perishing by the 
hands of Achilles. Homer makes no allusion 
to the emigration of .^Eneas after the capture 
of Troy, but, on the contrary, he evidently con- 
ceives ^Eneas and his descendants as reigning 
at Troy after the extinction of the house of 
Priam. — Later Stories. The later stories pre- 
sent the greatest variations respecting the con- 
duct of ./Eneas at the capture of Troy and in 
the events immediately following. Most ac- 
counts, however, agree that after the city had 
fallen, he withdrew to Mount Ida with his friends 
and the images of the gods, especially that of 
Pallas (the Palladium.) ; and that from thence 
he crossed over to Europe, and finally settled in 
Latium in Italy, where he became the ancestral 
hero of the Romans. A description of the wan- 
derings of iEneas before he reached Latium, 
and of the various towns and temples he was 
believed to have founded during his wander- 
ings, is given by Dionysius of Halicarnassus 
(L, 50, <fcc.), whose account is, on the whole, the 
same as the one followed by Virgil in his iEneid, 
although the latter makes various embellish- 
ments and additions, some of which, such as 
his landing at Carthage and meeting with Dido, 
are irreconcilable with mythical chronology. 
Erom Pallene, where iEneas stayed the winter 
after the taking of Troy, he sailed with his com- 
panions to Delos, Cythera, Boise in Laconia, 
Zacynthus, Leucas, Actium, Ambracia, and to 
Dodona, where he met the Trojan Helenus. 
From P^pirus he sailed across the Ionian Sea to 
Italy, where he landed at the Iapygian promon- 
tory. Thence he crossed over to Sicily, where 
he met the Trojans, Elymus and iEgestus (Aces- 
tes), and built the towns of Ely me and ^Egesta. 
Erom Sicily he sailed back to Italy, lauded in 
the port of Palinurus, came to the Island of 
Leucasia, and at last to the oast of Latium. 



the Trojans through iEneas was believed at an 
early period, but probably rests on no historical 
foundation. — 2. jEneas Silvius, son of Silvius, 
and grandson of Aseanius, is the third in the list 
of the mythical kings of Alba in Latium : the Sil- 
vii regarded him as the founder of their house. 

^Eneas Gaz^eus, so called from Gaza, his 
birth-place, flourished A.D. 487. He was at 
first a Platonist and a Sophist, but afterward 
became a Christian, when he composed a dia- 
logue, on the Immortality of the Soul, called 
Theophrastus. — Editions ; By Barthius, Lips., 
1655 ; By Boissonade, Par., 1836. 

^Eneas Tacticus, a Greek writer, may be the 
same as the iEneas of Stymphalus, the general 
of the Arcadians, B.C. 362 (Xen., Hell., vii., 3 
§ 1) ; and he probably lived about that period. 
He wrote a work on the art of war, of which a 
portion only is preserved, commonly called Com- 
mentarius Potior ceticus, showing how a siege 
should be resisted. An epitome of the whole 
book was made by Cineas. (Cic, ad Fam., ix., 
25.) — Editions: By Ernesti, Lips., 1763; by 
Orelli, Lips., 1818. 

jEnesidemus (Aivnold7]/j.og), a celebrated skep- 
tic, born at Cnosus in Crete, probably lived a 
little later than Cicero. He differed on many 
points from the ordinary skeptics. The grand 
peculiarity of his system was the attempt to 
unite skepticism with the earlier philosophy, to 
raise a positive foundation for it by accounting 
from the nature of things for the never-ceasing 
changes both in the material and spiritual world. 
None of the works of iEuesidemus have come 
down to us. To them Sextus Empiricus was 
indebted for a considerable part of his work. — 
[2. (Dor. Aivnatda/LLoc), father of Theron, tyrant 
of Agrigentum. Vid. Theron.] 
[tEnia. Vid. iExEA.] 

^Exianes (Aiviuveg, Ion. 'Eviiiveg), an ancient 
Greek race, originally near Ossa, afterward in 
southern Thessaly, between C3ta aud Othrys, 
on the banks of the Spercheus. 

[iExi Pons (now Innsbruck), a town of Raetia, 



Various signs pointed out this place as the end on the ^Enus.] 
of his wanderings, and he and his Trojans ac- iEsus (Alvog : Alvioc, Alvidrr] : now Eno\ 
cordiugly settled in Latium. The place where ! an ancient town in Thrace, near the mouth of 
'they had landed was called Troy. Latinus, I the Hebrus, mentioned in the Iliad. It was col- 
king of the Aborigines, prepared for war, but onized by the iEolians of Asia Minor. Virgil 
•afterward concluded au alliance with the stran- I {JEn., in., 18) supposes iEnos to have been built 
gers, gave up to them part of his dominions, and by iEneas, but he confounds it with ^Enea in 
with their assistance conquered the Rutulians. Chalcidice. Under the Romans Enos was a 
.iEneas founded the town of Lavinium, c^led j free town, and a place of importance. 
20 



JSNUS. 



uEQUI. 



jEnus (now bin), a river in Raetia, the bound- 
ary between Raetia and Noricum. 

^Eoles or M6hh (AtoAeZc), one of the chief 
branches of the Hellenic race, supposed to be 
descended from uEolus, the son of Hellen. Vid. 
Moixs, No. 1. They originally dwelt in Thes- 
saly, from whence they spread oyer various 
parts of Greece, and also settled in iEolis in 
Asia Minor, and in the Island of Lesbos. 

Moiam Insula (al Alolov vf/aoi : now Lipari 
Islands), a group of islands northeast of Sicily, 
where JSolus, the god of the winds, reigned. 
Homer (Od., x., 1) mentions only one iEolian 
island, and Virgil (jEn., i, 52) accordingly 
speaks of only one JEolia (sc. insula), where 
JSolus reigned, supposed to be Strongyle or 
Lipara. These islands were also called Hephces- 
tiades or Vulcanice, because Hephaestus or Vul- 
can was supposed to have had his workshop in 
one of them, called Hiera. (Virg., jEn., viii., 
415, seq) They were also named Liparenses, 
from Lipara, the largest of them. The names 
of these islands were Lipara (now Lipari), Hiera 
(now Volcano), Strongyle (now Stromboli), Phce- 
nicusa (now Felicudi), Ericusa (now Alicudi), 
Euonymus (now Panaria), Didyme (now Sa- 
lina), Hieesia (now Lisca Bianca), Basilidia (now 
Basilizzo), Osteodes (now Ustica). 

JEolides (Aio?u6r}c), a patronymic given to 
the sons of ./Eolus, as Athamas, Cretheus, Sis- 
yphus, Salmoneus, <fec, and to his grandsons, 
as Cephalus, Ulysses, and Phrixus. [The name 
jEolides, applied by Virgil (JSn., 6, 164) to Mi- 
senus, is supposed by some to have arisen from 
the legendary connection between the iEolian 
and Campanian Cumae ; others suppose that, as 
Misenus played upon a wind-instrument, the 
poet, by a figurative genealogy, makes him the 
eon of the wind-god iEolus. It is much more 
probable, however, that Virgil calls him JEolides 
as indicating merely his descent from a mortal 
father named J£olus, the same, probably, with 
the one slain in battle with the Latins (JEn., 12, 
542, seq.).] iEolis is the patronymic of the fe- 
male descendants of ^Eolus, given to his daugh- 
ters Canace and Alcyone. 

JEolis (Alo?ug), or ^Eolia, a district of Mysia 
in Asia Minor, was peopled by JEolian Greeks, 
whose cities extended from the Troad along the 
shores of the ^Egean to the River Hermus. 
In early times their twelve most important 
cities were independent, and formed a league, 
the members of which celebrated an annual fes- 
tival (the Panaeolium) at Cyme. The twelve 
cities comprising this league were Cyme, La- 
rissae, Neontichos, Temnus, Cilia, Notium, 
JSgirusa, Pitane, JSgaeae, Myrina, Grynea, and 
Smyrna; but Smyrna subsequently became a 
member of the Ionian confederacy. (Herod., 
i, 149, seq.) These cities were subdued by 
Croesus, and were incorporated in the Per- 
sian empire on the conquest of Croesus by 
Cyrus. 

JEolus (Aloloc). Son of Hellen and the 
nymph Orse'is, and brother of Dorus and Xu- 
thus. He was the ruler of Thessaly, and the 
founder of the JEolic branch of the Greek na- 
tion. His children are said to have been very 
numerous ; but the most ancient story men- 
tions only four sons, viz.. Sisyphus, Athamas, 
Cretheus, and Salmoneus. The great extent 



of country which this race occupied probably 
gave rise to the varying accounts about the 
number of his children. — 2. Son of Hippotes, or, 
according to others, of Neptune (Poseidon) and 
Arne, a descendant of the previous JSolus. His 
story probably refers to the emigration of a 
branch of the JSolians to the west. His mother 
was carried to Metapoutum in Italy, where she 
gave birth to iEolus and his brother Bceotus. 
The two brothers afterward fled from Metapon- 
tum, and iEolus went to some islands in the 
Tyrrhenian Sea, which received from him the 
name of the ^Eolian Islands. Here he reigned 
as a just and pious king, taught the natives the 
use of sails for ships, and foretold them the na- 
ture of the winds that were to rise. In these 
accounts iEolus, the father of the iEolian race, 
is placed in relationship with iEolus, the ruler 
and god of the winds. In Homer, however, 
JEolus, the son of Hippotes, is neither the god 
nor the father of the winds, but merely the 
happy ruler of the ^Eolian Island, to whom Ju- 
piter (Zeus) had given dominion over the wind3, 
which he might soothe or excite according to his 
pleasure. (Od., x., 1, seq.) This statement of 
Homer, and the etymology of the name of Mo- 
lus from htXku, led to JEolus being regarded in 
later times as the god and king of the winds, 
which he kept inclosed in a mountain. It is, 
therefore, to him that Juno applies when she 
wishes to destroy the fleet of the Trojans. 
(Virg., ^En., i., 78.) The ^Eolian Island of Ho- 
mer was in later times believed to be Lipara or 
Strongyle, and was accordingly regarded as the 
place in which the god of the winds dwelt. Vid. 
iEou^E Insula. 

iEpfiA (Alireta : A'nr^dTrjg). 1. A town in 
Messenia on the sea-coast, afterward Thuria, 
[as Strabo says, but, according to Pausanias, 
the later Corone.] — 2. A town in Cyprus, after- 
ward Soli. 

tEpy (AIttv), a town in Elis, situated on a 
height, as its name indicates. 

JEpytus (Aittvtoc). A mythical king of Ar- 
cadia, from whom a part of the country was 
called JSpytis. — 2. Youngest son of the Hera- 
clid Cresphontes, king of Messenia, and of Mer- 
ope, daughter of the Arcadian king Cypselus. 
When his father and brothers were murdered 
during an insurrection, ^Epytus alone, who was 
with his grandfather Cypselus, escaped the dan- 
ger. The throne of Cresphontes was, in the 
mean time, occupied by the Heraclid Polyphon- 
tes, who also forced Merope to become his wife. 
When iEpytus had grown to manhood, he re- 
turned to his kingdom, and put Polyphontes to 
death. From him the kings of Messenia were 
called ^Epytids instead of the more general 
name Heraclids. — 3. Son of Hippothous, king 
of Arcadia, and great-grandson of the iEpytus 
mentioned first-^4. Son of JSeleus, grandson 
of Codrus, founder of Priene.] 

jEqui, vEquicoli, ^Equicolae, tEquiculani, 
an ancient warlike people of Italy, dwelling in 
the upper valley of the Anio, in the mountains 
forming the eastern boundary of Latium, and 
between the Latini, Sabini, Hernici, and Marsh 
In conjunction with the Volsci, who were of the 
same race, they carried on constant hostilities 
with Rome, but were finally subdued in B.C. 
302. One of their chief seats was Mount 
* 21 



^EQ.UI FALISCI. 



JESCHLXES. 



Algidus, from which they were accustomed to 
make their marauding expeditions. « 

jEqui Falisci. Vid. Faleku. 

iEQUi^LEiiuM. Vid. Melius. 

[^Equum Tuticum. Vid. Equcs Tuticus.J 

[Aeria (now Mont Venteux), a city of Gallia 
Earbonensis, having an elevated and airy situa- 
tion.] . 

[Aerias, an ancient king of Cyprus, who is 
said to have founded the temple of Venus (Aph- 
rodite) at Papbos.] 

Aerope ('AsporcTj), daughter of Catreus, king 
of Crete, and grand-daughter of Minos. Her 
father, who had received an oracle that he 
should lose his life by one of his children, gave 
her and her sister Clymene to jSauplius, who 
•was to sell them in a foreign land. Aerope mar- 
ried Plisthenes, the son of Atreus, and became 
by him the mother of Agamemnon and Menelaus. 
After the death of Plisthenes, Aerope married 
Atreus ; and her two sons, who were educated 
by Atreus, were generally believed to be his 
sons. Aerope was faithless to Atreus, being 
seduced by Thyestes. 

[Aeropus (Aepo-of), brother of Perdiccas, 
who was the first Macedonian king of the race 
of Temenus, B.C. 670. — 2. Aeropus L, king of 
Macedonia, great-grandsoa of Perdiccas, father 
of Alcetas. — 3. Aeropus II., king of Macedonia, 
guardian of Orestes, the son of Archelaus, whom 
he murdered, after reigning jointly with him for 
four years ; after this he ruled for two years 
alone, and was then succeeded by his son Pausa- 
nias.] 

[JEeropus Moxs (now Trebusiri), a mountain 
range of Illyricum, at the base of which flows 
the Aous.] , 

^Esacus (Aloanoq), son of Priam and Alex- 
irrhoe. He lived far from his father's court, 
in the solitude of mountain forests. Hespe- 
ria, however, the daughter of Cebren, kindled 
love in his heart, and on one occasion, while he 
was pursuing her, she was stung by a viper and 
died. JEsaeus in his grief threw himself into 
the sea, and was changed by Tethys into an 
aquatic bird. This is the story related by Ovid 
(Met., xi, 761, seq.), but it is told differently by 
Apollodorus. 

xEsar, the name of the deity among the 
Etruscans. 

-<Esae or ^Esaeus (now JSsaro), a river near 
Croton, in the country of the Brutti, in Southern 
Italy. 

-Eschixes (Aioxh'?ie). 1. The Athenian ora- 
tor, born B.C. 889, was the son of Atrometus 
and Glaucothea. According to Demosthenes, 
his political antagonist, his parents were of dis- 
reputable character, and not even citizens of 
Athens; but ^schines himself says that his 
father was descended from an honorable family, 
and lost his property during ^he Peloponnesian 
war. In his youth, ^Eschines appears to have 
assisted his father in his school ; he next acted 
as secretary to Aristophon, and afterward to 
Eubulus ; he subsequently tried his fortune as 
an actor, but was unsuccessful ; and at length, 
after serving with distinction in the armv, came 
forward as a public speaker, and soon acquired 
great reputation. In 347 he was sent, along 
with Demosthenes, as one of the ten ambassa- 
dors to negotiate a peace with Philip : from this 
22 



time he appears as the friend of the Macedonian 
party and as the opponent of Demosthenes. 
Shortly afterward jEschines formed one of the 
second embassy sent to Philip to receive the 
oath of Philip to the treaty which had been con- 
cluded with the Athenians ; but, as the delay 
of the ambassadors in obtaining the ratification 
had been favorable to the interests of Philip, 
JSschines, on his return to Athens, was ac- 
cused by Timarchus. He evaded the danger by 
bringing forward a counter-accusation against 
Timarchus (345), and by showing that the moral 
conduct of his accuser was such that he had no 
right to speak before the people. The speech 
in which JEschines attacked Timarchus is still 
extant: Timarchus was condemned, and JEs- 
chines gained a brilliant triumph. In 343, De- 
mosthenes renewed the charge against /Fsohj- 
nes of treachery during his second embassy to 
Philip. This charge of Demosthenes (rrepl tto- 
pa~pec6ELag) was not spoken, but published as a 
memorial, and ^Eschines answered it in a sim- 
ilar memorial on the embassy (-repl T.apa-xpza- 
6elac), which was likewise published. Short- 
ly after the battle of, Chaeronea, in 338, which 
gave Philip the supremacy in Greece, Ctesiphon 
proposed that Demosthenes should be rewarded 
| for his services with a golden crown in the the- 
| atre at the great Dionysia. Eschines availed 
x himself of the illegal form in which this reward 
I was proposed to be given to bring a charge 
I against Ctesiphon on that ground, but he did 
| not prosecute the charge till eight years later, 
J 330. The speech which he delivered on the 
j occasion is extant, and was answered by De- 
! mosthenes in his celebrated oration on the 
! crown (~Epi creodvov). iEschines was defeat- 
ed, and withdrew from Athens. He went to 
j Asia Minor, and at length established a school 
of eloquence at Rhodes. On one occasion he 
read to his audience in Rhodes his speech 
against Ctesiphon, [and, after receiving much 
applause, he was desired to read the speech of 
j his antagonist. WTien he had done this, his 
! auditors expressed great admiration ; " but," 
j exclaimed ^Eschines, " how much greater would 
| have been your admiration if you had heard (De- 
J mosthenes) himself !"] From Rhodes he went 
to Samos, where he died in 314. Besides the 
j three orations extant, we also possess twelve 
j letters which are ascribed to ^Eschines, but 
'. which are the work of late sophists. — Editions. 
j In the editions of the Attic orators (vid. Demos- 
| t hexes), and by Bremi, Zurich, 1823. — 2. An 
Athenian philosopher and rhetorician, and a 
j disciple of Socrates. After the death of his 
j master, he went to Syracuse ; but returned to 
S Athens after the expulsion of Dionysius, and 
supported himself, receiving money for his in- 
structions. He wrote several dialogues, but 
the three which have come down to us under 
his name are not genuine. — Editions: By Fis- 
cher, Lips., 1786; by Bockh, Heidel., 1810; and 
in many edition^ of Plato. — 3. Of Neapolis, a 
Peripatetic philosopher, who was at the head 
of the Academy at Athens, together with Char- 
madas and Clitomachus, about B.C. 109. — 4. Of 
; Miletus, a contemporary of Cicero, and a dis- 
tinguished orator in the Asiatic style of elo- 
quence. — [5. A distinguished individual among 
the Eretrians, who disclosed to the Athenians 



^ESCHRION. 



iESCULAPIUS. 



the treacherous designs of some of his country- 
men, when the former had come to their aid 
against the Persians.— 6. An Acarnanian, com- 
mander of a company of light-armed troops in 
the retreat of the ten thousand under Xeno- 
phon.] 

JSschrion (Alaxptuv). 1. Of Syracuse, whose 
wife Pippa was one of the mistresses of Verres, 
and who was himself one of the scandalous in- 
struments of Verres. — 2. An iambic poet, a na- 
tive of Samos. There was an epic poet of the 
same name, who was a native of Mytilene and 
a pupil of Aristotle, and who accompanied Alex- 
ander on some of his expeditions. He may 
perhaps be the same person as the Samian. — 
3. A native of Pergamus, and a physician in 
the second century after Christ, was one of 
Galen's tutors. 

iEscHYLUs {klaxvlog). 1. The celebrated 
tragic poet, was born at Eleusis in Attica, B.C. 
525, so that he was thirty-five years of age at 
the time of the battle of Marathon, and contem- 
porary with Simonides and Pindar. His father 
Euphorion was probably connected with the 
worship of Ceres (Demeter), and iEschylus 
himself was, according to some authorities, ini- 
tiated in the mysteries of this goddess. At the 
age of twenty-five (B.C. 499), he made his first 
appearance as a competitor for the prize of 
tragedy, without being successful. He, with 
his brothers Cyueegirus and Aminius, fought at 
the battle of Marathon (490), and also at those 
of Salamis (480) and Plataea (479). In 484 he 
gained the prize of tragedy ; and in 472 he gain- 
ed the prize with the trilogy, of which the Per- 
sse, the earliest of his extant dramas, was one 
piece. In 468 he was defeated in a tragic con- 
test by his younger rival, Sophocles ; and he is 
said in consequence to have quitted Athens in 
disgust, and to have gone to the court of Hiero, 
king of Syracuse, where he found Simonides, 
the lyric poet. In 467 his friend and patron 
King Hiero died ; and in 458 it appears that 
^Eschylus was again at Athens, from the fact 
that the trilogy of the Oresteia was produced 
an that year. In the same or the following 
year he again visited Sicily, and he died at 
Gela in 456, in the sixty-ninth year of his age. 
It is said that an eagle, mistaking the poet's 
bald head for a stone, let a tortoise fall upon it 
to break the shell, and so fulfilled an oracle, ac- 
cording to which iEschylus was fated to die by 
a blow from heaven. The alterations made by 
JEschylus in the composition and dramatic rep- 
resentation of Tragedy were so great, that he 
was considered by the Athenians as the father 
of it, just as Homer was of Epic poetry and 
Herodotus of History. Even the improve- 
ments and alterations introduced by his suc- 
cessors were the natural results and sugges- 
tions of those of .JSschylus. The first and prin- 
cipal alteration which he made was the intro- 
duction of a second actor (devTepayuvio-rqg), and 
the consequent formation of the dialogue prop- 
erly so called, and the limitation of the choral 
parts. The innovation was of course adopted 
by his contemporaries, just as ^Esehylus him- 
self followed the example of Sophocles, in sub- 
sequently introducing a third actor. But the 
improvements of iEschylus were not limited to 
the composition of tragedy : he added the re- 



sources of art in its exhibition. Thus he is 
said to have availed himself of the skill of Ag- 
atharchus, who painted for him the first scenes 
which had ever been drawn according to the 
principles of linear perspective. He also fur- 
nished bis actors with more suitable and mag- 
nificent dresses, with significant and various 
masks, and with the thick-soled cothurnus, to 
raise their stature to the height of heroes. He 
moreover bestowed so much attention on the 
choral dances, that he is said to have invented 
various figures himself, and to have instructed 
the choristers in them without the aid of the 
regular ballet-masters. With him, also arose 
the usage of representing at the same time a 
trilogy of plays connected in subject, so that 
each formed one act, as it were, of a great whole, 
which might be compared with some of Shaks- 
peare's historical plays. Even before the time 
of ^Eschylus, it had been customary to contend 
for the prize of tragedy with three plays exhibit- 
ed at the same time, but it was reserved for him 
to show how each of three tragedies might be 
complete in itself, and independent of the rest, 
and nevertheless form a part of an harmonious 
and connected whole. The only example still 
extant of such a trilogy is the Oresteia, as it 
was called. A satyrical play commonly follow- 
ed each tragic trilogy. iEschylus is said to 
have written seventy tragedies. Of these only 
seven are extant, namely, the Persians, the 
Seven against Thebes, the Suppliants, the Pro- 
metheus, the Agamemnon, the Choephori, and Eu- 
menides; the last three forming, as already re- 
marked, the trilogy of the Oresteia. The Per- 
sians was acted in 472, and the Seven against 
Thebes a year afterward. The Oresteia was rep- 
resented in 458 ; the Suppliants and the Pro- 
metheus were brought out some time between 
the Seven against Thebes and the Oresteia. It 
has been supposed from some allusions in the 
Suppliants, that this play was acted in 461, 
when Athens was allied with Argos. — Editions : 
By Schiitz, third edition, Hal. Sax., 1808-21 ; by 
Wellauer, Lips., 1823: by W. Dindorf, Lips., 
1827, and Oxon., 1832; and by Scholefield, 
Camb., 1830. [The best edition, so far as it 
goes, is that by Blomfield, which unfortunately 
was never completed, containing only five of 
the seven remaining tragedies. — 2. of Cnidus, 
a contemporary of Cicero, and one of the most 
celebrated rhetoricians of Asia Minor. — 3. Of 
Rhodes, was appointed by Alexander the Great 
one of the inspectors of the governors of that 
country after its conquest, in B.C. 332.] 

J3sculapius ('AGK?i7jrrwg), the god of the med- 
ical art. In the Homeric poems iEsculapius is 
not a divinity, but simply the " blameless physi- 
cian" {irjTijp dfiv/uuv), whose sons, Machaon and 
Podalirius, were the physicians in the Greek 
army, and ruled over Tricca, Ithome, and CEcha- 
lia. Homer says nothing of the descent of <<Es- 
culapius. The common story relates that he 
was a son of Apollo and Coronis, and that when 
Coronis was with child by Apollo, she became 
enamored with Ischys, an Arcadian. Apollo, 
informed of this by a raven, which he had set 
to watch her, or, according to others, by his own 
prophetic powers, sent his sister Artemis to kill 
Coronis. Artemis accordingly destroyed Co- 
ronis in her own house at Laceria in Thessaly, 

23 



^ESEPUS. 



^ESOPUS. 



on the shore of Lake Baebia. According to Ovid 
(Met, ii., 605), it was Apollo himself who killed 
Coronis and Ischys. When the body of Coronis 
Tras to be burned, either Apollo or Mercury 
(Hermes) saved the child ^Esculapius from the 
flames, and carried it to Chiron, who instructed 
the boy in the art of healing and in hunting. 
There are various other narratives respecting 
his birth, according to some of which he was 
a native of Epidaurus, and this was a common 
opinion in later times. After he had grown 
up, reports spread over all countries, that he 
not only cured all the sick, but called the dead 
to life again. But while he was restoring 
Glaucus to life, Jupiter (Zeus) killed him with 
a flash of lightning, as he feared lest men might 
contrive to escape death altogether, or because 
Pluto had complained of iEsculapius diminish- 
ing the number of the dead. But on the 
request of Apollo, Jupiter (Zeus) placed ^Escu- 
lapius among the stars. iEsculapius is also 
said to have taken part in the expedition of the 
Argonauts and in the Calydonian hunt. He 
was married to Epione, and besides the two 
sons spoken of by Homer, we also find mention 
of the following children of his : Ianiscus, Alex- 
enor, Aratus, Hygieia, iEgle, Iaso, and Pana- 
eeia, most of whom are only personifications of 
the powers ascribed to their father. iEscula- 
pius was worshipped all over Greece. His 
temples were usually built in healthy places, on 
hills outside the town, and near wells which 
were believed to have healing powers. These 
temples were not only places of worship, but 
were frequented by great numbers of sick per- 
sons, and may therefore be compared to modern 
hospitals. The principal seat of his worship in 
Greece was Epidaurus, where he had a temple 
surrounded with an extensive grove. Serpents 
were everywhere connected with his worship, 
probably because they were a symbol of pru- 
dence and renovation, and were believed to 
have the power of discovering herbs of won- 
drous powers. For these reasons, a peculiar 
kind of tame serpents, in which Epidaurus 
abounded, was not only kept in his temple, but 
the god himself frequently appeared in the form 
of a serpent. At Rome the worship of iEscu- 
lapius was introduced from Epidaurus at the 
command of the Delphic oracle or of the Sybil- 
line books, in B.C. 293, for the purpose of avert- 
ing a pestilence. The supposed descendants of 
JEseulapius were called by the patronymic name 
Asclepiadce ('Ao-rf.viTiddcu), and their principal 
seats were Cos and Cnidus. They were an order 
or caste of priests, and for a long period the 
practice of medicine was intimately connected 
with religion. The knowledge of medicine was 
regarded as a sacred secret, which was trans- 
mitted from father to son in the families of the 
Asclepiadas. Respecting the festivals of Mscu- 
lapius, vid. Diet of Antiq. 

[^Esepus (AZffjyTTOf), son of Bucolion and the 
nymph Abarbarea, slain by Euryalus before 
Troy.] ^ y 

jEsepus (Alanrcog :) [now BoHu according to 
leake, but usually considered the modern Satal- 
dere], a river which rises in the mountains of 
Ida, and flows by a northerly course into the 
Propontis, which it enters west of Cyzicus and 
east of the Granicus. 
24 



JEsernia (^Eserninus: now hernia), a town 
in Samnium, made a Roman colony in the first 
Punic war. 

iEsis (now Esino or Fiumesino), a river which 
formed the boundary between Pieenum and 
Umbria, was anciently the southern boundary 
of the Senones, and the northeastern boundary 
of Italy proper. 

iEsis or jEsium (iEsinas : now Jesi), a town 
and a Roman colony in Umbria, on the River 
iEsis, celebrated for its cheese, ^Esinas caseus. 

-^Eson (Alcuv), son of Cretheus, the founder 
of Iolcus, and of Tyro, the daughter of Salmo- 
neus, and father of Jason and Promaehus. He 
wns excluded from the throne by his half-brother 
Pelias, who endeavored to keep the kingdom to 
himself by sending Jason away with the Argo- 
nauts. Pelias subsequently attempted to get 
rid of JEson by force, but the latter put an end 
to his own life. According to Ovid (Met, vii., 
162, seg.), JEson survived the return of the Argo- 
nauts, and was made young again by Medea. 

[iEsoNiDEs (kioovidric), a patronymic given 
to the sons of JEson, especially Jason.] 

iEsorus (Alawnoc). 1. A writer of fables, 
lived about B.C. 5*70, and was a contemporary 
of Solon. He was originally a slave, and re- 
ceived his freedom from his master ladmon the 
Samian. Upon this he visited Croesus, who 
sent him to Delphi, to distribute among the citi- 
zens four minae apiece ; but in consequence of 
some dispute on the subject, he refused to give 
any money at all, upon which the enraged Del- 
phians threw him from a precipice. Plagues 
were sent upon them from the gods for the of- 
fence, and they proclaimed their willingness to 
give a compensation for his death to any one who 
could claim it. At length ladmon, the grandson 
of iEsop's old master, received the compensa- 
tion, since no nearer connection could be found. 
A life of ^Esop prefixed to a book of fables pur- 
porting to be his, and collected by Maximus 
Planudes, a monk of the fourteenth century, 
represents ^Esop as a perfect monster of ugli- 
ness and deformity ; a notion for which there is 
no authority whatever in the classical authors, 
"Whether iEsop left any written works at all, 
is a question which affords considerable room 
for doubt ; though it is certain that fables, bear- 
ing iEsop's name, were popular at Athens in its 
most intellectual age. We find them frequently 
noticed by Aristophanes. They were in prose, 
and were turned into poetry by several writers. 
Socrates turned some of them into verse during 
his imprisonment, and Demetrius Phalereus 
(B.C. 320) imitated bis example. The only 
Greek versifier of iEsop, of whose writings any 
whole fables are preserved, is Babrius. Vid. 
Babrius. Of the Latin writers of ^Esopean 
fables, Phaedrus is the most celebrated. Vid. 
Ph^drus. The Fables now extant in prose, 
bearing the name of JEsop, are unquestionably 
spurious, as is proved by Bentley in his disser- 
tation on the fables of jSsop appended to his 
celebrated letters on Phalaris. — Editions: By 
Ernesti, Lips., 1781; by De Furia, Lips., 1810; 
reprinted by Coray at Paris, 1810 ; and by 
Schaefer, Lips., 1820. — 2. A Greek historian, 
who wrote a life of Alexander the Great. The 
original is lost, but there is a Latin translation 
of it by Julius Valerius. 



^ESOPUS. 



^ETHIOPIA. 



jEsopus, Claudius, or Clodius, was the great- 
est tragic actor at Rome, and a contemporary 
of Roscius, the greatest comic actor; and both 
of them lived on intimate terms with Cicero. 
JEsopus appeared for the last time on the stage, 
at an advanced age, at the dedication of the 
theatre of Pompey (B.C. 55), when his voice 
failed him, and he could not go through with the 
speech. yEsopus realized an immense fortune 
by his profession, which was squandered by his 
son, a foolish spendthrift. It is said, for instance, 
that this son dissolved in vinegar and drank a 
pearl worth about £8000, which he took from 
the ear-ring of Caecilia Metella. 

JSstii, JEstyi, or /Estui, a people dwelling 
on the sea-coast, in the northeast of Germany, 
probably in the modern Kurland, who collected 
amber, "which they called glessum. Their cus- 
toms, says Tacitus, resembled the Suevic, and 
their language the British. They were proba- 
bly a Sarmatiau or Slavonic race, and not a 
Germanic. 

./Esula (/Esulanus), a town of the ./Equi, on a 
mountain between Praeneste and Tibur. (iEsuke 
declive arvum, Hor., Carm., iii., 29.) 

[/Esyetes {Alai^rng), a Trojan hero, whose 
son Alcathous married a daughter of Anchises. 
His tomb is alluded to by Homer, according to 
whom it served as a post of observation, and is 
said by Strabo to have been five stadia distant 
from Troy, on the road leading to Alexandrea 
Troas. A conical mound is still pointed out in 
that vicinity as the tomb of JEsyetes, and bears 
the appellation UdjeJc-7epe.] 

[iEsYMNETES (Aiavfivrjrrj^), an appellation of 
Bacchus (Dionysus), which means "Lord," 
" King," and under which he was honored espe- 
cially at Aroe in Achaia.] 

[/Etelea (AWai'a), a city of Laconia.] 

./Ethalia (Mfta'/./a, AWdhj), called Ilva (now 
Elba) by the Romans, a small island in the Tus- 
can Sea, opposite the town of Populonia, cele- 
brated for its iron mines. It had on the north- 
east a good harbor, " Argous Portus" (now Porto 
Ferraio), in which the Argonaut Jason is said to 
have lauded. 

jEthalides (Alda/.lting), son of Mercury (Her- 
mes) and Eupolemia, the herald of the Argonauts. 
He had received from his father the faculty of 
remembering every thing, even in Hades, and 
was allowed to reside alternately in the upper 
and in the lower world. His soul, after many 
migrations, at length took possession of the body 
of Pythagoras, in which it still recollected its 
former migrations. 

jEther (At6r/p), a personified idea of the 
mythical cosmogonies, in which ./Ether was con- 
sidered as one of the elementary substances out 
of which the Universe was formed. /Ether was 
regarded by the poets as the pure upper air, 
the residence of the gods, and Jupiter (Zeus) 
as the Lord of the /Ether, or ./Ether itself, per- 
sonified. 

JEthices (AWiksc), a Thessalian or Epirot 
people, near Mount Pindus. 

./Ethicus, Hister or Ister, a Roman writer 
of the fourth century after Christ, a native of 
Istria, the author of a geographical work called 
uEthici Cosmograpliia, which appears to have 
been chiefly drawn up from the measurement 
of the whole Roman world ordered by Julius 



Caesar, B.C. 44, and from other official documents. 
Edited by Gronovius, in his edition of Pompo- 
nius Mela, Leyden, 1722. 

^Ethilla (AWiKka or kWvXka), daughter of 
Laomedon and sister of Priam, became after the 
fall of Troy the captive of Protesilaus, [according 
to a late legend, for the Homeric account makes 
Protesilaus to have been the first Greek slain 
before Troy. Vid. Protesilaus.] 

[/Ethton, a seer and friend of Phineus, slain 
at the nuptials of Perseus and Andromeda. — 
2. Son of a Heliconian nymph, fell in the expe- 
dition of the Seven against Thebes.] 

^Ethiopes (AWtoTreg, said to be from aWu and 
ioip, but perhaps really a foreign name corrupt- 
ed), was a name applied, (1.) most generally to 
all black or dark races of men ; (2.) to the inhab- 
itants of all the regions south of those with 
which the early Greeks were well acquainted, 
extending even as far north as Cyprus and Phoe- 
nicia ; (3.) to all the inhabitants of Inner Africa, 
south of Mauretania, the Great Desert, and 
Egypt, from the Atlantic to the Red Sea and 
Indian Ocean, and to some of the dark races of 
Asia ; and (4.) most specifically to the inhabi- 
tants of the land south of Egypt, which was 
called ./Ethiopia. 

./Ethiopia {AWiOTrla, Aid. vir£p Alyv-Krov : Al- 
dloip, AidiOTvevr, Horn., fern. AWlottic; : jEthiops : 
now Nubia, Kordofan, Sennaar, Abyssinia), a 
country of Africa, south of Egypt, the boundary 
of the countries being at Syene (now Assouan) 
and the Smaller Cataract of the Nile, and extend- 
ing on the east to the Red Sea, and to the south 
and southwest indefinitely, as far apparently as 
the knowledge of the ancients extended. In 
its most exact political sense the word ^Ethio- 
pia seems to have denoted the kingdom of 
Meroe ; but in its wider sense it included also 
the kingdom of the Axomit^e, besides several 
other peoples, such as the Troglodytes and the 
Ichtlryophagi on the Red Sea, the Blemmyes 
and Megabari and Nubaa in the interior. The 
country was watered by the Nile and its tribu- 
taries, the Astapus (Bahr-el-Azreh or Blue Nile) 
and the Astaboras {Atbara or Tacazze). The 
people of /Ethiopia seem to have been of the 
Caucasian race, and to have spoken a language 
allied to the Arabic. Monuments are found in 
the country closely resembling those of Egypt, 
but of an inferior style. The religion of the 
/Ethiopians appears to have been similar to that 
of the Egyptians, but free from the grosser su- 
perstitions of the latter, such as the worship of 
animals. Some traditions made Meroe the 
parent of Egyptian civilization, while others 
ascribed the civilization of /Ethiopia to Egyptian 
colonization. So great was the power of the 
^Ethiopians, that more than once in its history 
Egypt was governed by /Ethiopian kings ; and 
even the most powerful kings of Egypt, though 
they made successful incursions into /Ethiopia, 
do not appear to have had any extensive or 
permanent hold upou the country. Under the 
Ptolemies Graaco-Egyptian colonies established 
themselves in /Ethiopia, and Greek manners 
and philosophy # had a considerable influence on 
the upper classes ; but the country was never 
subdued. The Romans failed to extend their 
empire over /Ethiopia, though they made expe- 
ditions into the country, in one of which C. Pe- 
25 



AETHL1US. 



^ETOLIA. 



tronius, prefect of Egypt under Augustus, ad- 
vanced as far as Napata, and defeated the war- 
rior queen Candace (B.C. 22). Christianity very 
early extended to ^Ethiopia, probably in conse- 
quence ol the conversion of the treasurer of 
Queen Candace (Acts, viii., 2*7). The history of 
the downfall of the great Ethiopian kingdom 
of Meroe is very obscure. 

Aethlius ('Aed?uo.g), first king of Elis, father 
of Eudymion, was son of Jupiter (Zeus) and 
Protogenla, daughter of Deucalion ; according to 
others, a son of iEolus. 

[xEthox (Alduv from aldo), father of Tantalus. 

2. Appellation assumed by Ulysses to escape 

detection on his return to Ithaca. — 3. ISTame of a 
horse of the Sun ; also of one of Pluto's ; and 
of Aurora (Eos), of Hector, and of several other 
heroes.] 

^Ethra (Al6pa). 1. Daughter of Pittheus of 
Trcezen, was mother of Theseus by yEgeus. 
She afterward lived in Attica, from whence she 
was carried off to Lacedaemon by Castor and 
Pollux, and became a slave of Helen, with whom 
she was taken to Troy. At the capture of Troy 
she was restored to liberty by her grandson 
Acamas or Demophon. — 2. Daughter of Oceanus, 
by whom Atlas begot the twelve Hyades and a 
son, Hyas. 

[^Ethusa (Aidovaa), daughter of Neptune and 
Alcyone, and mother by Apollo of Eleuther.] 

[i&THYiA (Aldvia), an appellation of Minerva 
(Athena), as the inventress of ship-building or 
navigation.] 

Aeiion ('AeTtcov). 1. A sculptor of Amphipo- 
lis, flourished about the middle of the third cen- 
tury B.C. — 2. A celebrated painter, whose best 
picture represented the marriage of Alexander 
and Roxana, It is commonly supposed that he 
lived in the time of Alexander the Great ; but 
the words of Lucian (Herod., 4) show that he 
must have lived about the time of Hadrian and 
the Antonines. 

Aetius. 1. [Son of Anthas, kiug of Trcezen, 
whose descendants founded Halicarnassus and 
Myndus.] — 2. A celebrated Roman general, de- 
fended the Western empire against the barba- 
rians during the reign of Valeutinian III. In 
A.D. 45 1 he gained a great victory over Attila, 
near Chalons, in Gaul ; but he was treacherously 
murdered by Valeutinian in 454. — 3. A Greek 
medical writer, born at Amida in Mesopotamia, 
lived at the end of the fifth or the beginning of 
the sixth century after Christ, His work Bi6?Ua 
'larpcKu 'EnKaLtietia, " Sixteen Books on Medicine," 
is one of the most valuable medical remains of 
antiquity, as being a judicious compilation from 
many authors whose works are lost. The Avhole 
of it has never appeared in the origiual Greek, 
but a corrupt translation of it into Latin was 
published by Cornarius, BasiL 1542, often re- 
printed, and in H. Stephens's Medicce Artis Prin- 
cipes, Paris, 1567. 

iETNA (Actvti). 1. (Now Monte Gibello), a 
volcanic mountain in the northeast of Sicily, 
between Tauromenium and Catana. It is said 
to have derived its name from JEtna, a Sicilian 
nymph, a daughter of Uranus and Gaea, or of 
Briareus. Jupiter (Zeus) burieM under it Ty- 
phon or Enceladus ; and in its interior Vulcan 
(Hephaestus) and the Cyclopes forged the thun- 
derbolts for Jupiter (Zeus). There were seve- 
26 



ral eruptions of Mount JStna in antiquity. One 
occurred in B.C. 475, to which iEschylus and 
Pindar probably allude, and another in B.C. 425, 
which Thucydides says (iii., 116) was the third 
on record since the Greeks had settled in Sicily. 
The form of the mountain seems to have been 
much the same in antiquity as it is at present. 
Its base covers an area of nearly ninety miles 
in circumference, and its highest point is 10,874 
feet above the level of the sea. The circum- 
ference of the crater is variously estimated 
from two and a half to four miles, aud the dejJth 
from six hundred to eight hundred feet. — 2. 
(iEtnenses : now S. Maria di Licodia or S. Nic- 
olas di Arenis), a town at the foot of Mount 
iEtna, on the road to Catana, formerly called 
Inessa or Innesa. It was founded in B.C. 461, 
by the inhabitants of Catana, who had been ex- 
pelled from their own town by the Siculi. They 
gave the name of iEtna to Inessa, because their 
own town Catana had been called JStna by 
Hiero I. 

^Etn^eus (Airvalog), an epithet of several gods 
and mythical beings connected with Mount iEtua : 
of Jupiter (Zeus), of whom there was a statue 
on Mount iEtna, aud to whom a festival was 
celebrated there, called iEtnea ; of Vulcan (He- 
phaestus) ; and of the Cyclopes. 

^Etolia (AlrioAta : Airu?^), a division of 
Greece, was bounded on the west by Acarna- 
nia, from which it was separated by the River 
Achelous, on the north by Epirus and Thessaly, 
on the east by the Ozolian Locrians, and on the 
south by the entrance to the Corinthian Gulf. 
It was divided into two parts, Old iEtolia, from 
the Achelous to the Evenus and Calydon, and 
K"ew iEtolia, or the Acquired (z-Ikt7]toc), from 
the Evenus and Calydon to the Ozolian Locri- 
ans. On the coast the country is level and 
fruitful, but in the interior mountainous and 
unproductive. The mountains contained many 
wild beasts, and were celebrated in mythology 
for the hunt of the Calydoniau boar. The coun- 
try was originally inhabited by Curetes and 
Leleges, but was at an early period colonized 
by Greeks from Elis, led by the mythical JEto- 
lus. The iEtolians took part in the Trojan 
war, under their king, Thoas. They continued 
for a long time a rude and uncivilized people, 
living to a great extent by robbery ; and even 
in the time of Thucydides (B.C. 410) many of 
their tribes spoke a language -which was not 
Greek, and were in the habit of eating raw flesh. 
Like the other Greeks, they abolished, at an 
early time, the monarchical form of govern- 
ment, and lived under a democracy. They ap- 
pear to have been early united by a kind of 
league, but this league first acquired political 
importance about the middle of the third cen- 
tury B.C., and became a formidable rival to the 
Macedonian monarchs and the Achaean League. 
The JStoliau League at one time included not 
only iEtolia Proper, but Acarnania, part of Thes- 
saly, Locris, and the Island of Cephallenia ; and 
it also had close alliances with Elis and several 
towns in the Peloponnesus, and likewise with 
Cius on the Propontis. Its annual meetings, 
called Pancetolica, were held in the autumn at 
Thermus, and at them were chosen a general 
(oTparTjyoc), wno was a t fc ne head of the league, 
an hipparchus or master of the horse, a secre- 



iETOLUS. 



AFRICA. 



tary, and a select committee called apocleti 
(a-KOKlrjTOi). For further particulars respecting 
the constitution of the league, vid. Diet, of Ant., 
art. JStolicum Fcedus. The iEtolians took the 
side of Antiochus III. against the Romans, and 
on the defeat of that monarch B.C. 189, they 
became virtually the subjects of Rome. On 
the conquest of the Achaeans, B.C. 146, iEtolia 
was included in the Roman province of Achaia. 
After the battle of Actium, B.C. 31, a consider- 
able part of the population of ^Etolia was trans- 
planted to the city of Nicopolis, which Augus- 
tus built in commemoration of his victory. 

^Etolus (Ahuloc), son of Endymion and 
Neis, or Iphianassa, married Pronoe, by whom 
he had two sons, Pleuron and Calydon. He 
was king of Elis, but was obliged to leave Pel- 
oponnesus, because he had slain Apis, the son 
of Jason or Salmoneus. He went to the coun- 
try near the Achelous, which was called iEtolia 
after him. 

JExone (Ai^ovr) and AlZuvrftg : Altjuvevc : now 
Asani?), an Attic demus of the tribe Cecropis 
or Pandionis. Its inhabitants had the reputa- 
tion of being mockers aud slanderers. 

Afer, Domitius, of Nemausus (Nhmes) in 
Gaul, was the teacher of Quintilian, and one of 
the most distinguished orators in the reigns of 
Tiberius, Caligula, Claudius, and Nero, but he 
sacrificed his character by conducting accusa- 
tions for the government. He was consul suf- 
fectus in A.D. 39, and died in 60. Quintilian 
mentions several works of his on oratory, which 
are all lost. 

[Afrania Gaia or Caia, the wife of the sen- 
ator Licinius Buccio, a very litigious woman, 
who always pleaded her own causes before the 
praetor. Hence her name became proverbial 
for a litigious woman. She died 48 B.C.] 

Afranius. 1. L., A Roman comic poet, flour- 
ished about B.C. 100. His comedies described 
Roman scenes and manners (Gomozdiop, togatce), 
and the subjects were mostly taken from the 
life of the lower classes (Co?ncedice tabemarice). 
They were frequently polluted with disgraceful 
amours ; but he depicted Roman life with such 
accuracy that he is classed with Menander 
(Hor., Ep., ii., 1, 57). His comedies continued 
to be acted under the empire. The names and 
fragments of between twenty and thirty are still 
preserved : [these fragments have been pub- 
lished by Bothe, in the 5th vol. of his Poelce Sce- 
nici Lai, and by Neukirch, Be Fabula togata 
Romanai] 2. L., a person of obscure origin, 
and a faithful adherent of Pompey. He served 
under Pompey against Sertorius and Mithra- 
dates, and was, through Pompey's influence, 
made consul, B.C. 60. When Pompey obtained 
the provinces of the two Spains in his second 
consulship (B.C. 55), he sent Afranius and Pe- 
treius to govern them, while he himself remain- 
ed in Rome. In B.C. 49, Afranius and Petreius 
were defeated by Caesar in Spain. Afranius 
thereupon passed over to Pompey in Greece; 
was present at the battle of Pharsalia, B.C. 48 ; 
and subsequently at the battle of Thapsus in 
Africa, B O. 46. He then attempted to fly into 
Mauretauia. but was taken prisoner by P. Sit- 
tius, and killed. 

Africa (' A<j>p'uc7] : Africanus), was used by 
the ancients in two senses, (1.) for the whole 



continent of A frica, and (2.) for the portion of 
Northern Africa which constituted the territory 
of Carthage, and which the Romans erected 
into a province, under the name of Africa Pro- 
pria. — 1. In the more general sense the name 
was not used by the Greek writers ; and its 
use by the Romans arose from the extension 
to the whole continent of the name of a part of 
it. The proper Greek name for the continent 
is Libya (AlBvtj). Considerably before the his- 
torical period of Greece begins, the Phoeni- 
cians extended their commerce over the Medi- 
terranean, and founded several colonies on the 
northern coast of Africa, of which Carthage was 
the chief. Vid. Carthago. The Greeks knew 
very little of the country until the foundation 
of the Dorian colony of Cyrene (B.C. 620), and 
the intercourse of Greek travellers with Egypt 
in the sixth and fifth centuries ; and even then 
their knowledge of all but the part near Cyrene 
was derived from the Egyptians and Phoeni- 
cians, who sent out some remarkable expedi- 
tions to explore the country. A Phoenician 
fleet, sent by the Egyptian king Pharaoh Necho 
(about B.C. 600), was said to have sailed from 
the Red Sea, round Africa, and so into the 
Mediterranean : the authenticity of this story 
is still a matter of dispute. We still possess 
an authentic account of another expedition, 
which the Carthaginians dispatched under Han- 
no (about B.C. 510), and which reached a point 
on the western coast nearly, if not quite, as far 
as latitude ten degrees north. On the opposite 
side of the continent, the coast appears to have 
been very bttle known beyond the southern 
boundary of Egypt, till the time of the Ptole- 
mies. In the interior, the Great Desert (Sahara) 
interposed a formidable obstacle to discovery ; 
but even before the time of Herodotus, the 
people on the northern coast told of individuals 
who had crossed the Desert and had reached a 
great river flowing toward the east, with croc- 
odiles in it, and black men living on its banks, 
which, if the story be true, was probably the 
Niger in its upper course, near Timbuctoo. That 
the Carthaginians had considerable intercourse 
with the regions south of the Sahara, has been 
inferred from the abundance of elephants they 
kept. Later expeditions and inquiries extend- 
ed the knowledge which the ancients possessed 
of the eastern coast to about ten degrees south 
latitude, and gave them, as it seems, some 
further acquaintance with the interior, about 
Lake Tchad, but the southern part of the conti- 
nent was so totally unknown, that Ptolemy, 
who finally fixed the limits of ancient geograph- 
ical science, recurred to the old notion, which 
seems to have prevailed before the time of He- 
rodotus, that the southern parts of Africa met 
the southeastern part of Asia, and that the In- 
dian Ocean was a vast lake. The greatest ge- 
ographers who lived before Ptolemy, namely, 
Eratosthenes and Strabo, had accepted the tra- 
dition that Africa was circumnavigable. The 
shape of the continent they conceived to be that 
of a right-angled triangle, having for its hypot- 
enuse a line drawn from the Pillars of Hercules 
to the south of the Red Sea : and, as to its ex- 
tent, they did not suppose it to reach nearly so 
far as the equator. Ptolemy supposed the west- 
ern coast to stretch north and south from the 

27 



AFRICA. 



AGALLIS. 



Pillars of Hercules, and be gave the continent by the latest of the ancient geographers. The 
an indefinite extent toward the south. There northern district was better known to the Ro- 
were also great differences of opinion as to the mans than it is to us, and was extremely pop- 
boundaries of the continent. Some divided the j ulous and flourishing ; and, if we may judge by 
whole world into only two parts, Europe and ' the list of tribes in Ptolemy, the interior of the 
Asia, and they were not agreed to which of country, especially between the Little and Great 
these two Lybia («". ft, Africa) belonged ; and Altars, must have supported many more inhab- 
those who recognized three divisions differed : itants than it does at present. Further infor- 
again in placing the boundary between Libya ; mation respecting the several portions of the 
and Asia either on the west of Egypt, or along : country will be found in the separate articles. — 
the Wile, or at the Isthmus of Suez and the Red ; 2. Africa Propria or Provtxcta, or simply Af- 
Sea : the last opinion gradually prevailed. As ' rica, was the name under which the Romans, 
to the subdivision of the country itself. Herodo- ■ after the Third Punic War (B.C. 146), erected 
tus distributes it into J^gyptus, yEthiopia (i. <?., j into a province the whole of the former territory 
all the regions south of Egypt and the Sahara), of Carthage, it extended from the River Tus- 
and Libya, properly so called ; and he subdi- ca, on the west, which divided it from Mumidia, 
vides Libya into three parts, according to their j to the bottom of the Syrtis Minor, on the south- 
physical distinctions, namely, (1.) the Inhabit- ! east. It was divided into two districts (regio- 
ed Country along the Mediterranean, in which nes), namely, (1.) Zeugis or Zeugitana, the dis- 
dwelt the Nomad Libyans (oi rrapada/.do-aioi ruv trict round Carthage, (2.) Byzacium or Byza- 
vo/idduv A.i6vuv: the Barbary States); (2.) the cena, south of Zeugitana, as far as the bottom 
Country of "Wild Beasts {n dripiudrjc), south of of the Syrtis Minor. It corresponds to the mod- 
the former, that is, the region between the Little • ern regency of Tunis. The province was full 
and Great Atlas, which still abounds in wild of flourishing towns, and was extremely fertile, 
beasts, but takes its name from its prevailing especially Byzacena : it furnished Rome with 
vegetation (Beled-el-Jerid, i. e., the Country of \ its chief supplies of corn. The above limits are 
Palms), and. (3.) the Sandy Desert (tj tpduuoc ;\ assigned to the province by Pliny: Ptolemy 
the Sahara), that is, the table-land bounded by | makes it extend from the River Ampsaga, on 
the Atlas on the north and the margin of the the west, to the borders of Cyrenaica, at the 
Kile valley on the east, which is a vast tract of bottom of the Great Syrtis, on the east, so as 
sand broken only by a few habitable islands, to include Mumidia and Tripolitana. 
called Oases. As to the people, Herodotus dis- : Afkicanus. a surname given to the Scipios 
tinguishes four races, two native, namely, the ! on account of their victories in Africa. Yid. 
Libyans and Ethiopians, and two foreign, name- Sctpio. 

ly, the Phoenicians and the Greeks. The Lib- ; Africaxus. 1. Sex. Cjecilius, a Roman ju- 
yans, however, were a Caucasian race : the risconsult, lived under Antoninus Pius (A.D. 
^Ethiopians of Herodotus correspond to our Me- 138-161), and vrvote Libri IX. Qucestiojnan,irom 
gro races. The Phoenician colonies were plaut- which many extracts are made in the Digest, 
ed chiefly along, and to the west of, the great — 2. Julius, a celebrated orator in the reign of 
recess in the middle of the north coast, which Mero, is much praised by Quiutilian, who speaks 
formed the two Strtes, by far the most im- of him and Domitius Afer as the best orators 
portant of them being Carthage ; and the Greek ; of their time. — 3. Sex. Julius, a learned Chris- 
colonies were fixed on the coast along and be- tian writer at the beginning of the third cen- 
yond the east side of the Syrtes ; the chief of tury, passed the greater part of his life at Em- 
them was Cyrexe, and the region was called j maus in Palestine, and afterward lived at Alex- 
Cyreuaica. Between this and Egypt were Lib- ] andrea. His principal work was a Chronicon 
yan tribes, and the whole region between the in five books, from the creation of the world, 
Carthaginian dominions and Egypt, including • which he placed in 5199 B.C., to A.D. 221. This 
Cyrenaica, was called by the same name as the ! work is lost, but part of it is extracted by Euse- 
whole continent, Lybia. The chief native tribes bius in his Chronicon, and many fragments of 
of this region were the Adtrmachidje, Mar- i it are preserved by Georgius Syncellus, Cedre- 
marid.e, Psylli, and Nasamones. The last ex- nus, and in the Pasehale Chronicon. There 
tended into the Carthaginian territory. To the was another work written by Africanus, enti- 
west of the Carthaginian possessions* the coun- 1 tied Cesti (Kearot), that is, embroidered girdles, 
try was called by the general names of Mumidia so called from the celebrated Cestus of Yenus 
and Mauretaxia, and was possessed partly by (Aphrodite). It treated of a vast variety of sub- 
Carthaginian colonies on the coast, aud partlv jects — medicine, agriculture, natural history, 
Libyan tribes under various names, the chief the military art, <fcc. The work itself is lost, 
of which were the Mumid^e, Massylu, Mas- , but some extracts from it are published by The- 
s-esylii, and Mauri, and to the south of them ! venot in the Mathematici Yeteres, Paris, 1693, 
the GjEtull The whole of this northern re- and also in the Geojyonica. 

gion fell successively under the power of Rome, Africus (?uf by the Greeks), the southwest 
and was finally divided iuto provinces as fol- ' wind, so called because 'it blew from Africa, 
lows: (1.) Egypt; (2.) Libva, including, (a) frequently brought storms with it {crcberque pro- 
Libya? Moinos or Libya Exterior ; (6) Marma- cellis Africus, Yirg., uEn., i., 85.) 
rica ; (c) Cyrenaica ; (3.) Africa Propria, the [Agacles ( 'XyaK/Jjc) a Myrmidon hero, father 
former empire of Carthage (see below, Mo. 2) ; of Epigeus.] 

(4.) Mumidia ; (5.) Mauretania. divided into, [Agallis ('Aya/Jug), of Corcyra, a female 
(a) Sitifensis ; (b) Caesariensis ; (c) Tingitana : grammarian, who wrote upon Homer : but from 
these, with (6.) Ethiopia, make up the whole two passages in Suidas some have supposed 
of Africa, according to the divisions recognized that the true name is Anagallis] 
28 



AGAMEDE. 



AGAPENOR. 



Agamede ('AyaurjdTi), daughter of Auglas and 
^ife of Mulius, who, according to Homer (//., xi., 
*739), was acquainted with the healing powers 
of all the plants that grow upon the earth. 

Agamedes ('AyafiTjdnc), commonly called son 
of Erginus, king of Orchomenus, and brother of 
Trophouius, though his family connections are 
related differently by different writers. Agame- 
des and Trophouius distinguished themselves 
as architects : they built a temple of Apollo at 
Delphi, and a treasury of Hyrieus, king of Hyria 
in Boeotia. The story about this treasury re- 
sembles the one which Herodotus (ii., 121) 
relates of the treasury of the Egyptian king 
Rhanipsinitus. In the construction of the treas- 
ury of Hyrieus, Agamedes and Trophonius con- 
trived to place one stone in such a manner 
that it could be taken away outside, and thus 
formed an entrance to the treasury, without 
any body perceiving it. Agamedes and Tro- 
phonius now constantly robbed the treasury ; 
and the king, seeing that locks and seals were 
uninjured, while his treasures were constantly 
decreasing, set traps to catch the thief. Aga- 
medes was thus ensnared, and Trophonius cut 
off his head to avert the discovery. After this 
Trophonius was immediately swallowed up by 
the earth. On this spot there was afterward, 
in the grove of Lebadea, the cave of Agamedes. 
with a column by the side of it. Here was also 
the oracle of Trophouius, and those who con- 
sulted it first offered a ram to Agamedes and 
invoked him, A tradition mentioned by Cicero 
(Tusc. Qucest., i., 47) states that Agamedes 
and Trophouius, after building the temple of 
Apollo at Delphi, prayed to the god to grant 
them in reward for their labor what was best 
for men. The god promised to do so on a cer- 
tain day, and when the day came the two broth- 
ers died. 

Agamemnon ('Aya/itpvuv), son of Plisthenes 
and Aerope or Eriphyle, and grandson of Atreus, 
king of Mycenae ; but Homer and others call him 
a son of Atreus and grandson of Pelops. Aga- 
memnon and his brother Menelaus were brought 
up together with JEgisthus, the son of Thyes- 
tes, in the house of Atreus. After the murder 
of Atreus by JSgisthus and Thyestes, who suc- 
ceeded Atreus in the kingdom of Mycenae {vid. 
-JSgisthus), Agamemnon and Menelaus went to 
Sparta, where Agamemnon married Clytemnes- 
tra, the daughter of Tyndareus, by whom he be- 
came the father of Iphianassa (Iphigenia) Chry- 
sothemis, Laodice (Electra), and Orestes. The 
manner in which Agamemnon obtained the 
kingdom of Mycenae is differently related. 
Prom Homer, it appears as if he had peaceably 
succeeded Thyestes, while, according to others, 
he expelled Thvespes, and usurped his throne. 
He now became the most powerful priuce in 
Greece. A catalogue of his dominions is given 
in the Iliad (ii.. 569. <fec.) When Homer attri- 
butes to Agamemnon the sovereignty over all 
Argos, the name Argos signifies Peloponnesus, 
or the greater part of it, for the city of Argos 
was governed by Diomedes. When Helen, the 
wife of Menelaus, was carried off by Paris, aud 
the Greek chiefs resolved to recover her by 
force of arms, Agamemnou was chosen their 
commander-in-chief. After two years of prepa- 
ration, the Greek army aud fleet assembled in 



the port of Aulis in Bceotia. At this place Aga- 
memnon killed a stag which was sacred to Diana 
(Artemis), who in return visited the Greek army 
with a pestilence, and produced a calm which 
prevented the Greeks from leaving the port. In 
order to appease her wrath, Agamemnon con- 
sented to sacrifice his daughter Iphigenia ; but 
at the moment she was to be sacrificed, she was 
carried off by Diana (Artemis) herself to Tauris, 
and another victim was substituted in her place. 
The calm now ceased, and the army sailed to 
the coast of Troy. Agamemnon alone had one 
hundred ships, independent of sixty which he 
had lent to the Arcadians. In the tenth vear 
of the siege of Troy we find Agamemnon in- 
volved in a quarrel with Achilles respecting 
the possession of Briseis, whom Achilles was 
obliged to give up to Agamemnon. Achilles 
withdrew from the field of battle, and the 
Greeks were visited by successive disasters. 
The danger of the Greeks at last induced Pa- 
troclus, the friend of Achilles, to take part in 
the battle, and his fall led to the reconciliation 
of Achilles and Agamemnon. Vid. Achilles. 
Agamemnon, although the chief commander of 
the Greeks, is not the hero of the Iliad, and in 
chivalrous spirit, bravery, and character alto- 
gether inferior to Achilles. But he neverthe- 
less rises above all the Greeks by his dignity, 
power, and majesty : his eyes and head are 
likened to those of Jupiter (Zeus), his girdle to 
that of Mars (Ares), and his breast to that of 
Neptune (Poseidon). The emblem of his power 
is a sceptre, the work of Vulcan (Hephaestus), 
which Jupiter (Zeus) had once given to Mer- 
cury (Hermes), and Mercury (Hermes) to Pe- 
lops, from whom it descended to Agamemnon. 
At the capture of Troy he received Cassandra, 
the daughter of Priam, as his prize. On his 
return home he was murdered by iEgisthus, who 
had seduced Clytemnestra during the absence 
of her husband. The tragic poets make Cly- 
temuestra alone murder Agamemnon : her motive 
is in iEschylus her jealousy of Cassandra, in 
Sophocles and Euripides her wrath at the death 
of Iphigenia. 

Agamemnonides ('Aya/xefivovtSTj^), the son of 
Agamemnon, i. e., Orestes. 

[Aganice {' Kyavinr}) or Aglaonice ('AyXao- 
vIkt]), daughter of the Thessalian Hegetor: she 
was acquainted with the eclipses of the moon, 
and gave out that ^he could draw down the 
moon itself from the sky.] 

Aganippe ('Ayavtmrri), a nymph of the well 
of the same name at the foot of Mount Helicon, 
in Bceotia, which was considered sacred to the 
Muses (who were hence called Aganippides), and 
Avhich was believed to have the power of inspir- 
ing those who drank of it. [The nymph is called 
a daughter of the river-god Permessus.] The 
fountain of Hippocrene has the epithet Aganippis 
(Ov., Fast., v., 7), from its being sacred to the 
Muses, like that of Aganippe. 

Agapenor (' Ayairqvup), a son of Ancaeus, 
king of the Arcadians, received sixty ships from 
Agamemnon, in which he led his Arcadians to 
Troy. On bis return from Troy he was cast by 
a storm on the coast of Cyprus, where, accord- 
ing to some accounts, lie founded the town of 
Papbus, and in it the famous temple of Venus 
(Aphrodite). 

29 



AGAPTOLEMUS. 



AGATHOCLES. 



[Agaptolemus ('AyanTolepoc), a son of 
JE>vptus, slaia by the Danaid Pn-ene.] 

[Agar, a city of Byzaciutn in Africa Propria. 
Shaw regards it as the modem Boohadjar, where 
ruins of a destroyed city are found.] 

[Agara (now Agra), a city of India intra 
Gangem, on the southern bank of the lomanes 
(now Dschicmna).] 

[Agaricus Sinus (now Gulf of Arlingeri), a 
gulf of India intra Gangem.] 

Agarista {'A-yapLGTrj). 1. Daughter of Clis- 
thenes, tyrant of Sicyon, wife of Megacles, and 
mother of Clisthenes, who divided the Athenians 
into ten tribes, and of Hippocrates. — 2. Daugh- 
ter of the above-mentioned Hippocrates, and 
grand-daughter of No. 1, wife of Xanthippus, 
and mother of Pericles. 

Agasias (' 'A7 ao iag), a son of Dositheus, a 
sculptor of Ephesus, probably a contemporary 
of Alexander the Great (B.C. 330), sculptured 
the statue known by the name of the Borghese 
gladiator, which is still preserved in the gallery 
of the Louvre. Thi3 statue, as well as the 
Apollo Belvidere, was discovered among the 
ruins of a palace of the Roman emperors on the 
site of the ancient Antium (now Capo d'Anzo). 
From the attitude of the figure, it is clear that 
the statue represents not a gladiator, but a war- 
rior contending with a mounted combatant. Per- 
haps it was intended to represent Achilles fight- 
ing with Penthesilea. — [2. Another Ephesian 
sculptor, son of Menophilus, who exercised his 
art in Delos, while it was under the Roman 
sway. — 3. Of Stymphalus in Arcadia, an officer 
in the army of the ten thousand, often mentioned 
by Xenophon in his Anabasis.] 

Agasicles, Agesicles, or Hegesicles ('Ayaa- 
ttc?,r/g, 'Ayj}GiK?S/g, 'H.yTjcriK'h^g), king of Sparta, 
succeeded his father Archidamas I., about B.C. 
600 or 590. 

[Agasthexes Ayacdhrjc), son of Augias, and 
king in Elis : his son Polyxenus is mentioned 
among the suitors of Helen.] 

[Agastrophtjs ('Aydarpo^oc), son of Paeon, was 
slain by Diomedes before Troy.] 

[Agasus Portus (now Porto Greco), a harbor 
of Apulia on the Adriatic] 

Agatharchides ('Ayadapxtdvc) or Agathar- 
chus ('Ayddapxoc), a Greek grammarian, born 
at Cnidos, lived at Alexandrea, probably about 
B.C. 130. He wrote a considerable number of 
geographical and historical works ; but we have 
only an epitome of a portion of his work on the 
Erythraean Sea, which was made by Photius : 
it is printed in Hudson's Geogr. Script. Gr. Mi- 
nores ; [of his works on Europe and Asia some 
fragments are preserved in Athenaeus and other 
writers, which have been published by Miiller in 
Didot's Fragmenta Historicorum Grcecorum, vol. 
iii., p. 190-197.] 

Agatharchtjs {'Ayddapxoc), an Athenian art- 
ist, said to have invented scene-painting, and 
to have painted a scene for a tragedy which 
^Eschylus exhibited. It was probably not till 
toward the end of ^Eschylus's career that scene- 
painting was introduced, and not till the time of 
Sophocles that it was generally made use of; 
which may account for Aristotle's assertion 
(Poet, iv., 16) that scene-painting was intro- 
duced by Sophocles.— 2. A Greek painter, a na- 
tive of Samos. and son of Eudemus. He w?s 
30 



I a contemporary of Alcibiades and Zeuxis, and 
I must not be confounded with the contemporary 
j of JEschylus. — [3. A Syracusan, who was placed 
by the Syracusans over a fleet of twelve ships in 

B. C. 413, to visit their allies and harass the 
Athenians. He was one of the commanders, in 
the same year, in the decisive battle fought in 
the harbor of Syracuse.] 

[Agatha ('AydOrj : 'Ayadaloc : now Agde), a 
city of Gallia Xarbonensis on the Arauris.] 

Agathemerus ('Ayadr/fiepoc), the author of 
" A Sketch of Geography in Epitome" (ttjc yeu- 
ypacplac v-kotvttugelc ev eTUTOftrj), probably lived 
about the beginning of the third century after 
Christ. The work consists chiefly of extracts 
from Ptolemy and other early writers. It is 
printed in Hudson's Geogr. Script. Gr. Minores, 
[and by Hoffman with Arrian's Periplus, &c, 
Lips., 1842.] 

Agathias ('Ayadiac), a Byzantine writer, born 
about A.D. 536 at Myrina in iEolis, practiced 
as an advocate at Constantinople, whence he ob- 
tained the name Scholasticus (which word signi- 
fied an advocate in his time), and died about 
A.D. 582. He wrote many poems, of which 
several have come down to us ; but his prin- 
cipal work was his History in five books, which 
is also extant, and is of considerable value. It 
contains the history from A.D. 553 to 558, a 
period remarkable for important events, such 
as the conquest of Italy by Narses and the ex- 
ploits of Belisarius over the Huns and other 
barbarians. The best edition is by Niebuhr, 
! Bonn, 1828. 

[Agathixus ('Ayadlvog), an eminent Greek 
physician, born at Sparta, and flourished in the 
first century after Christ : he was a pupil of 
Athenaeus of Attalia in Cilicia, the founder of 
the Pneumatic sect: he did not follow strictly 
the tenets of his master, but united with them 
those of others, and thus became himself found- 
er of a new medical sect called Hectici or Epi- 
synthetici. — 2. Of Elis, son of Thrasybulus, ac- 
cording to Bceckh, an Iamid, whose father was a 
seer among the Mantineans in the time of Ara- 
tus : he was a celebrated athlete, and gained the 
prize at the Olympic games. — 3. A Corinthian 
naval commander, who had charge of a fleet in 
the Corinthian Gulf.] 

Agathoclea ('AyadoK/iELa), mistress of Ptole- 
my IV. Philopator, king of Egypt, and sister of 
his minister Agathocles. She and her brother 
were put to death on the death of Ptolemy CB_ 

C. 205). 

Agathocles ('AyadoK/vijc). 1. A Sicilian raised 
himself from the station of a potter to that of 
tyrant of Syracuse and king of Sicily. Born at 
Thermae, a town of Sicily subject to Carthage, 
he is said to have been exposed when an infant, 
| by his father, Carcinus of Rhegium, in conse- 
| quence of a succession of troublesome dreams, 
j portending that he would be a source of much 
I evil to Sicily. His mother, however, secretly 
' preserved his fife, and at seven years old he 
j was restored to his father, who had long re- 
! pented of his conduct to the child. By him he 
i was taken to Syracuse, and brought up as a pot- 
! ter. His strength and personal beauty recom- 
| mended him to Damas, a noble Syracusan, who 
i drew him from obscurity, and on whose death he 
] married his rich widow, and so became one • 



AGATHOD^EMON, 



AGENOR. 



of the wealthiest citizens in Syracuse. His 
ambitious schemes then developed themselves, 
and he was driven into exile. After several 
changes of fortune, he collected an army which 
overawed both the Syracusans and Carthaginians, 
and was restored under an oath that he would 
not interfere with the democracy, which oath he 
kept by murdering four thousand and banishing 
six thousand citizens. He was immediately 
declared sovereign of Syracuse, under the title 
of Autocrator, B.C. 317. In the course of a few 
years the whole of Sicily which was under the 
dominion of Carthage, submitted to him. In 
B.C. 310 he was defeated at Himera by the 
Carthaginians, under Hamilcar, who straightway 
laid siege to Syracuse ; whereupon he formed 
the bold design of averting the ruin which threat- 
ened him, by carrying the war into Africa. His 
successes were most brilliant and rapid. He 
constantly defeated the troops of Carthage, but 
was at length summoned from Africa by the 
affairs of Sicily, where many cities had revolted 
from him, B.C. 307. These he reduced, after 
making a treaty with the Carthaginians. He 
had previously assumed the title of King of 
Sicily. He afterward plundered the Lipari 
Isles, and also carried his arms into Italy, in 
order to attack the Bruttii. But his last days 
were embittered by family misfortunes. His 
grandson Archagathus murdered his son Aga- 
thoeles, for the sake of succeeding to the crown, 
and the old kiug feared that the rest of his family 
would share his fate. He accordingly sent his 
wife Texena and her two children to Egypt, her 
native country ; and his own death followed 
almost immediately, B.C. 289, after a reign of 
twenty-eight years, and in the seventy-second 
year of his age. Other authors relate an incre- 
dible story of his being poisoned by Ma3no, an 
associate of Archagathus. The poison, we are 
told, was concealed in the quill with which he 
cleaned his teeth, and reduced him to so fright- 
ful a condition, that he was placed on the funeral 
pile and burned while yet living, beiog unable 
to give any signs that he was not dead. — 2. Of 
Pella, father of Lysimachus. — 3. Son of Lysima- 
chus, was defeated and taken prisoner by Dro- 
michaetis, king of the Getse, about B.C. 292, but 
was sent back to his father with presents. In 
287 he defeated Demetrius Poliorcetes. At the 
instigation of his step-mother, Arsinoe, Lysima- 
chus cast him into prison, where he was mur- 
dered (284) by Ptolemaeus Ceraunus.— 4. Brother 
of Agathoclea. — 5. A Greek historian, of uncer- 
tain date, wrote the history of Cyzicus, which 
was extensively read in antiquity, and is referred 
to by Cicero (De Div. i., 24). 

Agatiiod.kmon (' Ayadodaiixuv or 'Ayadbg deog). 
1. The " Good Deity," in honor of whom the 
Greeks drank a cup of unmixed wine at the end 
of every repast— [2. A name applied by the 
Greeks to the Egyptian Kneph, and also to a 
species of suake as his symbol. — 3. A name given 
by the Greek residents to the Canopic arm of 
the Nile.]— 4. Of Alexandrea, the designer of 
some maps to accompany Ptolemy's Geography. 
Gapfies of these maps are found appended to 
several MSS. of Ptolemy. 

Agathon- ('Ayddov), an Athenian tragic poet, 
born about B.C. 447, of a rich and respectable 
family, was a friend of Euripides and Plato. 



He gained his first victory in 416: in honor of 
which Plato represents the Symposium to have 
been given, which he has made the occasion of 
his dialogue so called. In 407 he visited the 
court of Archelaus, king of Macedonia, where 
his friend Euripides was also a guest at the 
same time. He died about 400, at the age of 
forty-seven. The poetic merits of Agathon 
were considerable, but his compositions were 
more remarkable for elegance and flowery orna- 
ments than force, vigor, or sublimity. In the 
Thesmophoriaztisce of Aristophanes he is ridi- 
culed for his effeminacy, being brought on the 
stage in female dress. [The fragments of Aga- 
thon have been published by Wagner in Didot's 
Fragmenta Tragicorum Grcec, p. 52-61. — 2. A 
son of Priam. — 3. Son of Tyrimmas, commander 
of the Odrysian cavalry under Alexander the 
Great.] 

Agathyrna, Agathyrnum (' Ayddvpva, -ov : 
'Ayadupvalog : now Agatha), a town on the 
northern coast of Sicily, between Tyndaris and 
Calacta. 

[Agathyrnus CAyddvpvog), son of iEolus, and 
founder of the city Agathyrna, q. v.~] 

Agathyrsi ('Ayddvpaot), a people in European 
Sarmatia, on the River Maris (now Marosc/i) in 
Transylvania. From their practice of painting 
or tattooing their skin, they are called by Virgil 
ijEn., iv., 146) picti Agathyrsi. 

Agave ('Ayavf/), daughter of Cadmus, wife of 
Echion, and mother of Pentheus. When Pentheus 
attempted to prevent the women from celebrat- 
ing the Dionysiac festivals on Mount Cithaeron, 
he was torn to pieces there by his own mother 
Agave, who in her phreusy believed him to be 
a wild beast. Vid. Pentheus. — One of the Ne- 
reids, one of the Danaids, and one of the Ama- 
zons were also called Agavse. 

Agbatana. Vid. Ecbatana. 

Agdistis ^AydiGTLg), an androgynous deity, 
the offspring of Jupiter (Zeus) and Earth, con- 
nected with the Phrygian worship of Attes or 
Atys.^ 

Ageladas ('AyeXddag), an eminent statuary 
of Argos, the instructor of the three great mas- 
ters, Phidias, Myron, and Polycletus. Many 
modern writers suppose that there were two 
artists of this name: one an Argive, the in- 
structor of Phidias, born about B.C. 540, the 
other a native of Sicvon, who nourished about 
B.C. 432. 

Agelaus ('Ayilaoc). 1. Son of Hercules and 
Omphale, and founder of the house of Croesus.: — 
2. Son of Damastor and one of the suitors of 
Penelope, slain by Ulysses. — 3. A slave of Priam, 
who exposed the infant Paris on Mount Ida, in 
consequence of a dream of his mother. — [4. Son 
of the Heraelid Temenus. — 5. A Trojan, son of 
Phradmon, slain by Diomedes.] 

Agendicum or Agedicum (now Sens), the chief 
town of the Senones in Gallia Lugdunensis. 

Agenor ('Ayvvup). 1. Son of Neptune (Po- 
seidon) and Libya, king of Phoenicia, twin-bro- 
ther of Belus, and father of Cadmus, Phoenix, 
Cilix, Thasus, Phineu&, and, according to some, of 
Europa also. Virgil {JEn., i., 338) calls Carthage- 
the city of Agenor, since Dido was descended 
from Agenor. — 2. Son of Iasus, and father of 
Argus Panoptes, king of Argos. — 3. Son and 
successor of Triopas, in the kingdom of Argos, 

31 



AGENORIDES. 



AGLAOPHON. 



—4. Son of Pleuron and Xanthippe, and grand- 
son of ^Etolus.— 5. Son of Phegeus, king of 
Psophis, in Arcadia. He and his brother Pron- 
ous slew Alemajon, when he wanted to give the 
celebrated necklace and peplus of Harmonia to 
his second wife Callirrhoe. Vid. Phegeus. The 
two brothers were afterward killed by Ampho- 
terus and Acarnan, the sons of Alcrneeon and 

Callirrhoe. 6. Son of the Trojan Antenor and 

Theano, one of the bravest among the Trojans, 
engaged in single combat with Achilles, but was 
rescued by Apollo. 

Agenorides ('Ay7jvopld7]g), a patronymic de- 
noting a descendant of an Agenor, such as Cad- 
mus, Phineus, and Perseus. 

Agesander, a sculptor of Rhodes, who, in 
conjunction with Polydorus and Athenodorus, 
sculptured the group of Laocoon, one of the most 
perfect specimens of art. This celebrated group 
was discovered in the year 1506, near the baths 
of Titus on the Esquiline Hill: it is now preserv- 
ed in the museum of the Vatican. The artists 
probably lived in the reign of Titus, and sculp- 
tured the group expressly for that emperor. 

Agesilaus ('AyTja'uaog), kings of Sparta. 1. 
Son of Doryssus. reigned forty-four years, and 
died about B.C. 886. He was contemporary 
with the legislation of Lycurgus. — 2. Son of 
Archidamus II., succeeded his half-brother Agis 
IT., B.C. 398, excluding, on the ground of spu- 
rious birth, and by the interest of Lysander, his 
nephew Leotychides. From 396 to 394 he 
carried on the war in Asia Minor with great 
success, and was preparing to advance into the 
heart of the Persian empire, when he was 
summoned home to defend his country against 
Thebes, Corinth, and Argos, which had been 
induced by Artaxerxes to take up arms against 
Sparta. Though full of disappointment, he 
promptly obeyed ; and in the course of the 
same year (394), he met and defeated at Coro- 
nea, in Boeotia, the allied forces. During the 
next four years he regained for his country 
much of its former supremacy, till at length the 
fatal battle of Leuctra, 371, overthrew forever 
the power of Sparta, and gave the supremacy 
for a time to Thebes. For the next few years 
Sparta had almost to struggle for its existence 
amid dangers without and within, and it was 
chiefly owing to the skill, courage, and presence 
of mind of Agesilaus that she weathered the 
storm. In 361 he crossed with a body of Lace- 
daemonian mercenaries into Egypt. Here, after 
displaying much of his ancient skill, he died, 
while preparing for his voyage home, in the win- 
ter of 361-360, after a life of above eighty years 
and a reign of thirty-eight. His body was em- 
balmed in wax, and splendidly buried at Sparta. 
In person Agesilaus was small, mean-looking, 
and lame, on which last ground objection had 
been made to his accession, an oracle, curiously 
fulfilled, having warned Sparta of evils awaiting 
her under a "lame sovereignty." In his reign, 
iudeed, her fall took place, but not through him, 
for he was one of the best citizens and generals 
that Sparta ever had. 

[Agesimbrotus, admiral of the Rhodian fleet, 
which aided the consul P. Sulpicius in the war 
against Philip, king of Macedonia, B.C. 200.] 

Agesipolis (' AyrjatTToXig), kings of Sparta. 1. 
Succeeded his father Pausanias, while vet a 
32 



minor, in B.C. 394, and reigned fourteen years. 
As soon as his minority ceased, he took an active 
part in the wars in which Sparta was then en- 
gaged with the other states of Greece. In 390 
he invaded Argolis with success ; in 385 he took 
the city of Mantinea; in 381 he went to the 
assistance of Acanthus and Apollonia against the 
Olynthians, and died in 380 during this war in 
the peninsula of Pallene. — 2. Son of Cleombrotus, 
reigned one year B.C. 3*71. — 3. Succeeded Cleo- 
menes in B.C. 220, but was soon deposed by his 
colleague Lycurgus : he afterward took refuge 
with the Romans. 

Agetor ('Ay^rup), " the leader," a surname 
of J upiter (Zeus) at Lacedsemon, of Apollo, and 
of Mercury (Hermes), who conducts the souls of 
men to the lower world. 

Aggenus Urbicus, a writer on the science of 
the Agrimensores, may perhaps have lived at 
the latter part of the fourth century of our era. 
His works are printed in Goesius, Rei Agrarice 
Auctores. 

Aggrammes or Xandrames (Zavdpafirjg), the 
ruler of the Gangaridse and Prasii in India, when 
Alexander invaded India, B.C. 327. 

Agias ('Aytac), a Greek epic poet, erroneously 
called Augias, a native of Ticezeu, flourished, 
about B.C. 740, and was the author of a poem 
called Nosti (Noeroi), i. e., the history of the re- 
turn of the Achsean heroes from Troy. 

Aginnum (now Agen), the chief town of the 
Nitiobriges in Gallia Aquitanica. 

Agis ( r Ayic), kings of Sparta. 1. Son of 
Eurysthenes, the founder of the family of the 
Agidse. — 2. Son of Archidamus II., reigned B.C. 
427-398. He took an active part in the Pel- 
oponnesian war, and invaded Attica several 
times. While Alcibiades was at Sparta he was 
the guest of Agis, and is said to have seduced 
his wife Timasa ; in consequence of which Leo- 
tychides, the son of Agis, was excluded from the 
throne as illegitimate. — 3. Son of Archidamus 
III, reigued B.C. 338-330, attempted to over- 
throw the Macedonian power in Europe, while 
Alexander the Great was in Asia, but was de- 
feated and killed iu battle by Antipater in 330. 
— 4. Son of Eudamidas II., reigned B.C. 244- 
240. He attempted to re-establish the institu- 
tions of Lycurgus, and to effect a thorough re- 
form in the Spartan state ; but he was resisted 
by his colleague Leonidas II. and the wealthy, 
was thrown into prison, and was there put to 
death by command of the ephors, along with 
his mother Agesistrata, and his grandmother 
Archidamia. 

Agis, a Greek poet of Argos, a notorious flat- 
terer of Alexander the Great. 

[Agiztmba, the name applied by Ptolemy to 
the part of Africa lying under the equator, the 
southernmost portion of that country with which 
the Greeks were acquainted.] 

Aglaia ('AyXata), "the bright one." 1. One 
of the Charites or Graces. — 2. Wife of Charopus 
and mother of Nireus, who came from the Island 
of Syme against Troy. 

[AglaonIce. Vid. Aganice.] 

Aglaopheme. Vid. Sirenes. 

Aglaophon ('AylaoQuv). 1. Painter of Tha- 
sos, father and instructor of Polygnotus and 
Aristophon, lived 1 about B.C. 500. — 2. Painter, 
lived about B.C. 420, probably grandson of No. 1. 



AGLAUROS. 



AGRIGENTUM. 



[Aglauros. Vid. Agraulos.] 

Aglaus {'AyXaog), a poor citizen of Psophis in 
Arcadia, whom the Delphic oracle declared hap- 
pier than Gyges, king of Lydia, on account of 
his contented disposition. Pausanias places him 
in the time of Croesus. 

[Agnius {"Ayvtog), father of the Argonaut Ty- 
phys, the pilot of the Argo.] 

Agnodice ( J AyvodUrj), an Athenian maiden, 
was the first of her sex to learn midwifery, 
which a law at Athens forbade any woman to 
learn. Dressed as a man, she obtained instruc- 
tion from a physician named Hierophilus, and 
afterward practiced her art with success. Sum- 
moned before the Areopagus by the envy of the 
other practitioners, she was obliged to disclose 
her sex, and was not only acquitted, but obtain- 
ed the repeal of the obnoxious law. This tale, 
though often repeated, does not deserve much 
credit, as it rests on the authority of Hyginus 
alone. 

Agnonides ('Ayvovidqc), an Athenian dema- 
gogue, induced the Athenians to sentence Pho- 
cion to death (B.C. 318), but was shortly after- 
ward put to death himself by the Athenians. 

Agoracritus ('AyoputcpiTog), a statuary of Pa- 
ros, flourished B.C. 440-428, and was the favorite 
pupil of Phidias. His greatest work was a 
statue of Venus (Aphrodite), which he changed 
into a statue of Nemesis, and sold it to the 
people of Rhamnus, because he was indignant 
that the Athenians had given the preference to a 
6tatue by Alcamenes, who was another distin- 
guished pupil of Phidias. 

Agor^ea and Agor^eus ('Ayopaia and 'Ayo- 
palog), epithets of several divinities who were 
considered as the protectors of the assemblies of 
the people iu the agora, such as Jupiter (Zeus), 
Minerva (Athena), Diana (Artemis), and Mer- 
cury (Hermes). 

[Agra ("Aypa) or Agra? ("Aypat), an Attic de- 
mus south of Athens on the Ilissus : it contained 
a temple of Diana (Artemis) Agrotera, and a 
temple of Ceres (Demeter).] 

Agr^i {'Aypalot), a people of iEtolia, on the 
Achelous. 

Agraule ('AypavXr} aud 'Aypvhj : 'Aypvlevg), 
an Attic demus of the tribe Erechthe'is, named 
after Agraulos, No. 2. 

Agraulos (" AypavXo?, also "AyXavpog). 1. 
Daughter of Actseus, first king of Athens, aud 
wife of Cecrops. — 2. Daughter of Cecrops and 
Agraulos, is an important personage in the le- 
gends of Attica, and there were three different 
stories about her. 1. According to some writ- 
ers, Minerva (Athena) gave Erichthonius in a 
chest to Agraulos and her sister Herse, with the 
command not to open it; but, unable to control 
their curiosity, they opened it, and thereupon 
were seized with madness at the sight of Erich- 
thonius, and threw themselves down from the 
Acropolis. 2. According to Ovid (Met., ii., 710), 
Agraulos and her sister survived opening the 
chest, but Agraulos was subsequently punished 
by being changed into a stone by Mercury (Her- 
mes), because she attempted to prevent the god 
from euteriug the house of Herse, when he had 
fallen in love with the latter. 3. The third le- 
gend relates that Athens was once involved in 
a loug-protracted war, and that Agraulos threw 
herself down from the Acropolis because an 
3 



oracle had declared that the Athenians would 
conquer if some one would sacrifice himself for 
his country. The Athenians, in gratitude, built 
her a temple on the Acropolis, in which it be- 
came customary for the young Athenians, on re- 
ceiving their first suit of armor, to take an oath 
that they would always defend their country to 
the last. One of the Attic demi (Agraule) de- 
rived its name from this heroine, and a festival 
and mysteries (Agraulia) were celebrated at 
Athens in honor of her. 

Agreus ('Aypevg), a hunter, a surname of Pan 
and Aristaeus. 

Agri Decumates, tithe lands, the name given 
by the Romans to a part of Germany, east of the 
Rhine and north of the Danube, which they took 
possession of when the Germans retired east- 
ward, and which they gave to Gauls and subse- 
quently to their own veterans on the payment of 
a tenth of the produce (decuma). Toward the 
end of the first or beginning of the second cen- 
tury after Christ, these lands were incorporated 
in the Roman empire. 

[Agrianes ('AypcdvTjg, now Ergene), a river of 
Thrace, joining the Hebrus.] 

[Agrianes ('Aypidveg), a Thracian race dwell- 
ing around Mount Hsemus, in the vicinity of the 
River Agrianes, a rude and warlike people, and 
excellent archers.] 

Agricola, Cn. Julius, born June 13th, A.D. 
31, at Forum Julii (Frejus in Provence), was the 
son of Julius Graecinus, who was executed by 
Caligula, and of Julia Procilla. He received a 
careful education ; he first served in Britain, 
A.D. 60, under Suetonius Paulinus ; was quaestor 
in Asia in 63 ; was governor of Aquitania from. 
74 to 76; and was consul in 77, when he be- 
trothed his daughter to the historian Tacitus, and 
in the following year gave her to him in mar- 
riage. In 78 he received the government of 
Britain, which he held for seven years, during 
which time he subdued the whole of the country 
with the exception of the highlands of Caledo- 
nia, and by his wise administration introduced 
among the inhabitants the language and civiliza- 
tion of Rome. He was recalled in 85 through 
the jealousy of Domitian, and on his return lived 
in retirement till his death in 93, which, accord- 
ing to some, was occasioned by poison, adminis- 
tered by order of Domitian. His character is 
drawn in the brightest colors by his son-in-law 
Tacitus, whose Life of Agricola has come down 
to us. 

Agrigentum ('Aupdyag: 'Aapayavrlvog, Agn- 
gentinus : now Girgenti), a town on the southern 
coast of Sicily, about two aud a half miles from 
the sea, between the rivers Acragas (now Fiume 
di S. Biagio) aud Hypsas (now Fiume Drago). 
It was celebrated for its wealth and populous- 
ness, and, till its destruction by the Carthagini- 
ans (B.C. 405), was one of the most splendid cit- 
ies of the ancient world. It was the birth-place 
of Empedocles. It was founded by a Doric col- 
ony from Gela about B.C. 579, was under the 
government of the cruel tyrant Phalaris (about 
560), and subsequently under that of Theron 
(488-472), whose praises are celebrated by Pin- 
{ dar. After its destruction by the Carthaginians, 
' it was rebuilt by Timoleon, but it never regained 
its former greatness. After undergoing many 
vicissitudes, it at length came into the power 

33 



AGRESTUM. 



AGRCECIUS. 



of the Romans (210), in whose hands it remain- 1 
ed. There are still gigantic remains of the an- j 
cient city, especially of the Olympieum, or tem- 
ple of the Olympian Jupiter (Zeus). 

Agrinium ('Ayplvtov), a town in ^Etoka, per- j 
haps near the sources of the Therrmssus. 

Agrippa first a praenomen, and afterward a 
coonomen among the Romans, signifies a child j 
presented at its birth with its feet foremost. 

Agrippa, Herodes. I Called " Agrippa the 
Great " son of Aristobulus and Berenice, and j 
grandson of Herod the Great. He was edu- 
cated at Rome with the future Emperor Clau- ■ 
dius, and Drusus, the son of Tiberius. Having 
given offence to Tiberius, he was thrown into : 
prison ; but Caligula, on his accession (AD .37), j 
set him at liberty, and gave him the tetrar- j 
ehies of Abilene, Batanaea, Trachonitis, and J 
Auranitis. On the death of Caligula (41), Agrip- j 
pa, who was at the time in Rome, assisted Clau- 1 
dius in gaining possession of the empire. As a 
reward for his services, Judaea and Samaria 
were annexed to his dominions. His govern- 
ment was mild and gentle, and he was exceed- ; 
ingly popular among the Jews. It was probably j 
to increase his popularity with the Jews that j 
he caused the Apostle James to be beheaded, ! 
and Peter to be cast into prison (44). The 
manner of his death, which took place at Caesa- 1 
rea in the same year, is related in Acts, xii. By { 
his wife Cypros he had a son, Agrippa, and three ; 
daughters, Berenice, Mariamne, and Drusilla. — 
2L Son of Agrippa L, was educated at the court j 
of Cladius, and at the time of his father's death : 
was seventeen years old. Claudius kept him j 
at Rome, and sent Cuspius Fadus as procurator ; 
of the kingdom, which thus again became a Ro- j 
man province. On the death of Herodes, king : 
of Chalchis (48), his little principality was given 
to Agrippa, who subsequently received an ac- 1 
cession of territory. Before the outbreak of i 
the war with the Romans, Agrippa attempted I 
in vain to dissuade the Jews from rebelling. ! 
He sided with the Romans in the war ; and af- 
ter the capture of Jerusalem, he went with his 
sister Berenice to Rome, and died in the sev- j 
enty-third year of his age, A.D. 100. It was I 
before this Agrippa that the Apostle Paul made 
his defence, AD. 60 ( Acts, xxv., xxvi). 

Agrippa, M. Vrpslxius, born in B.C. 63, of 
an obscure family, studied with young Octavius 
(afterward the Emperor Augustus) at Apollonia 
in niyria ; and upon the murder of Caesar in 
44, was one of the friends of Octavius, who ad- 
vised him to proceed immediately to Rome. In 
the civil wars which followed, and which ter- 
minated in giving Augustus the sovereignity of 
the Roman world, Agrippa took an active part ; 
and his military abilities, combined with his 
promptitude and energy, contributed greatly to 
that result In 41, Agrippa, who was then prae- 
tor, commanded part of the forces of Augustus 
in the Perusinian war. In 38 he obtained S great 
successes in Gaul and Germany ; in 37 he was 
consul ; and in 36 he defeated Sex Pompey by 
sea. In 33 he was aedile, and in this office ex- 
pended immense sums of money upon great 
public works. He restored old aqueducts, con- 
structed a new one, to which he gave the name 
of the Julian, in honor of Augustus, and also 
erected several public buildings. In 31 he com- 
34 



manded the fleet of Augustus, at the battle of 
Actium; was consul a second time in 28, and 
a third time in 27, when he built the Pantheon. 
In 21 he married Julia, daughter of Augustus. 
He had been married twice before, first to Pom- 
ponia, daughter of T. Pomponius Atticus, and 
next to Marcella, niece of Augustus. He con- 
tinued to be employed in various military com- 
mands in Gaul Spain, Syria, and Pannonia, till 
his death in B.C. 12. By his first wife Pompo- 
nia, Agrippa had Tipsania, married to Tiberius, 
the successor of Augustus; and by his third 
wife, J ulia, he had two daughters, Julia, married 
to L. /Emilius Paulus, and Agrippina, married 
to Germanicus, and three sons, Caius Caesar, 
Lucius Caesar (vid Cesar), and Agrippa Pos- 
tumus, who was banished by Augustus to the 
Island of Planasia, and was put to death by Ti- 
berius at his accession, A.D. 14. 

Agrippixa. 1. Daughter of M. Vipsanius 
Agrippa and of Julia, the daughter of Augustus,, 
married Germanicus, by whom she had nine 
children, among whom was the Emperor Calig- 
ula, and Agrippina, the mother of JSero. She 
was distinguished for her virtues and heroism, 
and shared all the dangers of her husband's 
campaigns. On his death in A.D. 17, she re- 
turned to Italy ; but the favor with which she. 
was received by the people, increased the hatred 
and jealousy which Tiberius and his mother 
Livia had long entertained toward her. For 
some years Tiberius disguised his hatred, but at 
length, under the pretext that she was forming 
ambitious plans, he banished her to the Island 
of Pandataria (A.D. 30), where she died three 
years afterward, (A.D. 33), probably by volun- 
tary starvation. — 2. Daughter of Germanicus and 
Agrippina [No. 1.], and mother of the Emperor 
Nero, was born at Oppidum Ubiorum, afterward 
called in honor of her Colonia Agrippina, now 
Cologne. She was beautiful and intelligent, but 
licentious, cruel, and ambitious. She was first 
married to Cn. Domitius Ahenobarbus (AD. 28), 
by whom she had a son, afterward the Emperor 
Nero ; next to Crispus Passienus ; and thirdly 
to the Emperor Cladius (49), although she was 
his niece. In 50, she prevailed upon Claudius 
to adopt her son, to the prejudice of his own 
son Britannicus ; and in order to secure the 
succession for her son, she poisoned the em- 
peror in 54. Upon the accession of her son. 
]S"ero, who was then only seventeen years of 
age, she governed the Roman empire for a few 
years in his name. The young emperor soon 
became tired of the ascendency of his mother, 
and after making several attempts to shake off 
her authority, he caused her to be assassinated 
in 59. 

Agrippixexses. Vid. Coloxia Agrippixa. 

Agrius ('Aypioc), son of Porthaon and Euryte, 
and brother of OSneus, king of Calydon in ^Eto- 
lia: his six sons deprived GSneus of his king- 
dom, and gave it to their father ; but Agrius and 
his sons were afterward slain by Diomedes, the 
grandson of ffineus. 

Agrozcius or AGRorrius, a Roman gramma- 
rian, probably lived in the fifth century after 
Christ, and wrote an extant work, Be Ortho- 
graphia et Proprietate el Differentia Sermonis, 
which is printed in Putschius, Grammatical La~ 
tince Auctores Antiqui, p. 2266-2275. 



AGROLAS. 



AJAX. 



[Agrolas ('Aypulac), of Sicily, an architect, 
■who, with Hyperbius, surrounded the citadel of 
Athens with walls, except that part which was 
afterward built by Cimou.] 

Agron ("Aypuv). I. Son of Ninus, the first 
of the Lydiau dynasty of the Heraclidas. — 2. 
Son of Pleuratus, kiDg of Illyria, died B.C. 231, 
and was succeeded by his wife Teuta, though 
he left a son, Pinnes or Pinneus, by his first 
wife, Triteuta, whom he had divorced. 

Agrotera ('Ayporepa), the huntress, a sur- 
name of Diana (Artemis). Vid. Agra. There 
was a festival celebrated to her honor at Athens 
under this name. Vid. Diet, of Antiq. 

Agrylk. Vid. Agraule. 

[Agusius T., a faithful friend of Cicero, who 
adhered to him in his banishment, and was the 
sharer of all his labors and sufferings during 
that period.] 

Agyieus ('Ayvievc), a surname of Apollo, as 
the protector of the streets and public places. 

Agylla (*Ayv?J.a), the ancient Greek name 
of the Etruscan town of C^ere. 

Agyrium CAyvpiov : 'Ayvpivalog, Agyrinen- 
sis : now S. Filipo d'Argiro), a town in Sicily on 
the Cyamosorus, northwest of Centuripas and 
northeast of Enna, the birth-place of the histo- 
rian Diodorus. 

Agyrrhius ('Ayvfipioc), an Athenian, after be- 
ing in prison many years for embezzlement of 
public money, obtained, about B.C. 395, the res- 
toration of the Theoticou, and also tripled the pay 
for attending the assembly, hence he became 
so popular, that he was appointed general in 389. 

Ahala, Servilius, the name of several dis- 
tinguished Romans, who held various high of- 
fices in the state from B.C. 478 to 342. Of 
these the best known is C. Servilius Ahala, 
magister equitum in 439 to the dictator L. Cin- 
cinnatus, when he slew Sp. Melius in the 
forum, because he refused to appear before the 
dictator. Ahala was afterward brought to trial, 
and only escaped condemnation by a voluntary 
exile. Vid. Savilii. 

Aharna [now Bargiano /], a town in Etruria, 
northeast of Volsinii. 

_ Ahenobarbus, Domitius, the name of a dis- 
tinguished Roman family. They are said to 
have obtained the surname of Ahenobarbus, i. 
e., " Brazen-Beard" or " Red-Beard," because 
the Dioscuri announced to one of their ances- 
tors the victory of the Romans over the Latins 
at Lake Regiilus (B.C. 496), and, to confirm the 
truth of what they said, stroked his black hair 
and beard, which immediately became red. — 
1. Cn.. plebeiau £edile B.C. 196, prretor 194, and 
consul 192, when he fought against the Boii. 
—2. Cn., son of No. 1, consul suffectus iu 162. 
—3. Cn-., sou of No. 2, consul 122, conquered 
the Allobroges iu Gaul, in 121, at the confluence 
of the Sulga and Rhodanus. He was censor in 
115 with Caecilius Metellus. The Via Domitia 
iu Gaul was made by him. — 4 Cn., son of No. 
3. tribune of the plebs 104. brought forward the 
law {Lex Domitia), by which the election of the 
priests was transferred from the collegia to the 
people. The people afterward elected him Pon- 
tificus Maximus out of gratitude. He was con- 
sul in 96, and censor in 92. with Licinius Cras- 
8U3 the orator. In his censorship he and his 
colleague shut up the schools of the Latin rhet- 



I oricians ; but otherwise their censorship was 
j marked by their violent disputes. — 5. L., broth- 
J er of No. 4, pi-astor in Sicily, probably in 96, and 
I consul in 94, belonged to the party of Sulla, and 
was murdered at Rome in 82, by order of the 
younger Marius. — 6, Cn., son of No. 4, married 
Cornelia, daughter of L. Ciuna, consul in 87, 
and joined the Marian party. He was pro- 
scribed by Sulla in 82, and fled to Africa, where 
he was defeated and killed by Cn. Pompey in 
81.— 7. L, son of No. 4, married Porcia, the 
sister of M. Cato, and was a stanch and a cour- 
ageous supporter of the aristocratical party. 
He was aedile in 61, praetor in 58, and consul in 
54. On the breaking out of the civil war in 49" 
he threw himself into Corfinium, but was com- 
pelled by his own troops to surrender to Csesar. 
He next went to Massilia, and, after the sur- 
render of that town, repaired to Pompey in 
Greece : he fell in the battle of Pharsaha (48),. 
where he commanded the left wing, and, accord- 
ing to Cicero's assertion in the second Philippic^ 
by the hand of Antony. — 8. Cn., son of No. *l r 
was taken with his father at Corfinium (49), 
was present at the battle of Pharsalia (48), and 
returned to Italy iu 46, when he was pardoned 
by Csesar. After Caesar's death in 44, he com- 
manded the republican fleet in the Ionian Sea. 
He afterward became reconciled to Antony,, 
whom he accompanied in his campaign against 
the Pavthians in 36. He was consul in 32, and 
deserted to Augustus shortly before the battle 
of Actium. — 9. L., son of No. 8, married An- 
tonia, the daughter of Antony by Octavia; was 
sedile in 22, and consul in 16 ; and after his 
consulship, commanded the Roman army in 
Germany and crossed the Elbe. He died A. D. 
25.-10. Cn., son of No. 9, consul A.D. 32, mar- 
ried Agrippina, daughter of Germanicus, and 
was father of the Emperor Nero. Vid. Agrip- 
pina. 

Ajax (Alac). 1. Son of Telamon, king of Sal- 
amis, by Peribcea or Eriboea, and grandson of 
JEacus. Homer calls him Ajax the Telamo- 
nian, Ajax the Great, or simply Ajax, whereas 
the other Ajax, son of Oileus, is always distin- 
guished from the former by some epithet He 
sailed against Troy in twelve ships, and is rep- 
resented in the Iliad as second only to Achilles 
in bravery, and as the hero most worthy, in the 
absence of Achilles, to contend with Hestor. 
In the contest for the armor of Achilles, he was 
conquered by Ulysses, and this, says Homer, 
was the cause of his death. (Od. xi., 541, seq.) 
Homer gives no further particulars respecting 
his death ; but later poets relate that his defeat 
by Ulysses threw him into an awful state of 
madness; that he rushed from his tent and 
slaughtered the sheep of the Greek army, fan- 
cying they were his enemies ; and that at length 
he put an end to his own life. From his blood 
there sprang up a purple flower bearing the let- 
ters at on its leavesj which were at once the 
initials of his name and expressive of a sigh. 
Homer does not mention his mistress Tecmessa. 
Ajax was worshipped at Salamisj and was hon- 
ored with a festival (Aiavreia). He was also 
worshipped at Athens, and one of the Attic- 
tribes {jEavtis) to called after him. — 2. Son 
of Oileus, king of the Locrians, also called the 
lesser Ajax, sailed against Troy in forty ships. 

35 



AIDES. 



ALBANIA. 



He is described us small of stature, and wears 
a linen cuirass (/.ivodcopv^), but is brave and in- 
trepid, skilled in throwing the spear, and, next 
to Achilles, the most swift-footed among the 
Greeks. On his return from Troy his vessel 
was wrecked on the Whirling Rocks (Tvpal tte- 
rpai) ; he himself got safe upon a rock through 
the assistance of Neptune (Poseidon); but as 
he boasted that he Vould escape in defiance of 
the immortals. Neptune (Poseidon) split the 
rock with his trident, and Ajax was swallowed 
up by the sea. This is the account of Homer, 
but his death is related somewhat differently by 
Virgil and other writers, who also tell us that 
the anger of Minerva (Athena) was excited 
against him, because on the night of the cap- 
ture of Troy, he violated Cassandra in the tem- 
ple of the goddess, where she had taken refuge. 
The Opuntian Locrians worshipped Ajax as their 
national hero. 

Aides ('Aidnc). Vid. Hades. 

Aidoneus ('Ai'oWevf). 1. A lengthened form 
of Aides. Vid. Hades. — 2. A mythical king of 
the Molossians in Epirus, husband of Proserpina 
(Persephone), and father of Core. When The- 
seus and Pirithous attempted to cany off Core, 
Aidoneus had Pirithous killed by Cerberus, and 
kept Theseus in captivity till he was released by 
Hercules. 

Arcs Locutius or Loquexs, a Rornan divinity. 
A short time before the Cauls took Rome (B.C. 
390), a voice was heard at Rome in the Via 
Nova, during the silence of night, announcing that 
the Gauls were approaching. No attention was 
at the time paid to the warning, but the Romans 
afterwards erected on the spot where the voice 
had been heard, an altar with a sacred inclos- 
ure around it, to Aius Locutius, or the " Announc- 
ing Speaker." 

At.aba.npa 'X/.u6avda or rd, 'A7A6av8a : 
'A?.a6av6evc or 'A?M6av6oc : now Arabissar), an 
inland town of Caria, near the Marsyas, to the 
south of the Marauder, was situated between two 
hills : it was a prosperous place, but one of the 
most corrupt and luxurious towns in Asia Minor. 
Under the Romans it was the seat of a conven- 
tus juridicus. 

[Alabasteon ('A/.aSacrTptiv ttoaic), a city in 
Upper or Middle Egypt, in the Arabian mountain 
chain, and famed for its artists, who, from the ala- 
baster dug in Mons Alabastrinus, carved all 
kinds of vases and ornaments.] 

Alabon ('A/.aSuv), a river and town in Sicily, 
north of Syracuse. 

Alagonia ('A/iayovta), a town of the Eleuthe- 
ro-Laconians on the frontiers of Messenia. 

Alalcomex.e ('A? J a?.KO/uevai : 'A?,a?,KO/j,Evaloc, 
'A/.a/.KOfievievg). l. (Now Sulinari), an ancient 
town of Bceotia, east of Coronea, with a temple 
of Minerva (Athena), who is said to have been 
born in the town, and who was hence called 
Alaleomeneis {'A2.ahcofiev7jtg, Uoe). The name 
of the town was derived either from Alaleome- 
nia, a daughter of Ogyges, or from the Boeotian 
hero Alalcomenes.— 2. A town in Ithaca, or in 
the Island Asteria, between Ithaca and Cephal- 
lenia. 

Alalia. Vid. Aleria. 
^ Ala.ni (^k'Aavol, 'A/.avvot, i. e., mountaineers, 
irom the Sarmatian word ala), a great Asiatic 
people, included under the general name of 
36 



Scythians, but probably a branch of the Mas- 
sagetae. They were a nation of warlike horse- 
men. They are first found about the eastern 
part of the Caucasus, in the country called Al- 
bania, which appears to be only another form 
of the same name. In the reign of Vespasian 
they made incursions into Media and Armenia ; 
and at a later time they pressed into Europe, as 
far as the banks of the Lower Danube, where, 
toward the end of the fifth century, they were 
routed by the Huns, who then compelled them 
to become their allies. In A.D. 406, some of the 
Alani took part with the Vandals in their irrup- 
tion into Gaul and Spain, where they gradually 
disappear from history. 

Alaeicus, in German Al-ric, i. e., " All-rich," 
elected king of the Visigoths in AJD. 398, had 
previously commanded the Gothic auxiliaries of 
Theodosius. He twice invaded Italy, first in A.D. 
402-403, when he was defeated by Stilicho at 
the battle of Pollentia, and a second time in 408- 
410 ; in his second invasion he took and plundered 
Rome, 24th of August, 410. He died shortly 
afterward, at Consentia in Bruttium, while pre- 
paring to invade Sicily. 

Alastor ('AXdoTtop). 1. A surname of Jupi- 
j ter (Zeus) as the avenger of evil, and also, in 
general, any deity who avenges wicked deeds.— 
[2. Son of Neleus and Chloris, was slain, toge- 
ther with his brothers, except Nestor, by Hercu- 
les, when that hero took Pylos.] — 3. A Lycian, 
and companion of Sarpedon, slain by Ulysses. — 
[4. A Greek who rescued Teucer, the brother of 
Ajax, when wounded, and also Hypsenor when 
struck down by Deipkobus.] 

Alba Silvius, one of the mythical kings of 
Alba, son of Latinus, reigned thirty -nine years. 

Alba. 1. (Now Abla), a town of the Bastitani 
in Spain. — 2. (Now Alvanna), a town of the Bar- 
duli in Spain. — 3. Augusta (now Aulps, near Du- 
rance), a town of the Elicoci in Gallia Narbon- 
ensis.— 4. Eucentia or Fucentis (Albenses : now 
Alba or Albi), a town of the Marsi, and subse- 
quently a Roman colony. Tvas situated on a lofty 
rock near the Lake Fucinus. It was a strong 
fortress, and was used by the Romans as a state 
prison. — 5. Longa (Albani), the most ancient 
town in Latium, is said to have been built by 
Ascanius, and to have founded Rome. It was 
called Longa, from its stretching in a long line 
down the Alban Mount towards the Alban 
Lake, perhaps near the modern convent of Pal- 
azzolo. It was destroyed by Tullus Hostilius, 
and was never rebuilt : its inhabitants were 
removed to Rome. At a later time the surround- 
ing country, which was highly cultivated and 
covered with vineyards, was studded with the 
| splendid villas of the Roman aristocracy and 
| emperors (Pompey's, Domitian's, <fec.), each of 
' which was called Albanum, and out of which a 
I new town at length grew, also called Albanum 
I (now Alba-no), on the Appian Road, ruins of 
: which are extant. — 6. Pompeia (Albenses Pom- 
peiani : now Alba), a town in Liguria, founded 
by Scipio Africanus L, and colonized by Pom- 
peius Magnus, the birth-place of the Emperor 
' Pertinax. 

Albania (J A?c6avia : 'AMavot, Albani : now 
Schirwan and part of Doghestan, in the south- 
eastern part of Georgia), a country of Asia on 
the western side of the Caspian, extending from 



ALBANUM. 



ALBIUM INGAUNUM. 



the Rivera Cyrus and Araxes on the south to 
Mount Cerauuius (the eastern part of the Cau- 
casus) on the north, and bounded on the west 
by Iberia. It was a fertile plain, abounding in 
pasture aud vineyards; but the inhabitants were 
fierce and Avarlike. They were a Scythian tribe, 
probably a branch of the Massagetas, and identi- 
cal with the Alani. The Romans first became 
acquainted with them at the time of the Mithra- 
datic war, when they encountered Pompey with 
a large army. 

Albanum. Vid. Alba, No. 5. 

Albanus Lacts (now Lago di Albano), a small 
lake about five miles in circumference, west of 
the Mons Albanus, between Bovilloe and Alba 
Longa. is the crater of an extinct volcano, and is 
many hundred feet deep. The emissarium which 
the Romans bored through the solid rock during 
the siege of Veii, in order to carry off the super- 
fluous water of the lake, is extant at the present 
day. 

Albanus Mons (now Monte Cavo or Albano), 
was, in its narrower signification, the mountain 
in Latium on whose declivity the town of Alba 
Longa was situated. It was the sacred mountain 
of the Latins, on which the religious festivals of 
the Latin League were celebrated (Ferice Latince), 
and on its highest summit was the temple of 
Jupiter Latiaris, to which the Roman generals 
ascended in triumph, when this honor was denied 
them in Rome. The Mons Albanus in its wider 
signification included the Mons Algidus and the 
mountains about Tusculum. 

Albi Monies, a lofty range of mountains in 
the west of Crete, three hundred stadia in length, 
covered with snow the greater part of the year. 

Albici ('A/Moikoi, 'A/Mtelc), a warlike Gallic 
people, inhabiting the mountains north of Mas- 
ailia. 

Albingaunlm. Vtd. Albium Ingaunum. 

Albinovanus, 0. Pedo, a friend of Ovid, who 
addresses to him one of his epistles from Pontus 
(iv., 10). Three Latin elegies are attributed to 
Albinovanus, printed by Wernsdorf, in his Poetce 
Latini Minores, vol. iii., iv., and by Meinecke, 
Quedlinburg, 1819. — [2. Alb. Celsus, a Latin 
poet, friend of Horace.] 

Albinovanus, P. Tullius, belonged to the 
Marian party, was proscribed in B.C. 87, but 
was pardoned by Sulla in 81, in consequence of 
his putting to death many of the officers of Nor- j 
banus, whom he had invited to a banquet at ' 
Ariminum. 

Albinus or Albus, Postumius, the name of a I 
patrician family at Rome, many of the members 
of which held the highest offices of the state 
from the commencement of the republic to its 
downfall.— 1. A., surnamed Regillensis, dictator) 
B.C. 498. when he conquered the Latins in the j 
great battle near Lake Regillus, and consul 496, 
in which year some of the annals placed the 
battle. — 2. Sr., consul 466, and a member of the 
first decemvirate 451.— 3. Sp., consul 344, and j 
again 321. In the latter year he marched I 
against the Samnites, but was defeated near ! 
Caudium, and obliged to surrender with his I 
whole army, who were sent under the yoke, j 
The Senate, on the advice of Albinus, refused 
to ratify the peace which he had made with the 
Samnites, and resolved that all persons who | 
had sworn to the peace should be given up to j 



the Samnites, but they refused to accept them. 
— i. L., consul 234, and again 229. In 216 he 
was prcetor, and was killed in battle by the Boii. 
— 5. Sp., consul in 186, when the senatus consul- 
turn was passed, which is extant, for suppress- 
ing the worship of Bacchus in Rome. He died 
in 179.-— 6. A., consul 180, when he fought against 
the Ligurians, and censor 174. He was subse- 
quently engaged in many public missions. Livy 
calls him Luscus, from which it would seem 
that he was blind of one eye. — 7. L. praetor 
180, in Further Spain, where he remained two 
years, and conquered the Vaecrei and Lusitani. 
He was consul in 173, and afterward served 
under -^Emilius Paulus in Macedonia in 168. — 
8. A., consul 151, accompanied L. Mummius 
into Greece in 146. He was well acquainted 
with Greek literature, and wrote in that lan- 
guage a poem and a Roman history, which is 
censured by Polybius. — 9. Sr., consul 110, car- 
ried on war against Jugurtha in Numidia, but 
effected nothing. When Albinus departed from 
Africa, he left his brother Aulus in command, 
who was defeated by Jugurtha. Spurius was 
condemned by the Mamilia Lex, as guilty of 
treasonable practices with Jugurtha. — 10. A., 
consul B.C. 99, with M. Antonius, is said by 
Cicero to have been a good speaker. 

Albinus ('A?Mvoc), a Platonic philosopher, 
lived at Smyrna in the second century after 
Christ, and wrote an Introduction to the Dia- 
logues of Plato, which contains hardly any thing 
of importance. — Editions. In the first edition 
of Fabricius's Bibl. Graze, vol. ii., and prefixed 
to Etwall's edition of three dialogues of Plato, 
Oxon., 1771 : and to Fischer's four dialogues of 
Plato, Lips., 1783. 

Albinus, Clodius, whose full name was De- 
chnus Clodius Ceionius Septimius Albinus, was 
born at Adrumetum in Africa. The Emperor 
Commodus made him governor of Gaul and 
afterward of Britain, where he was at the death 
of Commodus in A.D. 192. In order to secure 
the neutrality of Albinus, Septimius Severus 
made him Caasar ; but after Severus had de- 
feated his rivals, he turned his arms against 
Albinus. A great battle was fought between 
them at Lugdunum (Lyons), in Gaul, the 19th 
of February, 197, in which Albinus was defeated 
aud killed. 

Albion or Alebion ('A/Xlov, 'Aae61ov), son 
of Neptune (Poseidon) and brother of Dercynus 
or Bergion, with whom he attacked Hercules, 
when he passed through their country (Liguria) 
with the oxen of Geryon. They were slain by 
Hercules. 

Albion, another name of Britannia, the white 
land, from its white cliffs opposite the coast of 
Gaul: [more correctly, perhaps, the high land, 
from the Celtic root Alb or Alp, high, in refer- 
ence to its lofty coasts, as it lies facing Gaul.] 

Albis (now Elbe), one of the great rivers in 
Germany, the most easterly which the Romans 
became acquainted with, rises, according to 
Tacitus, in the country of the Hermunduri. The 
Romans reached the Elbe for the first time in 
B.C. 9, under Drusus, and crossed it for the first 
time in B.C. 3, under Domitius Ahenobarbus, 
The last Roman general who saw the Elbe was 
Tiberius, in A.D. 5. 

Albium Ingaunum or Albingaunum (now Al- 

37 



ALBIUM INTEMELIUM. 



ALCESTIS. 



bengo), a town of the Ingauni on the coast of 
Liguria, and a rnunicipium. 

Albilm Ixtemelium or Albixtemelioi (now 
Vintimiglia), a town of the Internelii on the 
coast of Liguria, and a rnunicipiuin. 

[Albucella or Arbocala ('ApSovKa?^, Polyb. : 
now Villa Fasila), a city of Hisjjania Tarraco- 
nensis, southwest of Pallantia : according to Poly- 
bius, it was the largest city of the Yaccsei, and 
was taken by Hannibal after a brave and long 
resistance.] 



which remain, and the excellent imitations of 
Horace, enable us to understand something of 
their character. Those which have received the 
highest praise are his warlike odes, in which he 
tried to rouse the spirits of the nobles, the Alccei 
minaces Camence of Horace (Carm., iv. 9, 7). 
In others he described the hardships of exile, 
and his perils by sea (dura navis, dura fugce, 
mala dura belli, Hor., Carm., ii. 13, 27). Alcaeus 
is said to have invented the well-known Alcaic 
metre. — Editions : By Matthias, Alccei Mytileucei 



Albucius or Albutius, T., studied at Athens, | reliquiae, Lips., 1827 ; and by Bergk, in Foetm 
and belonged to the Epicurean sect; he was well j Lyrici Grceci, Lips., 1843. — 2. A comic poet at 



acquainted with Greek literature, but was satir 
ized by Lucilius on account of his affecting on 
every occasion the Greek language and philoso- 
phy. He was praetor in Sardinia in B.C. 105 ; 
and in 103 was accused of repetundas by C. 
Julius Caesar, and condemned. He retired to 
Athens, and pursued the study of philosophy. 
£2. C. Albucius Silus. Vid. Silus.] 

Albula, an ancient name of the River Tiber. 

Albul^e Aquje. Vid. Albuxea. 

Albuxea or Albuxa, a prophetic nymph or 
Sibyl, to whom a grove was consecrated in the 
neighborhood of Tibur (now Tivoli), with a foun- 
tain and a temple. This fountain was the 
largest of the Albuke aquae, still called Acque 
Albule, sulphureous springs at Tibur, which 



Athens, flourished about B.C. 388, and exhibited 
plays of that mixed comedy, which formed the 
transition between the old and the middle. 
[Some fragments remain, which have been pub- 
lished by Meineke, Fragmenta Comicorum Grce- 
corum, vol. i., p. 457-461, edit, minor.] — 3. Of 
Messene, the author of twenty-two epigrams in 
the Greek Anthology, written between B.C. 219 
and 196. 

Alcamexes ( : ' kluauevric). 1. Son of Teleclus, 
king of Sparta, from B.C. 779 to 742.-2. A 
statuary of Athens, flourished from B.C. 444 to 
400, and was the most famous of the pupils of 
Phidias. His greatest work was a statue of 
Yenus (Aphrodite). 

Alcaxder ("A/Jcavdpoc), a young Spartan, who 



flow into the Anio. K"ear it was the oracle of j thrust out one of the eyes ofLycurgus, when his 
^aunus Fatidicus. The temple is still extant at | fellow-citizens were discontented with the laws 



Tivoli, 

Alburxus Moxs, [now Monte di Postiglione~\, 
a mountain in Lucauia, covered with wood, be- 
hind Paastmn. — [2. Portus, a harbor near Paes- 
tum, at the mouth of the Shams (now Sele)]. 

[Albcs Portus ("the "White Haven," now 
Algesiras), a town on the coast of Baetica in 
Spain.] 

[Albus Yicus (// AevKf/ K6[irj : now Iambo ?), a 
harbor in Arabia, from which Gallus sot out on 
his expedition into the interior.] 

[Albutics. Vid. Albucius.] 

ALCiEus ('A/U-cuoc), son of Perseus and An- 
dromeda, and father of Amphitryon and Anaxo. 
- — [2. Son of Hercules and a female slave of 
Jardanus, from whom the Heraclid dynasty in 
Lydia, c. g., Candaules (Myrsilus), <fcc. were de- 
scended. Diodorus gives to this son of Hercules 
the name of Cleolaus. — 3. Son of Androgeus, 
grandson of Minos.] 

Alcaeus. 1. Of Mytilene in Lesbos, the earli- 
est of the iEolian lyric poets, began to flourish 
about B.C. 611. In "the war bet ween the Athen- 
ians and Mytilenasans for the 



(B.C. 606), he incurred the disgrace of leaving 
his arms on the field of battle : these arms were 
hung up as a trophy by the Athenians in the 
temple of Pallas at Sigeum. Al casus took an 
active part in the struggles between the nobles 
and people of Mytilene : he belonged bv birth to 
the nobles, and was driven into exile" with his 
brother Antimenidas, when the popular party 
got the upper hand. He attempted, by force of 
arms, to regain his country; but all his attempts 
were frustrated by Pittacus, who had been 
chosen by the people ^Esymnetes, or dictator, 
for the purpose of resisting him and the other 
exiles. Alcaeus and Us brother afterward tra- 
velled into various countries : the time of his 
death is uncertain. 



he proposed. Lycurgus pardoned the outrage, 
and thus converted Alcander into one of his 
warmest friends. — [2. A Lycian, slain by Ulysses 
before Troy. — 3. A companion of ^Eneas, slain by 
Turnus in Italy.] 

[Alcaxdra ('AXtidvdpa), wife of Polybus, a 
wealthy Egyptian of Egyptian Thebes, by whom 
Helen was kindly received and entertained on 
her arrival in Egypt.] 

[Alcaxor, a Trojan, whose sons Pandarus and 
Bitias accompanied JEneas to Italy. — 2. A war- 
rior in the army of the Rutulians, wounded by 
^Eneas.] 

Alcathoe or Alcithoe ( 'AAnadori or AIklOoj]), 
daughter of Minyas, refused, with her sisters 
Leucippe and Arsippe, to join in the worship of 
Bacchus (Dionysus) when it was introduced into 
Boeotia, and were accordingly changed by the 
god into bats, and their work into vines. Vid. 
Diet, of Ant., art. Agrioxia. 

Aloathous ( : 'Aluddoor). 1. Son of Pelops 
I and Hippodamia, brother of Atreus and Thyes- 
I tes, obtained as his wife Euaechme, the daugh- 
possesgion of Sigeum ter of Megareus, by slaying the Citheeronian Hon, 



38 



Some fragments of his poems 



and succeeded his father-in-law as king of Me- 
gara. He restored the walls of Megara, in 
which work he was assisted by Apollo. The 
stone upon which the god used to place his lyre 
while he was at work, was believed, even in 
late times, to give forth a sound, when struck, 
similar to that of a lyre (Ov., Met., viii., 15). — 
2. Son of ^Isyetes and husband of Hippodamia, 
the daughter of Anchises and sister of JEneas, 
was one of the bravest of the Trojan leaders 
in the war of Troy, and was slain by Idome- 
neus. — [3. Son of Porthaon and Euryte," killed by 
Tydeus. — 1. A companion of JEneas, slain by 
Caedicus.] 

Alcestis or Alceste CAaktjotic or 'A/.KeoT?)), 
daughter of Pelias and Anaxibia, wife of Ad- 



ALCETAS. 



ALCIMEDON. 



metus, died in place of her husband. Vid. Ad- 
metus. 

Alcetas {'A?^rag\ two kings of Epirus. 1. 
Son of Tharypus, was expelled from his king- 
dom, and was restored by the elder Dionysius 
of Syracuse. He was the ally of the Atheni- 
ans in B.C. 373.-2. Son of Arymbas, and grand- 
son of Alcetas I, reigned B.C. 313-303, and 
was put to death by his subjects. 

Alcetas. 1. King of Macedonia, reigned 
twenty-nine years, and was father of Amyntas 

I, 2. Brother of Perdiccas and son of Orontes, 

was one of Alexander's generals. On the death 
of Alexander, he espoused his brother's party ; 
and upon the murder of the latter in Egypt in 
321, he joined Eumenes. He killed himself at 
Termessus in Pisidia in 320, to avoid falling 
into the hands of Antigonus. 

Alcibiades (' A/l KiCuiSrjg). — [1. Of Athens, 
father of Clinias, and grandfather of the cele- 
brated Alcibiades, deduced his descent from 
Eurysaces, the son of Telamonian Ajax. He 
joined Clisthenes in an attempt to procure the 
banishment of the Pisistratidae ; but was ban- 
ished with him B.C. 512.]— 2. Son of Clinias 
and Dinomache, was born at Athens about B.C. 
450, and on the death of his father in 447, was 
brought up by his relation Pericles. He pos- 
sessed a beautiful person, transcendent abilities, 
and great wealth, which received a large ac- 
cession through his marriage with Hipparete, 
the daughter of Hipponlcus. His youth was 
disgraced by his amours and debaucheries, and 
Socrates, who saw his vast capabilities, at- 
tempted to win him to the paths of virtue, but 
in vain. Their intimacy was strengthened by 
mutual services. At the battle of Potidaea 
(B.C. 432) his life was saved by Socrates, and 
at that of Delium (424) he saved the life of Soc- 
rates. He did not take much part in public af- 
fairs till after the death of Cleon (422), but he 
then became one of the leading politicians, and 
the head of the war party in opposition to Nic- 
ias. Enraged at the affront put upon him by 
the Lacedaemonians, who had not chosen to 
employ his intervention in the negotiations 
which ended in the peace of 421, and had pre- 
ferred Nicias to him, he induced the Athenians 
to form an alliance with Argos, Mantinea, and 
Elis, and to attack the allies of Sparta. In 415 
he was foremost amongst the advocates of the 
Sicilian expeditiou, which he believed would be 
a step toward the conquest of Italy, Carthage, 
and Peloponnesus. While the preparations for 
the expedition were going on, there occurred 
the mysterious mutilation of the Hermes-busts, 
which the popular fears connected in some un- 
accountable manner with an attempt to over- 
throw the Athenian constitution. Alcibiades 
was charged with being the ringleader in this 
attempt. He had been already appointed along 
with Nieias and Lamachus as commander of the 
expedition to Sicily, and he now demanded an 
investigation before he set sail. This, however, 
his enemies would not grant, as they hoped to 
increase the popular odium against him in his 
absence. He was, therefore, obliged to depart 
for Sicily ; but he had not been there long, be- 
fore he was recalled to stand his trial. On his 
return humeward, he managed to escape at 
Thurii, and thence proceeded to Sparta, where 



he acted as the avowed enemy of his country. 
At Athens sentence of death was passed upon 
him, and his property was confiscated. At 
Sparta he rendered himself popular by the fa- 
cility with which he adopted the Spartan man- 
ners ; but the machinations of his enemy, Agis 
II, induced him to abandon the Spartans and 
take refuge with Tissaphernes (412), whose fa- 
vor he soon gained. Through his influence Tis- 
saphernes deserted the Spartans and professed 
his willingness to assist the Athenians, who ac- 
cordingly recalled Alcibiades from banishment 
in 411. He did not immediately return to Ath- 
ens, but remained abroad for the next four years, 
during which the Athenians under his com- 
mand gained the victories of Cynossema, Aby- 
dos, and Cyzicus, and got possession of Chal- 
cedon and Byzantium. In 407 he returned to 
Athens, where he was received with great en- 
thusiasm, and was appointed commander-in- 
chief of all the land and sea forces. But the 
defeat at Notium, occasioned during his absence 
by the imprudence of his lieutenant, Antiochus, 
furnished his enemies with a handle against 
him, and he was superseded in his command 
(B.C. 406). He now went into voluntary ex- 
ile to his fortified domain at Bisanthe in the 
Thracian Chersonesus, where he made war on 
the neighboring Thracians. Before the fatal 
battle of iEgos-Potami (405), he gave an inef- 
fectual warning to the Athenian generals. After 
the fall of Athens (404), he was condemned to 
banishment, and took refuge with Pharnaba- 
zus ; he was about to proceed to the court of 
Artaxerxes, when one night his house was sur- 
rounded by a band of armed men, and set on 
fire. He rushed out sword in hand, but fell, 
pierced with arrows (404). The assassins were 
probably either employed by the Spartans, or 
by the brothers of a lady whom Alcibiades had 
seduced. He left a son by his wife Hipparete, 
named Alcibiades, who never distinguished him- 
self. It was for him that Isocrates wrote the 
speech iLepl rov Zevyovc. 

Alcidamas ( ' klKiddiiag), a Greek rhetorician 
of Elsea in JEolis, in Asia Minor, was a pupil of 
Gorgias, and resided at Athens between B.C. 
432 and 411. His works were characterized by 
pompous diction, and the extravagant use of 
poetical epithets and phrases. There are two 
declamations extant which bear his name, en- 
titled Llysses, and On the Sophists, but they 
were probably not written by him. — Editions : 
In Reiske's Oratores Grceci, vol. viii., and in 
Bekker's Oratores Attici, vol. vii. 

Alcidas ('Alfccdag Dor = 'AA/cacfyc), a Spar- 
tan commander of the fleet in the Peloponnesian 
war, B.C. 428-427. In the former year he was 
sent to Mytilene, and in the latter to Corcyra. 

Alcides ('AZ/ceicfyc), a name of Amphitryon, 
the son of Alcaeus, and more especially of Her- 
cules, the grandson of Alcaeus. 

Alcimede ('A/Kift^j}), daughter of Phylacus 
and Clymene, wife of ^Eson, and mother of 
Jason. 

[Alcimeoon ('A?Mfie6uv), an Arcadian hero, 
father of Phillo. From him the Arcadian plain 
Alcimedon derived its name. — 2. Son of Laerces, 
one of the commanders of the Myrmidons un- 
der Achilles. — 3. One of the Tyrrhenian sailors, 
who wished to carry off from Naxos the god 
39 



ALCMEDON. 



ALCMENE. 



Bacchus, who had taken the form of an infant, I 
and for this was metamorphosed mto a dolphin.] { 

TALcmEDoy, an embosser or chaser, spoken ot 
fcy Virgfl {Eclog., hi., 37, 44), who mentions some j 
goblets of his workmanship.] w . • . I 

Alcimus (Avlxrs) Alethitjs, the writer of j 
seven short poems, a rhetorician in Aquitania, m j 
Gaul, is spoken of in terms of praise by Sidonius j 
Apollinaris and Ausonius. — Editions : In Meier's J 
Anthologia Latina, p. 254-260, and in Wernsdo- j 
ri's Poetce Latini Minores, vol. vl 

Alcinous (Aakivooc). 1. Son of Nausithous, j 
and grandson of Neptune (Poseidon), is celebra- j 
ted in the story of the Argonauts, and still more j 
in the Odyssey. Homer represents him as the j 
happy ruler of the Phaeacians in the Island of 
Scheria, who has by Arete five sons and one daugh- \ 
ter, Nausicaa. The way in which he received ! 
Ulysses, and the stories "which the latter related j 
to the king about his wanderings, occupy a con- 
siderable portion of the Odyssey (books vi to 
xiii.). — 2. A Platonic philosopher, who probably j 
lived under the Caesars, wrote a work entitled j 
Epitome of the Doctrines of Plato. — Editions : j 
By Fell, Oxon, 1667, and by J. F. Fischer, Lips., 
1788, 8vo. 

Axciphron ('A?iKiopuv), the most distinguished 
of the Greek epistolary writers, was perhaps a 
contemporary of Lucian about A.D. 170. The 
letters (one hundred and thirteen in number, in 
three books) are written by fictitious person- 
ages, and the language is distinguished by its 
purity and elegance. The new Attic comedy 
was the principal source from which the author 
derived his information respecting the characters 
and manners which he describes, and for this 
reason they contain much valuable information | 
about the private life of the Athenians of that 
lame. — Editions : By Bergler, Lips., 1715, and by ; 
Wagner, Lips., 1798. 

[Alcippe {' k/.KLTZTTrj), a daughter of Mars and 
Agraulos. Vid. Haxirrhotrtus.] 

Alcithoe. Vid. Alcathoe. 

Alcileox ('A/Mfiacuv). 1. Son of Amphiaraus 
and Eriphyle, and brother of Amphilochus. His 
mother was induced by the necklace of Harmo- 
nia, which she received from Polynices, to per- 
suade her husband Amphiaraus to take part in I 
the expedition against Thebes ; and as he knew ! 
he should perish there, he enjoined his sons to kill | 
their mother as soon as they should be grown up. i 
Alcmseon took part in the expedition of the Epi- ; 
goni against Thebes, and on his return home i 
after the capture of the city, he slew his mother, j 
according to the injunction of his father. For | 
this deed he became mad, and was haunted by 
the Erinnyes. He went to Phegeus in Psophis, 
and being purified by the latter, he married 
his daughter Arsinoe or Alphesibcea, to whom 
he gave the necklace and peplus of Harmonia. 
But as the land of this country ceased to I 
bear, on account of its harboring' a matricide, | 
he left Psophis and repaired to the country 
at the mouth of the River Achelous. The 
god Achelous gave him his daughter Callirrhoe 
in marriage ; and as the latter wTshed to possess 
the necklace and peplus of Hamionia, Alcmaaon I 
went to Psophis and obtained them from Phe- j 
geus, under the pretext of dedicating them at 
Delphi ; but when Phegeus heard that the trea- j 
sures were fetched for Callirrhoe, he caused his I 
40 



sons to murder Alcniaeon. Alcmaeon was wor- 
shipped as a hero at Thebes, and at Psophis his 
tomb was shown, surrounded with cypresses. — 
[2. Son of Sillus, and great grandson of Nestor, 
founder of the celebrated family of the Alcm.eon- 
id.e (g. v.) in Athens.] — 3. Son of Megacles, was 
greatly enriched by Crcesus. — 4. Of Crotona in 
Italy, said to have been a pupil of Pythagoras, 
though this is very doubtful. He is said to 
have been the first person who dissected ani- 
mals, and he made some important discoveries 
in anatomy and natural philosophy. He wrote 
several medical and philosophical works, which 
are lost. 

ALCii.£oxin.£ CA?jc/iatuvt6aL), a noble family 
at Athens, members of which fill a space in 
Grecian history from B.C. 750 to 400. They 
were a branch of the family of the Nelldas, who 
were driven out of Pylus in Messenia by the Do- 
rians, and settled at Athens. In consequence of 
the way in which Megacles, one of the family, 
treated the insurgents under Cylon (B.C. 612), 
they brought upon themselves the guilt of sacri- 
lege, and were in consequence banished from 
Athens, about 595. About 560 they returned 
from exile, but were again expelled by Pisistra- 
tus. In 548 they contracted with the Amphic 
tyonic council to rebuild the temple of Delphi 
and obtained great popularity throughout Greece 
by executing the work in a style of magnificence 
which much exceeded their engagement. On the 
expulsion of Hippias in 510, they were again re- 
stored to Athens. They now joined the popular 
party, and Clisthenes, who was at that time the 
head of the family, gave a new constitution to 
Athens. Vid. Clisthenes. 

Alcman CA/m/mIu, [Doric form of the name, 
which was properly] 'AZ/c/zaiwv), the chief lyric 
poet of Sparta, by birth a Lydian of Sardis, was 
brought to Laconia as a slave, when very young, 
and was emancipated by his master, who dis- 
covered his genius. He probably flourished 
about B.C. 631, and most of his poems were com- 
posed after the conclusion of the second Messenian 
war. He is said to have died, like Sulla, of the 
morbus pedicularis. Alcman's poems were com- 
prised in six books : many of them were erotic, 
and he is said by some ancient writers to have 
been the inventor of erotic poetry. His metres 
were very various. The Cretic hexameter was 
named Alcmanic from his being its inventor. His 
dialect was the Spartan Doric, with an inter- 
mixture of the ^Eolie. The Alexaudrean gram- 
marians placed Alcman at the head of their 
canon of the nine lyric poets. The fragments 



of his poems are edited by Welcker, Gies- 
\ in Po'etie Lyrici Grceci, 

1843. 



sen, 1815 ; and by Bergk, 



Alcmexe ('A2.Kfiyvij), daughter of Electryon, 
king of Mycense, by Anaxo or Lysidice. The 
brothers of Alcmene were slain by the sons of 
Pterelaus ; and their father set out to avenge 
their death, leaving to Amphitryon his kingdom 
and his daughter Alcmene. whom Amphitryon 
was to marry. But Amphitryon having unin- 
tentionally killed Electryon before the marriage, 
Sthenelus expelled both Amphitryon and Alc- 
mene, who went to Thebes. But here, instead 
of marrying Amphitryon, Alcmene declared that 
she would only marry the man who should 
avenge the death of her brothers. Amphitryon 



ALCON. 



ALETES. 



undertook the tusk, and invited Creon of Thebes 
to assist him. During his absence, Jupiter (Zeus), 
in the disguise of Amphitryon, visited Alemene, 
and, having related in what way he had avenged 
the death of her brothers, [finally persuaded her 
to a union]. Amphitryon himself returned the 
next day ; Alemene became the mother of Her- 
cules by Jupiter (Zeus), and of Iphicles by Am- 
phitryon. Vid Hercules. After the death of 
Amphitryon, Alemene married Rhadamauthys, 
at Ocalia in Boeotia. When Hercules was 
raised to the rank of a god, Alemene, fearing 
Eurystheus, fled with the sons of Hercules to 
Athens. 

[ Alcon ("AIkuv), son of Hippocoon, a Calydo- 
niau hunter, slain by Hercules. — 2. Son of the 
Athenian King Erechtheus, so skillful an archer, 
that he shot a serpent which had entwined itself 
around his son, without wounding his child. 
In Virgil (Eel., 5, 11) an Alcon is mentioned, 
whom Servius calls a Cretan, and a companion 
of Hercules, and relates of him nearly the 
story just given. — 3. A statuary, who made a 
statue of Hercules at Thebes, of iron, to 
symbolize thereby the hero's powers of endur- 
ance.] 

Alcyone or Haloyone ('A?,Kv6vrj). 1. A 
Pleiad, daughter of Atlas and Pleiohe, and be- 
loved by Neptune (Poseidon). — 2. Daughter of 
JEolus and Enarete^or yEgiale, and wife of Ceyx. 
They lived so happily that they were presump- 
tuous enough to call each other Jupiter (Zeus) 
and Juno (Hera), for which Jupiter (Zeus) me- 
tamorphosed them into birds, alcyon and ceyx, 
Others relate that Ceyx perished in a shipwreck, 
that Alcyone for grief throw herself into the 
sea, and that the ^<h1s. out of compassion, 
changed the two into birds. It was fabled that 
during the seven days before, and as many after, 
the shortest day ol the year, while the bird 
alcyon was breeding, there always prevailed 
calms at sea. — [2. Daughter of Idas and Marpessa, 
wife of Meleager, called by her parents Alcyone, 
from the plaintive cries uttered by her mother 
Marpessa when carried off by Apollo.] 

Alcvoneus ('A?.Kvoievc), a giant, killed by 
Hercules at the Isthmus of Corinth. 

[Alcyonia Palis (' Afocvov ta "kifivrj), a lake 
in Argolis, of small size, but unfathomable depth, 
by which Bacchus descended to the lower world, 
when he sought to bring back Semele, It is re- 
garded by Leake as a part of Lerna.] 

Alcyomum Mare (/) 'AXicvovlg Mlaoca), the 
eastern part of the Corinthian Gulf. 

Alea ('Alia), a surname of Minerva (Athena), 
under which she was worshipped at Alea, Man- 
tinea, and Tegea. Her temple at the latter place 
was one of the most celebrated in Greece. It is 
said to have been built by Aleus, son of Aphldas, 
king of Tegea, from whom the goddess is sup- 
posed to have derived this surname. 

Alea ('A?.ta : 'A?.evc), a town in Arcadia, east 
of the Stymphalian Lake, with a celebrated tem- 
ple of Minerva (Athena), the ruins of which arc 
near Piali. 

Alebiox. Vid. Albiox. 

Alecto. Md. Furle. 

[Alector ('A/ieKTop), son of Pelops, and fa- 
ther of Iphilochc, who married Megapenthes, son 
of Menelaus— 2. Son of Anaxagoras, father of 
Iphis, King of Argos.] 



[Alectryox ('A?.eicTpvuv), a youth stationed 
by Mars, during his interview with Venus, at the 
door to guard against surprise. Having fallen 
asleep, he was changed by Mars into a cock 
(u/\,eKrpv6v) for his neglect of duty. — 2. The 
father of the Argonaut Leitus, called by Apollo- 
dorus Alector. ~\ 

Aleics Campus or Aleii Campi (to 'Alrjiov 
Tredtov), an extensive and fruitful plain of Cilicia, 
not far from Mallus, between the Rivers Pyra- 
mus and Sarus (in Homer's Lycia, 11, 6, 201). 
It derives its name from the circumstance that 
Bellerophon in his old age fell into melancholy 
and madness, and wandered about here (from 
a?,7j, wandering). Another legend makes Bel- 
lerophon to have been thrown from Pegasus when 
attempting to mount to heaven, and to have wan- 
dered about here lame and blind.] 

Alemaxxi, or Alamanni, or Alamani (from the 
German alle Manner, all men), a confederacy of 
German tribes, chiefly of Suevic extraction, be- 
tween the Danube, the Rhine, and the Main, 
though we subsequently find them extending 
their territories as far as the Alps and the Jura. 
The different tribes of the confederacy were gov- 
erned by their own kings, but in time of war 
they obeyed a common leader. They were brave 
and warlike, and proved formidable enemies to 
the Romans. They first came into contact with the 
Romans in the reign of Caracalla, who assumed 
the surname of Alemannicus on account of a pre- 
tended victory over them (A.D. 214). They 
were attacked by Alexander Severus (234), and 
by Maximin (237). They invaded Italy in 270, 
but were driven back by Aurelian, and were 
again defeated by Probus in 282. After this 
time they continually invaded the Roman domi- 
nions in Germany, and, though defeated by 
Constantius L, Julian (357), Valentinian, and 
Gratian, they gradually became more and 
more powerful, and in the fifth century were 
in possession of Alsace and of German 
Switzerland. 

Aleria ('AXepia : 'A\a7da in Herod.), one of 
the chief cities of Corsica, on the east of the 
island, on the southern bank of the River Rhota- 
nus (now Tavignano), near its mouth. It was 
founded by the Phocaeans B.C. 564, was plun- 
dered by L. Scipio in the first Punic war, and 
was made a Roman colony by Sulla. 

Alesa. Vid. Halesa. 

Alesia ('A/iEola), an ancient town of the Man- 
dubii in Gallia Lugdunensis, said to have been 
founded by Hercules, and situated on a high hill 
(now Auxois, [at the foot of which is a village 
called Alise]), which was washed by the two 
rivers Lutosa (now Oze) and Osera (now Ozer- 
ain). It was taken and destroyed by Cassar, in 
B.C. 52, after a memorable siege, but was after- 
ward rebuilt. 

AlesLe ('A?,e<jtat.), a town in Laconia, west of 
Sparta, on the road to Pherre. 

Alesium ('A?.elglov), a town in Elis, not far 
from Olympia, afterward called Alesiceum. 

Alesius Moxs (to , A?.t/oiov opoc), a mountain 
in Arcadia with a temple of Neptune (Poseidon) 
Hippius and a grove of Ceres (Demeter). 

Aletes ('Aat'ittjc), son of Hippotes, and a de- 
scendant of Hercules, is said to have taken pos- 
session of Corinth, and to have expelled the 
Sisyphids, thirty years after the first invasion 

41 



ALETIUM. 



ALEXANDER. 



of Peloponnesus by the Heraclids. His family, 
called the Aletidse, maintained themselves at 
Corinth down to the time of Bacchis.— [2. A 
companion of iEneas, who was held in venera- 
tion on account of his age and wisdom.] 
Aletium (Aletinus), a town of Calabria. 
Aletrium or Alatriuxi (Aletrmas, atis : now 
Alatri), an ancient town of the Hernici, subse- 
quently a munieipium and a Roman colony, 
west of Sora and east of Anagnia. 
Aleuadjs. Vid. Aleuas. 
Alecas, ('A/.evag) a descendant of Hercules, 
was the ruler of Larissa in Thessaly, and the 
reputed founder of the celebrated family of the 
Aleuadas. Before the time of Pisistratus (B.C. 
560), the family of the Aleuadse appears to have 
become divided into two branches, the Aleuadse 
and the Scopadae. The Scopadae inhabited Cran- 
non and perhaps Pharsalus also, while the main 
branch, the Aleuadae, remained at Larissa. The 
influence of the families, however, was not con- 
fined to these towns, but extended more or less 
over the greater part of Thessaly. They form- 
ed, in reality, a powerful aristocratic party in op- 
position to the great body of the Thessalians. 
In the invasion of Greece by Xerxes (480), the 
Aleuadae espoused the cause of the Persians, 
and the family continued to be the predominant 
one in Thessaly for a long time afterward. But 
after the end of the Poloponnesian war (404), 
another Thessaiian family, the dynasts of Pherae, 
gradually rose to power and influence, and gave 
a great shock to the power of the Aleuadae. 
The most formidable of these princes was Jason 
of Pherae, who succeeded, after various strug- 
gles, in raising himself to the dignity of Tagus, 
or supreme ruler of Thessaly. Vid. Jasox. 
Aleus. Vid. Alea. 

Alex or H\lex (now Alece), a small river in 
Southern Italy, was the boundary between the 
territory of Rhegium and of the Locri Epi- 
zephyrii. 

[Alexamexus ('A?,e^a/j,ev6c), an Jitolian lead- 
er, sent by his countrymen with one thousand 
men to Sparta, who slew Xabis the Spartan 
tyrant. 

Alexaxdee ('A/.e^avdpoc), the usual name of 
Paris in the Iliad. 

Alexander Severus. Vid. Severes. 

Alexaxdee. 1. Minor Historical Persons. 

1. Son of iEROFUS, a native of the Macedoni- 
an district called Lyneestis. whence he is usually 
called Alexander Lyneestis. He was an accom- 
plice in the murder of Philip, B.C. 336, but 
^as pardoned by Alexander the Great. He ac- 
companied Alexander to Asia ; but in 334 he 
was detected in carrying on a treasonable cor- 
respondence with Darius, was kept in confine- 
ment, and put to death in 330. 2. Son of Ax- 
toxius the triumvir, and Cleopatra, born, with 
his twin-sister Cleopatra, B.C. 40. After the 
battle of Actium they were taken to Rome by 
Augustus, and were generously educated by 
Oetavia, the wife of Antonius, with her own 
children.— 3. Eldest son of Aristobcltjs II, 
king of Judea, rose in arms in B.C. 57. against 
Hyrcanus, who was supported by the Romans. 
Alexander was defeated by the Romans in 56 
.and 55, and was put to death by Pompey at An- 
tioch in 49.-4. Third son of "Cassander, king 
•of Macedonia, by Thessalonica, sister of Alex- 



ander the Great. In his quarrel with his elder 
brother Antipater for' the government (vid. An- 
tipater), he called in the aid of Pyrrhus of 
Epirus and Demetrius Poliorcetes, by the latter 
of whom he was murdered B.C. 294. — 5. Jax : 
n^eus, the son of Joannes Hyrcanus, and broth- 
er of Aristobulus I., king of the Jews B.C. 104- 
77. At the commencement of his reign he was 
engaged in war with Ptolemy Lathyrus, king of 
Cyprus ; and subsequently he had to carry on for 
six years a dangerous struggle with his own 
subjects, to whom he had rendered himself ob- 
noxious by his cruelties and by opposing the 
Pharisees. He signalized his victory by the 
most frightful butchery of his subjects. — 6. Snr- 

I named Isius, the chief commander of the JSto- 
lians, took an active part in opposing Philip of 

i Macedonia (B.C. 198, 197), and in the various 

• negotiations with the Romans. — 7. Tyrant of 

j Pherae, was a relation of Jason, and succeeded 
; either Polydorus or Polyphron, as Tagus of 
\ Thessaly, about B.C. 369. In consequence of 
! his tyrannical government, the Thessalians ap- 
I plied for aid first to Alexander II, king of Mace- 
\ donia, and next to Thebes. The Thebans sent 
\ Pelopidas into Thessaly to succor the malcon- 
tents ; but having ventured incautiously within 
j the power x>f the tyrant, he was seized by Alex- 
t ander, and thrown into prison B.C. 368. The 
{ Thebans sent a large army into Thessaly to 
' rescue Pelopidas, but they were defeated in the 
; first campaign, and did not obtain their object 
' till the next year, 367. In 364 Pelopidas again 
entered Thessaly with a small force, but was 
| slain in battle by Alexander. The Thebans 
I now sent a large army against the tyrant, and 
i compelled him to become a dependent ally of 
j Thebes. We afterwards hear of Alexander 

• making piratical descents on many of the Athe- 
! man dependencies, and even on Attica itself. 
(He was murdered in 367, by his wife Thebe, 
j with the assistance of her three brothers. — 8. 
' Son of Poltsperchox, the Macedonian, was 
| chiefly employed by his father in the command 
, of the armies which he sent against Cassander. 
! Thus he was sent against Athens in B.C. 318, 
| and was engaged in military operations during 
j the next year in various parts of Greece. But 
I in 315 he became reconciled to Cassander, and 
i we find him in 314 commanding on behalf of 

I the latter. He was murdered at Sicyon in 314. 
— 9. Ptolem^eus. Vid. Ptolem^eus. — 10. Ti- 
\ berius, born at Alexandrea, of Jewish parents, 
: and nephew of the writer Philo. He deserted 
j the faith of his ancestors, and was rewarded 
for his apostacy by various public appointments. 
In the reign of Claudius he succeeded Fadus as 
procurator of Judaea (A.D. 46), and was ap- 
pointed by Xero procurator of Egypt. He was 
the first Roman governor who declared in favor 
of Vespasian ; and he accompanied Titus in the 
war against Judaea, and was present at the tak- 
ing of Jerusalem. 

IL Kings of Epirus. 

1. Son of Xeoptolemus, and brother of Olym- 
pias, the mother of Alexander the Great. Phil- 
ip made him king of Epirus in place of his cousin 
iEacides, and gave him his daughter Cleopatra 
j in marriage (B.C. 336). In 332, Alexander, at 
: the request of the Tarentines, crossed over into 



ALEXANDER. 



ALEXANDER. 



Italy, to aid them against the Lucaniaus and 
Bruttii. After meeting with considerable suc- 
cess, he was defeated and slain in battle in 326, 
near Pandosia. on the- banks of the Acheron in 
Southern Italy.— 2. Son of Phyrrus and Lanas- 
sa, daughter of the Sicilian tyrant Agathocles, 
succeeded his lather in B.C. 272, and drove An- 
tigonus Gonatus out of Macedonia. He was 
shortly afterward deprived of both Macedonia 
and Epirus by Demetrius, the son of Antigonus ; 
but he recovered Epirus by the aid of the Acar- 
nanians. 

III. Kings of Macedonia. 

1. Son of Amyntas L, distinguished himself 
in the lifetime of his father by killing the Per- 
sian ambassadors who had come to demand the 
submission of Amyntas, because they attempted 
to offer indignities to the ladies of the court, about 
B.C. 507. He succeeded his father shortly 
afterward, was obliged to submit to the Per- 
sians, and accompanied Xerxes in his invasion 
of Greece (B.C. 480). He gained the confidence 
of Mardonius, who sent him to Athens to propose 
peace to the Athenians, which was rejected. 
He was secretly inclined to the cause of the 
Greeks, and informed them the night before the 
battle of Plataeae of the intention of Mardonius to 
fight on the following day. He died about B.C. 
455, and was succeeded by Perdiccas II. — 2. 
Son of Amyntas II., wham he succeeded, 
reigned B.C. 869-367. A usurper of the name 
of Ptolomey Alorites having risen against him, 
Pelopidas, who was called in to mediate between 
them, left Alexander in possession of the king- 
dom, but took with him to Thebes several hos- 
tages ; among whom was Philip, the youngest 
brother of Alexander, afterward King of Mace- 
donia. Alexander was shortly afterward mur- 
dered by Ptolomey Alorites.— 8. Suruamed the 
Great, son of Philip It and Olympias, was born 
at Pella, B.C. 356. His early education was 
committed to Leonidas and Lysimaehus; and 
he was also placed under the care of Aris- 
totle, who acquired an influence over his mind 
and character which was manifest to the latest 
period of his life. At the age of sixteen, Alex- 
ander was intrusted with "the government of 
Macedonia hj his father, while he was obliged 
to leave his kingdom to march against Byzan- 
tium. He first distinguished himself, however, 
at the battle of Chaeronea (338), where the vic- 
tory was mainly owing to his impetuositv and 
courage. On the murder of Philip (336), Alex- 
ander ascended the throne, at the age of twenty, 
and found himself surrounded bv enemies on 
every side. He first put down rebellion in his 
own kingdom, and then rapidly marched into 
Greece. His unexpected activity overawed all 
opposition ; Thebes, which had been most active 
against him, submitted when he appeared at its 
gates; and the assembled Greeks at the Isth- 
mus of Corinth, with the sole exception of the 
Lacedemonians, elected him to the command 
against Persia, which had previously been 
bestowed upon his father. He now directed his 
arms against the barbarians of the north, marched 
(early in 385) across Mount Haemus, defeated the 
Triballi, and advanced as far as the Danube, 
which he crossed ; and, on his return, subdued 
the Ulyrians and Taulantii. A report of his 



death having reached Greece, the Thebans once- 
more took up arms. But a terrible punish- 
ment awaited them. He advanced into Boeotia 
by rapid marches, took Thebes by assault, des- 
troyed all the buildings, with the exception of 
the house of Pindar, killed most of the inhabi- 
tants, and sold the rest as slaves. Alexander 
now prepared for his great expedition against 
Persia. In the spring of 334, he crossed the 
j Hellespont with about thirty-five thousand men. 
' Of these thirty thousand were foot and five 
thousand horse, and of the former only twelve 
thousand were Macedonians. Alexanders first 
engagement with the Persians was on the River 
j Granicus in Mysia (May 334), where they were 
j entirely defeated by him. This battle was fol- 
I lowed by the capture or submission of the chief 
I towns on the west coast of Asia Minor. Hali- 
earnassus was not taken till late in the autumn, 
I after a vigorous defence by Memnon, the ablest 
' general of Darius, and whose death in the fol- 
; lowing year (333) relieved Alexander from a 
j formidable opponent. He now marched along 
I the coast of Lycia and Pamphylia, and then 
j north into Phrygia and to Gordium, where he cut 
or untied the celebrated Gordian knot, which, it 
was said, was to be loosened only by the con- 
! queror of Asia. In 333, he marched from Gor- 
dium through the centre of Asia Minor into 
j Cilicia. where he nearly lost his life at Tarsus by 
| a fever, brought on by his great exertions or 
through throwing himself, when heated, into the 
I cold waters of the Cydnus. Darius, meantime, 
j had collected an army of five hundred thousand 
j or six hundred thousand men, with thirty thou- 
sand Greek mercenaries, whom Alexander 
defeated in the narrow plain of Issus. Darius 
escaped across the Euphrates by the ford of 
I Thapsacus ; but his mother, wife, and children. 
| fell into the hands of Alexander, who treated 
; them with the utmost delicacy and respect. Alex- 
' ander now directed his arms against the cities 
; of Phoenicia, most of which submitted ; but Tyre 
i was not taken till the middle of 332, after an 
! obstinate defence of seven months. Next fol- 
| lowed the siege of Gaza, which again delayed 
! Alexander two months. Afterward, according 
to Josephus, he marched to Jerusalem, intending to 
punish the people for refusing to assist him, 
but he was diverted from his purpose by 
the appearance of the high-priest, and par- 
doned the people. This story is not mentioned 
by Arrian, and rests on questionable evi- 
dence. Alexander next marched into Egypt, 
which willingly submitted to him, for the Egyp- 
tians had ever hated the Persians. At the begin- 
ning of 331, Alexander founded at the mouth 
of the western branch of the Nile the city 
of Alexandria, and about the same time 
visited the temple of Jupiter Amnion, in the 
desert of Libya, and was saluted by the priests 
as the son of Jupiter Amnion. In the spring 
of the same year (331), Alexander set out 
to meet Darius, who had collected another 
army. He marched through Phoenicia and 
Syria to the Euphrates, which he crossed 
at the ford of Thapsacus ; thence he pro- 
ceeded through Mesopotamia, crossed the Tigis, 
and at length met with the immense hosts 
of Darius, said to have amounted to more than 
a million of men, in the plains of Gauga- 

43 



ALEXANDER. 



ALEXANDER, 



mela. The battle was fought in the month of 
October, 331, and ended in the complete defeat 
of the Persians. Alexander pursued the fugi- 
tives to Arbela (now JSrbil), which place has 
given its name to the battle, though distant about 
fifty miles from the spot where it was fought. 
Darius, who had left the field of battle early in 
the day, fled to Ecbatana (now Hamadan), in 
Media. Alexander was now the conqueror of 
Asia, and began to adopt Persian habits and cus- 
toms, by which he conciliated the affections of 
his new subjects. From Arbela he marched to 
Babylon, Susa, and Persepolis, all of which sur- 
rendered to him. He is said to have set fire to 
the palace of Persepolis, and, according to some 
accounts, in the revelry of a banquet, at the in- 
stigation of Thais, an Athenian courtesan. At 
the beginning of 330 Alexander marched from 
Persepolis into Media, in pursuit of Darius, 
whom he followed through Rhaga? and the passes 
of the Elburz Mountains, called by the ancients 
the Caspian Gates, into the deserts of Parthia, 
where the unfortunate king was murdered by 
Bessus, satrap of Bactria, and his associates. 
Alexander sent his body to Persepolis, to be 
buried in the tombs of the Persian kings. Bes- 
sus escaped to Bactria, and assumed the title of 
King of Persia. Alexander was engaged during 
the remainder of the year in subduing the 
northern provinces of Asia between the Caspian 
and the Indus, namely, Hyrcania, Parthia, Aria, 
the Drangee, and Sarangse. It was during 
this campaign that Philotas, his father Parme- 
niox, and other Macedonians were executed on 
a charge of treason. In 329 Alexander crossed 
the mountains of the Paropamisus (now the 
Hindoo Koosh), and marched into Bactria 
against Bessus, whom he pursued across the 
Oxus into Sogdiana. In this country Bessus 
was betrayed to him, and was put to death. 
From the Oxus he advanced as far as the Jax- 
artes (now the Sir), which he crossed, and de- 
feated several Scythian tribes north of that 
river. After founding a city, Alexandrea, on the 
Jaxartes, he retraced his steps, and returned to 
Zariaspa or Bactra, where he spent the winter- 
of 329. It was here that he killed his friend 
Clitus in a drunken revel. In 82S, Alexander 
again crossed the Oxus to complete the subjuga- 
tion of Sogdiana, but was not able to effect it in 
the year, and accordingly went into winter- 
quarters at Nautaca, a place in the middle of 
the province. At the beginning of 327, he took 
a mountain fortress, in which Oxyartes, a Bac- 
trian prince, had deposited his wife and daugh- 
ters. The beauty of Roxana, one of the latter, 
captivated the conqueror, and he accordingly 
made her his wife. This marriage with one of 
his Eastern subjects was in accordance with 
the whole of his policy. Having completed the 
conquest of Sogdiana, he marched south into 
Bactria, and made preparations for the invasion 
of India. While in Bactria another conspiracy 
was discovered for the murder of the king. 
The plot was formed bv Hermolaus with a 
number of the royal pages, and Calhsthenes, 
a pupil of Aristotle, was involved in it. All 
the conspirators were put to death. Alex- 
ander did not leave Bactria till late in 
the spring of 32*7. and crossed the Indus, pro- 
bably near the modern Attock. He met with 
44 



no resistance till he reached the Hydaspes, 
where he was opposed by Porus, an Indian king, 
whom he defeated after a gallant resistance, 
and took prisoner. Alexander restored to him 
his kingdom, and treated him with distinguished 
honor. He founded two towns, one on each 
bank of the Hydaspes : one called Bucephala, in 
honor of his horse Bucephalus, who died here, 
after carrying him through so many victories ; 
and the other Nicaea, to commemorate his vie- 
j tory. From thence he marched across the 
I Acesines (now the Chinab) and the Hydraotes 
j (now the Ravee), and penetrated as far as the 
j Hyphasis (now Garra). This was the furthest 
! point which he reached, for the Macedonians, 
j worn out by long service, and tired of the war r 
! refused to advance further ; and Alexander, not- 
: withstanding his # entreaties and prayers, was 
! obliged to lead them back. He returned to the 
; Hydaspes, where he had previously given orders 
1 for the building of a fleet, and then sailed down 
j the river with about eight thousand men, while 
the remainder marched along the banks in two 
| divisions. This was late in the autumn of 327. 
! The people on each side of the river submitted 
; without resistance, except the Malli, in the con- 
quest of one of whose places Alexander was 
j severely wounded. At the confluence of the 
j Acesines and the Indus, Alexander founded a 
! city, and left Philip as satrap, with a considera- 
j ble body of Greeks. Here he built some fresh 
\ ships, and continued his voyage down the Indus, 
I founded a city at Pattala, the apex of the delta 
\ of the Indus, and sailed into the Indian Ocean, 
which he reached about the middle of 326. 
Neaichus was sent with the fleet to sail along 
the coast to the Persian Gulf (vid. Nearchus) \ 
and Alexander marched with the rest of has 
forces through Gedrosia, in which country his ar- 
my suffered greatly from want of water and provi- 
sions. He reached Susa at the beginning of 825. 
Here he allowed himself and his troops some 
rest from their labors ; and anxious to form his 
European and Asiatic subjects into one people, 
he assigned to about eighty of his generals Asia- 
tic wives, and gave with them rich dowries. 
He himself took a second wife, Barsine, the 
eldest daughter of Darius, and, according to 
some accounts, a third, Parysatis, the daughter 
of Ochus. About ten thousand Macedonians 
followed the example of their king and generals, 
and married Asiatic women. Alexander also 
enrolled large numbers of Asiatics among his 
troops, and taught them the Macedonian tactics. 
He, moreover, directed his attention to the in- 
crease of commerce, and for this purpose had 
the Euphrates and Tigris made navigable, by 
removing the artificial obstructions which had 
been made in the river for the purpose of irriga- 
tion. The Macedonians, who were discontented 
with several of the new arrangements of 
the king, rose in mutiny against him, which 
he quelled with some difficulty. Toward the 
close of the same year (325). he went to 
Ecbatana, where he lost his great favorite, 
Heph.estiox. From Ecbatana he marched to 
Babylon, subduing in his way the Cossaei, 
a mountain tribe ; and before he reached 
Babylon he was met by ambassadors from al- 
most every part of the known world. Al- 
exander entered Babylon in the spring of 



ALEXANDER. 



ALEXANDER. 



324, about a year before his death, notwithstand- 
ing the warnings of the Chaldfeans, who pre- 
dicted evil to him if he entered the city at that 
time. He intended to make Babylon the capital 
of his empire, as the best point of communication 
between his eastern and western dominions. His 
schemes were numerous and gigantic. His first 
object was the conquest of Arabia, which was to 
be followed, it was said, by the subjugation of 
Italy, Carthage, and the West. But his views 
were not confined merely to conquest. He or- 
dered a fleet to be built on the Caspian, in order 
to explore that sea. He also intended to im- 
prove the distribution of waters in the Babylon- 
ian plain, and for that purpose sailed down the 
Euphrates to inspect the canal called Palla- 
copas. On his return to Babylon he was at- 
tacked by a fever, probably brought on by his 
recent exertions in the marshy districts around 
Babylon, and aggravated by the quantity of 
wine he had drunk at a banquet given to bis 
principal officers. He died after an illness of 
eleven days, in the month of May or June, B.C. 
323, at the age of thirty-two, after a reign of 
twelve years and eight mouths. He appointed 
no one as his successor, but just before his death 
he gave his ring to Perdiccas. Roxana was 
with child at the time of his death, and after- 
ward bore a son who is known by the name 
of Alexander JEgus. The history of Alexander 
forms an important epoch in the history of man- 
kind. Unlike other Asiatic conquerors, his pro- 
gress was marked by something more than 
devastation and ruin ; at every step of his course 
the Greek language and civilization took root 
and flourished ; and after his death Greek king- 
doms were formed in all parts of Asia, which 
continued to exist for centuiies. By his con- 
quests the knowledge of mankind was increased ; 
the sciences of geography, natural history, and 
others, received vast additions ; and it was 
through him that a road was opened to India, 
and that Europeans became acquainted with the 
products of the remote East. — 4. JEgus, son of 
Alexander the Great and Roxana, was born 
shortly after the death of his father, in B.C. 323, 
and was acknowledged as the partner of Philip 
Arrhidceus in the empire, under the guardian- 
ship of Perdiccas, Antipater, and Polysperchon 
in succession. Alexander and his mother Roxana 
were imprisoned by Cassander, when he ob- 
tained possession of Macedonia in 316, and re- 
mained in prison till 311, when they were put to 
death by Cassander. 

IV. Kings of Syria. 

1. Surnamed Balas, a person of low origin, 
pretended to be the son of Antiochus IV. Epiph- 
anes, and reigned in Syria B.C. 150-146. He 
defeated and slew in battle Demetrius I. Soter, 
but was afterward defeated and dethroned by 
Demetrius II. Nicator. — 2. Surnamed Zebina or 
Zabinas, son of a merchant, was set up by 
Ptolemy Physcon as a pretender to the throne of 
Syria, shortly after the return of Demetrius II. 
Nicator from his captivity among the Parthians, 
B.C. 128. He defeated Demetiius in 125, but 
was afterward defeated by Antiochus Grypus, 
by whom he was put to death, 122. 

V. Literary. 

1. Of J&gm, a peripatetic philosopher at Rome 



in the first century after Christ, was tutor to the 
Emperor Nero.— 2. The ^tolian, of Pleuron 
in iEtolia, a Greek poet, lived in the reign of 
Ptolemajus Philadelphus (B.C. 285-247), at 
Alexandrea, where he was reckoned one of the 
seven tragic poets who constituted the tragic 
pleiad. He also wrote other poems, besides 
tragedies. His fragments are collected by Ca- 
pellmann, Alexandri uEtoli Fragmenta, Bonn, 
1829. — 3. Of Aphrodisias, in Caria, the most 
celebrated of the commentators on Aristotle, 
lived about A.D. 200. About half his volumin- 
ous works were edited and translated into Latin 
at the revival of literature; there are a few 
more extant in the original Greek, which have 
never been printed, and an Arabic version is 
preserved of several others. His most impor- 
tant treatise is entitled Be Fato, an inquiry into 
the opinions of Aristotle on the subject of Fate 
and Free-will : edited by Orelli, Zurich, 1824. — 
4. Cornelius, surnamed Polyhistor, a Greek 
writer, was made prisoner during the war of 
Sulla in Greece (B.C. 8*7-84), and sold as a slave 
to Cornelius Lentulus, who took him to Rome, 
made him the teacher of his children, and sub- 
sequently restored him to freedom. The sur- 
name of Polyhistor was given to him on account 
of his prodigious learning. He is said to have 
written a vast number of works, all of which 
have perished, [with the exception of a few 
fragments] : the most important of them was 
one in forty -two books, containing historical and 
geographical accounts of nearly all countries of 
the ancient world. [A list of his works is given 
by Miiller, who has collected and published the 
fragments of his writings in the third volume of 
Fragmenta Hi.storicorum Grctcorujn, p. 206-244.] 
— 5. Surnamed Lychnus, of Ephesus, a Greek 
rhetorician and poet, lived about B.C. 30. A 
few fragments of his geographical and astro 
nomical poems are extant. — 6. Of Myndus, in 
Caria, a Greek writer on zoology of uncertain 
date. — 7. Numenius, a Greek rhetorician, who 
lived in the second century of the Christian era- 
Two works are ascribed to him, one Be Figuris 
Sententiarum et Elocutionist, from which Aquila 
Romanus took his materials for his work on the 
same subject; and the other On Show-speeches, 
which was written by a later grammarian of the 
name of Alexander. Edited in Walz's Rhetores 
Grceci, voL viii. — 8. The PaPhlagonian, a cele- 
brated impostor, who flourished about the be- 
ginning of the second century after Christ, of 
whom Lucian has given an amusing account, 
chiefly of the various contrivances by which he 
established and maintained the credit of an ora- 
cle. The influence he attained over the popu- 
lace seems incredible ; indeed, the narrative of 
Lucian would appear to be a mere romance, 
were it not confirmed by some medals of An- 
toninus and M. Aurelius. — 9. Surnamed Pelo- 
platon, a Greek rhetorician of Seleucia in 
Cilicia, was appointed Greek secretary to M. 
Antoninus, about A.D. 174. At Athens, he 
conquered the celebrated rhetorician Herodes 
Attieus, in a rhetorical contest. All persons, how- 
ever, did not admit his abilities ; for a Corinthian 
of the name of Sceptes said that he had found 
in Alexander " the clay (IT?;Aof), but not Plato," 
alluding to his surname of " Peloplaton." — 10. 
Philalethes, an ancient Greek physician, lived 

45 



ALEX ANDREA. 



ALGIDUM 



probabrv toward the end of the first century 
B.C and succeeded Zeuxds as head of a cele- 
brated Herophflean school of medicine, estab- 
lished in Phrvgia between Laodicea and Carura. 
H of Tejlltes in Lydia, an eminent physi- 
cian, lived in the sixth century after Christ and 
is the author of two extant Greek -works : 1. 
Libri Ifjid«cim d- Re Mtdica : -2. Df Lwnbricu. 

Attttav drea. [sometimes -dria. though, as 
Madvig says (Cio- Dt Fhu v_ 19. 54I the" Latin 
writers always preferred the e. and this was al- 
wavs the form on coins and inscriptions; e£ 
Fea. ad Hor., OcL rv~ 14, 35} ('A?*iardpeia : 
A L"f.;. Alrxaririr--; . tie ^ame of sev- 
eral cities founded by. or in memory of Alex- 
ander the Great — 1. (Alexandrea. Arab. hJcan- 
deria). the capital of Egypt under the Ptolemies, 
ordered bv Alexander to be founded in B.C. 332. 
It was built on the narrow neck of land between 
the Lake Mareotis and the Mediterranean, op- 
posite :~_e Island of Pharos, which was joined 
to the city by an artificial dike, called Hepta- 
stadium. which formed, with the island, the two 
harbors of the city, that on the northeast of the 
dike being named the Great Harbor (now the 
Veir Porr\. that on the southwest Ennostos 
(ervocroc. the Old Port). These harbors com- 
municated with each other by two channels cut 
through the Heptastadium. one at each end of 
it : and there was a canal from the Eunost :>s tc 
the Lake Mareotis. The city was built on a 
regular plan, and ws= intersected by two prin- 
cipal streets, above one hundred feet wide, the 
one extending thirty stadia from east to west 
the other across this, from the sea toward the 
lake, to the length of ten stadia. At the east- 
em extremity of the esty was the roval quarter, 
called Bruchium. and at the other end of the 
chief street outside of the city, the Necropolis 
or cemetery. A great light-house was built on 
the Island of Pharos in the rei°n of Ptolemy 
Philadelphus (B.C. 2831 Under the care of the 
Ptolemies, as the capital of a great kingdom 
and of the most fertile country on the earth, 
and com man ding by its position all the com- 
merce of Europe with the East Alexandrea 
soon became the most wealthy and splendid 
city of the known world. Greeks, Jews, and 
other foreigners docked to it, and its population 
probably amounted to three quarters of a mil- 
lion. But a still greater distinction was con- 
ferred upon it through the foundation, by the 
first two Ptolemies, of the Museum, an establish- 
in which men devoted to literature were 
at the public cost and of the Library. 
:-:ntained ninetv thousand distinct works, 
and four hundred thousand volumes, and the in- 
crease of which made it necessary to establish 
another library in the Serapeum* (Temple of 
Serapis i. which reached to forty-two thousand 
eight hundred volumes, but which was destroved 
by the Bishop Theophilus, at the time of "the 
general overthrow of the heathen temples under 
Theodosins (AD. 389} The Great Library suf- 
fered severely by fire, when Julius Csesar was 
besieged in Alexandrea. and was finallv destrov- 
ed by Amrou. the lieutenant of the Calif Omar, 
in AD. 651. These institutions made Alex- 
andrea the chief centre of literarv aetivitv. 
When Egypt became a Roman province (rid 
^Egyftis 1. Alexandrea was made the residence 
46 



'of the Praefectus Egypti. It retained its com- 
mercial and literary importance, and became 
also a chief seat of Christianity and theological 
learning. Its site is now covered by a mass of 
rriins, among which are the remains of the cis^ 
terns by which the whole city was supplied with 
water, house by house ; the two obelisks (vulg. 
Cleopatra's Needles), which adorned the gate^ 
way of the royal palace, and. outside the walls, 
to the south, the column of Diocletian (vulg. 
Pompey's Pillar). The modern city stands on 
the dike uniting the Island of Pharos to the 
main land. — 2. A. Teoas, also Tboas simply. 
('A. rj Tpudc : now ExkisfambouJ. i. f„ the Old 
CityX on the sea-coast, southwest of Troy, was 
enlarged by Antigonus, hence called Antigonia, 
but afterward it resumed its first 'name. It 
flourished greatly, both under the Greeks and 
the Romans ; it was made a colonia ; and both 
Julius Caesar and Constantine thought of estab- 
lishing the seat of empire in it — 3. A. ad Issot 
(A. KC~a I&G09 : now hkenderoon, Scanderoun , 
Ahxandr?fte\ a sea-port at the entrance of Syr- 
ia, a little south of Issus. — i. In Susiana, affer- 
icard Aniiochia, aftervard Charax Spatsini (XJ- 
;m£ TLamvov or -~ac\ at the mouth of the Ti- 
gris, built by Alexander ; destroyed by a flood : 
restored by Antiochus Epiphanes : birth-place 
of Dionysius Periegetes and Isidores Chara- 
! cenns, — 5. A. Asle ( A. r, h 'Apiotc: now Hc- 
\ rat\ founded by Alexander on the River Arms, 
in the Persian province of Aria, a very flourish- 
ing city, on the great caravan road to India. — 
6. A. Arachosue or Axexastxeopolis (now Kan- 
daJtar f >. on the River Araehotus. was probably 
not founded till after the time of Alexander. 
— 7. A. Bacthiasa ( A. Kara. BaJtroa : probably 
: Kftooloom. ruins I east of Bactra (Balkh). — 8. A_ 
j ad Caucasum. or apud Paropamisidas ('A. h> 
Xiapo-apwddauX at the foot of Mount Paropam- 
| isus (now Hindoo Koozh). probably near Ca 
\ bool. — 9. A. Ultima or A ikxavdreschata ('A. 
I 7 ecxd-TT] : now Kokand h. in Sogdiana, on the 
; Jaxartes. a little east of Cyropolis or Cyrescha- 
| ta, marked the furthest point reached by Alex- 
ander in his Scythian expedition. These are not 
all the cities of the name. 

AxzxicIcTS rA/fikaKOf). the averter of evil 
a surname of several deities, but particularly of 
! Jupiter (Zeus 1 Apollo, and Hercules. 

Axxxivrs i"A/.£rr.orl of ETis. a philosopher 
of the Dialectic or Megarian school, and a dis- 
I eiple of Eubulides. lived about the beginning of the 
I third century B.C. 

A t.fxts \*A/.fi:c). 1. A comic poet born at 
. Thurii in Italy, and an Athenian citizen. He 
. was the uncle and instructor of Menander. was 
born about B.C. 394. and lived to the age of 
; one hundred and six. Some of his plays, of 
I which he is said to have written two hundred 
and forty-five, belonged to the Middle, and others 
j to the Xew Comedy. [The fragments of his 
plays have been published by Meineke, Frag- 
menta Comicorum Graecorum. voL iL p. 688-768, 
1 edit, minor.] — 2. A sculptor and statuary, one of 
the pupils of Polyeletus, 

Alfents Varus. Vid. Varus, 
AxoinuM or Algldus (ruins near Cava?), a 
■ small but strongly fortified town of the JSqui 00 
j one of the hiTU of Mount Algidus. of which all . 
' trace has now disappeared. 



ALGIDUS MONS. 



ALPES. 



Algidus Mons, a range of mountains in La- 
tium, extending south from Praeneste to Mount 
Albanus, cold, but covered with wood, and con- 
taining good pasturage {gelido Algido ; Hor., 
Carm., i., 21, 6 : nigra feraci frondis in Algido ; 
id., iv., 4, 58). It was an ancient seat of the 
worship of Diana. From it the ./Equi usually 
made their incursions into the Roman territory. 
Alienus Cjecina. Vid. Cectna. 
Alimentus, L. Cincius, a celebrated Roman 
annalist, antiquary, and jurist, was praetor in 
Sicily, B.C. 209, and wrote several works, of 
which the best known was his Annates, which 
contained an account of the second Punic war 
[His fragments have been published in the 
Scriptores Historici Romani of Popma, 1620, and 
more recently by Krause, in his Vitce et Frag- 
menta veterum Hist. Lot., Berlin, 1833.] 

Alinda (tu 'AXivda : 'Aluvdevc), a fortress 
and small town, southeast of Stfatonlce, where 
Ada, queen of Caria, fixed her residence, when 
she was driven out of Halicarnassus (B.C. 340). 

Aliphera ('AXfyetpa, 'Ali^rjpa : 'A?.i(j)eipaloc, 
'AlLtyrjpevc : ruins near Nerovitza), a fortified 
town in Arcadia, situated on a mountain on the 
borders of Elis, south of the Alpheus, said to 
have been founded by the hero Alipherus, son 
of Lycaon. 

Alipherus. Vid. Aliphera. 
[Alisium ^AleioLov), a town of Elis, the same, 
probably, with that called Alesleum by Strabo, 
and placed by him between Elis and Olympia.] 

Aliso (now Msen), a strong fortress built by 
Drusus B.C. 11, at the confluence of the Luppia 
(now Lippe) and the Eliso (now Alme). 

Alisontia (now Alsitz), a river flowing into 
the Mosella (now Moscl). 

Allectus, the chief officer of Carausius in 
Britain, whom he murdered in A.D. 293. He 
then assumed the imperial title himself, but was 
defeated and slain in 296 by the general of Con- 
stantius. 

Allia, or, more correctly, Alia, a small river, 
which rises about eleven miles from Rome, in 
the neighborhood of Crustumerium, and flows 
into the Tiber about six miles from Rome. It 
is memorable by the defeat of the Romans by 
the Gauls on its banks, July 16th, B.C. 390 ; 
which day, dies Alliensis, was hence marked as 
an unlucky day in the Roman calendar. 

Allienus, A. 1. A friend of Cicero, was the 
legate of Q. Cicero in Asia, B.C. 60, praetor in 
49, and governor of Sicily on behalf of Caesar in 
48 and 47.-2. A legate of Dolabella, by whom 
he was sent into Egypt in 43. 

Allied or AiAvk (Allifanus : now Allife), a 
town of Samnium, on the Vulturnus, in a fertile 
country. It was celebrated for the manufacture 
of its large drinkiug-eups {Allifana sc. poada, 
Hor., Sat, ii., 8, 39). 

Allobroges (nom. sing., Allobrox : 'AXko- 
tpoyee, 'A.A2.66pvyec, 'AA?i66piyec : perhaps from 
the Celtic aill, "rock" or "mountain," and brog, 
"dwelling," consequently "dwellers in the 
mountains"), a powerful people of G-aul dwell- 
ing between the Rhodauus (now Rhone) and 
the Isara (now Isere), as far as the Lake Leman- 
nus (now Lake of Geneva), consequently in thf> 
modern Dauphine and Savoy. Their chief town 
was Vienna (now Vienne) on the Rhone. They 
are first mentioned in Hannibal's invasion, B.C. 



218. They were conquered, in B.C. 121, by Q, 
Fabius Maximus Allobrogieus, and made sub- 
jects of Rome, but they bore the yoke unwill- 
ingly, and were always disposed to rebellion. 
In the time of Ammianus the eastern part of 
their country was called Sapaudia, i. e., Savoy. 

Almo (now Almone), a small river, rises near 
Bovillae, and flows into the Tiber south of Rome, 
in which the statue and sacred things of Cybele 
were washed annually. 

Almopes ('A^w7r£c), a people in Macedonia, 
inhabiting the district Almopia between Eordsea 
and Pelagonia. 

Aloeus ('AAuevc), son of Neptune (Poseidon) 
and Canace, married Iphimedla, the daughter 
of Triops. His wife was beloved by Neptune 
(Poseidon), by whom she had two sons, Otus 
and Ephialtes, who are usually called the Alol- 
dce, from their reputed father Aloeus. They 
were renowned for their extraordinary strength 
and daring spirit. When they were nine years 
old, the body of each measured nine cubits in 
breadth and twenty-seven in height. At this 
early age, they threatened the Olympian gods 
with war, and attempted to pile Ossa upon 
Olympus, and Pelion upon Ossa. They would 
have accomplished their object, says Homer, 
had they been allowed to grow up to the age of 
manhood; but Apollo destroyed them before 
their beards began to appear ( Od., xi., 305, seq.). 
They also put the god Mars (Ares) in chains, 
and kept him imprisoned for thirteen months. 
Other stories are related of them by later 
writers. 

Aloid^e. Vid. Aloeus. 

[Alone ('AAovac : now Benidorme or Torre di 
Sali?ias), a town of Hispania Tarraconensis, a 
colony of the Massilians. — 2. A town of Britain, 
somewhat south of Keswick ; by some supposed 
to correspond to Ambleside.'] 

Alonta {'AAovra : now Terek), a river of Al- 
bania, in Sarmatia Asiatica, flowing into the 
Caspian. 

Alope ('A/loV?/), daughter of Cercyon, be- 
came by Neptune (Poseidon) the mother of 
Hippothous. She was put to death by her fa- 
ther, but her body was changed by Neptune 
(Poseidon) into a well, which bore the same 
name. 

Alope ('Aaott?? : 'AAoirevg, ' ' Aaotxlttjc). h A 
town in the Opuntian Locris, opposite Eubcea. 
— 2. A town in Phthiotis in Thessaly (//., ii. T 
682). 

Alopece ('A^uttex.?} and 'A/lcjTre/ccu : 'AXuire- 
kevc), a demus of Attica, of the tribe Antiochis, 
eleven stadia east of Athens, on the Hill An- 
chesmus. [Here the parents of Socrates dwelt, 
who therefore belonged to this demus, as did 
also Aristides.] 

Alopecia (AAw7r£/«a) or Alopece (Plin.), an 
island in the Palus Maeotis, near the mouth of 
the Tanais.] 

Alopeconnesus ('AXu7ceK6vvi]crog : 'AXuttskov- 
vijatoi : now Alexi ?), a town in the Thracian 
Chersonesus, founded by the iEolians. 

Alpenus (' 'ATittvvoc, , A?,7Trjvot), a town of the 
Epicnemidii Locri at the entrance of the pass of 
Thermopylae. 

Alpes (al 'ATnzeig, ij "Almc, ra 'Alneiva bpn> 
tu 'A?nreia bpn ; probably from the Celtic Alb or 
Alp, "a height"), the mountains forming the 

47 



ALPES. 



ALTHAEA. 



boundary of Northern Italy, are a part of the 
great mountain chain which extends from the 
Gulf of Genoa across Europe to the Black Sea, 
of which the Apennines and the mountains of 
the Grecian peninsula may be regarded as off- 
shoots. Of the Alps proper, the Greeks had 
very little knowledge, and included them under 
the oeneral name of the Rhipaean Mountains. 
The ^Romans first obtained some knowledge of 
them by Hannibal's passage across them: this 
knowledge was gradually extended by their va- 
rious wars with the inhabitants of the mount- 
ains, who were not finally subdued till the reign 
of Augustus. In the time of the emperors the 
different parts of the Alps were distinguished 
by the following names, most of which are still 
retained. We enumerate them in order from 
west to east, h Alpes Maritim^e, the Mari- 
time or Ligurian Alps, from Genua (now Genoa), 
where the Apennines begin, run west as far 
as the River Varus (now War) and Mount Cema 
(now La Caillole), and then north to Mount Ve- 
sulus (now Monte Viso), one of the highest 
points of the Alps. — 2. Alpes Cottle or Cot- 
tiax.e, the Cottian Alps (so called from a King 
Cottius in the time of Augustus), from Monte 
Viso to Mont Cenis, contained Mount Matrona, 
afterward called Mount Janus or Janua (now 
Mont Genevre), across which Cottius construct- 
ed a road, which became the chief means of 
communication between Italy and Gaul : this 
road leads from the Valley of the Durance in 
France to Segusio (now Susa) and the Valley 
of the Dora in Piedmont. The pass over Mont 
Cenis, now one of the most frequented of the 
Alpine passes, appears to have been unknown 
in antiquity. — 3. Alpes Grai^e, also Saltus 
Graius (the name is probably Celtic, and has 
nothing to do with Greece), the Graian Alps, 
from Mont Cenis to the Little St. Bernard in- 
clusive, contained the Jugum Cremonis (now Le 
Cramont) and the Centronics Alpes, apparent- 
ly the Little St. Bernard and the surrounding 
mountains. The Little St. Bernard, which is 
sometimes called Alpis Graia, is probably the 
pass by which Hannibal crossed the Alps ; the 
road over it, which was improved by Augustus, 
led to Augusta (now Aosta) in the territory of 
the Salassi. — 4. Alpes Pennine, the Pennine 
Alps, from the Great St. Bernard to the Simplon 
inclusive, the highest portion of the chain, in- 
cluding Mont Blanc, Monte Rosa, and Mont 
Cervin. The Great St. Bernard was called 
Mount Penninus, and on its summit the inhab- 
itants worshipped a deity, whom the Romans 
called Jupiter Penninus. The name is proba- 
bly derived from the Celtic pen, " a height." — 
5. Alpes Lepoxtiorum r Lepoxti^e, the Lepon- 
tian or Helvetian Alps, from the Simplon to the 
St Gothard.— 6. Alpes R^etic^:, the Hcetian 
Alps, from the St. Gothard to the Orteler by the 
pass of the Stelvio. Mount Adula is usually 
supposed to be the St. Gothard, but it must be 
another name for the whole range, if Strabo is 
right in stating that both the Rhine and the 
Adda rise in Mount Adula. The Romans were 
acquainted with two passes across the Roetian 
Alps, connecting Curia (now Coire) and Milan, 
one across the Spliigen and the other across 
Mont Septimer, and both meeting at Clavenna 
'now Chiavenna). — 7 Alpes Tridentix^e, the 
48 



mountains of Southern Tyrol, in which the 
Athesis (now Adige) rises, with the pass of the 
Brenner. — 8. Alpes jSorioe, the Noric Alps, 
northeast of the Tridentine Alps, comprising the 
mountains in the neighborhood of Salzburg. — 
9. Alpes Carnice, the Carnic Alps, east of the 
Tridentine, and south of the Xoric, to Mount 
Terglu. — 10. Alpes Juli.e, the Julian Alps, 
from Mount Terglu to the commencement of 
the Hlyrian or Dalmatian Mountains, which are 
known by the name of the Alpes Dalmaticse, 
further north by the name of the Alpes Pan- 
nonicae. The Alpes Juliae were so called be- 
cause Julius Caesar or Augustus constructed 
roads across them : they are also called Alpes 
Venetae. 

[Alphejea ('AXpeaca). Vid. Alpheus, near 
the end.] 

[Alphexor ('A?L<pf/vup), a son of Amphion and 
Klobe, slain by Apollo.] 

Alphexus Varus. Vid. Varus. 

Alphesiboea ('A?^ecl6oia). 1. Mother of Ado- 
nis. Vid. Adoxis. — 2. Daughter of Phegeus, 
married Alcmaeon. Vid, Alcileox. 

Alpheus Mytilexjsus ('AlQetdc MvrL/.vvaiog), 
the author of about twelve epigrams in the 
Greek Anthology, was probably a contemporary 
of the Emperor Augustus. 

Alpheus ('A?,6ei6c : Doric, 'A/.tyeog : now Al- 
feo, Rofeo, Eyfo, Eufea), the chief river of Pel- 
oponnesus, rises at Phylace in Arcadia, short- 
ly afterward sinks under ground, appears again 
near Asea, and then mingles its waters with 
those of the Eurotas. After flowing twenty 
stadia, the two rivers disappear under ground : 
the Alpheus again rises at Pegae in Arcadia, 
and, increased by many affluents, Hows north- 
west through Arcadia and Elis, not far from 
Olympia, and falls into the Ionian Sea. The 
subterranean descent of the river, which is con- 
firmed by modern travellers, gave rise to the 
story about the river-god Alpheus and the 
nymph Arethusa. The latter, pursued by Al- 
pheus, was changed by Diana (Artemis) into 
the fountain of Arethusa, in the Island of Orty- 
gia at Syracuse, but the god continued to pur- 
sue her under the sea, and attempted to mingle 
his stream with the fountain in Ortygia. Hence 
it was said that a cup thrown into the Alpheus 
would appear again in the fountain of Arethusa 
in Ortygia. Other accounts related that Diana 
(Artemis) herself was beloved by Alpheus : the 
goddess was worshipped, under the name of 
Alphecea, both in Elis and Ortygia. 

Alphius Avitus. Vid. Avrrus. 

Alpixus, a name which Horace gives, in ridi- 
cule, to a bombastic poet. He probably means 
Bibaculus. 

[Alsa (now Ausa), a river of Italy, in the 
territory of the Veneti, just west of Aquileia. 
Here the younger Constantine lost his fife in a 
battle against his brother Constantius.] 

Alsium (Alsiensis: now Palo), one of the 
most ancient Etruscan towns on the coast near 
Caere, and a Roman colony after the first Punic 
war. In its neighborhood Pompey had a coun- 
try seat ( Villa Alsiensis). 

[Altes ("AA-^c), a king of the Leleges, at 
Pedasus. father of Laothoe.] 

Althaea {'Aldaia), daughter of the ^Etohan 
King Thestius and Eurythemis, married G£neus, 



1 



ALTHiEA. 



AMARDUS. 



fcing of Calydou, by whom she became the 
mother of several children, and among others 
of Meleager, upon whose death she killed her- 
self. 

Alth.ea (now Orgaz ?), the chief town of the 
Olcades in the country of the Oretani, in His- 
pania Tarraconensis. 

Althemenes ('A?,dTifievr}c or 'AX6ai/j,evr]g), son 
of Catreus, king of Crete. In consequence of 
an oracle, that Catreus would lose his life by 
one of his children, Althemenes quitted Crete 
and went to Rhodes. There he unwittingly 
killed his father, who had come in search of his 
son. 

Altinum (Altinas: now Altino), a wealthy 
municipium in the land of the "Veneti in the 
north of Italy, at the mouth of the River Silis 
and on the road from Patavium to Aquileia, 
was a wealthy manufacturing town, and the 
chief emporium of all the goods which were 
sent from Southern Italy to the countries of the 
north. Goods could be brought from Ravenna 
to Altinum through the Lagoons and the nu- 
merous canals of the Po, safe from storms and 
pirates. There were many beautiful villas 
around the town. (Mart., iv., 25.) 

Altis ("AAric), the sacred grove of Jupiter 
(Zeus) at Olympia. 

Aluntium or Haluntium ('Alovvriov), a town 
on the north coast of Sicily, not far from Calac- 
ta, on a steep hill, celebrated for its wine. 

Alus or Halus ("AXog, "Alog : 'Alevg : ruins 
near Kefalosi), a town in Phthiotis in Thessaly, 
at the extremity of Mount Othrys, built by the 
hero Athamas. 

Alyattes ('AAvorr^f), king of Lydia, B.C. 
617-560, succeeded his father Sadyattes, and 
was himself succeeded by his son Croesus. He 
carried on war with Miletus from 617 to 612, 
and with Cyaxares, king of Media, from 590 to 
585 ; an eclipse of the sun, which happened in 
585, during a battle between Alyattes and Cy- 
axares, led to a peace between them. Alyattes 
drove the Cimmerians out of Asia and took 
Smyrna. The tomb of Alyattes, north of Sar- 
dis, near the Lake Gygaea, which consisted of 
a large mound of earth, raised upon a founda- 
tion of great stones, still exists. Mr. Hamilton 
says that it took him about ten minutes to ride 
round its base, which would give it a circum- 
ference of nearly a mile. 

Alyba ('ATlvCt)), a town on the south coast of 
the Euxine. (Horn., ii., 857.) 

Alypius (' A?.vtt tog), of Alexandrea, probably 
lived in the fourth century of the Christian era, 
and is the author of a Greek musical treatise, 
called " Introduction to Music " {elaayuyij fiov- 
ccktj), printed by Meibomius in Antiquce Musiccc 
Auctores Septem, Amstel., 1652. 

Alyzia or Alyzea, ('AXv&a, 'ATivfria: 'Al„v- 
£diog : ruins in the Valley of Kandili), a town in 
Acarnania, near the sea, opposite Leucas, with 
a harbor and a temple both sacred to Hercules. 
The temple contained one of the works of Ly- 
sippus, representing the labors of Hercules, 
which the Romans carried off. 

Amadocus (' A/iudoicog) or Medocus (MyjAoKog). j 
1. King of the Odrysse in Thrace, when Xeno- ; 
phon visited the country in B.C. 400. He and ' 
Seuthes, who were the most powerful Thracian 
kings, were frequently at variance, but were i 
4 



reconciled to one another by Thrasybulus, the 
Athenian commander, in 390, and induced bj 
him to become the allies of Athens. — 2. A ruler 
in Thrace, who, in conjunction with Berisades 
and Cersobleptes, succeeded Cotys in 358. 

AmagetobPvIa. Vid. Magetobria. 

[Amalchius Oceanus, a part of the Northern 
Ocean, extending, according to Hecatseus, along 
the coast of Scythia.] 

[Amallobriga (now probably Medino del Rio 
Seco), a city of the Vacceei, in Hispania Tarra- 
conensis.] 

Amalthea ('AfidWeta). 1. The nurse of the 
infant Jupiter (Zeus) in Crete. According to 
some traditions, Amalthea is the goat which 
suckled Jupiter (Zeus), and which was reward- 
ed by being placed among the stars. Vid. JEgA. 
According to others, Amalthea was a nymph, 
daughter of Oceanus, Helios, Haemouius, or of 
the Cretan king, Melisseus, who fed Jupiter 
(Zeus) with the milk of a goat. When this goat 
broke off one of her horns, Amalthea filled it 
with fresh herbs and gave it to Jupiter (Zeus), 
who placed it among the stars. According to 
other accounts, Jupiter (Zeus) himself broke off 
one of the horns of the goat Amalthea, and gave 
it to the daughters of Melisseus, and endowed 
it with the wonderful power of becoming filled 
with whatever the possessor might wish. This 
is the story about the origin of the celebrated 
horn of Amalthea, commonly called the Horn of 
Plenty or Cornucopia, which was used in later 
times as the symbol of plenty in general. — 2. 
One of the Sibyls, identified with the Cumsean 
Sibyl, who sold to King Tarquinius the cele- 
brated Sibylline books. 

Amaltheum or Amalthea, a villa of Atticus 
on the River Thyamis iu Epirus, was perhaps 
originally a shrine of the nymph Amalthea, 
which Atticus adorned with statues and bass- 
reliefs, and converted into a beautiful summer 
retreat. Cicero, in imitatiou, constructed a 
similar retreat on his estate at Arpinum. 

Amantia ('A/mvrta : Amantiuus, Amantianus, 
or Amantes, pi. : now Nivitza), a Greek town 
and district iu Illyricum : the town, said to have 
been founded by the Abantes of Eubcea, lay at 
some distance from the coast, east of Oricum. 

Amanus (6 'Apiavog, rd 'A/xavov : 'Afiavcr7jg f 
Amaniensis : now Almadagh), a branch of Mount 
Taurus, which runs from the head of the Gulf 
of Issus northeast to the principal chaiu divid- 
ing Syria from Cilicia and Cappadocia. There 
were two passes in it ; the one, called the Syr- 
ian Gates (ai Zvptai nvlai, Syria? Porta? : now 
Bylan), near the sea ; the other, called the 
Amanian Gates ('A/iavtSeg or 'A/iavucal irvhai : 
Amanica? Pylae, Porte Amani Montis : now 
Demir Kapu, i. e., the Iron Gate), further to the 
north. The former pass was on the road from 
Cilicia to Antioch, the latter on that to the dis- 
trict Commagene ; but, on account of its great 
difficulty, the latter pass was rarely used, until 
the Romans made a road through it. The in- 
habitants of Amanus were wild banditti. 

Amardi or Mardi ("A/uapdot, Mupdoi), a power- 
ful, warlike, and predatory tribe, who dwelt on 
the south shore of the Caspian Sea. 

Amardus or Mardus ("Ajuapdog, Mupdog : now 
Kizil Ozien or SefidRud), a river flowing through 
the country of the Mardi into the Caspian Sea. 

49 



AMARI LACUS. 



AMBIANI. 



[ Amari Lacus (at mitpal Mfivett : now Scheib), 
in Lower Egypt, derived their name from then- 
bitter, brackish taste, which was subsequently 
changed and rendered sweet by the Canal of 
Ptolemy, letting into them the water of the 
Nile.] 

Amaryxceus ('A/iapvynevc), a chief of the 
Eleans, is said by some writers to have fought 
against Troy : but Homer only mentions his son 
Diores {Amaryncldes) as taking part in the Tro- 
jan war. 

Amaetxthcs ('Afidpvvdoc : 'Afiapvvdioc), a 
town in Euboea, seven stadia from Eretria, to 
which it belonged, with a celebrated temple of 
Diana (Artemis), who was hence called Ama- 
rynthia or Amarysia, and in whose honor there 
was a festival of the name both in Euboea and 
Attica. Vid. Diet, of Antiq., art. Amaryjjthia. 

Amasenus (now Amaseno), a river in Latium, 
rises in the Volscian Mountains, flows by Pri- 
vernuni, and after being joined by the Ufens (now 
Ufente), which flows from Setia, falls into the 
sea between Circeii and Terracina, though the 
greater part of its waters are lost in the Pontine 
marshes. 

Amasia or -ea ('Afidaeia : 'Afiaaevc : now 
Amasiah), the capital of the kings of Pontus, 
was a strongly fortified city on both banks of the 
River Iris. It was the birth-place of Mithra- 
dates the Great and of the geographer Strabo. 

Amasis ("Afiaaic). L King of Egypt, B.C. 
570-526, succeeded Apries, whom he dethroned. 
During his long reign Egypt was in a very pros- 
perous condition, and the Greeks were brought 
into much closer intercourse with the Egyptians 
than had existed previously. Amasis married 
Ladice, a Cyrenaic lady, contracted an alliance 
with Cyrene and Polycrates of Samos, and also 
sent presents to several of the Greek cities. — 
2. A Persian, sent in the reign of Cambyses 
(B.C. 525) against Cyrene, took Barca, but did 
not succeed in taking Cyrene. 

Amastris ("AfiaGTpL^, Ion. 'AjirjaTpie). 1. 
Wife of Xerxes, and mother of Artaxerxes L, 
was of a cruel and vindictive character. — 2. 
Also called Amastrine, niece of Darius, the last 
king of Persia. She married, 1. Craterus; 2, 
Dionysius, tyrant of Heraclea in Bithynia, B.C. 
322; and, 3. Lysimachus, B.C. 302. Having 
been abandoned by Lysimachus upon his mar- 
riage with Arsinoe, she retired to Heraclea, 
where she reigned, and was drowned by her 
two sons about 288. 

Amastris ('A/xacrptg : 'A/j-aarpiavoc : now 
Amasera), a large and beautiful city, with two 
harbors, on the coast of Paphlagonia, built by 
Amastris after her separation from Lysimachus 
(about B.C. 300), on the site of the old town of 
Sesamus, which name the citadel retained. The 
uew city was built and peopled by the inhabit- 
ants of Cytorus and Cromna. 

Amata, wife of king Latinus and mother of 
Lavinia, opposed Lavinia being given in mar- 
riage to ^Eneas, because she had already prom- 
ised her to Turnus, When she heard that Tur- 
nua had fallen in battle, she huno- herself. 

[Amathia CAfiddeta), one °of the Nereids 
(Horn.)]. 

Amathus, -untis, (' A/xa6ovc, -ovvtoc : 'Ap.adov- 
cioc: now Limasol), an ancient town on the 
south coast of Cyprus, with a celebrated tern 
50 



pie of Venus (Aphrodite), who was hence called) 
Amathusia. There were copper mines in the 
neighborhood of the town (fecundam Amathunta 
metalli, Ov., Met, x., 220).— [2. (Now Amatah), 
a fortified town of Perasa or Palestine, beyond 
the Jordan.] 

Amatius, surnamed JPseudomarius, pretended 
to be either the son or grandson of the great 
Marius, and was put to death by Antony in B.C. 
44. Some call him Herophilus. 

Amazones {'Afial^oveg), a mythical race of war- 
like females, are said to have come from the 
Caucasus, and to have settled in the country 
about the River Thermodon, where they found- 
ed the city Themiscyra, west of the modern 
Trebizond. Their country was inhabited only 
by the Amazons, who were governed by a queen ; 
but, in order to propagate their race, they met 
once a year the Gargareans in Mount Caucasus. 
The children of the female sex were brought up 
by the Amazons, and each had her right breast 
cut off; the male children were sent to the 
Gargareans or put to death. The foundation 
of several towns in Asia Minor and in the isl- 
ands of the ^2gean is ascribed to them, e. g., of 
Ephesus, Smyrna, Cyme, Myrina, and Paphos, 
The Greeks believed in their existence as a real 
historical race down to a late period ; and hence 
it is said that Thalestris, the queen of the Ama- 
zons, hastened to Alexander, in order to be- 
come a mother by the conqueror of Asia. This 
belief of the Greeks may have arisen from the 
peculiar way in which the women of some of 
the Caucasian districts lived, and performed 
the duties which in other countries devolve 
upon men, as well as from their bravery and 
courage, which are noticed as remarkable even- 
by modern travellers. Vague and obscure re- 
ports about them probably reached the inhabit- 
ants of Western Asia and the Greeks, and these 
reports were subsequently worked out and em- 
bellished by popular tradition and poetry. The 
following are the chief mythical adventures with 
which the Amazons are connected: they are said 
to have invaded Lycia in the reign of Iobates, but 
were destroyed by Bellerophontes, who happen- 
ed to be staying at the king's court. Vid. Bel- 
lerophoxtes, Laomedo.v. They also invaded 
Phrygia, and fought with the Phrygians and 
Trojans when Priam was a young man. The 
ninth among the labors imposed upon Hercules 
by Eurystheus was to take from Hippolyte, the 
queen of the Amazons, her girdle, the ensign 
of her kingly power, which she had received as 
a present from Mars (Ares). Vid. Hercules. 
In the reign of Theseus they invaded Attica. 
Vid. Theseus. Toward the end of the Trojan 
war, the Amazons, under their Queen Penthe- 
silea, came to the assistance of Priam ; but she 
was killed by Achilles. The Amazons and their 
battles are frequently represented in the re- 
mains of ancient Greek art. 

Amazonici or -ius Mons, a mountain range 
parallel and near to the coast of Pontus, con- 
taining the sources of the Thermodon and other 
streams which water the supposed country of 
the Amazons. 

Ambarri, a people of Gaul, on the Arar (now 
Saone) east of the ^Edui, and of the same stock 
as the latter. 

Ambiani, a Belgic people, between the BebV 



AMBIATINUS. 



AMBUSTUS. 



vaci and Atrebates, conquered by Caesar in B. 
C. 57. Their chief town was Samarobriva, aft- 
erward called Ambiani : now Amiens. 

Ambiatinus Vicus, a place in the country of 
the Treviri near Coblentz, where the Emperor 
Caligula was born. 

Ambibaki, an Armoric people in Gaul, near 
the modem Ambieres in Normandy. 

[Ambiga-its. a king of the Celts in Gaul in the 
reign of Tarquinius Priscus.] 

Ambiliati, a Gallic people, perhaps in Brit- 
tany. 

Ambiorix, a chief of the -Eburones in Gaul, 
cut to pieces, in conjunction with Cativolcus, 
the Roman troops under Sabinus and Cotta, who 
were stationed for the winter in the territories 
of the Eburones, B.C. 54. He failed in taking 
the camp of Q. Cicero, and was defeated on the 
arrival of Cresar, who was unable to obtain pos- 
session of the person of Ambiorix, notwithstand- 
ing his active pursuit of the latter. 

Ambivareti, the clieutes or vassals of the 
JSdui, probably dwelt north of the latter. 

Ambivariti, a Gallic people west of the Maas, 
in the neighborhood of Namur. 

Ambivius Turpio. Vid. Turpio. 

Amblada (tu "AfiSlada : 'kfxdXadevc;), a town 
in Pisidia, on the borders of Caria ; famous for 
its Aviue. 

Ambracia ('A/nrpaKia, afterward 'A/^pa/aa : 
'Au.6pa.Ki(l)T7](;, 'Apfjpaicuvg, Ambraciensis : now 
Arta), a town on the left bank of the Arachthus, 
eighty stadia from the coast, north of the Am- 
bracian Gulf, was originally included in Acar- 
nauia, but afterward in Epirus. It was colo- 
nized by the Corinthians about B.C. 660, and at 
an early period acquired wealth and importance. 
It became subject to the kings of Epirus about 
the time of Alexander the Great. Pyrrhus 
made it the capital of his kingdom, and adorned 
it with public buildings and statues. At a later 
time it joined the M olian League, was taken 
by the Romans in B.C. 189, and" stripped of its 
works of art. Its inhabitants were transplanted 
to the new city of Nicopolis, founded by Au- 
gustus after the battle of Actium, B.C. 31. 
South of Ambracia, on the east of the Arach- 
thus, and close to the sea, was the fort Ambracus. 

Ambracius Sinus ('Afirrpanivdc or 'Ap6paK.iK.bg 
Kolnoc. now Gulf of Arta), a gulf of the Ionian 
Sea between Epirus aud Acarnania, said by 
Polybius to be three hundred stadia long and 
one hundred wide, aud with an entrance only 
five stadia in width. Its real length is twenty- 
five miles and its width ten : the narrowest part 
of the entrance is only seven hundred yards, but 
its general width is about half a mile. 

AmbrOnes ('ApSpoveg), a Celtic people, who 
joined the Cimbri and Teutoni in their invasion 
of the Roman dominions, and were defeated by 
Marius near Aqua? Sextiae (now Aix) in B.C. 102. 

AmbrosIus, usually called St. Ambrose, one 
of the most celebrated Christian fathers, was 
born in A.D. 340, probably at Augusta Treviro- 
rum (now Treves.) After a careful education 
at Rome, he practiced with great success as an 
advocate at Milan ; and about A.D. 370 was 
appointed prefect of the provinces of Liguria 
and ^Emilia, whose seat of government was 
Milan. On the death of Auxentius, bishop of 
Milan, in 374, the appointment of his successor 



led to an open conflict between the Arians and 
Catholics. Ambrose exerted his influence I© 
restore peace, and addressed the people in a 
conciliatory speech, at the conclusion of which 
a child in the further part of the crowd cried 
out " AmbrosIus episcopus." The words were 
received as an oracle from heaven, and Ambrose 
was elected bishop by the acclamation of the 
whole multitude, the bishops of both parties 
uniting in his election. It was in vain that he 
adopted the strangest devices to alter the de- 
termination of the people ; nothing could make 
them change their mind; aud at length he 
yielded to the express command of the emper- 
or (Valentinian I.), and was consecrated on the 
eighth day after his baptism, for at the time of 
his election he was only a catechumen. Am- 
brose was a man of eloquence, firmness, and 
ability, and distinguished himself by maintain- 
ing and enlarging the authority of the church. 
He was a zealous opponent of the Arians, and 
thus came into open conflict with Justina, the 
mother of Valentinian II., who demanded the 
use of one of the churches of Milan for the Ari- 
ans. Ambrose refused to give it; he was sup- 
ported by the people ; and the contest was at 
length decided by the miracles which are re- 
ported to have attended the discovery of the 
reliques of two martyrs, Gervasius and Prota- 
sius. Although these miracles were denied by 
the Arians, the impression made by them upon 
the people iu general was so strong, that Justina 
thought it prudent to give way. The state of 
the parties was quite altered by the death of 
Justina in 387, when Valentinian became a Cath- 
olic, and still more completely by the victory of 
Theodosius over Maximus (388). This event 
put the whole power of the empire into the 
hands of a prince who was a firm Catholic, and 
over whom Ambrose acquired such influence, 
that, after the massacre at Thessalonica in 390, 
he refused Theodosius admission to the Church 
of Milan for a period of eight months, and only 
restored him after he had performed a public 
penance. The best edition of the works of 
Ambrose is that of the Benedictines, Paris, 1686 
and 1690. 

Ambrysus or Amphrysus ('A/u6pvcoc : 'Afi- 
6pvaevg: near Dhislomo), a town in Phocis, 
strongly fortified, south of Mount Parnassus: 
in the neighborhood were numerous vineyards. 

Ambustus, Fabius. 1. M., pontifex maxi- 
mus in the year that Rome was taken by the 
Gauls, B.C. 390. His three sons, Kseso. Nu- 
merius, aud Quintus, were sent as ambassadors 
to the Gauls, when the latter were besieging 1 
Clusium, and took part in a sally of the besieged 
against the Gauls (B.C 391). The Gauls de- 
manded that the Fabii should be surrendered 
to them for violating the law of nations; and 
upon the Senate refusing to give up the guilty- 
parties, they marched against Rome. The 
three sons were in the same year elected con- 
sular tribunes. — 2. M., consular tribune inlfcB.C. 
381 and 369, and censor in 363, had two daugh- 
ters, of whom the eider was married to- Ser, 
Sulpicius, and the younger to C. Licinius Stole, 
the author of the Liciuian Rogations. Accord- 
ing to the story recorded by Livy, the younger 
Fabia induced her father to assist her husband 
in obtaining the consulship for the plebeian or* 
51 



AMEN ANUS. 



AMMONIUS. 



der, into which she had married.— 3. M, thrice 
consul, in B.C. 360, when he conquered the 
Hernica; a second time in 356, when he con- 
quered the Falisci and Tarquinieuses ; and a 
third time in 354, when he conquered the Ti- 
burtes. He was dictator in 351. He was the 
father of the celebrated Q. Fabius Maximus 
Rullianus. Vid, Maximus. 

Amenanls ('Aftevcatoe, Dor. 'A/xevag : [now Ju- 
dicello]), a river in Sicily near Cataua, only 
flowed occasionally (nunc fuit, intcrdum sup- 
presses fontibus aret, Ov, Met, xv., 280.) 

Ameria (Amerinus: now Amelia), an ancient 
town in Umbria, and a municipium, the birth- 
place of Sex. Roscius defended by Cicero, was 
situate in a district rich in vines (Virg., Georg., 
i, 265). 

Ameriola, a town in the land of the Sabines, 
destroyed by the Romans at a very early period. 

Amestratus ( : kfii'ioTparoc \ Amestratiuus : 
now Mistretta), a town in the north of Sicily, 
not far from the coast, the same as the Myttis- 
tratum of Polybius, and the Amastra of Silius 
Italicus, taken by the Romans from the Cartha- 
ginians in the first Punic war. 

Amestris. Vid. Amastris. 

Amida ij] 'Apida : now Diarbekr), a town in 
Sophene (Armenia Major), on the Upper Tigris. 

Amii.car. Vid. Hamilcar. 

Aminias ('Afieiviac), brother of ^Eschylus, dis- 
tinguished himself at the battle of Salamis (B.C. 
480): he and Eumenes were judged to have 
been the bravest on this occasion among all the 
Athenians. 

Amipsias ('Afieiiplac), a comic poet of Athens, 
contemporary with Aristophanes, whom he 
twice conquered in the dramatic contests, gain- 
ing the second prize with his Conuus when 
Aristophanes was third with the Clouds (B.C. 
423), and the first with his Comastce when Aris- 
tophanes gained the second with the Birds (B.C. 
414). [Some fragments of his plays remain, 
which are collected in Meineke's Fragmenta 
Comicorum Grcecorura, vol. i., p. 402 — 407, edit, 
minor.] 

Amisia or Amisius ('Afidcioc, Strab. : now 
Ems), a river in northern Germany well known 
to the Romans, on which Drusus had a naval 
engagement with the Bructeri B.C. 12. 

Amisia ('Afuata and 'Aixdaeta : now Etnden ?), 
a fortress on the left bank of the river of the 
same name. 

Amisodarus ('A[iLa65apog\ a king of Lycia, 
eaid to have brought up the monster Chimaera : 
nis sons Atymuius and Maris were slain at 
Troy by the sons of Nestor. 

Amisus ('Afiiaoc : A'/iionvoc, Amiseuus : now 
Samsuv\ a large city on the coast of Poutus, 
on a bay of the Euxine Sea, called after it 
(Amiseuus Sinus). Mithradates enlarged it, 
and made it one of his residences. 

Amiternum (Amiterninus : now Amatrica or 
Torre dAmiterno), oue of the most ancient towns 
of tit Sabines, on the Aternus, the birth-place 
of the historian Sallust. 

Ammianus ('A/ifiiavug), a Greek epigramma- 
tist, but probably a Roman by birth, the author 
of nearly thirty epigrams in the Greek Anthol- 
ogy, lived under Trajan and Hadrian. 

Ammianls Marcellinus, by birth a Greek, 
and a native of Syrian Antioch, was admitted 
52 



at an early age among the imperial body guards. 
He served many years under Ursicinus, one of 
the generals of Constautius, both in the West 
and East, and he subsequently attended the Em- 
peror Julian in his campaign against the Per- 
sians (A.D. 363). Eventually he established 
himself at Rome, where he composed his his- 
tory, and was alive at least as late as 390. His 
history, written in Latin, extended from the 
accession of Nerva, A.D. 96, the point at which 
the histories of Tacitus terminated, to the death 
of Valens, A.D. 378, comprising a period of two 
hundred and eighty -two years. It was divided 
into thirty-one books of which the first thirteen 
are lost, The remaining eighteen embrace the 
acts of Coustautius from A.D. 353, the seven- 
teenth year of his reign, together with the whole 
career of Gallus, Juliauus. Jovianus, Valentin- 
ianus, and Valens. The portion preserved was 
the more important part of, the work, as he was 
a contemporary of the events described iu these 
books. The style of Ammianus is harsh and 
inflated, but his accuracy, fidelity, and imparti- 
ality deserve praise. — Editions: By Gronovius, 
Lugd. Bat, 1693; by Ernesti, Lips., 1773; by 
Wagner and Eifurdt, Lips, 1808, 3 vols. 8vo. 

[Ammochostus ('Aju/LLoxioaroc : now C. Grego), 
a sandy promontory near Salamis in Cyprus, 
which gives name by corruption to the modern 
Famagusta^] 

Ammon ('A/ifiuv), originally an ./Etbiopiau or 
Libyan, afterward an Egyptiau divinity. The 
real Egyptiau name was Amun or Ammun; the 
Greeks called him Zeus Amnion, the Romans 
Jupiter Amnion, and the Hebrews Amon. The 
most aucieut seat of his worship was Meroe, 
where he had an oracle : thence it was intro- 
duced into Egypt, where the worship took the 
firmest root at Thebes in Upper Egypt, which 
was therefore frequently called by the Greeks 
Diospolis, or the city of Zeus. Another famous 
seat of the god, with a celebrated oracle, was 
in the oasis of Ammonium (now Siwah) in the 
Libyan desert; the worship was also established 
iu Cyrenaica. The god was represented either 
in the form of a ram, or as a human being with 
the head of a ram ; but there are some repre- 
sentations in which he appears altogether as a 
human being, with only the horns of a ram. It 
seems clear that the original idea of Amnion 
was that of a protector and leader of the flocks. 
The ^Ethiopians were a nomad people, flocks 
of sheep, constituted their principal wealth, and 
it is perfectly in accordance with the notions 
of the ^Ethiopians as well as Egyptians to wor- 
ship the animal which is the leader and pro- 
tector of the flock. This view is supported by 
the various stories related about Ammou. 

Ammonium. Vid. Oasis. 

AmmonIus ('Afi/iuvtoc). L Grammaticus, of 
Alexaudrea, left this city on the overthrow of 
the heathen temples in A.D. 389, and settled 
at Constantinople. He wrote, in Greek, a valu- 
able work Oil the Differences of Words of like Sig- 
nification (—epi ouoluv nal diatyopuv Xi^euv). Edi- 
tions : By Valckenaer, Lugd. Bat., 1739; by 
Schafer, Lips. 1822. — 2. Son of Hermeas, stud- 
ied at Athens under Proclus (who died A.D. 
484), and was the master of Simplieius, Damas- 
cius, and others. He wrote numerous com- 
mentaries in Greek on the works of the earlier 



AMNISUS. 



AMPH1DAMAS. 



philosophers. His extant works are Comment- 
aries on the Isagoge of Porphyry, or the Five 
Predicates, first published at Venice in 1500; 
and On the Categories of Aristotle and I)e Inter- 
pretatione, published by Brandis in his edition of 
the Scholia on Aristotle. — 3. Of Lamped, in At- 
tica, a Peripatetic philosopher, lived in the first 
century of the Christian era, and was the in- 
structor of Plutarch. — 4. Surnamed Saccas, or 
sack-carrier, because his employment was car- 
rying the corn, landed at Alexaudrea, as a pub- 
lic porter, was born of Christian parents. Some 
writers assert, and others deny, that he aposta- 
tized from the faith. At any rate, he combined 
the study of philosophy with Christianity, and 
is regarded by those who maintain his apostasy 
as the founder of the later Platonic School. 
Among his disciples were Longinus, Herennius, 
Plotiuus, and Origen. He died. A.D. 243, at the 
age of more than eighty years. — [5. Of Alex- 
andre.*, a pupil of Aristarehus, a celebrated 
grammarian, who composed commentaries on 
Homer, Pindar, and others, none of which are 
extant. — 6. Styled Lithotomus, an eminent sur- 
geon of Alexaudrea, celebrated for his skill in 
cutting for the stone.] 

Amnisus ('A/nviooc), a town in the north of 
Crete and the harbor of Cnosus, situated on a 
river of the same name, the nymphs of winch, 
called AmnUiades, were in the service of Diana 
(Artemis). 

Amor, the god of love, had no place in the re- 
ligion of the Romans, who only translate the 
Greek name Eros into Amor. Vid. Eros. 

Amorgus ("Apopyoc : 'A/wpyivoc : now Amor- 
go), an island in the Grecian Archipelago, one of 
the Sporades, the birth-place of Simonides, and, 
under the Roman emperors, a place of banish- 
ment. 

Amorium ('Aftoptov), a city of Phrygia. Major 
or Galatia, on the River Sangarius ; the reputed 
birth-place of iEsop. 

Ampe ("Ap,~Tj, Herod.) or Ampelone (Plin.), 
a town at the mouth of the Tigris, where Darius 
I. planted the Milesians whom he removed from 
their own city after the Tonian revolt (B.C. 494). 

Ampelius, L.. the author of a small work, en- 
titled Liber Meniorialis, probably lived in the 
second or third century of the Christian era. 
His work is a sort of common-place book, con- 
taining a meagre summary of the most striking 
natural objects and of the most remarkable 
events, divided into fifty chapters. It is gener- 
ally printed with Florus, and has been published 
separately by Beck, Lips., 1826. 

Ampelus (' A.{iire?Mc), a promontory at the ex- 
tremity of the peninsula Sithonia in Chalcidice, 
in Macedonia, near Torone. — 2. [A promontory 
of Crete, on the eastern coast south of Sam- 
monium, with a city of same name, now prob- 
ably Cape Sacro. — 3. A mountain ending in a 
promontory in the Island of Samos, opposite 
Icaria, now Cape Uominico.~] 

Ampeltjsta ('A/j.rre?.ovala: now C. Espartel), 
the promontory at the west end of the south or 
African coast of the Fretum Gaditanum (now 
Straits of Gibraltar). The natives of the coun- 
try called it Cote3 (al Kureig). 

Amphaxitis ('AfiQa&Tig), a district of Myg- 
donia in Macedonia, at the mouths of the Axius 
and Echedorus. 



Amphea ("A/KpeLa : 'A/Mpevg), a small town of 
Messenia on the borders of Laconia aud Mes- 
senia, conquered by the Spartans in the first 
Messenian war. 

[Amphialus ('A/u(pia?,or), a Phaaacian, who 
gained the prize in the games, in which Ulysses 
took part (Od,, viii., 114).] 

[Amphianax ('A/i<pulva$), king of Lycia, who 
received Proetus when driven out of Argolis, 
gave him his daughter Antea in marriage, and 
restored him to Argos.] 

Amphiaraus ('Afupiupaoc), son of Oicles and 
Hypermnestra, daughter of Thestius, was de- 
scended on his father's side from the famous 
seer Melampus, and was himself a great prophet 
and a great hero at Argos. By his wife Eri- 
phyle, the sister of Adrastus, he was the father 
of Alcmaeon, Amphiaraus, Eurydice, and De- 
monassa. He took part in the hunt of the Caly- 
donian boar and in the Argonautic voyage. He 
also joined Adrastus in the expedition against 
Thebes, although he foresaw its fatal termina- 
tion, through the persuasions of his wife Eri- 
phyle, who had been induced to persuade her 
husband by the necklace of Harmonia which 
Polynices had given her. On leaving Argos, 
however, he enjoined on his sons to punish 
their mother for his death. During the war 
against Thebes, Amphiaraus fought bravely, 
but could not escape his fate. Pursued by Peri- 
clymenus, he fled toward the River Ismenius, 
and the earth swallowed him up, together with 
his chariot, before he was overtaken by his ene- 
my. Jupiter (Zeus) made him immortal, and 
henceforth he was worshipped as a hero, first 
at Oropus and afterward in all Greece. His 
oracle between Potniae and Thebes, where he 
was said to have been swallowed up, enjoyed 
great celebrity. Vid. Diet, of Ant, art. Oracu- 
lum. His son, Alcmaeon, is called Amphiara- 
ides. 

Amphic.ea or Amphiclea (ApKfiLtcaLa,' 'A/z^£- 
K/.eia: 'A^Laauvg : now DhadM or Oglunitza?), 
a town in the north of Phocis, with an adytum 
of Bacchus (Dionysus), was called for a long 
time Ophitea ('OtiiTeia), by command of the Am- 
phictyons. 

[Amfhiclus (A/z(j>iK?*og), a Trojan, slain by 
Meges.] 

[Amphicrates ('A/LL(j)iKpuTT/g), an early king of 
Samos, in whose reign the Samians made war 
on the ./Eginetans. — 2. A sophist and rhetorician 
of Athens, who flourished about 1 B.C.] 

Amphictyon ('A/KpiKT-vuv), a son of Deucalion 
and Pyrrha. Others represent him as a king of 
Attica, who expelled from the kingdom his fa- 
ther-in-law Cranaus, ruled for twelve years, 
and was then in turn expelled by Erichthonius. 
Many writers represent him as the founder of 
the amphictyony of Thermopylae ; in conse- 
quence of this belief a sanctuary of Amphictyon 
was built in the village of Anthela on the Aso- 
pus, which was the most ancient place of meet- 
ing of this amphictyony. 

Amphidamas ('An<j)idd/j.ac), son, or, according 
to others, brother of Lycurgus, one of the Ar- 
gonauts. — [2. Son of Busiris, king of Egypt, 
slain by Hercules along with his father. Vid. 
Busiris. — 3. A hero of Scandia in Cythera, to 
whom Autolyeus sent a helmet set round with 
boar's tusks, afterward borne by Meriones be- 
53 



AMPHIDOLI. 



AMPHISSA. 



fore Troy. 4. A king of Chalcis in Eubcea : had repudiated, and had then married Dirce in 

he fell in battle against the Erythrseans, and her stead. They took the city, and as Lycus 

his sons celebrated in his honor funereal games, and Dirce had treated their mother with great 

at which Hesiod gained the first prize of poetry, cruelty, the two brothers killed them both, 

viz., a golden tripod, which he dedicated to the They put Dirce to death by tying her to a bull, 



Muses.] 

[Amfhidoli ('A/jptfoioi), a city of Triphylian 
Elis.] 

Amphilochia ('Afiyi/.ox'ia), the country of the 
Amphilochi ('Af^>tMxP l )> an Epirot race, at the 
eastern end of the Ambracian Gulf, usually in- 
cluded in Acarnania. Their chief town was 
Argos Amphilochicum. 

Amphilochus ('A/li(?i/.oxoc). son of Amphiaraus 
and Eriphyle, and brother of Alcmeeon. He 
took an active part in the expedition of the Epi 



who dragged her about till she perished ; and 
they then threw her body into a well, which 
was from this time called the Well of Dirce. 
After they had obtained possession of Thebes, 
they fortified it by a wall. It is said that when 
Amphion played his lyre, the stones moved of 
their own accord and formed the wall (movit 
Amphion lapides cane ado, Hor., Cctrm., hi., 11). 
Amphion afterward married Niobe, who bore 
him many sons and daughters, all of whom were 
killed by Apollo. His death is differently re- 



goni against Thebes, assisted his brother in the ; lated : some say, that he killed himself from 
murder of their mother (vid. Alcaleox), and grief at the loss of his children (Ov., Met, vi.. 
afterward fought against Troy. On his return 270), and others tell us that he was killed by 
from Troy, together with Mopsus, who was, like j Apollo because he made an assault on the Pyth- 



himself, a seer, he founded the town of Mallos 
in Cilieia. Hence he proceeded to his native 
place, Argos, but returned to Mallos, where he 
was killed in single combat by Mopsus. Others 
relate (Thuc, ii., 68) that, after leaving Argos, 
Amphilochus founded Argos Amphilochieum on 
the Ambracian Gulf. He was 



ian temple of the god. Amphion and his broth- 
er were buried at Thebes. The punishment in- 
flicted upon Dirce is represented in the cele- 
brated Farnese bull, the work of Apollonius and 
Tauriscus, which was discovered in 1546, and 
placed in the palace Farnese at Rome. — 2. Son 
orshipped at I of Jasus and father of Chloris. In Homer, this 
Amphion, king of Orchomenos, is distinct from 
Amphion, the husband of Kiobe ; but in earlier 
traditions they seem 
the same person.- 



Mallos in Cilieia, at Oropus, and at Athens. 

Amphilytus ('A/jc)i?.vtoc), a celebrated seer 
in the time of Pisistratus (B.C. 559). is called j traditions they seem to have been regarded as 
both an Aearnanian and an Athenian : he may ; the same person. — [3. A leader of the Epeans 
have been an Aearnanian who received the j before Troy. — L Son of Hyperesius of Pallene. 
franchise at Athens. an Argonaut. — 5. A king of Corinth, father of 

A^rPHTMACHUs ( : ' A[ioLuaxoc). L Son of Ctea- ' Labda.] 
tus, grandson of Neptune (Poseidon), one of the ! Amphipolis ('Auuitto/.ic : ' A/ao it: o //it?/ c : now 



four leaders of the Epeans against Troy, was 
slain by Hector. — 2. Son of Nornion, with his 
brother Nastes, led the Carians to the assist- 
ance of the Trojans, and was slain by Achilles. 

Amphimalla (rd ' ' AjMbifiaA/.a), a town on the 
northern coast of Crete, on a bay called after 
it (now &idf of Armiro). 



Neokhorio, in Turkish Jcni-Keui), a town in 
Macedonia on the left or eastern bank of the 
Strymon, just below its egress from the Lake 
Cercinitis, and about three miles from the sea. 
The Strymon flowed almost round the town, 
nearly forming a circle, whence its name Am- 
phi-polis. It was oriorinallv called 'Evvea 66oi, 



[Ampheiarus ('Afioifiapoc), son of Neptune, I " the Nine Ways/' and belonged to the Edoni- 
father of the minstrel Linus by Urania.] : ans, a Thraciau people. Aristagoras of Miletus 

Ajsiphimedox ('Afidifieduv), of Ithaca, a guest- j first attempted to colonize it, but was cut off 
friend of Agamemnon, and a suitor of Penelope, j with his followers by the Edonians in B.C. 497. 
was slain by Telemachus. — [2. A Libyan slain i The Athenians made a next attempt with ten 
at the nuptials of Perseus.] \ thousand colonists, but they were all destroyed 

[Amphlxome ('A^oivofi?}), one of the Nereids, j by the Edonians in 465. In 437 the Athenians 
— 2. "Wife of jEsou and mother of Jason, slew j were more successful, and drove the Edonians 
herself when Pelias had slain her husband. — 3. j out of the " Nine Ways," which was henceforth 
Daughter of Pebas, married by Jason to An- i called Amphipolis. It was one of the most im- 
dramon.] j port-ant of the Athenian possessions, being ad- 

[Amphixomus ('AuQivoju.oc), son of Nisus of vantageously situated for trade on a navigable 
Dulichium, one of the suitors of Penelope, slain : river in the midst of a fertile country, and near 
by Telemachus.] j the gold mines of Mount Pangasus. Hence the 

Amphiox {'A/JOiwi ). 1. Sou of Jupiter (Zeus) i indignation of the Athenians when it fell into 
and Antiope, the daughter of Nyeteus of Thebes, j the "hands of Brasidas (B.C. 424) and of Philip 
and twin-brother of Zethus. (Ov., Met, vi, j (358). Under the Romans it was a free city, 
110, seq.) Amphion and Zethus were born . and the capital of Macedonia prima : the Yia 
either at Eleuthera in Bceotia or on Mount Ci- J Egnatia ran through it. The port of Amphip- 
thaeron, whither their mother had fled, and grew ! olis was Eiox. 

up among the shepherds, not knowing their de- j Amphis ('A/uptc), an Athenian comic poet, of 
scent. Mercury (Hermes) (according to others, ' the middle comedy, contemporary with the phi- 
Apollo, or the Muses) gave Amphion a lyre, j losopher Plato. We have the titles of twenty- 
who henceforth practiced song aud music, while ' six of his plays, and a few fragments of them, 
his brother spent his time in hunting and tend- 1 [These fragments have been published by Mei- 
ing the flocks. (Hor., Ep„ i. 18, 41.) Hav- 1 neke. Fragmenta Comicorum Graxorum, toL l, 



ing become acquainted with their origin, they 
marched against Thebes, where Lycus reigned, 
the husband of their mother Antiope, whom he 
54 



p. 645-656, edit, minor.] 

Amphissa ('A/iQiGca. : 'AjiqiGoevc, 'Afiyiacraloc : 
now Sctlona), one of the chief towns of the Lo- 



AMPHISTRATUS. 



AMYCLjE. 



•<eri Ozolae on the borders of Phoeis, seven miles 
. from Delphi, said to have been named after 
' Amphissa, daughter of Macareus, and beloved 
by Apollo. In consequence of the Sacred War 
declared against Amphissa by the Amphictyous, 
the town was destroyed by Phihp, B.C. 338, 
but it was soon afterward rebuilt, and under the 
Romans was a free state. 

Amphisteatus ('A/i<f>'ioTpaToc) and his brother 
Rhecas, the charioteers^ of the Dioscuri, were 
said to' have taken part in the expedition of Ja- 
son to Colchis, and to have occupied a part of 
that country which was called after them Heni- 
ochia, as heniochus (ijvLoxoc) signifies a chari- 
oteer. 

[Amphithea (' AfMpidea), wife of Autolycus, 
grandmother of Ulysses. — 2. Wife of Adrastus.J 

[Amphithemis ('A/Mbtdefiie), son of Apollo and 
Acacallis, and father of Nasamon and Caphau- 
rus by Tritonis. — 2. A Theban general, who re- 
ceived money sent by the Persians into Greece 
to excite disturbances there, for the purpose of 
causing the recall of Agesilaus from Asia.] 

[Amphithoe ('A/j,(j)t667j), one of the Nereids.] 

Amphitrite (' Afi^LTpLTrf), a Nereid or an 
Oceanid, wife of Neptune (Poseidon) and god- 
dess of the sea, especially of the Mediterranean. 
In Homer Amphitrite is merely the name of the 
sea, and she first occurs as a goddess in Hesiod. 
Later poets again use the word as equivalent to 
the sea in general. She became by Neptune 
(Poseidon) the mother of Triton, Rhode or Rhodos, 
and Benthesicyme. 

Amphitrope ('AfJ-tyi-po-ii 'Afj.<j>iTp07vaievg), an 
Attic demus belonging to the tribe Antiochis, in 
the neighborhood of the silver-mines of Laurium. 

Amphitryon or Amphitruo ('ApipLrpvuv), son 
of Alcaeus, kiug of Tiryns, and Hipponome. Al- 
caeus had a brother Electryon, who reigned at 
Mycenae. Between Electryon and Pterelaus, 
king of the Taphians, a furious war raged, in 
which Electryon lost all his sous except Licym- 
nius, and was robbed of his oxen. Amphitryon 
recovered the oxen, but on his return to Myce- 
nae accidentally killed his uncle Electryon. He 
was now expelled from Mycenae, together with 
Alcmene the daughter of Electryon, by Sthen- 
elus the brother of Electryon, and went to 
Thebes, where he was purified by Creon. In 
order to win the hand of Alcmene, Amphitryon 
prepared to avenge the death of Alcmene's 
brothers on the Taphiaus, and conquered them, 
after Comae tho, the daughter of Pterelaus, 
through her love for Amphitryon, cut off the 
one goldeu hair on her father's head, which 
rendered him immortal. During the absence 
of Amphitryon from Thebes, Jupiter visited 
Alcmene. who became by the god the mother 
of Hercules ; the latter is called Amphitryoniades 
in allusion to his reputed father. Amphitryon 
fell in a war against Erginus, king of the Miny- 
ans. The comedy of Plautus, called Amphitruo, 
is a ludicrous representation of the visit of Ju- 
piter (Zeus) to Alcmene in the disguise of her I 
lover Amphitryon. 

[Amphius ("Ap.(f>ioe), son of Lelagus, an ally 
of the Trojans, slain by the Telamonian Ajax. 
— 2. Son of Merops, the celebrated seer, against 
whose wish his two sons Amphius and Adrastus 
went to the Trojan war : they were both slain by 
. oDiomedes.] 



Amphoteric ('A/^orepoc). Vid. Acarnan.-*- 
[2. A Trojan slain by Patroclus.] 

Amphrvsus ('A/j,(j)pvGug). 1. A small river in 
Thessaly which flowed into the Pagasaean Gulf, 
on the banks of which Apollo fed the herds of 
Admetus (pastor ab Ampkryso, Virg., Georg., iii., 
2).— 2. Vid. Ambrysus. 

[Ampius Balbus, T. Vid. Balbus.] 
Ampsaga (now Wad-el-Kabir, or tiufjimar), a 
river of Northern Africa, which divided Numidia 
from Mauretania Sitifensis. It flows past the 
( town of Cirta (now Constantino). 

Ampsanctus or Amsanctus Lacus (now Lago 
d' Ansanti or Mujiti), a small lake in Samnium 
near iEeulauum, from winch mephitic vapors 
arose. Near it was a chapel sacred to Mephi- 
tis, with a cavern from which mephitic vapors 
also came, and which was therefore regarded as 
an entrance to the lower world. (Virg., JEn.> 
vii., 563, seq.) 

Ampsivarii. Vid. Ansibarii. 
Ampycus ("AfiTrvnoc). 1. Son of Pelias, hus- 
band of Chloris, and father of the famous seer 
Mopsus, who is hence called Ampycides. Pau- 
sanias calls him Ampyx. — 2. Son of lapetus, a 
bard and priest of Ceres, killed by Pettalus at 
the marriage of Perseus. 

Ampyx. Vid. Ampycus. — [2. A friend of 
Phineus, changed to stone by Perseus by the 
head of Medusa. — 3. One of the Lapithae, who 
slew the Centaur G£clus at the nuptials of Pir- 
ithous.] 

Amulius. Vid. Romulus. 
Amyclae. 1. ('AfivKAat : 'Apvic/Mtevc, 'A.{iv~ 
k?mioc : now Sklavokhori or Aia Kyriaki ?\ an 
ancient town of Laconia on the Eurotas, in a 
beautiful country, twenty miles southeast of 
Sparta. It is mentioned in the Iliad (ii., 584), 
and is said to have been founded by the ancient 
Lacedaemonian King Amyclas, father of Hyacin- 
thus, and to have been the abode of Tyndarus, 
and of Castor and Pollux, who are hence called 
Amyclcei Fratrcs. After the conquest of Pelo- 
ponnesus by the Dorians, the Achaeans main- 
tained themselves in Amyclae for a long time ; 
and it was only shortly before the first Messe- 
nian war that the town was taken and destroy- 
ed by the Lacedaemonians under Teleclus. The 
tale ran that the inhabitants had been so often 
alarmed by false reports of the approach of the 
enemy, that they passed a law that no one 
should speak of the enemy ; and accordingly, 
when the Lacedaemonians at last came, and no 
one dared to announce their approach, " Amy- 
clae perished through silence :" hence arose the 
proverb Amyclis ipsis taciturnior. After its de- 
struction by the Lacedaemonians Amyclae be- 
came a village, and was only memorable by the 
festival of the Hyacinthia [vid. Diet, of Antiq^ 
s. v.) celebrated at the place annually, and by the 
temple and colossal statue of Apollo, who was 
hence called Amyclceus. — 2. (Amyclanus), an 
ancient town of Latium, east of Terracina, on 
| the Sinus Amyclanus, was, according to tradi- 
tion, an Achaean colony from Laconia. In the 
time of Augustus the town had disappeared ; 
the inhabitants were said to have deserted it 
on account of its being infested by serpents ; 
whence Virgil (JEn., x., 564) speaks of tacitcs 
Amyclce, though some commentators suppose 
that he transfers to this town the epithet be- 

55 



AMYCLAS. 



ANACREON. 



longing to the Amy else in Laeonia (No. 1). Near 
Amyclse was the Spelunca (Sperlonga), or nat- 
ural grotto, a favorite retreat of the Emperor 
Tiberius. 

Akvclas. Vid Amyclm. 

Amyclides, a name of Hyacinthus, as the son 
of Amyclas. 

Amicus ('A/ivkoc), son of Neptune (Poseidon) 
and Bithynis, king of the Bebryces, was cele- 
brated for his skill in boxing, and used to chal- 
lenge strangers to box with him. When the 
Argonauts came to his dominions, Pollux accepted 
the challenge and killed him. _ 

[Amydon ('Afivduv), an ancient city of Pseonia 
in Macedonia, on the Axius, spoken of by Homer 
(7?., n, 849).] 

Amymone ^Afivjxuvrj), one of the daughters of 
Danaus and Elephantis. When Danaus ar- 
rived in Argos, the country was suffering from 
a drought, and Danaus sent out Amymone to 
fetch water. She was attacked by a satyr, but 
was rescued from his violence by Neptune (Po- 
seidon), who appropriated her to himself, and 
then showed her the wells at Lerna. According 
to another account, he bade her draw his trident 
from the rock, from which a three-fold spring 
gushed forth, which was called after her the 
Well and River of Amymone. Her son by Nep- 
tune (Poseidon) was called Nauplius. 

Amynander ^A[xvvav6pog), king of the Atha- 
manes in Epirus. an ally of the Romans in their 
war with Philip of Macedonia, about B.C. 198, 
but an ally of Antiochus, B.C. 189. 

Amyntas ('Afivvrar). 1. I. King of Macedo- 
nia, reigned from about B.C. 540 to 500, and 
was succeeded by his son Alexander I. — 2. II. 
King of Macedonia, son of Philip, the brother 
of Perdiccas II, reigned B.C. 393-369, and ob- 
tained the crown by the murder of the usurper 
Pausanias. Soon after his accession he was 
driven from Macedonia by the Ulyrians, but was 
restored to his kingdom by the Thessalians. 
On his return he was engaged in war with the 
Olynthians, in which he was assisted by the 
Spartans, and by their aid Olynthus was reduced 
in 379. Amyntas united himself also with Ja- 
son of Pherse, and carefully cultivated the friend- 
ship of Athens. Amyntas left by his wife Eu- 
ridice three sons, Alexander, Perdiccas, and 
the famous Philip. — 3. Grandson of Amyntas 
II., was excluded by Philip from the succession 
on the death of his father, Perdiccas III, in B.C. 
360. He was put to death in the first year of 
the reign of Alexander the Great, 336, for a plot 
against the king's life. — 4. A Macedonian officer 
in Alexander's army, son of Andromenes. He 
and his brothers were accused of being privy to 
the conspiracy of Philotas in 330, but were ac- 
quitted. Some little time after he was killed 
at the siege of a village. — 5. A Macedonian 
traitor, son of Antiochus, took refuge at the 
court of Darius, and became one of the com- 
manders of the Greek mercenaries. He was 
present at the battle of Issus (B.C. 333), and 
afterward fled to Egypt, where he was put to 
death by Mazaces, the Persian governor. — 6. A 
king of Galatia, supported Antony, and fought 
on his side against Augustus at the battle of 
Actium (B.C. 31). He fell in an expedition 
against the town of Homonada or Homona. — 
*7. A Greek writer of a work entitled Stathmi 
56 



(Lrad/jioC) probably on account of the different 
halting-places of Alexander the Great in his 
Asiatic expedition. 

Amyntor ('A/uvvTiop), son of Ormenus of Ele- 
on in Thessaly, where Autolycus broke into his 
house, and father of Phoznix, whom he cursed on 
account of unlawful intercourse with his mis- 
tress. According to Apollodorus he was a king 
of Ormenium, and was slain by Hercules, to 
whom he refused a passage through his domin- 
ions, and the hand of his daughter Astydamia. 
According to Ovid (Met, xii., 364), he was king 
of the Dolopes. 

Amyrt^eus ('AfivpTalog), an Egyptian, as- 
sumed the title of king, and joined lnarus the 
Libyan in the revolt against the Persians in 
B.C. 460. They at first defeated the Persians 
(vid. Ach^emenes), but were subsequently totally 
defeated, 455. Amyrtaeus escaped, and main- 
tained himself as king in the marshy districts 
of Lower Egypt till about 414, when the Egyp- 
tians expelled the Persians, and Amyrtseus reign- 
ed six years. 

Amyrus ("Afivpoz), a river in Thessaly, with 
a town of the same name upon it, flowing into 
the Lake Bosbeis : the country around was called 
the 'Ajivpinbv rcedlov. 

Amythaon ('Afivdduv), son of Cretheus and 
Tyro, father of Bias and of the seer Melampus, 
who is hence called Amythaomus (Virg., Georg., 
iii., 550). He dwelt at Pylus in Messenia, and 
is mentioned among those to whom the restora- 
tion of the Olympian games was ascribed. 

Anabon ('Avddov), a district of the Persian 
province of Aria, south of Aria Proper, contain- 
ing four towns, which still exist, Phra (now 
Ferrah), Bis (now Beest or Bost), Gari (now 
Ghore), Nii (now Neh). 

[Anabura (ra 'Avu6ovpa), a city of Pisidia.] 

Anaces ("Avcikc?). Vid. Anax, No. 2. 

Anacharsis ('Avuxapotc), a Scythian of 
princely rank, left his native country to travel 
in pursuit of knowledge, and came to Athens 
about B.C. 594. He became acquainted with So- 
lon, and by his talents and acute observations, he 
excited general admiration. The fame of bis 
wisdom was such, that he was even reckoned 
by some among the seven sages. He was killed 
by his brother Saulius on his return to his native 
country. Cicero {Tasc. Disp., v., 32) quotes 
from one of his letters, of which several, but 
spurious, are still extant. 

Anacreon ('AvaKpeuv), a celebrated lyric 
poet, born at Teos, an Ionian city in Asia Mi- 
nor. He removed from his native city, with 
the great body of its inhabitants, to Abdera, in 
Thrace, when Teos was taken by the Persians 
(about B.C. 540), but lived chiefly at Samoe, 
under the patronage of Polycrates, in whose 
praise he wrote many songs. After the death 
of Polycrates (522), he went to Athens at the 
invitation of the tyrant Hipparchus, where he 
became acquainted with Simonides and other 
poets. He died at the age of eighty-five, proba- 
bly about 478, but the pla.ce of his death is un- 
! certain. The universal tradition of antiquity rep- 
resents Anacreon as a consummate voluptuary, 
and his poems prove the truth of the tradition. 
He sings of love and wine with hearty good will ; 
and we see in him the luxury of the Ionian in- 
flamed by the fervor of the poet. The tale that 



ANACTORIUM. 



ANAXAGORS. 



he loved Sappho is very improbable. Of his 
poems only a tew genuine fragments have come 
down to us : for the " Odes" attributed to him 
are now admitted to be spurious. — Editions : By 
Fischer, Lips., 1793; Bergk, Lips., 1834. 

Anactoricm ('AvatcTopiov : 'AvanTopioc), a 
town in Aearuauia, built by the Corinthians, 
upon a promontory of the same name (near La 
Madonna) at the entrance of the Ambracian 
Gulf. Its inhabitants were removed by Augus- 
tus after the battle of Actium (B.C. 31) to Ni- 
copolis. 

Anadtomene ('Avadvo/j,t-v7j), the goddess rising 
out of the sea, a surname given to Venus (Aph- 
rodite), in allusion to the story of her being 
born from the foam of the sea. This surname 
had not much celebrity before the time of Apel- 
les, but his famous painting of Aphrodite Ana- 
dyomene excited the emulation of other art- 
ists, painters as well as sculptors. Vid. Apel- 
les. 

[An.ea or AnnjEa ('Avata or 'Avvala), a Ca- 
rian city on the Ionian coast of Asia Minor, op- 
posite the Island <*f Samos, deriving its name 
from an Amazon, Anoea : it was the place of 
refuge in the Pelopounesian war for the Samian 
exiles.] 

Axagnia (Anagnlnus : now Anagni), an an- 
cient town of Latium, the chief town of the 
Hernici, and subsequently both a municipium 
and a Roman colony. It lay in a very beauti- 
ful and fertile country on a hill, at the foot of 
which the Via Lavicana and Via Pratnestina 
united (now (Jompitvm Anagninum). In the 
neighborhood Cicero had a beautiful estate, 
Anaigninum (sc. prcedium). 

Anagyrus ('Avayvpovc, -ovvtoc : 'Avayvpdoior, 
'AvayvpovvToBev : ruins near Van), a demus of 
Attica, belonging to the tribe Erechtheis, not, 
as some say, ^Eantis, south of Athens, near the 
Promontory Zoster. 

Anaitica ('AvaiTiKrj), a district of Armenia, in 
which the goddess Auaitis was worshipped ; 
also called Acilisene. 

Anaitis ('Avai~i£) an Asiatic divinity, whose 
name is also written Ancea, Aneitis, Tana'is, or 
Nancea. Her worship prevailed in Armenia, 
Cappadocia, Assyria, Persis, <fcc, and seems to 
have been a part of the worship so common 
among the Asiatics, of the creative powers of na- 
ture, both male and female. The Greek writers 
sometimes identify Ana"iti3 with Diana (Ar- 
temis), and sometimes with Venus (Aphro- 
dite). 

Anamari or -res, a Gallic people in the plain 
of the Po, in whose laud the Romans founded 
Placentia. 

Ananes, a Gallic people west of the Trebia, 
between the Po and the Apennines. 

Ananius ('kvuvtog\ a Greek iambic poet, 
contemporary with Hipponax, about B.C. 540. 
[His remains have been collected by Welcker, 
and published at the end of his edition of Hip- 
ponax, q. v.] 

Anaphe ('Avufri : 'Avaoaloc : now Anaphi, 
Nanfio), a small island in the south of the JSge- 
an Sea, east of Thera, with a temple of Apollo 
jEgletes, who was hence called Anapheus. ' 

Anaphlystus ( ' Avdylvcroe : 'AvacpXvcTioc : 
now A navyso), an Attic demus of the tribe An- 
tiochis on the southwest coast of Attica, oppo- 



site the Island Eleussa, called after Anaphlya- 
tus, sou of Neptune (Poseidon). 

Anapus ("Avairoc). 1. A river in Acarnania, 
flowing into the Achelous. — 2. (Now Anapo), a 
river in Sicily, flowing into the sea south of Syr- 
acuse through the marshes of Lysimelia. 

Anartes or -ti, a people of Dacia, north of the 
Theiss. 

Anas ('Avac : now Guadiana), one of the chief 
rivers of Spain, rising in Celtiberia in the mount- 
ains near Laminium, formed the boundary be- 
tween Lusitania and Baetica, and flowed into 
the ocean by two mouths (now only one). 

[Anassus (now Stella), a small river in the 
territory of the Veneti.] 

Anatolius. 1. Bishop of Laodieea, A.D. 270, 
an Alexandrean by birth, was the author of sev- 
eral mathematical and arithmetical works, of 
which some fragments have been preserved. — 
2. An eminent jurist, was a native of Bcrytus. 
and afterward P. P. (prccfectus prcetorio) of illyr- 
icum. He died in A.D. 361. A work on agri- 
culture, often cited in the Geoponica, and a 
treatise concerning Sympathies and Antipathies, 
are assigned by many to this Anatolius. The 
latter work, however, was probably written by 
Anatolius the philosopher, who was the master 
of Iamblichus, and to whom Porphyry addressed 
Homeric Questions. — 3. Professor of law at Be- 
rytus, is mentioned by Justinian among those 
who were employed in compiling the Digest. 
He wrote notes on the Digest, and a very concise 
commentary on Justinian's Code. Both of 
these works are cited in the Basilica. He per- 
ished A.D. 557, in an earthquake at Byzantium, 
whither he had removed from Berytus. 

Anaurus ('Avavpoc), a river of Thessaly flow- 
ing into the Pagasaaan Gulf. [It was in this 
stream that Jason lost his sandal, and thus ful- 
filled the words of the oracle. Vid. Jason.] 

Anava ("Avava), an ancient, but early decayed 
city of Great Phrygia, on the salt lake of the 
same name, between Celeenaa and Colossa? (now 
Hagec Ghioul). 

Anax ("Aval;). 1. A giant, son of Uranus and 
Gsea, and father of Asterius. — 2. An epithet of 
the gods in general, characterizing them as the 
rulers of the world; but the plural forms, 
"Avanec, or "AvaK-ee, or "Avatcec natdec, were 
used to designate the Dioscuri. 

Axaxagoras ( 'Ava^ayopag ), a celebrated 
Greek philosopher of the Ionian school, was 
born at Clazomenaa in Ionia, B.C. 500. He gave 
up his property to his relations, as he in- 
tended to devote his life to higher ends, and 
went to Athens at the age of twenty ; here he 
remained thirty years, and became the intimate 
friend and teacher of the most eminent men of 
the time, such as Euripides and Pericles. His 
doctrines gave offence to the religious feelings 
of the Athenians ; and the enemies of Pericles 
availed themselves of this circumstance to ac- 
cuse him of impiety, B.C. 450. It was only 
through the eloquence of Pericles that he was 
not put to death ; but he was sentenced to pay 
a fine of five talents, and to quit Athens. He 
retired to Lampsacus, where he died in 428, at 
the age of seventy-two. Anaxagoras was dis- 
satisfied with the systems of his predecessors, 
the Ionic philosophers, and struck into a new 
path. The Ionic philosophers had endeavored 

57 



ANAXAXDER 



ANOcEUS. 



i» explain nature and its various phenomena 
by regarding matter in its different forms and 
modifications as the cause of all things, Anax- 
agoras. on the other hand, conceived the neces- 
sity of seeking a higher cause, independent of 
matter, and this cause he considered to be nous 
(voic), that is, mind, thought, or intelligence. 
[Editions of the fragments by Schaubach, Lips., 
1827. and by Sekom, Bonn, 1829. — 2. Son of 
Argeus, grandson of Megapenthes, monarch of 
Argos. He shared the sovereign power with 
Bias and Alelampus. who had cured the Argive 
women of madness. — 3. An Athenian orator, 
pupil of Isocrates.] 

Axaxaxdee, ( ■A.vd;ardpoc), king of Sparta, son 
of Euryerates, fought in the second Messenian 
war. about B.C. 668. 

.Av AVAv nBfnKs ( 'Ava^avdptdrjc). L Son of 
Theopompus. king of Sparta. — 2. King of Spar- 
ta, son of Leon, reigned from about B.C. 560 to 
520. Having a barren wife whom he would not 
divorce, the ephors made him take with her a 
second. By her he had Cleomenes ; and after 
this by his first wife, Dorieus, Leonidas, and 
Cleornbrotus. — 3. An Athenian comic poet of 
the middle comedy, a native of Camirus in 
Bhodes. began to exhibit comedies in B.C. 376. 
Aristotle held him in high esteem. [The frag- 
ments of his plays are collected in Meineke*s 
Fragrnenta Comiconim Gtcec, voL i, p. 574-594, 
edit, minor.] 

Axaxakcrts ('Avd^apxoc). a philosopher of 
Abdera, of the school of Democritus, accom- 
panied Alexander into Asia (B.C. 384), and 
gained his favor by flattery and wit. After the 
death of Alexander (32*3), Anaxarchus was 
thrown by shipwreck into the power of Xieo- 
•creon, king of Cyprus, to whom he had given 
mortal offence, and who had him pounded to 
death in a stone mortar. 

An ax arete {'Ara;apeT7]). a maiden of Cyprus, 
remained unmoved by the love of Iphis. wh<:> 
at last in despair, hung himself at her door. She 
looked with indifference at the funeral of the 
youth, but Venus changed her into a stone 
statue. 

Axaxibia (;Ava;tCia). daughter of Plisthenes. 
sister of Agamemnon, wife of Strophius, and 
mother of Py lades. — [2. Daughter of Bias, wife 
-of Pelias of Ioleos, and mother of Aeastus. Pi- 
sidiee. Hippothoe, and Aleestis.] 

A>AXTBirs ('Avaztbtoc). the Spaitan admiral 
stationed at Byzantium on the return of the 
Cyrean Greeks from Asia, B.C. 400. In 389 he 
succeeded Dereyllidas in the command in the 
iEgean. but fell in battle against Iphicrates, 
near Aiitandrus, in 388. 

AxaxedImts i'Availdauoc). king of Sparta, 
son of Zeusidamus, lived to the conclusion of the 
second Messenian war, B.C 668. 

Axaxilaus {'Avazu.aoc), or An a xti.as ('A.vau- 
xaf. 1. Tyrant of Rhegiurn, of Messenian ori- 
gin, took possession of Zanele in Sicily about 
B.C. 494, peopled it with fresh inhabitants, and 
changed its name into Messene. He died in 
476.-2. Of Byzantium, surrendered Bvzantiuin 
to the Athenians in B.C. 40S.— 3. An Athenian 
-comic poet of the middle comedy, contemporary 
with Plato and Demosthenes, '^Ve have a few 
fragments, and the titles of nineteen of his com- 
edies. [His fragments are collected bv Meineke 
58 



in his Fragrnenta Comicorum Grcec, voL ii, p. 
667-675, edit, minor.] — i. A physician and 
Pythagorean philosopher, born at Larissa, was 
banished by Augustus from Italy, B.C. 28, on the 
charge of magic. 

A>~ a xtm axder ('Ava^ijuavSpoc), of Miletus, wa3 
born B.C. 610 and died 547, in his sixty-fourth 
I year. He was one of the earliest philosophers 
I of the Ionian school, and the immediate success- 
or of Thales, its first founder. He first used the 
! word apxn to denote the origin of things, or 
! rather the material out of which they were 
< formed : he held that this apxrj was the infinite 
J (rd a^etpov), everlasting, and divine, though not 
attributing to it a spiritual or intelligent na- 
ture ; and that it was the substance into which 
all things were resolved on their dissolution. 
He was a careful observer of nature, and was 
distinguished by his astronomical, mathemat- 
ical, and geographical knowledge: he is said 
to have introduced the use of the gnomon into 
Greece, 

ANAxr>rt:xEs ( 'Ava^ifuvr/e ). 1. Of Miletus, 
the third in the series ofc Ionian philosophers, 
flourished about B.C. 544; but as he was the 
teacher of Anaxagoras B.C. 480, he must have 
lived to a great age. He considered air to be 
the first cause of all things, the primary form, 
as it were, of matter, into which the other ele- 
ments of the universe were resolvable. — 2. Of 
Lampsacus. accompanied Alexander the Great 
to Asia (B.C. 334). and wrote a history of Philip 
of Macedonia ; a history of Alexander the 
Great ; and a history of Greece, in twelve books, 
from the earliest mythical age down to the 
death of Epaminondas. He also enjoyed great 
reputation as a rhetorician, and is the author of a 
scientific treatise on rhetoric, the 'PrjropiK^ -pdr 
'Ategavdpov, usually printed among the works of 
Aristotle. He was an enemy of Theophrastus, 
and published under the name of the latter a 
work calumniating Sparta, Athens, and Thebes, 
which produced great exasperation against 
Theophrastus. [The Ars Rhctorica, edited by 
L Spengel, Turiei, 1844 ; the fragments of 
the history of Alexander, by Geier, in his " Scrip- 
tons Hisioriarum Ahxoadri M. (.date suppares? 
Lips., 1844.] 

[Anaxxppus ( Avd^iTr-Of). L A general of 
Alexander the Great — 2. A comic poet of the 
new comedy, who flourished about B.C. 303. The 
titles of four of his plays have come down to 
us : his fragments are collected by Meineke, 
Fragm. Comic G-rac^ voL iL, p. 1112-1116, edit 
minor., who adds a fragment from Athenaeus, 
attributed to Anthippus in the ordinary text, 
but supposed to be an error for Anaxippus.] 

Axazaebus or -a ('Ava£ap66g or -a : 'Ava^ap- 
6eve, Anazarbenus : ruins at Anasarba or Aa- 
versa), a considerable city of Cilicia Campestris, 
on the left bank of the River Pyramus, at the 
foot of a mountain of the same name. Augus- 
tus conferred upon it the name of Caesarea (ad 
Anazarbum) ; and. on the division of Cilicia 
into the two provinces of Prima and Secunda, it 
was made the capital of the latter. It was al- 
most destroyed by earthquakes in the reigns of 
Justinian and Justin. [It was the birth-place of 
Dioscorides and Oppian.] 

Axc^eus ('AynaZoc). 1. Son of the Arcadian 
Lycurgus and Cleophile or Eurynome, and fa- 



ANCALITES. 



ANCYRA. 



iher of Agapenor. He was one of ihe Argo- 
nauts, and took part in the Calydoniau hunt, in 
which he was killed by the boar.— 2. Son of 
Neptune (Poseidon) and "Astypakea or Alta, king 
of the Lcleges in Samos, husband of Samia, 
and father of Porilaus, Enodos, Samos, Alither- 
ses, and Parthenope. He seems to have been 
confounded by some mythographers with An- 
C£eus, the sou of Lycurgus. The son of Nep- 
tune (Poseidon) is also represented as one of the 
Argonauts, and is said to have become the 
helmsman of the ship Argo after the death of 
Tiphys. A well-known proverb is said to have 
originated with this Ancajus. He had been told 
by a seer that he would not live to taste the wine 
of his vineyard ; and when he was afterward on 
the point of drinking a cup of wine, the growth 
of his own vineyard, he laughed at the seer, 
who, however, answered, TroAAa fiera^v neXei 
kvTukoq Kal x e ^ £0 S uKpov, "There is many a 
slip between the cup and the lip." At the same 
instant Ancaeus was informed that a wild boar 
was near. He put down his cup, went out 
against the animal, and was killed by it. 

Ancalites, a people of Britain, probably a 
part of the Atrebates. 

Ancharius, Q., tribune of the plebs, B.C. 59, 
took an active part in opposing the agrarian law 
of Caesar. He was praetor in 56, and succeeded 
L. Piso in the province of Macedonia. 

[Anchemalus, son of Rhcetus, king of the 
Marrubii in Italy, was expelled by his father for 
criminal conduct toward his step-mother, fled 
to Turnus, and was slain by Pallas, son of 
Evander, in the war with iEneas.] 

Anchesmus ('Ayxec/Lioc), a hill not far from 
Athens, with a temple of Jupiter (Zeus), who was 
hence called Anchesmivs. 

Anchiale and -lcs i^Ayxid'Ai]). 1. (Now 
AJciali), a town in Thrace on the Black Sea, on 
the borders of Moesia. — 2. Also Anchialos, an 
ancient city of Cilicia, west of the Cydnus near 
the coast, said to have been built by Sardana- 
palus. 

[Anchialus {' kyx'ialoc). 1. King of the Taphi- 
ans, father of Mentes, united in guest-friendship 
with Ulysses. — 2. A Greek, slain by Hector be- 
fore Troy. — 3. A Pheeaeian. All these are men- 
tioned in Homer.] 

Anchises (' Ayx'tonc), sou of Capys and The- 
mis, the daughter of Ilus, king of Dardanus on 
Mount Ida. In beauty he equalled the immor- 
tal gods, and was beloved by Venus (Aphrodite), 
by whom he became the father of iEneas, who 
is hence called Anchisiades. The goddess warn- 
ed him never to betray the real mother of the 
child ; but as on one occasion he boasted of his 
intercourse with the goddess, he was struck by 
a flash of lightning, which, according to some 
traditions, killed, but according to others, only 
blinded or lamed him. Virgil, in his ^Eneid, 
makes Anchises survive the capture of Troy, 
and ^Eneas carries his father on his shoulders 
from the burning city. He further relates that 
Anchises died soon after the first arrival of 
^Eueas in Sicily, and was buried on Mount Eryx. 
This tradition seems to have been believed in 
Sicily, for Auchises had a sanctuary at Egesta, 
and the funeral games celebrated in Sicily in his 
honor continued down to a late period. 

Anchisia ('Ayxtaia), a mountain in Arcadia, 



northwest of Mantinca, where Anchises is said to 
have been buried, according to one tradition. 

[AnchCuus ("Ayxovpoc), son of Midas, king of 
Phrygia. A large chasm having opened near 
Celajnae, Anchurus threw himself into it, as 
an oracle had said that it would not close un- 
til he had thrown what he regarded as most 
precious into it. On this the chasm closed im- 
mediately.] 

Ancon (AevKoavpuv 'Ayicuv), a harbor and 
town at the mouth of the River Iris (now Yeshil- 
ennak) in Pontus. 

Ancona or Ancon ('Ayicuv : Anconitanus : 
now Ancona), a town iu Picenmn on the Adri- 
atic Sea, lying in a bend of the coast between 
two promontories, and hence called Ancon or an 
" elbow." It Avas built by the Syracusans, who 
settled there about B.C. 392, discontented with 
the rule of the elder Dionyeius ; and under the 
Romans, who made it a colony, it became one 
of the most important sea-ports of the Adri- 
atic. It possessed an excellent harbor, com- 
pleted by Trajan, and it carried on an active 
trade with the opposite coast of Illyricum. The 
town was celebrated for its temple of Venus and 
its purple dye : the surrounding country pro- 
duced good wine and wheat. 

Ancorarius Mons, a mountain in Mauretania 
Csesariensis, south of Ceesarea, abounding in cit- 
ron trees, the wood of which w r as used by the 
Romans for furniture. 
Ancore. Vid. Nklea. 

Ancus Marcius, fourth king of Rome, reign- 
ed twenty-four years, B.C. 640-616, and is said 
to have been the son of Nunia's daughter. He 
conquered the Latins, took many Latin towns, 
transported the inhabitants to Rome, and gave 
them the Aventine to dwell on : these conquer- 
ed Latins formed the original Plebs. He also 
founded a colony at Ostia, at the mouth of the 
Tiber ; built a fortress on the Janiculum as a 
protection against Etruria, and united it with 
the city by a bridge across the Tiber ; dug the 
ditch of the Quirites, which was a defence for 
the open ground between the Ca?lian and the 
Palatine ; and built a prison. He was succeeded 
by Tarquinius Priscus. 

Ancyra ('AyKvpa : 'Aynvpavoc, Ancyranus). 
1. (Now Angora), a city of Galatia in Asia Minor, 
in 39° 56' north latitude. In the time of Au- 
gustus, when Galatia became a Roman province, 
Ancyra was the capital : it was originally the 
chief city of a Gallic tribe named the Tectosa- 
ges, who came from the south of France. Un- 
der the Roman empire it had the name of Se- 
baste, which in Greek is equivalent to Augusta 
in Latin. When Augustus recorded the chief 
events of his life on bronze tablets at Rome, 
the citizens of Ancyra had a copy made, which 
was cut on marble blocks and placed at Ancyra 
in a temple dedicated to Augustus and Rome. 
This inscription is called the Monumenhim An- 
cyranum, The Latin inscription was first copied 
by Tournefort in 1701, and it has been copied 
several times since. One of the latest copies 
has been made by Mr. Hamilton, who also copied 
as much of the Greek inscription as is legible. 
[Near this place Bajazet was defeated and made 
prisoner by Timur, or, as he is commonly called, 
Tamerlane.] — 2. A town in Phrygia Epictetus. 
i on the borders of Mysia. 

59 



ANDANIA 



ANDROGEOS. 



Andania ('Avdavia: 'Avdavievc, 'AvSavLOf. 
[now Andorossa, and the ruins near Crano]), a 
town in Messenia, between Megalopolis and 
Messene, the capital of the kings of the race of 
the Leleges, abandoned by its inhabitants in the 
second Messenian war, and from that time only a 
village. 

Andecavi, Andegavi. or Andes, a Gallic peo- 
ple north of the Loire, with a town of the same 
name, also called Juliomagus, now Angers. 

Andematunnum. Vid. Lingones. 

Andera (ra "Avdeipa : ' Avdeipnvog), a city of 
Mysia, celebrated for its temple of Cybele, sur- 
named 'Avdeiprivq. 

Anderitum (now Anterieux), a town of the 
Gabali in Aquitania. 

Andes. 1. Vid, Andecavi. — 2. Now Pie- 
tola), a village near Mantua, the birth-place of 
Virgil. 

Andocides ^AvdoKidrjc), one of the ten Attic 
orators, son of Leogoras, was born at Athens 
in B.C. 467. He belonged to a noble family, 
and was a supporter of the oligarchical party at 
Athens. In 436 he was one of the commanders 
of the fleet sent by the Athenians to the assist- 
ance of the Corcyreans against the Corinthians. 
In 415 he became involved in the charge brought 
against Alcibiades for having profaned the mys- 
teries and mutilated the Hernia?, and was thrown 
into prison; but he recovered his liberty by 
promising to reveal the names of the real per- 
petrators of the crime. He is said to have de- 
nounced his own father among others, but to 
have rescued him again in the hour of danger. 
But as Andocides was unable to clear himself 
entirely, he was deprived of his rights as a citi- 
zen, and left Athens. He returned to Athens 
on the establishment of the government of the 
Four Hundred in 411, but was soon obliged to 
fly again. In the following year he ventured 
once more to return to xlthens, and it was at 
this time that he delivered the speech, still ex- 
tant, On his Return, in which he petitioned for 
permission to reside at Athens, but in vain. He 
was thus driven into exile a third time, and 
went to reside at Elis. In 403 he again return- 
ed to Athens upon the overthrow of the tyran- 
ny of the Thirty by Thrasybulus, and the proc- 
lamation of the general amnesty. He was now 
allowed to remain quietly at Athens for the 
next three years, but in 400 his enemies ac- 
cused him of having profaned the mysteries : 
he defended himself in the oration still extant, 
On the Mysteries, and was acquitted. In 394 
he was sent as ambassador to Sparta to con- 
clude a peace, and on his return in 393 he was 
accused of illegal conduct during his embassy 
(Trapa-pec^ELag) ; he defended himself in the ex- 
tant speech On the Peace with Lacedcemon, but 
was found guilty, and sent into exile for the 
fourth time. He seems to have died soon aft- 
erward in exile. Besides the three orations al- 
ready mentioned, there is a fourth against Alci- 
biades, said to have been delivered in 415, but 
which is in all probability spurious— Editions : 
In the collections of the Greek orators; also, 
separately by Baiter and Sauppe, Zurich, 1838. 

Andr^emon ('Avdpaifiuv). l. Husband of 
Gorge, daughter of CEneus, king of Calydon, in 
><Etolia, whom he succeeded, and father of Thoas, 
who is hence called Andrcernonides. — 2. Son of 
60 



Oxylus, and husband of Dryope, who was moth- 
er of Amphissus by Apollo. 

[Andriaca ('AvSpianrj : now Andraki), port of 
Myra in Lycia.] 

Andriscus ('AvSpioKoc), a man of low origin, 
who pretended to be a natural son of Perseus, 
king of Macedonia, was seized by Demetrius, 
king of Syria, and sent to Rome. He escaped 
from Rome, assumed the name of Philip, and 
obtained possession of Macedonia, B.C. 149. He 
defeated the praetor Juventius, but was conquer- 
ed by Caecilius Metellus, and taken to Rome to 
adorn the triumph of the latter, 148. 

Androcles ('Av6poK?.rjg), an Athenian dema- 
gogue and orator. He was an enemy of Alci- 
biades ; and it was chiefly owing to his exertions 
that Alcibiades was banished. After this event, 
Androcles was for a time at the head of the 
democratical party ; but in B.C. 411 he was put 
to death by the oligarchical government of the 
Four Hundred. 

[Androclides ('Avdponleidrjc), a Theban offi- 
cer, one of those who received money from the 
Persians to induce the Thebans to make war on 
Sparta, so as to bring about the recall of Agesi- 
laus from Asia.] 

Androclus l( y AvdpotcAoc). 1. Son of Codrus, 
leader of a colony of Ionians to Asia Minor, and 
founder of Ephesus.] — 2. The slave of a Roman 
consular, was sentenced to be exposed to the 
wild beasts in the circus ; but a lion which was 
let loose upon him, instead of springing upon 
his victim, exhibited signs of recognition, and 
began licking him. Upon inquiry, it appeared 
that Androclus had been compelled by the se- 
verity of his master, while in Africa, to run 
away from him. Having one day taken refuge 
in a cave from the heat of the sun, a lion enter- 
ed, apparently in great pain, and, seeing him, 
went up to him and held out his paw. Andro- 
clus found that a large thorn had pierced it, 
which he drew out, and the lion was soon able 
to use his paw again. They lived together for 
some time in the cave, the lion catering for his 
benefactor. But at last, tired of this savage 
life, Androclus left the cave, was apprehended 
by some soldiers, brought to Rome, and con- 
demned to the wild beasts. He was pardoned, 
and presented with the lion, which he used to 
lead about the city. 

[Androcrates ('AvdpoK.pu.T7je), an ancient hero 
of the Platseans, who had a temple consecrated 
to him at Platsese.] 

Androgeos ('Avdpoyeuc), son of Minos and 
Pasiphae, or Crete, conquered all his opponent;? 
in the games of the Panathenaga at Athens. 
This extraordinary good luck, however, became 
the cause of his destruction, though the mode 
of his death is related differently. According 
to some accounts, vEgeus sent the man he dread- 
ed to fight against the Marathonian bull, who 
killed him ; according to others, he was assas- 
sinated by his defeated rivals on his road to 
Thebes, whither he was going to take part in a 
solemn contest. A third account related that 
he was assassinated by JSgeus himself. Minos 
made war on the Athenians in consequence of 
the death of his son, and imposed upon them 
the shameful tribute, from which they were de- 
livered by Theseus. He was worshipped in 
Attica as a hero, and games were celebrated in 



ANDROMACHE. 



ANDROSTHENES. 



his honor every year in the Ceramicus. Vid, 
Diet, of Ant, art. Androgeonia. 

Andromache (' Avdpofidxv), daughter of Eetiou, 
king of the Cilician Thebe, and one of the no- 
blest aud most amiable female characters in the 
Iliad. Her father and her seven brothers were 
slain by Achilles at the taking of Thebe, and 
her mother, who had purchased her freedom by 
a large ransom, was killed by Diana (Artemis). 
She was married to Hector, by whom she had 
a son, Scamandrius (Astyanax), and for whom 
she entertained the most tender love. On the 
taking of Troy her son was hurled from the 
wall of the city, and she herself fell to the share 
of Neoptolemus (Pyrrhus), the son of Achilles, 
who took her to Epirus, and to whom she bore 
three sons, Molossus, Pielus, and Pergamus. 
She afterward married Helenus, a brother of 
Hector, who ruled over Chaonia, a part of Epi- 
rus, and to whom she bore Cestrinus. After the 
leath of Helenus, she followed her son Perga- 
mus to Asia, where a heroum was erected to her. 

Andromachus ('Avdpo/naxoc). 1. Ruler of 
Tauromenium in Sicily about B.C. 344, and fa- 
ther of the historian Timseus. — 2. Of Crete, 
physician to the Emperor Nero, A.D. 54-68 ; 
was the first person on whom the title of Archi- 
ater was conferred, and was celebrated as the 
inventor of a famous compound medicine and 
antidote called Theriaca Andromachi, which re- 
tains its place in some foreign Pharmacopoeias 
to the present day. Andromachus has left the 
directions for making this mixture in a Greek 
elegiac poem, consisting of one hundred and 
seveuty-lour lines, edited by Tidicaeus, Tiguri, 
1607, and Leinker, Norimb., 1*754.— [3. Son of 
the former, commouly called the Younger, held 
the same office, that of physician to Nero, after 
his father's death. He is generally supposed to 
have been the author of a work on pharmacy in 
three books, of which only a few fragments re- 
main.] 

Andromeda {' Avdpofitdrj), daughter of the 
^Ethiopian king Cepheus and Cassiopea. Her 
mother boasted that the beauty of her daughter 
surpassed that of the Nereids, who prevailed 
on Neptune (Poseidon) to visit the country by 
an inundation and a sea-monster. The oracle 
of Amnion promised deliverance if Andromeda 
was giveu up to the monster; and Cepheus, 
obliged to yield to the wishes of his people, 
■chained Andromeda to a rock. Here she was 
found and saved by Perseus, who slew the mon- 
ster and obtained her as his wife. Andromeda 
had previously been promised to Phineus, and 
this gave rise to the famous fight of Phineus 
and Perseus at the wedding, in "which the for- 
mer and all his associates were slain. (Ov., 
Met, v., 1, seq.) After her death, she was 
placed' amoug the stars. 

( [Andron ('Avdpuv), of Halicarnassus, a Greek 
.historian, avuo wrote a work entitled I,vyyevaiai, 
of which he himself made an epitome. Miiller 
assigns to this Andron a work, Trspl -frvaitiv, 
which some ascribe to the following. His frag- 
ments are collected by Miiller, Fragm. Hist. 
Grozc, vol ii., p. 349-352.-2. Of Teos, author 
of a Periplus, perhaps the same with the Teian 
Andron, son of Cebaleus, whom Arrian men- 
tions as a companion of Alexander the Great, 
and one of the leaders of the Indian exploratioa 



His fragments are given by Miiller, 1. a, p. 
348-9. — Two other historians of this name are 
mentioned, one of Alexandrea, author of a 
Chronica, a fragment of which is given by 
Miiller, p. 352; the other of Ephesus, author 
of a work entitled IVipus : fragments of it are 
given in Miiller, p. 347-8.-3. An Athenian, son 
of Androtion, and father of the orator Androtion.] 

Andronicus ('AvdpoviKog). 1. Cyrrhestes, 
so called from his native place, Cyrrha, proba- 
bly lived about B.C. 100, and built the octagonal 
tower at Athens, vulgarly called "the Tower 
of the Winds." Vid, Diet, of Ant, p. 616, 2d 
ed., where a drawing of the building is given. 
— 2. Livius Andronicus, the earliest Roman 
poet, was a Greek, probably a native of Taren- 
tum, and the slave of M. Livius Salinator, by 
whom he was manumitted, and from whom he 
received the Roman name Livius. He obtain- 
ed at Rome a perfect knowledge of the Latin 
language. He wrote both tragedies and come- 
dies in Latin, and we still possess the titles and 
fragments of at least fourteen of his dramas, all 
of which were borrowed from the Greek : his 
first drama was acted in B.C. 240. He also 
wrote an Odyssey in the Saturnian verse and 
Hymns. ( Vid. Diintzer, Livii Andronici Frag- 
mented Collecta, &c, Berl, 1835). — 3. Of Rhodes, 
a Peripatetic philosopher at Rome, about B.C. 
58. He published a new edition of the works 
of Aristotle and Theophrastus, which formerly 
belonged to the library of Apellicon, and which 
were brought to Rome by Sulla with the rest 
of Apellicon's library in B.C. 84. Tyrannio 
commenced this task, but apparently did not do 
much toward it. The arrangement which An- 
dronicus made of Aristotle's writings seems to 
be the one which forms the basis of our present 
editions. He wrote many commentaries upon 
the works of Aristotle ; but none of these is ex- 
tant, for the paraphrase of the Nicomachean 
Ethics, which is ascribed to Andronicus of 
Rhodes, was written by some one else, and 
may have been the work of Andronicus Callistus 
of Thessalonica, who was professor in Italy in 
the latter half of the fifteenth century. 

Andropolis ('Avdptiv Kokie.'. now Chabur), a 
city of Lower Egypt, on the western bank of 
the Canopic branch of the Nile, was the capital 
of the Nomos Andropolites, and, under the Ro- 
mans, the station of a legion. 

Andros ("Avdpoc. : "AvtipLoc : now Andro), the 
most northerly and one of the largest islands of 
the Cyclades, southeast of Eubcea, twenty-one 
miles long and eight broad, early attained import- 
ance, and colonized Acauthus and Stagira about 
B.C. 654. It was taken by the Persians in their 
invasion of Greece, was afterward subject to the 
Athenians, at a later time to the Macedonians, 
and at length to Attalus III., king of Pergamus, 
on whose death (B.C. 133) it passed, with the 
rest of his dominions, to the Romans. It was 
celebrated for its wine, whence the whole isl- 
and was regarded as sacred to Bacchus (Diony- 
sus). Its chief town, also called Andros, con- 
tained a celebrated temple of Bacchus (Diony- 
sus), and a harbor of the name of Gaureleon, 
and a Fort Gaurion. 

[Androsthenes ('Avdpoa6ev7]g). of Thasus, 
one of Alexander's admirals, sailed with Near- 
chus, and was also sent by Alexander to ex- 

61 



ANDROTION. 



ANNALI& 



plore the coast of the Persian Gulf He wrote 
an account of his voyage, and also a Tyc 'Ivdi- 
ktjc Uapci77?.ovg.] 

Axdrotiox {'kvdpoTiui'). 1. An Athenian 
orator, and a contemporary of Demosthenes, 
against whom the latter delivered an oration, 
which is still extant— 2. The author of an At- 
this. or a work on the history of Attica. [Frag- 
ments published by Siebelis with Philochorus, 
Lips.. 1811. and by Muller in his Fragm. Hist. 
Qra-c^ voL L p. 371-377.] 

Axemorea, afterward Axemolea ('AvEp-upeta, 
'Avefiu/.eia ; ' Ave fiopiEvc), a town on a hill on 
the borders of Phocis and Delphi 

Akemi'rium ('Avetiovpiov : now Anamur, with 
ruins), a town and promontory at the southern 
point of Cilicia, opposite to Cyprus. 

[Axgeliox ('Ayye/.tuv). an artist always men- 
tioned in connection with Tecta?us : they were 
Dupils of Dipeenus and Scvllis, and flourished 
about 548 B.C.] 

Axgeroxa or Axgeroxia. a Roman goddess, 
respecting whom we have different statements, 
some representing her as the goddess of silence, 
others as the goddess of anguish and fear ; that 
is, the goddess who not only produces this state 
of mind, but also relieves men from it. Her 
statue stood in the temple of Yolupia, with her 
mouth bound and sealed up. Her festival, An- 
geronalia, was celebrated yearly on the twelfth 
of December. 

Axgites ('Ayym;f : now Ay\ghista), a river 
in Macedonia, fiowiug into the Strymon. 

Axgitia or Axguitia, a goddess worshipped 
by the Marsians and Marrubians, who lived 
about the shores of the Lake Fueinus. 

Axgli or Axglii. a German people of the 
race of the Suevi, on the left bank of the Elbe, 
afterward passed over with the Saxons into 
Britain, which was called after them England. 
Vid, Saxoxes. A portion of them appear* to 
have settled in Angeln in Schleswig. 

AxGRrvARii, a German people dwelling on 
both sides of the Visurgis (now Weser), separa- 
ted from the Cherusei by an agger or mound of 
earth. The name is usually derived from An- 
gern, that is, meadows. They were generaDy 
on friendly terms with the Romans, but rebelled 
in A.D. 16, and were subdued. Toward the end 
of the first century they extended their terri- 
tories southward, and, in conjunction with the 
Chamavi, took possession of part of the terri- 
tory of the Bructeri, south and east of the Lippe, 
the Angaria or Engern of the Middle Ages. 

Axicetts [('Av'iktjtoc). 1. Son of Hercules, 
by Hebe, after his admission to the abode of the 
gods.] — 2. A freedman of Nero, and formerly 
his tutor, was employed by the emperor in the 
execution of many of his crimes : he was after- 
ward banished to'Sardinia. where he died, 

Axicius Gallus. Vid. Gallus. 

[Axicics, 0, a senator and friend of Cicero, 
whose villa was near the latter's ; mentioned 
in the letters of Cicero.] 

Axigrus ('Avr/poc : now Ifavro-Potamo), a 
small river in the Triphylian EEs, the Minveius 
(Utvv^loc) of Homer (77., xL 721), rises in Mount 
Lapithas, and flows into the Ionian Sea near 
Samicum : its waters have a disagreeable smell, 
and its fish are not eatable. Near Samicum 
was a cave sacred to the Nymphs Anigrides 
62 



('Avtyptdec or 'AvLypiddec), where persons with- 
cutaneous diseases were cured by the waters 
of the river. 

Axio, anciently Axiex (hence, gen., Anienis : 
now Teverone or ISAnietie), a river, the most 
celebrated of the tributaries of the Tiber, rises 
in the mountains of the Hernici, near Treba 
(now Trevi), flows first northwest and then 
southwest through narrow mountain-valleys, re- 
ceives the brook Digentia (now Licenza), above 
Tibur, forms at Tibur beautiful waterfalls (hence 
pr&ceps Anio, Hor., Carm, i, 7, 13), and flows, 
forming the boundary between Latium and the 
land of the Sabines, Into the Tiber, three miles 
above Rome, where the town of Antemnse stood. 
The water of the Anio was conveyed to Rome 
by two aqueducts, the Anio veins and Anio no- 
wis. Vid. Diet, of Ant, p. 110, 111, 2d ed. 

[Axitorgis or Axistorgis, a city of Hispania 
Ba?tica, near which a battle was fought between 
Hasdrubal and the Scipios.] 

Axius ("Avtoc), son of Apollo by Creiisa, or 
Rhceo, and priest of Apollo at Delos. By Do- 
rippe he had three daughters, CEno, Spermo, 
and Elais, to whom Bacchus (Dionysus) gave 
the power of producing at will any quantity of 
wine, corn, and oil, whence they were called 
(Enotropce. When the Greeks, on their expedi- 
tion to Troy, landed in Delos, Anius endeavored 
to persuade them to stay with him for nine 
years, as it was decreed by fate that they should 
not take Troy until the tenth year; and he 
promised, with the help of his three daughters, 
to supply them with all they wanted during that 
period. After the fall of Troy, JSneas was 
kindly received by Anius. 

Axxa, daugter of Belus and sister of Dido. 
After the death of the latter, she fled from 
Carthage to Italy, where she was kindly re- 
ceived by ^Eneas. Here she excited the jeal- 
ousy of Lavinia, and being warned in a dream 
by Dido, she fled and threw herself into the 
River Xumieius. Henceforth she was wor- 
shipped as the nymph of that river, under the 
name of Axxa Perexxa. There are various 
other stories respecting the origin of her wor- 
ship. Ovid relates that she was considered by 
some as Luna, by others as Themis, by others 
as Io, daughter of Inachus, by others as the 
j Anna of Bovillfe, who supplied the plebs with 
j food, when they seceded to the Mons Sacer. 
! (Ov., Fast, hi, 523.) Her festival was cele- 
j brated on the 15th of March. She was, in reali- 
j ty, an old Itahan divinity, who was regarded as 
I the giver of life, health, and plenty, as the god- 
dess whose powers were most manifest at the 
I return of spring, when her festival was cele- 
| brated. The identification of this goddess witib 
j Anna, the sister of Dido, is undoubtedly of late 
j origin. 

1 Axxa C^mxexa, daughter of Alexis L Com- 
| nenus (reigned A.D. 1081-1118), wrote the life 
j of her father Alexis in fifteen books, which is? 
I one of the most interesting and valuable his- 
' tories of the Byzantine literature. Editions : 
\ By Possinus, Paris, 1651 ; by Schopen, Bonn, 
j 1839, Svo. 

| Axxalis, a cognomen of the Yillia Gens, first. 
j acquired by L Villius, tribune of the plebs, in 
j B.C. 179, because he introduced a law fixing 
i the year (annus) at wluch it was lawful for o. 



ANNE1US. 



ANTEVORTA. 



person to be a candidate for each of the public 
offices. 

Anneius, M., legate of M. Cicero during his 
government of Cilicia, B.C. 51. 

[Annia, wife of L. Cinna, and, after his 
death, of M. Piso Calpurnianus.] 

Anniants. T., a Roman poet, lived in the time 
of Trajan and Hadrian, and wrote Fescennine 
verses. 

Anniceris {'AvvUepic), a Cyrenaic philoso- 
pher, of whom the ancients have left us contra- 
dictory accounts. Many modern writers have 
supposed that there were two philosophers of 
this name, the one contemporary with Plato, 
whom he is said to have ransomed for twenty 
minse from Dionysius of Syracuse, and the other 
with Alexander the Great. 

Annius Cimber. Vid, Cimber. 

Annius Milo. Vid. Milo. 

Anser, a poet of the Augustan age, a friend 
of the triumvir Marcus Antonius, and one of the 
detractors of Virgil. Hence Virgil plays upon 
his name {Eel, ix., 36). Ovid {Trist, ii., 435) 
calls him procax. 

Ansibarii or Ampsivarii, a German people, 
originally dwelt south of the Bructeri, between 
the sources of the Ems and the "Weser : driven 
out of their country by the Chauci in the reign 
of Nero (A.D. 59), they asked the Romans for 
permission to settle in the Roman territory be- 
tween the Rhine and the Yssel, but when their 
request was refused they wandered into the in- 
terior of the country to the Cherusci, and were 
at length extirpated, according to Tacitus. We 
find their name, however, among the Franks in 
the time of Julian. 

Antjeopolis (' AvtcliottoIuc : near Gau-el-Ke- 
bir), an ancient city of Upper Egypt (the The- 
ba'is), on the east side of the Nile, but at some 
distance from the river, was the capital of the 
Nomos Antaeopolites, and one of the chief seats 
of the worship of Osiris. 

Antaeus {'Avraioc). 1. Son of Neptune (Po- 
seidon) and Ge, a mighty giant and wrestler in 
Libya, whose strength was invincible so long 
as he remained in contact with his mother 
earth. The strangers who came to his country 
were compelled to wrestle with him ; the con- 
quered were slain, and out of their skulls he 
built a house to Neptune (Poseidon). Hercules 
discovered the source of his strength, lifted him 
from the earth, and crushed him in the air. 
The tomb of Antaeus {Anted collis), which form- 
ed a moderate hill in the shape of a man stretch- 
ed out at full length, was shown near the town 
of Tingis in Mauretania down to a late period. 
— 2. [A companion of Turnus, slain by JEneas.] 

Antagoras {' Avrayopac), of Rhodes, flourish- 
ed about B.C. 270, a friend of Antigonus Gona- 
tas and a contemporary of Aratus. He wrote 
an epic poem entitled Thebais, and also epi- 
grams, of which specimens are still extant [in 
the Greek Anthology.] 

Antalcidas (' AvraAKidag), a Spartan, son of 
Leon, is chiefly known by the celebrated treaty 
concluded with Persia in B.C. 387, usually called 
the peace of Antalcidas, since it was the fruit 
of his diplomacy. According to this treaty, all 
the Greek cities in Asia Minor, together with 
Clazomenaj and Cyprus, were to belong to the 
Persian king- the Athenians were allowed to 



retain only Lcmnos, Imbros, and Scyros ; and 
all the other Greek cities were to be inde- 
pendent. 

Antan-der {"Avravdpoc). 1. Brother of Agath- 
ocles, king of Syracuse, wrote the life of hi» 
brother. [A fragment, preserved by Diodorus, is 
given by Muller, Frag. Hist. Grcec, vol. ii., p. 
383. — 2. General of the Messenians, and com- 
mander of cavalry in the first Messenian war 
against the Lacedaamonians.] 

Antandrus {"Avravdpog : 'Avravtiptoc : now 
Antandro), a city of Great Mysia, on the Adra- 
myttian Gulf, at the foot of Mount Ida ; an 
JEolian colony. Virgil represents ..Eneas as 
touching here after leaving Troy ( ffln,, hi., 106). 

Anta.ra.dus {'Av-(lpa6oc : now Tortosa), a 
town on the northern border of Phoenicia, op- 
posite the island of Aradus. 

Antea or Antia {"AvTeta), daughter of the 
Lycian king Iobates, wife of Prostus of Argos_ 
She is also called Sthenobcea. Respecting her 
love for Bellerophontes, see Bellerophontes. 

[Anteius, P., appointed governor of Syria 55 
A.D. On account of the favor in which he stood 
with Agrippina, he was an object of hatred to* 
Nero : being accused of a conspiracy, he took 
poison, but, finding this too slow, he opened his 
veins.] 

Antemn.e (Antemnas, -atis), an ancient Sa- 
bine town at the junction of the Anio and the 
Tiber, destroyed by the Romans in the earliest 
times. 

Antenor {'AvTTjvop). 1. A Trojan, son of 
iEsyetes and Cleomestra, and husband of The- 
ano. According to Homer, he was one of the 
wisest among the elders at Troy : he received 
Menelaus and Ulysses into his house when they 
came to Troy as ambassadors, and advised his 
fellow-citizens to restore Helen to Menelaus. 
Thus he is represented as a traitor to his coun- 
try, and when sent to Agamemnon, just before 
the taking of Troy, to negotiate peace, he con- 
certed a plan of delivering the city, and even 
the palladium, into the hands of the Greeks. 
On the capture of Troy, Antenor was spared by 
the Greeks. His history after this event is re- 
lated differently. Some writers relate that he 
founded a new kingdom at Troy ; according to 
others, he embarked with Menelaus and Helen, 
was carried to Libya, and settled at Cyrene ; 
while a third account states that he went with 
the Heneti to Thrace, and thence to the west- 
ern coast of the Adriatic, where the foundation 
of Patavium and several other towns is ascribed 
to him. The sons and descendants of Anteuor 
were called Antenoridce. — 2. Son of Euphranor, 
an Athenian sculptor, made the first bronze 
statues of Harmodius and Aristogiton, which 
the Athenians set up in the Ceramicus, B.C.. 
509. These statues were carried off to Susa by 
Xerxes, and their place was supplied by others 
made either by Callias or by Praxiteles. After 
the conquest of Persia, Alexander the Great 
sent the statues back to Athens, where they 
were again set up in the Ceramicus. 

Anteros. Vid. Eros. 

Antevorta, also called Porrima or Prorsa, 
together with Postvorta, are described either 
as the two sisters or companions of the Roman 
goddess Carmenta; but originally they were 
only two attributes of the one goddess Car- 
63 



ANTHEA 



ANTIGONUS. 



menta, the former describing her knowledge of 
the future, and the latter that of the past, anal- 
ogous to the two-headed Janus. 

[Axthea ('Avdeta), a city of Messenia, men- 
tioned by Homer (J7, 9, 151) ; the later Thuria, 
or, according to others, identical with Asi?ie.] 

Anthedon ('Avdytov : 'AvOrjdaviog : now Lu- 
kisi ?). 1. A town of Boeotia with a harbor, on the 
coast of the Eubcean Sea, at the foot of Mount 
Messapius, said to have derived its name from 
a nymph Anthedon, or from Anthedon, son of 
Glaucus, who was here changed into a god. 
(Ov., Met, vii., 232; xiii., 905.) The inhabit- 
ants lived chiefly by fishing. — [2. A sea-port of 
Argoh's on the Saronic Gulf, near the borders 
of Corinthia. called by Ptolemy 'Adrjvaiuv ?a/ij}v. 
— 3. A harbor in the southern part of Palestine, 
afterward called 'AypirrTudc.] 

[Axthela ('Av6j]?.ij), a village of Thessaly, be- 
tween the entrance of the Asopus into the Ma- 
li ac Gulf and Thermopylae, containing a temple 
of Ceres : it was one of the places of meeting 
of the Amphictyonic council.] 

Anthemics, emperor of the West, A.D. 46*7- 
4*72, was killed on the capture of Rome by Ri- 
cimer, who made Olybrius emperor. 

Antheml's ('Avde/iovg -ovv-)<; : 'AvdefiovcLog), 
a Macedonian town in Chalcidice. 

AxthemCsia or Anthemus ('Avdeftovcta), a 
city of Mesopotamia, southwest of Edessa, and 
a little east of the Euphrates. The surround- 
ing district was called by the same name, but 
was generally included under the name of Os- 

KHOEXE. 

Antheke ('Av6?jvj]), a place in Cynuria, in the 
Peloponnesus. 

[Axthermus, a statuary of Chios, father of 
Bupalus and Athenis: as the name is differently 
given in different MSS., Sillig has proposed Ar- 
chennus instead of Anthermus. 

[Antheus ('Avdevg), a Trojan, a companion 
of ^Eneas.] 

Anthylla ("AvOva/m), a considerable city of 
Lower Egypt, near the mouth of the Canopic 
branch of the Nile, below Naucratis, the reve- 
nues of which, under the Persians, were as- 
signed to the wife of the satrap of Egypt, to 
provide her with shoes. 

Antias, Q. Valerius, a Roman historian, 
flourished about B.C. 80, and wrote the history 
of Rome from the earliest times down to those 
of Sulla. He is frequently referred to by Livy, 
who speaks of him as the most lying of all the 
annalists, and seldom mentions his name with- j 
out terms of reproach : there can be little doubt ! 
that Livy's judgment is correct [The frag- 
ments of his work are collected by Krause in 
his Vita et Fragm, veterum Hist. Rom., Berlin, 
1833, p. 271-88.] 

Axticlea ('AvTin/.Eia), daughter of Autolycus, 
wife of Laertes, and mother of Ulysses, died of 
grief at the long absence of her son. It is said 
that, before marrying Laertes, she lived on in- 
timate terms with Sisyphus ; whence Euripides I 
calls Ulysses a son of Sisyphus. 

Anticlides ('AvTiKAe'idTjg), of Athens, lived j 
after the time of Alexander the Great, and was i 
the author of several works, the most import- j 
ant of which was entitled Nosti (Nocrroi). con- 1 
taining an account of the return of the Greeks i 
from their mvthical expeditions. 
64 



[Anticragus (' AvrUpayog : now Soumbourlu), 
a lofty and steep mountain range in Lycia, run- 
ning in a northeast direction along the coast 
of the Sinus Glaucus.] 

[Anticrates ('AvriKpdrTjg), a Spartan, who 
claimed the merit of having dealt the blow that 
proved fatal to Epaminondas at Mantinea,] 

Anticyra, more aneiently Antictrrha, ('Av- 
riKL^pa or 'AvTLKvpa : 'AvTinvpevg, 'AvriKvpalog), 
1. (Now Aspra Spitia), a town in Phocis, with 
a harbor on a peninsula on the western side of 
the Sinus Antieyranus, a bay of the Crisssean 
Gulf, called in ancient times Cyparissus, and 
celebrated for its hellebore. It continued to be 
a place of importance under the Romans. — 2. 
A town in Thessaly, on the Spercheus, not far 
from its mouth. Both towns were celebrated 
for their hellebore, the chief remedy in antiquity 
for madness ; hence the proverb, 'AvriKtp'pag ae 
del, when a person acted senselessly, and Na- 
viget Anticyram. (Hor., Sat., ii., 3, 166.) 

Antigenes ('AvriyevTjg), a general of Alexan- 
der the Great, on whose death he obtained the 
satrapy of Susiana, and espoused the side of 
Eumenes. On the defeat of the latter in B.C. 
316, Antigenes fell into the hands of his enemy 
Antigonus, and was burned alive by him. 

Axtigenidas ('Avrtyevldag), a Theban, a cele- 
brated flute-player, and a poet, lived in the time 
of Alexander the Great. 

Antigone ('Avtijovi]). 1. Daughter of OEdipus 
by his mother Jocaste, and sister of Ismene, and 
of Eteocles and Polynices. In the tragic story 
of OEdipus, Antigone appears as a noble maiden, 
with a truly heroic attachment to her father 
and brothers. When CEdipus had blinded him- 
self, and was obliged to quit Thebes, he was 
accompanied by Antigone, who remained with 
him till he died in Colouus, and then returned 
to Thebes. After her two brothers had killed 
each other in battle, and Creon, the king of 
Thebes, would not allow Polynices to be buried, 
Antigone alone defied the tyrant, and buried the 
body of her brother. Creon thereupon ordered 
her to be shut up in a subterranean cave, where 
she killed herself. Haemon, the son of Creon, 
who was in love with her, killed himself by her 
side. — [2. Daughter of the Trojan king Laome- 
don, changed by Juno (Hera) into a stork, be- 
cause she presumed to vie with her in the beau- 
ty of her hair. — 3. (Historical.) Daughter of 
Cassander, second wife of Ptolemy Lagus, and 
mother of Berenice.] 

Antigonea or -ia and -ia ('AvTiyovEia, 'Avn- 
yovia). 1. (Now Tepeleni), a town in Epirus 
(Illyricum), at the junction of a tributary with 
the Aous, and near a narrow pass of the Acro- 
ceraunian Mountains. — 2. A Macedonian town 
in Chalcidice. — 3. Vid. Maxtinea. — 4. A town 
on the Orontes in Syria, founded by Antigonus as 
the capital of his empire (B.C. 306), but most 
of its inhabitants were transferred by Seleucus 
to Antiochia, which was built in its neighbor- 
hood. — 5. A town in Bithynia, afterward Kic£ea. 
— 6. A town in the Troas. Vid. Alexandrea, 
No. 2. 

[Antigonis ('AvTiyovls), an Athenian tribe, so 
called in honor of Antigonus, father of Deme- 
trius.] 

Antigonts ('Avrlyovog). 1. King of Asia, 
surnamed the One-eyed son of Philip of Ely- 



ANTILIBANUS. 

miotis, and father of Demetrius Poliorcetes by 
Stratonice. He was one of the generals of 
Alexander the Great, and iu the division of the 
empire after the death of the latter (B.C. 323), 
he received the provinces of the Greater Phryg- 
ia, Lycia, and Pamphylia. On the death of 
the regent Antipater in 319, he aspired to the 
sovereignty of Asia. In 316 he defeated and 
put Eumenes to death, after a struggle of near- 
ly three years. From 315 to 311 he carried on 
war, with varying success, against Seleucus, 
Ptolemy, Cassander, and Lysimachus. By the 
peace made in 311, Antigonus was allowed to 
have the government of all Asia ; but peace did 
not last more than a year. After the defeat of 
Ptolemy's fleet in 306, Antigonus assumed the 
title of king, and his example was followed by 
Ptolemy, Lysimachus, and Seleucus. In the 
same year, Antigonus invaded Egypt, but was 
compelled to retreat. His son Demetrius car- 
ried on the war with success against Cassander 
in Greece ; but he was compelled to return to 
Asia to the assistance of his father, against 
whom Cassander, Seleucus, Ptolemy, and Ly- 
simachus had formed a fresh confederacy. An- 
tigonus and Demetrius were defeated by Lysim- 
achus at the decisive battle of Ipsus in Phryg- 
ia, in 301. Antigonus fell in the battle in the 
eighty-first year of his age. — 2. Gonatas, son 
of Demetrius Poliorcetes, and grandson of the 
preceding. He assumed the title of King of 
Macedonia, after his fathers death in Asia in 
B.C. 283, but he did not obtain possession of 
the throne till 277. He was driven out of his 
kingdom by Pyrrhus of Epirus in 273, but re- 
covered it in the following year : he was again 
expelled by Alexander, the son of Pyrrhus, and 
again recovered his dominions. He attempted 
to prevent the formation of the Achaaan League, 
and died in 239. He was succeeded by Deme- 
trius II. His surname Gonatas is usually de- 
rived from Gonnos or Gonui in Thessaly ; but 
some think that Gonatas is a Macedonian word, 
signifying an iron plate protecting the knee. 
— 3. Doson (so called because he was always 
about to give, but never did,) son of Demetrius 
of Cyrene, and grandson of Demetrius Polior- 
cetes. On the death of Demetrius II. in B.C. 
229, he was left guardian of his son Philip, but 
he married the widow of Demetrius, and became 
King of Macedonia himself. He supported Ara- 
tus and the Achiean League against Cleomenes, 
king of Sparta, whom he defeated at Sellasia in 
221, and took Sparta. On his return to Mace- 
donia, he defeated the Illyrians, and died a few 
days afterward, 220. — 4. King of Judaea, son 
of Aristobulus II., was placed on the throne by 
the Partisans in B.C. 40, but was taken prison- 
er by Sosius, the lieutenant of Antony, and was 
put to death by the latter in 37. — 5. Of Carys- 
tus, lived at Alexaudrea about B.C. 250, and 
wrote a work, still extant, entitled Histories Mi- 
rabiles, which is only of value from its preserv- 
ing extracts from other and better works. — 
Editions : By J. Beekmann, Lips., 1791, and by 
Westermann in his Paradoxoqraphi, Bruns.. 
1839. ^ 

Antilibanus {'kvTili6avoc : now Jebel-es- 
Bheikh or Anti- Lebanon), a mountaiu on the 
confines of Palestine, Phoenicia, and Syria, 
parallel to Libanus (now Lebanon), which it ex- 



ANTIOCHIA. 

ceeds m height. Its highest summit is Mount 
Hermou (also Jebel-es-Sheikh). 

Antilochus ('AvtlIoxoc), son of Nestor and 
Anaxibia or Eurydice, accompanied his father 
to Troy, and distinguished himself by his brav- 
ery. He was slain before Troy by Memnon the 
^Ethiopian, and was buried by the side of his 
friends Achilles and Patroclus. 

Antimachus ('AvTL/xaxog). 1. A Trojan, per- 
suaded his countrymen not to surrender Helen 
to the Greeks. He had three sons, two of whom 
were put to death by Menelaus. — 2. Of Claros 
or Colophon, a Greek epic and elegiac poet, was 
probably a native of Claros, but was called a Col- 
ophonian, because Claros belonged to Colophon. 
(Clarius poeta, Ov., Trist, i., 6, 1.) He flourish- 
ed toward the end of the Peloponnesian war: 
his chief work was an epic poem of great length 
called Thebais Qn6aig m . Antimachus was one 
of the forerunners of the poets of the Alexan- 
drine school, who wrote more for the learned 
than for the public at large. The Alexandrine 
grammarians assigned to him the second place 
among the epic poets, and the Emperor Hadrian 
preferred his works even to those of Homer. 
He also wrote a celebrated elegiac poem called 
Lyde, which was the name of his wife or mis- 
tress, as well as other works. There was like- 
wise a tradition that he made a recension of the 
text of the Homeric poems. [His fragments 
have been collected and published by Schellen- 
berg, Halle, 1786 ; some additional fragments 
in Stoll's Animadversiones in Antimachi Eragm., 
Gotting., 1840 ; the epic fragments in Diintzer's 
Fragin. der Episch. Poes. der Griech. bis auf Alex- 
ander, p. 99.] 

[Antimcerus ('AvTi/uoipog), a sophist of Mende 
in Thrace, a pupil of Protagoras, mentioned by 
Plato (Protag., 315, A.)] 

Antinoopolis ('Avtcvoov TvoTiig or 'Avrivoeia : 
ruins at Enseneh), a splendid city, built by Ha- 
drian, in memory of his favorite Antinous, on 
the eastern bank of the Nile, upon the site of the 
ancient Besa, in Middle Egypt (Heptanomis). 
It was the capital of the Nonios Antino'ites, and 
had an oracle of the goddess Besa. 

Antinous ('Avrlvooc). 1. Son of Euplthes 
of Ithaca, and one of the suitors of Penelope, 
was slain by Ulysses. — 2. A youth of extraor- 
dinary beauty, born at Claudiopolis in Bithynia, 
was the favorite of the Emperor Hadrian, and 
his companion in all his journeys. He was 
drowned in the Nile, A.D. 122, whether acci- 
dentally or on purpose, is uncertain. The grief 
of the emperor knew no bounds. He enrolled 
Antinous among the gods, caused a temple to 
be erected to him at Mantinea, and founded the 
city of Antinoopolis in honor of him. A large 
number of works of art of all kinds were exe- 
cuted in his honor, and many of them are still 
extant. 

AntiochIa and -ea ('Avrcoxeta : 'Avrioxevg 
and -o^aoc, fern. 'Avnoxk and -bxioca, Autio- 
chenus), the name of several cities of Asia, six- 
teen of which are said to have been built by 
Seleucus I. Nicator, and named in honor of his 
father Autiochus. 1. A. Epidaphnes, or ad 
Daphnem, or ad Orontem ('A. ml Autyvn : so 
called from a neighboring grove : A. enl Opov- 
Tn : ruins at Antakia), the capital of the Greek 
kingdom of Syria, and long the chief city of 

65 



ANTIOCKIA. 



AIn'TIOCHUS. 



Asia, and perhaps of the world, stood on the left 
bank of the Orontes, about twenty miles (geog.) 
from the sea, in a beautiful valley, about ten miles 
long and five or six broad, inclosed by the ranges 
of Amanus on the northwest, and Casius on the 
southeast. It was built by Seleueus Nicator, 
about B.C. 300, and peopled chiefly from the 
neighboring city of Antigonia. It flourished so j 
rapidly as soon to need enlargement ; and other j 
additions were again made to it by Seleueus II. j 
Callinicus (about B.C. 240), and Antiochus IV. 
Epiphanes (about B.C. 170). Hence it obtained j 
the name of Tetrapolis (TCTpdizohig, i. e. four 
cities). Besides being the capital of the greatest ; 
kingdom of the world, it had a considerable com- j 
merce, the Orontes being navigable up to the j 
city, and the high road between Asia and Europe 
passing through it. Under the Romans it was j 
the residence of the proconsuls of Syria ; it was j 
favored and visited by emperors ; and was made j 
a colonia with the Jus Italicum by Antoninus ! 
Pius. It was one of the earliest strongholds of | 
the Christian faith ; the first place where the j 
Christian name was used (Acts, xi., 26) ; the j 
centre of missionary efforts in the Apostolic 
age ; and the see of one of the four chief bishops, 
who were called Patriarchs. Though far inferior 
to Alexandrea as a seat of learning, yet it 
derived some distinction in this respect from the 
teaching of Libanius and other Sophists ; and 
its eminence in art is attested by the beautiful 
gems and medals still found among its ruins. 
It was destroyed by the Persian King Chosroes 
(A.D. 540), but rebuilt by Justinian, ^vho gave it 
the new name Theupolis (Qeoviro?.^). The 
ancient walls which still surround the insignifi- 
cant modern town are probably those built 
by Justinian. The name of Antioehia was 
also given to the surrounding district, i. e., the 
northwestern part of Syria, which bordered j 
upon Cilicia. — 2. A. ad M^eandrum ('A. Ttpdc 
MaLuvdpCf) : ruins near Yenishehr), a city of 
Caria, on the Meeander, built by Antiochus L 
Soter, on the site of the old city of Pythopolis. 
— 3. A. Pisidije or ad Pisidiam ('A. ILtaidiag or 
Trpoc Ucaidta), a considerable city on the borders 
of Phrygia Paroreios and Pisidia; built by 
colonists from Magnesia ; declared a free city by 
the Romans after their victory over Antiochus 
the Great (B.C. 189); made a colony under 
Augustus, and called Ceesarea. It was celebra- 
ted for the worship and the great temple of 
Men Arcasus (Mr/v 'Ap/cawc, the Phrygian Moon- 
god), which the Romans suppressed. — 4. A. Mar- 
giana ('A. Mapyiavij : now Meru Shah-Jehan ?), a 
city in the Persian province of Margiana, on the 
River Margus, founded by Alexander, and at 
first called Alexandrea ; destroyed by the bar- 
barians, rebuilt by Antiochus I. Soter, and 
called Antioehia. It was beautifully situated, 
and was^ surrounded by a wall seventy stadia 
(about eight miles) in circuit. Among the less 
important cities of the name were : (5.) A. ad 
Taurum in Commagene ; (6.) A. ad Cragum ; and 
(7.) A, ad Pyramum, in Cilicia. The following 
Antiochs are better known by other names : A. 
ad Sarum (vid. Adana) ; A. Characenes (vid. 
Charax) 5 A. Callirrhoe (vid. Edessa) ; A. ad 
Hippum (vid. Gadara) ; A. Migdonle (vid. Nisi- 
bis) ; in Cilicia (vid. Tarsus) ; in Caria or Lydia 
(vid. Tralles). 

66 



Antiochus ('Azm'o^oe). 1. Kings of Syria. 
1. Soter (reigned B.C. 280-261), was the son 
of Seleueus L, the founder of the Syrian king- 
dom of the Seleucidae. He married his step- 
mother Stratonice, with whom he fell violently 
in love, and whom his father surrendered to 
liim. He fell in battle against the Gauls in 261. 
—2. Theos (B.C. 261-246), son and successor 
of No. 1. The Milesians gave him his surname 
of Theos, because he delivered them ffom their 
tyrant, Timarchus. He carried on war with 
Ptolemy Philadelphus, King of Egypt, which 
was brought to a close by his putting away 
his wife Laodiee, and marrying Berenice, the 
daughter of Ptolemy. After the death of Ptole- 
my, he recalled Laodiee ; but, in revenge for the 
insult she had received, she caused Antiochus 
and Berenice to be murdered. During the reign 
of Antiochus, Arsaces founded the Parthian 
empire (250), and Theodotus established an 
independent kingdom in Bactria. He was suc- 
ceeded by his son Seleueus Callinicus. His 
younger son Antiochus Hierax also assumed 
the crown, and carried on war some years with 
his brother. Vid. Seleucus II. — 3. The Great 
(B.C. 223-187), second son of Seleucus Callini- 
cus, succeeded to the throne on the death of 
his brother Seleucus Ceraunus, when he was 
only in his fifteenth year. After defeating (220) 
Molon, satrap of Media, and his brother Alex- 
ander, satrap of Persis, who had attempted to 
make themselves independent, he carried on 
war against Ptolemy Philopator, king of Egypt, 
in order to obtain Ccele-Syria, Phoenicia, and 
Palestine, but was obliged to cede these prov- 
inces to Ptolemy, in consequence of his defeat 
at the battle of Raphia near Gaza, in 217. He 
next marched against Achaeus, who had revolted 
in Asia Minor, and whom he put to death, 
when he fell into his hands in 214. Vid. Achaeus. 
Shortly after this he was engaged for seven 
years (212-205) in an attempt to regain the 
eastern provinces of Asia, which had revolted 
during the reign of Antiochus III. ; but though 
he met with great success, he found it hopeless 
to effect the subjugation of the Parthian and 
Bactrian kingdoms, and accordingly concluded 
a peace with them. In 205 he renewed his war 
against Egypt with more success, and in 198 
conquered Palestine and Ccele-Syria, which he 
afterward gave as a dowry with his daughter 
Cleopatra upon her marriage with Ptolemy 
Epiphanes. In 196 he crossed over into Europe, 
and took possession of the Thracian Chersonese. 
This brought him into contact with the 
Romans, who commanded him to restore the 
Chersonese to the Macedonian king; but he 
refused to comply with their demand, in 
which resolution he was strengthened by Han- 
nibal, who arrived at his court in 195. Hanni- 
bal urged him to invade Italy without loss of 
time ; but Antiochus did not follow his advice, 
and it was not till 192 that he crossed over into 
Greece. In 191 he was defeated by the Romans 
at Thermopylae, and compelled ito return to 
Asia ; his fleet was also vanquished in two 
engagements. In 190 he was again defeated by 
the Romans under L. Scipio at Mount Sipylus, 
near Magnesia, and compelled to sue for peace, 
which was granted in 188, on condition of his 
ceding all his dominions east of Mount Taurus, 



ANTIOCHUS. 



ANTIOPE. 



paying fifteen thousand Euboie talents within 
twelve years, giving up his elephants and ships 
of war, and surrendering the Roman enemies ; 
but he allowed Hannibal to escape. In order 
to raise the money to pay the Romans, he at- 
tacked a wealthy temple in Elymais, but was 
killed by the people of the place (187). He was 
succeeded by his son Seleucus Philopator. — 4. 
Epiphanes (B.C. 175-164), son of Antiochus 
III., was given in hostage to the Romans in 
188, and was released from captivity in 175 
through his brother Seleucus Philopator, whom 
he succeeded in the same year. He carried on 
war against Egypt from 171-168 with great suc- 
cess in order to obtain Ccele-Syria and Pales- 
tine, which had been given as a dowry with his 
sister, and he was prejmring to lay siege to 
Alexandrea in 168, when the Romans compelled 
him to retire. He endeavored to root out the 
Jewish religion and to introduce the worship 
of the Greek divinities ; but this attempt led to 
a rising of the Jewish people, under Mattathias 
and his heroic sons the Maccabees, which An- 
tiochus was unable to put down. He attempt- 
ed to plunder a temple in Elymais in 164, but 
he was repulsed, and died shortly afterward in 
a state of raving madness, which the Jews and 
Greeks equally attributed to his sacrilegious 
crimes. His subjects gave him the name of 
Epimanes (" the madman") in parody of Epiph- 
anes. — 5. Eupatok (B.C. 164-162), son and suc- 
cessor of Epiphanes, was nine years old at his 
father's death, and reigned under the guardian- 
ship of «Lysias. He was dethroned and put to 
death by Demetrius Soter, the son of Seleucus 
Philopator, *vho had hitherto lived at Rome as 
a hostage.— 6. Theos, son of Alexander Balas. 
He was brought forward as a claimant to the 
crown in 144, against Demetrius JSTicator by 
Tryphon, but he was murdered by the latter, 
who ascended the throne himself in 142. — 7. 
Sidetes (B.C. 137-128), so called from Side in 
Pamphyha, where he was brought up, younger 
son of Demetrius Soter, succeeded Tryphon. 
He married Cleopatra, wife of his elder brother 
Demetrius Nicator, who was a prisoner with 
the Parthians. He carried on war against the 
Parthians, at first with success, but was after- 
ward defeated and slain in battle in 128. — 8. 
Grypus, or Hook-nosed (B.C. 125-96), second 
son of Demetrius Nicator and Cleopatra. He 
was placed upon the throne in 125 by his moth- 
er Cleopatra, who put to death his elder broth- 
er Seleucus, because she wished to have the 
power in her own hands. He poisoned his 
mother in 120, and subsequently carried on war 
for some time with his half-brother A. IX. 
Cyzicenus. At length, in 112, the two broth- 
ers agreed to share the kingdom between them, 
A. Cyzicenus having Coele-Syria and Phoenicia, 
and A. Grypus the remainder of the provinces. 
Grypus was assassinated in 96. — 9. Cyzicenus, 
from Cyzieus, where he was brought up, son of 
A. VII. Sidetes and Cleopatra, reigned over 
Coele-Syria and Phoenicia from 112 to 96, but 
fell in battle iu 95 against Seleucus Epiphanes, 
son of A. VIII. Grypus. — 10. Eusebes, son of 
A. IX. Cyziceuue, defeated Seleucus Epiph- 
anes, who had slain his father in battle, and 
maintained the throne against the brothers of 
Seleucus. He succeeded his father Antiochus 



! IX. in 95.— 11. Epiphanes, son of A. VIII. Gry- 
pus and brother of Seleucus Epiphanes, carried 
on war against A. X. Eusebes, but was defeat- 
ed by the latter, and drowned in the River 
Orontes.— 12. Dionysus, brother of No. 11, held 
the crown for a short time, but fell in battle 
against Aretas, king of the Arabians. The Syr- 
ians, worn out with the civil broils of the Se- 
leucidae, offered the kingdom to Tigranes, king 
of Armenia, who united Syria to his own domin- 
ions in 83, and held it till his defeat by the Ro- 
mans in 69. — 13. Asiaticus, son of A. X. Eu- 
sebes, became King of Syria on the defeat of 
Tigranes by Lucullus in "69; but he was de- 
prived of it in 65 by Pompey, who reduced Syria 
to a Roman province. In this year the Seleu- 
cidas ceased to reign. 

IL Kings of Commagene. 

1. Made an alliance with the Romans about 
B.C. 64. He assisted Pompey with troops in 
49, and was attacked by Antony in 38. He was 
succeeded by Mithradates I., about 31. — 2. Suc- 
ceeded Mithradates I, and was put to death at 
Rome by Augustus in 29. — 3. Succeeded Mith- 
radates II., and died in A.D. 17. Upon his 
death, Commagene became a Roman province, 
and remained so till A.D. 38. — 4. Surnamed 
Epiphanes, apparently a son of Antiochus III, 
received his paternal dominion from Caligula in 
A.D. 38. He was subsequently deposed by 
Caligula, but regained his kingdom on the ac- 
cession of Claudius in 41. He was a faithful 
ally of the Romans, and assisted them in their 
wars against the Parthians under Nero, and 
against the Jews under Vespasian. At length, 
in 72, he was accused of conspiring with the 
Parthians against the Romans, was deprived of 
his kingdom, and retired to Rome, where he 
passed the remainder of his life. 

III. Literary. 

1. Of Mgje. in Cilicia, a Sophist, or, as he 
himself pretended to be, a Cynic philosopher. 
He flourished about A.D. 200, during the reign 
of Severus and Caracalla. During the war of 
Caracalla against the Parthians, he deserted to 
the Parthians together with Tiridates. He was 
one of the most distinguished rhetoricians of 
his time, and also acquired some reputation as 
a writer. — 2. Of Ascalon, the founder of the 
fifth Academy, was a friend of Lucullus and the 
teacher of Cicero during his studies at Athens 
(B.C. 79); but he had a school at Alexandria 
also, as well as in Syria, where he seems to 
have ended his life. His principal teacher was 
Philo, who succeeded Plato, Arcesilas, and 'Car- 
neades, as the founder of the fourth Academy. 
He is, however, better known as the adversary 
than the disciple of Philo ; and Cicero mentions 
a treatise called Sosus, written by him against 
his master, in which he refutes the skepticism 
of the Academics. — 3. Of Syracuse, a Greek 
historian, lived about B.C. 423, and wrote his- 
tories of Sicily and Italy. [The fragments of 
his writings are collected in Miiller's Fragrnenia 
Hist. Grcec, vol. i., p. 181-184.— 4. Of Alex- 
andrea, author of a history of the comic poets 
of Greece.] 

Antiope CAvTioTTt}). 1. Daughter of Nyeteus 
and Polyxo, or of the river-god Asopus in Boeo- 
67 



ANTIPATER. 



ANTIPHON. 



tia, became by Jupiter (Zeus) the mother of , 
Amphion and'Zethus. Vid. Amphiox Bac- j 
chus (Dionysus) threvr her into a state of mad- ! 
ness on account of the vengeance which her j 
sons had taken on Diree In this condition she 
wandered through Greece, until Phocus, the 
grandson of Sisyphus, cured and married her. 
—2 An Amazon, sister of Hippolyte, wife of j 
Theseus, and mother of Hippolytus. 

Axtipateb ( ? Avri-arpog). 1. The Macedoni- ; 
an, an officer greatly trusted by Philip and Alex- j 
ander the Great, was left by the latter regent in 
Macedonia, when he crossed over into Asia in 
B.C. 334. In consequence of dissensions be- 
tween Olympias and Antipater, the latter was 
summoned to Asia in 324, and Craterus appoint- 
ed to the regency of Macedonia, but the death 
of Alexander in the following year prevented 
these arrangements from taking effect. An- 
tipater now" obtained Macedonia again, and in 
conjunction with Craterus, who was associated 
with him in the government, carried on war 
against the Greeks, who endeavored to establish 
their independence. This war, usually called 
the Lamian war, from Lamia, where Antipater 
was besieged in 323, was terminated by Antip- 
ater's victory over the confederates at Cran- 
non in 322. This was followed by the submis- 
sion of Athens and the death of Demosthenes, 
In 321 Antipater passed over into Asia in or- 
der to oppose Perdiccas; but the murder of 
Perdiccas in Egypt put an end to this war, and 
left Antipater supreme regent. Antipater died 
in 319, after appointing Polysperchon regent, 
and his own son Cassaxder to a subordinate 
position. — 2. Grandson of the preceding, and 
second son of Cassander and Thessalonlca. 
After the death of his elder brother Philip IV. 
(B.C. 295). great dissensions ensued between 
Antipater and his younger brother Alexander 
for the kingdom of Macedonia. Antipater, be- 
lieving that Alexander was favored by his moth- 
er, put her to death. The younger brother upon 
this applied for aid at once to Pyrrhus of Epirus 
and Demetrius Polioreetes. The remaining 
history is related differently ; but so much is 
certain, that both Antipater and Alexander were 
subsequently put to death, either by Demetri- 
us or at his instigation, and that Demetrius be- 
came King of Macedonia, — 3. Eather of Herod 
the Great, son of a noble Idnmsean of the same 
name, espoused the cause of Hyrcanus against 
his brother Aristobulus. He ingratiated himself 
with the Romans, and in B.C. 47 was appointed by 
Caesar procurator of Judaea, which appointment 
he held till his death in 43. when he was carried 
off by poison, which Maliehus, whose life he had 
twice saved, bribed the cup-bearer of Hyrcanus 
to administer to him — L Eldest son of Herod 
the Great by his first wife. Doris, brought about 
the death of his two half-brothers, Alexander 
and Aristobulus. hi B. C. 6, but was himself con- 
demned as guilty of a conspiracy against his fa- 
thers life, and was executed five days before 
Herod's death.— 5. Of Tarsus, a Stoic philoso- 
pher, the successor of Diogenes and the teach- 
er of Panaetius, about B.C. 144.— 6. Of Tyre, a 
Stoic philosopher, died shortly before B.C. 45, 
and wrote a work on Duties" (D e Ojficiis.) — 7. 
Of Sidon, the author of several epigrams in the 
Greek Anthology, flourished about B.C. 108- 
68 



100, and lived to a great age. — 8. Of Thessa- 

lonica, the author of several epigrams in the 
Greek Anthology, lived in the latter part of the 
reign of Augustus. 

Antipater, L. Gfiiius, a Roman jurist and 
historian, and a contemporary of C. Gracchus 
(B.C. 123) and L. Crassus, the orator, wrote An- 
nates, which were epitomized by Brutus, and 
which contained a valuable account of the sec- 
ond Punic war. [The fragments of this work 
have been published by Krause in his Vitce et 
Fragment a vet er nm Hist. Roman. Berlin, 1833, 
p. 182-201.] 

Axtipatria ('AvTi-urpia : now Berat ?\ a 
town in Iliyricum on the borders of Macedonia, 
on the left bank of the Apsus. 

[Axtipatris ('Avrt-arptc), a city of Judaea be- 
tween Jerusalem and Cassarea, in a beautiful 
and fruitful plain : it was built on the site of an 
older town called Capharsaba, enlarged by Her- 
od the Great, and named Antipairis in honor of 
his father Antipater.] 

Axtiphanes ('AvriQuvnc). L A comic poet 
of the middle Attic comedy, born about B.C. 404, 
and died 330. He wrote 365, or at the least 
260 plays, which were distinguished by ele- 
gance of language. [The fragments of his 
plays are collected by Meineke in his Frag- 
menta Comic. G-rac, voL i., p. 491-574, edit 
min or,] — 2. Of Berga in Thrace, a Greek writ- 
er on marvelous and incredible things. — 3. An 
epigrammatic poet, several of whose epigrams 
are still extant in the Greek Anthology, lived 
about the reign of Augustus. — [4. Of Argos, a 
sculptor, disciple of Polyeletus, and teacher of 
Cleon. — 5. A physician of Delos^ who lived 
about the beginning of the second century A.D.] 
Axtiphates ('AvTiOu-Tjg). h King of the 
mythical Laestrygones in Sicily, who are repre- 
sented as giants and cannibals. They destroy- 
ed eleven of the ships of Ulysses, who escaped 
with only one vessel. — [2. Son of the diviner 
Melampus, and father of GSeles, mentioned in 
the Odyssey. — 3. A companion of iEneas, son 
of Sarpedon, slain by Turnus.] 

Axtiphellus (' AvTip£?J*og : now Antiphilo), 
a town on the coast of Lycia, between Patara 
and Aperlae, originally the port of Phellus. 

Antiphemus ('Avriorjfiog), the Rhodian, found- 
er of Gela in Sicily, B.C. 690. 

AxTiPHTLrs ( 'Avridi Aof). 1. Of Byzantium, 
an epigrammatic poet, author of several excel- 
lent epigrams in the Greek Anthology, was a 
contemporary of the Emperor Nero. — 2. Of 
Egypt, a distinguished painter, the rival of 
Apelles, painted for Philip and Alexander the 
Great — [3. An Athenian general in the Lami- 
an war. appointed in the place of Leosthenes.] 

Axtiphox ('Avrt^wv). 1. The most ancient 
of the ten orators in the Alexandrine canor_, 
was a son of Sophilus the Sophist, and born at 
j Rhamnus in Attica, in B.C. 430. He belonged 
to the oligarchical party at Athens, and took an 
| active part in the establishment of the govern- 
ment of the Four Hundred (B.C. 411), after the 
! overthrow of which he was brought to trial 
condemned, and put to death. The oratorical 
powers of Antiphon are highly praised by the 
ancients. He introduced great improvements 
in public speaking, and was the first who laid 
down theoretical laws for practical eloquence; 



ANTIPHONUS. 



ANTIUM. 



he opened a school in which he taught rhetoric, 
and the historian Thucydides is said to have 
been one of his pupils. The orations which he 
composed were written for others; and the 
only time that he spoke in public himself was 
when he was accused and condemned to death. 
This speech, which was considered in antiqui- 
ty a master-piece of eloquence, is now lost. 
(Thuc, viii, 68 ; Cic, Brut, 12.) We still pos- 
sess fifteen orations of Antiphon, three of which 
were written by him for others, and the remain- 
ino- twelve as specimens for his school, or ex- 
ercises on fictitious cases. They are printed 
in the collections of the Attic orators, and sep- 
arately, edited by Baiter and Sauppe, Zurich, 
1838, and Matzner, Berlin, 1838. — 2. A tragic 
poet, whom many writers confound with the 
Attic orator, lived at Syracuse, at the court of 
the elder Dionysius, by whom he was put to 
death. — 3. Of Athens, a Sophist and an epic 
poet, wrote a work on the interpretation of 
dreams, which is referred to by Cicero and 
others. He is the same person as the Anti- 
phon who was an opponent of Socrates. (Xen., 
Mem , i., 6.) — [4. The youngest brother of Pla- 
to, mentioned in the Parmenides. — 5. An Athe- 
nian, who was arrested for favoring the cause 
of Macedonia, at the instigation of Demosthe- 
nes, and put to death. 

[Antiphonus ('AvTifovoc), one of the sons of 
Priam, accompanied his father when he went 
to solicit the body of Hector from Achilles.] 

[Antiphrjs ('Avrifpa and 'Avrtypac), a city of 
Africa, in the Libyan nome, at some distance 
from the sea : it was here that the common 
Libyan wine was made, which formed the drink 
of the lower orders at Alexandrea.] 

Antiphus ("AvrtQos). 1. Son of Priam and 
Hecuba, slain by Agamemuon. — 2. Son of Thes- 
salus, and one of the Greek heroes at Troy. — 
[3. Son of Pykemenes and the nymph Gygaea, 
ally of the Trojans, joint leader with his brother 
Mesthles of the Majouians from Mount Tmolus. 
—4. Son of J2gyptius of Ithaca, a companion of 
Ulysses in his wanderings; devoured by Poly- 
phemus. — 5. Another Ithacan, a friend of Te- 
lemachus.] 

Antipolis ('Avtitto/uc : now Antibes, pro- 
nounced by the inhabitants Antiboid), a town in 
Gallia Narbonensis on the coast, in the territory 
of the Deciates, a few miles west of Nicsea, was 
founded by Massilia : the muria, or salt pickle 
made of fish, prepared at this town, was very 
celebrated. 

Antirrhium ('Avrip'piov : now Castello di Bo- 
melia), a promontory on the borders of .^Etolia 
and Loeris, opposite Rhium (now Castello di Mo- 
rea) in Achaia, with which it formed the nar- 
row entrance of the Corinthian Gulf: the straits 
are sometimes called the Little Dardanelles. 

Antissa ("Avriaaa : 'Avriaaaloc : now Kalas 
Limneonas), a town ia Lesbos with a harbor, 
on the western coast between Methymna and 
the promontory Sigrium, was originally on a 
small island opposite Lesbos, which was after- 
ward united with Lesbos. [It was the birth- 
place of the poet Terpander.] It was destroy- 
ed by the Romans, B.C. 168, and its inhabitants 
removed to Methymna, because they had as- 
sisted Antioehus. 

Antisthenes ('Avricdevnc). 1. An Athenian, 



founder of the sect of the Cynic philosophers. 
His mother was a Thraeian. In his youth he 
fought at Tanagra (B.C. 426), and was a disci- 
ple first of Gorgias, and then of Socrates, whom 
he never quitted, and at whose death he was 
present. He died at Athens, at the age of sev- 
enty. He taught in the Cynosarges, a gymna- 
sium for the use of Athenians born of foreign 
mothers; whence probably his followers were 
called Cynics (kvvlkol), though others derive 
their name from the dog-like neglect of all 
forms and usages of society. His writings 
were very numerous, and chiefly dialogues ; his 
style was pure and elegant; and he possessed 
considerable powers of wit and sarcasm. Two 
declamations of his are preserved, named Ajax 
and Ulysses, which are purely rhetorical. He 
was an enemy to all speculation, and thus was 
opposed to Plato, whom he attacked furiously 
in one of his dialogues. His philosopical sys- 
tem was confined almost entirely to ethics, and 
he taught that virtue is the sole thing necessa- 
ry. He showed his contempt of all the luxuries 
and outward comforts of life by his mean cloth- 
ing and hard fare. From his school the Stoics 
subsequently sprung. In one of his works en- 
titled Physicus, he contended for the unity of 
the Deity. (Cic, Be Nat. Deor., i., 13.) [The 
fragments of his writings have been collect- 
ed and published by Winckelmann, Antisthenis 
Fragmenta, Turici, 1842. — 2. Of Rhodes, a 
Greek historian, who flourished about 200 B.C. 
He wrote a history of his own times, which 
has perished.] 

Antistius, P., tribune of the plebs, B.C. 88, 
a distinguished orator, supported the party of 
Sulla, and was put to death by order of young 
Marius in 82. His daughter Antistia was mar- 
ried to Pompeius Magnus. 

Antistius Labeo. Vid. Labeo. 

Axtistius Vetus. Vid. Vetus. 

Antitaurus ('AvTiravpor : now AU-Dagh), a 
chain of mountains, which strikes off northeast 
from the main chain of the Taurus on the south- 
ern border of Cappadoeia, in the centre of which 
district it turns to the east and runs parallel to 
the Taurus as far as the Euphrates, Its aver- 
age height exceeds that of the Taurus; and 
one of its summits, Mount Argaeus, near Ma- 
zaea, is the loftiest mountain of Asia Minor. 

Antrum (Antias : now Torre or Porto dAnzo), 
a very ancient town of Latium, on a rocky prom- 
ontory running out some distance into the Tyr- 
rhenian Sea. It was founded by Tyrrhenians 
and Pelasgians, and in earlier and even later 
times was noted for its piracy. Although unit- 
ed by Tarquinius Superbus to the Latin League, 
it generally sided with the Volscians against 
Rome. It was taken by the Romans in B.C. 
468, and a colony was sent thither, but it revolt- 
ed, was taken a second time by the Romans in 
B.C. 338, was deprived of all its ships, the beaks 
of which (Rostra) served to ornament the plat- 
form of the speakers in the Roman forum, was 
forbidden to have any ships in future, and re- 
ceived another Roman colony. But it gradu- 
ally recovered its former importance, was allow- 
ed in course of time again to be used as a sea- 
port, and in the latter times of the republic and 
under the empire, became a favorite residence 
of many of the Roman nobles and emperors. 

69 



ANTIUS EESTIO. 



ANTONIUS. 



The Emperor Nero was born here, and in the 
remains of his palace the celebrated Apollo Bel- 
vedere was found. Antium possessed a cele- 
brated temple of Fortune (0 Diva, gratum quce 
regis Antium, Hor, Carm., i., 35), of ^Escula- 
pius, and at the port of Ceno, a little to the east 
of Antium, a temple of Neptune, on which ac- 
count the place is now called Nettuno. 
Antius Restio. Vid. Restio. 
Antonia. 1- Major, elder daughter of M. 
Antonius and Octavia, wife of L. Domitius 
Ahenobarbus, and mother of Cn. Domitius, the 
father of the Emperor Nero. Tacitus calls 
this Antonia the younger daughter. — 2. Minor, 
younger sister of the preceding, wife of Drusus, 
the brother of the Emperor Tiberius, and mother 
of Germanicus, the father of the Emperor Calig- 
ula, of Livia or Livilla, and of the Emperor Clau- 
dius. She died A.D. 3S, soon after the acces- 
sion of her grandson Caligula. She was cele- 
brated for her beauty, virtue, and chastity. — 
3. Daughter of the Emperor Claudius, married 
first to Pompeius Magnus, and afterward to 
Faustus Sulla. Nero wished to marry her after 
the death of his wife Poppaea, A.D. 66 ; and on 
her refusal he caused her to be put to death on 
a charge of treason. 

Antoxia Turris, a castle on a rock at the 
northwest corner of the temple at Jerusalem, 
which commanded both the temple and the city. 
It was at first called Paris : Herod the Great 
changed its name in honor of Marcus Antomus. 
It contained the residence of the Procurator 
Judaeae. 

Axtoxixi Itixerarium, the title of an extant 
work, which is a very valuable itinerary of the 
whole Roman empire, in which both the prin- 
cipal and the cross-roads are described by a list 
of all the places and stations upon them, the 
distances from place to place being given in 
Roman miles. It is usually attributed to the 
Emperor Marcus Aurelius Antonius, but it ap- 
pears to have been commenced by order of 
Julius Caesar, and to have been completed in the 
reign of Augustus, though it is probable that 
it received important additions and revision 
under one or both of the Antonines. — Editions : 
By Wesseling, Amst., 1*735 ; by Parthey and 
Pinder, Berlin, 1848. 

AxTOXIXOPOLIS (' AvTG)VtVO~0?UC I -tTVC, -JUlUs), 

a city of Mesopotamia, between Edessa and 
Dara, afterward Maximianapolis, and afterward 
Constantia. 

Antoninus, M. Aurelius. Vid. Aurelius, M. 

Axtoxixus Pius, Roman emperor, A.D. 138- 
161. His name in the early part of his life, at 
full length, was Titus Aurelius Fidvus Boionius 
Arritcs Antoninus. His paternal ancestors came 
from Nernausus (now Nismes) in Gaul ; but An- 
toninus himself v^as born near Lanuvium, Sep- 
tember 19th, A.D. 86. From an early age he 
gave promise of his future worth. In 120 he 
was consul, and subsequently proconsul of the 
province of Asia: on his return to Rome, he 
lived _ on terms of the greatest intimacy with 
Hadrian, who adopted him on February 25th, 
138. Henceforward he bore the name of T. 
uElius Hadrianus Antoninus Ccesar, and on the 
death of Hadrian, July 2d, 138, he ascended the 
throne. The Senate conferred upon him the 
title of Pius, or the dutifully affectionate, because 



he persuaded them to grant to his father Ha- 
drian the apotheosis and the other honors usual- 
ly paid to deceased emperors, which they had 
at first refused to bestow upon Hadrian. The 
reign of Antoninus is almost a blank in history 
— a blank caused by the suspension for a time 
of war, violence, and crime. He was one of 
the best princes that ever mounted a throne, 
and all his thoughts and energies were dedi- 
cated to the happiness of his people. No at- 
tempt was made to achieve new conquests, and 
various insurrections among the Germans, Da- 
cians, Jews, Moors, Egyptians, and Britons, 
were easily quelled by Ins legates. In all the 
relations of private life the character of Anto- 
ninus was without reproach. He was faithful 
to his wife Faustina, notwithstanding her profli- 
gate life, and after her death loaded her memory 
with honors. He died at Lorium, March *7th, 
161, in his seventy-fifth year. He was suc- 
ceeded by Marcus Aurelius, whom he had adopt- 
ed, when he himself was adopted by Hadrian, 
and to whom he gave his daughter Faustina 
in marriage. 

Antoninus Liberalis, a Greek grammarian, 
probably lived in the reign of the Antonines, 
about A.D. 14*7, and wrote a work on Meta- 
morphoses (MeTa/j,op<ptooeG)v evvajay?/) in forty- 
one chapters, which is extant, — Editions : By 
Verheyk, Lugd. Bat., 1114; by Koch, Lips., 
1832 ; by Westermann, in his Mythographi, 
Brunsv., 1843. 

Antonius. 1. M., the orator, born B.C. 143 ; 
quaestor in 113 ; praetor in 104, when he fought 
against the pirates in Cilicia ; consul in 99 ; and 
censor in 9*7. He belonged to Sulla's party, and 
was put to death by Marius and Cinna when 
they entered Rome in 8*7 : his head was cut off 
and placed on the Rostra. Cicero mentions 
him and L. Crassus as the most distinguished 
orators of their age; and he is introduced as 
one of the speakers in Cicero's Be Oratore. — 2. 
M., surnamed Creticus, elder son of the orator, 
and father of the triumvir, was prsetor in *75, 
and received the command of the fleet and all 
the coasts of the Mediterranean, in order to clear 
the sea of pirates ; but he did not succeed in 
his object, and used his power to plunder the 
provinces. He died shortly afterward in Crete, 
and was called Creticus in derision. — 3. C, 
younger son of the orator, and uncle of the tri- 
umvir, was expelled the Senate in *70, and was 
the colleague of Cicero in the prastorship (65) 
and consulship (63). He was one of Catiline's 
conspirators, but deserted the latter by Cicero's 
promising him the province of Macedonia. He 
had to lead an army against Catiline, but, un- 
willing to fight against his former friend, he 
j gave the command on the day of battle to his 
legate, M. Petreius. At the conclusion of the 
I war, Antony went into his province, which he 
plundered shamefully; and on his return to 
Rome in 59, was accused both of taking part in 
Catiline's conspiracy and of extortion in his 
province. He was defended by Cicero, but was 
condemned, and retired to the island of Cephal- 
lenia. He was subsequently recalled, probably 
by Caesar, and was in Rome at the beginning of 
44. — 4. M., the Triumvir, was son of No. 2, and 
Julia, the sister of L. Julius Caesar, consul in 
64, and was born about 83 B.C. His father 



ANTONIUS. 



ANTONIUS PRIMUS. 



died while he was still young, and he was 
brought up by Cornelius Lentulus, who married 
his mother Julia, and who was put to death by 
Cicero in 63 as one of Catiline's conspirators ; 
whence he became a personal enemy of Cicero. 
Antony indulged in his earliest youth in every 
kind of dissipation, and his affairs soon became 
deeply involved. In 58 he went to Syria, where 
he served with distinction under A. Gabinius. 
He took part in the campaigns against Aristo- 
bulus in Palestine (5*7, 56), and in the restora- 
tion of Ptolemy Auletes to Egypt in 55. In 54 
he went to Caesar in Gaul, and by the influence 
of the latter was elected quaestor. As quaestor 
(52) he returned to Gaul, and served under 
Caesar for the next two years (52, 51). He re- 
turned to Rome in 50, and became one of the 
most active partisans of Caesar. He was trib- 
une of the plebs in 49, and in January fled to 
Caesar's camp in Cisalpine Gaul, after putting 
his veto upon the decree of the Senate which 
deprived Caesar of his command. He accom- 
panied Caesar in his victorious march into Italy, 
and was left by Caesar in the command of Italy, 
while the latter carried on the war in Spain. 
In 48 Antony was present at the battle of Phar- 
salia, where he commanded the left wing ; and 
in 47 he was again left in the command of Italy 
during Caesar's absence in Africa. In 44 he was 
consul with Caesar, when he offered him the 
kingly diadem at the festival of the Lupercalia. 
After Caesar's murder on the 15th of March, 
Antony endeavored to succeed to his power. 
He therefore used every means to appear as 
his representative ; he pronounced the speech 
over Caesar's body, and read his will to the peo- 
ple ; and he also obtained the papers and private 
property of Caesar. But he found a new and un- 
expected rival in young Oetavianus, the adopted 
son and great-nephew of the dictator, who came 
from Apollonia to Rome, assumed the name 
of Caesar, and at first joined the Senate in 
order to crush Antony. Toward the end of the 
year Antony proceeded to Cisalpine Gaul, which 
had been previously granted him by the Senate ; 
but Dec. Brutus refused to surrender the pro- 
vince to Antony and threw himself into Mutina, 
where he was besieged by Antony. The Senate 
approved of the conduct of Brutus, declared 
Antony a public enemy, and intrusted the con- 
duct of the war against him to Octavianus. 
Antony was defeated at the battle of Mutina, in 
April, 43, and was obliged to cross the Alps. 
Both the consuls, however, had fallen, and the 
Senate now began to show their jealousy of 
Octavianus. Meantime Antony was joined by 
Lepidus with a powerful army : Octavianus be- 
came reconciled to Antony, and it was agreed 
that the government of the state should be 
vested in Antony, Octavianus, and Lepidus, under j 
the title of Triumviri JReipublicce Constituendce, 
for the next five years. The mutual friends 
of each were proscribed, and in the numerous j 
executions that followed, Cicero, who had at- 
tacked Antony in the most unmeasured manner \ 
in his Philippic Orations, fell a victim to An- ' 
tony. In 42, Antony and Octavianus crushed j 
the republican party by the battle of Philippi, j 
in which Brutus and Cassius fell. Antony then 
went to Asia, which he had received as his 
share of the Roman world. In Cilicia he met' 



with Cleopatra, and followed her to Egypt, a 
captive to her charms. In 41 Fulvia, the wife 
of Antony, and his brother L. Antonius, made 
war upon Octavianus in Italy. Antony pre- 
pared to support his relatives, but the war 
was brought to a close at the begin ning of 40, 
before Antony could reach Italy. The oppor- 
tune death of Fulvia facilitated the reconciliation 
of Antony and Octavianus, which was cemented 
by Antony marrying Octavia, the sister of Octa- 
vianus. Antony remained in Italy till 39, when 
the triumvirs concluded a peace with Sext. Pom- 
pey, and he afterward went to his provinces 
in the East. In this year and the following, 
Ventidius, the lieutenant of Antony, defeated the 
Parthians. In 37 Antony crossed over to Italy, 
when the triumvirate was renewed for five years. 
He then returned to the East, and shortly after- 
ward sent Octavia back to her brother, and 
surrendered himself entirely to the charms of 
Cleopatra. In 36 he invaded Parthia, but he 
lost a great number of his troops, and was 
obliged to retreat. He was more successful 
in his invasion of Armenia in 34, for he obtained 
possession of the person of Artavasdes, the 
Armenian king, and carried him to Alexandrea. 
Antony now laid aside entirely the character 
of a Roman citizen, and assumed the pomp 
and ceremony of an eastern despot. His eon- 
duct, and the unbounded influence which Cleo- 
patra had acquired over him, alienated mauy of 
his friends and supporters ; and Octavianus 
thought that the time had now come for crush- 
ing his rival. The contest was decided by the 
memorable sea-fight off Actium, September 2d, 
31, in which Antony's fleet was completely 
defeated. Antony, accompanied by Cleopatra, 
fled to Alexandrea, where he put an end to his 
own life in the following year (30), when Octavi- 
anus appeared before the city. — 5. O, brother of 
the triumvir, was praetor in Macedonia, B.C. 44, 
fell into the hands of Marcus Brutus in 43, and 
was put to death by Brutus in 42, to revenge 
the murder of Cicero. — 6. L., youngest brother 
of the triumvir, was consul in 41, when he 
engaged in war against Octavianus at the insti- 
gation of Fulvia, his brother's wife. He was 
unable to resist Octavianus, and threw himself 
into the town of Perusia, which he was obliged 
to surrender in the following year; hence the 
war is usually called that of Perusia. His life 
was spared, and he was afterwards appointed ty 
Octavianus to the command of Iberia, Cicero 
draws a frightful picture of Lucius's character. 
He calls him a gladiator and a robber, and heaps 
upon him every term of reproach and contempt. 
Much of this is of course exaggeration. — 7. M., 
called by the Greek writers Antyllus, which is 
probably only a corrupt form of Antonillus 
(young Antonius), elder son of the triumvir by 
Fulvia, was executed by order of Octavianus, 
after the death of his father in B.C. 30.— 8. Iu- 
lus, younger son of the triumvir by Fulvia, was 
brought up by his step-mother Octavia at Rome, 
and received great marks of favor from Augus- 
tus. He was consul in B.C. 10, but was put to 
death in 2, in consequence of his adulterous inter- 
course with Julia, the daughter of Augustus. 

Antonius Felix. Vid. Felix. 

Antonius Musa. Vid. Musa. 

Antonius Primus. Vid. Primus. 

71 



ANTRON. 



APELLA. 



Antboh ('Avrpuv and ol 'Avrpuvec: Avrpu- 
vtoc : now Fano), a town in Phthiotis in Thes- 
saly. at the entrance of the Sinus Mahacus. 

Antunnaccm (now Andemach), a town of the 
Ubii on the Rhine. . . 

Anubis CAvov6ic), an Egyptian divinity, wor- 
shipped in the form of a human being with a 
dog's head. He was originally worshipped sim- 
ply as the representative of the dog, which ani- 
mal, like the cat, was sacred in Egypt ; but his 
worship was subsequently mixed up with other 
religious systems, and Anubis thus assumed a 
symbolical' or astronomical character, at least 
with the learned. His worship prevailed through- 
out Egypt, but he was most honored at Cynopo- 
]is in Middle Egypt. Later myths relate that 
Anubis was the son of Osiris and Nephthys, 
born after the death of his father ; and that Isis 
brought him up, and made him her guard and 
companion, who thus performed to her the same 
service that dogs perform to men. In the tem- 
ples of Egypt Anubis seems to have been rep- 
resented as the guard of other gods, and the 
place in the front of a temple was particularly 
sacred to him. The Greeks identified him with 
their own Hermes, and thus speak of Hermanu- 
bis in the same manner as of Zeus Amnion. 
His worship was introduced at Rome toward 
the end of the republic, and, under the empire, 
spread very widely both in Greece and at Rome. 
Anxur. " Yid. Tarracixa. 
[Anxur, an ally of Turnus in Italy, wounded 
by iEneas.] 

Anxurus, an Italian divinity, who was wor- 
shipped in a grove near Anxur (Tarracina), to- 
gether with Eeronia. He was regarded as a 
youthful Jupiter, and Feronia as Juno. On 
coins his name appears as Axur or Anxur. 

Anysis ("Avvglc), an ancient king of Egypt, 
in whose reign Egypt was invaded by the ^Ethi- 
opians under their king, Sabaco. 

Anyte CAvvtt]), of Tegea, the authoress of 
several epigrams in the Greek Anthology, flour- 
ished about B.C. 300, [a date which some writ- 
ers, on mere conjecture, have changed to 700 
B.C.] The epigrams are for the most part in 
the style of the ancient Doric choral songs. 

Anytcs ("Avvtoc), a wealthy Athenian, son 
of Anthemion, the most influential and formida- 
ble of the accusers of Socrates, B.C. 399 (hence 
Socrates is called Anyti reus, Hor., Sat. ii, 4, 
3). He was a leading man of the democratic- 
al party, and took an active part along with 
Thrasybulus, in the overthrow of the Thirty 
Tyrants. The Athenians, having repented of 
their condemnation of Socrates, sent Anvtus into 
banishment. 

[Acede ('AoiSt]), one of the three oldest Muses, 
whose worship was introduced into Bceotia bv 
the Aloidce.] 

Aon {"Aov), son of Xeptune, and an ancient 
Bceotian hero, from whom the Aones, au ancient 
race in Bceotia, were believed to have derived 
their name. Aortia was the name of the part 
of Bceotia near Phocis, in which were Mount 
Helicon and the fountain Aganippe ( Aonice aquce, 
Ov., Fast, hi., 456). The Muses are also called 
Aonides, since they frequented Helicon and the 
fountain of Aganippe. (Ov., Met., v., 333.) 

Aonides. Vid. Aon*. 

[Aornos ('Aopvog), a city of Bactria, next to 
72 



I Baetra in importance, having a strong and lofty 
! citadel, but taken by Alexander the Great 
! Wilson regards the name as of Sanscrit origin 
! (from Awarana), and meaning " an inclosure" 
or " stockade? — 2. A mountain fastness of India 
I on this side of the Indus, between the Cophen 
J and Indus, to which the inhabitants of Bazira 
! fled from before Alexander.] 

Aoesi ('Aopo-oi) or Adorsi, a powerful people 
j of Asiatic Sarmatia. who appear to have had 
| their origiual settlements on the northeast of 
! the Caspian, but are chiefly found between the 
| Palus Maeotis (now Sea of Azof) and the Cas- 
; pian, to the southeast of the River Tanais (now 
j Don), whence they spread far into European Sar- 
matia. They carried on a considerable traffic 
in Babylonian merchandise, which they fetched 
j on camels out of Media and Armenia. 
| Aous or jEas ('Atioc or Aiag: now Viosa, 
j Viussa or Vovussa), the principal river of the 
i Greek part of Illyricum, rises in Mount Lacmou, 
the northern part of Pindus, and flows into the 
j Ionian Sea near Apollonia. 

[Apama ('Arrd/za or 'Arruujj), wife of Seleucus 
JsK-ator, and mother of Antiochus Soter.] 

Apamea or-L\ ^ATcdjiEia : 'Arrafiievc, Apameus, 
: -enus, -ensis), the name of several Asiatic cities, 
three of which were founded by Seleucus I. Ni- 
! cator, and named in honor of his wife Apama. 1. 
j A. ad Orontem (now Famiah), the capital of the 
| Syrian province Apamene, and, under the Ro- 
j mans, of Syria Secunda, was built by Seleucus 
Xicator on the site of the older city of Pella, 
i in a very strong position on the River Orontes 
I or Axius, the citadel being on the left (west) 
! bank of the river, and the city on the right. It 
' was surrounded by rich pastures, in which Se- 
i leueus kept a splendid stud of horses and five 
hundred elephants. — 2. In Osroene in Mesopo- 
tamia (now Balasir), a town built by Seleucus 
Xicator on the east bank of the Euphrates, op- 
posite to Zeugma, with which it was connected 
by a bridge, commanded by a castle, called Se- 
leucia. In Pliny's time (A.D. 77) it was only 
; a ruin. — 3. A. Cibotus or ad M^eaxdrum: ('A. 7j 
j Ki6ot6c, or Trpdc ^Slaiavdpov), a great city of 
j Phrygia, on the Mfeander, close above its con- 
j fluence with the Marsyas. It was built by An- 
| tiochus I. Soter, who named it in honor cf his 
j mother Apama, and peopled it with the inhabit- 
! ants of the neighboring Cehenae. It became 
j one of the greatest cities of Asia within the 
j Euphrates ; and, under the Romans, it was the 
! seat of a Conventus Juridicus. The surround- 
1 ing country, watered by the Maeander and its 
i tributaries, was called Apamena Regio. — 4. A. 
J Myrleon, in Bithynia. Vid. Myrlea. — 0. A 
\ town built by Antiochus Soter, in the district 
j cf Assyria called Sittacene, at the junction of 
j the Tigris with the Royal Canal which connect- 
; ed the Tigris with the Euphrates, and at the 
northern extremity of the island called Mesene. 
! which was formed by this canal and the two 
, rivers. — 6. A. Mesexes (now Korna), in Baby- 
■ Ionia, at the south point of the same Island of 
\ Mesene, and at the junction of the Tigris and 
\ Euphrates. — 7. A. Rhaglvxa ('A. ;/ -Kpbq 'Pa- 
: yalc), a Greek city in the district of Choarene 
in Parthia (formerly in Media), south of the 
\ Caspian Gates. 

[Apelea, a very common name of Roman 



APELLES. 



APHRODISIAS. 



freedmen : the Jews in Rome, mostly freedmen, 
dwelt on the further side of the Tiber, and were 
regarded as superstitious ; hence Apella came to 
be used proverbially for a superstitious person. 
(Credat Judceus Apella, Hon, Sat, i., 5, 100.)] 

Apelles ('ATrcXA^f), the most celebrated of 
Grecian paiuters, was born, most probably, at 
Colophon in Ionia, though some ancient writers 
call him a Coan, and others an Ephesian. He 
was the contemporary and friend of Alexander 
the Great (B.C. 336-323), whom he probably 
accompanied to Asia, and who entertained so 
high an opinion of him, that he was the only 
person whom Alexander would permit to take 
his portrait. After Alexander's death he ap- 
pears to have travelled through the western 
parts of Asia. Being driven by a storm to 
Alexandrea, after the assumption of the regal 
title by Ptolemy (B.C. 306), whose favor he had 
not gained while he was with Alexander, his 
rivals laid a plot to ruin him, which he defeated 
by an ingenious use of his skill in drawing. We 
are not told when or where he died. Through- 
out his life Apelles labored to improve himself, 
especially in drawing, which he never spent a 
day without practicing. Hence the proverb 
Nulla dies sine linea. A list of his works is 
given by Pliny (xxxv., 36). They are for the 
most part single figures, or groups of a very few 
figures. Of his portraits the most celebrated 
■was that of Alexander wielding a thunderbolt ; 
but the most admired of all his pictures was the 
" Venus Anadyomene' (7 avadvo^vn 'A<ppodiTn), 
or Veuus rising out of the sea. The goddess 
was wringing her hair, and the falling drops of 
water formed a transparent silver veil around 
her form. He commenced another picture of 
Venus, which he intended should surpass the 
Venus Anadyomene, but which he left unfinished 
at bis death. 

Apellicon ('A7rt:'A?.iKuv), of Teos, a Peripa- 
tetic philosopher and great collector of books. 
His valuable library at Athens, containing the 
autographs of Aristotle's works, was carried to 
Rome by Sulla (B.C. 83) : Apellicon had died 
just before. 

Apenninus Mons (6 'Attevvivoc and to 'Airev- 
vwov opoc, probably from the Celtic Pen, " a 
height"), the Apennines, a chain of mountains 
which runs throughout Italy from north to south, 
and forms the backbone of the peninsula. It is a 
continuation of the Maritime Alps (vid. Alpes), 
begins near Genua, and ends at the Sicilian Sea, 
and throughout its whole course sends off nu- 
merous branches in all directions. It rises to 
its greatest height in the country of the Sabines, 
where one of its points (now Monte Corno) is 
9521 feet above the sea ; aud further south, at 
the boundaries of Samnium, Apulia, and Lu- 
cania, it divides into two main branches, one 
of which runs cast through Apulia and Calabria, 
and terminates at the Salentine promontory, 
and the other west, through Bruttium, termina- 
ting apparently at Rhegium and the Straits of 
Messina, but in reality continued throughout 
Sicily. The greater part of the Apennines is 
composed of limestone, abouuding iu numerous 
caverns and recesses, which, in ancient as well 
as modern times, were the resort of numerous 
robbers: the highest points of the mountains 
are covered with snow, even during most of the 



summer {nivali vertice se attollens Apenninus; 
Virg., uEn., xii., 703). 

Aper, M., a Roman orator and a native of 
Gaul, rose by his eloquence to the rank of quaes- 
tor, tribune, and praetor, successively. He is one 
of the speakers in the Dialogue De Oratoribus, 
attributed to Tacitus. 

Aper, Arrius, praetorian prefect, and son-in- 
law of the Emperor Numerian, whom he was 
said to have murdered : he was himself put to 
death by Diocletian on his accession in A.D. 284. 

Aperantia, a town and district of iEtolia near 
the Achelous, inhabited by the Aperantii. 

[Aperopia ('Airepoma : now Dhoko or Bello 
Poulo), a small island in the Argolic Gulf, near 
Hydrea.] 

Apesas ('ATreaag : now Fuka?), a mountain 
on the borders of Phliasia and Argolis, with a 
temple of Jupiter (Zeus), who was hence called 
Apesantixis, and to whom Perseus here first sac- 
rificed. 

Aphaca (rd "AQaica : now Afka ?), a town of 
Ccele-Syria, between Heliopolis and Byblus, 
celebrated for the worship and oracle of Venus 
(Aphrodite) Aphacitis ('Afpa/clrcc). 

Aphareus {'Acpapevs), son of the Messenian 
king Perieres and Gorgophone, and founder of 
the town of Arene in Messenia, which he called 
after his wife. His two sons, Idas and Lynceus, 
the Apharetidce (Aphareia proles, Ov., Met, viii., 
304), are celebrated for their fight with the Dios- 
curi, which is described by Pindar. {Nem., x., 
111.) — [2. Son of Caletor, slam by iEneas before 
Troy. — 3. A centaur, whose arm was crushed 
by Theseus with the trunk of an oak at the nup- 
tials of Pirithous.] — 4. An Athenian orator and 
tragic poet, flourished B.C. 369-342. After the 
death of his father, his mother married the ora- 
tor Isocrates, who adopted Aphareus as his son. 
He wrote thirty-five or thirty-seven tragedies, 
and gained four prizes. 

Aphet^e ('A^erat and 'AQetci'i : 'A^eralog : 
[now F~etio ?]), a sea-port and promontory of 
Thessaly, at the entrance of the Sinus Malia- 
cus, from which the ship Argo is said to have 
sailed. 

Aphidas ('Atietdag), son of Areas, obtained 
from his father Tegea and the surrounding ter- 
ritory. He had a son, Aleus. — [2. Son of Poly- 
pemon, for whom Ulysses, on his return to Itha- 
ca, passed himself off to Eumseus. — 3. A cen- 
taur, slain by Theseus at the nuptials of Piri- 
thous.] 

Aphidna ("AQtdva and "Afyidvat : 'A^>idvalog), 
an Attic demus not far from Decelea, originally 
belonged to the tribe iEantis, afterward to Leon- 
tis, and last to Hadrianis. It was in ancient 
times one of the twelve towns and districts into 
which Cecrops is said to have divided Attica; 
in it Theseus concealed Helen, but her brothers, 
Castor and Pollux, took the place and rescued 
their sister. 

[Aphidnus, one of the companions of iEneas,- 
slain by Turnus.] 

AphrodIsias ('Atppodiaidg : 'A(ppo6iatevg : Aph- 
rodisiensis), the name of several places famous 
for the worship of Aphrodite (Venus). 1. A. 
Cari^e (now Gheira, ruins), on the site of an 
old town of the Leleges, named Ninoe : under 
the Romans a free city and asylum, and a flour- 
ishing school of art. — 2. Veneris Oppidum (now 

73 



APHRODISIUM. 



APIDANUS. 



Porto Gavaliere\ a town, harbor, and island on 
the coast of Cilicia, opposite to Cyprus.— 3. A 
town, harbor, and island on the coast of Cyrena- 
ica, in North Africa.— 4. Vid. Gades.— [5. (Now 
Kaisch), an island in the Persian Gulf, on the 
coast of Carmania, earlier called Catsea.] 

[Aphrodisium ('Afpodimov), a town on the 
northern coast of Cyprus.— 2. A village of Arca- 
dia, east of Megalopolis.— 3. One of the three 
minor harbors into which the Piraeus was sub- 
divided. — 4. A. Promontoriom, a promontory at 
the eastern base of the Pyrenees, with a temple 
of Aphrodite (Venus).] 

Aphrodite ('A<ppodiTT}), one of the great di- 
vinities of the Greeks, the goddess of love and 
beauty. In the Iliad she is represented as the 
daughter of Jupiter (Zeus) and Dione, and, in 
later traditions, as a daughter of Saturn (Cronos) 
and Euonyme, or of Uranus and Hemera ; but 
the poets most frequently relate that she was 
sprung from the foam (a^poc) of the sea, whence 
they derive her name. She is commonly rep- 
resented as the wife of Vulcan (Hephaestus) ; 
but she proved faithless to her husband, and 
was in love with Mars (Ares), the god of war, 
to whom she bore Phobos, Deimos, Harmonia, 
and, according to later traditions, Eros and An- 
teros also. She also loved the gods Bacchus 
(Dionysus), Mercury (Hermes), and Neptune 
(Poseidon), and the mortals Anchises, Adonis, 
and Butes. She surpassed all the other god- 
desses in beauty, and hence received the prize 
of beauty from Paris. She likewise had the 
power of granting beauty and invincible charms 
to others, and whoever wore her magic girdle 
immediately became an object of love and de- 
sire. In the vegetable kingdom the myrtle, 
rose, apple, poppy. <fec, were sacred to her. 
The animals sacred to her, which are often 
mentioned as drawing her chariot or serving 
as her messengers, are the sparrow, the dove, 
the swan, the swallow, and a bird called iynx. 
The planet Venus and the spring-month of April 
were likewise sacred to her. The principal 
places of her worship in Greece were the isl- 
ands of Cyprus and Cythera. The sacrifices 
offered to her consisted mostly of incense and 
garlands of flowers, but in some places animals 
were sacrificed to her. Respecting her festi- 
vals, vid. Diet, of Antiq., art. Adonia, Anagogia, 
Aphrodisia, Catagogia. Her worship was of 
Eastern origin, and probably introduced by the 
Phoenicians into the islands of Cyprus, Cyth- 
era, and others, whence it spread all over 
Greece. She appears to have been originally 
identical with Astarte, called by the Hebrews 
Ashtoreth, and her connection with Adonis clear- 
ly points to Syria, Respecting the Roman god- 
dess Venus, vid. Venus. 

Aphroditopolis ('A(f)po6iT7]g tzoXlc), the name 
of several cities in Egypt. 1. In Lower Egypt : 
(1.) In the Nomos Leontopolites, in the Delta, 
between Arthribis and Leontopolis ; (2.) (Now 
Chybin-el-Koum), in the Nomos Prosopites, in 
the Delta, on a navigable branch of the Nile, 
between Naucratis and Sais ; probably the same 
as Atarbechis, which is an Egyptian name of the 
same meaning as the Greek Aphroditopolis. — 
.2. In Middle Egypt or Heptanomis (now Atfyh), 
a considerable city on the east bank of the Nile ; 
the chief city of the Nomos Aphroditopolites.— 



3. In Upper Egypt, or the Thebais : (1.) Vene- 
ris Oppidum (now Tachta), a little way from the 
west bank of the Nile ; the chief city of the No- 
mos Aphroditopolites ; (2.) In the Nomos Her- 
monthites (now Deir, northwest of Esneh), on the 
west bank of the Nile. 

Aphthonius ('A<j>66vioc), of Antioch, a Greek 
rhetorician, lived about A.D. 315, and wrote the 
introduction to the study of rhetoric, entitled 
Progymnasmata (Trpoyv/xvdajuaTa). It was con- 
structed on the basis of the Progymnasmata of 
Hermogenes, and became so popular that it was 
used as the common school-book in this branch 
of education for several centuries. On the re- 
vival of letters it recovered its ancient popu- 
larity, and during the sixteenth and seventeenth 
centuries was used every where, but more es- 
pecially in Germany, as the text book for rhet- 
oric. The number of editions and translations 
which were published during that period is 
greater than that of any other ancient writer. 
The best edition is in Walz's Rhetores Grceci, 
voL i. Aphthonius also wrote some iEsopic 
fables, which are extant. 

Aphytis ('A^vtlc : now Athyto), a town in 
the peninsula Pallene in Macedonia, with a cele- 
brated temple and oracle of Jupiter Amnion. 

Apia ('Airta, sc. y?j), the Apian land, an an- 
cient name of Peloponnesus, especially Argolis, 
said to have been so called from Apis, a mythical 
king of Argos. 

Apicata, wife of Sejanus, was divorced by 
him, A.D. 23, after she had borne him three 
children, and put an end to her own life on the 
execution of Sejanus, 31. 

Apicius, the name of three notorious gluttons. 
— 1. The first lived in the time of Sulla, and is 
said to have procured the condemnation of Ru- 
tilius Rufus, B.C. 92. — 2. The second and most 
renowned, M. Gabius Apicius, flourished under 
Tiberius. [It is stated by Seneca that, after 
having spent upon his culinary dainties one 
hundred millions of sesterces (sestertium millies), 
upward of three millions of dollars, he became 
overwhelmed with debts, and was thus forced, 
for the first time, to look into his accounts. He 
found that he would have only ten millions of 
sesterces (sestertium centies), a sum somewhat 
over three hundred thousand dollars, left after 
paying his debts ;] upon which, despairing of 
being able to satisfy the cravings of hunger from 
such a pittance, he forthwith put an end to his 
life by poison. But he was not forgotten. Sun- 
dry cakes (Apicia) and sauces long kept alive 
his memory ; Apion, the grammarian, composed 
a work upon his luxurious labors, and his name 
passed into a proverb in all matters connected 
with the pleasures of the table. — 3. A contem- 
porary of Trajan, sent to tins emperor, when 
he was in Parthia, fresh oysters, preserved by 
a skillful process of his own. The treatise we 
now possess, bearing the title C^elii Apicii de 
Opsoniis et Condimentis, sive de Re Culinaria 
Libri decern, is a sort of Cook and Confection- 
er's Manual, containing a multitude of receipts 
for cookery. It was probably compiled at a late 
period by some one who prefixed the name of 
Apicius, in order to insure the circulation of his 
book. — Editions : By Almeloveen, Amstelod., 
1709 ; and by Bernhold, Ansbach., 1800. 

Apidanus ('ATudavoc, Ion. 'Hirtdavoc), a river 



APIOL^E. 



APOLLO. 



in Thessaly, whicli receives the Enlpeus near 
Pharsalus, and empties into the Peneus. 

Apioljs, a town of Latium, destroyed by Tar- 
quinius Priscus. 

Apion ('Attiuv), a Greek grammarian, and a 
native of Oasis Magna in Egypt, studied at Alex- 
andrea, and taught rhetoric at Rome in the 
reigns of Tiberius and Claudius. In the reign 
of Caligula he left Rome, and in A.D. 38 he was 
sent by the inhabitants of Alexandrea at the 
head of an embassy to Caligula to bring forward 
complaints against the Jews residing in their 
city. Apion was the author of many works, all 
of which ai'e now lost [with the exception of a 
few fragments]. Of these the most celebrated 
were upon the Homeric poems. He is said not 
only to have made the best recension of the text 
of the poems, but to have written explanations 
of phrases and words in the form of a diction- 
ary (terete 'Oftijpucat). He also wrote a work 
on Egypt in five books, and a work against the 
Jews, to which Josephus replied in his treatise 
Against Apion. 

Apion, Ptolem^eus. Vid. Ptolem^eus, Api- 
on. 

Apis (JAmc). 1. Son of Phoroneus and La- 
odice, king of Argos, from whom Peloponnesus 
was called Apia : he ruled tyrannicallv, and was 
killed by Thelxion and Telchis.— 2. The Bull of 
Memphis, worshipped with the greatest rever- 
ence as a god among the Egyptians. The Egyp- 
tians believed that he was the offspring of a 
young cow, fructified by a ray from heaven. 
There were certain signs by which he was rec- 
ognized to be the god. It was requisite that 
he should be quite black, have a white square 
mark on the forehead, on his back a figure simi- 
lar to that of an eagle, have two kinds of hair in 
his tail, and on his tongue a knot resembling an 
insect called canthnrus. When all these signs 
were discovered, the animal was consecrated 
with great pomp, and was conveyed to Mem- 
phis, where he had a splendid residence, con- 
taining extensive walks and courts for his 
amusement. His birth-day, which was celebrat- 
ed every year, was his most solemn festival : it 
was a day of rejoicing for all Egypt. The god 
was allowed to hVe only a certain number of 
years, probably twenty-five. If he had not died 
before the expiration of that period, he was killed 
and buried in a sacred well, the place of which 
was unknown except to the initiated. But if 
he died a natural death, he was buried publicly 
and solemnly ; and as his birth filled all Egypt 
with joy and festivities, so his death threw the 
whole country into grief and mourning. The 
worship of Apis was originally nothing but the 
simple worship of the bull ; but in the course of 
time, the bull, like other animals, was regarded 
as a symbol, and Apis is hence identified with 
Osiris or the Sun. 

Apis PAthc : now Kasser Schama?) a city 
of Egypt on the coast of the Mediterranean, on 
the border of the countiy toward Libya, about 
one hundred stadia west of Paraetonium ; cele- 
brated for the worship of the god Apis. 

[Apisaox CAtrtorawv), of Phausius, slain 
by Eurypylus before Troy.— 2. Son of Hippasus, 
a leader of the Paeonians, slain by Lyeomedes 
before Troy.] 

Apobatemi ('AiToCad/ioi), a place in Argolis, 



[ on the sea, not far from Thyrea, where Danaus 
j is said to have landed. 

[AroBATHSA {'Airbfjadpa : now Boja), a place 

near Sestos, where Xerxes's bridge of boats 

ended.] 

Apodoti and AroDEOT^E('A7r6(5cj704 and 'Atto- 
doToi); a people iu the southeast of ^Etolia, be- 
tween the Evenus and Hylaethus. 

Apollinaris, Sidonius, Vid. Sidonius. 

[Apollinaris, Sulpicius. Vid. Sulpicius.] 

Apollinis Promontoriuji ('AttSXTluvoc dupov . 
now Cape Zibeeb or Cape Farina), a promontory 
of Zeugitana in Northern Africa, forming the 
western point of the Gulf of Carthage. 

[Apollinopolis ('Axoa/.uvoc ttoKlc). 1. Magna 
! tto'/ac fizydJ^n 'AttoXXovoc : now Edfou), the cap- 
i ital of the nome named after it, Apolloniates, in 
j Upper Egypt, on the west bank of the Nile. The 
j people of this city were haters and destroyers of 
j the crocodile. — 2. Parva ('ArcolXovog j] {unpd : 
now Kuss), a city of Upper Egypt, on the east 
bank of the Nile, in the Nomos Coptites, between 
Coptos and Thebes.] 

Apollo (' Att6?Jmv), one of the great divini- 
ties of the Greeks, son of Jupiter (Zeus) and 
Latona (Leto), and twin-brother of Diana (Ar- 
temis), was born in the Island of Delos, whither 
Latona (Leto) had fled from the jealous Juno 
(Hera). Vid. Leto. After nine days' labor, 
the god was born under a palm or olive tree at 
the foot of Mount Cynthus, and was fed by 
Themis with ambrosia and nectar. The pow- 
ers ascribed to Apollo are apparently of different 
kinds, but all are connected with one another, 
and may be said to be only ramifications of one 
and the same, as will be seen from the follow- 
ing classification. He is: 1. The god who pun- 
ishes, whence some of the ancients derived his 
name from dn6?.Xvfic, destroy. (iEsch., Agam^ 
1081.) As the god who punishes, he is repre- 
sented with bow and arrows, the gift of Vulcan 
(Hephaestus) ; whence his epithets, Enaroc, kna- 
epyoc, kKarrjBo'koc, kXvtoto^oc and dpyvporotjoc, 
arcitenens, &c. All sudden deaths were be- 
lieved to be the effect of the arrows of Apollo ; 
and with them he sent the plague into the camp 
of the Greeks. — 2. The god who affords help and 
wards off evil. As he had the power of punish- 
ing men, so he was also able to deliver men, if 
duly propitiated ; hence his epithets, ukegloc, 
uKeorop, u?<,e!;iKaKoc, Gurrjp, dTrorpoTcatoc, e7vi- 
KovpLoc, iarpofiavrig, opifer, sahdifer, (fee. From 
his being the god who afforded help, he is the 
father of jEsculapius, the god of the healing art, 
and was also identified in later times with 
Paeeon, the god of the healing art in Homer. 
Vid. P/EEon. — 3. The god of prophecy. Apollo 
exercised this power in his numerous oracles, and 
especially in that of Delphi. Vid. Diet, of Ant, 
art. Oraculum. He had also the power of 
communicating the gift of prophecy both to 
gods and men, and all the ancient seers and pro- 
phets are placed in some relationship to him. 
— 4. The god of song and music. We find him 
in the Ihad (i., 603) delighting the immortal 
gods with his phorminx ; and the Homeric 
bards derived their art of song either from 
Apollo or the Muses. Later traditions ascribed 
to Apollo even the invention of the flute and 
lyre, while it is more commonly related that he 
received the lyre from Mercury (Hermes). Re- 

75 



APOLLOCRATES. 



APOLLONIA. 



specting his musical contests, vid. Marsyas, 
Midas.— 5. TJie god who protects the flocks and 
cattle (vofitoc deog, from vo/io; or a meadow 
or pasture land). There are in Homer only a 
few allusions to this feature in the character of 
Apollo, but in later writers it assumes a very 
prominent form, and in the story of Apollo tend- 
ing the flocks of Admetus at Pherae in Thessaly, 
the idea reaches its height. — 6. The god who de- 
lights in the foundation of towns and the estab- 
lishment of civil constitutions. Hence a town or 
a colony was never founded by the Greeks with- 
out consulting an oracle of Apollo, so that in 
every case he became, as it were, their spiritual 
leader. — 7. The god of the Sun. In Homer, 
Apollo and Helios, or the Sun, are perfectly 
distinct, and his identification with the Sun, 
though almost universal among later writers, 
was the result of later speculations and of for- 
eign, chiefly Egyptian, influence. Apollo had 
more influence upon the Greeks than any other 
god. It may safely be asserted that the Greeks 
would never have become what they were with- 
out the worship of Apollo : in him the brightest 
side of the Grecian mind is reflected. Respect- 
ing his festivals, vid. Diet, of Ant, art. Apol- 
lonia, Thargelia, and others. In the religion 
of the early Romans there is no trace of the 
worship of Apollo. The Romans became ac- 
quainted with this divinity through the Greeks, 
and adopted all their notions and ideas about 
him from the latter people. There is no doubt 
that the Romans knew of his worship among the 
Greeks at a very early time, and tradition says 
that they consulted his oracle at Delphi, even 
before the expulsion of the kings. But the 
first time that we hear of his worship at Rome 
is in B.C. 430, when, for the purpose of avert- 
ing a plague, a temple was raised to him, and 
soon after dedicated by the consul, C. Julius. 
A second temple was built to him in 350. Dur- 
ing the second Punic war, in 212, the ludi Apol- 
linares were instituted in his honor. Vid. Diet, 
of Ant, art. Ludi Apollinares. His worship, 
however, did not form a very prominent part in 
the religion of the Romans till the time of Au- 
gustus, who, after the battle of Actium, dedicat- 
ed to him a portion of the spoils, built or embel- 
lished his temple at Actium, and founded a new 
one at Rome on the Palatine, and instituted 
quinquennial games at Actium. The most beau- 
tiful and celebrated among the extant repre- 
sentations of Apollo are the Apollo Belvedere 
at Rome, which was discovered in 1503 at Ret- 
tuno, and the Apollino at Florence. In the 
Apollo Belvedere, the god is represented with 
commanding but serene majesty ; sublime intel- 
lect and physical beauty are combined in the 
most wonderful manner. 

ApollocrXtes ('AitoXTMKpdTyc), elder son of 
Dionysius the Younger, was left by his father in 
command of the island and citadel of Syracuse, 
but was compelled by famine to surrender them 
to Dion, about B.C. 354. 

APOLLODORUS ('AlTOA/.ofiupor). 1. Of Amphip- 

olis, one of the generals of Alexander the 
Great, was intrusted in B.C. 331, together with 
Menes, with the administration of Babylon and 
of all the satrapies as far as Cilicia. — 2. Tyrant 
of Cassakdrea (formerly Potidsea), in the pen- 
insula of Pallene, obtained the supreme power 



in B.C. 379, and exercised it with the utmost 
cruelty. He was conquered and put to death 
by Antigonus Gonatas. — 3. Of Carystus, a 
comic poet, probably lived B.C. 300-260, and 
was one of the most distinguished of the poets 
of the new Attic comedy. It was from him that 
Terence took his Hecyra and Phormio.— 4. Of 
Gela in Sicily, a comic pcet and a contempo- 
rary of Menander, lived B.C. 340-290. He is 
frequently confounded with Apollcdorus of Ca- 
rystus. — 5. A Grammarian of Athens, son of 
Asclepiades, and pupil of Aristarchus and Panae- 
tius, flourished about B.C. 140. He wrote a 
great number cf worls, all of which have per- 
ished with the exception of his Bibliotheca. 
This work consists of three books, and is by far 
the best among the extant works of the kind. 
It contains a well-arranged account of the my- 
thology and the heroic age of Greece : it begins 
with the origin of the gods, and goes down to 
the time of Theseus, when the work suddenly 
breaks off. — Editions : By Heyne, Gottingen, 
1803, 2d ed.; by Clavier, Paris, 1805, with a 
French translation ; and by "Westermann in the 
Mythographi, Brunswick, 1843. Of the many- 
other works of Apollodorus, one of the most im- 
portant was a chronicle in iambic verses, com- 
prising the history of one thousand and forty 
years, from the destruction of Troy (1184) down 
to his own time, B.C. 143. — 6. Of Pergamus, a 
Greek rhetorician, taught rhetoric at Apollonia in 
his advanced age, and had as a pupil the young 
Octavius, afterward the Emperor Augustus. — 7. 
A painter of Athens, flourished about B.C. 408, 
with whom commenced a new period in the his- 
tory of the art. He made a great advance in 
coloring, and invented chiaroscuro. — 8. An ar- 
chitect of Damascus, lived under Trajan anr 
Hadrian, by the latter of whom he was put to 
death. — [9. Of Phalerum, one of the intimate 
friends of Socrates, and who was present at his 
death. — 10. Of Lemnos, a writer on agriculture 
previous to the time of Aristotle.] 

Apollonia ('A7ro?JMvla : , A'no?AovtdrT]g). 1. 
(Now Pollina or Pollona), an important town in 
Rlyria or New Epirus, not far from the mouth 
of the Aous, and sixty stadia from the sea. It 
was founded by the Corinthians and Corcyree- 
ans, and was equally celebrated as a place of 
commerce and learning : many distinguished 
Romans, among others the young Octavius, af- 
terward the Emperor Augustus, pursued their 
studies here. Persons travelling from Italy to 
Greece and the East, usually landed either at 
Apollonia or Dyrrhachium ; and the Via Egnatia, 
the great high road to the East, commenced at 
Apollonia, or, according to others, at Dyrrha- 
chium. Vid. Egnatia Via. — 2. (Now Polina), 
a town in Macedonia, on the Via Egnatia, be- 
tween Thessalonica and Amphipolis, and south 
of the Lake of Bolbe.— 3. (Now Sizeboli), a 
•town in Thrace on the Black Sea, with two 
harbors, a colony of Miletus, afterward called 
Sozopolis, whence its modern name : it had a 
celebrated temple of Apollo, from which Lucul- 
lus carried away a colossus of this god, and 
erected it on the Capitol at Rome. — 4. A castle 
or fortified town of the Locri Ozolas, near Nau- 
pactus. — 5. A town in Sicily, on the northern 
coast, of uncertain site. — 6. (Now Abullionte), a 
town in Bithynia, on the Lake Apolloniatis, 



APOLLONIATIS. 



APOLLONIUS. 



through which the River Rhyndacu3 flows.— 7. 
A town on the borders of Mysia and Lydia, be- 
tween Pergamus and Sardis. — 8. A town in 
Palestina, between Caesarea and Joppa. — 9. A 
town in Assyria, in the district of Apolloniatis, 
through which the Delas or Durus (now Diala) 
flows. — (10. Now Marza Susa), a town in Cy- 
renaica, and the harbor of Cyrene, one of the five 
towns of the Pentapolis in Libya: it was the 
birth-place of Eratosthenes. 

[Apolloniatis. Vid. Assyria, 1.] 

[Apollonidas ('ATroXhov'idac), a Greek poet 
under whose name there are thirty-one pieces 
extant in the Greek Anthology. He flourished 
under Augustus and Tiberius.] 

[Apollonides ('ATToHov'tdr/g, Dor. 'AttoX/mv- 
tdac). 1. Commander of the cavalry in Olyn- 
thus, who opposed Philip of Macedon, and pre- 
vented the surrender of the town to him. Philip, 
however, by his agents in Olynthus, procured 
his banishment. — 2. A Boeotian officer in the 
army of Cyrus the Younger, who was, after the 
death of Cyrus, deprived of his office, and de- 
graded to a menial condition. — 3. Of Chios, 
who betrayed Chios to the Persian general 
Memnon during Alexander's eastern expedi- 
tion : he was afterward taken and put in con- 
finement. — 4. A Stoic philosopher, friend of the 
younger Cato, with whom he conversed on the 
allowableuess of suicide before committing that 
act at Utica. — 5. A Greek physician and sur- 
geon, born at Cos, obtained reputation and hon- 
or at the Persian court under Artaxerxes Lon- 
gimanus. He became engaged in a disreputa- 
ble attempt, and was put to death by torture.] 

Apollonis ('AttoXTiuv'ic), a city in Lydia, Be- 
tween Pergamus and Sardis, named after Apol- 
lonis, the mother of King Eumenes. It was 
one of the twelve cities of Asia which were 
destroyed by an earthquake in the reign of Ti- 
berius (A.D. 17). 

Apollonius {'k-rro/./.uvios). 1. Of Alabanda 
in Caria, a rhetorician, taught rhetoric at Rhodes 
about B.C. 100. He was a very distinguished 
teacher of rhetoric, aud used to ridicule and de- 
spise philosophy. He was surnamed 6 MaXaKoc. 
and must be distinguished from the following. 
— 2. Of Alabanda, surnamed Molo, likewise a 
rhetorician, taught rhetoric at Rhodes, and also 
distinguished himself as a pleader in the courts 
of justice. In B.C. 81, when Sulla was dicta- 
tor, Apollonius came to Rome as ambassador 
of the Rhodians, on which occasion Cicero 
heard him ; Cicero also received instruction 
from Apollonius at Rhodes a few years later. — 
3. Son of Arcuebulus, a grammarian of Alex- 
andre^ in the first century of the Christian era, 
and a pupil of Didymus. He wrote an Homeric 
Lexicon, which is still extant, and, though much 
interpolated, is a work of great value. — Edi- 
tions: By Yilloison, Paris, 1773; by H. Tollius, 
Lugd. Bat,, 1788: and by Bekker, Berlin, 1833. 
— 3. Surnamed Dyscolus, " the ill-tempered," I 
a grammarian at Alexandrea, in the reigns of j 
Hadrian and Antoninus Pius (AD. 117-161), ! 
taught at Rome as well as Alexandrea. He j 
and his son Herodianus are called by Priscian ' 
the greatest of all grammarians. Apollonius | 
was the first who reduced grammar to any J 
thing like a system. Of his numerous works ] 
only four are extant. 1. Tlepl cvvrd^ug tov i 



j ?.6yov fitptjv, "De Coustructione Orationis," or 
J " De Ordinatione sive Construction Diotio- 
num," in four books ; edited by Fr. Sylburg, 
Frankf., 1590, and by I. Bekker, Berlin, 1817. 
2. Kepi avTuvv/ntac, u De Pronomiue ;" edited 
by L Bekker, Berlin, 1814. 3. Ilepi owdco/uuv, 
" De Conjunctionibus," and, 4. Uepl eTrip'p'v/uuTuv, 
|' De Adverbiis," printed in Bekker's Anecdot., 
ii., p. 477, <fec. Among the works ascribed to 
Apollonius by Suidas there is one, nepl Kareipevo- 
fieyng iaTopiac, on fictitious or forged histories : 
this has been erroneously supposed to be the 
same as the extant work 'laropiat &avfj.aolai t 
which purports to be written by an Apollonius 
(published by Westermann, Paradoxographi, 
Brunswick, 1839) ; but it is now admitted that 
the latter work was written by an Apollonius 
who is otherwise unknown. — 5. Perceus, from 
Perga in Pamphylia, one of the greatest mathe- 
maticians of antiquity, commonly called the 
" Great Geometer," was educated at Alexan- 
drea under the successors of Euclid, and flour- 
ished about B.C. 250-220. His most important 
work was a treatise on Conic Sections in eight 
books, of which the first four, with the com- 
mentary of Eutocius, are extant in Greek ; and 
all but the eighth in Arabic. We have also in- 
troductory lemmata to all the eight by Pappus. 
Edited by Halley, " Apoll. Perg. Conic, lib. viii.," 
<fec, Oxoa, 1710, fol. The eighth book is a 
conjectural restoration founded on the introduc- 
tory lemmata of Pappus. — 6. Rhodius, a poet 
and grammarian, son of Silleus or Illeus and 
Rhode, was born at Alexandrea, or, according 
to one statement, at Naucratis, and flourished 
in the reigns of Ptolemy Philopator and Ptolemy 
Epiphanes (B.C. 222-181). In his youth he was 
instructed by Callimachus ; but they afterward 
became bitter enemies. Their tastes were en- 
tirely different ; for Apollonius admired and imi- 
tated the simplicity of the ancient epic poets, 
and disliked and despised the artificial and learn- 
ed poetry of Callimachus. When Apollonius 
read at Alexandrea his poem on the Argonautic 
expedition (Argonautica), it did not meet with 
the approbation of the audience ; he attributed 
its failure to the intrigues of Callimachus, and 
revenged himself by writing a bitter epigram 
on Callimachus which is still extant. (Anth. 
Grcec, xi., 27 5.) Callimachus, in return, attack- 
ed Apollonius in his Ibis, which was imitated by 
Ovid in a poem of the same name. Apollonius 
now left Alexandrea and went to Rhodes, where 
he taught rhetoric with so much success, that 
the Romans honored him with their franchise : 
hence he was called the " Rhodian." He after- 
ward returned to Alexandrea, where he read a 
revised edition of his Argonautica with great 
applause. He succeeded Eratosthenes as chief 
librarian at Alexandrea, in the reign of Ptolemy 
Epiphanes, about B.C. 194, and appears to have 
held this office till his death. The Argonaut- 
ica, which consists of four books, and is still ex- 
tant, gives a straightforward and simple descrip- 
tion of the adventures of the Argonauts : it is a 
close imitation of the Homeric language and 
style, but exhibits marks of art and labor, aud 
thus forms, notwithstanding its many resem- 
blances, a contrast with the natural and easy 
flow of the Homeric poems. Among the Ro- 
mans the work was much read, and P. Teren- 

77 , 



APOLLONIUS. 



APPIANUS. 



tius Varro Atacinus acquired great reputation 
by his translation of it. The Argonautica of 
Valerius Flaccus is only a free imitation of 
it— Editions: By Brunck, Argentorat, 1780; 
by G. Schafer, Lips., 1810-13 ; by Wellauer, 
Lips., 1828. Apollonius wrote several other 
work's which are now lost.— 7. Tyanensis or 
Ttan^eus i. e., of Tyana in Cappadocia, a Py- 
thagorean philosopher, was born about four 
years before the Christian era. At a period 
when there was a general belief in magical 
powers, it would appear that Apollonius obtain- 
ed great influence by pretending to them ; and 
we may believe that his Life by Philostratus 
gives a just idea of his character and reputation, 
however inconsistent in its facts and absurd in 
its marvels. Apollonius, according to^ Philos- 
tratus, was of noble ancestry, and studied first 
under Euthydemus of Tarsus ; but, being dis- 
gusted at the luxury of the inhabitants, he re- 
tired to the neighboring town of iEgse, where 
he studied the whole circle of the Platonic, 
Skeptic, Epicurean, and Peripatetic philosophy, 
and ended by giving his preference to the Pyth- 
agorean. He devoted himself to the strictest 
asceticism, and subsequently travelled through- 
out the East, visiting Nineveh, Babylon, and 
India. On his return to Asia Minor, we first 
hear of his pretensions to miraculous power, 
founded, as it would seem, on the possession of 
some divine knowledge derived from the East. 
From Ionia he crossed over into Greece, and 
came thence to Rome, where he arrived just 
after an edict against magicians had been issued 
by Nero. He accordingly remained only a .short 
time at Rome, and next went to Spain and Af- 
rica ; at Alexandrea he was of assistance to 
Vespasian, who was preparing to seize the em- 
pire. The last journey of Apollonius was to 
^Ethiopia, whence he returned to settle in the 
Ionian cities. On the accession of Domitian, 
Apollonius was accused of exciting an insur- 
rection against the tyrant : he voluntarily sur- 
rendered himself, and appeared at Rome before 
the emperor ; but, as his destruction seemed 
impending, he escaped by the exertion of his 
supernatural powers. The last years of his life 
were spent at Ephesus, where he is said to have 
proclaimed the death of the tyrant Domitian at 
the instant it took place. Many of the won- 
ders which Philostratus relates in connection 
with Apollonius are a clumsy imitation of the 
Christian miracles. The proclamation of the 
birth of Apollonius to his mother by Proteus, 
and the incarnation of Proteus himself, the cho- 
rus of swans which sang for joy on the occa- 
sion, the casting out of devils, raising the dead, 
and healing the sick, the sudden disappearances 
and reappearances of Apollonius, his adventures 
in the cave of Trophonius, and the sacred voice 
which called him at his death, to which may be 
added his claim as a teacher having authority to 
reform the world, can not fail to suggest the 
parallel passages in the Gospel history, [from 
which they have evidently been borrowed.] 
"We know, too, that Apollonius was one among 
many rivals set up by the Eclectics to our Sa- 
viour, an attempt renewed by the English free- 
thinkers Blount and Lord Herbert Still it must 
be allowed that the resemblances are very gen- 
eral, and, on the whole, it seems probable that 
78 



the life of Apollonius was not written with a 
controversial aim, as the resemblances, although 
real, only indicate that a few things were bor- 
rowed, and exhibit no trace of a systematic 
parallel. Vid. Philostratus. — 8. Of Tyre, a 
Stoic philosopher, who lived in the reign of 
Ptolemy Auletes, wrote a history of the Stoic 
philosophy from the time of Zeno. — 9. Apollo- 
nius and Tauriscus of Tralles, were two broth- 
ers, and the sculptors of the group which is com- 
monly known as the Farnese bull, representing 
the punishment of Dirce by Zethus and Amphi- 
on. Vid. Dirge. It was taken from Rhodes to 
Rome by Asinius Pollio, and afterward placed in 
the baths of Caracalla, where it was dug up in 
the sixteenth century, and deposited in the Far- 
nese palace. It is now at Naples. Apollonius 
and Tauriscus probably flourished in the first cen- 
tury of the Christian era. 

Apollophanes (' ' k-xoAAofydvrio), a poet of the 
i old Attic comedy, of whose comedies a few frag- 
' ments are extant, lived about B.C. 400. [The 
I fragments are collected in Meineke's Fragm. Com, 
j Grcec, vol. i., p. 482-484, edit, minor.] 

Aponus or Aponi Fons (now Abano), warm 
j medicinal springs near Patavium, hence called 
j Aquae Patavinse, were much frequented by the 
; sick. 

Appia or Apia (A-anta, Ania), a city of Phry- 
I gia Pacatiana, 

j Appia Via, the most celebrated of the Roman 
i roads (regina viarum, Stat., Silv., ii., 2, 12,), was 
! commenced by Appius Claudius Cascus when 
j censor, B.C. 319, and was the great line of com- 
| munication between Rome and Southern Italy. 
It issued from the Porta Capena, and, passing 
I through Aricia, Tres Tabernce, Appii Forum, 
I Tarracina, Fundi, Formice, Minturnce, Sinuessa, 
j and Casilinum, terminated at Capua, but was 
j eventually extended through Calatia and Cau- 
| dium to Beneventum, and finally thence through 
' Venusia, Tarentum, and Uria, to Brundisium. 

Appianus ('Aniuavoc), the Roman historian, 
was born at Alexandrea, and lived at Rome 
during the reigns of Trajan, Hadrian, and An- 
toninus Pius. He wrote a Roman history 
i ('PofiaiKu, or Pofia'iKT) iaropia) in twenty-four 
I books, arranged, not synchronistically, but eth- 
nographically, that is, he did not relate the his- 
tory of the Roman empire as a whole in chro- 
nological order, but he gave a separate account 
j of the affairs of each country, till it vvas finallv 
incorporated in the Roman empire. The sub- 
! jects of the different books were : 1. The king- 
ly period. 2. Italy. 3. The Samnites. 4. The 
Gauls or Celts. 5. Sicily and the other islands. 
6. Spain. 7. Hannibal's wars. 8. Libya, Car- 
thage, and Numidia, 9. Macedonia. 10. Greece 
and the Greek states in Asia Minor. 11. Syria 
and Parthia. 12. The war with Mithradates. 
13-21. The civil wars, in nine books, from 
those of Marius and Sulla to the battle of Ac- 
tium. 22. 'EKarovraena, comprised the history 
of a hundred years, from the battle of Actium 
to the beginning of Vespasian's reign. 23. The 
wars with Blyria. 24. Those with Arabia. 
We possess only eleven of these complete, 
namely, the sixth, seventh, eighth, eleventh, 
twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth, fifteenth, six- 
teenth, seventeenth, and twenty-third : there 
are fragments of several of the others. The- 



APPIAS. 



APULIA. 



Parthian history, which has come down to us 
as part of the eleventh book, is not a work of 
Appian, but merely a compilation from Plu- 
tarch's Lives of Antony and Crassus. Appian's 
work is a compilation. His style is clear and 
simple ; but he possesses few merits as an his- 
torian, and he frequently makes the most ab- 
surd blunders. Thus, for instance, he places 
Saguntum on the north of the Iberus, and states 
that it takes only half a day to sail from Spain 
to Britain. The best edition is that of Schweig- 
hauser, Lips., 1785. 

Appias, a nymph of the Appian well, which 
was situated near the temple of Venus Genetrix 
in the forum of Julius Caesar. It was surrounded 
by statues of nymphs, called Appiades. 

Appii Forum. Vid. Forum Appii. 

[Appiol^e, an old city of Latium, said to have 
been taken and burned by Tarquinius Priscus, 
and to have furnished from its spoils the sums 
necessary for the construction of the Circus 
Maximus.] 

[Appius Claudius. Vid. Claudius.] 

Appuleius or Apuleius, of Medaura in Africa, 
was born about A.D. 130, of respectable parents. 
He received the first rudiments of education at 
Carthage, and afterward studied the Platonic 
philosophy at Athens. He next travelled ex- 
tensively, visiting Italy, Greece, and Asia, and 
becoming initiated in most mysteries. At length 
he returned home, but soon afterward undertook 
a new journey to Alexandrea. On his way 
thither he was taken ill at the town of 02a, and 
was hospitably received into the house of a 
young man, Sicinius Pontianus, whose mother, 
a very rich widow of the name of Pudentilla, 
he married. Her relatives, being indignant that 
so much wealth should pass out of the family, 
impeached Appuleius of gaining the affections 
of Pudentilla by charms and magic spells. The 
cause was heard at Sabrata before Claudius 
Maximus, proconsul of Africa, AD. 173, and 
the defence spoken by Appuleius is still extant. 
Of his subsequent career we know little : he 
occasionally declaimed in public with great ap- 
plause. The most important of the extant works 
of Appuleius are, 1. Metamorphoseon seu de Asino 
Aureo Libri XI. This celebrated romance, to- 
gether with the Asinus of Lucian, is said to have 
been founded upon a work bearing the same 
title by a certain Lucius of Patrae. It seems to 
have been intended simply as a satire upon the 
hypocrisy and debauchery of certain orders of 
priests, the frauds of juggling pretenders to su- 
pernatural powers, and the general profligacy 
of public morals. There are some, however, 
who discover a more recondite meaning, and 
especially Bishop Warburton, in his Divine Le- 
gation of Moses, who has at great length en- 
deavored to prove that the Golden Ass was 
written with the view of recommending the Pa- 
gan religion in opposition to Christianity, and 
especially of inculcating the importance of initia- 
tion into the purer mysteries. The well-known 
and beautiful episode of Cupid and Psyche is in- 
troduced in the fourth, fifth, and sixth books. 
This, whatever opinion we may form of the prin- 
cipal narrative, is evidently an allegorv, and is 
generally understood to shadow forth "the pro- 
gress of the soul to perfection. II. FLoridorum 
Libri IV. An Anthology, containing select ex- 



tracts from various orations and dissertation^ 
collected, probably, by some admirer. III. De 
Deo Socratis Liber. IV. De Dogmate Platonic 
Libri tres. The first book contains some ac- 
count of the speculative doctrines of Plato, the 
second of his morals, the third of his logic. V. 
De Mundo Liber. A translation of the work 
Tzepl Koofiov, at one time ascribed to Aristotle. 
VI. Apologia sive De Magia Liber. The oration 
described above, delivered before Claudius Max- 
imus. The best edition of the whole works of 
Appuleius is by Hildebrand, Lips., 1842. 

Appuleius Saturninus. Vid. Saturninus. 

Apries ('Airpcijc, 'Anplag), a king of Egypt, 
the Pharaoh-Hophra of Scripture, succeeded his 
father Psammis, and reigned B.C. 595-570. Af- 
ter an unsuccessful attack upon Cyrene he was 
dethroned and put to death by Amasis. 

Apronius. 1. Q., one of the worst instru- 
ments of Verres in oppressing the Sicilians. — 
2. L., served under Drusus (A.D. 14) and Ger- 
manicus (15) in Germany. In 20 he was pro- 
consul of Africa, and praetor of Lower Germany, 
where he lost his life in a war against the Frisii. 
Apronius had two daughters, one of whom was 
married to Plautius Silvanus, the other to Len- 
tulus Gaetulicus, consul in 26. 

[Aprusa (now Ausa), a river of Umbria in 
Italy, flowing near Ariminum.] 

[Apseudes ('Afevdi/js), a Nereid, mentioned in 
the Iliad of Homer.] 

Apsil^e ('AipL?t,ai), a Scythian people in, Col- 
chis, north of the River Phasis. 

Apsines ('Aipcvrjc), of Gadara in Phoenicia, a 
Greek Sophist and rhetorician, taught rhetoric 
at Athens about A.D. 235. Two of his works 
are extant : Ilepl tC>v fiepQv rov 7to?utikov \byov 
Texvij, which is much interpolated ; and Ilepl 
t£)v , taxf1l ia ~ ia l 1 ^ vuv 7rpo6XTjftuTO)v, both of which 
are printed in Walz., Rhetor. Grceci, vol. ix., p. 
465, sqq., and p. 534, sqq. 

[Apsinthii ('Aftvdtoi), a people of Thrace, 
said by Herodotus to border on the Thracian 
Chersonesus.] 

Apsus (now Crevasta), a river in Blyria (Nova 
Epirus), which flows into the Ionian Sea. 

Apsyrtus. Vid. Absyrtus. 

Apta Julia (now Apt), chief town of the Vul- 
gientes in Gallia Narbonensis, and a Roman 
colony. 

Aptera (A7TTepa : Avrrepalog : now Pala>o- 
kastron on the Gulf of Suda), a town on the west 
coast of Crete, eighty stadia from Cydonia.. 

Apuani, a Ligurian people on the Macra, were 
subdued by the Romans after a long resistance 
and transplanted to Samnium, B.C. 180. 

Apuleius. Vid. Appuleius. 

Apulia (Apulus), included, in its widest sig- 
nification, the whole of the southeast of Italy 
from the River Frento to the promontory Iapy- 
gium, and was bounded on the north by the 
Frentani, on the east by the Adriatic, on the 
south by the Tarentine Gulf, and on the west 
by Samnium and Lucania, thus including the 
modern provinces of Bari, Otranto, and Capi- 
tanata, in the kingdom of Naples. Apulia, in its 
narrower sense, was the country east of Sam- 
nium on both sides of the Aufidus, the Daunia 
and Peucetia of the Greeks : the whole of the 
southeast part was called Calabria by the Ro- 
mans. The Greeks gave the name of Daunia 
79 



AQU^E. 



ARA UBIORUM. 



to the north part of the country from the Frento 
to the Aufidus, of Peucetia to the country from 
the Aufidus to Tarentum and Brundisium, and 
of Iapvgia or Messapia to the whole of the re- 
maining south part, though they sometimes in- 
cluded under Iapygia all Apulia in its widest 
meaning. The northwest of Apulia is a plain, 
but the south part is traversed by the east branch 
of the Apennines, and has only a small tract of 
land on the coast on each side of the mountains. 
The country was very fertile, especially in the 
neighborhood of Tarentum, and the mountains 
afforded excellent pasturage. The population 
•was of a mixed nature : they were, for the most 
part of Rlyrian origin, and are said to have set- 
tled in the country under the guidance of Iapyx, 
Dauiius, and Peucetius, three sons of an Illyr- 
ian king, Lycaon. Subsequently many towns 
were founded by Greek colonists. The Apu- 
lians joined the Samnites against the Romans, 
and became subject to the latter on the conquest 
of the Samnites. 

Aqu^e, the name given by the Romans to 
many medical springs and bathing-places. L 
Aurelle or Coloxia Aurelia Aquexsis (now 
Baden-Baden). 2. Galeae or Solis (now Bath) 
in Britain. 3. C utilise, mineral springs in Sam- 
niuni near the ancient town of Cutilia, which 
perished in early times, and east of Reate. 
There was a celebrated lake in its neighborhood 
with a floating island, which was regarded as 
the umbilicus or centre of Italy. Vespasian 
died at this place. 4. Mattiac^e or Foxtes 
Mattiaci (now Wiesbaden), in the land of the 
Mattiaci in Germany. 5. Patavix.e (rid. Apoxj 
Foxs). 6. Sextee (now Aix), a Roman colony 
in Gallia Xarbonensis, founded by Sextius Cal- 
vinus. B.C. 122 ; its mineral waters were long 
celebrated, but were thought to have lost much 
of their efficacy in the time of Augustus. N~ear 
this place Marius defeated the Teutoni, B.C. 
102. 7. Statiell^: (now Acqui), a town of the 
Statielli in Liguria, celebrated for its warm 
baths. 

Aqu^e, in Africa. 1. (Xow Meriga, ruins), in 
the interior of Mauretania Cassariensis. — 2. Ca- 
lidj: (now Gurbos or Hammam V Enf), on the 
Gulf of Carthage. — 3. Regime (now Hammam 
Truzza), in the north part of Byzacena. — 4. 
Tacapitaxjs (now Eammat-el-Khabs), at the 
southern extremity of Byzacena, close to the 
large city of Tacape (no\r" Khabs). 

Aqcila. L Of Pontus, translated the Old 
Testament into Greek in the reign of Hadrian, 
probably about A.D. 130. Only a few fragments 
remain, which have been published in the edi- 
tions of the Hexapla of Origen. — 2. Julius 
Aquila, a Roman jurist quoted in the Digest, 
probably lived under or before the reign of Sep- 
timius Sevems, A.D. 193-198.— 3. L. Poxtius 
Aquiea, a friend of Cicero, and one of Caesar's 
murderers, was killed at the battle of Mutina. 
B.C. 43. — 1. Aquila Romaxus, a rhetorician who 
probably lived in the third centurv after Christ, 
wrote a small work entitled Be Figuris Senten- 
tiarum et Elocutionis, which is usually printed 
with Rutilius Lupus.— Editions ; Bv Ruhnken. 
Lugd. Bat, 1768. reprinted with additional notes 
by Frotscher, Lips., 1831. 

Aquilaria (now Alkoicareah). a town on the 
coast of Zeus^tana in Africa, on the we=t side 
80 



of Hermasum Promontorium (now Cape Bon), 
the eastern extremity of the Gulf of Carthage, 
It was a good landing-place in summer. 

Aquileia (Aquileiensis : now Aquileia or 
Aglar), a town in Gallia Transpadana, at the 
very top of the Adriatic, between the rivers 
Sontius and ISatiso. about sixty stadia from the 
sea. It was founded by the Romans in B.C. 
182 as a bulwark against the northern barbari- 
ans, and is said to have derived its name from 
the favorable omen of an eagle {aquila) appear- 
ing to the colonists. As it was the key of Italy 
on the northeast, it was made one of the strong- 
est fortresses of the Romans. From its posi- 
tion it became also a most flourishing place of 
commerce : the Via /Emilia was continued to 
this town, and from it all the roads to Rae- 
tia, Isoricum, Pannonia, Istria, and Dalmatia 
branched off. It was taken and completely de- 
stroyed by Attila in A.D. 452 : its inhabitants 
escaped to the Lagoons, where Venice was after- 
ward built. 

AquillIa Via, began at Capua, and ran south 
through Nola and Nuceria to Salernum ; from 
thence it ran through the very heart of Luca- 
nia and the country of the Bruttii, passing Neru- 
lum, Interamnia, Cosentia, Vibo, and Medina, and 
terminated at Rhegium. 

Aquillits or Aquilius. 1. M\, consul B.C. 
129, finished the war against Aristonicus, son 
of Eumenes of Pergamus. On his return to 
Rome he was accused of maladministration in 
his province, but was acquitted by bribing the 
judges. — 2. M'., consul in B.C. 101, conquered 
the slaves in Sicily, who had revolted under 
Athenion. In 9 S he was accused of maladmin- 
istration in Sicily, but was acquitted. In 88 he 
went into Asia as one of the consular legates 
in the Mithradatic war : he was defeated, and 
handed over by the inhabitants of Mytilene to 
Mithradates, who put him to death by pouring 
molten gold down his throat. 

Aqulllics Gallus. Vid. Gallus. 

Aquiloxla (Aquilonus), a town of Samnium, 
east of Bovianum, destroyed by the Romans in 
the Samnite wars. 

Aquixum (Aquinas : now Aquino), a town of 
the Volscians, east of the River Melpis, in a fer- 
tile country ; a Roman municipium, and after- 
ward a colony ; the birth-place of Juvenal ; cel- 
ebrated for its purple dye. (Hor., Ep., i., 10, 

Aquitaxia. 1. The country of the Aquitani, 
extended from the Garumna (now Garonne) to 
the Pyrenees, and from the ocean to Gallia Nar- 
bonensis : it was first conquered by Caesar's le- 
gates, and again upon a revolt of the inhabitants 
in the time of Augustus. — 2. The Roman prov- 
ince of Aquitania, formed in the reign of Au- 
gustus, was of much wider extent and was 
bounded on the north by the Ligeris (now Loire), 
on the west by the ocean, on the south by the 
Pyrenees, and on the east by the Mons Ceven- 
na, which separated it from Gallia Narbonensis. 
The Aquitani were one of the three races which 
inhabited Gaul ; they were of Iberian or Span- 
ish origin, and differed from the Gauls and Bel- 
gians in language, customs, and physical pecu- 
liarity. 

Aea Ubiorum, a place in the neighborhood of 
Bonn in Germany, perhaps Godesberg : others 



ARABIA. 



ARABIA. 



suppose it to be another name of Colonia Agrip- 
pina (now Cologne). 

Arabia (v 'ApaSia : "Apaf, pi. "Apa&eg, 'Apatioi, 
Arabs, Arabus, pL Arabes, Arab! : now Arabia), 
a country at the southwest extremity of Asia, 
forming a large peninsula, of a sort of hatchet- 
shape, bouuded on the west by the Arabicus 
Sinus (now Bed Sea), on the south and south- 
east by the Erythr^eum Mare (now Gulf of 
Bab-el-Mavdcb and Indian Ocean), and on the 
northeast by the Persicus Sinus (now Persian 
Gulf). On the north or land side its bounda- 
ries were somewhat indefinite, but it seems to 
have included the whole of the desert country 
between Egypt and Syria on the one side, and 
the banks of the Euphrates on the other ; and it 
was often considered to extend even further on 
both sides, so as to include, on the east, the 
southern part of Mesopotamia along the left 
bank of the Euphrates, and on the west, the 
part of Palestine east of the Jordan, and the 
part of Egypt between the Red Sea and the 
eastern margin of the Nile valley, which, even 
as a part of Egypt, was called Arabiee Nomos. 
In the stricter seuse of the name, which confines 
it to the peninsula itself, Arabia may be consid- 
ered as bounded on the north by a line from the 
head of the Red Sea (at Suez) to the mouth of 
the Tigris (now Shat-el- Arab), which just about 
coincides with the parallel of thirty degrees north 
latitude. It was divided into three parts : (1.) 
Arabia Petr^ea (# Tterpata 'Apafila: northwest 
part of El-Hejaz), including the triangular piece 
of laud between the two heads of the Red Sea 
(the peuiusula of Mouut Sinai) and the country 
immediately to the north and northeast, and 
called, from its capital, Petra, while the literal 
signification of the name, " Rocky Arabia," agrees 
also with the nature of the country : (2.) Ara- 
bia Deserta (now El-Jebel), including the great 
Syrian Desert, and a portion of the interior of 
the Arabian peninsula : (3.) Arabia Felix (now 
El-Nejed, El-Hejaz, El- Yemen, El-Hadramaut, 
Oman, and El-Hejer) consisted of the whole 
eouutry not included in the other two divisions ; 
the ignorance of the aucients respecting the 
interior of the peninsula leading them to class 
it with Arabia Felix, although it properly be- 
longs to Arabia Deserta, for it consists, so far as 
it is known, of a sandy desert of steppes and 
table land, interspersed with Oases ( Wadis), and 
fringed with mountains, between which and the 
sea, especially on the western coast, lies a belt 
of low land (called Teliamah), intersected by 
numerous mouutaiu torrents, which irrigate the 
strips of laud on their banks, and produce that 
fertility which caused the ancients to apply 
the epithet of Felix to the whole peninsula. 
The width of the Tehamah is, in some places 
on the western coast, as much as from one to 
two days' journey, but on the other sides it 
is very narrow, except at the eastern end of 
the peninsula (about Musical in Oman), where 
for a small space its width is again a day's 
journey. The inhabitants of Arabia were of 
the race called Semitic or Aramaean, and closely 
related to the Israelites. The northwestern dis- 
trict (Arabia Petraea) was inhabited by the 
various tribes which constantly appear in Jew- 
ish history : the Amalekites, Midiauites, Edom- 
ites, Moabites, Ammonites, <fcc. The Greeks 
6 



; and Romans called the inhabitants by the name 
of Nabath^ei, whose capital was Petra. The 
people of Arabia Deserta were called Arabes 
Scenitae (Znnvirai), from their dwelling in tents, 
and Arabes Nomades (No^adec), from their 
mode of life, which was that of wandering 
herdsmen, who supported themselves partly by 
their cattle, and to a great extent, also, by the 
plunder of caravans, as their unchanged de- 
scendants, the Bedouins or Bedawee, still do. 
The people of the Teliamah were (and are) of 
the same race ; but their position led them at 
an early period to cultivate both agriculture 
and commerce, and to build considerable cities. 
Their chief tribes were known by the follow- 
ing names, beginning south of the Nabathaei, 
on the western coast : the Thamydeni and Miuaei 
(in the southern part of Hejaz), in the neigh- 
borhood of Macoraba (now Mecca) ; the Sabsei 
and Homeritae, in the southwestern part of the 
peninsula (now Yemen); on the southeastern 
coast, the Chatramolita? and Adramitae (in El- 
Hadramaut, a country very little known, even 
to the present day) ; on the eastern and north- 
eastern coast, the Omanitae and Daracheni (in 
Oman, and El-Ahsa or El-Hejer). From the 
earliest known period a considerable traffic 
was carried on by the people in the north (espe- 
cially the Nabathaei) by means of caravans, 
and by those on the southern and eastern coast 
by sea, in the productions of their own country 
(chiefly gums, spices, and precious stones), and 
in those of India and Arabia. Besides this 
peaceful intercourse with the neighboring coun- 
tries, they seem to have made military expe- 
ditions at an early period, for there can be no 
doubt that the Hyksos or " Shepherd-kings," 
who for some time ruled over Lower Egypt, 
were Arabians. On the other hand, they have 
successfully resisted all attempts to subjugate 
them. The alleged conquests of some of the 
Assyrian kings could only have affected small 
portions of the country on the north. Of the 
Persian empire we are expressly told that they 
were independent Alexander the Great died 
too soon even to attempt his contemplated 
scheme of circumnavigating the peninsula and 
subduing the inhabitants. The Greek kings of 
Syria made unsuccessful attacks upon the Naba- 
thaei. Under Augustus, ^Elius Gallus, assisted 
by the Nabathaei, made an expedition into Ara- 
bia Felix, but was compelled to retreat into 
Egypt to save his army from famine and the 
climate. Under Trajan, Arabia Petraea was 
conquered by A. Cornelius Palma (A.D. 107), 
and the country of the Nabathaei became a Ro- 
man province. Some partial and temporary 
footing was gained at a much later period, on the 
southwestern coast, by the ^Ethiopians ; and 
both in this direction and from the north Ohris- 
tif-nity was early introduced into the country, 
where it spread to a great extent, and continued 
to exist side by side with the old religion (which 
was Sabaism, or the worship of heavenly bo- 
dies), and with some admixture of Judaism, 
until the total revolution produced by the rise 
of Mohammedanism in 622. While maintain- 
ing their independence, the Arabs of the Desert 
have also preserved to this day their ancient 
form of government, which is strictly patri- 
I archal, under the heads of tribes and families 

81 



ARABICUS SDOJS. 



ARATUS. 



(Emirs and Sheiks). In the more settled dis- 
tricts, the patriarchal authority passed into the j 
hands of kings, and the people were divided | 
into the several castes of scholars, warriors, j 
agriculturists, merchants, and mechanics. The 
Mohammedan revolution lies beyond our limits. 

Arabicus Soros (6 'Apa6ucde koa-oc: now j 
Red Sea), a long narrow gulf between Africa 
and Arabia, connected on the south with the 
Indian Ocean by the Angustiae Divae (now Straits 1 
of Bab-el-Mandeb), and on the north divided into 
two heads by the peninsula of Arabia Petraea 
(now Peninsula of Sinai), the east of which was 
called Sinus iElanites or iElaniticus (now Gulf 
of Akaba), and the west Sinus Heroopolites or 
Heroopoliticus (now Gulf of Suez). The upper 
part of the sea was known at a very early pe- 
riod, but it was not explored in its whole ex- 
tent till the maritime expeditions of the Ptole- j 
mies. Respecting its other name, see Eryth- j 
e^eum Mare. 

Arabis ('ApaGic, also 'Apd6ioc, 'Aptie, 'Apra- 1 
tic, and 'Aprddioc: now Poorally or Agbor), a 
river of Gedrosia, falling into the Indian Ocean 
1000 stadia (100 geographical miles) west of the 
mouth of the Indus, and dividing the Oritae on i 
its west from the Arabltae or Arbies on its 
east, who had a city named Arbis on its eastern ; 
bank. 

Arabit^e. Vid. Arabis. 

[Arabics (Scholasticus), a Grecian poet, prob- 
ably in the time of Justinian, who has left seven j 
epigrams, which are found in the Anthologia ; 
Graeca.] 

Arachx^etm: ('Apaxvalov), a mountain form- ! 
ing the boundarv between Argolis and Corin- j 
thia. 

Arachxe, a Lydian maiden, daughter of Id- 
mon of Colophon, a famous dyer in purple. I 
Arachne excelled in the art of weaving, and, | 
proud of her talent, ventured to challenge Mi- j 
nerva (Athena) to compete with her. Arachne | 
produced a piece of cloth in which the amours of 
the gods were woven, and as Minerva (Athena) j 
could find no fault with it, she tore the work to ! 
pieces. Arachne, in despair, hung herself : the \ 
goddess loosened the rope and saved her life, but 1 
the rope was changed into a cobweb and Arachne ! 
herself into a spider (dpdxvn), the animal most | 
odious to Minerva (Athena). (Ov., Met. vL, 1, 
seq.) This fable seems to suggest the idea that ; 
man learned the art of weaving from the spider, 
and that it was invented in Lydia. 

Arachosia ('ApaxuGta : 'Apaxuroi or -drat : i 
southeastern part of Afghanistan and northeast- \ 
em part of Beloochistan), one of the extreme east- 
ern provinces of the Persian (and afterward of the 
Parthian) empire, bounded on the east by the ! 
Indus, on the north by the Paropamisadae, on the 
west by Drangiana, and on the south by Gedro- 
sia. It was a fertile country, watered by the ' 
River Arachotus, with a town of the same name, 
built by Semiramis, and which was the capital 
of the province until the foundation of Alexan- 
dres The shortest road from Persia to India 
passed through Arachosia. 

Arachotus. Vid. Arachosia. 

Arachthes or Aretho ('Apaxdoc or 'Apeduv : 
now Arta), a river of Epirus, rises in Mount ; 
Lacmon or the Tymphean Mountains, and flows ! 
into the Ambracian Gulf, south of Ambracia^ 
82 



it is deep and difficult to cross, and navigable up • 
to Ambracia. 

[Aracia ('Apaiita), or Alexandri Insula (now 
Charedsch or Karek), an island in the Persian 
Gulf, opposite the coast of Persis, containing a 
mountain sacred to Neptune.] 

Aracyxthcs ('Apdnvvdoc : now Zigos), a mount- 
ain on the southwest coast of JStolia, near Pleu- 
ron, sometimes placed in Acarnania. Later 
writers erroneously make it a mountain between 
Bceotia and Attica, and hence mention it in con- 
nection witb Amphion, the Boeotian hero. (Pro- 
pert, in., 13, 41 ; Actceo (i. e. Attico) Aracyntho. 
Virg., Eel, ii., 24.) 

Aradus ( "Apadoc : 'Apddioc, Aradius : in Old 
Testament, Arvad : now Ruad), an island off 
the coast of Phoenicia, at the distance of twenty 
stadia (two geographical miles), with a city which 
occupied the whole surface of the island, seven 
stadia in circumference, which was said to have 
been founded by exiles from Sidon, and which 
was a very flourishing place under its own kings, 
under the Seleucidae, and under the Romans. 
It possessed a harbor on the main land, called 
Antaradus. 

Ar.e Phil^enorum. Vid, Phil^exorum A&& 

Arjsthyrea ('Apatdvpia), daughter of Aras> 
an autochthon who was believed to have built 
Arantea, the most ancient town in Phliasia- 
After her death, her brother Aoris called the 
country of Phliasia Araethyrea, in honor of his, 
sister. 

ArXphex ('Apa&rjv : 'Apa<j>r/vioc, 'Apa^vodev : 
now Rafina), an Attic demus belonging to the 
tribe .zEgeis, on the east of Attica, north of the 
River Erasinus, not far from its mouth. 

Arar or Araris (now Saone), a river of GauL 
rises in the Vosges, receives the Dubis (now 
Doubs) from the east, after which it becomes 
navigable, and flows with a quiet stream into the 
Rhone at Lugdunum (now Lyon). In the time 
of Ammianus (A.D. 370) it was also called Sau- 
conna, and in the Middle Ages Sangona, whence 
its modern name Saone. 

[Ararexe (' Apapvvrj), a barren district of 
Arabia Felix, inhabited by nomad tribes, through 
which ^EHus Gallus had to make his way in his 
unsuccessful attempt to subjugate Arabia.] 

Araros ('Apapuc), an Athenian poes of the 
Middle Comedy, son of Aristophanes, flourished. 
B.C. 375. [The fragments of his comedies are 
collected in Meineke's Fragm. Comic. Grcec, voL 
i., p. 630-632, edit, minor.] 

Ai as. Vid. Araethyrea. 

Araspes ('ApdciTT/c), a Mede, and a friend of 
the elder Cyrus, is one of the characters in Xen- 
ophon's Cyropasdia. He contends with Cyrus 
that love has no power over him, but shortly af- 
terward refutes himself by falling in love with 
Panthea, whom Cyrus had committed to his 
charge. Vid. Abradatas. 

Aratus ("Aparog). 1. The celebrated general, 
of the Aehasans, son of Clinias, was born at 
Sicyon, B.C. 271. On the murder of his father 
by Abaxtidas, Aratus, who was then a child, was^ 
conveyed to Argos, where he was brought up. 
When he had reached the age of twenty, he 
gained possession of his native city, B.C. 251, 
deprived the usurper Xicoeles of his power, and 
united Sicyon to the Achaean league, which 
gained, in consequence, a great accession o£ 



ARAURA. 



ARCADIA 



power. Vid. Achjsi. In 245 he was elected 
geueral of the league, which office he frequently 
held in subsequent years. Through his influ- 
ence a great number of the Greek cities joined 
the league ; but he excelled more in negotiation 
than in war, and in his war with the ^Etolians 
and Spartans he was often defeated. In order 
to resist these enemies, he cultivated the friend- 
ship of Antigonus Doson, king of Macedonia, 
and of his successor Philip ; but as Philip was 
evidently anxious to make himself master of all 
Greece, dissensions erose between him and Ara- 
tus, and the latter was eventually poisoned in 
213, by the king's order. Divine honors were 
paid to him by his countrymen, and an annual 
festival ('Apdreia, vid. Diet, of Antiq.) establish- 
ed. Aratus wrote Commentaries, being a his- 
tory of his own times down to B.C. 220, at 
which point Polybius commenced his history. 
— 2. Of Soli, afterward Pompeiopolis, in Cilicia, 
or (according to one authority) of Tarsus, flour- 
ished B.C. 270. and spent all the latter part of 
his life at the court of Antigonus Gonatas, king 
of Macedonia. He wrote two astronomical po- 
ems, entitled Phamomena ($aiv6fieva), consisting 
of 732 verses, and Diosemeia (Aioav/uela), of 422. 
The design of the Phenomena is to give an in- 
troduction to the knowledge of the constella- 
tions, with the rules for their risings and set- 
tings. The Diosemeia consists of prognostics 
of the weather from astronomical phenomena, 
with an account of its effects upon auimals. It 
appears to be an imitation of Hesiod, and to 
have been imitated by Virgil in some parts of 
the Georgics. The style of these two poems is 
distinguished by elegance and accuracy, but it 
wants originality and poetic elevation. That 
they became very popular both in the Grecian 
and Roman world (cum sole et luna semper Ara- 
tus erit, Ov., Am., i., 15, 16), is proved by the 
number of commentaries and Latin translations. 
Parts of three poetical Latin translations are 
preserved. One written by Cicero when very 
young, one by C;esar Germauicus, the grand- 
son of Augustus, and one by Festus Avienus. 
— Editions. [Most copious and complete, by 
Buhle, Lips., 1793-1801, 2 vols. ; later, with re- 
vised text], by Voss, Heidelb., 1824, with a Ger- 
man poetical version; by Buttmann, Berol., 
1826 ; and by Bekker, Berol., 1828. 

[Araura (now St. Tibcri), earlier Cessero, a 
town of the Volcsc Arecomici, on the Arauris, 
in Gallia Narbonensis.] 

Arauris (now Hcrault), erroneously Rauraris 
in Strabo, a river in Gallia Narbonensis, rises 
m Mount Cevenna, and flows into the Mediter- 
ranean. 

Arausio (now Orange,) a town of the Cavari 
or Cavares, and a Roman colony, in Gallia Nar- 
bonensis, on the road from Arelate to Vienna : 
it still contains remains of an amphitheatre, 
circus, acqueduct, triumphal arch, &c. 

Araxes ('Apd^vc), the name of several rivers. 
— 1. In Armenia Major (now Eraskh or Aras), 
rises in Mount Aba 'or Abus (near Erzeroum), 
from the opposite side of which the Euphrates' 
•flows; and, after a great bend southeast, and 
then northeast, joins the Cyrus (now Kour), 
which flows down from the Caucasus, and falls 
with it into the Caspian by two mouths, in about 
39° 20' north latitude. The lower part, past Ar- 



taxata, flows through a plain, which was call- 
ed to 'Apa^rjvdv iredcov. The Araxes was pro- 
verbial for the force of its current ; and hence 
Virgil (uEn., viii., 728) says pontem indignatus 
Araxes, with special reference to the failure of 
both Xerxes and Alexander in throwing a bridge 
; over it. It seems to be the Phasis of Xeno- 
| phon. — 2. In Mesopotamia. Vid. Aborrhas. 
j — 3. In Persis (now Bend-Emir), the river on 
j which Persepolis stood, rises in the mountains 
east of the head of the Persian Gulf, and flows 
| southeast into a salt lake (now Bakhtegan) not 
j far below Persepolis.— 4. It is doubtful whether 
the Araxes of Herodotus is the same as the 
Oxus, Jaxartes, or Volga.— h. The Peneus, in 
Thessaly, was called Araxes from the violence 
of its torrent (from dpdaao)). 

Araxus ("Apatjoc : now Gape Papa), a prom- 
ontory of Achaia, near the confines of Elis. 

Arbaces ("Ap6dKTjc), the founder of the Medi- 
an empire, according to Ctesias, is said to have 
taken Nineveh in conjunction with Belesis, the 
Babylonian, and to have destroyed the old As- 
syrian empire under the reign of Sardanapalus, 
B.C. 876. Ctesias assigns twenty-eight years 
to the reign of Arbaces, B.C. 876-848, and 
makes his dynasty consist of eight kings. This 
account differs from that of Herodotus, who 
makes Deioces the first king of Media, and as- 
signs only four kings to his dynasty. 

Arbela (rd "ApBnla : now Erbille), a city of 
Adiabene in Assyria, between the rivers Lycus 
and Caprus ; celebrated as the head-quarters of 
Darius Codomannus before the last battle in 
which he was overthrown by Alexander (B.C. 
331), which is hence frequently called the battle 
of Arbela, though it was really fought near Gau- 
gamela, about fifty miles west of Arbela. The 
district about Arbela was called Arbelitis ('Ap- 
CvTutlc). 

Arbis. Vid. Arabis. 
[Arbiter. Vid. Petronius.] 
Arbucala or Arbocala (now Villa Fo.sila ?), 
the chief town of the Vaecsei in Hispania Tar- 
raconensis, taken by Hannibal after a long re- 
sistance. 

Arbuscula, a celebrated female actor in pan- 
tomimes in the time of Cicero. 

Arca or -m ("Apia] or -at : now Tell-Arka), a 
very ancient city in the north of Phoenicia, not 
far from the sea-coast, at the foot of Mount 
Lebanon : a colony under the Romans, named 
Arca Csesarea or Caasarea Libani : the birth- 
place of the Emperor Alexander Severus. 

Arcadia ('Aptcadca : "Apuac, pi. 'Apuddec), a 
country in the middle of Peloponnesus, was 
bounded on the east by Argolis, on the north by 
Achaia, on the west by Elis, and on the south 
by Messenia and Laeonica. Next to Laconica 
it was the largest country in the Peloponnesus : 
its greatest length was about fifty miles, its 
breadth from thirty-five to forty-one miles. It 
was surrounded on all sides by mountains, 
which likewise traversed it in every direction, 
and it may be regarded as the Switzerland of 
Greece. Its principal mountains were Cyllene 
and Erymanthus in the north, Artemisius in* the 
east, and Parthenius ; Mrenalus, and Lycseus in 
the south and southwest. The Alpheus, the 
greatest river of Peloponnesus, rises in Arcadia, 
and flows through a considerable part of the 



ARCADIUS 



ARCHEDEMUS. 



country, receiving numerous affluents. The | 
northern and eastern parts of the country were j 
barren and unproductive; the -western and 
southern were more fertile, with numerous val- 1 
leys where corn was grown. The Arcadians, ! 
said to be descended from the eponymous hero I 
Arcas, regarded thenselves as the most ancient j 
people in Greece : the Greek writers call them 
indigenous (airoxOovec) and Pelasgians. In con- 
sequence of the physical peculiarity of the coun- 
try, they were chiefly employed in hunting and 
the' tending of cattle, whence their worship of J 
Pan, who was especially the god of Arcadia, and j 
of Diana (Artemis). They were a people sim- j 
pie in their habits and moderate in their desires : j 
they were passionately fond of music, and cul- 
tivated it with great success (soli can-tare periti | 
Arcades, Virg., Eel., x., 32), which circumstance 
was supposed to soften the natural roughness 
of their character. The Arcadians experienced 
fewer changes than any other people in Greece, 
and retained possession of their country upon 
the conquest of the rest of Peloponnesus by the 
Dorians. Like the other Greek communities, 
they were originally governed by kings, but are 
said to have abolished monarchy toward the 
•elose of the second Messenian war, and to have 
stoned to death their last king Aristocrates, be- 
cause he betrayed his allies the Messenia.ns. 
The different towns then became independent 
republics, of which the most important were 
Mantixea, Tegea, Orchomenus, Psophis, and 
Pheneos. Like the Swiss, the Arcadians fre- 
quently served as mercenaries, and in the Pelo- 
ponnesian war, they were found in the armies 
of both the Lacedaemonians and Athenians. 
The Lacedaemonians made many attempts to 
obtain possession of parts of Arcadia, but these 
attempts were finally frustrated by the battle 
of Leuetra (B.C. 371); and in order to resist 
all future aggressions on the part of Sparta, 
the Arcadians, upon the advice of Epami- 
nondas, built the city of Megalopolis, and in- 
stituted a general assembly of the whole na- 
tion, called the Myrii (Mvpiot,, vid. Diet, of Antiq., 
s. v.). They subsequently joined the Achaean 
League, and finally became subject to the Ro- 
mans. 

Arcadius, emperor of the East (A.D. 395- 
408), elder son of Theodosius I., was born in 
Spain, A.D. 383. On the death of Theodosius 
he became emperor of the East, while the West 
was given to his younger brother Honorius. 
Arcadius possessed neither physical nor intel- 
lectual vigor, and was entirely governed by un- j 
-worthy favorites. At first he was ruled by Ru- 1 
ftaus, the prefect of the East ; and on the mur- 
der of the latter soon after the accession of | 
Arcadius, the government fell into the hands of 
the eunuch Eutropius. Eutropius was put to 
death in 399, and his power now devolved upon 
Gainas, the Goth ; but upon his revolt aud death 
in 401, Arcadius became entirely dependent upon j 
his wife Eudoxia, aud it was through her influ- i 
wence that Saint Chrysostom wa3 exiled in 404. 
Arcadius died on the first of Mav, 408, leaving 
-«he empire to his son, Theodosius II., who was ( 
• a minor. 

[Arcadius ('ApndSiog), a Greek grammarian ' 
*of Antioeh, of uncertain date, but certainly not 1 
earlier than 200 A.D. He wrote a useful work : 
84 



on accents (xepl rovov), which is extant. — Edi- 
tions ; By Barker, Leipzig, 1820, and by Dindorf, 
in his Grammat. Graici, Leipzig, 1823.] 

Arcanum. Vid, Arpinum. 

Arcas ('Apuag), king and eponymous hero of 
the Arcadians, son of Jupiter (Zeus) and Cal- 
listo, grandson of Lycaon, aud father of Aphidas 
and Elatus. Arcas was the boy whose flesh 
his grandfather Lycaon placed before Jupiter 
(Zeus), to try his divine character. Jupiter 
(Zeus) upset the table (rpurre^a) which bore the 
dish, and destroyed the house of Lycaon by light- 
ning, but restored Arcas to life. When Arcas 
had grown up, he built on the site of his father's 
house the town of Trapezus. Arcas and his 
mother were placed by Jupiter (Zeus) among 
the stars. 

Arcesilaus or Arcesilas ('Aptem/Moc, Ap/ce- 
mXac), a Greek philosopher, son of Seuthes or 
Scythes, was born at Pitane in iEolis, and flour- 
ished about B.C. 250. He studied at first in 
his native town under Autolycus. a mathema- 
tician and afterward went to Athens, where he 
became the disciple first of Theophrastus, and 
next of Polemo and of Crantor. He succeeded 
Crates about B.C. 241 in the chair of the Acad- 
emy, and became the founder of the second or 
middle (/j-sgtj) Academy. He is said to have 
died in his seventy-sixth year from a fit of 
drunkenness. His philosophy was of a skep- 
tical character, though it did not go so far as 
that of the folbwers of Pyrrhon. He did not 
doubt the existence of truth in itself, ouly our 
capacities for obtaining it, and he combated 
most strongly the dogmatism of the Stoics. 

Arcesilaus ('ApuectXaoc). 1. Son of Lycus 
and Theobule, leader of the Boeotians in the 
Trojan war, slain by Hector. — 2. The name of 
four kings of Cyrene. Vid. Battds and Bat- 
tiad^e. — [3. A Sicilian, who accompanied 
Agathocles to Africa, but, on the departure of 
the latter from that country, murdered his son 
Archagathus. — i. A sculptor in the first cen- 
tury B.C., who was held in high esteem at 
Rome : he was intimate with L. Lentulus, and 
was greatly commended by Varro.] 

Arcesius ('ApKeiciog), son of Jupiter (Zeus) 
and Euryodia, father of Laertes, and grandfather 
of Ulysses. Hence both Laertes aud Ulysses 
are called Arcesiades ^Apuetciddrig). 

Arch^eopolis ('ApxaioTzo/uc), the later capital 
of Colchis, near the River Phasis. 

[Archagathus. Vid. Arcesilaus, 3.] 

Archandropolis ('Apxdvdpov nolle), a city of 
Lower Egypt, on the Nile, between Canopus 
and Cercasorus. 

[Archebates ('Apx^drvg), son of Lycaon, 
destroyed by Jupiter (Zeus) by lightning.] 

Archedemus ^Apx'^V^OQ i D° r - 'Apxeda/uoc). 
1. A popular leader at Athens, took the first 
step against the generals who had gained the 
battle of Arginusae, B.C. 406. The comic poets 
called him " blear-eyed ' (y/la/zwv), and said that 
he was a foreigner, and had obtained the fran- 
chise by fraud. — 2. An ^Etolian (called Archi- 
damus by Livy), commanded the ^Etoliau troops 
which assisted the Romaus in their war with 
Philip (B.C. 199-197). He afterward took an 
active part agaiust the Romans, aud eventual- 
ly joined Perseus, whom he accompanied in his 
flight after his defeat in 168.— 3. Of Tarsus, a 



ARCHEDICUS. 



ARCHIAS. 



Stoic philosopher, mentioned by Cicero, Seneca, 
and other aucicut writers. 

Archedicus (' Apx^iKog), an Athenian comic 
poet of the new comedy, supported Antipater 
and the Macedonian party. 

Archegetes ('A.pxvy£TVc), a surname of 
Apollo, probably in reference to his being a 
leader of colonies. It was also a surname of 
other gods. 

Archelais (' 'Apx&atg). 1. In Cappadocia 
(now Akserai), on the Cappadox, a tributary of 
the Halys, a city founded by Archelaus, the last 
king of Cappadocia, and made a Roman colony 
by the Emperor Claudius. — 2. A town of Pales- 
tine, near Jericho, founded by Archelaus, the 
son of Herod the Great. 

Archelaus (' Apx^aog). 1. Son of Herod 
the Great, was appointed by his father as his 
successor, and received from Augustus Judaea, 
Samaria, and Idumaaa, with the title of ethuarch. 
In consequence of his tyrannical government, 
the Jews accused him before Augustus in the 
tenth year of his reign (A.D. 7): Augustus 
banished him to Vienua in Gaul, where he died. 
—2. King of Macedonia (B.C. 413-399), an il- 
legitimate son of Perdiccas II., obtained the 
throne by the murder of his half-brother. He 
improved the internal condition of his kingdom, 
and was a warm patron of art and literature. 
His palace was adorned with magnificent paint- 
ings by Zeuxis; and Euripides, Agathon, and 
other men of eminence, were among his guests. 
According to some accounts, Archelaus was ac- 
cidently slain in a hunting party by his favorite, 
Crater us or Crateuas ; but, according to other 
accounts, he was murdered by Craterus. — 3. A 
distinguished general of Mithradates. In B. 
C. 8*7 he was sent into Greece by Mithradates 
with a large fleet and army ; at first he met 
with considerable success, but was twice de- 
feated by Sulla in 86, near Chaeronea and Or- 
chomenos in Boeotia, with immense loss. There- 
upon he was commissioned by Mithradates to 
sue for peace, which he obtained ; but subse- 
quently being suspected of treachery by the 
king, he deserted to the Romans just before 
the commencement of the second Mithradatic 
war, B.C. 81, — 4. Son of the preceding, was 
raised by Pompey, in B.C. 63, to the dignity of 
priest of the goddess (Enyo or Bellona) at Co- 
mana in Pontus or Cappadocia. In 56 or 55 
Archelaus became king of Egypt by marrying 
Berenice, the daughter of Ptolemy Auletes, who, 
after the expulsion of her father, had obtained 
the sovereignty of Egypt. Archelaus, however, 
was king of Egypt only for six months, for Ga- j 
binius marched 'with an army into Egypt in or- ! 
der to restore Ptolemy Auletes, and in the bat- j 
tie which ensued, Archelaus perished. — 5. Son | 
of No. 4, and his successor in the office of high- 
priest of Com ana, was deprived of his dignitv 
oy Julius Caesar in 47. — 6. Sou of No. 5, re- ! 
ceived from Antony, in B.C. 36, the kingdom 
of Cappadocia, a favor which he owed to the 
charms of his mother Glaphyra. After the bat- 
tle of Actium, Octavianus not only left Arche- 
laus in the possession of his kingdom, but sub- 
sequently added to it a part of Cilicia and Lesser 
Armeuia. But, having incurred the enmity of 
Tiberius by the attention which he had paid to 
C. Caesar he was summoned to Rome soon after 



the accession of Tiberius and accused of trea- 
son. His life was spared, but he was obliged 
to remain at Rome, where he died soon after, 
A.D. 17. Cappadocia was then made a Roman 
province. — 7. A philosopher, probably born at 
Athens, though others make him a native of 
Miletus, flourished about B.C. 450. The philo- 
sophical system of Archelaus is remarkable, as 
forming a point of transition from the older to 
the newer form of philosophy in Greece. As a 
pupil of Anaxagoras, he belonged to the Ionian 
school, but he added to the physical system of 
his teacher some attempts at moral specula! ion. 
— 8. A Greek poet, in Egypt, lived under the 
Ptolemies, and wrote epigrams, some of which 
are still extant in the Greek Anthology. — 9. A 
sculptor of Priene, son of Apollonius, made the 
marble bas-relief representing the Apotheosis of 
Homer, which formerly belonged to the Colon- 
na family at Rome, and is now in the Townley 
Gallery of the British Museum. He probably 
lived in the reign of Claudius. 

[Archelochus ('Apxehoxoc), son of the Tro- 
jan Antenor ; slain by Ajax.] 

[Archemachus ('Apxsfiaxoc), a greek his- 
torian of Euboea, who wrote a work on his na- 
tive country (rti Ev6oiku), consisting of at least 
three books.] 

Archemorus (^ApxejJ-opog), or Ofheltes, son 
of the Nemean king Lycurgus and Eurydice, 
When the Seven heroes, on their expedition 
against Thebes, stopped at Nemea to obtain 
water, Hypsipyle, the nurse of the child Ophel- 
tes, while showing the way to the Seven, left 
the child alone. In the meantime, the child 
was killed by a dragon, and buried by the Seven. 
But as Amphiaraus saw in this accident an 
omen boding destruction to him and his com- 
panions, they called the child Archemorus, that 
is, " Forerunner of Death,'' and instituted the 
Nemean games in honor of him. 

[Archeptolemus ('Apxerrro/ieftor), son of Iph- 
itus, charioteer of Hector, was slain by Teucer.] 

[Archestratus ('Apxecrrparoc), one of the ten 
generals appointed to supersede Alcibiades in 
the command of the Athenian fleet, after the 
battle of Notium, B.C. 407.— 2. A member of 
the (3ov?nj at Athens, who, during the siege of 
the city, after the battle of ./Egospotami^ B.C> 
405, was thrown into prison for advising capitu-- 
lation on the terms proposed by Sparta.] 

Archestpatus ('ApxeGrparog), of Gela or Syr- 
acuse, about B.C. 350, wrote a poem on the Art 
of Cookery, which was imitated or translated 
byEnniusin his Carmina Hech/pathetica or Hedy- 
pathica (from rjdvrcddeia). 

[Archetius, a companion of Turnus, slain by 
Mnestheus.] 

Archias ('Apxtag). 1. An Heraelid of Corinth, 
left his country in consequence of the death of 
Action, and founded Syracuse, B.C. 734, by 
command of the Delphic oracle. — [2. A Theban, 
who betrayed the citadel (Cadmea) to the Spar- 
tan commander Phcebidas, B.C. 382. He was- 
at the head of the party in the interest of Spar- 
ta, but was slain by the Theban exiles under 
Pelopidas. — 3. Of Thurii, originally an actor, 
was sent, B.C. 322, after the battle of Cranom 
to apprehend the orators whom Antipater had 
demanded of the Athenians, and who had fled 
from Athens. Vid. Hyperides and Demosthe- 



ARCHIDAMIA. 



ARCHILOCHUS. 



nes. He was nicknamed *vya6o6jipas, " exile- 
hunter f and ended his life, as be deserved, in 
poverty and disgrace.]— 4. A. Licmus Aechias, 
a Greek poet, born at Antiocb m Syria, about 
B.C. 120, very early obtained celebrity by his 
verses. In 102 be caine to Rome, and was re- 
ceived in the most friendly way by many of the 
Roman nobles, especially by the Luculli, from 
whom be afterward obtained the gentile name 
of Licinius. After a short stay at Rome he ac- 
companied L. Lucullus, the elder, to Sicily, and 
followed him, in the banishment to which he 
was sentenced for his management of the slave 
war in that island, to Heraclea in Lucania, in 
which town Archias was enrolled as a citizen ; 
and as this town was a state united with Rome 
by a fcedus, he subsequently obtained the Ro- 
man franchise in accordance with the lex Plau- 
tia Papiria passed in B.C. 89. At a later time 
he accompanied L. Lucullus the younger to 
the Mithradatic war. Soon after his return, a 
charge was brought against him hi 61 of as- 
suming the citizenship illegally, and the trial 
came on before Q. Cicero, who was prsetor this 
year. He was defended by his friend M, Cicero 
in the extant speech Pro Archia, in which the 
orator, after briefly discussing the legal points 
of the ease, rests the defence of his client upon 
his surpassing merits as a poet, which entitled 
him to the Roman citizenship. "We may pre- 
sume that Archias was acquitted, though we 
have no formal statement of the fact. Archias 
wrote a poem on the Cimbric war in houor of 
Marius ; another on the Mithradatic war in hon- 
or of Lucullus ; and at the time of his trial was 
engaged on a poem in honor of Cicero's con- 
sulship. !No fragments of these works are ex- 
tant; and it is doubtful whether the epigrams 
preserved under the name of Archias in the 
Greek Anthology were really written by him. 

[Archidahia (Apxiduueia), the priestess of 
Ceres (Demeter) at Sparta, who, through love 
of Aristomenes, set him at liberty when he had 
been taken prisoner. — 2. A Spartan woman, who 
distinguished herself by her heroic spirit when 
Sparta was nearly taken by Pyrrhus in B.C. 
272, and opposed the plan which had been en- 
tertained of sending the women to Crete.] 

Archidamtjs ('Apx'ida/iog), the name of five 
kings of Sparta. 1. Son of Anaxidamus, con- 
temporary with the Tegeatan war, which fol- 
lowed soon after the second Messeniau, B.C. 
668. — 2. Son of Zeuxidamus. succeeded his 
grandfather Leotychides, and reigned B.C. 469- 
427. During his reign, B.C. 464, Sparta was 
made a heap of ruins by a tremendous earth- 
quake j and for the next ten years he was en- 
gaged in war against the revolted Helots and 
Messenians. Toward the end of his reign the 
Peloponnesian war broke out : he recommend- 
ed his countrymen not rashly to embark in the 
war, and he appears to have taken a more cor- 
rect view of the real strength of Athens than 
any other Spartan. After the war had been de- 
clared (B.C. 431) he invaded Attica, and held 
the supreme command of the Peloponnesian 
forces till his death in 429.-3. Grandson of IS T o. 
2, and son of Agesilaus II., reigned B.C. 361- 
338. During the lifetime of his father he took 
an active part in resisting the Thebans and the 
various other enemies of Sparta, and in 367 he 
86 



j defeated the Arcadians and Argives in the 
" Tearless Battle," so called because he had 
won it without losing a man. In 362 he de- 
fended Sparta against Epaminondas. In the 

, third Sacred war (B.C. 356-346) he assisted 
the Phocians. In 338 he went to Italy to aid 
the Tarentines against the Lucanians, and there 
fell in battle. — 4. Grandson of Xo. 3, and son 
of Eudomidas L, was king in B.C. 296, when 
he was defeated by Demetrius Poliorcetes. — 5. 
Son of Eudamidas II, and the brother of Agis 
IV. On the murder of Agis, in B.C. 240, Ar- 
chidamus fled from Sparta, but afterward ob- 
tained the throne by means of Aratus. He was, 
however, slain almost immediately after his re- 
turn to Sparta. He was the last king of the 
Eurypontid race. 

Archigexes (' ' Kpxiyt-vj]g), an eminent Greek 
physician born at Apamea in Syria, practiced 
at Rome in the time of Trajan, A.D. 98-117. 
He published a treatise on the pulse, on which 
Galen wrote a Commentary. He was the most 
eminent physician of the sect of the Eclectici, 
and is mentioned by Juvenal as well as by other 
writers. Only a few fragments of his works re- 
main. 

Archilochus ('ApxrAoxoc), of Paros, was one 
, of the earliest Ionian lyric poets, and the first- 
Greek poet who composed Iambic verses accord- 
ing to fixed rules. He flourished about B.C. 714- 
676. He was descended from a noble family, 
; who held the priesthood in Paros. His grand- 
; father was Tellis, his father Telesicles, and his 
mother a slave, named Enipo. In the flower 
: of his age (between B.C. 710 and 700), Archilo- 
j chus went from Paros to Thasos with a colony, 
: of which one account makes him the leader. 
The motive for this emigration can only be con- 
jectured. It was most probably the result of 
a political change, to which cause was added, 
in the ease of Archilochus, a sense of personal 
wrongs. He had been a suitor to Neobule, one 
of the daughters of Lycambes, who first proni- 
; ised and afterward refused to give his daughter 
\ to the poet. Enraged at this treatment, Archil- 
ochus attacked the whole family in an Iambic 
i poem, accusing Lycambes of perjury, and his 
daughters of the most abandoned lives. The 
verses were recited at the festival of Ceres 
(Demeter), and produced such an effect, that 
the daughters of Lycambes are said to have 
hung themselves through shame. The bitter- 
ness which he expresses in his poems toward 
his native island seems to have arisen in part 
also from the low estimation in which he was 
held, as being the son of a slave. Neither was 
he more happy at Thasos. He draws the most 
melancholy picture of his adopted country, which 
he at length quitted in disgust. While at Tha- 
sos, he incurred the disgrace of losing his shield 
in an engagement with the Thraeians of the op- 
posite continent ; but instead of being ashamed 
of the disaster, he recorded it in his verse. At 
length he returned to Paros, and in a war be- 
tween the Parians and the people of JSaxos, 
he fell by the hand of a Kaxian named Calondas 
or Corax. Archilochus shared with his con- 
temporaries, Thaletas and Terpander, in the 
honor of establishing lyric poetry throughout 
Greece. The invention of the elegy is ascribed 
, to him, as well as to Callinus : but it was on 



ARCHIMEDES. 



ARCTOS. 



?his satiric Iambic poetry that his fame was 
founded. His Iambics expressed the strongest 
feelings in the most unmeasured language. The 
licence of Ionian democracy and the bitteruess 
of a disappointed man were united with the 
highest degree of poetical power to give them 
force and point. The emotion accounted most 
conspicuous in his verses was " rage," " Archi- 
lochum proprio rabies armavit iambo." (Hor., 
Ars. Poet., 79.) The fragments of Archilochus 
are collected in Bergk's Poet. Lyrici Grcec, and 
by Liebel, Archil ochi Reliquiae, Lips., 1812, 8vo; 
[2d edit., somewhat enlarged, Vienna, 1818, 8vo.] 
Archimedes ('Apxiftydyc), of Syracuse, the 
most famous of ancient mathematicians, was 
born B.C. 287. He was a friend, if not a kins- 
man, of Hiero, though his actual condition in 
life does not seem to have been elevated. In 
the early part of his life he travelled into Egypt, 
where he studied under Conon the Samian, a 
mathematician and astronomer. After visiting 
other countries, he returned to Syracuse. Here 
he constructed for Hiero various engines of war, 
which, many years afterward, were so far ef- 
fectual in the defence of Syracuse against Mar- 
cellus as to convert the siege into a blockade, 
, and delay the taking of the city for a consider- 
able time. The accounts of the pei'formances 
of these engines are evidently exaggerated ; and 
the story of the burning of the Roman ships by 
the reflected rays of the sun, though very cur- 
rent in later times, is probably a fiction. He 
superintended the building of a ship of extraor- 
dinary size for Hiero, of which a description is 
given in Athenteus (v., p. 206, d.), where he is 
also said to have moved it to the sea by the help 
of a screw. He invented a machine called, from 
its form, Cochlea, and now known as the water- 
screw of Archimedes, for pumping the water 
out of the hold of this vessel. His most cele- 
brated performance was the construction of a 
sphere; a kind of orrery, representing the move- 
ments of the heavenly bodies. Wheu Syracuse 
was taken (B.C. 212), Archimedes was killed 
by the Roman soldiers, being at the time intent 
upon a mathematical problem. Upon his tomb 
was placed the figure of a sphere inscribed in 
a cylinder. When Cicero was quaestor in Sicily 
(75), he found this tomb near one of the gates 
of the city, almost hid among briers, and for- 
gotten by the Syracusans. The intellect of Ar- 
chimedes was of the very highest order. He 
possessed, in a degree never exceeded, unless 
by Newton, the inventive genius which discov- 
ers new provinces of inquiry, and finds new 
points of view for old and familiar objects ; the 
clearness of conception which is essential to 
the resolution of complex phenomena into their 
constituent elements ; and the power and habit 
of intense and persevering thought, without 
which other intellectual gifts are comparatively 
fruitless. The following works of Archimedes 
have come down to us : 1. On Equiponderants 
and Centres of Gravity. 2. The Quadrature of 
the Parabola. 3. On the Sphere and Cylinder. 
4. On Dimension of the Circle. 5. On Spirals. 
6. On Conoids and Spheroids. 7. The Arenarius. 
8. On Floating Bodies. 9. Lemmata. The best 
edition of his works is by Torelli, Oxon., 1792. 
There is a French translation of his works, with 
notes, by F. Peyrard, Paris, 1808, and an En- 



glish translation of the Arenarius by G-. Ander- 
son, London, 1784. 

_ Archinus ('Apx'tvoc), one of the leading Athe- 
nians, who, with Thrasybulus and Anytus, over- 
threw the government of the Thirty, B.C. 403. 

Archippus ("Apximroc), an Athenian poet of 
the old comedy, about B.C. 415. [The frag- 
ments of Archippus are collected in Meineke's 
Fragm. Comic. Grozcor., vol. i., p. 408-415, edit, 
minor.] 

[Archippus, an ancient king of the Marrubii 
in Italy, one of the allies of Turnus in his war 
with iEneas.] 

Archytas ('Apxvtclc). 1. Of Amphissa, a 
Greek epic poet, flourished about B.C. 300. — 2. 
Of Tarentum, a distinguished philosopher, math- 
ematician, general, and statesman, probably liv- 
ed about B.C. 400, and onward, so that he was 
contemporary with Plato, whose life he is said 
to have saved by his influence with the tyrant 
Dionysius. He was seven times the general of 
his city, and he commanded in several cam- 
paigns, in all of which he was victorious. After 
a life which secured to him a place among the 
very greatest men of antiquity, he was drowned 
while upon a voyage on the Adriatic. (Hor., 
Carm., i., 28.) As a philosopher, he belonged 
to the Pythagorean school, and he appears to 
have been himself the founder of a new sect 
Like the Pythagoreans in general, he paid much 
attention to mathematics. Horace calls him 
maris et terra; numeroque carentis arena? Menso- 
rem. To his theoretical science he added the 
skill of a pratical mechanician, and constructed 
various machines and automatons, among which 
his wooden flying dove in particular was the 
wonder of antiquity. He also applied mathe- 
matics with success to musical science, and 
even to metaphysical philosophy. His influence 
as a philosopher was so great, that Plato was 
undoubtedly indebted to him for 3ome of his 
views ; and Aristotle is thought by some writers 
to have borrowed the idea of his categories, as 
well as some of his ethical principles, from Ar- 
chytas. [The fragments of Archytas are pub- 
lished in part by Gale, Opusc. Mythol., Cantab., 
1671, Amst., 1688; and more fully by Orelli, 
Opusc. Sentent. et Moral., vol. ii., p. 234, seqq.] 

Arconnesus ('ApKovvnooc : ApuovvrjOioe). 1. 
An island off the coast of Ionia, near Lebedus, 
also called Aspis and Macris. — 2. (Now Orak 
Ada), an island off the coast of Caria, opposite 
Halicarnassus, of which it formed the harbor. 

Arctinus ('ApuTlvoc), of Miletus, the most 
distinguished among the cyclic poets, probably 
lived about B.C. 776. Two epic poems were 
attributed to him. 1. The JEthiopAs, which was 
a kind of continuation of Homer's Iliad : its 
chief heroes were Memnon, king of the ^Ethio- 
pians, and Achilles, who slew him. 2. The De- 
struction of llion, which contained a description 
of the destruction of Troy, and the subsequent 
events until the departure of the Greeks. [The 
fragments of Arctinus have been collected by 
Diibner, Homer i Carm. et Cycli Epici Beliq., 
Paris, 1837, and by Diintzer, Die Fragm. des ep. 
Pocsie bis auf Alex., Koln, 1840 ; and Nachtrag t 
p. 16, Koln, 1841.] 

Arctophylax. Vid. Arctos. 

Arctos ("ApKTOc), " the Bear," two constella- 
I tions near the North Pole. 1. The Great Bear 

87 



ARCTURUS. 



ARES. 



(•kpKToc fieydlri : Ursa Major), also called the 
Wagon (upaga : plaustrwn). The ancient Ital- 
ian name of this constellation was Septem Tri- 
ones, that is, the Seven Ploughing Oxen, also Sep- 
tentrio, and with the epithet Major to distinguish 
it from the Septentrio Minor, or Lesser Bear: 
hence Virgil (u£n., hi., 356) speaks of geminos- 
que Triones. The Great Bear was also called He- 
lice (eXUaj) from its sweeping round in a cuiwe.— 
2. The Lksser or Little Bear ("Ap/crac /ziKpu : 
Ursa Minor), likewise called the Wagon, was 
first added to the Greek catalogues by Thales, 
by whom it was probably imported from the 
East It was also called Pheenice (Qoivlztj), from 
the circumstance that it was selected by the 
Phoenicians as the guide by which they shaped 
their course at sea, the Greek mariners with 
less judgment employing the Great Bear for the 
purpose ; and Cynomra (Kvvocovpa), dog's tail, 
from the resemblance of the constellation to the 
upturned curl of a dog's tail. The constella- 
tion before the Great Bear was called Bootes 
(Bourns) Arctophylaz {'Aparoov/.a^ov Arcturus 
('Apnrovpoc, from ovpoc, guard) ; the two latter 
names suppose the constellation to represent a 
man upon the watch, and denote simply the po- 
sition of the figure in reference to the Great 
Bear, while Bootes, which is fouud in Homer, 
refers to the Wagon, the imaginary figure of 
Bootes being fancied to occupy the place of the 
driver of the team. At a later time Arctophylaz 
became the general name of the constellation, 
and the word Arcturus was confined to the chief 
star in it. All these constellations are connect- 
ed in mythology with the Arcadian nymph Cal- 
listo, the daughter of Lycaon. Metamorphosed 
by Jupiter (Zeus) upon the earth into a she- 
bear, Callisto was pursued by her son Areas in 
the chase, and when he was on the point of kill- 
ing her, Jupiter (Zeus) placed them both among 
the stars, Callisto becoming the Great Bear, and 
Areas the Little Bear, or Bootes. In the poets 
the ephithets of these stars have constant refer- 
ence to the family and country of Callisto : thus 
we find them called Lycaonis Arctos ; Mcenalia 
Arctos and Mcenalis Ursa (from Mount Maenalus 
in Arcadia) : Erymardhis Ursa (from Mount Ery- 
manthus in Arcadia) : Parrhasides stellce (from 
the Arcadian town Parrhasia). Though most 
traditions identified Bootes with Areas, others 
pronounced him to be Icarus or his daughter 
Erigone. Hence the Septentriones are called 
Boves Icarii. Vid. Diet, of Antig., p. 147, 148, 
159, 2d ed. 

Arcturus. Vid. Arctos. 

Ardea (Ardeas, -atis: now Ardea). 1. The 
chief town of the Rutuli in Latium, a little to 
the left of the River Numieus, three miles from 
the sea, was situated on a rock surrounded by 
marshes, in an unhealthy district. It was one 
of the most ancient places in Italy, and was said 
to have been the capital of Turnus. It was 
conquered and colonized by the Romans, B.C. 
442, from which time its importance declined 
In its neighborhood was the Latin Aphrodisium 
or temple of Yenus, which was under the super- 
intendence of the Ardeates.— 2. (Xow Arde- 
kdn ?), an important town in Persis, southwest 
of Persepolis. 

[Ardericca ('ApdepiKua, now Akkerkuf? Hee- 
ren). 1. A town above Babvlon, where the Eu- 



phrates was so diverted from its course that it 
passed three times through this place — 2. A 
town of Susiana, not far from Susa ; perhaps the 
same as the Aracca of later writers, where Da- 
rius Hystaspis settled the captured Eretrians.] 

[Ardescus ^Kpd^GKoc), a river of European 
Sarmalia, flowing into the Ister ; the god of this 
stream was, according to Hesiod, a son of Oce- 
anus and Tethys.] 

Arduexxa Silva (now the Ardennes), a vast 
forest in the northwest of Gaul, extended from 
the Rhine and the Treviri to the I^ervii and 
Remi, and north as far as the Scheldt : there- 
are still considerable remains of this forest, 
though the greater part of it has disappeared. 

Ardys ('Apdvc), sou of Gyges, king of Lydia* 
reigned B.C. 678-629 : he took Priene, and mad& 
war against Miletus. 

Area or Aretias ("Apeia or 'Apr/nag vhaoc, 
i. e., the island of Ares : now Kerasunt Ada), 
also called Chalceritis, an island off the coast 
of Pontus, close to Pharnacea, celebrated in the 
legend of the Argonauts. 

[Aregonis ('Apnyovlc), wife of Ampycus, and 
mother of Mopsus.j 

[Areilycus ('Apni/A'Koc), a Trojan warrior, 
slain by Patroclus.j 

Areithous ('ApnWooc). 1. King of Arne in 
Bceotia. and husband of Philomedusa, is called 
in the Iliad (vii., 8) Kopw^rng, because he fought 
with a club : he fell by the hand of the Arcadian. 
Lycurgus. — [2. Charioteer of Rhigmus, slain 
by Achilles.] 

Arelate, Arelas, or Arelatum (Arelatensis : 
now Aries), a town in Gallia jSarbonensis, at 
the head of the delta of the Rhone on the left 
bank, and a Roman colony founded by the sol- 
| diers of the sixth legion, Colonia Arelate Sexta- 
\ norum. It is first mentioned by Caesar, and un- 
j der the emperors it became one of the most 
I flourishing towns on this side of the Alps. Con- 
j stantine the Great built an extensive suburb on 
the right bank, which he connected with the 
I original city by a bridge. The Roman remains 
j at Aries attest the greatness of the ancient city : 
I there are still to be seen an obelisk of granite, 
i and the ruins of an aqueduct, theatre, amphi- 
i theatre, palace of Constantine, and a large Ro- 
i man cemetery. 

\ [Arellius Fuscus. Vid, Fuscus.] 
Arehorica. Vid. Armorica. 
Arexacum: (now Arnheim or ^Ert /), a town 
of the Batavi in Gallia Belgica. 

[Arexjs Monies (now Arenas Gordas), high 
; sand hills in Hispania Btetica, between the Bae- 
| tis and Urium.] 

[Arexe (^Apyjvri). 1. Daughter of the Spartan 
king CEbalus, wife of Aphareus. — 2. A city of 
; Elis, on the River Minye'ius, said to have been 
named after the foregoing : it was the residence 
of Aphareus.] 

I Areopagus. Vid. Athene. 

Ares ("Apnc), (the Latin Mars), the Greek 
i god of war and one of the great Olympian gods, 
i is represented as the son of Zeus (Jupiter) and 

Hera (Juno). The character of Ares (Mars) in 
| Greek mythology will be best understood by 
' comparing it with that of other divinities who 
i are likewise in some way connected with war. 
' Athena (Minerva) represents thoughtfulness and 

wisdom in the affairs of war, and protects men 



ARES IAS. 



AREVA. 



and their habitations during its ravages. Ares 
(Mars), on the other hand, is nothing but the 
personification of bold force and strength, and 
not so much the god of war as of its tumult, con- 
fusion, and horrors. His sister Eris calls forth 
war, Zeus (Jupiter) directs its course, but Ares 
(Mars) loves war for its own sake, and delights 
in the din and roar of battles, in the slaughter 
of men, and the destruction of towns. He is 
not even iufluenced by party spirit, but some- 
times assists the one, and sometimes the other 
side, just as his inclination may dictate ; whence 
Zeus (Jupiter) calls him a/^onpoaaXKog. (IL, v., 
S89.) This savage and sanguinary character of 
Ares (Mars) makes him hated by the other 
gods and by his own parents. It was contrary 
to the spirit of the Greeks to represent a being 
like Ares (Mars), with all his overwhelming 
physical strength, as always victorious ; and 
when he comes in contact with higher powers, 
he is usually conquered. He was wounded by 
Diomedes, who was assisted by Athena (Miner- 
va), and in his fall he roared like ten thousand 
warriors. The gigantic Aloidas had likewise 
conquered him, and kept him a prisoner for thir- 
teen months, until he was delivered by Hermes 
(Mercury). He was also conquered by Hercules, 
with whom he fought on account of his son Cyc- 
nus, and was obhged to return to Olympus. 
This fierce and gigantic, but, withal, handsome 
god, loved and was beloved by Aphrodite (Ve- 
nus). Vid. Aphrodite. When Aphrodite (Ve- 
nus) loved Adonis, Ares (Mars), in his jealousy, 
metamorphosed himself into a boar, and killed 
his rival. Vid. Adonis. According to a late 
tradition, Ares (Mars) slew Halirrhothius, the 
son of Poseidon (Neptune), when he was on the 
point of violating Aleippe, the daughter of Ares 
(Mars). Hereupon Poseidon (Neptune) accused 
Ares (Mars) in the Areopagus, where the Olym- 
pian gods were assembled in court. Ares (Mars) 
was acquitted, and this event was believed to 
have given rise to the name Areopagus. The 
warlike character of the tribes of Thrace led to 
the belief that the god's residence was in that 
country, and here and in Scythia were the prin- 
cipal seats of his worship. In Scythia he was 
worshipped under the form of a sword, to which 
not only horses and other cattle, but men also, 
were sacrificed. In Greece itself the worship of 
Ares (Mars) was not very general. All the 
stories about Ares (Mars), and his worship in the 
countries north of Greece, seem to indicate that 
his worship was introduced into the latter coun- 
try from Thrace. The Romans identified their 
god Mars with the Greek Ares. Vid. Mars. 

[Aresias (Wpeciag), one of the thirty tyrants 
in Athens under the Spartan ascendency.] 

Arestor ('Aptorwp), father of Argus, the 
guardiau of Io, who is therefore called Arestor- 
ides. 

Aret.eus ('Aperaioc), the Cappadocian, one 
of the most celebrated of the ancient Greek 
physicians, probably lived in the reign of Ves- 
pasian. He wrote in Ionic Greek a general 
treatise OB diseases in eight books, which is still 
extant. The best edition is by C. G. Kiihn, 
Lips., 1828. 

[Aretaon ('Aperawv), a Trojan, slain by Teu- 
cer.] 

Aretas {'Aperag), the name of several kings 



of Arabia Petraea. L A contemporary of Pom- 
pey, invaded Judaea in B.C. 65, in order to place 
Hyrcanus on the throne, but was driven back by 
the Romans, who espoused the cause of Aristobu- 
lus. His dominions were subsequently invaded 
by Scaurus, the lieutenant of Pompey. — 2. The 
father-in-law of Herod Antipas, invaded Judaea 
because Herod had dismissed the daughter of 
Aretas in consequence of his connection with 
Herodias. This Aretas seems to have been 
the same who had possession of Damascus 
at the time of the conversion of the Apostle 
Paul, A.D. 31. 

Arete ('Apr/r^). 1. Wife of Alciuous, king 
of the Phasacians, received Ulysses with hospi- 
tality. — 2. [Arete, in Greek 'Aper?/], daughter 
of the elder Dionysius and Aristomache, wife of 
Thearides, and after his death of her uncle 
Dion. After Dion had fled from Syracuse, 
Arete was compelled by her brother to marry 
Timocrates, one of his friends ; but she was 
again received by Dion as his wife when he had 
obtained possession of Syracuse, and expelled 
the younger Dionysius. After the assassination 
of Dion in 353, she was drowned by his enemies. 
— 3. Daughter of Aristippus, the founder of the 
Cyrenaic school of philosophy, was instructed 
by him in the principles of his system, which 
she transmitted to her son, the younger Aris- 
tippus. 

Arethusa (' Aptdovaa), one of the Nereids, and 
the nymph of the famous fountain of Arethusa, 
in the island of Ortygia, near Syracuse. For 
details, see Alpheus. Virgil (Eclog., iv., 1 ; x., 1) 
reckons her among the Sicilian nymphs, and as 
the divinity who inspired pastoral poetry. There 
were several other fountains in Greece which 
bore the name of Arethusa, of w T hich the most 
important was one in Ithaca, now Lebado, and 
another in Eubcea, near Chalcis. 

Arethusa ('Apedovaa : now Er-Restun). 1. A 
town and fortress on the Orontes, in Syria : in 
Strabo's time, the seat of a petty Arabian prin- 
cipality. — [2. a city of Macedonia, between Am- 
phipolis and the Lake Bolbe. — 3. A bituminous 
lake in Greater Armenia, through which the 
Tigris was said to flow without mingling its 
waters, at no great distance from its source. 
Strabo gives as the Oriental names of this lake, 
Arsene and Thospilis.] 

Aretias. Vid. Area. 

Aretium. Vid. Arretium. 

[Aretus ("Ap?]Toc). 1. Son of Priam, slain by 
Automedon. — 2. Son of Nestor.] 

Areus ('Apevc), two kings of Sparta. 1. Suc- 
ceeded his grandfather, Cleomenes II., since his 
father Acrotatus had died before him, and 
reigned B.C. 309-265. He made several un- 
successful attempts to deliver Greece from the 
dominion of Antigonus Gonatas, and at length 
fell in battle against the Macedonians in 265, 
and was succeeded by his son Acrotatus. — 
2. Grandson of No. 1, reigned for eight years 
(the duration of his life) under the guardianship 
of his uncle Leonidas II, who succeeded him 
about B.C. 256. 

[Areus ('Apelog), of Alexandria, a Stoic or 
Pythagorean philosopher, who enjoyed in a high 
degree the confidence of Augustus, and was said 
to have been bis instructor in philosophy.] 

[Areva (now Alanzon, or, according to Florez; 

89 



AREVACiE. 



ARGONAUT JE. 



Ucero), a tributary of the Durius, in Hispania 
Tarraconensis.] 

Arevace or Arevaci, the most powerful 
tribe of the Celtiberians in Spain, near the 
sources of the Tagus, derived their name from 
the River Areva (q. v.). 

Arg^eus ('A-pyaioc). 1. King of Macedonia, 
son and successor of Perdiccas I, the founder of 
the dynasty. — 2. A pretender to the Macedonian 
crown, dethroned Perdiccas II, and reigned two 
years. 

Arg^eus Mons ('Apyaloc : now Erdjish-Dagh), 
a lofty snow-capped mountain nearly in the cen- 
tre of Oappadocia ; an offset of the Anti-Taurus. 
At its foot stood the celebrated city of Mazaca 
or Ceesarea. 

Arganthonius ('Apyav66vtoc), king of Tartes- 
sus in Spain, in the sixth century B.C., is said to 
have reigned eighty years, and to have lived one 
hundred and twenty. 

Arganthonius or Arganthus Mons (to 'Ap- 
yavduvLov bpoc : now Katirli), a mountain in 
Bithynia, running out into the Propontis, forming 
.the Promontorium Posidium (Cape Bouz), and 
separating the bays of Cios and Astacus. 

[Arge ("Apyrj), a Hyperborean maiden, who 
■ came with (>pis to Delos.J 

Argennum or Arginum ("Apyevvov, 'Apylvov : 
.now Cape Blanco). 1. A promontory on the 
Ionian coast, opposite to Chios. — [2. A promon- 
tory of the eastern coast of Sicily, now Capo 
San Alessio.] 

[Argennusa, an island with a city of same 
name between the promontory of Argennum, 
and the Ionian coast, and the promontorium Po- 
sidium in the island of Chios.] 

[Argentanum (now San Marco), a city of 
Bruttium.] 

[Argentaria or Argentuaria, also Argento- 
varia (now Arzenheim), the capital city of Gal- 
lia Belgica, where Gratian defeated the Ale- 
manni A.D. 3T8.] 

Argenteus (now Argens), a small river in 
Gallia Narbonensis, which flows into the Medi- 
terranean near Forum Julii. 

Argentoratum or -tus (now Strassburg), an 
important town on the Rhine, in Gallia Belgica, 
the head-quarters of the eighth legion, and a 
Roman municipium. In its neighborhood Ju- 
lian gained a brilliant victory over the Aleman- 
ni, A.D. 35*7. It was subsequently called Strate- 
burgum and Stratishurgum, whence its modern 
name. 

Arges. Vid. Cyclopes. 

Argia ('Apyela). 1. Daughter of Adrastus and 
Amphithea, and wife of Polynices. — [2. Daugh- 
ter of Autesion, wife of the Spartan king Aris- 
todemus, by whom she became the mother of 
Eurysthenes and Procles.] 

Argia ('Apyeta). Vid. Argos. 

[Argileonis ('A pyruvic), a Spartan female, 
mother of the celebrated general Brasidas.] 

Argiletum, a district in Rome, which extend- 
ed from the south of the Quirinal to the Capito- 
line and the Forum. It was chiefly inhabited 
by mechanics and booksellers. The origin of 
the name is uncertain: the most obvious deri- 
vation is from argilla, « potter s clay ;" but the 
more common explanation in antiquity was Argi- 
letum, " death of Argus," from a hero Aro-us who 
was buried there. 

90 



ArgIlus (^ApyiAoe : 'ApylXiog), a town in Bi- 
saltia, the eastern part of Mygdonia, in Mace- 
donia, between Amphipolis and Bromiscus, a col- 
ony of Andros. 

Arginus^e ('Apytvovaat or 'Apyivovooai), three 
small islands off the coast of iEolis, opposite 
Mytilene in Lesbos, celebrated for the naval vic- 
tory of the Athenians over the Lacedaemonians 
under Callicratidas, B.C. 406. 

[Argiope ('ApyioTTTj), a nymph, mother of the 
Thracian bard Thamyris by Philammon.] 

Argiphontes ('ApyeL(j)6vT7]c), " the slayer of 
Argus," a surname of Hermes. 

Argippjei ('ApynnzaZoi), a Scythian tribe in 
Sarmatia Asiatica, who appear, from the descrip- 
tion of them by Herodotus (iv., 23), to have been 
of the Calmuc race. 

Argissa. Vid. Argura. 

Argithea, the chief town of Athamania, in 
Epirus. 

ArgIva, a surname of Hera or Juno, from Ar- 
gos, where, as well as in the whole of Pelopon- 
nesus, she was especially honored. Vid. Argos, 

Argivi. Vid. Argos. 

Argo. Vid. Argonauts. 

[Argolictjs Sinus. Vid. Argos.] 

Argolis. Vid. Argos. 

Argonauts ('Apyovavrai), the Argonauts, 
" the sailors of the Argo," were the heroes who 
sailed to JSa (afterward called Colchis) for the 
purpose of fetching the golden fleece. The 
story of the Argonauts is variously related by 
the ancient writers, but the common tale ran as 
follows : In Iolcus in Thessaly reigned Pelias, 
who had deprived his half-brother iEson of the 
sovereignty. In order to get rid of Jason, the 
son of iEson, Pelias persuaded Jason to fetch 
the golden fleece, which was suspended on an 
oak-tree in the grove of Ares (Mars) in Colchis, 
and was guarded day and night by a dragon. 
Jason willingly undertook the enterprise, and 
commanded Argus, the son of Phrixus, to build 
a ship with fifty oars, which was called Argo 
('Apyu>) after the name of the builder. Jason 
was accompanied by all the great heroes of the 
age, and their number is usually said to have 
been fifty. Among these were Hercules, Cas- 
tor and Pollux, Zetes and Calais, the sons of 
Boreas, the singer Orpheus, the seer Mopsus, 
Philammon, Tydeus, Theseus, Amphiaraus, Pe- 
leus, Nestor, Admetus, &c. After leaving Iol- 
cus they first landed at Lemnos, where they 
united themselves with the women of the island, 
who had just before murdered their fathers and 
husbands. From Lemnos they sailed to the 
Doliones at Cyzicus, where King Cyzicus re- 
ceived them hospitably. They left the coun- 
try during the night, and being thrown back 
on the coast by a contrary wind, they were 
taken for Pelasgians, the enemies of the Do- 
liones, and a struggle ensued, in which Cyzi- 
cus was slain; but, being recognized by the 
Argonauts, they buried him, and mourned over 
his fate. They next landed in Mysia, where 
they left behind Hercules and Polyphemus, who 
had gone into the country in search of Hylas, 
whom a nymph had carried off while he was 
fetching water for his companions. In the 
country of the Bebryces, King Amycus chal- 
lenged the Argonauts to fight with him; and 
when he was killed by Pollux, [the Bebryces, 



ARGONAUTS. 



ARGOS. 



to aveuge the death of - their king, made an 
attack on Pollux, but the Argonauts, having 
seized their arms, repulsed them, and slew many 
in their flight ; they then] sailed to Salmydes- 
sus in Thrace, where the seer Phineus was tor- 
mented by the Harpies. When the Argonauts 
consulted him about their voyage, he promised 
them his advice on condition of their delivering 
him. from the Harpies. This was done by Zetes 
and Calais, two sons of Boreas ; and Phineus 
now advised them, before sailing through the 
Symplegades, to mark the flight of a dove, and 
to judge from its fate what they themselves 
would have to do. When they approached the 
Symplegades, they sent out a dove, which, in its 
rapid flight between the rocks, lost only the end 
of its tail. The Argonauts now, with the assist- 
ance of Juno (Hera), followed the example of 
the dove, sailed quickly between the rocks, and 
succeeded in passing without injm'y to their ship, 
with the exception of some ornaments at the 
stern. Henceforth the Symplegades stood im- 
movable in the sea. On their arrival at the 
country of the Mariandyni, the Argonauts were 
kindly received by their king, Lycus. The seer 
Idmon and the helmsman Tiphys died here, and 
the place of the latter was supplied by Ancaeus. 
They now sailed along the coast until they arriv- 
ed at the mouth of the River Phasis. The Col- 
ehian king iEetes promised to give up the golden 
fleece if Jason alone would yoke to a plough 
two fire breathing oxen with brazen feet, and 
sow the teeth of the dragon which had not been 
used by Cadmus at Thebes, and which he had 
received from Minerva (Athena). The love of 
Medea furnished Jason with means to resist 
fire and steel, on condition of his taking her as 
his wife ; and she taught him how he was to 
kill the warriors that were to spring up from 
the teeth of the dragon. While Jason was 
engaged upon his task, iEetes formed plans for 
burning the ship Argo and for killing all the 
Greek heroes. But Medea's magic powers lulled 
to sleep the dragon who guarded the golden 
fleece ; and after Jason had taken possession of 
the treasure, he and his Argonauts, together 
with Medea and her young brother Absyrtus, 
embarked by night and sailed away. iEetes 
pursued them ; but, before he overtook them, 
Medea murdered her brother, cut him into pieces, 
and threw his limbs overboard, that her father 
might be detained in his pursuit by collecting 
the limbs of his child. iEetes at last returned 
home, but sent out a great number of Colchians, 
threatening them with the punishment intended 
for Medea if they returned without her. While 
the Colchians were dispersed in all directions, 
the Argonauts had already reached the mouth 
of the River Eiidauus. But Jupiter (Zeus), 
angry at the murder of Absyrtus, raised a storm 
which cast the ship from its course. When 
driven on the Absyrtian Islands, the ship began 
to speak, and declared that the anger of Juptter 
(Zeus) would not cease unless they sailed toward 
Ausonia, and got purified by Circe. They now 
sailed along the coasts of the Ligyans and Celts, 
and through the sea of Sardinia, and, continuing 
their course aloug the coast of Tyrrhenia, they 
arrived in the Island of Mohvl, where Circe puri- 
fied them. When they were passing by the 
Sirens, Orpheus sang to prevent the Argonauts 



being allured by them. Butes, however, swam 
to them, but Venus (Aphrodite) carried him to 
Lilybaeum. Thetis and the Nereids conducted 
them through Scylla and Charybdis and between 
the whirling rocks (ix'crpai TzTiayKTal) ; and, sail- 
ing by the Thracian island with its oxen of 
Helios, they came to the Phaeacian island of 
Corcyra, where they were received by Alcinous. 
In the mean time, some of the Colchians, not 
being able to discover the Argonauts, had settled 
at the foot of the Ceraunian Mountains ; others 
occupied the Absyrtian islands near the coast of 
Illyricum ; and a third band overtook the Argo- 
nauts in the island of the Phasacians. But as 
their hopes of recovering Medea were deceived 
by Arete, the queen of Alcinous, they settled in 
the island, and the Argonauts continued their 
vovage. During the night they were overtaken 
by a storm ; but Apollo sent brilliant flashes of 
lightning, which enabled them to discover a 
neighboring island, which they called Anaphe. 
Here they erected an altar to Apollo, and solemn 
rites were instituted, which continued to be ob- 
served down to very late times. Their attempt 
to land in Crete was prevented by Talus, who 
guarded the island, but was killed by the arti- 
fices of Medea. From Crete they sailed to 
iEgina, and from thence between Eubcea and 
Locris to Iolcus. Respecting the events sub- 
sequent to their arrival in Iolcus, vid, iEsox, 
Medea, Jason, Pelias. The story of the Argo- 
nauts probably arose out of accounts of com- 
mercial enterprises which the wealthy Minyans, 
who lived in the neighborhood of Iolcus, made 
to the coasts of the Euxine. The expedition of 
the Argonauts is related by Pindar in the fourth 
Pythian ode, by Apollonius Rhodius in his 
Argonautica, and by his Roman imitator, Vale- 
rius Flaccus. 

Argos (to "Apyoc, -eo$), is said by Strabo (p. 
312) to have signified a plain in the language of 
the Macedonians and Thessalians, and it may 
therefore contain the same root as the Latin 
word ager. In Homer we find mention of the 
Pelasgic Argos, that is, a town or district of 
Thessaly, and of the Achaean Argos, by which 
he means sometimes the whole Peloponnesus 
sometimes Agamemnon's kingdom of Argos, of 
which Mycenae was the capital, and sometimes 
the town of Argos. As Argos frequently sig- 
nifies the whole Peloponnesus, the most import' 
ant part of Greece, so the 'Apyeloc often occur 
in Homer as a name of the whole body of the 
Greeks, in which sense the Roman poets also 
use Argivi. — 1. Argos, a district of Peloponne- 
sus, called Argolis (rj 'Apyo/ug) by Herodotus, but 
more frequently by other Greek writers either 
Argos, Argla (t/ 'Apyela), or Argolice (?) 'Apyo- 
XiMj). Under the Romans Argolis became the 
usual name of the country, while the word Argos 
or Argi was confined to the town. Argolis, un- 
der the Romans, signified the country bounded 
on the north by the Corinthian territory, on the 
west by Arcadia, on the south by Laconia, and 
included toward the east the whole Acte or pen- 
insula between the Saronic and Argolic gulfs ; 
but, during the time of Grecian independence, 
Argolis or Argos was only the country lying 
round the Argolicus Sinus (now Gulf of Nauplia), 
bounded on the west by the Arcadian Mountains, 
and separated on the north by a range of mount- 
91 



ARGOS. 



ARIA. 



ains from Corinth, Cleouae, and Phlius. Argolis, 
as understood by the Romans, was, for the most 
part, a mountainous and unproductive country ■ 



tyrants. In the Peloponnesian war Argos sided 
with Athens against Sparta. In B.C. 243 it 
joined the Achaaan League, and on the conquest 



the only extensive plain adapted for agriculture I of the latter by the Romans, 146, it became a 

. * . . . * i j 4.U « „c a — i . i? ii_ . t) : „e a _ • a a. 



was in the neighborhood of the city of Argos, 
Its rivers were insignificant, and mostly dry in 
summer : the most important was the Inachus. 
The country was divided into the districts of Ar- 
gia or Argos proper, Epidauria, Troszenia, and 
Hermioxis. The original inhabitants of the 
country were, according to mythology, the Cy- 
nurii ; 'but the main part of the population con- 
sisted' of Felasgi and Achsei, to whom Dorians 
were added after the conquest of Peloponnesus 
by the Dorians. See below, No. 2. — 2. Argos, or 
Akgi, -orum, in the Latin writers, now Argo, the 
capital of Argolis, and, next to Sparta, the most 
important town of Peloponnesus, situated in a 
level plain a little to the west of the Inachus. It 
had an ancient Pelasgic citadel, called. Larissa. 



and another built subsequently on another height j no longer existed.] 



part of the Roman province of Achaia. At an 
early time Argos was distinguished by its culti- 
vation of music and poetry (vid. Sacadas, Tel- 
esilla) ; but at the time of the intellectual 
greatness of Athens, literature and science seem 
to have been entirely neglected at Argos. It 
produced some great sculptors, of whom Agela- 
das and Polycletus are the most celebrated. 

Argos Amphilochiuum ("Apyog to 'Aju<pi?ioxL- 
kov), the chief town of Amphilochia in Acarna- 
nia, situated on the Ambraeian Gulf, and found- 
ed by the Argive Amphilochus. 
Argos Hippium. Vid. Arpi. 
[Argos Pelasgicum ("Apyoo to Tle/.aoyiKbv), 
an ancient city and district of Thessaly, men- 
tioned by Homer ; but in Strabo's time the city 



(duas arces habent Argi, Liv., xxxiv., 25). It 
possessed numerous temples, and was particu- 
larly celebrated for the worship of Juno (Hera), 
whose great temple, Hermtm, lay between Argos 
and Mycenae. The remains of the Cyclopian 
walls of Argos are still to be seen. The city is 
said to have been built by Inachus or his son 
Phoroneus, or grandson Argus. The descend- 



Argous Portus (now Porto Ferraio), a town 
and harbor in the Island of Ilva (now Elba). 

Argura ('Apyovpa), a town in Pelasgiotis in 
Thessaly, called Argissa by Homer (11., ii., 138). 

Argus ("Apyoc). 1. Son of Jupiter (Zeus) and 
Niobe, third king of Argos, from whom Argos 
derived its name. — 2. Surnamed Panoptes, " the 
all-seeing," because he had a hundred eyes, son 



ants of Inachus, who may be regarded as the j of Agenor, Arestor, Inachus, or Argus. Juno 
Pelasgian kings, reigned over the country for j (Hera) appointed him guardian of the cow into 
nine generations, but were at length deprived \ which Io had been metamorphosed ; but Mercury 
of the sovereignty by Danaus, who is said to j (Hermes), at the command of Jupiter (Zeus), 
have come from Egypt. The descendants of 
Danaus were in their time obliged to submit to 
the Achaaan race of the Pelopidse. Under the 
rule of the Pelopida? Mycenae became the capi- 
tal of the kingdom, and Argos was a dependent 
state. Thus Mycenaa was the royal residence 
of Atreus and of his son Agamemnon ; but under 
Orestes Argos again recovered its supremacy. 
Upon the conquest of Peloponnesus by the Do- 
rians Argos fell to the share of Temenus, whose 
descendants ruled over the country ; but the 
great bulk of the population continued to be 
Achaaan. All these events belong to Mythol- 
ogy ; and Argos first appears in history about 
B.C. 750, as the chief state of Peloponnesus, 
under its ruler Phidon. After the time of Phi- 
don its power declined, and it was not even able 
to maintain its supremacy over the other towns 
of Argolis. Its power was greatly weakeued 
by its wars with Sparta. The two states long 
contended for the district of Cynuria, which lay 
between Argolis and Laconia, and which the 
Spartans at length obtained by the victory of 
their three hundred champions, about B.C. 550. 
In B.C. 524, Cleomenes, the Spartan king, de- 



put Argus to death, either by stoning him, or by 
cutting off his head after sending him to sleep 
by the 6weet notes of his flute. Juuo (Hera) 
transplanted his eyes to the tail of the peacock, 
her favorite bird. — 3. The builder of the Argo, 
son of Phrixus, Arestor, or Polybus, was sent by 
iEetes, his grandfather, after the death of Phrix- 
us, to take possession of his inheritance in Greece. 
On his voyage thither he suffered shipwreck, was 
found by Jason in the Island of Aretias, and car- 
ried back to Colchis. 

Argyra ('Apyvpu), a town in Achaia near Pa- 
troa, with a fountain of the same name. 

Argyripa. Vid. Arpi. 

Aria ('Apeia, 'Apia : "Apeiog, "Apiog : the east- 
em part of Khorassan, and the western and north- 
western part of Afghanistan), the most import- 
ant of the eastern provinces of the ancient Per- 
sian Empire, was bounded on the east by the 
Paropamisadaa, on the north by Margiana and 
Hyrcania, on the west by Parthia, and on the 
south by the great desert of Carmania. It was 
a vast plain, bordered on the north aud east by 
mountains, and on the west aud south by sandy 
deserts ; and, though forming a part of the great 



feated the Argives with such loss near Tiryns ■ sandy table-land, now called the Desert of Iran, 
that Sparta was left without a rival in Pelopon- 1 it contained several very fertile oases, especially 



nesus. In consequence of its weakness and of 
its jealousy of Sparta, Argos took no part in the 
Persian war. In order to strengthen itself, Ar- 
gos attacked the neighboring towns of Tiryns, 
Mycenae, <fcc., destroyed them, and transplanted 
their inhabitants to Argos. The introduction 
of so many new citizens was followed by the 
abolition of royalty and of Doric institutions. 



in its northern part, along the base of the Sari- 
phi (now Kohistan and Hazarah) Mountains, 
which was watered by the river Arius or -as 
(now Herirood), on which stood the later capital 
Alexandrea (now Herat). The river is lost in 
the sand. The lower course of the great river 
Etymandrus (now Helmund) also belonged to 
Aria, and the lake into which it falls was called 



and by the establishment of a democracy, which | Aria Lacus (uoav Zurrah). From Aria was de- 
continued to be the form of government till later 
times, when the city fell under the power of 



rived the name under which all the eastern pro- 
vinces were included. Vid. Ariana. 



92 



ARIA LACUS. 



ARIBiEUS. 



Aria Lacus. Vid. Aeia. 

Ariabignes (' ' kptaCtyvrjc), son of Darius Hys 
taspis, one of the commanders of the fleet 
of Xerxes, fell in the battle of Salamis, B.C. 
480. 

Ariadne ('Xpiudwj), daughter of Minos and 
Pasiphae or Creta, fell in love with Theseus 
when he was sent by his father to convey the 
tribute of the Athenians to Minotaurus, and 
gave him the clew of thread by means of which 
he found his way out of the Labyrinth, and 
which she herself had received from Vulcan 
(Hephaestus). Theseus, in return, promised to 
marry her, and she accordingly left Crete with 
him ; but on their arrival in the Island of Dia 
(Naxos), she was killed by Diana (Artemis). 
This is the Homeric account (Od., xi., 322); 
but the more common fraditiou related that 
Theseus left Ariadne in Naxos alive, either be- 
cause he was forced by Bacchus (Dionysus) to 
leave her, or because he was ashamed to bring 
a foreign wife to Athens. Bacchus (Dionysus) 
found her at Naxos, made her his wife, and 
placed among the stars the crown which he 
gave her at their marriage. There are several 
•circumstances in the story of Ariadne which 
offered the happiest subjects for works of art, 
and some of the finest ancient works, on gems 
as well as paintiugs, are still extant, of which 
Ariadue is the subject. 

ARiiBus ('Apmioc) or Arid^eus ('ApiSalog), 
the friend of Cyrus, commanded the left wing 
of the army at the battle of Cunaxa, B.C. 401. 
After the death of Cyrus he purchased his par- 
don from Artaxerxes by deserting the Greeks. 

Ariamnes (' ApiufivTjs), the name of two kings 
of Cappadocia, one the father of Ariarathes L, 
and the other the sou and successor of Ariara- 
thes II. 

Ariana ('Apiav// : now Iran), derived from 
Aria, from the specific sense of which it must 
be carefully distinguished, was the geueral name 
of the eastern provinces of the ancient Persian 
Empire, and included the portion of Asia bound- 
ed on the west by au imaginary line drawn 
from the Caspian to the mouth of the Persian 
Gulf, on the south by the Indian Ocean, on the 
east by the Indus, and on the north by the great 
chain of mountains called by the general name 
of the Indian Caucasus, embracing the provin- 
ces of Partbia, Aria, the Paropamisadae, Ara- 
chosia, Drangiana, Gedrosia, and Carmania 
(now Khoraasan, Afghanistan, Beloochistan, and 
Kirman). But the name was often extended to 
the country as far west as the margin of the 
Tigris valley, so as to include Media and Persis, 
and also to the provinces north of the Indian 
Caucasus, namely, Bactria and Sogdiana (now 
Bokhara). The knowledge of the ancients re- 
specting the greater part of this region was con- 
fined to what was picked up in the expeditions 
of Alexander and the wars of the Greek kings 
of Syria, and what was learned from merchant 
caravans. 

[Ariantas, a king of the Scythians, who, in 
order to take a census of his subjects, ordered 
each to bring him an arrow-head. So great a 
.number was collected, that he caused a bronze 
vessel to be made from them, and this he pre- 
served as a memorial.] 

[Ariapithes, a king of the Scythians, who 



was treacherously murdered by Spargapithes, 
king of the Agathyrsi.] 

[Ariarathea ('Aptapudeca), a city of Cappa- 
docia, founded by the Cappadocian king Ariara- 
thes IV. : it lay between Sebastia and Comana 
A urea.] 

Ariarathes ('Apiapddqc), the name of several 
kings of Cappadocia.— 1. Son of Ariamnes I, 
assisted Ochus in the recovery of Egypt, B.C. 
350. Ariarathes was defeated by Perdiecas. 
and crucified 322. Eumenes then obtained 
possession of Cappadocia. — 2. Son of Holopher- 
nes, and nephew of Ariarathes I., recovered 
Cappadocia after the death of Eumenes, B.C. 
315. He was succeeded by Ariamnes II. — 3. 
Son of Ariamnes II., and grandson of No. 2, 
married Stratomce, daughter of Antiochus II., 
king of Syria. — 4. Son of No. 3, reigned B.C. 
220-162. He married Antiochis, the daughter 
of Antiochus III., kiug of Syria, and assisted 
Antiochus in his war against the Romans. 
After the defeat of Antiochus, Ariarathes sued 
for peace in 188, which he obtained on favorable 
terms. In 183-179, he assisted Eumenes in his 
war against Pharnaces. — 5. Son of No. 4, pre- 
viously called Mithradates, reigned B.C. IBS- 
ISO. He was surnamed Philopator, and was 
distinguished by the excellence of his character 
and his cultivation of philosophy and the liberal 
arts. He assisted the Romans in their war 
against Aristonicus of Pergamus, and fell in 
this war, 130.— 6. Son of No. 5, reigned B.C. 
130-96. He married Laodice, sister of Mithra- 
dates VI., king of Pontus, and was put to death 
by Mithradates by means of Gordius. On his 
death the kingdom was seized by Nicomedes, 
king of Bithyuia. who married Laodice, the 
widow of the late king. But Nicomedes was 
soon expelled by Mithradates, who placed upon 
the throne, — 7. Son of No. 6. He was, how- 
ever, also murdered by Mithradates in a short 
time, who now took possession of his kingdom. 
The Cappadocians rebelled against Mithradates, 
and placed upon the throne, — 8. Second son of 
No. 6 ; but he was speedily driven out of the 
kingdom by Mithradates, and shortly afterward 
died. Both Mithradates and Nicomedes at- 
tempted to give a king to the Cappadocians ; but 
the Romans allowed the people to choose whom 
they pleased, and their choice fell upon Ario- 
barzanes. — 9. Son of Ariobarzanes II., reigned 
B.C. 42-36. He was deposed and put to death 
by Antony, who appointed Archelaus as his suc- 
cessor. 

Ariasp^e or Agriasp^e ('ApLdcnrai, ' 'Aypcda- 
nai), a people in the southern part of the Per- 
sian province of Drangiana, on the very borders 
of Gedrosia, with a capital city, Ariaspe ('Api- 
doirrj). In return for the services which they 
rendered to the army of Cyrus the Great when 
he marched through the desert of Carmania, 
they were honored with the name of Evepye- 
rai, and were allowed by the Persians to re- 
tain their independence, which was confirmed 
to them by Alexauder as the reward of similar 
services to himself. 

[Ariaspes (' ' Apida'Kijg), called by Justin (10, 
1) Ariarates, son of the Persian king Artaxerxes 
Muemon.] 

[Arib^eus (' ApcBaiog), king of the Cappado- 
cians, was slain by the Hyrcanians in the time 

93 



ARICIA. 



ARIOVISTUS. 



of the elder Cyrus, according to Xenophon in times expelled from his kingdom by Mithrada- 
his Cyropffidia.] ' I ^ es » but was finally restored by Pompey iu 63, 

Aricia ( Arieinus : now Ariccia or Riccia), an \ shortly before his death. — 2. Surnamed Philo- 
ancient town of Latium, at the foot of the Alban ' pator, succeeded his father in 63. The time of 
Mount, on the Appian Way, sixteen miles from i his death is not known, but it must have been 
Rome.' It was a member of the Latin confed- 1 before 51, in which year his son was reigning- 
eracv was subdued by the Romans, with the ! — 3. Surnamed Eusebes and Philoromceus, son 
other Latin towns, in B.C. 338, and received | of No. 2, whom he succeeded about 51. He as- 
the Roman franchise. In its neighborhood was ' sisted Pompey against Cassar in 48, but was 
the celebrated grove and temple of Diana Ari- \ nevertheless pardoned by Caesar, who even en- 
ema, on the borders of the Lacus Nemorensis ; larged his territories. He was slain in 42 by 
(now Nemi). Diana was worshipped here with '■ Cassius, because he was plotting against him 
barbarous customs : her priest, called rex 7iemo- j in Asia. 

retisis, was always a runaway slave, who obtain- ! Arion ('Aptuv). 1. Of Methymna in Lesbos, 
ed his office by killing his predecessor in single \ an ancient Greek bard and celebrated player 
combat. The 'priest was obliged to fight with ; on the cithara, is called the inventor of the 
any slave who succeeded in breaking off a ; dithyrambic poetry and of the name dithyramb, 
branch of a certain tree in the sacred grove. j He lived about B.C. 625, and spent a great part 

Arkleus. Vid. Arleus. Arrhidjecs. j of his life at the court of Periauder, tyrant of 

[Aridolis {'Api6u?ug), tyrant of Alabanda in Corinth. Of his life scarcely any thing is known 
Caria, accompanied Xerxes in his expedition beyond the beautiful story of his escape from 
against Greece, and was taken captive by the the sailors with whom he sailed [from Taren- 
Greeks off Artemisium, B.C. 480.] turn in Italy] to Corinth. On one occasion,. 

Arh, is the name applied to the inhabitants thus runs the story, Arion went to Sicily to take 
of the province of Aria, but it is probably, also, 1 part in some musical contest He won the 
a form of the generic name of the whole Per- prize, and, laden with presents, he embarked in 
sian race, derived from the root ar, which means a Corinthian ship to return to his friend Peri- 
noble, and which forms the first syllable of a ander. The rude sailors coveted his treasures, 
great number of Persian names. Compare and meditated his murder. After trying in vain 
Art-ei. j to save his life, he at length obtained" permission 

Arimaspi ('Aptuaz-oi), a people in the north \ once more to play on the eithara. In festal at- 
of Scythia, of whom a fabulous account is given \ tire, he placed himself in the prow of the ship, 
by Herodotus (iv., 27). The germ of the fable | and invoked the gods in, inspired strains, and 
is perhaps to be recognized in the fact that the i then threw himself into the sea. But many 
Ural Mountains abound in gold. song-loving dolphins had assembled round the- 

Areuazes ('Apiud&s) or Ariomazes ('Aptoud- vessel, and one of them now took the bard on, 
£77?), a chief in Sogdiana, whose fortress was , its back and carried him to Taanarus, from 
taken by Alexander in B.C. 328. In it Alex- ' whence he returned to Corinth in safety, and 
ander found Roxana, the daughter of the Bac- ; related his adventure to Periander. Upon the 
trian chief Oxyartes, whom he made his wife. j arrival of the Corinthian vessel, Periander in- 

Arimi ("Apiuot) and Arima (rd "Apipa, sc. bprf), | quired of the sailors after Arion, who replied 
the names of a mythical people, district, and that he had remained behind at Tarentum ; but 
range of mountains in Asia Minor, which the when Arion, at the bidding of Periander, came 
old Greek poets made the scene of the punish- forward, the sailors owned their guilt, and were 
ment of the monster Typhoeus. Vigil (v£?i., ; punished according to their desert. In the times 
ix., 116) has misunderstood the elv 'Apiiioig of \ of Herodotus and Pausanias there existed at 
Homer (11., ii, 183), and made Typhoeus lie be- ; Taenarus a brass monument, representing Arion 
neath Inarime, an island off the coast of Italy, riding on a dolphin. Arion and his cithara (lyre) 
namely, Pithecusa or JEnaria (now Lochia). \ were placed among the stars. A fragment of a 

Arlmixum (Aiiminensis : now Rimini), a town hymn to Neptune (Poseidon), ascribed to Arion, 
in Umbria, on the coast, at the mouth of the little is" contained in Bergks Poetce Lyrici G-rceci, p. 
River Ariminus (now Marocclria). It was origin- 066, &c. — 2. A fabulous horse, which Neptune 
ally inhabited by Umbrians and Pelasgians, was (Poseidon) begot by Ceres (Demeter); for, in 
afterward in the possession of the Senones, and order to escape from the pursuit of Neptune 
was colonized by the Romans in B.C. 268, from : (Poseidon), the goddess had metamorphosed 
which time it appears as a flourishing place, herself into a mare, and Neptune (Poseidon) 
After leaving Cisalpine Gaul, it was the first deceived her by assuming the figure of a horse, 
town which a person arrived at in the northeast [ There were many other traditions respecting 
of Italia proper. j the origin of this horse, but all make Neptuue 

Ariobarzaxes ('Apio6ap^dv7ic). I- Kings or ■ (Poseidon) its father, though its mother is dif- 
Satraps of Ponlus.—l. Betrayed by his son ferent in the various legends. 
Mithradates to the Persian king about B.C. Ariovistus, a German chief, who crossed the 
o°°'~ 2 ; SoD ° f Mitnrad ates I, reigned B.C. Rhine at the request of the Sequani, when they 
363-331. He revolted from Artaxerxes in 362, were hard pressed by the iEdui. He subdued 
and may be regarded as the founder of the king- the JEdui, but appropriated to himself part of 
dom of Pontus.— 3. Son of Mithradates III., the territory of the Sequani, and threatened to 
reigned 266-240, and was succeeded by Mith- take still more. The Sequani now united with 
radates IV. II. Kings of Cappadocia.—l. Sur- the ^Edui in imploring the help of Cassar, who 
named Philoromxm, reigned B.C. 93-63, and defeated Ariovistus about fifty miles from the 
was elected king by the Cappadocians, under Rhine, B.C. 58. Ariovistus escaped across the 
the direction of the Romans. He was several river in a small boat. 



ARIPHON. 



ARISTARCHUS. 



[Ariphon ('Apupuv). I. The father of Xan- 
thippus, and grandfather of Pericles.— 2. Of Sic- 
yon, a Greek poet, author of a beautiful paean to 
Health, preserved by Athenaeus : it k given in 
Bergk's Pockc Li/rici Grceci, p. 841.] 

[Arisbe {■\,>ioCt]). 1. Daughter of Merops, 
first wife of Priam, to whom she bore iEsacus. 

2. Daughter of Teucer, wife of Dardanus, 

from whom the town Arisbe, in Troas, was said 
to be named.] 

[Arisbe ('AptaCij, now Mussa Koi). 1. A town 
of Troas, on the Selleis, not far from Abydus, 
founded by the Lesbians, or, according to Anax- 
imenes of Lampsacus, by the Milesians, the ear- 
lier town having been destroyed by Achilles in 
the Trojan war. It was occupied by the army of 
Alexander after the passage of the Hellespont : 
at a later period it was captured by the Gauls, 
and in Strabo's time it no longer existed. It 
appears to have been subsequently rebuilt, and 
to have become a considerable place under the 
later emperors. — 2. A city of Lesbos, made trib- 
utary at an early period by the Methymnaeans : 
it was destroyed by an earthquake.] 

[Arisbus ("Aptadog), a river of Thrace, flow- 
ing into the Hebrus.] 

Arist^enetus ('ApicTatveroc), the reputed au- 
thor of two books of Love Letters, taken almost 
entirely from Plato, Lucian, Philostratus, and 
Plutarch. Of the author nothing is known. 
The best edition is by Boissonade, Paris, 1822. 

Arist^enus (' ApicTacvoc), of Megalopolis, 
sometimes called Aristcenetus, was frequently 
strategus or general of the Achaean League from 
B.C. 198 to 185. He was the political opponent 
of Philopcemen, and a friend of the Romans. 

Arist.<eus (' ApLaralog), a divinity worshipped 
in various parts of Greece, was once a mortal, 
who became a god through the benefits he had 
conferred upon maukiud. The different ac- 
counts about him seem to have arisen in differ- 
ent places and independently of one another, so 
that they referred to several distinct beings, 
who were subsequently identified and united 
into one. He is described either as a son of 
Uranus and Ge, or, according to a more general 
tradition, as the son of Apollo and Cyrene. His 
mother Cyreue had been carried off by Apollo 
from Mount Peliou to Libya, where she gave 
birth to Ajjjstaaus. Aristaeus subsequently went 
to Thebes in Boeotia ; but after the unfortunate 
death of his son Act.eon, he left Thebes, and 
visited almost all the Greek colonies on the 
coasts of the Mediterranean. Finally he went 
to Thrace, and after dwelling for some time 
near Mount Haemus, where he founded the town 
of Aristaeon, he disappeared. Aristaeus is one 
of the most beneficent divinities in ancient my- 
thology : he was worshipped as the protector 
of flocks and shepherds, of vine and olive plant- 
ations ; he taught men to keep bees, and avert- 
ed from the fields the burning heat of the sun 
and other causes of destruction. 

Aristagoras ('Apiarayopag). 1. Of Miletus, 
brother-in-law of Histiaeus, was left by the latter, 
during his stay at the Persian court, in charge 
of the government of Miletus, Having failed 
in an attempt upon Naxos (B.C. 501), which he 
had promised to subdue for the Persians, and 
fearing the consequences of his failure, he in- 
duced the Ionian cities to revolt from Persia. 



He applied for assistance to the Spartans and 
Athenians : the former refused, but the latter 
sent him twenty ships and some troops. In 
499 his army captured and burned Sardis, but 
was finally chased back to the coast. The 
Athenians now departed ; the Persians con- 
quered most of the Ionian cities ; and Aristag- 
oras, in despair, fled to Thrace, where he was 
slain by the Edonians in 497. — [2. Son of Her- 
aclides, tyrant of Cyme in ^Eolis, one of the Io- 
nian chiefs left by Darius to guard the bridge 
over the Danube. — 3. Tyrant of Cyzicus, also 
in the service of the Persian king, and left by 
him as one of the guards of the bridge over the 
Danube. — 4. A Greek author, who composed a 
work on Egypt, flourished near the time of Pla- 
to. — 5. A comic poet of the old comedy, of whom 
a few slight fragments remain, given by Mei- 
neke, Fragm. Comic. Grcec, voL i., p. 427-428, 
edit, minor.] 

Aristander CAptaravSpoc), the most celebra- 
ted soothsayer of Alexander the Great, wrote a 
work on prodigies. 

Aristarchus ('ApL<j~apxoc). 1. An Athenian, 
one of the leaders in the revolution of the " Foux- 
Huudred," B.C. 411. He was afterward put to 
death by the Athenians, not later than 406.— 2. A 
Lacedaemonian, succeeded Oleander as harmost 
of Byzantium in 400, and in various ways ill 
treated the Greeks of Cyrus's army, who had 
recently returned from Asia. — 3. Of Tegea, a 
tragic poet at Athens, contemporary with Eu- 
ripides, flourished about B.C. 454, and wrote 
seventy tragedies. — 4. Of Samos, an eminent 
mathematician and astronomer at Alexandrea,. 
flourished between B.C. 280 and 264. He enir 
ployed himself in the determination of some of 
the most important elements of astronomy ; but 
none of his works remain, except a treatise on 
the magnitudes and distances of the sun and 
moon (irepl fieyeOtiv nal anocrrjfidruv rfkiov not 
aelrjvrjc). Edited by Wallis, Oxon, 1688, and 
reprinted in vol. hi. of his works. There is a 
French translation, and an edition of the text r 
Paris, 1810. — 5. Of Samothrace, the celebrated 
grammarian, flourished B.C. 156. He was edu- 
cated in the school of Aristophanes of Byzan- 
tium, at Alexandrea, where he himself founded 
a grammatical and critical school. At an ad- 
vanced age he left Alexandrea and went to 
Cyprus, where he is said to have died at the 
age of 72, of voluntary starvation, because he 
was suffering from incurable dropsy. Aristar- 
chus was the greatest critic of antiquity. His- 
labors were chiefly devoted to the Greek poets, 
but more especially to the Homeric poems, of 
which he published a recension, which has been 
the basis of the text from his time to the pres- 
ent day. The great object of his critical labors 
was to restore the genuine text of the Homeric 
poems, and to clear it of all later interpolations- 
and corruptions. He marked those verses which 
he thought spurious with an obelos, and those 
which he considered as particularly beautiful 
with an asterisk. He divided the Iliad and 
Odyssey into twenty-four books each. He did 
not confine himself to a recension of the text r 
but also explained and interpreted the poems : 
he opposed the allegorical interpretation which 
was then beginning to find favor, and which at 
a later time became very general. His gram- 

95 



ARISTEAS. 



ARISTIPPUS. 



matical principles were attacked by many of his 
contemporaries : the most eminent of his oppo- 
nents was Crates of Mallus. 

Aristeas ('ApioTeac). 1. Of Proconnesus, an 
epic poet of whose life we have only fabulous 
accounts. His date is quite uncertain: some 
place him in the time of Croesus and Cyrus ; 
but other traditions make him earlier than Ho- 
mer or a contemporary and teacher of Homer. 
The' ancient writers represent him as a magi- 
cian, who rose after his death, and whose soul 
could leave and re-enter its body according to 
its pleasure. He was connected with the wor- 
ship of Apollo, which he was said to have in- 
troduced at Metapontum. He is said to have 
travelled through the countries north and east 
of the Euxine, and to have visited the Issedones, 
Arimaspse, Cimmerii, Hyperborei, and other 
mythical nations, and after his return to have 
written an epic poem in three books, called Tfie 
Arimaspea (ra 'ApL/MOTzeia). This work is fre- 
quently mentioned by the ancients, but it is 
impossible to say who was the real author of 
it. — [2. Of Chios, a distinguished officer in the 
army of the Ten Thousand. — 3. An Argive, 
who invited Pyrrhus to Argos, B.C. 272, as his 
rival Aristippus was supported by Antigonus 
Gonntas.] 

Aristeas or Arist^eus, an officer of Ptolemy 
Philadelphus (B.C. 285-241), the reputed author 
of a Greek work, giving an account of the man- 
ner in which the translation of the Septuagint 
was executed, but which is generally admitted 
bv the best critics to be spurious. Printed at 
Oxford, 1692. 8vo. 

Aristides ('ApcaTELdTjg). 1. An Athenian, son 
of Lysimachus, surnamed the " Just," was of an 
ancient and noble family. He was the political 
disciple of Clistbenes, and partly on that ac- 
count, partly from personal character, opposed 
from the first to Themist'<cles. Aristides fought 
as the commander of his tribe at the battle of 
Marathon, B.C 490 ; and next year, 489, he was 
archon. In 483 or 482 he suffered ostracism, 
probably in consequence of the triumph of the 
maritime and democratic policy of his rival. He 
was still in exile in 480 at the battle of Salamis, 
where he did good service by dislodging the 
enemy, with a band raised and armed by him- 
self, from the islet of Psyttaleia. He was re- 
called from banishment after the battle, was ap- 
pointed general in the following year (479), and 
commanded the Athenians at the battle of Pla- 
tseaB. In 47*7, when the allies had become dis- 
gusted with the conduct of Pausanias and the 
Spartans, he and his colleague Cimon had the 
glory of ubtainiugfor Athens the command of the 
maritime confederacy ; and to Aristides was by 
general cousent intrusted the task of drawing 
up its laws and fixing its assessments. This 
first tribute (<j>6pog) of 460 talents, paid into a 
common treasury at Delos, bore his name, and 
was regarded by the allies in after times as 
marking their Saturnian age. This is his last 
recorded act. He died after 471, the year of 
the osti acism of Theinistocles, and very likely 
in 468. He died so poor that he did not leave 
enough to pay for his funeral: his daughters 
were portioned by the state, and his son, Ly- 
simachus, received a grant of land and of money. 
— 2. The author of a work entitled Milesiaca, 



which was probably a romance, having Miletus 
for its scene. It was written in prose, and was 
of a licentious character. It was translated into 
Latin by *L. Cornelius Sisenna, a contemporary 
of Sulla, and it seems to have become popular 
with the Romans. Aristides is reckoned as 
the inventor of the Greek romance, and the 
title of his work gave rise to the term Milesian, 
as applied to works of fiction. His age and 
country are unknown, but the title of his work 
is thought to favor the conjecture that he was a 
native of Miletus. — 3. Of Thebes, a celebrated 
Greek painter, flourished about B.C. 360-330. 
The point in which he most excelled was in 
depicting the feelings, expressions, and pas- 
sions which may be observed in common life. 
His pictures were so much valued, that, long 
after his death, Attalus, king of Pergamus, offer- 
ed six hundred thousand sesterces for one of 
them. — 4. JElius Aristides, surnamed Theo- 
dorus, a celebrated Greek rhetorician, was born 
at Adriani, in Mysia, in AD. 117. He studied 
under Herodes Atticus at Athens, and subse- 
quently travelled through Egypt, Greece, and 
Italy. The fame of his talents and acquire- 
ments was so great, that monuments were 
erected to his honor in several towns which he 
had honored with his presence. Shortly before 
his return he was attacked by an illness which 
lasted for thirteen years, but this did not prevent 
him from prosecuting his studies. He subse- 
quently settled at Smyrna, and when this city 
was nearly desti'oyed by an earthquake in 178, 
he used his influence with the emperor. M. Au- 
relius, to induce him to assist in rebuilding the 
town. The Smyrnseans showed their gratitude 
to Aristides by offering him various honors and 
distinctions, most of which he refused : he ac- 
cepted only the office of priest of iEsculapius 
(Asclepius), which he held until his death, about 
A.D. 180. The works of Aristides which have 
come down to us are fifty-five orations and dec- 
lamations, and two treatises on rhetoric;il sub- 
jects of little value. His orations are much su- 
perior to those of the rhetoricians of his time. 
His admirers compared him to Demosthenes, 
and even Aristides did not think himself much 
inferior. This vanity and self-sufficiency made 
him enemies and opponents; but the number 
of his admirers was far greater, ^md several 
learned grammarians wrote commentaries on 
his orations, some of which are extant. The 
best edition of Aristides is by W. Dindorf, Lips., 
1829. — 5. Quintilianus Aristides, the author 
of a treatise in three books on music, probably 
lived in the first century after Christ. His work 
is perhaps the most valuable of all the ancient 
musical treatises : it is printed in the collection 
of Meibomius entitled Antiquce Musicce Auctores 
Septem, Amst., 1652. 

Aristion ('ApLCTtov), a philosopher either of 
the Epicurean or Peripatetic school, made him- 
self tyrant of Athens through the influence of 
Mithradates. He held out against Sulla in B. 
C. 87 ; and when the city was taken by storm, 
he was put to death by Sulla's orders. 

Aristippus ('AptarnnTog). 1. Son of Aritades, 
born at Cyrene, and founder of the Cyrenaic 
school of philosophy, flourished about B.C. 370. 
The fame of Socrates brought him to Athens, 
and he remained with that philosopher almost 



ARIST1US FUSCUS. 



AKJSTOCEATES. 



up to the time oi* bis execution, B.C. 
Though :i disciple of Socrates, he wandered 
both in principle and practice very tar from the 
teachiug and example of his. great master. He 
was luxurious in his mode of living- ; he in- 
dulged in sensual gratifications and the society 
of the notorious Lais ; and he took money for 
bis teaching (being the first of the disciples of 
Socrates who did so). He passed part of liis 
life at the court of Hionysius, tyrant of Syra- 
cuse ; but ho appears at last to have returned to 
Cyrcne, and there to have spent his old age. 
The anecdotes which are told of him, however, 
do uot give us the notion of a person who was 
the mere slave of his passions, but rather of one 
who took a pride in extracting enjoyment from 
all circumstances of every land, and in eon- 
trolling adversity and prosperity alike. They 
illustrate and confirm the two statements of 
Horace {Ep., i., 1, 18), that to observe the pre- 
cepts of Aristippus is mihi res, non me rebus sub- 
jung»re, and (i., 17, 23) that omnis Arisiippum 
>iecuit color ft status et res. Thus, when re- 
proached for his love of bodily indulgences, he 
answered that there was no shame in enjoy- 
ing them, but that it would be disgraceful if he 
could uot at any time give them up. To Xeuo- 
phon and Plato he was very obnoxious, as we 
see from the Memorabilia* {\\., 1), where he main- 
tains an odious discussion against Socrates in 
defence of voluptuous ' enjoyment, and from the 
Phaxfo, where his absence at the. death of Soc- 
rates, though he was only at iEgina, two hund- 
red stadia from Athens, is doubtless mentioned 
as a reproach. He imparted his doctrine to his 
daughter Arete, by whom it was communicated 
to her son, the younger Aristippus. — [2. Arjs- 
Tirrrjs, an Aleuad, of Larissa m Tbessaly, re- 
ceived money and troops from Cyrus, to resist a 
faction opposed to him, and for the ulterior 
purposes of Cyrus, to whom he sent the troops 
under command of Mcuon. — 3. An Argive, who 
obtained the supreme power iu Argos through 
the aid of Antigouus Gonatas, about " B.C. 272. — 
4. An Argive, tyrant of Argos after the the mur- 
der of Aristomachus I. Aratus made many at- 
tempts to deprive him of his tyranny, but at first 
without success : he fell at length in a battle 
against Aratus, and was succeeded iu the tyran- 
ny by Aristomachus 11. Vid. Autstomachus, 
v.-. 3 and 4.] 
[Aristius Fuscus, Vid. Fuscus. No. 2.] 
Auisto, T., a distinguished Roman jurist, lived 
under the Emperor Trajan, and was a friend of 
the younger Pliny. His works are occasionally 
mentioned in the Digest, but there is no di- 
rect extract from any of them in that compi- 
lation. He wrote notes on the Lihri Poste- 
riorurn of Labeo, on Cassius, whose pupil he had 
been, and on Sabinus. 
Aristo. Vid. Ariston. 

Aristobulus VApiGTo6ov?,oc), princes of Ju- 
daea. 1. Eldest son of Joannes Hyrcanus, as- 
sumed the title of King of Judaea on the death 
of his father in B.C. 107. He put to death his 
brother Antigonus in order to secure his power, 
but died in the folio wiug year, 106. — 2. Younger 
son of Alexander Janmeus and Alexandra. 
After the death of his mother in B.C. 70, there 
•was a civil war for some years between Aristo- 
bulus and bis brother Hyrcanus for the posses- 



sion of the crown At length, in B.C. 63, Aristo- 
bulus was deprived of the the sovereignty by 
Pompey, and carried away as a prisoner to 
Rome. In 57 he escaped from his confinement 
at Rome with his sou Antigonus, and, return- 
ing to Judosa, renewed the war ; but he was 
taken prisoner, and sent back to Rome by Ga- 
binius. In 49 he was released by Julius Coasar, 
who seut him into Judsea, but he was poisoned 
on the way by some of Pompey's party. — 3. 
Grandson of No. 2, son of Alexander, and broth- 
er of Herod's wife Mariamne. He was made 
high-priest by Herod when he was only seven- 
teen years old, but was afterward drowned at; 
Jericho, by order of Herod, B.C. 35. — 4. Son of 
Herod the Great by Mariamne, was put to death 
in B.C. 6, with 3iis brother Alexander, by order 
of their father, whose suspicions had been excit- 
ed against them by their brother Antipater. — 
5. Surnamed " the Younger," son of Aristobulus 
and Berenice, and grandson of Herod the Great. 
He was educated at Rome with his two brothers, 
Agrippa I. and Herod the future king of 
Chalcis. He died, as he had lived, in a private 
station. — 6. Son of Herod, king of Chalcis, 
grandson of No. 4, ami great-grandson of Herod 
the Great. In A.D. 55, Nero made him king 
of Armenia Minor, and in 61 added to his do- 
minions some portion of the Greater Armenia 
which had been given to Tigranes. He joined 
the Romans in the war against Antiochus, king 
of Commagene, in 73. 

Aristobulus. I. Of Caesandrea, served un- 
der Alexander the Great in Asia, and wrote a. 
history of Alexander, which was one of the 
chief sources used by Arrian in the composition 
of his work. — 2. An Alexandrine Jew, and a. 
Peripatetic philosopher, lived B.C. 170, under 
Ptolemy VI. Philometor. He is said to have 
been the author of commentaries upon the books 
of Moses, the object of which was to prove that 
the Greek philosophy was taken from the books 
of Moses ; but it is now admitted that this work 
was written by a later writer, whose object was 
to induce the Greeks to pay respect to the Jew- 
ish literature. 

Aristocles {'ApiGTOKAr/c). 1. Of Rhodes, a 
Greek grammarian and rhetorician, a contem- 
porary of Strabo. — 2. Of Pergamus, a Sophist 
and rhetorician, and a pupil of Herod.es Atticus, 
lived under Trajan and Hadrian. — 3. Of Mes- 
sene, a Peripatetic philosopher, probably lived 
about the beginning of the third century after 
Christ He wrote a work on philosophy, some 
fragments of which are preserved by Eusebius. 
— 4. Sculptors. There were two sculptors of 
this name: Aristocles the elder, who is called 
both a Cydonian and a Sicyonian, probably be- 
cause he was born at Cydonia and practiced his 
art in Sicyon ; and Aristocles the younger, of 
Sicyon, grandson of the former, son of Cleoetas, 
and brother of Canachus. These artists founded 
& school of sculpture at Sicyon, which se- 
cured an hereditary reputation, and of which 
we have the heads for several generations, name- 
ly, Aristocles, Clerctas, Aristocles and Cana- 
chus, Synnoon, Ptoliehus, Sostratus, and Pantias. 
The elder Aristocles probably lived about B.C. 
600-568 ; the younger about 540-508 —[5. Ear- 
lier name of Plato. Vid. Plato.] 

Aristoojb ATE8 V A-QiGToxpaTTjc). %. Last King 
97 



ARISTODEMUS. 



ARISTOMENES. 



of Arcadia, was the leader of the Arcadians in 
the second Messenian war. when they assisted 
the Messenians against the Spartans. Having 
been bribed by the Spartans, he betrayed the 
Messenians, and was, in consequence, stoned to 
death by the Arcadians about B.C. 668, who 
tk>w abolished the kingly office. — 2. An Atheni- 
an of wealth and influence, son of Scellias, was 
one of the Athenian generals at the battle of 
Arginusae, B.C. 406, and on his return to Athens 
?ras brought to trial and executed. 

Aristodemus ('ApiGTodijuog). 1. A descend- 
ant of Hercules, son of Aristomachus, and fa- 
ther of Eurysthenes and Procles. According 
to some traditions, Aristodemus was killed at 
Naupaetus by a flash of lightning, just as he 
was setting out on his expedition into Pelopon- 
nesus ; but a Lacedaemonian tradition related 
that Aristodemus himself came to Sparta, was 
the first king of his race, and died a natural 
death. — 2. A Messenian, one of the chief heroes 
in the first Messenian war. As the Delphic 
oracle had declared that the preservation of the 
Messenian state demanded that a maiden of the 
house of the ^Epytids should be sacrificed, Aris- 
todemus offered his own daughter. In order to 
save her life, her lover declared that she was 
with child by him ; but Aristodemus, enraged at 
this assertion, murdered his daughter, and open- 
ed her body to refute the calumny. Aristode- 
mus was afterward elected king in place of 
Euphaes, who had fallen in battle against the 
Spartans. He continued the war against the 
Spartans, till at length, finding further resist- 
ance hopeless, he putf an end to his life, on the 
tomb of his daughter, about B.C. 723. — 8. Ty- 
rant of Cumre in Campania, at whose court Tar- 
quinius Superbus died, B.C. 496. — 4. One of the 
three hundred Spartans at Thermopylae (B.C. 
480), was not present at the battle in which his 
comrades fell, either in consequence of sick- 
ness, or because he had been sent on an errand 
from the camp. The Spartans punished him 
with Atimia, or civil degradation. Stung with 
this treatment, he met his death at Platfeas in 
the following year (479), after performing the 
wildest feats of valor. — 5. A tragic actor of 
Athens in the time of Demosthenes, took a 
prominent part in the political affairs of his 
time, and advocated peace with Macedonia. 
He was employed by the Athenians in the ne- 
gotiations with Philip, with whom he was a 
great favorite. — 6. Of Miletus, a friend and flat- 
terer of Antigonus, king of Asia, who sent him 
into Greece iu B.C. 315, in order to promote 
his interests there. — 7. There were many lit- 
erary persons cf this name referred to by the 
ancient grammarians, whom it is difficult to dis- 
tinguish from one another. Two were natives 
of Nysa in Caria, both grammarians, one a teach- 
er of Pompey, and the other of Strabo. There 
was also an Aristodemus of Elis, and another 
of Thebes, who are quoted as writers. [The 
fragments of these writers are collected and 
published together by Miiller, Fragm. Histor. 
Grcec., vol. iii., p. 307-311.] 

Aristogiton ('ApiGToye'iruv). 1. The con- 
spirator against the sous of m Pisistratus. Vid. 
Hasmooius. — 2. An Athenian orator and ad- 
versary of Demosthenes, Hyperides, and Dinar- 
efcm He was often accused bv Demosthenes 
98 



and othei's, and defended himself iu a number 
of orations which are lost. Among the extant 
speeches of Demosthenes there are two against 
Aristogiton, and among those of Dinarchus there 
is one. 

Aeistomache ('ApLcrofidxfi). [1. One of the 
daughters of Priam, and wife of Critolaus.] — 
2. Daughter of Hipparlnus of Syracuse, sister 
of Dion, and wife of the elder Dionysius, wh<- 
married her and Doris of Locri on the same day. 
She afterward perished with her daughter 
Arete. 

Aeistomackus ( ApiG-ouavor). 1. Sou of Ta- 
laus and brother of Adrastus. — 2. Son of Cleo- 
demus or Cleodasus, grandson of Hyllus, great- 
grandson of Hercules, and father of Temenus, 
Cresphontes, and Aristodemus. He fell in bat^ 
tie when he invaded Peloponnesus ; but hifc 
three sons were more successful, and conquer- 
ed Peloponnesus. — 3. Tyrant of Argos, under 
the patronage of Antigonus Gonatas, was as- 
sassinated, and succeeded by Aristippus II. — i. 
Tyrant of Argos, succeeded Aristippus 1L : he 
resigned his power upon the death of Demetri- 
us iu B.C. 229, and induced Argos to join the 
Achaean League, He afterward deserted the 
Acha2an3, and again assumed the tyranny of Ar- 
gos ; but the city having been taken by Antigo- 
nus Doson, Aristomachus fell into the hands of 
the Achaeans, and was by them put to death. 

Aeistomenes ('Ap/crro/^ev^c). 1. The Messe- 
nian, the hero of the second war with Sparta, 
belongs more to legend than to history. He 
was a native of Andania, and was sprung from 
the royal line of xEpytus. Tired of the yoke of 
Sparta, he began the war iu B.C. 685, thirty - 
nine years after the end of the first war. Soou 
after its commencement, he so distinguished 
himself by his valor that he Avas offered the 
throne, but refused it, and received the office 
of supreme commander. After the defeat ot 
the Messenians in the third year of the war. 
through the treachery of Aristocratee, the Ar- 
cadian leader, Aristomenes retreated to the 
mountain fortress of Ira, and there main ta i ned 
the war eleven years, constantly ravaging the 
land of Laeonia. In one of his incursions, how- 
ever, the Spartans overpowered him with su- 
perior numbers, and carry iug him, with fifty <>i 
his comrades, to Sparta, cast them into the. 
pit (fceddag) where condemned criminals were 
thrown. The rest perished ; not so Aristome- 
nes, the favorite of \he gods ; for legends told 
how an eagle bore him up on its wings as he 
fell, and a fox guided him on the third day from 
the cavern. But having incurred the anger of 
the Twin Brothers, his country was destined to 
ruin. The city of Ira, which he had so long 
successfully defended, fell into the hands of the 
Spartans ; Aristomeues, after performing prodi- 
gies of valor, was obliged to leave his country, 
which was again compelled to submit to the 
Spartans, B.C. 668. He afterward settled at 
Ialvsus in Rhodes, where he died. Damagetus, 
king of Ialysus, had been enjoined by the Del- 
phic oracle " to marry the daughter of the best 
of the Greeks," and he therefore took to wife 
the daughter of Aristomenes, who accompanied 
him to Rhodes. The Rhodians honored Am- 
tomenes as a hero, and from him were descend- 
ed the illustrious family of the Diflgoridw.— ** 



ARISTON. 



ARISTOPHANES, 



An Aearnanian, who governed Egypt with jus- 
tice and wisdom during the minority of Ptolc- 
mj V. Epiphanes, but was put to death by Ptole- 
my in 192. — 3. A eomic poet of Athens, flour- 
ished during the Peloponnesiau war: [of his 
comedies only a few fragments remain, which are 
collected in Meineke's Fragm. Comic. Grace, vol 
I, p. 415-7, edit, minor.] 

Aristok ('AplffTuv). 1. Of Chios, a Stoic 
philosopher, and a disciple of Zeno, flourished 
•about B.C. 960. Though he professed himself 
a Stoic, yet he differed from Zeno in several 
;x>inte, and became the founder of a small 
school He is said to have died of a coup dc 
soleil. — 2. A Peripatetic philosopher of Iuhs in 
the Island of Ceos, succeeded Lycon as head 
of the Peripatetic school about B.C. 230. He 
wrote several philosophical works which are 
!ost — 3. Of Alexandrea, a Peripatetic philoso- 
pher end a contemporary of Strabo, wrote a 
work on the Nile ; [and another, rrepl 'AOyvatov 
anotniar, as Vossius has shown, with whom also 
Muller agrees, who has given the fragments of 
these works, in his Fragm. Mist. Qrcec., vol. iii., 
p. 324-5.] 

Aristonaltve(' Apcarovavrai), a town in Aehaia, 
the harbor of Pallene. 

Aristonicus ('AptGTovLtLor). ] . [A tyrant of 
Methymna, in Lesbos, who oppressed the Les- 
bians. He was subsequently taken prisoner by 
the naval commanders of Alexander at Chios, 
given up to the Methymneans, and by them 
cruelly put to death.] — 2. A natural son of Eu- 
inenes II. of Pergamus. Upon the death of his 
brother, Attalus^ HI, B.C. 133, who left his 
kingdom to the Romans, Aristonieus laid claim 
to the erown. At first ho met with considerable 
success. He defeated in 131 the consul P. Li- 
eiuius Crassus ; but in 130 he was defeated and 
taken prisoner by M. Perporna, was carried to 
Rome by M'i Aquillius in 129, and was there put 
to death. — 3. An Alexandrine grammarian, a 
contemporary of Strabo, and the author of sev- 
eral works, most of which related to the Homeric 
poems. 

Aristonvmus ('AptOTuwftos), a comic poet and 
contemporary of Aristophanes and Amipsias, [of 
whose plays scarcely any thing survives : two or 
three fragments are given in Meineke's Fragm. 
domic. Gtcbc, vol i., p. 401-2, edit, minor.] 

Aristophanes ('AptfSTQ<j>dv7jc). 1. The cele- 
brated comic poet, was born about B.C. 444, and 
probably at Athens. His father Philippus had 
possessions in yEgiua, and may originally have 
oome from that island, whence a question arose 
whether Aristophanes was a genuine Athenian 
oitizen: his enemy Cleon brought against him 
more than on- accusation to deprive him of his 
civic rights (ir:iar yjW?ai), but without success. 
He had three sous. Philippus, Araros, and Ni- 
eostratus, but of his private history we know 
ootlung. He probably died about B*C. 380. The 
•omedies of Aristophanes are of the highest his- 
torical interest, containing as they do an admi- 
rable series of caricatures on the leading men 
of the day, and a contemporary commentary on 
the evils existing at Athens. Indeed, the cari- 
cature is the only feature in modern social life 
which at all resembles them. Aristophanes was 
a bold and often a wise patriot. He had the 
strongest affection for Athena and longed to gee 



her restored to the state in which she was flour- 
ishing in the previous generation, and almost in 
his own childhood, before Pericles became the 
head of the government, and when the age of 
Miltiades and Aristides had but just passed 
away. The first great evil of his own time 
against which he inveighs is the Peloponnesian 
war, which he regards m the work of Pericles. 
To this fatal war, among a host of evils, he as- 
cribes the influence of demagogues like Cleon 
at Athens. Another groat object of his indig- 
nation was the recently adopted system of edu- 
cation, which had been introduced by the Soph- 
ists, acting on the speculative and inquiring 
turn given to the Atheniau mind by the Ionian 
and Eleatic philosophers, and the extraordinary 
intellectual development of the age following 
the Persian war. The new theories introduced 
by the Sophists threatened to overthrow the 
foundations of morality, by making persuasion, 
and not truth, the object of man in Ins intercourse 
with his fellows, and to substitute a universal 
skepticism for the religious creed of the people. 
The worst effects of such a system were seen in 
Aleibiades, who combined all the elements which 
Aristophanes most disliked, beading the war 
party in politics, and protecting the sophistical 
school in philosophy and also in literature. Of 
this latter school — the literary aud poetical Soph- 
ists — Euripides was the chief, whose works 
are full of that fiETccopoGOtpLO, which contrasts so 
offensively with the moral dignity of iEschylus 
and Sophocles, and for which Aristophanes in- 
troduces him as soaring in the air to write his 
tragedies. Another feature of the times was 
the excessive love for litigation at Athens, the 
consequent importance of the dicasts, and dis- 
graceful abuse of their power, all of which enor- 
mities are made by Aristophanes objects of con- 
tinual attack. But though he saw what were 
the evils of his time, he had not wisdom to find 
a remedy for them, except the hopeless and un- 
desirable one of a movement backward ; and 
therefore, though we allow him to have been 
honest and bold, we must deny him the epithet 
of great. The following is a list of his extant 
comedies, with the year in which they were 
performed : 425. Acharnians. Produced in the 
name of Callistratus. First prize. — 424. 'I7r7re#, 
Knights or Horsemen. The first play produced 
in the name of Aristophanes himself. First 
prize ; second Cratinus. — 423. Clouds. First 
prize, Cratinus ; second, Amipsias. — 422. Wasps. 
Second prize. — Clouds (second edition), failed in 
obtaining a prize. Some writers place this B.C.. 
411, and the whole subject is very uncertain. 
— 419. Peace. Second prize; Eupolis, first — 
Birds. Second prize ; Amipsias, first ; Phryn 
ichus, third. — 411. Lysislrata. — Thesmophorio- 
ztisa:. During the Oligarchy. — 408. First Plu 
tus. — 405. Frogs. First prize ; Phry melius, sec- 
ond ; Plato, third. Death of Sophocles. — 392. 
Ecclesiazusce. — 388. Second edition of the Plv- 
tus. — The last two comedies of Aristophanes 
were the JEolosicon and Cocahis, produced about 
B.C. 387 (date of the peace of Antalcidas) by Ar- 
aros, one of his sons. Suidas tells us that Aris- 
tophanes was the author, in all, of fifty-four plays. 
As a poet Aristophanes possessed merits of the 
highest order. His works contain snatches of 
lyric poetry v?hieh are Quite noble, and some of 

99 



AftfSTOPHOJir. 



AillSTOTKLES. 



his choruses, particolarly one in the Knightc, iu j of Macedonia* and the author of several treatises 
■which the horses arc represented as rowing tri- j on subjects connected with natural science : his 
renies in an expedition against Corinth, are writ- mother, Phaestis (or Pha;stias), was descended 
ten with a spirit and humor unrivalled in Greek, j from a Chaleidian family. The studies and oc- 
and are not very dissimilar to English ballads. , cupation of his father account for the early in 
He was a complete master of the Attic dialect, ' clination manifested by Aristotle for the inves 
and in his hands the perfection of that glorious i tigation of nature, an inclination which is per- 
language is wonderfully shown. ISTo flights are | ceived throughout his whole life. He lost his 
too bold for the range of his fancy : animals of , father before he had attained his seventeenth 
every kind are pressed into his service ; frogs j year, and he was intrusted to the guardianship 
ehaunt choruses, a dog is tried for stealing a i of one Proxenus of Atarneus in Mysia, who was 
cheese, and an iambic verse is composed of the ; settled in Stagira. In 367 he went to Athens 
grunts of a j>ig. — Editions : The best of the col- to pursue his studies, and there became a pupil 
leetive plays are by Invernizzi, completed by ; of Plato upon the return of the latter from Sici- 
Beck and Dindorf, IS vols., Lips., 1794-1826 :; ly about 365. Plato soon distinguished him 
by Bekker, 5 vols. Sve, Lond., 1829 ; [and by Din- ! above all his other disciples. He named him 
dorf, 4 vols., in 7 parts. 8vo, Oxford, 1835-38]. — i the "intellect of hi3 school," and his house the 
2. Of Byzantium, son of Apelies, and one of the j house of the " reader." Aristotle lived at 
most eminent Greek grammarians at Alexan- j Athens for twenty years, till 347. During the 
drea. He was a pupil of Zenodotus and Era- j whole of this period the good understanding 
tosthenes, and teacher of the celebrated Aristar- which subsisted between teacher and scholar 
chus. He lived about B.C. 264, in the reign of j continued, with some trifling exceptions, undie- 
Ptolemy II. and Ptolemy III., and had the su- [ turbed, for the stories of the disrespect and in- 
preme management of the library at Alexandres. | gratitude of the latter toward the former are 
Aristophanes was the first who introduced the ; nothing but calumnies invented by his enemies, 
use of accents in the Greek language. He de- ! During the last ten years of hi3 first residence 
voted himself chiefly to the criticism and inter- ; at- Athens, Aristotle gave instruction in rhetoric, 
pretation of the Greek poets, and more espe- ; and distinguished himself by his opposition to 
cially of Homer, of whose works he made a new j Isoerates. It was at this time that he publish- 
and critical edition (oiopducric}. The philoso- ! ed his first rhetorical writings. Upon the death 
phei's Plato and Aristotle likewise engaged his 1 of Plato (347) Aristotle left Athens; perhaps he 
attention, and of the former, as of several of the j was offended by Plato having appointed Speu- 
poets, he made new and critical editions. All j sippus as his successor in the Academy. He 
we possess of his numerous works consists of | first repaired to his friend Hermias at Atarneus. 
fragments scattered through the Scholia on the j where he married Pythias, the adoptive daugh- 
poets, some arguments to the plays of the tragic j ter of the prince. On the death of Hermias, 
poets and of Aristophanes, and" a part of his who was killed by the Persians (344), Aristotle 
A^eic, which is printed in Boissonade's edition ; fled from Atarneus to Mytilene. Two years 
of Herodian's Partiliones, London, 1S19, p. 283- j afterward (342) he accepted an invitation from 
2S9. ^ [A collection of all the extant fragments J Philip of Macedonia to undertake the instruc- 
of Aristophanes has been made by Xauek, Haile, ' tion of his son Alexander, then thirteen years 
184S, 8vo.] of age. Here Aristotle was treated with the 

Aristopiiox ('Af)io-0(pGjv). 1. Of the demus | most marked respect. His native city, Stagira, 
of Azenia iu Attica, one of the most distinguish- ' which had been destroyed by Philip, was re- 
ed Athenian orators about the close of the Pelo- j built at his request, and Philip caused a gym- 
ponnesian war. The number of laws which he ' nasium (called !Nympha3uin) to be built there in 
proposed may be inferred from his own state- j a pleasant grove expressly for Aristotle and bis 
ment, as preserved by ^Eschines, that he was ; pupils. Several of the youths of the Macedo- 
accused seventy -five times of having made ille- i nian nobles were educated by Aristotle along 
gal proposals, but that he had always come off j with Alexander. Aristotle spent seven years 
victorious. In B.C. 354 he accused Iphicrates | in Macedonia, but Alexander enjoyed his in- 
and, Timotheus, and in the same year he came j struction without interruption for only four, 
forward in the assembly to defend the law of j Still, with such a pupil, even this short period 
Leptines against Demosthenes. The latter j was sufficient for a teacher like Aristotle to 
treats kim with great respect, and reckons him j fulfill the highest purposes of education, and to 
among the most eloquent orators. — 2. Of the j create in his pupil that sense of the noble and 
demus of Colyttus, a contemporary of Demos- ! great which distinguishes Alexander from all 
thenes, and an orator of great distinction and those conquerors who have only swept like a 
influence. It was this Aristophon whom iEs- ' hurricane through the world. On Alexander's 
chines served as a clerk, and in whose service j accession to the throne in 335, Aristotle return- 
he was trained for his public career. Vid. Ms- ; ed to Athens. Here he found his friend Xenoc- 
chixes. — 3. A eomie poet of the middle comedy ; j rates president of the Academy. He himself 
[the fragments of his plays remaining are col- had the Lyceum, a gymnasium sacred to Apollo 
lected by Meineke, in his Fragm Comic. Grcee., \ Lyceus, assigned to him by the state. He soon 
voL ii., p. 675-679, ed. minor.] — l. A painter of j assembled round him a large number of distin- 
some distinction, son and pupil f Aglaophon, | guished scholars, to whom he delivered lectures 
and brother of Polyguotus. ' j on philosophy in the shady walks (-n-epiTraToi) 

Aristoteles ('ApiGTOTihjc), the philosopher, i which surrounded the Lyceum, while walking 
was born at Stagira, a town in Chalcidice in ! up and down (TrepMrarwv), and not sitting, which 
Macedonia. B.C. 384. His father, Nicomachus. ! was the general practice of the philosophers, 
was physician in ordinary to Amvntas II, kine i From one or other of these circumstances the 
100 ^ 



ARLSTOTE LES. 



ARISTOTELES. 



name Peripatetic is derived, which was after- 
ward given to his school. He gave two dif- 
ferent courses of lectures every day. Those 
which he delivered in the morning (tuOivdc tte- 
piiraToc ) to a narrower circle of chosen (esote- 
ric) hearers, and which were called acroamatic 
or acroatic, embraced subjects connected with 
the more abstruse philosophy (theology), phys- 
ics, and dialectics. Those which he delivered 
in the afternoon (deihtvoc Tzepirraroc), and intend- 
ed for a more promiscuous circle (which, accord- 
ingly, he called exoteric), extended to rhetoric, 
sophistics, and politics. He appears to have 
taught not so much in the way of conversation 
as in regular lectures. His school soon became 
the most celebrated at Athens, and he continued 
to preside over it for thirteen years (335-323). 
During this time he also composed the greater 
part of his works. In these labors he was as- 
sisted by the truly kingly liberality of his former 
pupil, who not only presented him with 800 
talents, but also caused large collections of nat- 
ural curiosities to be made for him, to which 
posterity is indebted for one of his most excel- 
lent works, the History of Animals. Meanwhile 
various causes contributed to throw a cloud 
over the latter years of the philosopher's life. 
In the first place ho felt deeply the death of his 
wife Pythias, who left behind her a daughter of 
the same name : he lived subsequently with a 
friend of his wife's, the slave Herpyllis, who 
bore him a son, Nieomachus. But a source of 
still greater grief was an interruption of the 
friendly relation in which he had hitherto stood 
to his royal pupil. This A\as oecasioned by the 
conduct of Callisthkm-s, the nephew and pupil 
of Aristotle, who hud vehemently and injudi- 
ciously opposed the changes in the conduct and 
policy of Alexander. Still Alexander refrain- 
ed from any expression of hostility towards his 
former instructor, although their former cordial 
connection no longer subsisted undisturbed. 
The story that Aristotle had a share in jxason- 
ing the king is a fabrication of a later age ; 
and, moreover, it is certain that Alexander died 
a natural death. After the death of Alexan- 
der (323), Aristotle was looked upon with suspi- 
cion at Athens as a friend of Macedonia ; but 
as it was not easy to bring any j)olitical accusa- 
tion against him, he was accused of impiety 
(uoefjE lac) by the hierophant Eurymedon. He 
withdrew from Athens before his trial, and es- 
caped in the beginning of 822 to Chaleis in Eu- 
Imbs., where he died in the course of the same 
year, in the sixty-third year of his age, of a 
chronic disease of the stomach. His body was 
transported U> his native city Stagira, and his 
memory was honored there, like that of a hero, 
by yearly festivals He bequeathed to Theo- 
phrastus his well-stored library and the origi- 
nals of his w ritings. In person Aristotle was 
short and of slender make, with small eyes, 
and a lisp in his pronunciation, using L for R, 
and with a sort of sarcastic expression in his 
countenance. He exhibited remarkable atten- 
tion to external appearance, and bestowed much 
care on his dress and person. He is described 
as having been of weak health, which, consid- 
ering the astonishing extent of his studies, 
ishows all the more the energy of his mind. The 
numerous works of Aristotle may be divided 



into the following classes, according to the sub- 
jects of which they treat : we only mention the 
most important in each class. I. Dialectics 
and Logic. The extant logical writings are 
comprehended as a whole under the title Or- 
(janon. ('Qpyavov, i. c, instrument of science). 
They are occupied with the investigation of the 
method by which man arrives at knowledge. 
An insight into the nature and formation of con- 
clusions, and of proof by me;ms of conclusions, 
is the common aim and centre of all the sep- 
arate six works composing the Organon : these 
separate works are, 1. Karwyopiat, Prcedicamcn- 
la, in which Aristotle treats of the (ten) com- 
prehensive generic ideas, under which all the 
attributes of tilings may be subordinated as 
species. — 2. Ylepl tp/xwvetac, Be Interpretation 
concerning the expression of thought by means 
of speech. — 3, 4. 'Ava?,VTtKu -rrporepa and vcrepa, 
Analytica, each in two books, on the theory of 
conclusions, so called from the resolution of 
the conclusion into its fundamental component 
parts. — o. TorriKa, I)e Locis, in eight books, of 
the general points of view (rorro/), from which 
conclusions may be drawn. — 6. TLepl co^lutikCov 
Oi'tyxuv, concerning the fallacies which only 
apparently prove something. The best edition 
of the Organon is by Waitz, Lips., 1844. II. 
Theoretical Philosophy, consisting of Meta- 
physics, Mathematics, and Physics, on all of 
which Aristotle wrote works. 1. The Meta- 
physics, in fourteen books (rfiv ficra rh <pvciKu), 
originally consisted of distinct treatises, inde- 
pendent of one another, and were put together 
as one work after Aristotle's death. The title, 
also, is of late origin, and was given to the work 
from its being placed offer (//era) the Physics 
(ra (pvatKu). The best edition is by Brandis, 
Berol., 1823. — 2. In Mathematics we have two 
treatises by Aristotle : (1.) Ilepi aropjurv ypay.- 
juQv, i. e., concerning indivisible lines; (2.) M?;- 
Xavinu. 7:po(jArifia~a, Mechanical Problems. — 3. 
In Physics we have, (1.) Physics (Qvaatr/ unpou- 
clc, called also, by others, rrspl apx&v), in eight 
books. In these Aristotle develops the general 
principles of natural science (Cosmology). (2.) 
Concerning the Heaven (rrepl ovpavov), in four 
books. (3.) On Production and Destruction (rrept 
y&ueceug nai (j)dopae, de Gcncratione et Corrvp- 
tione), in two books, develop the general laws 
of production and destruction. (4.) On Meteor- 
ology (ixsTeupoXoyiKa, de Mcteoris), in four books. 
(5.) On the Universe (rrepi koc/iov, de Mundo), a 
letter to Alexander, treats the subject of the 
last two works in a popular tone and a rhetor- 
ical style altogether foreign to Aristotle. The 
whole is probably a translation of a work with 
the same title by Appuleius. (6.) Tlie History 
of Animals (Trepl &cov Icropla), in nine books, 
treats of all the peculiarities of this division of 
the natural kingdom, according to genera, class- 
es, and species, especially giving all the char- 
acteristics of each animal according to its ex- 
ternal and internal vital functions, according 
to the manner of its copulation, its mode of 
life, and its character. The best edition is by 
Schneider, Lips., 1811. The observations in 
this work are the triumph of ancient sagacity, 
and have been confirmed by the results of the 
most recent investigations (Cuvier). (7.) On 
the parts of Animals (~epl &cjv popiov), in four 
101 



AM8TOTELES. 



ARIST0TELK5. 



books, in which Aristotle, after describing the 
phenomena in each species, develops the causes 
of these phaeuoniena by means of the idea to be 
formed of the purpose which is manifested in 
the formation of the animal. (8.) On the Gen- 
eration of Animals (rrepl Qum yeveceuc) in five 



the constitutions is the best ( the ideal of a 
The doctrine concerning education, as the 
important condition of this best state. Jonas tlx 
conclusion. Best editions, by Schneider, Fran 
eof. ad. Yiadr.. 1809; Coray, Paris, 1821 ; Gott 
ling, Jens, 1824; Stahr. with a German trans 



books, treats of the generation of animals audjlation, Lips.. 1837 : Barthelemy St Hilaire, with 
the organs of generation. — (9.) De Incemt Ani- a French translation. Paris, 1837, — 5. (Economics 



malivin {szepi ^opecac). (10.) Three books 
4m tar SorJ '(-epi V^Ttf?)- Aristotle defines the 
soul to be the " internal formative principle of a 
bodv which may be perceived by the senses, and 
is capable of life:' Best edition by Trendelen- 
burg, Jenae, 18-33. Several anatomical works 



(otKovofWiu), in two books, of which only the first 
is genuine. IV. Works ox Act. which have 
for their subject the exorcise of the creative 
faculty, or Art. To these belong the Potties and 
Rhetoric. 1. Tin Poetics ( Hep"; vrauyrucfey Aris- 
totle penetrated more deeply than any of the 



of Aristotle have been lost. He was the first : ancients into the essence of Hellenic art H*. 
person who. in any special manner, advocated ; is the father of the (Esthetics of -poetry, as he is 
anatomical investigations, and showed the ne- j the completer of Greek rhetoric as a science, 
eessity of them for the study of the natural j The greatest part of the treatise contains a 
sciences. He frequently refers to investiga- j theory of Tragedy : nothing else is treated of, 
tions of his own on the subject. IIL Pbacti- with the exception of the epos ; comedy is 
cal Philosophy or Politics. All that falls ; merely alluded to. Best editions, by Tyrwhitt 
within the sphere of practical philosophy is eom-j Oxon.. 1794; Hermann, Lips„ 1802 : Grafenhan. 
prehended in three principal works : the Ethics, Lips., 1821; Bekker, BeroL, 1832 ; Bitter, Cc- 
the Politics, and the (Economics. 1. The Hi- km, 1839. — 2. The Rhetoric (rtx^n py~opiK^),'m 
comachean Ethics ('HO'txil HtKOfiaxeia), in ten | three books. Rhetoric, as a science, according 
hooks. Aristotle here begins with the highest to Aristotle, stands side by side with Dialectics, 
and most universal end of life, for the indirid- The only thing which makes a scientific treat - 
ual as well as for the community in the state, ment of rhetoric possible is the argumentation 
This is happiness {eidaiuovia) ; and its condi- which awakens conviction : he therefore direct* 
tions are. on the one hand, perfect virtue ex- his chief attention to the theory of oratorical 
Mhiting itself in the actor, and, on the other argumentation. The second main division el 
hand, corresponding bodily advantages and fa- the work treats of the production of that favor- 
vorablo external circumstances. Virtue is the able disposition in the hearer, in consequence 
readiness to act constantly and consciously ae- j of which the orator appears to him to be worthy 
cording to the laws of the rational nature of i of credit. The third part treats oi oratories I 
man (opdoc Aoyoc). The nature of virtue shows expression and arrangement. According to a 
itself in its appearing as the medium between story current in antiquity. Aristotle- bequeathed 
two extremes. In accordance with tbi?, the his library and MSS. to Theoplrrastus, his suc- 
; everal virtues are enumerated and character- eessor in the Academy. C*n the death of Theo- 
ized. Best editions by Zell, Heidelb., 1820 ; ■ phrastus. the libraries and MSS-. both of Art 
Coray. Paris, 1822 ; Cardweil, Oxon., 182S : totle and Theophrastus, are said to have come 
Miehelet, BeroL, 1348, 2d edition. — 2. The Eu- ' into the hands of his relation and disciple. Ne- 
demean Ethic* (HOttta Et'etyueta), in several books, j leus of Scepsis. This Jieleus sold both libraries 
of which only books L, iL, hi., and viL are in- to Ptolemy IL. king of Egypt, for the Alexan 
dependent, while the remaining books iv„ v,idrine library; but he retained i->r himself, as 
and vi. agree word for word with books v., vi.. an heir doom, the original MSB. of the works of 
and vii. of the Nicomacheon Ethics. This eth- these two philosopher*. The descendants of 
ical work is perhaps a recension of Aristotle's NeJens, who were subjects < i the King of Per- 
leetures, edited by Eudemus. — 3. HdiKd Me- gamus. knew of no other way of securing them 
-. a'/M. in two books. — 4. Politics (Uo/.-'riKa). in from the search of the Attali, who wished to 
eight books. The Ethics conduct us to the Pol- rival the Ptolemies in forming a large library, 
itics. The connection between the two works than concealing them in a cellar, where for a 
is so close, that in the Ethics by the word i-crr?- j couple of centuries they were exposed to the 
oov reference is made by Aristotle to the Poll- ravages of damp and worms. It was not rili 
tics, and in the latter by -pbrepov to the Ethics, the beginning of the c»-utury before the birth of 
The Polities show how happiness is to be attain- Christ that a wealthy book-collector, the Atbe 
ed for the human community in the staie ; for the nian ApeHieon of Teos, traced out these valna- 
objeet of the state is not merely the external ble relic-, bought them from the ignorant heirs, 
preservation of life, "but happy fife," as it is at- and prepared from them a new edition of Aris- 
tained by '"means of virtue"' {aprrij, perfect de- ; totie's works. After the capture of Athene, 
yelopment of the whole man). Hence, also, eth- ! Sulla conveyed Apellicon's library to Rome, B. 
ie» form the first and most general foundation ' C. 84. lid. Apellicox. From" this story an 
of political life, because the state cannot attain error arose, which has been handed down from 
its highest object if morality docs not prevail the time of Strabo to the present day. It wao 
among its citizens. The house, the family, is concluded from this account that neither Arie- 
the element of the state. Accordingly. Aristo- [ totle nor Theophrastus had published their writ- 
tie begins with the doctrine of domestic econo- 1 ings, with the exception of some exoteric works, 
my, then proceeds to a description of the differ- which had no important bearing on their sjb- 
ent forms of government, after which he gives tem, and that it was not till 200 years later 
a delineation of the most important "Hellenic that they were brought to light by the above 
constitutions, and then investigates which of mentioned Apelucon. and published to the pW- 
102 



ARISTOXEKUS. 



ARMENIA. 



ueophical world, That, however, was by no 
means the cause. Aristotle, indeed, did not pre- 
pare a complete edition, as we call it, of his 
writings. Nay, it is certain that death overtook 
him before he could finish some of his works 
and put the finishing hand to others. Never- 
theless, it can not be denied that Aristotle des- 
tined all his works for publication, and published 
several in his hte-time. This is indisputably 
certain with regard to the exoteric writings. 
Those which had not been published by Aristo- 
tle himself, were given to the world by Theo- 
phrastus and his disciples in a complete form. 
—Editions: The best edition of the complete 
works of Aristotle is by Bekker, Berlin, 1831- 
1840, 4to, text in 2 vols., and a Latin translation 
in one volume. This edition has been reprint- 
ed at Oxford in 11 vols. 8vo. There is a ste- 
reotyped edition published by Tauchnitz, Leip- 
zig, 1832, 16mo, in 16 vols., and another edition 
of the text by Weise, in one volume, Leipzig, 
1843. — [2. One of the thirty tyrants established 
in Athens B.C. 404 : he w r ould also appear to 
have been one of the 400, and to have taken an 
active part in the scheme of fortifying Eetionea, 
and admitting the Spartans into the Piraeeus, 
8.0. 411. In B.C. 405 he was living in banish- 
ment, and is mentioned by Xenophon as being 
with Lysander during the siege of Athens. — 3. 
Of Sicily, a rhetorician, who wrote against the 
Panegyricus of Isocrates. — 4-. Of Athens, an 
orator and statesman, under whose name some 
forensic orations were known in the time of Di- 
ogenes Laertius, which were distinguished for 
their elegance. — 5. Of Argos, a Megarie or dia- 
!*>etio philosopher, belonged to the party at Ar- 
l'os which was hostile to Cleomenes of Sparta.] 

Aristoxenus ('ApiGTuzrvoc). 1. Of Tarentum, 
a Peripatetic philosopher and a musician, flour- 
ished about B.C. BIS. He was a disciple of 
Aristotle, whom lie appears to have rivalled in 
the variety of his studies. Accordiug to Suidas, 
he produced works to the number of 453 upon 
music, philosophy, history — in short, every de- 
partment of literature. We know uothing of 
his philosophical opinious except that he held 
the soul to be a harmony of the body (Cic., Tusc, 
i, 10), a doctrine which had been already dis- 
cussed by Plato in the Phcedo. Of his numer- 
ous works, the only oue extant is his Elements 
of Harmony (upjioviKa GToixna), in three books, 
edited by Meibomius, in the Antiqiuc Musiccc 
Auctores Septan, Amst, 1652.— [2. Of Selinus 
io Sicily, a Creek poet, who is said to have been 
the first who wrote in anapaestic metres. — 3. 
A celebrated Creek physician, who flourished 
about the beginning of the Christian era, and 
was the author of a work Ilepi 7% 'Hpo&i/.ov 
Aiptaeur, J)e Herophili Secta.] 

Aristls ("Aplotoc). 1. Of Salamis in Cyprus, 
wrote a history of Alexander the Great. — 2. An 
Academic philosopher, a contemporary and friend 
of Cicero, and teacher of M. Brutus. 

Arius, river. Vid. Aria. 

[Arius {"Apeioc). 1. A Pythagorean or Stoic 
philosopher of Alexandrea, an instructor of Au- 
gustus in philosophy ; highly esteemed by Augus- 
tus, who declared, after the capture of Alexan- 
dres, that he spared the city chiefly for the. sake 
of Arius. Besides philosophy, he also taught 
rhetoric, and wrote on that art, — 2: The cele- 



brated heretic, born shortly after the middle of 
the third century A.D. In the religious disputes 
at Alexandrea, AT). 306, Arius at first took the 
part of Meletius, but afterward became reconcil 
ed to the Bishop of Alexandrea, the opponent of 
Meletius, who made Arius deacon. Soon after 
this he was excommunicated by Peter of Alex 
andrea, but was restored by his successor Achil- 
las, and ordained priest A.D. 313. In 318 the 
celebrated controversy with Bishop Alexander 
broke out, a controversy which has had a great- 
er and more lasting influence upon the develop- 
ment of the Christian religion than any other. 
So fierce did the dispute become, that the Em- 
peror Constantiue was forced to convoke a gen- 
eral council at Nicaea (Nice), A.D. 325, at which 
upward of three hundred bishops were present 
The errors of Arius were condemned ; and he 
was compelled to go into exile into Illyricum, 
where he remained until recalled by the em- 
peror in 330, and allowed to return to Alexan 
drea, through the influence of Eusebius of Nico- 
media. His ever-wakeful opponent, however, 
Athanasius, was not so easily deceived as the 
emperor, and, notwithstanding the order of Con 
stantine, refused to receive him into the com- 
munion of the Church. This led to a renewed 
application to the emperor; and when Arius 
finally seemed on the point of triumphing over 
his sturdy orthodox opponents, he was removed 
suddenly by the hand of death, A.D. 3 3 6. J 

Ariusia (j) 'Aptovcia xupa), a district on the 
north coast of Chios, where the best wine in 
the island was grown {Ariusivm Vinum, Virg., 
Eel, v., 71.) 

Armene i^ApfLcvn or -'/jvrj : now : Akliman), a 
town on the coast of Paphlagonia, where the 
10,000 Greeks, during their retreat, rested five 
days, entertained by the people of Sinope, a lit- 
tle to the west of which Armene stood. 

Armenia ('Apfievia : 'Apptvioc, Armenius : now 
Armenia), a country of Asia, lying between Asia 
Minor and the Caspian, is a lofty table-land, 
backed by the chain of the Caucasus, watered 
by the rivers Cyru3 and Araxes, containing the 
sources also of the Tigris and of the Euphrates, 
the latter of which divides the country into two 
unequal parts, which were called Major and Mi- 
nor. 1. Armenia Major or Propria ('A. ?j pe- 
yuhj or 7/ idtuc Ka7Mvpevj] : now Erzeroum, Kars, 
Van, and Erivan), was bounded on the north- 
east and north by the Cyrus (now Kur), which 
divided it from Albania and Iberia ; on the north- 
west and west by the Moschici Mountains (the 
prolongation of the chain of the Anti-Tau- 
rus), and the Euphrates (now Frat), which di- 
vided it from Colchis and Armenia Minor ; and 
on the south and southeast by the mountains 
called Masius, Niphates, and Gordiasi (the pro- 
longation of the Taurus), and the low r er course 
of the Araxes, which divided it from Mesopo- 
tamia, Assyria, and Media : on the east the 
country comes to a point at the confluence of 
the Cyrus and Araxes. It is intersected by 
chains of mountains, between which run the 
two great rivers Araxes, flowing east into 
the Caspian, and the Arsanias (now Murad), or 
south branch of the Euphrates, flowing west into 
the main stream (now Frat) just above Mount 
Masius. The eastern extremity of the chain of 
mountains which separate- the basins of these. 

103 



ARMENIUB MONS, 



ARNIS3A. 



two rivers, unci which is an offshoot of the Anti- Armi-niis (the Latinized form of Hennaw*. 
Taurus forms the Ararat of Scripture In the "the chieftain"), son of Sigimon. "the eoc- 
aouth of the country is tbe great lake of Van, \ queroiy' and chief of the tribe of the Cherusoi. 
Arsissa Palus, inclosed by mountain chains who inhabited the country to the north of the 
which connect Ararat with the southern range Hartz Mountains, now forming the south of 

of mountains. 2. Armenia Minor ('A. [impd or Hanover and Brunswick. He was born in B.C 

Bpaxvrepa), was bounded on the east by the IS ; and in his youth he led the warriors of 
Euphrates, which divided it from Armenia Ma- his tribe as auxiliaries of the Roman legions in 
jor, on the north aud northwest by the mount- Germany, where he learned the language and 
ains Sccdlses, Paryadres. and Anti-Taurus, di- military discipline of Rome, and was admitted 
viding it from Pontus and Cappadocia, and on the to the freedom of the city, and enrolled among 
south by tbe Taurus, dividing it from Comma- the equites. In A.D. 9, Arminius, who was now 
gene ia" Northern Syria, so that it contained the twenty-seven years old, and had succeeded bis 
country east and south of the city of Sheas (the father as chief of his tribe, persuaded his coon 
ancient Cabira or Sebaste) as tar as the Euphra- trymen to rise against the Romans, who wert 
tes and the Taurus. The boundaries between now masters of this part of Germany, and which 
Armenia Minor and Cappadocia varied at dif- ( seemed destined to become, like Gaul, a Roman- 
ferent times ; and, indeed, the whole country up province. His attempt was crowned with sue 
Ee the Euphrates is sometimes called Cappado- cess. Quintilius Varus, who was stationed fea 
.-ia, and. on the other hand, the whole of Asia the country with three legions, was destroyed 
Minor east of the Halys seems at one time to with almost all his troops (vid. Varus) ; and "the 
have been included under the name of Armenia. Romans had to relinquish ail their possession 
The people of Armenia claimed to be aboriginal ; ; beyond the Rhine. in 14. Arminius had to de- 
and there can be little doubt that they were one fend his country against Germanicus. At firs': 
of the most ancient families of that branch of j he was successful ; the Romans were defeated, 
the human race which is called Caucasian. , and Germanicus withdrew toward the Rhine. 
Their language, though possessing some re- j followed by Arminius. But having been eom- 
aiarkahie peculiarities of its own, was nearly j pelled by his uncle, Inguiomer, against his own 
allied to the Indo-Germanie family ; and their ; wishes, to attack the Romans in their intrench - 
manners and religious ideas were similar to ed camp, his army was routed, and the Roman- 
those of the Medes and Persians, but with a ■ made good their retreat to the Rhine. It was 
greater tendency to the personification of the > in the course of this campaign that Thusnelda. 
powers of nature, as in the goddess Analtis, the wife of Arminius, fell into the hands of th? 
whose worship was peculiar to Armenia. They Romans, and was reserved, with the infant boy 
had commercial dealings with Assyria and Phce- to whom she soon after gave birth in her capth - 
nicia. In the time of Xeuophon they had pre- ity, to adorn the triumph of Germanicus at Rome 
served a great degree of primitive simplicity, ; In 16, Arminius was again called upon to resist 
but (kmt hundred years later Tacitus gives an Germanicus, but he was defeated, and his cour- 
unfavorable view of their character. The ear- , try was probably only saved from subjection by 
-est Armenian traditions represent the country the jealousy of Tiberius, who recalled German: - 
as governed by native kings, who had perpetu- ens in the following year. At length Arminiui. 
ally to maintain their independence against at- i aimed at absolute "power, and was, in conse ■ 
tacks from Assyria. They were said to have quence, cut off by his own relations in the thirty - 
been conquered by Semiramis, but again threw seventh year of his age, A.D. 19. 
off the yoke at the time of the Median and Baby- Armorica or Aremorica, the name of the 
Ionian revolt. Their relations to the Medes and northwest coast of Gaul from the Ligeris (now 
Persians seem to have varied between success- Loire) to the Sequana (now Seine), derived from 
ml resistance, unwilling subjection, and friendly the Celtic or, air. " upon," aud muir, m&r, B the 
alliance. A body of Armenians formed a part sea:' The Armoncce civiUstes are enumerate' 
of the army which Xexes led against Greece ; by Caesar (B. G.. vii., 75). 

and they assisted Darius Codomannus against Ass a ( Arnas, -atfe : now CiviteUa cTArvo). •. 

Alexander, and in this war they lost their king, town in fimbria, near Perusia. 

and became subject to the Macedonian empire Aknm: ('Apvai), a town in Chalcidice in Mae 

(B.C. 32S). After another interval of success- donia, south of Aulon and Bromiscus. 

ful revolt (B.C. 317-274). they submitted to the [Arx.eus VApvaioc). the proper name of th- 

Greek kings of Syria ; but when Antiochus the beggar Irus, mentioned in the Odyssey. Vt 

Great was defeated by the Romans (B.C. 190), Irus.] 

the country again regained its independence, and Arne ('Apr?/). 1. A town in Bceotia, mentioi 
it was at this period that it was divided into the ed by Homer (//., ii., 507). supposed by Pauss 
two kingdoms of Armenia Major and Minor, nias to be the same as Chceronea, but placed by 
under two different dynasties, founded respect- 1 others near Acraephium, on the east of the Lake 
ively by the nobles who headed the revolt. Copais. — [2. A town of Magnesia in Thessaly, on 
Artaxias and Zariadras. Ultimately, Armenia the Maliae Gulf, said to have derived its nam< 
Minor was made a Roman province "by Trajan ; j from Arne, a daughter of JEolus. — 3. A four - 
and Armenia Major, after being a perpetual ob tain in the territory of Mantinea in Arcadia.] 
ject of contention between the Romans and the [Arne ('Apvtj). 1. A daughter of ^Eolus. VicL 
Parthians, was subjected to the revived Persian the foregoing, I^o. % — 2. The betrayer of he: 
empire by its first king, Artaxerxes (Ardeshir), native country to King Minos, and, on this ac- 
in A.D. 226. count, changed into a jackdaw.] 

Armexius Moxs (to Wput viov cpoc). a branch Abxissa (^Apvtaaa : now Ostrova?) a town tk 
of the Anti-Taurus chain in Armenia Minor. Eorda^a i'n Macedonia. 
104 



ARNOBIUS. 



ARRIANUS. 



ArkobIus. I. The elder, a native of Africa, 
lived about A.D. 300, in the reign of Diocletian. 
He was first a teacher of rhetoric at Sicca in 
Africa, but afterward embraced Christianity ; 
and, to remove all doubts as to the reality of his 
conversion, he wrote, while yet a catechumen, 
his celebrated work against the Pagans, iu seven 
books (Libri septem adversus Gentes), which we 
still possess. The best editions are by Orelli, 
Lips., 1816, [and by Hildebrand, Halle, 1844].— 
2. The Younger, lived about A.D. 460, aud was 
probably a bishop or presbyter in Gaul. He 
•wrote a commentary on the Psalms, still extant, 
which shows that he was a Semi-Pelagian. 

Arnon ('Apvov : now Wad-el Mojib). a con- 
siderable river of East Palestine, rising in the 
Arabian Desert, and flowing west through a 
rocky valley into the Lacus Asphaltites (now 
Dead Sea). The surrounding district was call- 
ed Arnonas ; and in it the Romans had a mili- 
tary station, called Castra Arnonensia. 

Arnus (now Arno), the chief river of Etruria, 
rises in the Apennines, flows by Pisae, and falls 
into the Tyrrhenian Sea. It gave the name to 
*.he Tribus Arniensis, formed B.C. 387. 

Aroa ('Apua or 'Apbrj), the ancient name of 
PatrjK. 

[Aroanius ('ApodvLor), a river of Arcadia, 
rises in Mount Cyllene, loses itself in some 
natural cavities near Pheneus, then reappears 
at the foot of Penteleiou, and joins the Ladon. 
The same name was given to two other streams, 
one a tributary likewise of the Ladon, the other 
a tributary of the Erymanthus.] 

Aromata (tu 'Apuuara, 'ApujxurovuKpov : now 
Cape G-uardafui), the easternmost promontory 
of Africa, at the southern extremity of the Ara- 
bian Gulf: the surrounding district was also 
called Aromata or Aromatophora Regio, with a 
town 'ApufiuTov lj.i~6ptov : so named from the 
abundance of spicks which the district produced. 

Arfi (Arpanus : now Arpi), an inland town 
in the Dauuian Apulia, founded, according to 
tradition, by Diomedes, who called it "Apyoc ltt- 
ttiov, from which its later names of Argyrippa 
or Argyrtpa and Arpi are said to have arisen 
(Rle (Diomedes) urbem Argyripam, patrice cog- 
nomine gentis, Virg., jEn., xi., 246). During the 
time of its independence it was a flourishing 
commercial town, using Salapia as its harbor. 
It was friendly to the Romans iu the Samnite 
wars, but revolted to Hannibal after the battle 
of Cannae, B.C. 216: it was taken by the Ro- 
mans in 213, deprived of its independence, and 
never recovered its former prosperity. 

[Arpina ("Ap^iva), an ancient place in Elis, 
near the Alpheus, so called from a daughter of 
the Asopus : MM it flowed the River Arpina- 
tes.] 

Abpin-um (Arpinas, -atis : now Arpino), a town 
of Latium. on the small river Fibreuus (now Fi- 
breno), originally belonging to the Volscians and 
afterward to the Samnites, from whom the Ro- 
mans wrested it, was a Roman municipium, 
and received the jus suffragii, or right of voting 
in the Romau comitia, B.C. 188. It was the 
birth-place of Marius and Cicero : the latter of 
whom was bora in his father's villa, situated 
on a small island formed by the River Fibreuus. 
Cicero's brother Quintus had an estate south of 
Arpinum, culled Arcanum. 



[Aukabo (in Ptolemy NapaCuv, now Raab), ft 
river iu Paunonia, a tributary of the Danube. 
I At its mouth lay the city and fortress Arrabo. 

'. now Raab.~\ 

Arretium: or Aretium (Arretanus : now Arez- 
zo), one of the most important of the twelve 
cities of Etruria, was situated in the northeast 
of the country at the foot of the Apennines, and 
possessed a fertile territory near the sources of 
the Arnus and the Tiber, producing good wine 
and corn. It was thrice colonized by the Ro- 
mans, whence we read of Arrcthii Veteres, Fi- 
denates, Julienses. It was particularly cele- 
brated for its pottery, which was of red ware. 
The Cilnii, from whom Maecenas was descend- 
ed, were a noble family of Arretium. The 
I ruins of a city two or three miles to the south- 
I east of Arezzo, on a height called Poggio di San 
J Cornelio, or Castel Secco, are probably the re- 
; mains of the ancient Arretium. 
I Arrhapachitis ('AfifiaTraxiTic), a district of 
J Assyria, between the rivers Lycusand Choatra3. 

Arrhib^eus ('Afipidaloc), chieftain of the Mace- 
; donians of Lyucus, revolted against King Per- 
! diccas in the Peloponnesian war. It was to> 
' reduce him that Perdiccas sent for Brasidas 
(B.C. 424), and against him took place the un- 
successful joint expedition, in which Perdiccas 
deserted Brasidas, and Brasidas effected hi* 
bold and skillful retreat. 

Arrhid^us ('Afipidaloc) or Arid.eus ('Apt- 
daioc). L A half-brother of Alexander the Great, 
son of Philip and a female dancer, Philinna of 
Larissa, was of imbecile understanding. He 
was at Babylon at the time of Alexander's death. 
B.C. 323, and was elected king under the name 
of Philip. The young Alexander, the infant 
sou of Roxana, was associated with him in the 
government. In 322 Arrhidceus married Euryd- 
ice. On their return to Macedonia, Eurydice 
attempted to obtain the supreme power in op- 
position to Polysperchon ; but Arrhidseus and 
Eurydice were made prisoners, and put to death 
by order of Olympias, 317. — 2. One of Alexan- 
der's generals, obtained the province of the Hel - 
lespontine Phrygia at the division of the prov- 
inces in 321 at Triparadisus, but was deprived 
of it by Antigonus in 319. 

Arria. 1. Wife of Carina Psstus. When her 
husband was ordered by the Emperor Claudius 
to put an end to his life, A.D. 42, and hesitated 
to do so, Arria stabbed herself, handed the dag- 
j ger to her husband, and said, " Pastus, it does 
| not pain me." — 2. Daughter of the preceding, 
! and wife of Thrasea. 

Arrianus ('Ap'p'iavvc). 1. Of Nicomedia in 
I Bithynia, born about A.D. 90, was a pupil and 
j friend of Epictetus, aud first attracted attention 
; as a philosopher by publishing at Athens the 
: lectures of his master. In 124 he gained the 
; friendship of Hadrian during his stay in Greece, 
! and received from the emperor the Romau citi- 
! zenship ; from this time he assumed the name 
of Flavius. In 136 he was appointed prsefect of 
: Cappadocia, which was invaded the year after 
i by the Alani or Massagetee, whom he defeated. 
Under Antoninus Pius, in 140, Arrian was con- 
i sul ; and about 150 he withdrew from public life, 
| and from this time lived iu his native town of Ni- 
comedia. as priest of Ceres (Demetcr) and Pros- 
erpina (Persephone). He died at an advauced 
105 



ARRIBAS. 



ARSACES. 



fcge in the reigu of M. Aurelius. Arrian was 
one of the most active and best writers of his 
time. He was a close imitator of Xenophon, 
both in the subjects of his works and in the 
style in which they were written. He regard- 
ed his relation to Epictetus as similar to that of 
Xenophon to Socrates ; and it was his endeavor 
to carry out that resemblance. With this view 
he published, 1. The philosophical lectures of 
bis master (AcarptOal 'Ettlkt/jtov), in eight books, 
the first half of which is still extant. Edited in 
Sehweighiiusers Epictctecs Philosophicc Monu- 
ttienta, vol. iii., and in Corae's TLdpepya 'ETCkrjv. 
Bc6?.cod., vol. viii. — 2. An abstract of the prac- 
tical philosophy of Epictetus ('Eyxstptdiov 'Ett/.- 
fcrr/TOv), which is still extant This celebrated 
work maintained its authority for many cen- 
turies, both with Christians and Pagans. The 
best editions are those of Schweighauser and 
Oorae, in the collections above referred to. He 
also published other works relating to Epictetus, 
which are now lost His original works are : 
3. A treatise on the chase (Kwjjy^reKog), which 
forms a kind of supplement to Xenophons work 
off the same subject, and is printed in most edi- 
tions of Xenophon's works. — 4. The History of 
the Asiatic expedition of Alexander the Great 
('KvaCiaaic 'Ategdvdpov), in seven books, the 
most important of Arrian's works. This great 
work reminds the reader of Xenophon's Anab- 
asis, not only by its title, but also by the ease 
afad clearness of its style. It is also of great 
value for its historical accuracy, being based 
upon the most trustworthy histories written by 
the contemporaries of Alexander, especially 
those of Ptolemy, the sou of Lagus, and of Aris- 
tobulus, the sou of Aristobulus. — 5. On India 
('Ivoi/cy or ~d 'Ivducd), which may be regarded 
aS a continuation of the Anabasis, at the end of 
which it is usually printed. This work i3 writ- 
ten in the Ionic dialect, probably in imitation 
af Ctesias of Cnidus, whose work on the same 
cubject Arrian wished to supplant by a more 
trustworthy and correct account. The best 
♦.editions of the Anabasis are b}^ Eiieudt, • Regi- 
raontii, 1832, and by C. W. Kruger, Berlin 
1835-49, 2 vols. ; of the Indica by Schmieder, 
Halle, 179S. — 6. A description of a voyage round 
the coasts of the Euxine {rzepi^QVi tcqvtov Et>£- 
iivov), which had undoubtedly been made by Ar- 
rian himself during his government of Cappa- 
docia. This Periplus has come down to us, to- 
gether Yv r ith a Periplus of the Erythrseau, and a 
Periplus of the Euxine and the Palus Maeotis, 
both of which also bear the name of Arrian, but 
they belong undoubtedly to a later period. The 
best editions are in Hudson's Geographi Ml-aores, 
vol i., and in Gail's and Hoffmann's collections 
of the minor Geographers. — 7. A. work on Tac- 
tics (?.6yo£ ranrcKoc or rexvn raKru:^), of which 
we possess at present only a fragment : printed 
in Elaucard's collection of the minor works of 
Arrian. Arrian also wrote numerous other 
works, all of which are now lost— 2. A Roman 
jurisconsult probably lived under Trajan, and 
is perhaps the same person with the orator Ar- 
nanus. who corresponded with the younger 
Pliny. He wrote a treatise De. hderdictis, of 
which the second book is quoted in the Digest. 

A&ribas, Areybas, Aryjibas, or Tharrytas 
i'Afiptfac, 'Af^vSar. Wpvu6ar. or Oa t dovrac\ a de- 
106 



scendant of Achilles, and one of the early kings 
of the Molossians in Epirus. He is said to have 
been educated at Athens, and on his return to 
his native country to have framed for the Mo- 
lossians a code of laws, and established a regn 
lar constitution. 

Arrius. 1. Praetor B.C. 72, defeated 
Crixus, the leader of the runaway slaves, but 
was afterward conquered by Spartieus. In 71, 
Arrius was to have succeeded Veres as pro- 
praetor in Sicily, but died on his way to Sicily. 
— 2. A son of the preceding, was an unsuccess- 
ful candidate for the consulship B.C. 59. He 
was an intimate friend of Cicero. 

Arrius Aper. Yid. Aper. 

Arruntius, L. 1. Proscribed by the trium- 
virs in B.C. 43, but escaped to Sextus Pompey 
in Sicily, and was restored to the state with 
Pompey. He subsequently commanded the left 
wing of the fleet of Octavianus at the battle of 
Actium, 31, and was consul in 22. — 2. Son of 
the preceding, consul A.D. 6. Augustus de- 
clared in his last illness that Arruntius was not 
unworthy of the empire, and would have bold- 
ness enough to seize it, if an opportunity pre- 
sented. This rendered him an object , of sus- 
picion to Tiberius. He was charged in A.D. 
37 as an accomplice in the crimes of Albucilla, 
and put an end to his own life. 

Arsa (now Azunga), a town in Hispania Bffi- 
tica. 

Arsaces ('ApaaKrjc), the name of the founder 
of the Parthian empire, which was also borne 
by all his successors, who were hence called 
the Arsaeidce. — 1. He was of obscure origin, 
and seems to have come from the neighborhood 
of the Ochus. He induced the Parthians to re- 
volt from the Syrian empire of the Seleucidfe, 
and he became the first monarch of the Parthi- 
ans. This event probably took place about 
B.C. 250, in the reign of Antiochus II. ; but the 
history of the revolt as well as of the events 
which immediately followed, is stated very dif- 
ferently by different historians. Arsace3 reign- 
ed only two years, and was succeeded by his 
brother Tiridates. — 2. Tirtdates, reigned thir- 
ty-seven years, B.C. 248-211, and defeated Se 
leucu3 Callinieus, the successor of Antiochus II. 
— 3. Artabamjs I, son of the preceding, was 
attacked by Antiochus III. (the Great), who, 
however, was uuable to subdue his country, and 
at length recognized him as king about 210. — 
4. Priapatiub, son of the preceding, reigned fif 
teen years, and left three sons, Phraates, Mith- 
radates, and Artabanus. — 5. Phraates I, sub- 
dued the Mardi, and, though he had many sons, 
left the kingdom to his brother Mithradates. — 
6. Mithradates I, son of Arsaces IV., greatly 
j eularged the Parthian empire b}" his conquests, 
j He defeated Demetrius Nicator, king of Syria, 
1 and took him prisoner in 138. Mithradates 
| treated Demetrius with respect, and gave him 
j his daughter Rhodogune in marriage. Mithra- 
| dates died during the captivity of Demetrius, 
j between 138 and 130. — 7. Phraates II., son of 
[ the preceding, carried on war against Antiochus 
> VII. Sidetes, whom Phraates defeated and slew 
I in battle, B.C. 128. Phraates himself was 
! shortly alter killed in battle by the Scythians, 
1 who had been invited by Antiochus to assi«{. 
: hirn against Phraate*. but who did not arme 



ARSACES. 



ARSAC.ES. 



till after the Ml of the former. — S. Artabanus 

11, youngest brother of Arsaces VI, and young- 
est son of Arsacea IV., fell in battle :igaiust the 
Thogarii or Tochara, apparently alter a short 
reign. — 9. Mithraoates IL, son of the preced- 
ing, prosecuted many wars with success, and 
added lnauy nations to the Parthian empire, 
whence he obtained the surname of Great. It 
was in his reigu that the Romans first had any 
official communication with Parthia, Mithra- 
dates sent an ambassador to Sulla, who had 
,;ome into Asia B.C. 92, and requested alliance 
with the Romans. — 10. ( Mnascires ? ) Noth- 
ing is known of the successor of Arsaces IX. 
Even his name is uncertain — 11. Sanatroces, 
reigned seven years, and died about B.C. 70. — 

12. Phraat&s 111. son of the preceding. He 
lived at the time of the war between the Ro- 
mans and Mithradates of Pontus, by both of 
whom he Avas courted. He contracted an alli- 
ance with the Romans, but he took no part in 
the war. At a later period misunderstandings 
arose between Pompey and Phraates, but Pom- 
pey thought it more prudent to avoid a war with 
the Parthians, although Phraates had invad- 
ed Armenia, and Tigranes, the Armenian king, 
implored Pompey'fi assistance. Phraates was 
murdered soon afterward by his two sous, Mith- 
radates and Orodes. — Mithraoates III., son of 
the preceding, succeeded his father during the 
Armenian war. On bis return from Armenia, 
Mithradates was expelled from the throne on 
account of his cruelty, and was succeeded by 
his brother Orodes. Mithradates afterward 
made war upon hie brother, but was taken piis- 
oner and put to death. — l *. Orodes I., brother 
of the preceding, was the Parthian king whose 
general Surenas defeated Crassus and the Ro- 
mans, B.C. 5;5. Vid Crassus. After the death 
of Crassus, Orodes gave the command of the 
army to his son Paoorus, who entered Syria in 
51 with a small forc< , but was driven back by 
Crassius. In ^0 Pajeorua again crossed the Eu- 
phrates with a much larger army, and advanced 
as far as Antioeh, but was defeated near Anti- 
'^onea by Cassius, The Parthians now remained j 
rjuiet for some years. In 40 they crossed the ' 
Euphrates again, under the command of Pace- I 
r us and Labieuus, the sou of T. Labienus. They 
overran Syria and part of Asia Minor, but were j 
defeated in 39 by Ventidius Bassus, one of An- j 
tony's legate-- : Labieuus was [taken and put 
to death by Ventidius after the battle], and the i 
Parthians retired to their own dominions. In' 
38, Paeorus again invaded Syria, but was com- { 
pletely defeated and fell in the battle. This 1 
defeat was a severe blow to the aged king 
Orodes. wh t shortly afterward surrendered the 
crown to biV, sou Phraates during his life-time. 
— 15. Phraates [V., commenced his reign by J 
murdering his father, his thirty brothers, and; 
his own sou, who was grown up, that there! 
might be none of the royal family whom the ; 
Parthians could place up>n the throne in his 
htead. In consequence of his cruelty, many of 
the Parthiau nobles fled to Antony (31), who ! 
invaded Parthia in 30, but was obh'ged to retreat ! 
after ^losing a great part of his army. A few I 
years afterward the. cruelties of Phraates pro- i 
duced a rebellion against him ; he was driven j 
out of the country, and Tiridates proclaimed I 



king iu his stead. Phraates, however, was sooc 
restored by the Scythians, and Tiridates fled to 
Augustus, carrying with him the youngest sou 
of Phraates. Augustus restored his son to 
Phraates on condition of his surrendering the 
Roman standards and prisoners taken in the 
war with Crassus and Antony. They were 
given up in 20 ; their restoration caused univer- 
sal joy at Rome, and was celebrated not only 
by the poets, but by festivals and commemmora- 
tive monuments. Phraates also sent to Augus- 
tus as hostages his four sons, with their wive-3 
and children, who were carried to Rome. In 
A.D. 2, Phraates was poisoned by his wife Ther- 
musa and her son Phraataees. — 16. Phraata 
ces, reigned only a short time, a3 he was ex- 
pelled by his subjects on account of his crimes. 
The Parthian nobles then elected as king Oro- 
des, who was of the family of the Arsacidae. — 
1*7. Orodes II, also reigned only a short time, 
as he was killed by the Parthians on account, 
of his cruelty. Upon his death the Parthians 
applied to the Romans for Vonones, one of 
the sons of Phraates IV., who was according- 
ly granted to them. — 18. Vonones I, son of 
Phraates IV., was also disliked by his subjects, 
who therefore invited Artabanus, King of Media, 
to take possession of the kingdom. Artabanus 
drove Vonones out of Parthia, who resided first 
in Armenia, next in Syria, and subsequently ic 
Cilicia. He was put to death in A.D. 19, ac- 
cording to some accounts by order of Tiberius 
on account of his great wealth. — 19. Artaba- 
nus III., obtained the Parthian kingdom soon 
after the expulsion of Vonones, about A.D. 16. 
Artabanus placed Arsaces, one of his sons, over 
Armenia, and assumed a hostile attitude toward 
the Romans. His subjects, whom he oppressed, 
dispatched an embassy to Tiberius to beg him 
to send Parthia Phraates, one of the sons of 
Phraates IV. Tiberius willingly complied with 
the request ; but Phraates, upon arriving in Sy- 
ria, was carried off by a disease, A.D. 35. As 
soon as Tiberius heard of his death, he set up Ti- 
ridates, another of the Arsacidie, as a claimant 
of the Parthian throne : Artabanus was obligee 
to leave his kingdom, and fly for refuge te 
the Hyrcanians and Carmanians. Hereupoe 
Vitellius, the governor of Syria, crossed the 
Euphrates, and placed Tiridates on the throne. 
Artabanus was, however, recalled next year 
(36) by his fickle subjects. He was once more 
expelled by his subjects, and once more restored. 
He died soon after his last restoration, leaving 
two sous, Bardanes and Gotarzes, whose civil 
wars are related differently by Josephus and 
Tacitus. — 20. Gotarzes, succeeded his father, 
Artabanus III, but was defeated by his brother 
Bardanes and retired into Hyrcania. — 21. Bar 
danes, brother of the preceding, was put to 
death by his subjects in 47, whereupon Gotarzes 
again obtained the crown. But, as he ruled 
with cruelty, the Parthians secretly begged the 
Emperor Claudius to send them from Rome Me- 
herdates, grandson of Phraates IV. Claudius 
complied with their request, and commanded* 
the governor of Syria to assist Meherdates, but 
the latter was defeated in battle, and taken pris- 
oner by Gotarzes. — 22. Vonones II, succeeded 
Gotarzes about 50. His reign was short — 2Z 
Vologeses I, son of Vonoues II. or Artabanus 
107 



ARSACES. 



ARSINOE. 



III. Soon after his accession he conquered 
Armenia, which he gave to his brother Tiridates. 
[n 55 he gave up Armenia to the Romans, but 
in 58 he again placed his brother over Armenia, 
and declared war against the Romans. This 
war terminated in favor of the Romans: the 
Parthians were repeatedly defeated by Domitius 
Corbulo, and Tiridates was driven out of Ar- 
menia. At length, in 62, peace was concluded 
between Vologeses and the Romans on condi- 
tion that Nero would surrender Armenia to Ti- 
ridates, provided the latter would come to Rome 
and receive it as a gift from the Roman em- 
peror. Tiridates came to Rome in 63, where, 
lie was received with extraordinary splendor, 
and obtained from Nero the Armenian crown. 
Vologeses afterward maintained friendly rela- 
tions with Vespasian, and seems to have lived 
till the reign of Domitian. — 24. Pacorus, suc- 
ceeded his father. Vologeses I, and was a con- 
temporary of Domitian and Trajan. — 25. Chos- 
roes or Osroes, succeeded his brother Pacorus 
during the reign of Trajan. His conquest of 
Armenia occasioned the invasion of Parthia by 
Trajan, who stripped it of many of its provinces, 
and made the Parthians for a lime subject to 
Rome. Vid. TraJAnus. Upon the death of 
Trajan in A.D. 117, the Parthians expelled Pav- 
thamaspates, whom Trajan had placed upon the 
throne, and recalled their former king, Chosroes. 
Hadrian relinquished the conquests of Trajan, 
and made the Euphrates, as before, the eastern 
boundary of the Roman empire. Chosroes died 
during the. reign of Hadrian. — 26. Vologeses 
II.', succeeded his father Chosroes, and reigned 
from about 122 to 149. — 27. Vologeses III, be- 
gan to reign in 149. He invaded Syria in 162, 
but the generals of the Emperor Verus drove 
him back into his own dominions, invaded Mes- 
opotamia and Assyria, and took Seleueia and 
Ctesiphon ; and Vologeses was obliged to pur- 
chase a peace by ceding Mesopotamia to the 
Romans. From this time to the downfall of the 
Parthian empire, there is great confusion in the 
list of kings. — 28. Vologeses IV, probtfbly as- 
cended the throne in the reign of Commodus. 
His dominions were invaded by Septimus Seve- 
rus, who took Ctesiphon in 199. On the death 
of Vologeses IV., at the beginning of the reign of 
Caracalla, Parthia. was torn asunder by contests 
for the erown between the sons of Vologeses. 
—29. Vologeses V, son of Vologeses IV, was 
attacked by Caracalla in 215, and about the 
eame time was dethroned by his brother Arta- 
banus. — 30. Artabanus IV, the last king of Par- 
thia. The war commenced by Caracalla against 
Vologeses, was continued against Artabanus; 
but Maerinus, the successor of Caracalla, eon- 
eluded peace with the Parthians. In this war 
Artabanus had lost the best of his troops, and 
the Persians seized the opportunity- of recover- 
ing their long-lost independence. " They were 
led by Artaxerxes (Ardeshir), the son of Sassau, 
and defeated the Parthians iu three great bat- 
tles, in the last of which Artabanus was takeu 
prisoner and killed. A.D. 226. Thus ended the 
Parthian empire of the Arsacidaj, after it had 
existed four hundred and seventy-six years. 
The Parthians were now obliged to submit to 
Artaxerxes, the founder of the dynasty of the Sas- 
sarsida?, which continued to reign till AD. 651. 
108 



Arsacia ('ApaaKLa : ruins southeast of Tehe- 
ran), a great city of Media, south of the Cas- 
pian Porta), originally named Rhagai (Tayai) . 

i rebuilt by Seleueus Nicator, and called Euro- 
pus (EvpuKug) ; again destroyed in the Parthian 
wars, and rebuilt by Arsaces, who named it after 

j liimsclf. 

I Arsacidjs, the name of a dynasty of Parthian 
! kings. Vid, Arsaces. It was also the name of 
i a dynasty of Armenian kings, who reigned in Ar- 
| menia from B.C. 149 to A.D. 428. Tliis dynasty 
J was founded by Artaxias L, who was related to 
j the Parthian Arsacida?. 

[Arsamenes ('Xpaa/jtvTjr), sou of Darius Hys- 
j taspis, a commander iu the army of Xerxes.] 
[Arsames ('ApGufnjc). 1. Father of Hystaspe^ 

and grandfather of Darius. — 2. Son of Darius. 

and Artystone, daughter of Cyrus, commanded 

the Arabians and ^Ethiopians, who lived above 
j Egypt, in the army of Xerxes. — 3. An illegiti- 
! mate son of Artaxerxes Mnemon, murdered by 
I his brother Ai'taxerxes Oehus. — 4. A Persian 
i Satrap of Lydia under Darius Codomanuus : by 

not securing the Ciliciau passes, he afforded 
I Alexander an opportunity of a ready passage 
j into Upper Asia from Asia Minor.] 
! Ars amos ata (' ApGaficoGara, also wrongly ab- 
j breviated 'Ap/iuGura : now Shemshat), a town 
i and strong fortress in Armenia Major, between 
; the Euphrates and the sources of the Tigris, pear 
| the most frequented pass of the Taurus. 

ArsanIas, -ius, or -us CApGavtac, &c), the 
J name of two rivers of Great Armenia. — 1. (JNTow 
1 Murad), the southern arm of the Euphrates. 
I Vid. Armenia. — 2. (.Now Arslan ?), a small 
j stream rising near the sources of the Tigris, 
! and flowing west into the Euphrates near Mel- 

itene. 

Arsknaria or -enn- ('ApG7]vapia : now Ar- 
\ zaw, rains), a town in Mauretania Ca^sariccsL-, 
j three miles (Roman) from the sea: a Roman 
j colony. 

Arskne. Vid. Arzanene. 
| Arses. Narses, or Oarses ('Apffjflf, Nupcrq<:, 
j or 'Odpoijr), youngest son of King Artaxerxes III. 
1 Ochus, was raised to the Persian throne by the 
\ eunuch Bagoas after he had poisoued Artaxerxes, 
I B.C. 339, but he was murdered by Bagoas in the 
I third year of his reign, when he attempted to free 
I himself from the bondage in which he was kept. 
I After the death of Arses. Bagoas made Darius 
III. king. 

Arsia (now Arm), a river in Istria, forming 
the boundary between Upper Italy and Ulyri- 
cum, with a town of the same name upon it. 

Arsia Silva, a wood in Etruria, celebrated 
for the battle betAveen the Tarquins and the 
! Romans. 

j Arsinoe CApGivurj). i. Mythological. 1. The 
daughter of Phegeus, and wife of Alcmseoa 
! As she disapproved of the murder of Alemreon, 
j the sons of Phegeus put her into a chest and 
j carried her to Agapenor at Tege.it, where they 
! accused her of having killed Alcma^on. WidL 
j Alcm.eon, Agenor. — 2. Nurse of Orestes, saved 
! the latter from the hands of Clytemnestra, and 
I carried him to Strophius, father of Pylade*?. 
Some accounts call her Laodamia. — 3. Daughter 
of Leucippus and Philodice, became by Apollo 
mother of Eriopis and yEsculapius. II. Histori- 
cal 1. Mother of Ptolemy I., was a concubine 



A RSINOE. 



ARTANES. 



of Philip, father of Alexander the Great, aud . 
married Lagus while she was pregnant with j 
Ptolemy.— 2. Daughter of Ptolemy I. and Ber- 
enice, married Lysimachus, king of Thrace, m 
BC. 300 ; after the death of Lysimachus m 281, 
she married her half-brother, Ptolemy Cerau- 
mis, who murdered her children by Lysima- 
chus • and, lastly, in 279, she married her own 
brother Ptolemy II. Philadelphus. Though Ar- 
sinoe bore Ptolemy no children, she was ex- 
ceedingly beloved "by him: he gave her name 
to Several cities, called a district (vouoc) of 
Egypt Arsinoites after her, and honored her 
memory in various ways.— 3. Daughter of Ly- 1 
yimachus, married Ptolemy II. Philadelphus 
soon after his accession, B.C. 285. In conse- 
quence of her plotting against her namesake 
[No. 2.], when Ptolemy fell in love with her, 
she was banished to Coptos, in Upper Egypt. 
She had by Ptolemy three children, Ptolemy III. 
Evergetes, Lysimachus, and Berenice. — 4-. Also 
sailed Eurydice and Cleopatra, daughter of Ptol- 
emy III. Evergetes, wife of her brother Ptol- 
emy IV. Philopator, and mother of Ptolemy V. 
Epiphanes. She was killed by Philammon by 
order of her husband. — 5. Daughter of Ptolemy 
XI. Auletes, escaped from Csesar when he was 
besieging Alexandrea in B.C. 47, and was rec- 
ognized as queen by the Alexandreans. After 
the capture of Alexandrea she was carried to 
Rome by Caesar, and led in triumph by him in 
46. She was afterward dismissed by Cassar, 
and returned to Alexandrea; but her sister 
Cleopatra persuaded Antony to have her put to 
death in 41. 

Arsinoe ('Apanv;; : ^Apmvoevc or -ojjrrjr), the 
name of several cities of the times of the suc- 
cessors of Alexander, each called after one or 
other of the persons of the same uame (see 
above). — 1. In yEtolia, formerly Kuvuxa. — 2. 
On the northern coast of Cyprus, on the site of 
tiie older city of Marram (Mdpiov), which Ptol- 
emy I. had destroyed. — 3. A port on the west- 
ern coast of Cyprus. — 1. (Now Famagosta), on 
the southeastern coast of Cyprus, between Sal- 
amis and Leueolla. — 5. In Cilicia, east of Ane- 
raurium. — 6. (Now Ajcroud or Suez), in the No- 
mos Heroopolites in Lower Egypt, near or upon 
the head of the Sinus Heroopolites or western 
branch of the Red Sea (now Gulf of Suez). It 
was afterward called Cleopatris. — 7. (Now Me' 
dinet-el-Faioum, ruins), the chief city of the No- 
mos Arsinoites in the Heptanomis or Middle 
Egypt (vid. iEoYFTUK, p. 18, b); formerly called 
Crocodilopolis (Kpoicode'ilov tt6?uc), and the dis- 
trict Nomos Crocodilopolites, from its being the 
-shief seat of the Egyptian worship of the croc- 
odile. This uomos also contained the Lake Moa- 
ns and the Labyrinth.— 8. In Cyrenaica, also 
called Taucheira. — 9. On the coast of the Trog- 
lodytae on the Red Sea, east of Egypt. Its 
probable position is a little below the parallel of 
Thebes. Some other citie3 called Arsinoo are 
better known by other names, such as Ephesus 
in Ionia and Patara in Lyeia. 

[Arsinous ('Apo'cvocr), father of Hecamede ; 
ruler of Tenedos.] 

[Arsites ('Apolrrjc;), satrap of the Helles- 
pontine Phrygia when Alexander the Great in- 
vaded Asia : after the defeat of the Persians at 
the Granicus he put himself to death.] 



Absisba or Mantiana ("Apatooa, ij MavTiavij : 
J now Van), a great lake abounding in fish, in 
the south of Armenia Major. Vid. Armenia. 

Artabanus ('AprdOavoc). 1. Son of Hystas 
pes and brother of Darius, is frequently men- 
tioned in the reign of his nephew Xerxes as a 
wise and frank counsellor. — 2. An Hyrcanian, 
commander of the body-guard of Xerxes, as- 
sassinating this king in B.C. 465, with the view 
i of setting himself upon the throne of Persia, but 
was shortly afterward killed by Artaxerxes — 
3. 1, II., III., IV., kings of Parthia. Vid. Arsa- 
ces III, VIII., XIX., XXX. 

[Artabazanes CApraSa^lvfig), oldest son of 
Darius Hystaspis, half-brother of Xerxes, and 
called, also, Ariabignes. Vid. Ariabignes] 

Artabazus ('ApTudaCog). 1. A Mede, acta a 
prominent part in Xenophon's aceouut of Cyrus 
the Elder. — 2. A distinguished Persian, a son 
of Pharnaces, commanded the Parthians and 
Choasmians in the expedition of Xerxes into 
Greece, B.C. 480. He served under Mardonius 
in 479, and after the defeat of the Persians at 
Platsece, he fled with forty thousand men, and 
reached Asia in safety. — 3. A general of Ar- 
taxerxes I., fought against Inarus in Egypt, 
B.C. 462. — 4. A Persian general, fought under 
Artaxerxes II. against Datames, satrap of Cap- 
padocia, B.C. 362. Under Artaxerxes III., Ar- 
tabazus, who was then satrap of "Western Asia , 
revolted in B.C. 356, but was defeated and 
obliged to take refuge with Philip of Macedonia. 
He was afterward pardoned by Artaxerxes, and 
returned to Persia ; and he was one of the most 
faithful adherents of Darius III. Codomannus, 
who raised him to high honors. On the death 
of Darius (330) Artabazus received from Alex- 
ander the satrapy of Bactria. One of. his 
daughters, Barsine, became by Alexander the 
mother of Hercules ; a second, Artocama, mar- 
ried Ptolemy, son of Lagus ; and a third, Ar- 
tonis, married Eumenes. 

Artabri, afterward Arotreb.e, a Celtic peo- 
ple in the northwest of Spain, near the Promon- 
tory Nerium or Celticum, also called Artabruni 
after them (now Cape Finisterre). 

Artace CApraKT) : now ArtaJci), a sea-port 
town of the peninsula of Cyzicus, in the Pro- 
pontis : also a mountain in the same peninsula. 
■ Artacelees ('Apraxa'tfjc), a distinguished Per- 
sian in the army of Xerxes, died while Xerxes 
was at Athos. The mound which the king 
raised over him is still in existence. 

[Artacie ('ApraKin), a fountain in the coun- 
try of the mythic Laestrygones.] 

Artacoana. ('ApraKoava or -Kavva : now Sekh- 
van ?), the ancient capital of Aria, not far from 
the site of the later capital, Alexandrea. 

Art^ei ('ApTaioi), was, according to Herodo- 
tus (vi., 61), the old native name of the Per- 
sians. It signifies noble, and appears in the 
form Apra, as the first part of a large number 
of Persian proper names. Compare Aril 

[Artagera or Artager-e ('ApTajTjpac), a 
mountain fortress in southern Armenia, on the 
Euphrates.] 

[Artagerses (' ' ApTayepcris), a commander in 
the army of Artaxerxes.] 

[Artanes {' ApTavris), son of Hystaspes and 
brother of Darius, fought and fell at the battle 
' : of Thermopvlse.] 

109 



ARTANES, 



A IITAXEBXE^. 



AaTAHJES CApravm). *• A ***** 
felling into the later.— 2. A river m Bithjma. 

TAetaozus ('Apraococ), a friend and supports 
of the younger Cyrus.] 

Artaphernes ('Aprcupepvr/c)- h Son of Hys- 
taspes and brother of Darius. He was satrap 
of Sardis at the timo of the Ionian revolt, B.C. 
-500. Vid. Akistagoras. — 2. Son of the former, 
commanded, along with Datis, the Persian army 
of Darius, which was defeated at the battle of 
Marathon,' B.C. 490. Artaphernes commanded 
■the Lydians and Mysians in the invasion of 
Greece by Xerxes in 480. — [3. A Persian, sent 
by Artaxerxes I. to Sparta with a letter, ar- 
rested on bis way by Aristides and taken to 
Athens, where his letter was translated : the 
Athenians endeavored to turn this to their ad- 
vantage, and sent Artaphernes in a galley, with 
their ambassadors, to Ephesus,] 

ARTArauM (now Salburg, near Horn burg?), a 
Roman fortress in Germany on Mount Taunus, 
built by Drusus and restored by G-ermamcus. 

Artavasdes ('ApTaovaedrjQ or 'Aprafkladqt;) or 
Artabazes ('Aprahd%yr). 1, King of the Great- 
er Armenia, succeeded his father Tigranes. In 
the expedition of Crassus against the Parthians, 
B.C. 54, Artavasdes was an ally of the Romans ; 
but after the defeat of the latter, he concluded 
a peace with the Parthian Icing, In 36 he joined 
Antony in his campaign against the Parthians, 
-and persuaded him to invade Media, because he 
was at enmity with his namesake Artavasdes, 
king of Media ; but he treacherously deserted 
Antony in the middle of the campaign. Antony 
accordingly invaded Armenia in 34, contrived 
to entice Artavasdes into his camp, where he 
was immediately seized, carried him to Alex- 
andra and led him in triumph. He remained 
in captivity till SO, when Cleopatra had him 
•killed after the battle of Actium, and sent his 
head to his old enemy, Artavasdes of Media, in 
hopes of obtaining assistance from the latter. 
This Artavasdes was well acquainted with 
Greek literature, and wrote tragedies, speeches, 
md historical works. — 2. King of Armenia, 
probably a grandson of No. 1, was placed upon 
the throne by Augustus, but was deposed by 
the Armenians. — 3. King of Media Atropatene, 
and an enemy of Artavasdes I., king of Arme- 
nia. Antony invaded his country in 36, at the 
instigation of the Armenian king, but he was 
obliged to retire with great loss. Artavasdes 
afterward concluded a peace with Antony, and 
gave his daughter lotape in marriage to' Alex- 
ander, the son of Antony. Artavasdes was 
subsequently engaged in wars with the Par- 
isians and Armenians. He died shortly before 
20 B.C. 

Artaxata or -m (rd 'Apru§ara or -i-iara : 
rains at Ardachai, above Nakshivan), the later 
eapital of Great Armenia, built by Artaxias, 
under the advice of Hannibal, on a peninsula, 
surrounded by the River Araxes. After being 
•burned by the Romans under Corbulo (A.D. 58), 
** was restored by Tiridates, and called Nero- 
ola (Nepwveia). It was still standing in the 
■fourth century. 

Artaxerxes or Aktoxerxes ('ApraBep^ or 
'AproZt-pfyg), the name of four Persian kin^s, is 
compounded of Arta, which means "honored," 
vm} Xerxes, which h the same as the Zeod 
110 



| ks&ihra, " a king :" consequently Artaxtrxe* 
means "the honored king." 1. Surnamed 
Longimanus, from the circumstance of his right 
hand being longer than his left, reigned B.O, 
465-425. He ascended the throne after his fa- 
ther, Xerxes L, had been murdered by Arta 
bauus, and after he himself had put to death bk 
brother Darius at the instigation of Artabanus 
His reign was disturbed by several dangerous in- 
surrections of the satraps. The Egyptians also 
revolted in 460, under Inarus, who was support 
ed by the Athenians. The first army which 
Artaxerxes sent under his brother Achfemene;* 
was defeated and Achsemenes slain. The sec- 
ond army which he sent, under Artabazus and 
Megabyzus, was more successful. Inarus was 
defeated in 456 or 455, but Amyrtaeus, another 
chief of the insurgents, maintained himself ma 
the marshes of Lower Egypt, At a later period. 
(449) the Athenians under Cimon sent assist- 
ance to Amyrtaeus; and even after the death 
of Cimon, the Athenians gained two victories 
over the Persians, one by land and the other by 
sea, in the neighborhood of Salamis in Cyprus. 
After this defeat Artaxerxes is said to have eon 
eluded peace with the Greeks on terms very ad- 
vantageous to the latter. Artaxerxes was' suc- 
ceeded by his son Xerxes II.— 2. Surnamed 
Mnemon, from his good memory, succeeded his 
father. Darius II., and reigned B.C. 405-359. 
Gyrus, the younger brother of Artaxerxes, who 
was satrap of Western Asia, revolted against 
his brother, and, supported by Greek merceeu- 
ries, invaded Upper Asia. In the neighborhood 
of Cunaxa, near Babylon, a battle was fought 
between the armies of the two brothers, in 
which Cyrus fell, B.C 401. Vid. Cyrus. Tis- 
saphernes was appointed satrap of Western 
Asia in the place of Cyrus, and was actively 
engaged in wars with the Greeks. Vid. Thim 
bron, Deroyllidas, Agesilaus. Notwithstand- 
ing these perpetual conflicts with the Greeks* 
the Persian empire maintained itself by the dis- 
union among the Greeks themselves, which was 
fomented and kept up by Persian money. The 
peace of Antalcidas, in B.C. 388, gave the Per- 
sians even greater power and influence than 
they had possessed before. Vid. Antalcidas. 
But the empire was suffering from internal disr 
turbanees, and Artaxerxes had to carry on fre- 
quent wars with tributary princes and satraps, 
who endeavored to make themselves independ- 
ent Thus he maintained a long struggle against 
Evagoras of Cyprus, from 385 to 376 ; he also 
had to carry on war against the Cardusians, on 
the shores of the Caspian Sea ; and his attempts 
to recover Egypt were unsuccessful. Toward 
the end of his reign he put to death his eldes* 
son Darius, who had formed a plot to assassi- 
nate him. His last days were still further em- 
bittered by the unnatural conduct of his son 
Oehus, who caused the destruction of two of 
his brothers, in order to secure the succession 
for himself. Artaxerxes was succeeded by 
Oehus, who ascended the throne under ths> 
name of Artaxerxes III. — 3. Also called Qqjtm , 
reigned B.C. 359-338. In order to secure hk 
throne, he began his reign with a merciless ex- 
tirpation of the members of his family. He 
himself was a cowardly and reckless "despot ; 
and the great advantages which the Persian • 



ART AX IAS. 



ARTKBflS. 



anna gained during his reign were owing only to j 
his Greek generals and mercenaries. These ad- j 
vantages consisted in the conquest of the revolted | 
satrap Artabazus (vid. Artabazus, No. 4), and in 
the reduction of Phoenicia, of several revolted j 
towns in Cyprus, and of Egypt, 350. The reins j 
of government were entirely in the hands of the 
eunuch Bagoas aud of Mentor the Rhodian. At 
last he was poisoned by Bagoas, and was suc- 
ceeded by his youngest son, Arses.— 4. The 
founder of tie dynasty of the Sassanius. 

Artaxias (' Xpraij'iac) or Artaxes ('AprdijtK), 
the name of three kings of Armenia. L The 
founder of tho Armenian kingdom, was one of 
the generals of Antiochus the Great, but revolt- 
ed from him about B.C. 188, and became an in- 
dependent sovereign. Hannibal took refuge at j 
the court of Artaxias, and he superintended the j 
building of Artaxata, the capital of Armenia. 
Artaxias was conquered and taken prisoner by 
Antiochus IV. Epiphanes about 165. — 2. Son 
of Artavasdea, was made king by the Armeni- 
ans when his father was taken prisoner by An- 
tony in 34. In 20, Augustus, at the request of 
the Armenians, sent Tiberius into Armenia in 
order to depose Artaxias aud place Tigranes on 
the throne, but Artaxias was put to death before 
Tiberius reached the country. Tiberius, however, 
took the credit to himself of a successful expedi- 
tion, whence Horace (Ernst, i. 12, 26) says, 
(Jlaud't virtute Ner&nis Armenius cecidit. — 3. Son 
of Polemon, king of Poutus, was proclaimed king 
of Armenia by Gei-manicus in A.D. 18. He died 
about 35. 

Artaycteh {'ApraiKTi/c), Persian governor of 
Sestus on the Hellespont, when the town was ta- 
ken by the Greeks in B.C. 478, met with an igno- 
minious death on account of the sacrilegious acts 
which he had committed against the tomb of the 
hero Protesilaus. ' 

[ Artaynte ('Apravi r;/), a daughter of Masistcs, 
the brother of Xerxes I., who gave her in mar- 
riage to his son Darius, while he himself was se- 
cretly in love with her: this, becoming known to 
Amastris, brought down her vengeance on the 
mother of Artaynte, whom she suspected of hav- 
ing been the cause of the king's passion.] 

[Artayntes (' ApTavvT7!c), one of the generals 
in the army of Xerxes ; after the battle of Sala- 
mis, he, with several other generals, sailed to 
Samos to watch the Ionians ; but, after the de- 
feat of the Persians at Platan and Mycale, he 
abandoned his post and returned to Persia.] 

ArtemIdorus (' Apre/udupoc). 1. Surnamed 
Ajristophames, from his being a disciple of the 
velebrated grammarian Aristophanes, was him- 
self a grammarian, and the author of several 
works now lost.— 2. Of Cnidus, a friend of Ju- 
lius Caesar, was a rhetorician, and taught the 
Greek language at Rome.— 3. Daldianus, a na- 
tive of Ephesus, but called Daldianus, from 
Daldis in Lydia, his mother's birth-place, to dis- 
tinguish him from the geographer Artemidorus. 
He lived at Home in the reigns of Antoninus 
Pius and M. Aurelius (A.D. 138-180). and wrote 
a work on the interpretation of dreams ('Ovetpo- 
Kftirikd), in five books, which is still extant. The 
object of the work is to prove that the future 
jb revealed toman in dreams, and to clear the 
eeienoe of interpreting them from the abuses 
with which the fashion of the time had sur- 



rounded it. The style is simple, correct, ami 
elegant. The best edition is by Reiff, Lip&„. 
1805. — 4. Of Ephesus, a Greek geographer, 
lived about B.C. 100. He made voyages round 
the coasts of the Mediterranean, in the Red Sea, 
and apparently even in the Southern Ocean. He 
also visited Iberia and Gaul. The work, in 
which he gave the results of his investigations, 
consisted of eleven books, of which Marciann» 
afterward made an abridgment. The original 
work is lost; but we possess fragments of Mar- 
cianus's abridgment, which contain the peri- 
plus of the Pontus Euxinus, and accounts of 
Bithynia and Paphlagonia. These fragment* 
are priuted in Hudson's Gcographi Minor?*. 
vol. i. 

Artemis (^Apre^ir), the Latin Diana, one of 
the great divinities of the- Greeks. According 
to the most ancient account, she was the daugh- 
ter of Jupiter (Zeus) and Leto (Latona), and the 
twin-sister of Apollo, born with him in the isl- 
and of Delos. She was regarded in various 
points of view by the Greeks, which must be 
carefully distinguished. 1. Artetnis (Diana), a<; 
the sister of Apollo, is a kind of female Apollo, 
that is, ?he as a female divinity represented 
the same idea that Apollo did as a male divini- 
ty. As sister of Apollo, Artemis (Diana) i~, 
like her brother, armed with a bow, quiver, and 
arrows, aud sends plagues and death among 
men and animals. Sudden deaths, but more 
especially those of women, are described as the 
effect of her arrows. As Apollo was not only 
a destructive god, but also averted evils, so Ar- 
temis (Diana) likewise cured and alleviated the 
sufferings of mortals. In the Trojan war she 
sided, like Apollo, with the Trojans. She was 
more especially the protectress of the young; 
aud from her watching over the young of fe- 
males, she came to be regarded as the goddess 
of the flocks and the chase. In this manner 
she also became the huntress among the im- 
mortals. Artemis (Diana), like Apollo, is un- 
married ; she is a maiden divinity never eon 
quered by love. She slew Orion with her ar- 
rows, according to one account, because he 
made an attempt upon her chastity ; and she 
changed Action into a stag simply because 
he had seen her bathing. With her brother 
Apollo, she slew the children of Niobe, who 
had deemed herself superior to Leto (Latona). 
When Apollo was regarded as identical with, 
the sun or Helios, nothing was more natural 
than that his sister should be regarded as Se- 
lene or the moon, and accordingly the Greek 
Artemis is, at least in later times, the goddefew 
of the moon. Hence Artemis (Diana) is repre- 
sented in love with the fair youth Exdymiox 
whom she kissed in his sleep, but this legend 
properly relates to Selene or the Moon, and is 
foreign to the character of Artemis (Diana)., 
who, as we have observed, was a goddess un- 
moved by love. — 2. The Arcadian Artemis is a 
goddess of the nymphs, and was worshipped a* 
such in Arcadia in very early time?. She hunt- 
ed with her nymphs on the Arcadian Mount 
ains, and her chariot was drawn by four stags- 
with golden antlers. There was no connection 
between the Arcadian Artemis and Apollo.- — 
8. The Taurian Artemis. The worship of this 
goddess was connected, at least in early tinier . 

Ill 



lliMiSiA. 



ARYANDES. 



with human sacrifices. According to the Greek 
legend there was in Taurus a goddess, whom 
the Greeks for some reason identified with their 
-own Artemis (Diana), and to whom all strangers 
thrown on the coast of Tauris were sacrificed. 
Iphigenla and Orestes brought her image from 
thence, and landed at Brauron in Attica, whence 
the goddess derived the name of Brauronia. 
The Brauroniau Artemis was worshipped at 
Athens and Sparta, and in the latter place the 
boys were scourged at her altar till it was be- 
sprinkled with their blood. This cruel cere- 
mony was believed to have been introduced by 
Lycurgus, instead of the human sacrifices which 
had until then been offered to her. Iphigenia, 
who was at first to have been sacrificed to Ar- 
temis (Diana), and who then became her priest- 
ess, was afterward identified with the goddess, 
who was worshipped in some parts of Greece, 
as at Hermione, under the name of Iphigenia. 
Some traditions stated that Artemis made Iphi- 
genia immortal, in the character of Hecate, the 
goddess of the moon. — <£. The Ephes-ian Artemis 
(Diana) wa3 a divinity totally distinct from the 
Greek goddess of the same name. She seems 
Tjo have been the personification of the fructify- 
ing and all-nourishing powers of nature. She 
was an ancient Asiatic divinity, whoso worship 
the Greeks found established in Ionia when 
they settled there, and to whom they gave the 
came of Artemis. Her original character is 
sufficiently clear from the fact that her priests 
were eunuchs, and that her image in the mag- 
nificent temple of Ephesus represented her with 
many breasts {r:o7.v[iaaTor). The representations 
of the Greek Artemis in works of art are differ- 
ent, according as she is represented either as a 
imntress or as the goddess of the moon. As 
the huntress, she is tail, nimble, and has small 
hips; her forehead is high, her eyes glancing 
freely about, and her hair tied up, with a few 
locks floating down her neck; her breast is 
covered, and the legs up to the knees are naked, 
the rest being covered by the chlamys. Her at- 
tributes are the bow, quiver, and arrows, or a 
spear, stags, and dogs. As the goddess of the 
moon, she wears a long robe which reaches 
down to her feet, a veil covers her head, and 
above her forehead rises the crescent of the 
moon. In her hand she often appears holding a 
torch. _ The Romans identified their goddess Di- 
ana with the Greek Artemis. 

Artemisia ('Aprefuoia). I. Daughter of Lyg- 
damis, and queen of Halicarnassus in Caria, ac- 
companied Xerxes, in his invasion of Greece, 
with five ships, and in the battle of Salamis 
(B.C. 480) greatly distinguished herself by her 
prudence and courage, for which she was after- 
ward highly honored by the Persian king. — 2, j 
Daughter of Hecatomnus, and sister, wife, and 
successor of the Cariao prince Mausolus, reigned | 
B.C. 352-850. She is renowned in history for j 
her extraordinary grief at the death of her hus- ! 
band Mausolus. She is said to have mixed his 
ashes in her daily drink ; and to perpetuate his 
memory, she built at Halicarnassus the celebra- 
ted monument, Mausoleum, which was regarded 
as one of the seven wonders of the world, and 
the name of which subsequently became the! 
generic term for any splendid sepulchral mouu- j 
ment [ 
112 



Artemisium ('Aprefiiciov), properly a temple 
of Artemis. 1. A tract of country on the north- 
ern coast of Eubcea, opposite Magnesia, so called 
from the temple of Artemis (Diana) belonging to 
the town of Hestisea : off this coast the Greeks 
defeated the fleet of Xerxes, B.C. 480.— 2. A 
promontory of Caria, near the Gulf Glaucus, so 
called from the temple of Artemis it its neigh- 
borhood. 

Artemita {'Xpreutra). 1. (Xow SJterebanf), 
a city on the Sillas. in the district of Apollonia- 
tis in Assyria. — 2. A city of Great Armenia, 
south of the Lake Arsissa. 

Artemon ('Aprefiav), a Lacedaemonian, built 
the military engines for Pericles in his war 
against Sarnos in B.C. 441. There were also 
several writers of this name, whose works are 
lost. 

[Artimas ('Apriuac), a Persian satrap, men- 
tioned in the Anabasis.] 

[Artiscus ( J Ap7icKG£ '. now Bujulc-Dere), u 
river of Thrace, a tributary of the Hebrus.] 

[Artontes ('ApTovTtji), son of Mardonius.] 

Artorius, M., a physician at Rome, was the 
friend and physician of Augustus, whom he at 
tended in his campaign against Brutus and Cas- 
sius, B.C. 42. He was drowned at sea ebortlv 
after the battle of Actium, 31. 

Arverni, a Gallic people in Aquitania, in the 
country of the Mons Cebenna, in the modern 
Auvergne. In early times they were the most 
powerful people in the south of Gaul: they 
were defeated by Domitius Ahenobarbus and 
Fabiu3 Maxim us in B.C. 121, but still possessed 
considerable power in the time of Ccesar (58). 
Their capital was Nemossus, also named Augus- 
tonemetum or Arverni on the Elaver (now Allier). 
with a citadel, called at least in the Middle Ages 
Claras Mons, whence the name of the modem 
town, Clermont 

Arvina, a cognomen of the Cornelia gens, 
borne by several of the Cornelii, of whom the 
most important was A. Cornelius Cossus Arvina, 
consul B.C. 343 and 322, and dictator 320. He 
commanded the Roman armies against the Sam- 
mites, whom he defeated in several battles. 

Aruns, an Etruscan word, was regarded by 
the Romans as a proper name, but perhaps sig- 
nified a younger son in general. 1. Younger 
brother of Lucumo, i. e., L. Tarquiniu3 Priscus. 
— 2. Younger brother of L Tarquinius Superbus. 
was murdered by his wife. — 3. Younger son of 
Tarquinius Superbus, fell in combat with Brutus. 
— 4. Son of Porsena, fell in battle before Aricht. 
— 5. Of Clusium, invited the Gauls across the 
Alps. 

Aruntius. Vid. Arrentius. 

Arusiaxus, Messes or Messius, a Roman gram- 
marian, lived about A.D. 450, and wrote a Latin 
phrase book, entitled Quadriga, vel Exempla El- 
ocutionum ex Virgilio, Sallustio, Terentio, et Ci- 
cerone per literas digesta.. It is called Quadriga 
from its being composed from four authors. The 
best edition is by Lindemann, in his Corpus 
Grammaticorion Latin., vol. L, p. 199. 

Arxata ("Ap£aTa : now Nakshivan), the capi- 
tal of Great Armenia, before the building of Ar- 
taxata, lay lower down upon the Araxes, on the 
cuuri/ies of Media. 

Aryandes ('Apvuvdijc), a Persian, who was 
appointed by Cambyses governor of Egypt, but 



ARYBAS. 



ASCONItIS PEDIANUS. 



was put to death by Darius, because he coined 
, silver money of the purest metal, in imitation 
' of the gold money of that monarch. 

[Arybas or Arymbas. Vid. Arribas.] 

Arycanda ('Apvuavda), a email town of Ly- 
cia, east of Xauthus, on the River Arycandus, 
a tributary of the Limyrus. 

Arzaxene (' Ap&vjjvjj), a district of Armenia 
Major, bounded on the south by the Tigris, on 
the west by the Nymphius, and containing in it 
the Lake Arsene ('Apo?iv?'/ : now Frzen). It 
formed part of Gordyexe. 

[Arzen or -es, or Atraxutzix ('Aptfiv, 'Apfrg, 
\\.rpdvovT^iv : now Erzeroum), a strong fortress 
in Great Armenia, near the sources of the Eu- 
phrates and the Araxes. founded in the fifth 
century. 

As.£i ('Aaalot), a people of Sarmatia Asiatica, 
uear the mouth of the Tanai's (now Don). 

Asaxder ("Aoavdpoc). 1. Son of Philotas, 
brother of Parmenion, and one of the generals 
of Alexander the Great. After the death of 
Alexander in 323, he obtained Caria for his sat- 
rapy, and took an active part in the wars which 
followed. He joined Ptolemy and Cassander in 
their league against Antigonus, but was de- 
feated by Antigonus in 313. — 2. A general of 
Pharnaces II., king of Bosporus. He put Phar- 
naces to death in 47, after the defeat of the 
latter by Julius Cassar, in hopes of obtaining the 
kingdom. But Ca;sar conferred the kingdom 
upon Mithradates of Pergamus, with whom 
Asander carried on war. Augustus afterward 
confirmed Asander in the sovereignty. [He 
died of voluntary starvation in his ninety-third 
year.] 

[Asbolus (*Ao6o/o£ ), a centaur, famed for his 
*kill in prophesying from the flight of birds ; 
fought against the Lapithoe at the nuptials of 
Pirithous. He was crucified by Hercules.] 

Asbystve ('AaCCarat), a Libyan people, in the 
north of Cyrenaica. Their country was called 
Ag6v(jtcc. 

Asca ("Aokci), a city of Arabia Felix. 

Ascalabus, sou of Misme, respecting whom 
the same story is told which we also find relat- 
ed of Abas, son of Metamra. Vid. Abas, No. 1. 

Ascalaphus (' AcKu/M(j)0£). 1. Son of Mars 
(Ares) and Astyoche, led, with his brother Ial- 
menus, the Minyans of Orchomenos against 
Troy, and was slain by Deiphobus. — 2. Son of 
Acheron aud Gorgyra or Oi-phnc. When Pro- 
serpina (Persephone) was in the lower world, 
and Pluto gave her permission to return to the 
upper, providing she had not eaten any thing, 
Ascalaphus declared that she had eaten part of 
a pomegranate. Ceres (Demeter) punished him 
by burying him under a huge stone, and when 
this stone was subsequently removed by Her- 
cules, Proserpina (Persephone) changed him 
into an owl (aoKu/.a6oc), by sprinkling him with 
water from the River Phlegethon. 

Ascalon {'AGtialc'jv : 'AmcaXuvdnjr : now 
Aslcaldn), one of the chief cities of the Philis- 
tines, on the coast of Palestine, between Azotus 
and Gaza. 

Ascania (// 'Acuavia ?ufivtj). 1. (Now Lake j 
of Iznik), in Bithynia, a great fresh-water lake, j 
at the eastern end of which stood the city of Ni- j 
eaea (now Iznik). The surrounding district was I 
.•ilso called Ascania.— 2. (Now Lake of Burdur), I 
8 



j a salt-water lake on the borders of Phrygia and 
Pisidia, which supplied the neighboring country 
j with salt. 

i Ascanius ('Agkuvioc). [1- An ally of the Tro- 
! jans from the Phrygian Ascania.— 2. Son of 1 
Hippolion, also an ally of the Trojans.]— 3. Son 
j of ^Eneas by Creusa. According to some tra- 
j ditions, Ascanius remained in Asia after the fall 
I of Troy, and reigned either at Troy itself or at 
| some other town in the neighborhood. Accord- 
: ing to other accounts, he accompanied his father 
to Italy. _ Other traditions, again, gave the name 
of Ascanius to the son of iEneas and Lavinia. 
Livy states that on the death of his father Asca- 
nius was too young to undertake the govern- 
ment, and that, after he had attained the age of 
manhood, he left Lavinium in the hands of his 
mother, aud migrated to Alba Longa. Here he 
was succeeded by his son Silvius. Some writ- 
ers relate that Ascanius was also called Ilus or 
lulus. The gens Julia at Rome traced its origin 
from lulus or Ascanius. 

Asciburgium (now Asburg, near Mors), an an- 
cient place on the left bank of the Rhine, found- 
ed, according to fable, by Ulysses. 

Ascn (uokioc, i. e., shadowless), a term applied 
to the people living about the equator, between 
the tropics, who have, at certain times of the 
year, the sun in their zenith at noon, when, con- 
sequently, erect objects can cast no shadow. 

AsclepiadjE, the reputed descendants of As- 
clepius (iEsculapius). Vid. -/Esculapius. 

Asclepiades ('Ao-K?v7]7riddr]s). 1. A lyric poet, 
who is said to have invented the metre called 
after him (Metrum Asclepiadeum), but of whose 
life no particulars are recorded. — 2. Of Tragilus 
in Thrace, a contemporary and disciple of Isoc- 
rates, about B.C. 360, wrote a work called 
Tpayudovpeva in six books, being an explana- 
tion of the subjects of the Greek tragedies. 
[The fragments of this work are published in 
Muller's Fragm. Hist. Grate, vol. iii., p. 301-6. 
— 3. Of Samos, a bucolic poet, who flourished 
just before the time of Theocritus, as he is 
mentioned as his teacher : several epigrams in 
the Anthology are ascribed to him.] — 4. Of 
Myrlea in Bithynia, in the middle of the first 
century B.C., wrote several grammatical works ; 
[and a history of Bithynia, in ten books : a few 
fragments of this last work are collected in 
Muller's Fragm. Hist. Grcec, vol. hi., p. 300-1.] 
— 5. There were a great many physicians of this 
name, the most celebrated of whom was a na- 
tive of Bithynia, who came to Rome in the 
middle of the first century B.C., where he ac- 
quired a great reputation by his successful cures. 
Nothing remains of his writings but a few frag- 
ments published by Gumpert, AsclepiadisBithyni 
Fragmenta, Vinar., 1794. 

Ascxepiodorus (' AonlrjTuodupoc). 1. A gen- 
eral of Alexander the Great, afterward made 
satrap of Persia by Antigonus, B.C. 317. — 2. A 
celebrated Athenian painter, a contemporary of 
Apelles. 

Asclepius. Vid JEsculapius. 

Asconius Pediaxus, Q., a Roman gramma- 
rian, bom at Patavium (now Padua), about B.C. 
2, lost his sight in his seventy-third year, in the 
reign of Vespasian, and died in his eighty-fifth 
year, in the reign of Domitian. His most import- 
ant work was a Commentary on the speeches 
113 



ASCORDUS. 



ASIA. 



of Cicero, and we still possess fragments of 
his Commentaries on the Divinatio, the first 
two speeches against Verres, and a portion of 
the third, the speeches for Cornelius (i., ii.), 
the speech In toga Candida, for Scaurus, against 
Piso, and for Milo. They are written in very 
pure language, and refer chiefly to points of 
history and antiquities, great pains being be- 
stowed on the illustration of those constitutional 
forms of the senate, the popular assemblies, and 
the courts of justice, which were fast falling 
into oblivion under the empire. This character, 
however, does not apply to the notes on the 
Yerrine orations, which were probably written 
by a later grammarian. Edited in the fifth vol- 
ume of Cicero's works by Orelli and Baiter. 
There is a valuable essay cn Asconius by Mad- 
rig, Hafhiae, 1828. 

Ascordus, a river in Macedonia, which rises 
in Mount Olympus, and flows between Agassa 
and Dium into the Thermaic Gulf. 

Ascea {"AcKpc : ? AcA:,oa?of), a town iu Bceo- 
tia, on Mount Helicon, where Hesiod resided, 
who had removed thither with his father from 
Cyme in iEolis, and who is therefore called 
Ascrxus. 

Asculum. 1. PioIkch (Asculanus : now As- 
•;oli), the chief town of Picenum and a Roman 
municipium, was destroyed by the Romans in 
the Social War (BC. 89), but was afterward 
rebuilt. — 2. Apulum (Aseulinus : now Ascoli di 
Satriano), a town of Apulia, in Daunia, on the 
confines of Samnium, near which the Romans 
were defeated by Pyrrhus, B.C. 2^9. 

AscCius (now Ezero), a lake in Mount Olym- 
pus in Perrhrebia in Thessaly, near Lapathus. 

Asdkubal. Vid, Hasdkubal. 

Asea (i) 'Affta), a town in Arcadia, not far 
from Megalopolis. 

Asellio, P. Sempeonius, tribune of the sol- 
diers under P. Seipio Africanus at Numantia, 
B.C. 133. wrote a Roman history from the Pu- 
nic wars inclusive to the times of the Gracchi. 

Asellus, Tib. Claudius, a Roman eques, was 
deprived of his horse by Scipio Africanus Minor, 
when censor, B.C. 142, and in his tribuneship 
of the plebs in 139 accused Scipio Africanus be- 
fore the people. 

Asia {'Acta), daughter of Oceanus and Tethys, 
wife of Iapetus, and mother of Atlas, Prome- 
theus, and Epimctheus. According to some 
traditions, the continent of Asia derived its 
name from her. 

Asia ('Acta : 'Acievg, -lavbc, -luti]c, -ariuoc : 
now Asia), also in the poets Asis ('acric), one of 
the three great divisions which the ancients 
made of the known world. It is doubtful wheth- 
er the name is of Greek or Eastern origin ; but, 
in either case, it seems to have been first used 
by the Greeks for the western part of Asia Mi- 
nor, especially the plains watered by the river 
Cayster, where the Ionian colonists first settled ; 
and thence, as their geographical knowledge 
advanced, they extended it to the whole coun- 
try east, northeast, and southeast. The first 
knowledge which the Greeks possessed of the 
opposite shores of the ^Egean Sea dates before 
the earliest historical records. The legends 
respecting the Argonautic and the Trojan ex- 
peditions, and other mythical stories, on the one 
hand., and the allusions to commercial and other 
314 



intercourse with the people of Asia Minor, 
'■ Syria, and Egypt, on the other hand, indicate a 
i certain degree of knowledge of the coast from 
i the mouth of the Phasis, at the eastern extrem- 
| ity of the Black Sea, to the mouth of the Nile. 
| This knowledge was improved and increased 
i by the colonization of the western, northern, 
| and southern coasts of Asia Minor, and by the 
I relations into which these Greek colonies were 
| brought, first with the Lydian, and then with 
; the Persian empires, so that, in the middle of 
! the fifth century B.C., Herodotus was able to 
j give a pretty complete description of the Per- 
j sian empire, and some imperfect accounts of the 
J parts beyond it ; while some knowledge of 
southern Asia was obtained by way of Egypt ; 
and its northern regions, with their wandering 
tribes, formed the subject of marvellous stories 
which the traveller heard from the Greek colo- 
nists on the northern shores of the Black Sea. 
The conquests of Alexander, besides the per- 
sonal acquaintance which they enabled the 
Greeks to form with those provinces of the Per- 
sian empire hitherto only known to them by 
report, extended their knowledge over the re- 
gions watered by the Indus and its four great 
tributaries (the Punjab and Scinde) ; the lowe:- 
course of the Indus and the shores between its 
mouth and the head of the Persian Gulf wer>. 
explored by INearchus ; and some further knowl- 
edge was gained of the nomad tribes which 
roamed (as they still do) over the vast steppes 
of Central Asia by the attempt of Alexander to 
penetrate, on the northeast, beyond the Jaxarte? 
(now Sihoun) ; while, on all points, the Greek? 
were placed in advanced positions from which t > 
acquire further information, especially at Alex- 
audrea, whither voyagers constantly brought ac- 
counts of the shores of Arabia and India, as far 
as the island of Taprobane, and even beyond 
this, to the Malay peninsula and the coasts of 
Cochin China. On the east and north the war- 
and commerce of the Greek kingdom of Syri;; 
carried Greek knowledge of Asia no further, 
except in the direction of India to a small ex- 
tent, but of course more acquaintance was gain- 
ed with the countries already subdued, until the 
conquests of the Parthians shut out the Greeks 
from the country east of the Tigris valley -, a 
limit which the Romans, in their turn, were 
never able to pass. They pushed their arms, 
however, further north than the Greeks had 
done, into the mountains of Armenia, and they 
gained information cf a great caravan route be- 
tween India and the shores of the Caspian, 
through Baetria, and of another commercial 
track leading over Central Asia to the distant 
regions of the Seres. This brief sketch will 
I show that all the accurate knowledge of the 
' Greeks and Romans respecting Asia was con- 
i fined to the countries which slope down south- 
ward from the great mountain chain formed by 
' the Caucasus and its prolongation beyond tht- 
Caspian to the Himalayas : of the vast elevated 
; steppes between these mountains aud the cen- 
tral range of the Altai (from which the northern 
, regions of Siberia again slope down to the Arc- 
1 tic Ocean) they only knew that they were in- 
habited by nomad tribes, except the country 
\ directly north of Ariana, where the Persian em- 
! pire had extended beyond the mountain chair.. 



ASIA 



a sons. 



and where the Greek kingdom of Baeliia had 
been subsequently established. The notions of 
the ancients respecting the size and form of 
Asia were such as might be inferred from what 
has been stated. Distances computed from the 
accounts of travellers are always exaggerated ; 
and hence the southern part of the continent 
was supposed to extend much further to the 
east than it really doe? (about 60° of longitude 
too much, according to Ptolemy), while to the 
north and northeastern parte, which were quite 
unknown, much too small an extent was assign- 
ed. However, all the aueient geographers, ex- 
cept Pliny, agreed in considering it the largest 
of the three divisions of the world,, and all be- 
lieved it to be surrounded by the ocean, with 
the curious exception of Ptolemy, who recurred 
to the early notion, which we find in the poets, 
that the eastern parts of Asia and the south- 
eastern parts of Africa were united by land 
which inclosed the Indian Ocean on the east 
and south. The different opinions about the 
boundaries of Asia on the side of Africa are 
mentioned under Africa : on the side of Europe 
the boundary was formed by the River Tanais 
(now Don), the Palus Mseotis (now Sea. of Azcf), 
Pontes Euxinus (now Black Sea), Propontis 
(now Sea of Marmara), and the JSgean (now 
Archipelago). The most general division of 
Asia was into two parts, which were different 
at different times, and known by different names. 
To the earliest Greek colonists the River Halys, 
the eastern boundary of the Lydian kingdom, 
formed a natural division between Upper and 
Lower Asia (?) avo "A., or ra uno 'Aairjc, and i/ 
Kurt) 'A., or ra KUTU ri/c 'Aalrjc, or 'A. ?/ Lvrbr 
\/iVoc Trora/tov) ; and afterward the Euphrates 
was adopted as a more natural boundary. An- 
other division was made by the Taurus into A. 
intra To.urmn, i. e., the part of Asia north and 
northwest of the Taurus, aud A. extra Taurv.m, 
all the rest of the continent ('A. ivrdg rod Tav- 
pov, aud r A. Iktoc rov Tavpov). The division 
ultimately adopted, but apparently not till the 
fourth century of our era. was that of Asia Ma- 
jor and Asia Minor. 1. Asia Major ('A. i/ 
fieydftp) was the part of the continent east of 
the Tanais, the Euxine, an imaginary line drawn 
from the Euxine at Trapezus (now Trebizond) to 
the Gulf of Issus, and the Mediterranean : thus 
it included the countries of Sarmatica Asiatica, 
with all the Scythian tribes to the east, Colehis, 
Iberia, Albania, Armenia, Syria, Arabia, Babylo- 
nia, Mesopotamia, Assyria, Media, Susiana, Per- 
sia, Ariana, Hyreania. Margiana, Baetriana, Sog- 
diana, India, the land of the Sinas aud Serica ; 
respecting which, see the several articles.— 
2. Asia Minor ('A (tea % fufcpa : now Anatolia), 
was the peninsula oh the extreme west of Asia, 
bounded by the Euxine, iEgean, and Mediter- 
ranean on the north, west, and south ; aud on the 
e-ast by the mountains on the west of the upper 
course of the Euphrates. It was, for the most 
part, a fertile Country, intersected with mount- 
ains and rivers, abounding in minerals, possess- 
ing excellent harbors, and peopled, from the 
earliest known period, by a variety of tribes 
from Asia and from Europe. For particulars 
respecting the country, the reader is referred 
to the separate articles upon the parts into 
which it was divided by the later Greeks, name- 



ly, Mysia, Lydia, and Caria on the west; Lycia, 
Pamphylia, and Cilicia on the south ; Bithynia, 
Paphlagonia, and Pontus on the north; and 
Phrygia, Pisidia, Galatia, and Cappadocia in the 
centre : see, also, the articles Troas, ^Eolia, 
Ionia, Dobia, Lycaonia, Isauria, Pergamus, 
Halys, Sangakius, Taurus, <fec— 3. Asia Pro- 
pria ('A. 7] tduoc ua/ oviih'Ji), or simply Asia, the 
Roman province, formed out of the kingdom of 
Pergamus, which was bequeathed to the Ro- 
mans by Attalus III. (B.C. 130), and the Greek 
cities on the west coast, and the adjacent isl- 
ands, with Rhodes. It included the districts of 
Mysia, Lydia, Caria, and Phrygia, and was gov- 
erned at first by propraetors, afterward by pro- 
consuls. Under Constantino the Great a new 
division was made, and Asia only extended 
along the coast from the Promontorium Lectum 
to the mouth of the Maeander. 

[AsiATiotis, a surname of the Scipios and Va- 
lerii.] 

[Asidates {'Aaiddnjc), a Persian nobleman, 
whose castle was unsuccessfully attacked by Xen- 
ophon, but who was afterward captured with all 
his property.] 

[Asina, a surname of the Scipios.] 

JAsin^us Sinus, another name of the Messeni- 
aeus Sinus. Vid. Asine, 2STo. 3.] 

Asinarus ('Aatvapog : now Fiume di Noto or 
1'reddo ?), a river on the east side of Sicily, on 
which the Athenians were defeated by the Syra- 
cusans, B.C. 413: the Syracusans celebrated here 
an annual festival called Asinaria. 

Asine ('Aglv/j : 'Aoivaioc). I. (Now Passaioa) y 
a town in Laeonica, on the coast between Tasna- 
rum and Gythium. — 2. (Now Phurnos), a town 
in Argolis, west of Hermione, was built by the 
Dryopes, w%o were driven out of the town by 
the Argives after the first Messenian war, and 
built No. 3. — 3. (Now Saratza?), an important 
town in Messenia, near the Promontory Aeritas, 
on the Messenian Gulf, which was hence also 
called the Asinasan Gulf. 

Asinia Gens, plebeian, came from Teate, the 
chief town of the Marrucini ; and the first per- 
son of the name mentioned is Herius Asinius, the 
leader of the Marrucini in the Marsic war, B.C. 
90. The xAsinii are given under their surnames, 
Gallus and Pollio. 

Asius (Aatoc). 1. Son of Hyrtacus of Arisbe, 
and father of Acamas and Phasnops, an ally of 
the Trojans, slain by Idomeueus. — 2. Son of Dy- 
mas and brother of Hecuba, whose form Apollo 
assumed when he roused Hector to fight against 
Patroclus. — [3. Son of Imbrasus, accompanied 
-ZEneas to Italy.] — 4. Of Samos, one of the earli- 
est Greek poets, lived probably about B.C. 100. 
He wrote epic and elegiac poems, which have 
perished with the exception of a few fragments ; 
[and these have been published with the frag- 
ments of Callinus and Tyrtaeus, by Bach ; in the 
Minor Epic Poets, in Didot's Bibl. Grace. ; aud 
by Bergk, in his Poet. Lyrici Grcec.~\ 

" AsMiRjEA, a district and city of Serica, in the 
north of Asia, near mountains called Asmirjei 
Montes, which are supposed to be the Altai 
range, and the city to be Khamil, in the centre 
of Chinese Tartary. 

[Asoris ('A<76j-^j. 1. Daughter of the river- 
god Asopus. — 2. Daughter of Thespius, mother 
of Mentor.] 

115 



asopfs. 



ASPHALTITES LACUS. 



AsGpus ( : \co~Cc). 1. (Now Basilikos), a riv- 1 suiTeuder Aspasia to him. The request could 
er in Peloponnesus, rises near Phlius, and flows ! net be refused as coining from the king elect 



through the Sievoniau territory into the Corinth 
ian tfulf. Asopus, the god of this river, was 
son of Oeeanus aud Tethys, husband of Metope, 
and father of Evadnc, Eubcea, and ^Egina, each 
of whom was therefore erlled Asopis ('kau-ic). 
When Jupiter (Zeus) carried off ^Egina, Aso- 
pus attempted to right with him, but he was 
smitten bv the thunderbolt of Jupiter (Zeus), and 
from that time the bed of the river contained 
pieces of charcoal. By ^Egina Asopus became 
the grandfather of ^Eacus, who is therefore 
called Asopiades. — 2. (Now Asopo), a river in 
Bceotia, forms the northern boundary of the ter- 
ritorv of Plata?a\ flows through the south of 



Artaxerxes, therefore, gave her up ; but he S' 
after took her away again, and made her a priesi 
ess of a temple at Ecbatana, where strict celibacy 
was requisite. 

Aspasii. Tic?, Aspn 
Aspasius ('A.c~uoioc). 1. A peripatetic phi- 
losopher, lived about A.D. 80, and wrote com- 
mentaries on most of the works of Aristotle. 
A portion of his commentaries on the Hieo- 
machean Ethics is still preserved. — 2. Of Byb- 
lus, a Greek sophist, lived about A.D. 180, and 
wrote commentaries on Demosthenes and ,/Es- 
chines, of which a few extracts are preserved ; 
[the extracts relating to him are collected by 



oon 
est- 
acy 



Bceotia, and falls into the Eubcean Sea near j Muller, in the third volume of Didot's Fragmenta 
Delphinium in Attica. [On the banks of this j Eistoricorum Gracorwn, p. 576. — 3. Of Tyre, a 
river was fought the famous battle of Plataeae.] j rhetorician and historian, who, according to Sui- 
3. A river in Phthiotis in Thessaly. rises in ! das, wrote a history of Epirus and of things in 
)unt OZta. and flows into the Maliac Gulf near \ it in twenty books ; but Muller (Fragmenta His- 



Mount 

Thermopylae. — 4. A river in Phrygia, flows past 
LaodicSa into the Lycus. — 5. (Now Esapo), a 
town in Laeonica, on the east side of the Laco- 
Lian Gulf. 

Aspadaxa ('Ao~a6ui a : now Ispahan /). a town 
<>i the district Parsetacene in Persis. 

[Aspalis ^kG-a7/ig), daughter of Argaeus, 
concerning whom an interesting legend is pre- 
served in Antoninus Liberalis.] 

[Aspak, a Xumidian. sent by Jugurtha to Boe- 
chus in order to learn his designs, when the lat- 
ter had sent for Sulla. He was. however, de- 
ceived by Bocchus.] 

Asparagium (now Iscarpar), a town in the ter- 
ritory of Dyrrhachium, in Blyria. 

Aspasia ('Xa~ama). 1. The elder, of Miletus, 
daughter of Axiochus, the most celebrated of 
the Greek Hetrera? (vid. Diet, of Antiq^ s. v.), 
came to reside at Athens, and there gained and 
fixed the affections of Pericles, not more by her 

beauty than by her high mental accomplish- j oa/.rlrtc or 2ooo/u~ic 7J.pvr„ or ri ■&a?.aooa tj ven- 
ments. Having parted with his wife, Pericles j pa), the great salt and bituminous lake in the 
attached himself to Aspasia during the rest of , southeast of Palestine, which receives the 
his life as closely as was allowed by the law, water of the Jordan, [is of an irregular oblong 
which forbade marriage with a foreign woman ! figure, about forty miles long and eight miles 
under severe penalties. The enemies of Peri- j broad.] It has no visible outlet, and its surface 
cles accused Aspasia of impiety (daiOeia). and j is [a little more than thirteen hundred feet] be- 
it required all the personal influence of Pericles, I low the level of the Mediterranean. [It is called 



toricorwn Grcecorum, p. 5*76), with much proba- 
bility, suggests Tvpov for 'HTreipov, and so the 
account would be of Tyre. — L Of Bavenna, a 
distinguished sophist and rhetorician, who lived 
about 225 A.D., in the reign of Alexander Seve- 
rus. His works are now lost.] 

Aspexdus (*A.c-£vdoc : 'Ac-evdioc, Aspendius : 
now Dashashlcehr or Manaugat), a strong and 
flomishing city of Pamphylia, on the small navi- 
gable river Eurymedon, sixty stadia (six geo- 
graphical miles) from its mouth: said to have 
been a colony of the Argives. 

Asper, ^EiULius, a Roman grammarian, who 
wrote commentaries on Terence and Virgil, 
must be distinguished from another gramma- 
rian, usually called Asper Junior, the author of 
a small work entitled Ars Grammaiica, printed 
in the Grammat. Lot. Av.ctores, by Putschius, 
Hanov., 1605. 

AsphaltItes Lacus or Mare Mohtuum ('Act- 



who defended her, and his most earnest en- 
treaties and tears, to procure her acquittal The 
house of Aspasia was the centre of the best 



the Bead Sea from the desolation prevailing 
along its shores, as well as from the belief that 
no living creature can exist in its waters.] Al- 



iiterary aud philosophical society of Athens, and ! though the tales about birds dropping down dead 
v?as frequented even by Socrates. On the death i as they fly over it are now proved to be fabu- 
of Pericles (B.C. 429), Aspasia is said to have i lous, [yet the waters and the surrounding soil 
attached herself to one Lysicles, a dealer in cat- 1 are so intensely impregnated with salt and sul- 
phur that no tree or plants grow on its banks : 
and it is doubted, with great probability, whether 



tie, and to have made him, by her instructions, 
a first-rate orator. The son of Pericles by As- 



pasia was legitimated by a special decree of the ■ any fish live in its waters, for these, when ex 

amined by a powerful microscope, have been 
found to contain no animalcule or animal matter 
whatever. This sea has been very recently ex- 
plored for the first time with accuracy by Lieu- 
tenant Lynch of the United States navy, who 
has proved that the bottom of the sea consists 
of two submerged plains, an elevated and a de- 
pressed one, the former averaging thirteen, the 
latter thirteen hundred feet below the surface. 
The shallow portion is to the south ; the deeper. 



people, and took his father's name.— 2. The 
Younger, a Phocssan, daughter of Hermotimus, 
was the favorite concubine of Cyrus the Young- 
er, who called her Aspasia after the mistress 
of Pericles, her previous name having been Mil- 
to [from n'u-oc,, vermilion, being so called on 
account of the brilliancy of her complexion.] 
After the death of Cyrus at the battle of Cunaxa 
(B.C. 401), she fell into the hands of Artaxerxes, 
who likewise became deeply enamored of her. 
When Darius, son of Artaxerxes, was appointed 
•■successor to the throne, he asked his father to 
116 



which is also the larger, to the north. This 
southern and shallow portion would appear to 



ASPIL 



ASTAPA. 



have been originally the fertile plain of Siddim, I 
in which the guilty cities stood. ■ 

Aspii or AsrAsn ("Aoirtoi, 'AoTrdctoi), an In- ; 
dian tribe, in the district of the Paropamisadas, j 
between the rivers Choes (now Kama) and Indus, 
W the northeast of Afghanistan and the north- 1 
west of the Punjab. 

Aspis ('AffTu'f). 1. Clypea (now Klibiah). a 
city on a promontory of the same name, near the 
northeastern point of the Carthaginian territory, 
founded by Agathocles, and taken in the first 
Panic war by the Romans, who called it Clypea, j 
the translation of 'Aottiq. — 2. (Now Marsa-Zaff- \ 
ran ? ruins), in the African Tripolitana, the best ^ 
harbor on the coast of the Great Syrtis. — 3. Via 1 . 
Arconnesus. 

ASPLEDON ('Ao~?,7]66v : 'A(T7C?,7lduVl0g ), or Sple- j 

ix>N, a town of the Minyaj, in Bceotia, on the 
River Melas, near Orchomenus ; built by the 
mythical Aspledon, son of Neptune (Poseidon) j 
and Midea. 

Assa ("Avca : 'Acaalog), a town in Chalcidice, I 
in Macedonia, on the Singitic Gulf. 

Assaceni ('Acoatinvot), an Indian tribe, in the 
district of the Paropamisadas, between the rivers 
Cophen (now Cabool) and Indus, in the northwest 
of the Punjab. 

Assaracus {'AaGupanog), king of Troy, son of 
Tros, father of Capys, grandfather of Anchises, 
and great-grandfather of iEneas. Hence the Ro- 
mans, as descendants of iEneas, are called domus 
Assaraci (Virg., JEn., i., 284). 

Assesus ('Aocrjcog), a town of Ionia, near Mi- 
letus, with a temple of Minerva (Athena), sur- 
uamed 'Acanoia. 

Assorus ('Aoaopug or 'Aaaupiov : 'Aaauplvog : 
now Asaro), a small town in Sicily, between 
Enna and Agyrium. 

Assus ("Actcoc : 'Aaawg, 'Aaaevg : now Asso, 
ruins near Beiram). 1. A flourishing city in the 
Troad, on the Adramyttian Gulf, opposite to 
Lesbos: afterward called Apollonia : the birth- 
place of Cleanthes the Stoic. — [2. A tributary of 
the Cephisus, in Phocis and Boeotia.] 

Assyria ('Aaavpta : 'Aacvpiog, Assyrius : now 
Kurdistan). 1. The country properly so called, 
m the narrowest sense, was a district of West- 
ern Asia, extending along the eastern side of 
the Tigris, which divided it on the west and 
northwest from Mesopotamia and Babylonia, 
and bounded on the north and east by Mount 
Niphates and Mount Zagrus, which separated 
it from Armenia and Media, and on the south- 
east by Susiaua. It was watered by several 
streams, flowing into the Tigris from the east ; 
two of which, the Lycus or Zabatus (now Great 
Zab), and the Caprus, or Zabas, or Anzabas (now 
Little Zab), divided the country into three parts: 
that between the Upper Tigris and the Lycus 
was called Aturia (a mere dialectic variety of 
Assyria), was probably the most ancient seat 
of the monarchy, and contained the capital, 
Nineveh or Ninus; that between the Lycus 
and the Caprus was called Adiabene; and the 
part southeast of the Caprus contained the dis- 
tricts of Apolloniatis and Sittacene. Another 
division into districts, given by Ptolemy, is the 
following : Arrhapachitis, Calaciue, Adiabene, 
Arbelitis, Apolloniatis, and Sittacene. — 2. In a 
wider sense the name was applied to the whole 
country watered by the Euphrates and the Ti- 



gris, between the mountains of Armenia on the 
north, those of Kurdistan on the east, and the 
Arabian Desert on the west, so as to include, 
besides Assyria proper, Mesopotamia and Bab- 
ylonia; nay, there is sometimes an apparent 
confusion between Assyria and Syria, Avhich 
gives ground for the supposition that the terms 
were originally identical. — 3. By a further ex- 
tension the word is used to designate the As- 
syrian Empire in its widest sense. The early 
history of this great monarchy is too obscure to 
be given here in any detail; and, indeed, it is 
only just now that new means of investigating 
it are being acquired. The germ of this empire 
was one of the first great states of which we 
have any record, and was probably a powerful 
and civilized kingdom as early as Egypt. Its 
reputed founder was Ninus, the builder of the 
capital city ; and in its widest extent it included 
the countries just mentioned, with Media, Per- 
sia, and portions of the countries to the east 
and northeast, Armenia, Syria, Phoenicia, and 
Palestine, except the kingdom of Judah; and, 
beyond these limits, some of the Assyrian kings 
made incursions into Arabia and Egypt. The 
fruitless expedition of Sennacherib against the 
latter country and the miraculous destruction 
of his army before Jerusalem (B.C. 714), so 
weakened the empire, that the Medes revolted 
and formed a separate kingdom, and at last, in 
B.C. 606, the governor of Babylonia united with 
Cyaxares, the king of Media, to conquer Afsj r- 
ia, which was divided between them, Assyria 
Proper falling to the share of Media, and the 
rest of the empire to Babylon. The Assyrian 
king and all his family perished, and the city of 
Ninus was razed to the ground. Compare 
Babylon and Media. It must be noticed as a 
caution, that some writers confound the Assyr- 
ian and Babylonian empires under the former 
name. 

Asta (Astensis). 1. (Now Asti in Piedmont), 
an inland town of Liguria on the Tanarus, a Ro- 
man colony. — 2. (Now Mesa de Asta), a town in 
Hispania Bsetica, near Gades, a Roman colony 
with the surname Regia. 

Astaboras ('Aarafiopar : now Aibarah or Ta- 
cazza) and Astapus ('Aard^ovg, now Bahr-cl-Az- 
rek or Blue River), two rivers of ./Ethiopia, hav- 
ing their sources in the highlands of Abyssinia, 
and uniting in about 17° north latitude to form 
the Nile. The land inclosed by them was the 
so-called island of Meroe. 

Asta cits ("AoraKog). 1. A Theban, father of 
Ismarus, Leades, Asphodicus, and Melanippus. 
— [2. Son of Neptune (Poseidon) and the nymph 
Olbia, reputed founder of the city Astacus, q. v. 

Astacus ('Acraiwg : 'Acrannvoc). 1. (Now 
Dragomestre), a city of Acarnania, on the xlche- 
loiis. — 2. A celebrated city of Bithynia, at the 
southeast corner of the Sinus Astacenus ('Aara- 
unvbg Ko/.TTog), a bay of the Propontis, was a col- 
ony from Megara, but afterward received fresh 
colonists from Athens, who called the place Olbia 
('0?i6ia). It was destroyed by Lysimachus, but 
j'ebuilt on a neighboring site, at the northeast 
corner of the gulf, by Nicomedes I, who named 
his new city Nicomedia. 

A st a pa (now Eatepa), a town in Hispania 
Bastica. 

117 



ASTAPUS. 



ASTYDAMIA. 



ASTAWJS, Vid. ASTABOKAS. 

Astarte. Vid. Aphrodite and Syria Dea. 
Astelephus ('AcreAEfoc), a river of Colchis, 
one hundred and twenty stadia (twelve geograph- 
ical miles) south of Sebastopolis. 

[Aster ^horrjp), a skillful archer, one of the 
garrison of Methone in Macedonia, who, when 
Philip was besieging that city, aimed an arrow at 
him, with this inscription on it, 'Acrijp ^l/uttttc.) 
■&avdai/wv ^t^ei peloe, and deprived him of an 
eye. Philip sent back an arrow into the town 
with the inscription on it, 'Aarepa m/UTrxog, ijv 
M6?j, KpEfirjaerai. When the place was taken. 
Philip crucified Aster.] 

Asteria ('AarepLa), daughter of the Titan Cceus 
and Pheebe, sister of Leto (Latona), wife of Perses, 
and mother of Hecate. In order to escape the 
embraces of Jupiter (Zeus), she is said to have j 
taken the form of a quail {prtyx, oprv^,) and to ! 
have thrown herself down from heaven into the 
sea, where she was metamorphosed into the 
island Asteria (the island which had fallen from 
heaven like a star), or Ortygia, afterward called 
Delos. 

[Asteria. Vid. Asteris.] 

Asterion" or Asterius VAcrepitdv or : Aar'tpLor). 
I. Son of Teutamus, and king of the Cretans, 
married Europa after she had been carried to 
Crete by Jupiter (Zeus), and brought up the j 
three sons, Minos, Sarpedou, and Rhadamanthys, 
whom she had by the father of the gods. — 2. Son 
of Cometes, Pyremus, or Priseus, by Antigone, 
daughter of Pheres, was one of the Argonauts. — I 
[8. Son of Minos, slain by Theseus. — 4. A small ! 
river of Argolis, the god of which was father of 
Ascrtea.] 

Asteris or Asteria (Acrrep/c, 'Aarepia), a | 
small island between Ithaca and Cephallenia. 

Asterium ('Aortpiov), a town in Magnesia, in 
Thessaly. 

[Asterius ("Aortptoc). 1. Son of Hyperasius, i 
an Argonaut. — 2. Son of Helens, brother of Hes- j 
tor. Vid, also Asteriox.] 

Asterop^eus [' AcTepoTTuioc), son of Pelegon 
leader of the Pa^onians, and an ally of the Tro- 
jans, was slain by Achilles. 

[x\sterope (' Acrepo-rf), daughter of the river- j 
god Cebren, wife of iEsacus.] 

[Asteropea ('AGrepo-eia). I. Daughter of 
Pelias. — 2. Daughter of Deius in Phocis, sister 
of Cephalus.] 

Astigi (now Eciga), a town in Hispania Baetiea, 
on the River Singulis, a Roman colony with the 
surname Augusta Firma. 

[Astrabacus ('AGrpdbanoc) a son of Irbus, 
brother of Alopeeus, of the family of the Eurys- 
thenidoe, an ancient Laconian hero, who had a he- 
roum iu Sparta, and was worshipped as a god.] | 

Astr^ea ('Aorpala) daughter of Jupiter (Zeus) ! 
and Themis, or, according to others, of Astrams | 
and Eos. During the Golden Age, this star- j 
bright maiden lived on earth and among men, j 
whom she blessed ■ but when that age had passed ! 
away, Astrsea, who tarried longest among men, 
withdrew, and was placed among the stars^ where | 
she was called Uap6ii>oe or Virgo. Her sister 
Aidc')c, or Pudicitia, left the earth along with her ! 
(ad superos Astraa recessit. hoe (Pvdicitia) comite, j 
Juv., vL, 19.) 

A$>tb.mus ('Aorpatoe), a Titan, son of Crius | 
and Eurybia. husband of Eos (Aurora), and 1 
118 



father of the winds Zephyrus, Boreas, and Mo- 
tus, Eosphorus (the morning star), and all the 
stars of heaven. Ovid (Met. xiv., 545) calls 
the winds Astrcei (adj.) fratres, the "Astnean 
brothers." 

# Astura. 1. (jSTow La Stura), a river in La- 
tium, rises in the Alban Mountains, and flow^ 
between Antium and Circeii into the Tyrrhenian 
Sea. At its mouth it formed a small island with 
a town upon it, also called Astura (now Torre 
<? Astura) : here Cicero had an estate. — 2. (Now 
Ezla), a river in Hispania Tarraconensis, flowing 
into the Durius. 

Astures, a people in the northwest of Spain, 
bounded on the east by the Cantabri and Vac- 
casi, on the west by the Galkeci, on the north by 
the Ocean, and on the south by the Vettones, thus 
inhabiting the modern Asturias and the northerr 
part of Leon and Valladolid. They contained 
twenty-two tribes and two hundred and forty 
thousand freemen, and were divided into the 
Augustani and Transmontani, the former of whom 
dwelt south of the mountains as far as the Durius 
and the latter north of the mountains down to 
the sea-coast. The country of the Astures was 
mountainous, rich in minerals, and celebrated for 
its horses : the people themselves were rude and 
warlike. Their chief town was Asturica Augusta 
(now Astorga). 

Astyages ('Aarvdy}]e), son of Cyaxares, last 
king of Media, reigned B.C. 594-559. Alarmed 
by a dream, he gave his daughter Mandane in 
marriage to Cambyses, a Persian of good family. 
Another dream induced him to send Harpagus 
to destroy the offspring of this marriage. The 
child, the future conqueror of the Medes, was 
given to a herdsman to expose, but he brought it 
up as his own. Years afterward, circumstances 
occurred which brought the young Cyrus under 
the notice of Astyages, who, on inquiry, discov 
ered his parentage. He inflicted a cruel punish- 
ment on Harpagus, who waited his time for re- 
venge. When Cyrus had grown up to man's 
estate, Harpagus induced him to instigate the 
Persians to revolt, and, having been appointed 
general of the Median forces, he deserted with 
the greater part of them to Cyrus. Astyages 
was taken prisoner, and Cyrus mounted the throne- 
He treated the captive monarch with mildness, 
but kept him in confinement till his death. This 
is the account of Herodotus, and is to be prefer " 
red to that of Xenophon, who makes Cyrus the 
grandson of Astyages, but says that Astyages 
was succeeded by his son Cyaxares II., on whose 
death Cyrus succeeded peaceably to the vacant 
throne. 

Astyanax ('Aorvdvag), son of Hector and An- 
dromache : his proper name was Scamandrius. 
but he was called Astyanax or "lord of the city" 
by the Trojans, on account of the services of his 
father. After the taking of Troy the Greeks 
hurled him down from the walls, that he might 
not restore the kingdom of Troy. 

Astydamas (' AcTv6dp.ac), a tragic poet, son ot 
Morsimus and of a sister of the poet ^Eschylus, 
and a pupil of Isoerates, wrote two hundred and 
forty tragedies, and gained the prize fifteen times. 
His' first tragedy was acted B.C. 399. 

Astydamia ('Acrvdu/uzia). 1. Daughter of 
Amyntor, and mother of Tlepolemus by Hercu- 
les.— 2. Wife of Acastus. 



ASTYLUS. 



ATEIUS 



[Astylus ("AffTvXof), of Crotona, a distin- 
guished athlete, gained several prizes at the 
Olympic games.] 

Astynome ('AarvvSfiv), daughter of Chryses, 
better known under her patronymic Chryseis. 

[Astynous (*k0vwteo#)' 1- Son of Phaethon, 
father of Sandacus— 2. Son of Protiaon, a Tro- 
jan, slain by Neoptolemus.— 3. A Trojau, slain 
by Diomedes.] 

ASTYOCHE 01- AsTYOCHIA ('AdTVOXV 01* 'AffTVO- 

Xeca). 1. Daughter of Actor, by whom Mars 
(Ares) begot Ascalaphus and Ialmenus. — 2. 
Daughter of Phylas, king of Ephyra in Thes- 
protia, became by Hercules the mother of Tle- 
polemus. 

Astyochus ('AcTioxog), the Lacedasmouian 
admiral in B.C. 412, commanded on the coast 
of Asia Minor, where he was bribed by the 
Persians to remain inactive. 

Astypalea ('AarvTrd?.aia : 'Acrv-a/.aievr, 
'AarviraXaidTiji : now Stampalia). I. One of the 
Sporades, in the southern part of the Grecian 
archipelago, with a town of the same name, 
founded by the Megarians, which was under the 
Romans a libera eivitas. Astypaleia regna, i. e, 
Astypalcca, Ov., Met., vii., 461.) The inhabit- 
ants worshipped Achilles. — [2. A point of land 
in Attica, near Sunium. — 3. A point of land in 
Caria, near Myndus. — 4. An ancient city in the 
island Cos, which the inhabitants abandoned, 
and built the city Cos iustead.] 

Astyra (ru. "AGTvpa), a town of Mysia, north- 
west of Adramyttium, on a marsh connected 
with the sea, with a grove sacred to Diana (Ar- 
temis), surnamed 'AarvpCvt] or -t/vi'/. 

Asychis (*A<w^tf),.an ancient king of Egypt, 
succeeded Mycerinus. 

Atabulus, the name in Apulia of the parching 
southeast wind, the Sirocco, which is at present 
called Altino in Apulia. 

Atabyris or AtabyrI'l'm ('Ara&vpLOv), the 
highest mountain in Rhodes on the southwest 
of that island, on which was a celebrated temple 
of Jupiter (Zeus) Atabyrius, said to have been 
founded by Althaunene.s, the grandson of Minos. 

[Atacixus. Via. Atax.] 

Atagis. Vid. Athesis. 

Atalanta ('Ara/.a. ; .'7?;). I. The Arcadian Ata- 
lanta, was a daughter ox Iasus (Iasion or Iasius) 
and Clymene. Her father, who had wished for 
a son, was disappointed at her birth, and ex- 
posed her on the Partheuian (virgin) hill, where 
she was suckled by a she-bear, the symbol of 
Diana (Artemis). After she had grown up she 
lived in pure maidenhood, slew the centaurs 
who pursued her, and took part in the Caly- 
donian hunt. Her father subsequently recog- 
nized her as his daughter ; aud when he desired 
her to marry, she required every suitor who 
wanted to win her to contend with her first in 
the foot -race. If he conquered her, he waa to 
be rewarded with her hand ; if not, he was to 
be put to death. This she did because she was 
the most swift-footed of mortals, aud because 
the Delphic oracle had cautioned her against 
marriage. She conquered many suitors, but 
was at leugth overcome by Mllanion with the 
assistance of Venus (Aphrodite). The goddess 
had given him three golden apples, and during 
the race he dropped them one after the other : 
their beauty charmed Atalanta so amich that 



she could not abstain from gathering them, anti 
Milanion thus gained the goal before her. She 
accordingly became his wife. They were sub- 
sequently both metamorphosed into lions, be- 
cause they had profaned by their embraces the 
sacred grove of Jupiter (Zeus).— 2. The Boeotian 
Atalanta. The same stories are related of her 
as of the Arcadian Atalanta, except that her 
parentage aud the localities are described dif- 
ferently. Thus she is said to have been a daugh- 
ter of Schcenus, and to have been married to 
Hippomenes. Her foot-race is transferred to 
the Boeotian Onchestus, and the sanctuary which 
the newly-married couple profaned by their love 
was a temple of Cybele, who metamorphosed 
them into lions, and yoked them to her chariot. 

Atalaxte ('Ara?MVTT) : 'AraXavralog). 1. A 
small island in the Euripus, on the coast of the 
Opuntian Locri, with a small town of the same 
name. — [2. A small island on the coast of At- 
tica, near the Piraeus.] — 3. A town of Macedo- 
nia, on the Axius, in the neighborhood of Gor- 
tynia and Idomene. 

Atarantes ('Ardpavrr/g), a people in the east 
of Libya, described by Herodotus (iv., 184). 

Atarbechis. Vid. Aphroditopolis. 

Atarneus ('Arapvevg : now Dikeli), a city on 
Mount Cane, on the coast of Mysia, opposite to 
Lesbos : a colony of the Chians : the residence 
of the tyrant Hermias, with whom Aristotle re- 
sided some time : destroved before the time of 
Pliny. 

Ataulphus, Athaulphus, Adaulphus (i. e.. 
Athaulf, " sworn helper," the same name as that, 
which appears in later history under the form 
of Adolf or Adolphus), brother of Alaric's wife. 
He assisted Alaric in his invasion of Italy, and 
on the death of that monarch in A.D. 410, he 
was elected king of the Visigoths. He then 
made a peace with the Romans, married Pla 
cidia, sister of Honorius, retired with his nation 
into the south of Gaul, and finally withdrew into 
Spain, where he was murdered at Barcelona. 

Atax (now Aude), originally called Narbo, ■? 
river in Gallia Narbonensis, rises in the Pyre- 
nees, and flows by Narbo Martius into the Lacua 
Rubresus or Rubrensis, which is connected witii 
the sea. From this river the poet P. Teren- 
tius Varro obtained the surname A tacinus. Vid. 
Vaero. 

Ate ("Ar?;), daughter of Eris or Jupiter (Zeus), 
was an ancient Greek divinity, who led both 
gods and men into rash and inconsiderate ac- 
tions. She once even induced Jupiter (Zeus) t 
at the birth of Hercules, to take an oath by 
which Juno (Hera) was afterward enabled to 
give to Eurystheus the power which had been 
destined for Hercules. When Jupiter (Zeus) 
discovered his rashness, he hurled Ate from 
Olympus, and banished her forever from the 
abodes of the gods. In the tragic writers Ate 
appears in a different light: she avenges evil 
deeds and inflicts just punishments upon the 
offenders and their posterity, so that her char- 
acter is almost the same as that of Nemesis and 
Erinnys. She appears most prominent in the 
dramas of iEschylus, and least in those of Eu- 
ripides, with whom the idea of Dike (justice) is 
more fully developed. 

Ateius, surnamed Pratextatus and Philolo* 
gus, a celebrated grammarian at Rome, about 
119 



ATEIUS CAPITO. 



ATHENA. 



B.C. 40, and a friend of Sallust, for whom he 
drew up an Epitome (Breviarium) of Roman 
History. After the death of Sallust Ateius lived 
on intimate terms with Asinius Pollio, whom 
he assisted in his literary pursuits. 
Ateius Capito. Vid. Capito. 
Atella (Atellanus ; now Aversa), a town in 
Campania, between Capua and Neapolis, orig- 
inally inhabited by the Oscans, afterward a Ro- 
man municipium and a colony. It revolted to 
Hannibal (B.C. 216) after the battle of Cannaa. 
and the Romans, in consequence, transplanted 
its inhabitants to Calatia, and peopled the town 
by new citizens from Nuceria. Atella owes 
its celebrity to the Atellance Fabulce or Oscan 
farces, which took their name from this town. 
( Vid. Diet, of Antiq., p. 347, second edition.) 

Aterxum (now Pescara), a town in Central 
Italy, on the Adriatic, at the mouth of the River 
Atemus (now Pescara), was the common harbor 
of the Yestini, Marrueini, and Peligni. 
Atermjs. Vid. Atermjm. 
Ateste (Atestlnus : now Este), a Roman col- 
ony in the country of the Yeneti, in Upper Italy. 
Athacus, a town in Lyncestis, in Macedonia. 
Athamania {'Adoftavia : 'Adaftdv, -avog), a 
mountainous country in the south of Epirus, on 
the west side of Pindus, of which Argithea was 
the chief town. The Athamanes were a Thes- 
salian people, who had been driven out of Thes- 
saly by the Lapithas. They were governed by 
independent princes, the last of whom was Airv- 

XAXDER. 

Athamas ('Add/uac), son of .zEolus and Ena- 
rete, and king of Orchomenus in Bceotia. At 
the command of Juno (Hera), Athamas married 
Nephele, by whom he became the father of 
Phrtxus and Helle. But he was secretly in 
love with the mortal Ino, the daughter of Cad- 
mus, by whom he begot Learchus and Meli- 
certes; and Nephele, on discovering that Ino 
had a greater hold on his affections than her- 
self, disappeared in anger. Having thus incur- 
red the anger both of Juno (Hera) and of Neph- j 
ele, Athamas was seized with madness, and in 
this state killed his own son, Learchus : Ino 
threw herself with Melicertes into the sea, and ! 
both were changed into marine deities, Ino be- i 
coming Leucothea, and Melicertes Palsemon. 
Athamas, as the murderer of his son, was oblig- 
ed to flee from Boeotia, and settled in Thessaly. 
Hence we have Athamantiades, son of Athamas, 
i. e., Palsemon ; and Athamantis, daughter of 
Athamas, i. e., Helle. 

Athanagia (now Agramunt ?), the chief town ! 
of the Rergetes, in Hispania Tarraconensis. 

AthaxarIcus, king of the Yisigoths during 
their stay in Dacia. In A.D. 367-369 he carried 
on war with the Emperor Yalens, with whom 
he finally concluded a peace. In 374 Athanaric j 
was defeated by the Huns, and, after defending ! 
himself for some time in a stronghold in the j 
mountaius of Dacia, ^vas compelled to fly in i 
380, and take refuge in the Roman territory. 
He died in 381. 

Athanasius ('AdavdaLoc), St., one of the most 
celebrated of the Christian fathers, was born at 
Alexandrea about A.D. 296, and was elected 
archbishop of the city on the death of Alexan- 
der in 326. The history of his episcopate is 
full of stirring incidents and strange transitions 
120 



of fortune. He was the great champion of the 
orthodox faith, as it has beeu expounded at the 
Council at Nice in 352, and was therefore ex- 
posed to persecution whenever the Arians got 
the upper hand in the state. He was thrice 
driven from his see into exile through thei: 
machinations, and thrice recalled. He died in 
373. The Athanasian creed was not compose:! 
by Athanasius: its real author is unknown. 
The best edition of his works is by Montfaucon. 
Paris, 1698, reprinted at Padua, 1777. 

Athexa ('Adjjvt] or 'Adjjvu). (Roman Minerva.. 
one of the great divinities of the Greeks. Ho- 
mer calls her a daughter of Zeus (Jupiter), with- 
out any allusion to the manner of her birth ; but 
later traditions related that she was born from 
the head of Zeus (Jupiter), and some added that 
she sprang forth with a mighty war-shout and 
in complete armor. The most ancient tradi- 
tion, as preserved by Hesiod, stated that Metis, 
the first wife of Zeus (Jupiter), was the mother 
of Athena (Minerva), but that Metis, when preg- 
nant with her, was, on the advice of Gaea and 
Uranus, swallowed up by Zeus (Jupiter), anc 
that Zeus (Jupiter) afterward gave birth him- 
self to Athena (Minerva), who sprang from his 
head. Another set of traditions regarded her 
as the daughter of Pallas, the winged giact. 
whom she afterward killed on account of his at- 
tempting to violate her chastity ; and a third set 
carried her to Libya, and called her a daughter 
of Poseidon (Neptune) and Tritonis. These va- 
rious traditions about Athena (Minerva) arose, 
as in most other cases, from local legends and 
identifications of the Greek Athena with other- 
divinities. But, according to the general belie: 
of the Greeks, she was the daughter of Zens 
(Jupiter) ; and if we take Metis to have been 
her mother, we have at once the clew to the 
character which she bears in the religion of 
Greece ; for, as her father was the most power- 
ful and her mother the wisest among the gods, 
so Athena was a combination of the two, a god- 
dess in whom power and wisdom were harmo- 
niously blended. From this fundamental idea 
may be derived the various aspects under which 
she apppears in the ancient writers. She seems 
to have been a divinity of a purely ethical char- 
acter ; her power and wisdom appear in her 
being the preserver of the state and of every 
thing which gives to the state strength and 
prosperity. As the protectress of agriculture. 
Athena (Minerva) is represented as inventing 
the plough and rake ; she created the olive-tree 
{vid. below), taught the people to yoke oxen to 
the plough, took care of the breeding of horses, 
and instructed men how to tame them by the 
bridle, her own invention. Allusions to this 
feature of her character are contained in the 
epithets Bovdeuu 8oap[iia, d^.pioa, ix-la, or x CJ ~ 
ivlric. She is also represented as the patron 
of various kinds of science, industry, and art, 
and as inventing numbers, the trumpet, the 
chariot, and navigation. She was further be- 
lieved to have invented nearly every kind of 
work in winch women were employed, and she 
herself was skilled in such work. Hence me 
have the tale of the Lydian maiden Arachne, 
who ventured to compete with Athena (Mi- 
nerva) m the art of weaving. Vid. Arachxe. 
Athena (Minerva), is, in fact, the patroness of 



ATHENA. 



ATHENE. 



both the useful and elegant arts. Hence she 
is called kpydvij, and later writers make her the 
goddess of all wisdom, knowledge, and art, and 
represent her as sitting on the right hand of her 
father Zeus (Jupiter), and supporting him with 
her counsel. She is therefore characterized by 
various epithets and surnames, expressing the 
keenness of her sight or the vigor of her intel- 
lect, such as otttlMtlc, 6<l>dal(UTic, o^vdepK^c, 
y?,avnQinc, tto?.v6ov?mc, koXv/utjtic, and \n)xavlric. 
As the patron divinity of the state, she was at 
Athens the protectress of the phratries and 
houses which formed the basis of the state. The 
festival of the Apaturia had a direct reference 
to this particular point in the character of the 
goddess. ( Vid. Diet, of Ant, art. Apaturia.) 
She also maintained the authority of the law, 
justice, and order in the courts and the assem- 
bly of the people. This notion was as ancient 
as the Homeric poems, in which she is described 
as assisting Ulysses against the lawless conduct 
of the suitors. (Od., xiii., 894.) She was be- 
lieved to have instituted the ancient court of 
the Areopagus, and in cases where the votes of 
the judges were equally divided, she gave the 
casting one in favor of the accused. The epi- 
thets which have reference to this part of the 
goddess's character are u^wttoivoc, the avenger, 
3ov?Mia, and dyvpala. As Athena (Minerva) 
promoted the internal prosperity of the state, 
so she also protected the state from outward en- 
emies, and thus assumes the character of a war- 
like divinity, though in a very different sense 
from Ares (Mars), Ens, or Euyo. According to 
Homer, she does not even keep arms, but bor- 
rows them from Zeus (Jupiter) ; she preserves 
men from slaughter when prudence demands it, 
and repels Ares's (Mars) savage love of war, 
and conquers him. The epithets which she de- 
rives from her warlike character are dye?»eia, 
'/.a<j>p'ia, u/iKifj.dxr/, laoooooc, and others. In 
times of war, towns, fortresses, and harbors are 
under her especial care, whence she is desig- 
nated as hpvaiTTToAic, uAa?,Ko/xevnic, TroXidc, tto- 
Movxoc, unpaid, uKpia, nlridovxoc, irvlalric, rrpo- 
uaxop/xa, and the like. In the war of Zeus (Ju- 
piter) against the giants, she assisted her father 
and Hercules with her counsel, and also took an 
active part in it, for she buried Eneeladus under 
the island of Sicily, a^d slew Pallas. In the 
Trojan war she sided with the Greeks, though 
on their return home she visited them with 
storms, on account of the manner in which the 
Locrian Ajax had treated Cassandra in her tem- 
ple. As a goddess of war and the protectress 
of heroes, Athena (Minerva) usually appears in 
armor, with the a>gis and a golden staff. The 
character of Athena (Minerva), as we have 
traced it, holds a middle place between the 
male and female, whence she is a virgin divin- 
ity, whose heart is inaccessible to the passion of 
love. Tiresias was deprived of sight for having 
seen her in the bath ; and Hephaestus (Vulcan), 
who made an attempt upon her chastity, was 
obliged to take to flight. For this reason, the 
•ancient traditions always describe the goddess 
as dressed ; and when Ovid makes her appear 
naked before Paris, he abandons the genuine 
story. Athena (Minerva) was worshipped in all 
parts of Greece. Her worship was introduced 
from the ancient towns on the Lake Copais at a 



very early period into Attica, where she became 
the great national divinity of the city and the 
country. Here she was regarded as the edi- 
recpa, vyieia, and -rratuvta. The tale ran that in 
the reign of Gecrops both Poseidon (Neptune) 
and Athena (Minerva) contended for the posses- 
sion of Athens. The gods resolved that which- 
ever of them produced a gift most useful to 
mortals should have possession of the land. 
Poseidon (Neptune) struck the ground with 
his trident, and straightway a horse appeared. 
Athena (Minerva) then planted the olive. The 
gods thereupon decreed that the olive was more 
useful to man than the horse, and gave the city 
to the goddess, from whom it was called Athena?. 
At Athens the magnificent festival of the Pana- 
thencea was celebrated in honor of the goddess. 
At this festival took place the grand procession, 
which was represented on the frieze of the Par- 
thenon. ( Vid. Diet, of Ant, art. Panathex^ea.) 
At Lindus, in Rbodes, her worship was likewise 
very ancient. Respecting its introduction into 
Italy, and the modifications which her character 
underwent there, vid. Minerva. Among the 
things sacred to her we may mention the owl, 
serpent, cock, and olive-tree, which she was 
said to have created in her contest with Posei- 
don (Neptune) about the possession of Attica, 
The sacrifices offered to her consisted of bulls, 
rams, and cows. Athena (Minerva) was fre- 
quently represented in works of art, in which 
we generally find some of the following charac- 
teristics : 1. The helmet, which she usually 
wears on her head, but in a few instances car- 
ries in her hand. It is generally ornamented 
in the most beautiful manner with griffins, 
heads of rams, horses, and sphinxes. 2. The 
osgis, which is represented on works of art, not 
as a shield, but as a goat-skin, covered with 
scales, set with the appalling Gorgon's head, and 
surrounded with tassels. ( Vid. Diet, of Ant 
art. Mgis) 2. The round Argolic shield, in the 
centre of which the head of Medusa likewise 
appears. 4. Objects sacred to her, such as an 
olive-branch, a serpent, an owl, a cock, and a 
lance. Her garment is usually the Spartan 
tunic without sleeves, and over it she wears 
a cloak, the peplus, or, though rarely, the 
chlamys. 

Athene ('Ad^vat, also 'AQ-qvr] in Homer : 'Ad?]- 
valoc, 7] 'Adrjvaia, Atheniensis : now Athens), the 
capital of Attica, about thirty stadia from the 
sea, on the southwest slope of Mount Lycabet- 
tus, between the small rivers Cephisus on the 
west and Ilissus on the east, the latter of which 
flowed close by the walls of the town. The 
most ancient part of it, the Acropolis, is said to 
have been built by the mythical Cecrops, but 
the city itself is said to have owed its origin to 
Theseus, who united the twelve independent 
states or townships of Attica into one state, and 
made Athens their capital. The city was burni 
ed by Xerxes in B.C. 480, but was soon rebuilt 
under the administration of Themistocles, and 
was adorned with public buildings by Cimon 
and especially by Pericles, in whose f^pe (B.C. 
460-429) it reached its greatest splendor. Its 
beauty was chiefly owing to its public buildings, 
for the private houses were mostly insignificant, 
and its streets badly laid out. Toward the end 
of the Peloponnesian war, it contained ten thou- 
121 



ATHENE. 



ATHENjE. 



.and bouses (Xen., Mem., il, 6, § U), which, at 
the rate of twelve inhabitants to a bouse, would 
"ive a population of one hundred and twenty 
thousand, though some writers make the in- 
habitants as many as one hundred and eighty 
thousand. Under the Romans Athens continued 
to be a great and flourishing city, and retained 
many privileges and immunities when Southern 
Oeeee was formed into the Roman province 
of Aehaia. It suffered greatly on its capture 
by Sulla, B.C. SG, and was deprived of many 
of its privileges. It was at that time, and also 
.luring the early centuries of the Christian era, 
one of the chief seats of learning, and the 
Romans were accustomed to send their sons to 
Athens, as to a University, for the completion 
of their education. Hadrian, who was very 
partial to Athens, and frequently resided in the 
city (A.D. 122, 128), adorned it with many new 
buildings, and his example was followed by 
Herodes Atticus, who spent large sums of mon- 
<~y upon beautifying the city in the reign of M. 
Aurelius. Athens consisted of two distinct 
parts : I. The City (to darv), properly so called, 
divided into, 1. The Upper City or Acropolis (/) 
uvio tto?uc, uKpoTro?^,), and, 2. The Lower City 
{-/) kuto ttoIlc), surrounded with walls by The- 
mistocles. II. The three harbor-towns of Pi- 
raeus, Munyehia, and Phalerum, also surrounded 
with walls by Themistocles, and connected with 
the city by means of the long walls (rd jianpd 
~iiX'/]), built under the administration of Per- 
icles. The long walls consisted of the wall to 
Phalerum on the east, thirty-five stadia long 
(about four miles), aud of the wall to Piraeus on 
the west, forty stadia long (about four and a 
half miles) ; between these two, at a short dis- 
tance from the latter and parallel to it, another 
wall was erected, thus mating two walls leading 
to the Piraeus (sometimes called rd gke?^), with 
a narrow passage between them. There were, 
therefore, three long walls in all ; but the name 
of Long Walls seems to have been confined to 
the two leading to the Piraeus, while the one 
leading to Phalerum was distinguished by the 
same of the Phalerian Wall (to ^a?.TjpcKdv rei- 
Xoc). The entire circuit of the walls was one 
hundred and seventy-four and a half stadia 
(nearly twenty-two miles), of which forty-three 
stadia (nearly five and a half miles) belonged to 
the city, seventy-five stadia (nine and a half 
miles) to the long wails, and fifty-six and a half 
stadia (seven miles) to Piraeus, Munyehia, and 
Phalerum. — 1. Topography of the Acropolis 
or Upper City. The Acropolis, also called Ce- 
■ ropia, from its reputed founder, was a steep 
rock in the middle of the city, about one hundred 
and fifty feet high, eleven hundred and fifty feet 
long, and five hundred broad : its sides were 
naturally scarped on all sides except the west- 
ern end. It was originally surrounded by an 
ancient Cyclopian wall, said to have been built 
by the Pelasgians ; at the time of the Peiopon- 
nes!an war only the northern part of this wall 
remained, and this portion was still called the 
PelasgicJVall ; while the southern part, which 
had beeW rebuilt by Cimon, was called the Ci- 
monian Wall. On the western end of the Acro- 
polis, where access is alone practicable, were 
the magnificent Propyl^a, ' the Entrances," 
built by Pericles, before the right wing of which 
122 



was the small temple of N*/c// 'ATtrepo^. The 
summit of the Acropolis was covered with tern 
pies, statues of bronze and marble, and various 
other works of art. Of the temples, the grand- 
est was the Parthenon, sacred to the " Virgin" 
goddess Athena (Minerva); and north of the 
Parthenon was the magnificent Erechtheum, con- 
taining three separate temples, one of A then?. 
Polias (UoXidc), or the " Protectress of the State " 
the Erechtheum proper, or sanctuary of Erech- 
theus, and the Pandrosium, or sanctuary of 
Pandrosos, the daughter of Cecrops. Between 
the Parthenon and Erechtheum was the colossal 
statue of Athena Promachos (Hpo/iaxoc), or the 
" Fighter in the Front," whose helmet and spear- 
was the first object on the Acropolis visible 
from the sea. — 2. Topography of the Lower 
City. The lower city was built in the plain 
round the Acropolis, but the plain also con- 
tained several hills, especially in the southwest- 
ern part. — Walls. The ancient walls embraced 
a much greater circuit than the modern ones. 
On the west they included the hill of the 
Nymphs and the Pnyx, on the south they ex- 
tended a little beyond the Ihssus, and on the 
east they crossed the Ilissus, near the Lyceum, 
which was outside the walls. — Gates. Their 
number is unknown, and the position of many of 
them is uncertain ; but the following list con- 
tains the most important. On the west side 
were, 1. Dipylum (Alttv?.ov, more anciently Qpca 
aiai or Kepa/nLKai), the most frequented gate of 
the city, leading from the inner Ceramlcus to 
the outer Ceramlcus, and to the Academy. — 2. 
The Sacred Gate (ai 'Ispal Hvlai), where the sa 
, ered road to Eleusis began. — 3. The Knights 
j Gate (ai 'Inrrddec tt.), probably between the hill 
| of the Nymphs and the Pnyx. — 1. The Piraav 
1 Gate (tj IleipaiK?] tt.), between the Pnyx and the 
I Museum, leading to the carriage road (dfid^iTog) 
I between the Long Walls to the Piraeus. — 5. The 
Melitian Gate (ai Me?UTtd£g tt.), so called because 
it led to the demus Mehte, within the city. On 
the south side, going from west to east, — 6. The 
Gate of the Dead (ai 'Rpcat tt.), in the neighbor- 
hood of the Museum, placed by many authori- 
ties on the north side. — 1. The Itonian Gate (ai, 
'lroviai tt.), near the Ilissus, where the road to 
Phalerum began. On the east side, going frorzi 
south to north, — 8. The, Gate of Diochares (at 
Aioxdpovc tt.), leading to the Lyceum. — 9. The 
Biomean Gate (y Aio/j-elg tt.), leading to Cyno- 
sarges and the demus Diomea. On the north 
side, — 10. The Acharnian Gate(ai 'A%apviKa1 tt.) 
leading to the demus Acharnae. — Chief Dis- 
tricts. The inner Ceramlcus (KspapeiKos), or 
" Potter's Quarter," in the west of the city, ex 
tending north as far as the gate Dipylum, by 
j which it was separated from the outer Cerami 
I cus ; the southern part of the inner Ceramicus 
| contained the Agora (dyopd), or " market-place." 
j the only one in the city (for there were not two 
I market-places, as some suppose), lying south - 
i west of the Acropolis, and between the Acrop- 
j olis, the Areopagus, the Pnyx, and the Muse 
I um. The demu3 Melite, south of the inne: 
| Ceramicus, and perhaps embracing the hill of 
i the Museum. The demus Scanibonidce, west 
I of the inner Ceramicus, between the Pnyx and 
| the Hill of the Nymphs The Collytus, south 
I of Melitc. Cczle, a district south of Collytua 



ATHENE. 



ATHENJ3ITS. 



and the Museum, along the Iiissus, iu which . mental music {vid. Diet, of Ant., s. v.), an an- 
were the graves of Cinion and Thucydides. i eient one near the fountain Callirrhoe, a seconc 
JAmncc, a district east of M elite and Colly tus, built by Pericles, close to the theatre of Diony 
between the Acropolis and the Iiissus. Diornea, sus (Bacchus), on the southeastern slope of the 
a district iu the east of the city, near the gate | Acropolis, and a third built by Herodes Atticus, 
of the same name and the Cynosarges. Agree, in honor of his wife Regilla, on the southwestern 
a district south of Diornea. — Hills. The Areop- slope of the Acropolis, of which there are still 
agus ('Apeiov xdyoc or "Apeioc xdyoc), the " Hill | considerable remains. — 7. Stadium (to Zrddtov), 
of Ares" (Mars), west of the Acropolis, which south of the Iiissus, in the district Agrae. — S. 
•*:ive its name to the celebrated council that Monuments. The Monument of Andronicus. 
held its sittings there (vid. Diet of Ant. s. v.), Cyrrhestes, formerly called the Tower of th* 
was accessible on the south side by a flight of , Winds, an octagonal building north of the Acro- 
steps cut out of the roek. The Hill of the polis, still extant, was an horologium. ( Vid. 
Nymphs, northwest of the Areopagus. The Diet, of Ant, p. 616, 2d ed.) The Choragic Mon- 
Pnyx (Hvv£), a semicircular hill, southwest of J urnent of Lysicrates, frequently but erroneously 
the Areopagus, where the assemblies of the j called the Lantern of Demosthenes, still extant, 
people were held in earlier times, for afterward j in the Street of the Tripods. The Monument of 
the people usually met in the Theatre of Diony- j Harmodius and AristogUon in the Agora, jus:, 
sus (Bacchus.) ( Vid. Diet of Ant. p. 440, b, 2d ; before the ascent to the Acropolis. — Suburbs 
ed.) The Museum, south of the Pnyx and the j The Outer Cer amicus (6 e^co na'Aovusvoc), north 
Areopagus, on which was the monument of ( west of the city, was the finest suburb of Athens : 
Philopappus, and where the Macedonians built a here were buried the Athenians who had fallen 
fortress. — Streets. Of these we have little in- j in war, and at the further end of it was the 
formation. We read of the Pitman Street, which | Academia, six stadia from the city. Cynosarges 
led from the Piraean gate to the Agora ; of the j (to Kwocapyec), east of the city, before the gate 
Street of the Hcrmcc, which ran along the Agora Diornea, a gymnasium sacred to Hercules, 
between the Stoa Basifcos and Stoa Pceeile ; of \ where Antisthenes, the founder of the Cynic 
the Street of the Tripods, on the east of the , school, taught. Lyceum (to Avuelov), southeast 
Acropolis, <fcc. — Public Buildings. 1. Temples. J of the Cynosarges, a gymnasium sacred to 
Of these the most important was the Olyra- ; Apollo Lyceus, where Aristotle and the Peripa- 
pieum ('OZtyi-<f /or), or Temple of the Olym- j tetics taught. 

pian Zeus (Jupiter), southeast of the Acropolis, j Athene ('Adijvai : now Atenah), a sea-port 
near the Iiissus and the fountain Callirrhoe, ! town of Pontus, named from its temple of 
which was long unfinished, and was first com- j Athena (Minerva). 

pleted by Hadrian. Theseum (QjigeIov), or Tern- Athenjedm (' Adrjvaiov), iu general a temple oi 
pie of Theseus, on a hill north of the Areopagus, Athena, or auy place consecrated to the goddess, 
now converted into the Museum of Athens. The name was especially given to a school 
The Temple of Ares (Mara), south of the Areop- founded by the Emperor Hadrian at Rome about 
agus and west of the Acropolis. Metroum (M;;- A.D. 133, for the promotion of literary and sci- 
Tfxjov), or temple of the mother of the gods, ' entiflc studies. It was in the neighborhood 
east of the Agora, and south of the Acropolis, ', of the Forum, and at the foot of the Aventine 
near the Senate House, and the Odeum of He- Hill : it had a staff of professors paid by the 
rodes Atticus. Besides these, there was a vast ; government, and continued in repute till the fifth 
number of other temples in all parts of the city. I century of our era. ( Vid. Diet of Ant, s. v.) — 
— 2. The Senate House ((3ovXevT%ptov), at the ; Athen.eum was also the name of a town in Ar- 
south end of the Agora. — 3, The T hoi us (&6?,oc), I eadia, not far from Megalopolis, and of a place 
a round building close to the Senate House, 1 iu Athamania in Epirus. 

which served as the new Prytaneum, in which Athex.eus ('A&qvaioc). 1. A contemporary 
the Pry tanes took their meals and offered their j qf Archimedes, the author of an extant work 
sacrifices. ( Vid. Diet, of Ant s. v.) — 4. The | TLepl MT^cavnfidrov (on warlike engines), ad- 
Prytaneum (lipvravelov), at the northeastern j dressed to Marcellus (probably the conqueror of 
foot of the Acropolis, where the Prytanes used | Syracuse) ; printed in Thevenot's Mathematics 
more anciently to take their meals" and where j Veteres, Paris, 1693. — 2. A learned Greek gram- 
the laws of Solon were preserved. — 5. Stoa j mariau, of Nancratis in Egypt, lived about A.D. 
((jToai), or Halls, supported by pillars, and used | 230, first at Alexandres and afterward at Rome, 
as places of resort iu the heat of the day, of j His extant work is entitled the Deipnosophista 
which there were several in Athens. ( Vid. Diet j (Aei-vocopiGTai), i. e., the Banquet of the Learned, 
of Ant, p. <»U. 2d ed.) Iu the Agora there j in fifteen books, of which the first two books, 
were three : the Stoa Basileos (otou. fiaaiXetoc), j and parts of the third, eleventh, and fifteenth, 
the court of the Kiug-Archou, on the west side : exist only in an Epitome. The work may be 
of tibe, Agora ; the Stoa PcccUb (argil noiiufaj), so considered one of the earliest collections of 
called because if was adorned with fresco paint- ; what are called Ana, being an immense mass of 
ings of the battle of Marathon and other achieve- j anecdotes, extracts from the writings of poets, 
mentsby Polygnotus, Lycon, and others ; and the j historians, dramatists, philosophers, orators, and 
StoaEleutherius(cTod c ■%ev6epto§ ), or Hall of Zeus ! physicians, of facts in natural history, criticisms, 
Eleutherius, both on the south side of the Agora. — ! and discussions on almost every conceivable sub- 
6. Theatres. The Theatre of Dionysus (Bacchus), j ject, especially on gastronomy. Athenaeus re- 
on the southeastern slope of the Acropolis, was I presents himself as describing to his friend Ti- 
the great theatre of the state (vid. Diet, of Ant. j mocrates a full account of the conversation at c 
p. 1120, 2d ed.) ; besides this there were three \ banquet at Rome, at which Galen, the physician, 
Odm (Adda), for contests in vocal and instru- ' and Ulpian, the jurist, were among the guests. 

P23 



ATHENAGORAS. 



ATLAS. 



— -Editions : By CasauboD, Genev., 1597 ; by I Vid. Acanthus. The isthmus is about one and 



Sehweighauser, Argentorati, 1801-1801 ; and by 
W. Dindorf, Lips., 1827.— 3. A celebrated phy- 
sician, founder of the medical sect of the Pneu- 
matici, was born at Attalia in Cilicia, and prac- 
ticed at Rome about A.D. 50. 

Athenagoras ('A-dyvaybpagU an Athenian phi- 
losopher, converted to the Christian religion in 
the second century of our era, is the author of 
two extant works, An Apology for Christians, 
addressed to the emperors M. Aurelius and his 
son Commodus, and a treatise in defence of the 
tenet of the resurrection. — Editions: By Fell, 
Oxon., 1682; Rechenberg, Lips., 1684-85; De- 
ehair, Oxon., 1706. 

Athenais ('Adr/vair). Surnamed Philostor- 
jas, wife of Ariobarzanes II., kiug of Cappa- 
doeia, and mother of Ariobarzanes III. — 2. 
Daughter of Leontius, afterward named Eu- 

JOCIA. 

Athenion ('Adrjviuv). 1. A Ciliciau, one of the 
ommanders of the slaves in the second servile 
war in Sicily, maintained his ground for some 
+ ime successfully, and defeated L. Licinius Lu- 
;ullus, but was at length conquered and killed in 
B.C. 101 by the consul M'. Aquillius.— [2. A 
':omic poet of Athens, of whose plays only one 
fragment has been preserved; it is printed in 
Meineke's Fragrnenta Comic. Graze, vol. ii., p. 
1165-6, edit, minor. — 3. A painter, born at Mar- 
■jnea in Thrace. He was a pupil of Glaucion of 
Corinth, and gave promise of high excellence, 
but died young.] 

Athbnodorus ('AOr/vodopor). 1. Of Tarsus, a 
Stoic philosopher surnamed Cordylio, was the 
.keeper of the library at Pergamus, and after- 
ward removed to Rome, where he lived with M. 
Cato, at whose house he died. — 2. Of Tarsus, a 
Stoic philosopher, surnamed Cananitcs, from 
Cana in Cilicia, the birth-place of his father, 
whose name was Sandou. He was a pupil of 
Posidonius at Rhodes, and afterward taught at 
Apollonia in Epirus, where the young Octavius 
(subsequently the Emperor Augustus) was one 
of his disciples. He accompanied the latter to 
Rome, and became one of his intimate friends 
and advisers. In his old age he returned to 
Tarsus, where he died at the age of eighty-two. 
He was the author of several works, which are 
lot extant. — 3. A sculptor, the son and pupil of 
Agesander of Rhodes, whom he assisted in exe- 
cuting the group of Laocoon. Vid. Agesander. 

Athesis (now Adigc or Etsch), rises in the 
Rsetian Alps, receives the Atagis (now Eisach), 
3ows through Upper Italy past Verona, and 
falls into the Adriatic by many mouths. 

Athmone ('Ad/tov?'/, also 'Ad/wvca and "Afy/o- 
uov : 'A6/j.ovevc, fem. 'A6/20v'ir), an Attic demus 
belonging to the tribe Cecropis, afterward to the 
tribe Attalis. 

Athos ("A6ur, also "Aftav : 'AdoiTr/c : now 
flaghion Oros, Monte Santo, i. e., Holy Mountain), 
the mountainous peninsula, also called Acte, 
which projects from Chalcidice in Macedonia. 
■\t the extremity of the peninsula the mountain 
•ises abruptly from the sea to a height of 6349 
feet : there is no anchorage for ships at its base, 
:iud the voyage around it was so dreaded by 
mariners that Xerxes had a canal cut through 
+ he isthmus, which connects the peninsula with 



the' main land, to 
124 



half miles across ; and there are most distinct 
traces of the canal to be seen in the present 
day ; so that we must not imitate the skepticism: 
of Juvenal (x., 174), and of many modern writ- 
ers, who refused to believe that the canal was 
ever cut. The peninsula contained several flour- 
ishing cities in antiquity, and is now studdea 
with numerous monasteries, cloisters, and chapels, 
whence it derives its modern name. In thest 
monasteries some valuable MSS. of ancient au- 
thors have been discovered. 

Athribis ( j AB()l6lc), a city in the Delta or 
Egypt ; capital of the Nomos Athribites. 

[Athrulla ^Adpovlla : now Jathrib or Me- 
dina), a city of Arabia Felix, conquered bn 
^Elius Gallus.] 

Atia, mother of Augustus. 
Atjlia or Atillia Gens, the principal mem- 
bers of which are given under their surnames, 
Calatinus, Regulus, and Serranus. 

AtilicInus, a Roman jurist, who probably 
lived about A.D. 50, is referred to in the Digest. 

Atilius. 1. L., one of the earliest of the Ro- 
man jurists who gave public instruction in law, 
probably lived about B.C. 100. He wrote com 
j mentaries on the laws of the Twelve Tables. — 2. 
M., one of the early Roman poets, wrote both 
| tragedies and comedies, but apparently a greater 
number of the latter than of the former. 

Atina (Atlnas, -atis : now Atina), a town oi 
the Volsci in Latium, afterward a Roman colony. 

Atintanes ('ArivTdveg), an Epirot people in 
Illyria, on the borders of Macedonia: their coun- 
try, Atintania, was reckoned part of Macedonia 
Alius Varus. Vid. Varus. 
Atlanticum Mare. Vid. Oceanus. 
Atlantts ('Arlavrlg, sc. vr/oog), according to 
an ancient tradition, a great island west of the 
Pillars of Hercules in the Ocean, opposite Mount 
Atlas : it possessed a numerous population, and 
was adorned with every beauty ; its powerful 
princes invaded Africa and Europe, but were 
defeated by the Athenians and their allies : its- 
inhabitants afterward became wicked and im- 
pious, and the island was in consequence swal 
lowed up in the ocean in a day and a night. 
This legend i3 given by Plato in the TUmmis 
and is said to have been related to Solon by the 
Egyptian priests. The Canary Islands, or th-^ 
Azores, which perhaps were visited by the Phce- 
nicians, may have given rise to the legend ; but 
some modern writers regard it as indicative of a 
vague belief in antiquity in the existence of the 
western hemisphere. 

Atlas ("ArAac), son of Iapetus and Clymene, 
and brother of Prometheus and Epimetheus. 
He made war with the other Titans upon Jupi- 
ter (Zeus), and being conquered, was condemned 
to bear heaven on his head and hands : accord- 
ing to Homer, Atlas bears the long columns 
which keep asunder heaven and earth. The 
myth seems to have arisen from the idea that 
lofty mountains support the heavens. Later 
traditions distort the original idea still more, by 
making Atlas a man who was metamorphosed 
into a mountain. Thus Ovid (Met, iv., 626, 
scq.) relates that Perseus came to Atlas and 
asked for shelter, which was refused, where- 
upon Perseus, by means of the head of Medusa. 



ifford a passage to his fleet. ' changed him into Mount Atlas, on which rest*. 



ATLAS HONS. 



ATROPATES. 



heaven -with all its stars. Others go still fur- 
ther, and represent Atlas as a powerful king, 
who possessed great knowledge of the courses 
of the stars, and who was the first who taught 
men that heaven had the form of a globe. 
Hence the expression that heaven rested on his 
shoulders was regarded as a merely figurative 
mode of speaking. At first, the story of Atlas 
referred to one mountain only, which was be- 
lieved to exist on the extreme boundary of the 
earth ; but, as geographical knowledge extend- 
ed, the name of Atlas was transferred to other 
places, and thus we read of a Mauretanian, Ital- 
ian, Arcadian, and even of a Caucasian Atlas. 
The common opinion, however, was, that the 
heaven-bearing Atlas was in the northwest of 
Africa. See below. Atlas was the father of 
the Pleiades by Pleione or by Hesperie ; of the 
Hyades and Hesperidcs by iEthra ; and of CEno- 
maus and Maia by Sterope. Dione and Calyp- 
so, Hyas and Hesperus, are likewise called his 
children. AtlantVtdes, a descendant of Atlas, es- 
pecially Mercury, his grandson by Maia (comp. 
Mercuri facunde nepos Atlantis, Hor., Carm., i., 
10), and Hermaphroditus, son of Mercury. At- 
lantias and Atlantis, a female descendant of At- 
las, especially the Pleiads and Hyads. 

Atlas Moxs ('\r?,ar : now Atlas), was the 
general name of the great, mountain range 
which covers the surface of northern Africa, 
between the Mediterranean and Great Desert 
(now Sahara), on the north and south, and the 
Atlantic and the Lessor Syrtis on the west and 
east; the mountain chains southeast of the 
Lesser Syrtis, though connected with the Atlas, 
do not properly belong to it, and were called 
by other names. The northern and southern 
ranges of this system wtre distinguished by the 
names of Atlas Minor and Atlas Major, and 
a distinction was made between the three re- 
gions into which they divided the country. Vid. 
Africa, p. 28, a. 

Atossa (*Aro<7era), daughter of Cyrus, and wife 
successively of her brother Cambyses, of Smer- 
dis the Magian, and of Darius Hystaspis, over 
whom she possessed great influence. She bore 
Darius four sous, Xerxes, Masistes, Achaemenes, 
and Hystaspes. 

Atr.e or Hatra ("Arpat, ra "Arpa : 'Arpnvor, 
Atrenus: now Hadr, southwest of Mosul), a 
strongly-fortified city on a high mountain in Mes- 
opotamia, inhabited by people of the Arab race. 

Sempronius, AtratInus. 1. A., consul B.C. 
497 and 491.— 2. L., consul 444 and censor 
443. — 3. C, consul 423, fought unsuccessfully 
against the Volsciaus, and was in consequence 
condemned to pay a heavy fine. — 4. L., accused 
Marcus Caelius Rafbs, whom Cicero defended, 
57 B.C. 

Atrax ('Arpa^ : 'ArpnKior). 1. A town in 
Pelasgiotis in Thessaly, inhabited by the Per- 
rhaebi, so called from the mythical Atrax, son of 
Peneus and Bura, and father of Hippodamla and 
Casnis. [It was famed for its green marble, 
known by the name of Atr actum Marmor. — 
2* A small river of Pelasgiotis in Thessaly, a ' 
tributary of the Peneus.] 

Atrebates, a people in Gallia Belgica, in the 
modern Artois, which is a corruption of their j 
name. In Caesar's time (B.C. 57) they num- 
bered 15,000 warriors : their capital was Neme- j 



tocenna. Part of them crossed over to Britain, 
where they dwelt in the upper valley of the 
Thames, Oxfordshire and Berkshire. 

Atreus ('Arpeur), son of Pelops and Hippo- 
damla, grandson of Tautalus, aud brother of 
Thyestes and Nicippe. Vid. Pelops. He was 
first married to Cleola, by whom he became the 
father of Pllsthenes ; then to Aerope, the widow 
of his son Plisthenes, who was the mother of 
I Agamemnon, Menelaus, and Anaxibia, either by 
j Plisthenes or by Atreus (vid. Agamemnon) ; and 
! lastly to Pelopia, ihe daughter of his brother 
Thyestes. The tragic fate of the house of Tan- 
talus afforded ample materials to the tragic 
poets of Greece, who relate the details in vari- 
ous ways. In consequence of the murder of 
their half-brother Chrysippus, Atreus and Thy- 
estes were obliged to take to flight ; they were 
hospitably received at Mycenas; and, after the 
death of Eurystheus, Atreus became king of 
Mycena?. Thyestes seduced Aerope, the wife 
of Atreus, and was, in consequence, banished by 
his brother : from his place of exile he sent 
Plisthenes, the son of Atreus, whom he had 
brought up as his own child, in order to slay 
Atreus ; but Plisthenes fell by the hands of 
Atreus, who did not know that he was his own 
son. In order to take revenge, Atreus, pretend- 
ing to be reconciled to Thyestes, recalled him 
to Mycence, killed his two sons, and placed their 
flesh before their father at a banquet, who un- 
wittingly partook of the horrid meal. Thyestes 
fled with horror, and the gods cursed Atreus 
and his house. The kingdom of Atreus was 
now visited by famine, and the oracle advised 
Atreus to call back Thyestes. Atreus, who 
went out in search of him, came to King Thes- 
protus, and as he did not find him there, he mar- 
ried his third wife, Pelopia, the daughter of Thy- 
estes, whom Atreus believed to be a daughter 
of Thesprotus. Pelopia was at the time with 
child by her own father. This child, JEgisthus, 
afterward slew Atreus, because the latter had 
commanded him to slay his own father Thy- 
estes. Vid. JEgisthus. The treasury of Atreus 
and his sons at Mycenas, which is mentioned by 
Pausanias, is believed by some to exist still ; 
but the ruins which remain are above ground, 
whereas Pausanias speaks of the building as 
under ground. 

Atria. Vid, Adria. 

Atrides ^Arpetdrjc), a descendant of Atreus, 
especially Agamemnon and Menelaus. 

Atropatene ('ATpo-arrivr/), or Media Atropa- 
tia ('ATpoTraria or -or M^&'a), the northwestern 
part of Media, adjacent to Armenia, named after 
Atropates, a native of the country, who, having 
been made its governor by Alexander, founded 
there a kingdom, which long remained inde- 
pendent alike of the Seleucidae, the Parthians, 
and the Romans, but was at last subdued by the 
Parthians. 

Atropates ('Arpo-drr/c), a Persian satrap, 
fought at the battle of Gaugamela, B.C. 331, and 
after the death of Dariu3 was made satrap of 
Media by Alexander. His daughter was mar- 
ried to Perdiccas in 324 ; and he received from 
his father-in-law, after Alexander's death, the 
province of the Greater Media. In the north- 
west of the country, called after him, Media 
Atropatene, he established an independent kiog- 
125 



ATROPOS. 



ATTICUS HERODES. 



•3cm which continued to exist down to the time ; Attica (r> 'Attlkt} bc. }//), a division of Greece, 
• f the Emperor Augustus. has the form of a triaDgle, two sides of which 

' Atropos. Vid. MorR.£. j are washed by the HSgean Sea, while the third 

Atta, T. QurxTius, a Roman eomic poet, died ; is separated from Boeotia on the north by the 
r),C. 78. His surname Atta was given him ' mountains Cithseron and Parnes. Megaris, 
from a defect in hi? feet, to which circumstance which bounds it on the northwest, was formerly 
Horace probably alludes (Ep n ii., 1, 79). His ; a part of Attica. In ancient times it was called 
-jlavs were very popular, and were acted even \ Acte and Acticc ('Aktjj and 'Aktlkt}), or the 
In the time of * Augustus. [The fragments of "coastland" (vid. Acte), from which the later 
Atta are collected by Bothe, Poet. Scenic. Lot., form Attica is said to have been derived; but. 
roL v, P. ii-, p- 97-102 ; ef. Weichert, Poet, according to traditions, it derived its name from 
Lat. Reliquict, p 345.] Atthis, the daughter of the mythical king Cra- 

AttagI>ts ('Arraylvoc), son of Phrynon, a naus ; and it is cot impossible that Ait-ica may 
Theban, betrayed Thebes to Xerxes, B.C. 480. i contain the root Ait or Ath, which we find in 
After the battle of Platsese (479) the other j Atthis and Athena: Attica is divided by many 
Greeks required Attaginus to be delivered up j ancient writers into three districts. 1. The 
.0 them, but he made his escape. i Highlands (9 dLapiua, also dpeivfj 'Attiki}), the 

Attalia {'Ar-dZeia, 'ArraXeaTTji or -ar?c). — ' northeast of the country, containing the range 
1. A city of Lydia, formerly called Agroira | of Parnes and extending south to the Proraon- 
i'Arpoeipc). — 2. (Now Laara), a city on the ; tory Cynosura; the only level part of this dis- 
. oast of Paniphylia, near the mouth of the Riv- j trict was the small plain of Marathon opening 
er Catarrhactes, founded by Attalus II. Phila- ; to the sea. 2. TJie Plain (?) -edidc, to wediov), 
Jelphus, and subdued by the Romans under P. : the northwest of the country, included both the 
Servilius Isauricus. | plain round Athens and the plain round Eleusis, 

Attalus ( w Arra?.oc). 1. A Macedonian, uncle 1 and extended south to the Promontory Zoster, 
of Cleopatra, whom Philip married in B.C. 337. \ 3. The Sea-coast District (rj TTapa?/>a), the soutk- 
At the nuptials of his niece, Attalus offered an ] em part of the country, terminating in the Prom- 
■nsult to Alexander, and, on the accession of the | ontory Sunium. Besides these three division- 
latter, was put to death by his order in Asia i we also read of a fourth. The Midland Distric- 
Minor, whither Philip had previously sent him [ (ueGoyata), still called Jfcsogia, an undulating 
:o secure the Greek cities to his cause. — 2. Son \ plain in the middle of the country, bounded by 
q£ Andromenes the Stymphsean, and one of j Mount Pentehcus on the north, Mount Hymet- 
Akxander 's officers. After the death of Alex- j tus on the west, and the sea on the east-. Th~ 
tinder (B.C. 323), he served under Perdiccas, j soil of Attica is not very fertile; the greater 
whose sister, Atalante, he had married; and \ part of it is not adapted for growing corn ; but it 
after the death of Perdiccas (321), he joined Al- j produces olives, figs, and grapes, especially tht- 
oetas, the brother of Perdiccas ■ but their united two former, in great perfection. The country 
forces were defeated in Pisidia by Antigonus j is dry ; the chief river is the Cephisus, which 
in 320. — 3. J£i)igs of Pergamus. — (I.) Son of rises in Parnes and flows through the Athenian 
Attalus, a brother of Philetaerus, succeeded his j plain. The abundance of wild flowers in the 
.:ousin, Eumenes I., and reigned B.C. 241-197. J country made the honey of Mount Hymettu* 
He took part with the Romans against Philip J very celebrated in antiquity. Excellent marble 
and the Aehaeans. He was a wise and just i was obtained from the quarries of Penteiicus, 
prince, and was distinguished by his patronage : northeast of Athens, and a considerable supply 
of literature. — (II.) Surnamed Philadelphia, sec- of silver from the mines of Laurium, near Su- 

•nd son of Attalus L, succeeded his brother Eu- j nium. The area of Attica, including the island 
vnenes IL, and reigned 159-138. Like his father, ; of Salamis, which belonged to it, contained be- 
he was an ally of the Romans, and he also en- • tween seven hundred and eight hundred equare 

ouraged the arts and sciences. — (III.) Sur- j miles; and its population in its flourishing pe- 
named Philomeior, son of Eumenes II., and ; riod was probably about five hundred thousand. 
Siratonice, succeeded his uncle Attalus II, and : of which nearly four fifths were slaves. Attica 
-eigned 138-133. He is known to us chiefly fur j is said to have been originally inhabited by Pe- 
:.he extravagance of his conduct and the murder lasgiaus. Its most ancient political division 
of his relations and friends. In his will he j was into twelve independent states, attributed 
made the Romans his heirs ; but his kingdom I to Cecxops, who, according to some legends, 
was claimed by Aristonieus. Vid. Abietoni- j came from Egypt. Subsequently Ion, the grand- 
ee. — -L Roman emperor of the West, was j son of Hellen, divided the people into four tribes. 
1 aised to the throne by Alaric, but was deposed ; Gelconies, Uopletes, Argadcs and JEgicorcs ; and 
by the latter, after a reign of one year (AD. j Theseus, who united the twelve independent 
409, 410), on account of his acting without Ala- j states of Attica into one political body, and 

:c's advice. — 5. A Stoic philosopher in the reign 1 made Athens the capital, again divided the na- 

-f Tiberius, was one of the teachers of the phi- i tion into three classes, the JZupairida?, Geomori. 

losopher Seneca, who speaks of him in the j and Demiurgi. Clisthenes (B.C. 510) abolished 
highest terms. j the old tribes and created ten new vues, accord- 

Attegua, a town iu Hispania Bsetiea, of uu- 1 ing to a geographical division : these tribes 

certain site. j -^ere subdivided into one hundred and seventy 

Attrts or Attls ( Ardic or Arrtc), daughter j four demi or townships. (For details, vid. Did. 

t& Cranaus, from whom Attica was believed to \ of Ant, art* Tkibus). 

have derived its name. The two birds into ! Arricus Hebodes, Tiberius Claudius, a eel- 
which Philomele and her sister Procne were ! ebratcd Greek rhetorician, born about A.D. 104, 
metamorphosed were likewise called Attis. : at Marathon in Attica. He taught rhetoric \»>iu 
126 



ATTICUS. 



AUCHETJfi. 



at Athens and at Rome, and bis school was awe and fear of the whole ancient world, which 
frequented by the most distinguished men of j ultimately expressed itself by affixing to hh 
the age. The future emperors M. Aurelius and j name the well-known epithet of " the Scourge 
!L. Verus were among his pupils, and Antoni- J of God." His career divides itself into two 
ous Pius raised him to the consulship in 143. j parts. The first (A.D. 445^50) consists of the 
He possessed immense wealth, a great part of ravage of the Eastern empire between the Eux- 
which he spent iu embellishing Athens. He > ine and the Adriatic and the negotiations with 
died at the age of seventy -six, in 180. He i Theodosius II., which followed upon it. They 
wrote numerous works, none of which have j were ended by a treaty, which ceded to Attila a 



come down to us, with the exception of an ora- 
tion, entitled Ilepl rroXireiar, the genuineness of 
which, however, is very doubtful It is printed 
"ji the collections of the Greek orators, and by 
Eiorillo, in Herodis Attici quce super sunt, Lips., 
1601. 

Atticus, T. Pomponius, a Roman eques, born 
at Rome B.C. 109. His proper name, after his 
adoption by Q. Csecilius, the brother of his moth- 
er, was Q. Caecilius Pomponianus Atticus. His 
surname, Atticus, was given him on account 
of his long residence in Athens and his intimate 
acquaintance with the Greek language and lit- 
erature. He was educated along with L. Tor- 
quatus, the younger C. Marius, and M. Cicero. 
Soon after the breaking out of the civil war be- 
tween Marius and Sulla, he resolved to take no 
part in the contest, and accordingly removed to 
Athens. During the remainder of his life he 
kept aloof from all political affairs, and thus 
lived on the most intimate terms with the most 
distinguished men of all parties. He was equal- 
ly the friend of Craar and Pompey, of Brutus 
and Cassius, of Antony and Augustus : but his 
most intimate friend was Cicero, whose cor- j 
respoudence with him, beginning iu 68 and con- 1 
rinued down to Cicero's death, is one of the 
most valuable remains of antiquity. He pur- 
chased an estate at Buthrotum in Epirus, in 
which place, as well as at Athens and Rome, he 
spent the greater part of his time, engaged 
in literary pursuits and commercial undertak- 
ings. He died in 32, at the age of 77, of volun- 
tary starvation, when he found that he was at- 
tacked by an incurable illness. His wife Pilia, 
to whom he was married iu 50, when he was fifty- 
three years of age, bore him only one child, a 
daughter, Pompouia or Ca3cilia, whom Cicero 
sometimes calls Attica and Atticula. She was 
married in the life-time of her father to M. Vip- 
«anius Agrippa, The sister of Atticus, Pom- 
ponia, was married to Q. Cicero, the brother of 
the orator. The life of Atticus by Cornelius 
Nepos is to be regarded rather as a panegyric 
upon an intimate friend, than, strictly speaking, 
a biography. In philosophy Atticus belonged 
to the Epicurean sect. He was thoroughly ac- 
quainted with the whole circle of Greek and 
"Roman literature. So high an opinion was en- 
tertained of his taste and critical acumen, that 
many of his friends, especially Cicero, were ac- 
customed to send him their works for revision 



large territory south of the Danube and an an- 
nual tribute. The second part of his career wa? 
the invasion of the Western empire (450-452). 
He crossed the Rhine at Strassburg, but was 
defeated at Chalons by Aetius, and Theodoric, 
king of the Visigoths, in 451. He then cross- 
ed the Alps, and took Aquileia in 452, after a 
siege of three months, but he did not attack 
Rome, in consequence, it is said, of his inter- 
view with Pope Leo the Great. He reerosaed 
the Alps toward the end of the year, and died 
in 453, on the night of his marriage with a beau- 
tiful girl, variously named Hilda, Ildico, Mycoltln 
by the bursting of a blood-vessel. In person 
Attila was, like the Mongolian race in general, a 
short, thickset man, of stately gait, with a large 
head, dark complexion, flat nose, thin beard, and 
bald with the exception of a few white hairs, his 
eyes small, but of great brilliancy and quickness. 
Armies. Vid, Annus. 
Attics, lid. Accius. 
Attics or Aries Navius. Vid. Navilv. 
Attics Tcllics. Vid. Tclltds. 
[Attus Clacscs. Vid, Appics Claudius.] 
Aturia ('Arovpta). Vid. Assyria. 
Atlrcs (now Adour), a river iu Aquitauia, 
rises in the Pyrenees, and flows through the ter- 
ritory of the Tarbelli into the ocean. 

Atvmnics ('Arv/xviog or "Arv/xvor). 1. Son of 
Jupiter (Zeus) and Cassiopea, a beautiful boy. 
beloved by Sarpedon. Others call him son of 
Phoenix. — [2. Son of the Lycian king Amisodn- 
rus, came as an ally of the Trojans to the war, 
was slain by Nestor.] 

Atys, Attys, Attes, Attis, or Atttn ("Art'c, 
"Attvc, "Atttjc, 'Attiq, or "Arriv). 1. Son of 
Nana, and a beautiful shepherd of the Phrygian 
town Cekcnce. He was beloved by Cybele, but 
as he proved unfaithful to her, he was thrown 
by her into a state of madness, in which he un- 
manned himself. Cybele thereupon changed him 
into a fir-tree, which henceforth became sacred 
to her, and she commanded that, in future, he; 
priests should be eunuchs. Such is the account 
in Ovid (Fast, iv., 221), but his story is related 
differently by other writers. Atys was worship- 
ped in the temples of Cybele in common with 
this goddess. His worship appears to have been 
introduced into Greece at a comparatively late 
period. It is probable that the mythus of Atys 
represents the twofold character of nature, the 
male and female concentrated in one. — 2. Soi< 



one. 

and correction. None of his own writings have j of Manes, king of the Ma^oniaus, from whose 
f.ome down to us. J SO n Lydus, his son and successor, the Maeoni- 

Attila ('A-77/?.ar or 'ArrtAaf, German Etzd, } ans were afterward called Lydians. — 8. A Latin 
Hungarian JSthele), king of the Huns, attained chief, son of Alba, and father of Capys, from 
in A.D. 434, with his brother Bleda (in German j whom the Atia Gens derived its origin, and from 
Blodel), to the sovereignty of all the northern j whom Augustus was believed to be descended on. 
tribes between the frontier of Gaul and the fron- j his mother's side.— 4. Son of Creeses, slain by 
tier of China, and to the command of an army ! Adrastcs. 

of at least five hundred thousand barbarians.! [Aucheive (Ai'xurai), a Scythian people at 
He gradually concentrated upon himself the ' the sources of the Hvpnuis (now Botj).] 

127' 



ATJFIDESA. 



AUGUSTINUS. 



•Vufidexa (Aufidenas, -atis: now Alfidena), a 
-own in Samnium, on the River Sagrus^ 

Iufidius. 1. Cx., a learned historian, cele- 
brated by Cicero for the equanimity with which 
he bore blindness, was qmestor B.C. 119, tnbu- 
nus plebis 114, and finally praetor 108.— 2 T., a 
iurist, quffistorB.C. 86, and afterward propraetor 
4 Asia —3. Bassus. Vid. Bassus. — 4. Lerco. 
Vid, Lukco.— 5. Orestes. Vid. Orestes. 

Aufidus (now Ofanto)- the principal river of 
Apulia, rises in the Apennines, in the territory 
of the Hirpini in Saronium, flows at first with 
a rapid current (hence violens and acer, Hor., 
Carm., iii., 30, 10 ; Sat, i, 1, 58), and then more 
slowly {stagna Aufida, Sil ItaL, x., 171) into the 
Adriatic. Venusia, the birth-place of Horace, 
was on the Aufidus. 

Aegares. Vid. Acbarus. 

Aege or Aegia (Avyrj or Avyeia), daughter of 
Aleus and Xeaera, was a priestess of Athena 
Minerva), and mother by Hercules of Telephus. 
She afterward married Teuthras, king of the 
Mysians. 

Augeas or Aegias (Aiyeac or Avyeiar), son 
of Phorbas or Helios (the Sun), and king of the 
Epeans in Elis. He had a herd of three thou- 
sand oxen, whose stalls had not been cleansed 
for thirty years. It was one of the labors im- 
posed upon Hercules by Eurystheus to cleanse 
these stalls in one day. As a reward the hero 
was to receive the tenth part of the oxen ; but 
when he had accomplished his task by leading 
the rivers Alpheus and Peneus through the sta- 
bles. Augeas refused to keep his promise. Her- 
cules thereupon killed him and his sons, with 
the exception of Phyleus, who was placed on 
the throne of his father. Another tradition rep- 
resents Augeas as dying a natural death at an 
advanced age. and as receiving heroic honors 
from Oxylus. 

[AEGEas (Aiytac), a Grecian comic poet of 
the middle comedy at Athens: of his plays 
only a few titles remain. For the Cyclic poet 
whose name is sometimes thus given, vid. Agi- 

AS.] 

[AegLe (Avyeiai), name of two cities men- 
tioned in the Iliad ; one was in Laconia, the 
other in Locris.] 

Augila (rd, Avyt/.a : now Aujilah), an oasis 
in the Great Desert of Africa, about three and 
a half degrees south of Cyrene, and ten days' 
journey west of the Oasis of Ammon, abound- 
ing in date palms, to gather the fruit of which 
a tribe of the Nasamones, called Augike (A£- 
yj.hu), resorted to the Oasis, which at other 
times was uninhabited. 

Aegerixus, Gexucius. 1. T., consul B.C. 451, 
and a member of the first decemvirate in the 
same year. — 2. M., brother of the preceding, con- 
sul 445. P 6 

AugurIxus, Mixecies. 1. M, consul B.C. 
497 and 491. _ He took an active part in the de- 
fence of Coriolanus, who was brought to trial 
in 491, but was unable to obtain his acquittal. 
— 2. L., consul 458, carried on war against the 
/Equians, and was surrounded by the enemy on 
Mount Algidus, but was delivered by the dicta- 
tor Cincinnatus.— 3. L., was appointed prefect 
of the corn-market {jprozfectus annonce) 439, as 
the people were suffering from grievous famine. 
The ferment occasioned by the assassination 
128 



of Sp. Meelius in this year was appeased by Au- 
gurinus, who is said to have gone over to the 
plebs from the patricians, and to have been 
chosen by the tribunes one of their body. Au- 
gurinus lowered the price of corn in three mark- 
et days, fixing as the maximum an as for a mo- 
dius. The people, in their gratitude, presented 
him with an ox having its horns gilt, and erect- 
ed a statue to his honor outside the Porta Tri- 
gemina, for which every body subscribed an ounce 
of brass. 

Aegesta, the name of several towns founded 
or colonized by Augustus. 1. A. Asturica. 
Vid. Asteees. — 2. A. Emerita (now Jferida), in 
Lusitania, on the Anas (now Guadiana), colo- 
nized by Augustus with the veterans (emerit) 
of the fifth and tenth legions, was a place of 
considerable importance. — 3. A. Firma. Vid. 
Astigi. — 4. A. Pretoria (now Aosta [contract- 
ed from Augusta'], a town of the Salassi in Up- 
per Italy, at the foot of the Graian and Pennine 
Alps, colonized by Augustus with soldiers of 
the praetorian cohorts. The modern town still 
contains many Roman remains, the most im- 
portant of which are the town gates and a tri- 
umphal arch. — 5. A. Rauracorum (now Aug si), 
the capital of the Rauraci, colonized by Munatius 
Plancus under Augustus, was on the left of the 
Rhine near the modern Basle : the ruins of a Ro- 
man amphitheatre are still to be seen. — 6. A. Sr- 
essoxum (now Soissons), the capital of the Sues- 
sones in Gallia Belgica, probably the Novioda- 
iium of Caesar. — 7. A Taerixorcm (now Turin), 
more anciently called Taurasia, the capital of 
the Taurini on the Po, was an important town 
in the time of Hannibal, and was colonized by 
Augustus. — 8. A. Treviroeum. Vid. Treviri. 
— 9. Tricastixorem (now Aouste), the capital 
of the Tricastini in Gallia Narbonensis. — 10. A. 
Vindelicorum (now Augsburg), capital of Vin- 
delicia or Reetia Secunda on the Licus (now 
Lech), colonized by Drusus under Augustus, after 
the conquest of Reetia, about B.C. 14. 

Augestixes, Aurelius, usually called St. 
Augustine, the most illustrious of the Latin 
fathers, was born A.D. 354, at Tagaste, an in- 
land town in JNumidia. His mother was a sin- 
cere Christian, who exerted herself in training 
up her son in the practice of piety, but for a long 
time without effect. He studied rhetoric at 
Carthage, where he embraced the Manichaean 
heresy, to which he adhered for nine years. 
He afterward became a teacher of rhetoric at 
Carthage, but in 383 he went to Italy, and in 
Milan was led by the preaching and conversa- 
tion of Ambrose to abandon his Manichaean er- 
rors and embrace Christianity. He was bap- 
tized by Ambrose in 387, and then returned to 
Africa, where he passed the next three years 
in seclusion, devoting himself to religious ex- 
ercises. In 391 he was ordained a priest by 
Valerius, then bishop of Hippo, and in 395 he 
was consecrated bishop of Hippo. His history, 
from the time of his elevation to the see of Hip- 
po, is so closely implicated with the Donatistic 
and Pelagian controversy, that it would be im- 
practicable to pursue its details within our lim- 
its. He died at Hippo in 430, when the city 
wa3 besieged by the Vandals. Of his numerous 
works the two mo?t interesting are, 1. His Con- 
fessions, in thirteen books, written in 397, cod- 



AUGUSTOBONA. 



AUGUSTUS. 



taining an account of his early life- 2. Be Civi- 
tate Bei, iu twenty-two books, commenced about 
413, and not finished before 426. The first ten 
books contain a refutation of the various sys- 
tems of false religion, the last twelve present a 
systematic view of the true religion. The best 
edition of the collected works of Augustine is 
the Benedictine, 11 vols. foL, Paris, 1679-1700: 
[this valuable edition was reprinted at Paris, in 
II vols., imperial 8 vo., 1S36-39. 

Augustobona (now Troyes), afterward called 
Tricassce, the capital of the Tricasii or Tricasses, 
in Gallia Lugduncusis. 

AUGUSTODUNUM. Vid. BlBRACTE. 
AUGUSTONEMETUM. Vid. ArVERNI. 

Augustoritum. Vid. Lemovices. 
Augustulus, Romulus, last Roman emperor of 
the West, was placed upon the throne by his fa- 
ther Orestes (A.D. 475), after the latter had de- 
posed the Emperor Jnlius JSepos. In 47 6 Ores- 
tes was defeated by Odoacer and put to death : 
Romulus Augustulus was allowed to live, but 
was deprived of the sovereignty. 

Augustus, the first Roman emperor, was born 
on the 23d of September, B.C. 63, and was the 
son of C. Octav us by Atia, a daughter of Ju- 
lia, the sister of C. Julius Caesar. His original 
uame was C. Octavius, and, after his adoption 
by his great-uncle, C. Julius Ccesar Octavianus, 
but for the sake of brevity we shall call him 
Augustus, though this was only a title given 
him by the senate and the people in B.C. 27, to 
express their veneration for him. Augustus 
lost his father at four years of age, but his edu- 
cation was conducted with great care by his 
grandmother Julia, and by his mother and step- 
father, L. Marcius Philippus, whom his mother 
married soon after his father's death. C. Julius 
Ccesar, who had no male issue, also watched 
over his education with solicitude, He joined 
his uncle in Spain in 45. in the campaign against 
the sons of Pompey, and in the course of the 
same year was sent by Ccesar to Apollonia in 
Illyricum, where some legions were stationed, 
that he might acquire a more thorough practical 
training in military affairs, and. at the same time, 
prosecute his studies. He was at Apellonia 
when the news reached him of his uncle's mur- 
der at Rome in March, 44, and he forthwith set 
out for Italy, accompauied by Agrippa and a few 
other friends. On landing near Brundisium at 
the beginning of April, he heard that Ccesar had 
adopted him in his testament and made him his 
heir. He now assumed the name of Cassar, 
and was so saluted by the troops. On reaching < 
Rome about the beginning of May, he demanded i 
nothing but the private property which Cassar 
had left him, but declared that he was resolved . 
to avenge the murder of his benefactor. The 1 
state of parties at Rome was most perplexing ; i 
and one can not but admire the extraordinary ] 
tact and prudence which Augustus displayed, ! 
and the skill with which a youth of scarcely : 
twenty contrived to blind the most experienced < 
statesmen in Rome, and eventually to carry all < 
his designs into effect. Augustus had to con- ] 
tend against the republican party as well as < 
against Antony ; for the latter foresaw that Au- ' i 
gustus would stand in the way of his views, and ] 
had therefore attempted, though without sue- 1 
cess, to prevent Augustus from accepting the ! 



• inheritance which his uncle had left him. Au- 
: gustus, therefore, resolved to crush Antony first, 
i as the more dangerous of his two enemies, and 
■ accordingly made overtures to the republican 
party. These were so well received, especially 
i when two legions went over to him, that the 
senate conferred upon him the title of praetor, 
and sent him, with the two consuls of the year, 
C. Vibius Pansa and A. Hirtius, to attack An- 
tony, who was besieging D. Brutus in Mutina. 
Antony was defeated and obliged to fly across 
the Alps; and the death of the two consuls 
gave Augustus the command of all their troops. 
The Senate now became alarmed, and determ- 
ined to prevent Augustus from acquiring fur- 
ther power. But he soon showed that he did 
not intend to become the senate's servant. Sup- 
ported by his troops, he marched upon Rome and 
demanded the consulship, which the terrified 
senate was obliged to give him. He was elect- 
ed to the office along with Q. Pedius, and the 
murderers of the dictator were outlawed. He 
now marched into the north of Italy, profess- 
edly against Antony, who had been joined by 
Lepidus, and who was descending from the Alps 
along with the latter at the head of seventeen 
legions. Augustus and Antony now became 
reconciled ; and it was agreed that the empire 
should be divided between Augustus, Antony, 
and Lepidus, under the title of triumviri rei 
publicce constituendce, and that this arraagement 
should last for the uext five years. They pub- 
lished a proscriptio, or list of all their enemies, 
whose fives were to be sacrificed and their 
property confiscated : upward of two thousand 
equities and three hundred senators were put to 
death. Among whom was Cicero. Soon after- 
ward Augustus and Antony crossed over to 
Greece, and defeated Brutus and Cassius at the 
dicisive battle of Philippi in 42, by Avhich the 
hopes of the republican party were ruined. The 
triumvirs thereupon made a new division of the 
provinces. Lepidus obtained Africa, and Au- 
gustus returned to Italy to reward his veterans 
with the lands he had promised them. Here a 
new war awaited him (41), excited by Fulvia, 
the wife of Antony. She was supported by L. 
Antonius, the consul and brother of the trium- 
vir, who threw himself into the fortified town of 
Perusia, which Augustus succeeded in taking 
in 40. Antony now made preparations for war, 
but the opportune death of Fulvia led to a rec- 
onciliation between the triumvirs, who con- 
cluded a peace at Brundisium. A new division 
of the provinces was again made : Augustus 
obtained all the parts of the empire west of the 
town of Scodra in Illyricum, and Antony the 
eastern provinces, while Italy was to belong to 
them in common. Antony married Octavia, the 
sister of Augustus, in order to cement their al- 
liance. In 39 Augustus concluded a peece with 
Sextus Pompey, whose fleet gave him the com- 
mand of the sea, and enabled him to prevent 
corn from reaching Rome. But this peace was 
only transitory. As long as Pompey was inde- 
pendent, Augustus could not hope to obtain the 
dominion of the West, and he therefore eagerly 
availed himself of the pretext that Pompey al- 
lowed piracy to go on in the Mediterranean for 
the purpose of declaring war against him. In 
36 the contest came to a final issue. The fleet 
129 



AUGUSTUS. 



A ULOX. 



of Augustus, under the command of Marcus 
Agrippa. gained a decisive victory over that of 
Pompev, who abandoned Sicily and fled to Asia, 
Lepidus, who had landed in Sicily to support Au- 
<mstus, was impatient of the subordinate part 
which he had hitherto played, and claimed the 
island for himself; but he was easily subdued 
by Augustus, stripped of his power, and sent to 
Rome, where be resided for the remainder of 
his life, being allowed to retain the dignity of 
pontiles maxim us. In 35 and 34 Augustus was 
engaged in war with the Illyrians and Dalma- 
tians. Meantime, Antony had repudiated Oc- 
tavia, and had alienated the minds of the Ro- 
man people by his arbitrary and arrogant pro- 
ceedings in the East. Augustus found that the 
Romans were quite prepared to desert his rival, 
and accordingly, in 32, the senate declared war 
against Cleopatra, for Antony was looked upon 
only &3 her infatuated slave. The remainder 
of the year was occupied by preparations for 
war on both sides. In the spring of 31, Au- 
gustus passed over to Epirus, and in Septem- 
ber in the same year his fleet gained a bril- 
liant victory over Antony's near the promontory 
of Aetduin in Acaraania. In the following year 
(30) Augustus sailed to Egypt Antony and 
Cleopatra, who had escaped in safety from Ac- 
tium, put an end to their live3 to avoid falling 
into the hands of the conqueror ; and Augustus 
now became the undisputed master of the Ro- 
man world. Ee returned to Rome in 29, and 
after restoring order in all parts or the govern- 
ment, he proposed in the senate to lay down his 
powers, but pretended to be prevailed upon to 
remain at the head of affairs for ten years long- 
er. This plan was afterward repeated several 
times, and he apparently allowed himself to be 
always persuaded to retain his power either for 
ten or five years more. He declined all honors 
and distinctions which were calculated to re- 
mind the Romans of kingly power ; but he ac- 
cepted in 33 the imperium proconsulate and the 
tribunitia potestas for life, by which his inviola- 
bility was legally established, while by the impe- 
rium proconsulare he became tbe highest au- 
thority in all the Roman provinces. On the 
death of Lepidus in 12 he became pontifex max- 
imus ; but, though he had thus united in his own 
person all the great offices of state, yet he was 
too prudent to show to the Romans by any dis- 
play of authority that he was the sole master. 
He had no ministers, in our sense of the word ; 
but on state matters, which he did not choose to 
be discussed in public, he consulted his per- 
sonal friends, C. Cilnius Maecenas, M. Vipsanius 
Agrippa, M. Valerius Messalla Corvinus, and 
Asinius Pollio. The people retained then' re- 
publican privileges, though they were mere 
forms : they still met in then* assemblies, and 
elected consuls and other magistrates, but only 
such persons were elected as had been propos- 
ed or recommended by the emperor. The al- 
most uninterrupted festivities, games, distribu- 
tions of corn, and the like, made the people for- 
get the substance of their republican freedom, 
and obey contentedly then* new ruler. The 
srars of Augustus were not aggressive, but were 
chiefly undertaken to protect the frontiers of 
the Roman dominions. Most of them were car- 
ried on by his relations and friends, but he opn- 
130 



ducted some of them in person Thus, in 27, 
he attacked the warlike Cantabri and Astures 
in Spain, whose subjugation, however, was not 
completed till 19, by Agrippa. In 21 Augustus 
travelled through Sicily and Greece, and spent 
the winter following at Samos. Next year 
(20) he went to Syria, where he received from 
Phraates, the Parthian monarch, the standards 
and prisoners which had been taken from Cras- 
sus and Antony. In 16 the Romans suffered a 
defeat on the Lower Rhine by some German 
tribes ; whereupon Augustus went himself to 
Gaul and spent four years there, to regulate 
the government of that province, and to make 
the necessary preparations for defending it 
against the Germans. In 9 he again went to 
Gaul, where he received German ambassadors, 
who sued for peace ; and from this time for- 
ward, he does not appear to have again taken 
any active part in the wars that were carried 
on. Those in Germany were the most formid- 
able, and lasted longer than the reign of Augus- 
tus. He died at Nola, on the 29th of Augu-rt. 
A.D. 14, at the age of seventy-six. Augustus- 
was first married, though only nominally, to 
Clodia, a daughter of Clodius and Fulvia. His 
second wife, Scribonia, bore him his only daugh- 
ter, Julia. His third wife was Livia Drusilla, 
the wife of Tiberius Nero. Augustus had at 
first fixed on M. Marcelius as his successor, the 
son of his sister Octavia, who wa3 married to 
his daughter Julia. After his death Julia was 
married to Agrippa, and her two sons, Caias 
and Lucius Caesar, were now destined by Au- 
gustus as his successors. On the death of these 
two youths, Augustus was persuaded to adopt 
Tiberius, the son of Livia, aud to make him ms 
colleague and successor. Vid. Tiberius, 

Aulerci, a powerful Gallic people dwelling 
between the Sequana (now Seine) and the Liger 
(now Loire), were divided into three great tribes 
1. A. Eeueovices, near the coast, on the left 
bank of the Seine, in the modern Normandy : 
their capital was Mediolanum, afterward called 
Eburovices (now Evreux). — 2. A. Cenomani, 
southwest of the preceding, near the Liger; 
their capital was Subdinnum (now le Mam). At 
an early period some of the Cenomani crossed 
the Alps and settled in Upper Italy. — 3. A. Bran- 
novices, east of the Cenomani, near the jEdui, 
whose clients they were. The Diablintes men- 
tioned by Caesar are said by Ptolemy to have 
been likewise a branch of the Aulerci. 

[Aulestes, a Tyrrhenian, an ally of ^Eneae* 
slain by Messapus.] 

Aclis (AiAif), a harbor in Boeotia, on the Eu- 
ripus, where the Greek fleet assembled before 
sailing against Troy : it had a temple of Artemis- 
( Diana). 

Aulon (H-?.6v : Avluvtrrjc). 1. A district 
and town on the borders of Elis and Messenia, 
with a temple of ^Esculapius, who hence had 
the surname Avlonius. — 2. A town in Chalcid- 
ice in Macedonia, on the Strymonic Gulf. — 8. 
(Now Melone), a fertile valley near Tarentum, 
celebrated for its wine {amicus Avion fertili 
Baccho; Hor., Carm., il, 6, 18.) — [4. Regius- 
(Av/.dv 6 (3aGi?.LK6g), a valley of Syria, not far 
from Damascus. — 5. The valley of the Jordan, 
extending from the Sea of Galilee, and includ- 
ing the Dead Sea : the southern part of it 



! 



AULUS GELL1US. 



M. AURELIUS ANTONINUS'. 



w the fertile plain of Jericho.— 6. Cilicius, the i 
strait between Cyprus and the coast of Cilicia.] 

(Aulus Gbluus. Vid. Gellius.] 

Aueanitis (MpavlTir : now Hauran), a dis- 
trict south of Damascus and east of Ituraa and 
Batanaia, on the eastern side of the Jordan, be- 
longing either to Palestine or to Arabia. 

Aubea Chersonesus (?) Xovcij Xepaovijaor), 
the name given by the late geographers to the 
Malay Peninsula, [or, as others maintain, to the 
southern part of Prgu-] They also mention an 
Aurea Regio beyond the Ganges, which is sup- 
posed to be the country round Ava. 

Aubelia, the wife of C. Julius Caesar, by whom 
she became the mother of C. Julius Caesar, the 
dictator, and of two daughters. She carefully 
watched over the education of her children, and 
always took a lively interest in the success of 
her son. She died in B.C. 54, while Cossar was 
ia Gaul. 

Aueklia Gens, plebeian, 01 which the most 
Important members are given under their family 
names, Coota, Orestes, and Scaurus. 

Aueelia Orestilla, a beautiful but profligate 
w oman, whom Catiline married. As Aurelia at 
first refused to marry him because he had a 
grown up son by a former marriage, Catiline is 
.said to have killed his own offspring in order to 
remove this impediment to their union. 

Aueklia Yia, the great coast road from Home 
io Transalpine Gaul, at first extended no further 
than Pisa:, but was afterward continued along 
she coast to Genua and Forum Julii in Gaul. 

\useliani. Vid. Gen a bum. 

Aueelianus, Roman emperor, A.D. 270-275, 
was bom about A.D. '.H2, at Sirmium, in Pan- 
uonia. He entered the army as a common sol- 
dier, and by his extraordinary bravery was rais- 
ed to offices of trust and honor by Valerian and 
Claudius II. On tie death of the latter, he was 
elected emperor by the legions at Sirmium. His 
reign presents a succession of brilliant exploits, 
which restored for a while their ancient lustre 
to the arms of Rome. He first defeated the 
Goths and Vandals, who had crossed the Dan- 
ube, and were ravaging Pannonia. He next 
gained a great victory over the Alemanni and 
other German tribes: but they succeeded, not- 
withstanding, in crossing the Alps. Near Pla- 
centia they defeated the Romans, but were 
eventually overcome by Aurelian in two deci- 
sive engagements in Umbria. After crushing 
a formidable conspiracy at Rome, Aurelian next 
turned his arms against Zenobia, queen of Pal- 
myra, whom he defeated, took prisoner, and 
carried with him to Rome. Vid. Zenobia. On 
his return he marched to Alexandrea and put 
Firmus to death, who had assumed the title of 
emperor. He then proceeded to the West, 
where Gaul, Britain, and Spain were still in the 
hands of Tetricus, who had been declared em- 
peror a short time before the death of Gallienus. 
Tetricus surrendered to Aurelian in a battle 
fought near Chalons. Vid. Tetricus. The em- 
peror now devoted his attention to domestic im- 
provements and reforms. Many works of public 
utility were commenced: the most important 
of all was the erection of a new line of strongly 
fortified walls, embracing a much more ample 
•ircuit than the old ones, which had long since 
fcdlen into ruin; but this vast plan was not 



| completed until the reign of Probus. After u 
short residence in the city, Aurelian visited the 
provinces on the Danube. He now entirely 
abandoned Dacia, which had been first con- 
quered by Trajan, and made the southern bank 
of the Danube, as iu the time of Augustus, the 
boundary of the empire. A large force was now 
collected in Thrace in preparation for an expe- 
dition against the Persians ; but while the em- 
peror was on the march between Heraclea and 
Byzantium, he was killed by some of his officers. 
They had been induced to conspire against him 
! by a certain Mnestheus, the freedman of the em- 
peror and his private secretary, who had betray- 
ed his trust, and, fearful of punishment, had, by 
means of forged documents, organized the con- 
spiracy. 

Aurelianus, CeiJus or Ccklius, a very cel- 
ebrated Latin physician, w r as a native of Nu- 
midia, and probably lived iu the fourth century 
after Christ. Of his writings we possess three 
books On Acute Diseases, " Celerum Passionum" 
(or "De Morbis Acutis"), and five books On 
Chronic Diseases, "Tardarum Passionum" (or 
" De Morbis Chronicis"). Edited by Amman. 
AmsteL, 1709. 

Aurelius Antoninus, M., Roman emperor, 
A.D. 161-180, commonly called "the philoso- 
pher," was born at Rome on the 20th of Aprih 
A.D. 121. He was adopted by Antoninus Pius 
immediately after the latter had been himself 
adopted by Hadrian, received the title of Caesar, 
and married Faustina, the daughter of Pius 
(138). On the death of the latter in 161, he 
succeeded to the throne, but he admitted to an 
equal share of the sovereign power L. Ceionius 
Commodus, who had been adopted by Pius at 
the same time as Marcus himself. The two 
emperors henceforward bore respectively the 
names of M. Aurelius Antoninus and L. Aure- 
lius Verus. Soon after their accession Verus 
was dispatched to the East, and for four years 
(A.D. 162-165) carried on war with great suc- 
cess against Vologeses III, king of Parthia, 
over whom his lieutenants, especially Avidius 
Cassius, gained many victories. At the con- 
clusion of the war both emperors triumphed, 
and assumed the tit'es of Armeniacus, Parthicu» 
Maximus, and Medzais. Meantime Italy was 
threatened by the numerous tribes dwelling 
along the northern limits of the empire, from 
the sources of the Danube to the Ulyrian border. 
Both emperors set out to encounter the foe; 
and the contest with the northern nations was 
continued with varying success during the 
whole life of M. Aurelius. whose head quarters 
were generally fixed in Pannonia.. After the 
death of Verus in 169, Aurelius prosecuted the 
war against the Marcomanni with great suc- 
cess, and in consequence of his victories over 
them, he assumed in 172 the title of Germani- 
cus, which he also conferred upon his son Com- 
modus. In 174 he gained a decisive victory 
over the Quadi, mainly through a violent storm, 
which threw the barbarians into confusion. 
This storm is said to have beeu owing to the 
prayers of a legion chiefly composed of Chris- 
tians. It has given rise to a famous contro- 
versy among the historians of Christianity upon 
what ia commonly termed the Miracle of the 
Thundering Legion. The Marcomanni and the 
131 



AURELIUS VICTOR. 



AUTOLYCUS. 



other northern barbarians concluded a peace 
with Aurelius in 175, who forthwith set out for 
the East, where Avidius Cassius, urged on by 
Faustina, the unworthv wife of Aurelius, had 
risen in rebellion and proclaimed himself em- 
peror. But before Aurelius reached the East, 
Cassius had been slain by his own officers. On 
his arrival in the East, Aurelius acted with the 
greatest clemency ; none of the accomplices of 
Cassius were put to death; and to establish 
perfect confidence in all, he ordered the papers 
of Cassius to be destroyed without suffering 
them to be read. During this expedition, Faus- 
tina, who had accompanied her husband, died, 
according to some, by her own hands. Aure- 
lius returned to Rome toward the end of 176 ; 
but in 178 he set out again for Germany, where 
the Marcomanni and their confederates had 
again renewed the war. He gained several 
victories over them, but died, in the middle of 
the war, on March 17th, 180, in Pannonia, either 
at Vindobona (now Vienna) or at Sirmium, in 
the fifty-ninth year of his age and twentieth of 
his reign. The leading feature in the charac- 
ter of M. Aurelius was his devotion to philoso- 
phy and literature. When only twelve years 
old, he adopted the dress and practiced the aus- 
terities of the Stoics, and he continued through- 
out his life a warm adherent and a bright orna- 
ment of the Stoic philosophy. We still possess 
a work by M. Aurelius, written in the Greek 
language, and entitled Ta etc eavroVj or Medita- 
tions, in twelve books. It is a sort of common- 
place book, in which were registered from time 
to time the thoughts and feelings of the author 
upon moral and religious topics, without an at- 
tempt at order or arrange meut. No remains of 
antiquity present a nobler view of philosophical 
heathenism. The best edition of the Meditations 
is by Gataker, Cantab., 1652, and Lond., 1697. 
The chief and perhaps the only stain upon the 
memory of Aurelius is his two persecutions of 
the Christians; in the former of which, 166, the 
martyrdom of P lycarp occurred, and in the lat- 
ter, 177, that of Irenseus. Aurelius was succeed- 
ed by his son Com modus. 

Aurelius Victor Vid, Victor. 

Aureoles, one of the Thirty Tyrants (A.D. 
260-267), who assumed the title of Augustus du- 
ring the feeble rule of Gallienus. Aureolus was 
proclaimed emperor by the legions of Illyria in 
267, and made himself master of Northern Italy, 
but he was defeated and slain in battle in 268, 
by Claudius II., the successor of Gallienus. 

[Aurixia, a prophetess, held in great venera- 
tion by the Germans, spoken of in connection 
with Veleda by Tacitus. ] 

Aurora. Vid. Eos. 

Auruncl Vid. Italia. 

AURUNCULEIUS CoTTA. Vid, COTTA. 

Ausa. Vid. Ausetanl 

[Ausar (kvaap, now Serchio), a river of Etru- 
ria, which anciently joined the Arnus; but at 
present they both flow into the sea by different 
channels.] 

_ Ausci or Ausch, a powerful people in Aquita- 
nia who possessed the Latin franchise; their cap- 
ital was called Climberrum or Elimberrum, also 
Augusta and Ausci (now Auch). 

Auseta.ni, a Spanish people in the modern 
Catalonia: their capital was Ausa (now Vique) 
132 



Ausox (Avow), son of Ulysses and Calypso or 
Circe, from whom the country of the Auruncans 
was believed to have been called Ausonia. 

Ausones, Ausonia. Vid, Italia. 

Ausonius, Declmus Magnus, a Roman poet, 
born at Burdigala (now Bov.rdeaiix), about AD. 
310, taught grammar and rhetoric with such 
reputation at his native town that he was ap- 
pointed tutor of Gratian, son of the Emperor 
Valentinian, and was afterward raised to the 
highest honors of the state. He was appointed 
by Gratian praefectus of Latium, of Libya, and 
of Gaul, and. in 379 was elevated to the consul- 
ship. After the death of Gratian in 383, he 
retired from public life, and ended his days in a 
country retreat near Bourdeaux, perhaps about 
390. It is most probable that he was a Chris- 
tian and not a heathen. His extant works are, 
1. Epigrammatiim Liber, a collection of one 
hundred and fifty epigrams. — 2. Ephemeris, con- 
taining an account of the business and proceed- 
ings of a day. — 3 Parentalia, a series of short 
poems, dedicated to the memory of deceased 
friends and relations, and commemorating their 
virtues. — 4. Professores, notices of the Profes- 
sors of Bordeaux. — 5. Epitaphia Heroum, epi- 
taphs on the heroes who fell in the Trojan war 
and a few others. — 6. A metrical catalogue of 
the first twelve Caesars. — 7. Tetrasticha, on the 
Caesars from Julius to Elagabalus. — 8. Clares 
Urbes. the praises of fourteen illustrious cities. 
— 9. Ludns Septem Sapientum, the doctrines of 
the seven sages expounded by each in his own 
person. — 10. Idyllia, a collection of twenty 
poems. — 11. Eclogarium, short poems connected 
with the Calendar, &c. — 12. Epistolce, twenty- 
five letters, some in verse and some in prose. — 
13. Gratiarum Actio pro Consulatu,'m prose, ad- 
dressed to Gratian. — 14. Periochw, short argu- 
ments to each book of the Iliad and Odyssey. — 
15. Tres Prcefatiunculce. Of these works the 
Idyls have attracted most notice, and of them the 
most pleasing is the Mosella, or a description of 
the River Moselle. Ausonius possesses skill in 
versification, but is destitute of all the higher at- 
tributes of a poet. The best edition of his com- 
plete works is by Tollius, Amstel., 1671. 

Auster, called Notus (Nooc) by the Greeks, 
the south wind, or strictly the southwest wind, is 
personified as the god of the south wind, son of 
Astraeus and Eos (Aurora). It frequently brought 
with it fogs and rain ; but at certain seasons of 
the year it was a dry, sultry wind (hence called 
plumbeus Auster, Hor., Sat., ii., 6, 18), injurious 
both to man and to vegetation, the Sirocco of the 
modern Italians. 

Autariat-iE (AvTapLarai), an Illyrian people 
in the Dalmatian mountains, extinct in Stiabo's 
time. 

Autesiodorum, -URUM (now Auzerre), a town 
of the Senones in Gallia Lugdunensis. 

Autesion (Avreatuv), son of Tisamenus, father 
of Theras and Argia, left Thebes at the command 
of an oracle, and joined the Dorians in Pelopon- 
nesus. 

Autochthones (avroxdovec). Vid, Aborigi- 
nes. 

Autololes, or -js. (kvro/.o/.aL) a Gaetulian tribe 
on the western coast of Africa, south of the Atlas 
Mountains. 

Autolycus (Avto/iVkoc). 1. Son of Mercury 



AUTOMALA. 



AVIENUS, RUFUS. 



(Hermes) and Cbione, father of Anticlea, and 
thus maternal grandfather of Ulysses. He lived 
on Mount Parnassus, and was renowned for his 
cunning and robberies. Ulysses, when staying 
with him on one occasion, was wounded by a 
boar on Parnassus, and it was by the scar of 
this wound that he was recognized by his aged 
nurse when he returned from Troy. — 2. A Thes- 
salian, son of Deimachus, one of the Argonauts, 
and the founder of Sinope. — 3. A mathematician 
of Pitane in JEolis, lived about B.C. 340, and 
wrote two astronomical treatises, which are the 
most ancient existing specimens of the Greek 
mathematics. — 1. On the Motion of the Sphere 
(Ttepl KtvovjuevTjg ctyaipac). — 2. On the risings and 
settings of the fixed stars (irepl eTUToltiv nal 
dvaeuv). Edited by Dasypodius in his Sphceri- 
cce Doctrince Propositiones, Argent., 1572. 

Automala (rd A.vTOfia?«a), a fortified place on 
the Great Syrtis iu Northern Africa. 

AuTOMEnoN (Avrofiedcov). 1. Son of Diores, 
the charioteer and companion of Achilles, and, 
after the death of the latter, the companion of 
his son Pyrrhus. Hence Automedon is the 
name of any skillful charioteer. (Cic, pro Bosc. 
Am., 35 ; Juv., i., 61.) — 2. Of Cyzicus, a Greek 
poet, twelve of whose epigrams are in the Greek 
Anthology, lived in the reign of Nerva, A.D. 
96-98. 

AutomSli (Avt6uo?.ol), as a proper name, was 
applied to the Egyptian soldiers, who were said 
to have deserted from Psammetichus into JSthi- 
opia, where they founded the kingdom of Meroe. 

Autonoe (Avtoioi/). 1. Daughter of Cadmus 
and Harmonia, wife of Aristaeus, and mother 
of Actaeon. With her sister Agave, she tore 
Pentheus to pieces in their Bacchic fury: her 
tomb was shown in the territory of Megara. — 
[2. A handmaid of Penelope, mentioned in the 
Odyssey.] 

Autrigoxes, a people in Hispania Tarraeo- 
nensis, between the ocean (Bay of Biscay) and 
the upper course of the Iberus : their chief town 
was Flaviobriga. 

AuTRONIUS P-STITS. Vid. P.ETUS. 

Auxesia (Av^ncia), the goddess who grants 
growth and prosperity to the fields, honored at 
Trcezen and Epidaurus, was another name for 
Proserpina (Persephone). Damia, who was 
honored along with Auxesia at EjDidaurus and j 
Trcezen, was only another name for Ceres (De- 1 
meter.) 

Auximum (Auximas, -atis : now Osimo), an 
important town of Picenum in Italy, and a Ro- 
man colony. 

Auxume or Ax- (Aitjovfiq or 'A&fin, and other 
forms : Av^ov/uraL or 'A^ujxlrai, &c. : now Ax- 
tim, ruins southwest of Adowa), the capital of a 
powerful kingdom in ^Ethiopia, to the southwest 
of Meroe, in ffabesh or Abyssinia, which either 
first arose or first became known to the Greeks 
and Romans in the early part of the second cen- 
tury of our era. It grew upou the decline of 
the kingdon of Meroe, and extended beyond the 
Straits of Bab-cl-Mondeb into Arabia. * Being a 
mountainous region, watered by the numerous 
upper streams of the Astaboras and Astapus, 
and intersected by the caravan routes from the 
interior of Africa to the Red Sea and the Gulf 
of Bab-t.'1-Mandeb, the country possessed great 
internal resources and a flourishing commerce. 



Auzea, or -ia, or Audia (now Sur-Guzlan or 
Hamza, ruins), a city in the interior of Maure 
tania Cassariensis ; a Roman colony under Mar- 
cus Aurclius Antoninus. 

Avalites (AvaXirne : now Zeilah), an empo- 
rium in Southern ^Ethiopia, on a bay of the 
Erythraean Sea, called Avalites Sinus ('A. koX- 
TToe), probably the Gulf of Bab-el-Mandeb, or its 
innermost part, south of the Straits. A people, 
Avalitae, are also mentioned iu these parts. 

AVARICUM. Vid. BlTURIGES. 

Avella. Vid. Abella. 

Avenio (now Avignon), a town of the Cavares, 
in Gallia ISTarbonensis, on the left bank of the 
Rhone. 

Aventicum (now Avenches), the chief town of 
the Helvetii, and subsequently a Roman colony 
with the name Pia Fiavia Constans Emerita, of 
which ruins are still to be seen in the modern 
town. 

Aventinensis, Genucius. 1. L., consul B.C. 
365, and again 362, was killed in battle against 
the Hernicans in the latter of these years, and 
his army routed. — 2. Cx., consul 363. 

Aventinus, son of Hercules and the priestess 
Rhea. 

Aventinus Mons. Vid. Roma. 

Avernus Lacus (?) "Aopvog ?uuvn: now Logo 
Averno), a lake close to the promontory which 
runs out into the sea between Cumae and Pu- 
teoli. This lake fills the crater of an extinct 
volcano : it is circular, about one and a half 
miles in circumference, is very deep, and is sur- 
rounded by high banks, which in antiquity were 
covered by a gloomy forest sacred to Hecate. 
From its waters mephitic vapors arose, which 
are said to have killed the birds that attempted 
to fly over it, from which circumstance its 
Greek name was supposed to be derived (from 
a, priv., and bpvic). The lake was celebrated 
in mythology on account of its connection with 
the lower world. On its banks dwelt the Cim- 
merians in constant darkness, and near it was 
the cave of the Cumaaan Sibyl, through which 
iEneas descended to the lower world. Agrippa, 
in the time of Augustus, cut down ther forest 
which surrounded the lake, and connected the 
latter with the Lncrine Lake ; he also caused 
a tunnel to be made from the lake to Cumae, of 
which a considerable part remains, and is known 
under the title of Grotta di Sibylla. The Lu- 
crine Lake was filled up by an eruption in 1530, 
so that Avernus is again a separate lake. 

Avianus, Flavius, the author of forty-two 
./Esopic fables in Latin elegiac verse, which are 
of very little merit both as respects the matter 
and the style. The date of Avianus is uncer- 
tain; he probably lived in the third or fourth 
century of the Christian era. — Editions: By 
Cannegieter, Amstel., 1731 ; by Nbdell, Amstel., 
1787 ; and by Lachmann, BeroL, 1845. 

[Avidius Cassius. Vid. Cassius.] 

Avienus, Rufus Festus, a Latin poet toward 
the end of the fourth century of the Christian 
era. His poems are chiefly descriptive, and are 
some of the best specimens of the poetry of 
that age. His works are, 1. Bescriptio Orbis 
Terrce, also called Metaphrasis Periegeseos Bio- 
nysii, in 1394 hexameter lines, derived directly 
from the Trepi^ynaic of Dionysius, and containing 
a sueeinet account of the most remarkable ob- 
133 



ALVIONES. 



BABYLON. 



iects in the physical and political geography of 
the known world.— 2. Ora Maritima, a fragment 
in 70S iambic trimeters, describing the shores 
of the Mediterranean from Marseilles to Cadiz. 

3. Aratea Phenomena and Aratea Prognostic^ 

both in hexameter verse, the first containing 
1325, the second 552 lines, being a paraphrase 
of the two works ofAratus. The poems are 
edited by Wernsdorf, in his Poetce Latini Mino- 
res, vol. v., pt. ii. ; which, however, does not in- 
clude the Aratea : [reprinted, with the addition 
of the Aratea, by Lemaire, in the fifth volume of 
his Poeton Latini Minor -es, Paris, 1824-26.] 

Aviones, a people in the north of Germany, 
whose position is uncertain. 

AvItds, Alphius, a Latin poet under Augustus 
and Tiberius, the fragments of some of whose 
poems are preserved in the Anthologia Lotina. 

Avitus, Cluextius. Vid. Cluextius. 

Avitus, M. Macules, Emperor of the West, 
was raised to the throne by the assistance of 
Theodoric It, king of the Visigoths, in A.D. 
455 ; but, after a years reign, was deposed by 
Ricimer. 

[Axantos, another name of Uxantis (now 
Ouessant), on the northwestern coast of Gallia.] 

[Axellodunum (now JBrugh ?), a castle of the 
Brigantes in Britannia.] 

Axexus. Vid. Euxixus Pontus. 

Axia (now Castell (FAsso), a fortress in the 
territory of Tarquinii in Etruria. 

Axiox ('Aijtov), sou of Phegeus, brother of 
Temenus, along with whom he killed Alcma3on. 

[Axroxlcus (JA^ioviKog), an Athenian poet of 
the middle comedy, of whose plays only a few 
fragments have been preserved in Athenams : 
these are published collectively in Meineke's 
Fragmenta Comic. Grcec, vol. ii., p. 769-72, edit, 
minor.] 

Axiothea ('AijLodca), a maiden of Phlius, who 
eame to Athens, and, putting on male attire, was 
for some time a hearer of Plato, and afterward 
of Speusippus. 

Axius, Q., an intimate friend of Cicero and 
Varro, one of the speakers in the third book of 
Varro's De Re Rustica. 

Axius £*A|40f : now Wardar or Vardhari), the 
chief river in Macedonia, rises in Mount Sear- 
dus, receives many affluents, of which the most 
important is the Erigon, and flows southeast 
through Macedonia into the Thermaic Gulf. As 
a river-god, Axius begot by Peribcea a son, Pel- 
agon, the father- of Asteuof.eus. 

Axoxa (now Aisne), a river in Gallia Belgiea. 
which falls into the Isara (now Oise). 

Axume. Vid. Auxume. 

[Axes ('A toe), capital of a small kingdom in 
Crete.] 

[Axvlus (*A£u%o?), a Thracian prince, men- 
tioned in the Iliad, son of Teuthranus, slain by 
Diomedes.] 

Azax ('A£dv), sou of Areas and the nymph 
Erato, brother of Aphidas and Elatus. The part 
of Arcadia which he received from his father 
was called Azarda : it was on the borders of 
Elis. 

Azan'1 {'kCavoi : 'ACavtTr,c), a town of Phrygia, 
on the River Rhyndacus, and twenty miles south- 
west of Cotyaeiura (now Kiutayah). The ruins of 
■columns, capitals, and other architectural frag- 
ments are scattered over the ground. There 
134 



are also the remains of a splendid temple and 
of a theatre. This ancient site was discovered 

by Mr. Keppel. 

Azania or Barbaria ('A^avia, BapBapia : now 
Ajan), the region on the eastern coast of Afri- 
ca, south of Aromata Promontorium (now Cape 
Guardafui), as far as Rhaptum Promontoriuic 
(now Cape Formosa ?). 

Azexia ('A&vta : 'A&vtevc), a demus in the 
southwest of Attica, near Sunium, belonging to 
the tribe Hippothoontis. 

A zeus ('Afrvc), son of Clymenus of Orchome- 
nos, brother of Erginus, Stratius, Arrhon, and 
Pyleus, father of Actor and grandfather of Ae- 
tyoche. 

[Aziras ('A&pig in Hdt., or *A£i?uc in CalL : 
now Temmineh), a city of Marmarica in Africa, 
opposite to the island of Platea, and founded by 
the Therseans.] 

Az6e.us or Azorium ("A^opoc, 'A&piov : 'A£i«- 
! ptTWC) 'A£up turns, 'A&psvc), a town in the north 
of Thessaly, on the western slope of Olympus, 
formed, with Doliche and Pythium, the Perrhsp- 
bian Tripolis. 

Azotus (*A&toc : 'A&rtoc : now Ashdod or 
Ashdoud), a city of Palestine, near the sea-coast, 
nine miles northeast of Ascalon. It was one 
of the free cities of the Philistines, which were 
included within the portion of the tribe of Judak 



R 



Babrius (BuOpioe), a Greek poet, probably is 
the time of Augustus, turned the fables of iEsop 
into verse, of which only a few fragments were 
known till within the last few years, when a 
manuscript containing one hundred aud twenty- 
three fables was discovered on Mount Athos. 
Edited by Lachmann, Berol., 1845 ; by Orelli 
and Baiter, Turic, 1845 : by Lewis, Lond., 1847. 

Babylon (Ba6v?,6v : Ba6v?Mvtoc, fern. Badv- 
z.uvtr : Babel in Old Testament : ruins at and 
around Hillah), one of the oldest and greatest 
cities of the ancient world, the capital of a great 
empire, was built on both sides of the River 
Euphrates, in about 32° 28' north latitude. Its 
foundation, and the establishment of a kingdom 
by Nimrod, with the city for a capital, are 
among the first recorded facts subsequent tc 
the Deluge (Gen., x., 9, 10; xi., 1-10). Secu- 
lar history ascribes its origin to Belu3 (i. e., 
the god Baal), and its enlargement and decora- 
tion to Ninus, or his wife Semiramis ; or, accord 
! ing to another tradition, the country was 6ub- 
j dued by Ninus, and the city was subsequently 
j built by Semiramis, who made it the capital of 
| the Assyrian empire. At all events, it is pretty 
clear that Babylon was subject to the Assyr- 
ian kings of Nineveh from a very early period j 
and the time at which the governors of Babylon 
first succeeded in making themselves virtually 



independent, can not be determined with any 
eertainty until we know more of the history 
of the early Assyrian dynasties. Compare Na 
bonassar. The Babylonian empire begins with 
the reign of Nabopolassar, the father of Nebu- 
chadnezzar, who, with the aid of the Mediae 
king Cyaxares, overthrew the Assyrian mon- 
archy, and destroyed Nineveh (B.C. 606), and 
soon afterward defended his kingdom against 
the aggressions (at first successful) of Necho. 



BABYLON. 



BACCHIAD./E. 



king of Egypt, in the battle of Circesium, B.C. 
•604. Under his son and successor, Nebuchad- 
nezzar (B.C. 604-562), the Babylonian empire 
reached its height, and extended from the Eu- 
phrates to Egypt, and from the mountains of 
Armenia to the deserts of Arabia. After his 
death it again declined, until it was overthrown 
by the capture of Babylon by the Medes and 
Persians under Cyrus (B.C. 538), who made the 
city one of the capitals of the Persian empire, 
the others being Susa and Ecbatana. Under 
his successors the city rapidly sank. Darius I. 
dismantled its fortifications, in consequence of a 
revolt of its inhabitants ; Xerxes carried off 
the golden statue of Belus, and the temple in 
which it stood became a ruin. After the death 
of Alexander, Babylon became a part of the 
Syrian kingdom of Seleucus Nicator, who con- 
tributed to its decline by the foundation of Se- 
leucta on the Tigris, which soon eclipsed it. 
At the commencement of our era, the greater 
part of the city was in ruins ; and at the pres- 
ent day, all its visible remains consist of mounds 
of earth, ruined masses of brick walls, and a 
few scattered fragments. Its very site has 
been turned into a dreary marsh by repeated in- 
undations from the river. The city of Babylon 
had reached the summit of its magnificence in 
the reign of Nebuchadnezzar. It formed a 
square, each side of which was one hundred 
and twenty stadia (twelve geographical miles) 
in length. The walls, of burned brick, were 
two hundred cubits high and fifty thick; in 
them were two hundred and fifty towers and 
sixty bronze gat<* ; and they were surrounded 
by a deep ditch. The Euphrates, which divided 
the city into two equal parts, was embanked 
with walls of brick, the openings of which, at 
the ends of the transverse streets, were closed by 
gates of bronze. A bridge, built on piers of 
hewn stone, united the two quarters of the city ; 
and at each end of it stood a royal palace : these 
erections were ascribed to Semiramis. Of two 
other public buildings of the greatest celebrity, 
the one was the temple of Belus, rising to a 
great height, and consisting of eight stories, 
gradually diminishing in width, and ascended by 
a flight of 6teps, which wound round the whole 
buildiug on the outside ; in the uppermost story 
was the golden statue of Belus, with a golden 
altar and other treasures : this building also 
was ascribed to Semi ram k The other edifice 
referred to was the " hanging gardens" of 
Nebuchadnezzar, hud out. upon terraces which 
were raised above one another on arches. The 
houses of the city were three or four stories in 
height, and the Greets were straight, intersect- 
ing one auother at right angles. The buildings 
were almost universally constructed of bricks, 
some burned, and pome only sun-dried, cemented 
together with hob bitumen, aud in some cases 
with mortar. The Babylonians were certainly a 
Semitic race ; but the ruling class, to which the 
kings, and priests, aud the men of learning be- 
longed, were the Chaldasans, whose origin* aud 
.&f£uities%ire somewhat doubtful; the most 
probable opiniou, however, is that they were a 
tribe of invaders, who descended from the 
mountains on the borders of Armenia, and con- 
quered the Babylonians. The religion of the 
*Chaldo>anst was Sabaism. or the worship of the 



heavenly bodies, not purely so, but symbolized 
in the forms of idols, besides whom they had 
other divinities, representing the powers of na- 
ture. The priests formed a caste, and culti- 
vated science, especially astronomy ; in which 
they knew the apparent motions of the sun, 
moon, and five of the planets, the calculation of 
eclipses of the moon, the division of the zodiac 
into twelve constellations, and of the year into 
twelve months, aud the measurement of time by 
the sun-dial. They must also have had other in- 
struments for measuring time, such as the water- 
clock, for instance ; and it is highly probable 
that the definite methods of determining such 
quantities, which the Chaldasan astronomers in 
vented, were the origin of the systems of 
weights and measures used by the Greeks and 
Romans. Their buildings prove their knowledge 
of mechanics ; and their remains, slight as they 
are, show considerable progress in the fine arts. 
The Babylonian government was an unlimited 
monarchy ; the king appears to have lived in 
almost total seclusion from his people, sur- 
rounded by his court ; aud Ihe provinces were 
administered by governors, like the Persian sa- 
traps, responsible only to the monarch, whose 
commands they obeyed or defied according to 
his strength or weakness. The position of the 
city on the lower course of the Euphrates, by 
which it was connected with the Persian Gulf, 
and at the meeting of natural routes between 
Eastern Asia and India on the one side, and 
Europe, Asia Minor, Syria, Egypt, and Arabia 
on the other, made it the seat of a flourish- 
ing commerce, and of immense wealth and lux- 
ury. The district around the city, bounded by 
the Tigris on the east, Mesopotamia on the 
north, the Arabian Desert on the west, and ex- 
tending to the head of the Persian Gulf on the 
south, wa3 known in later times by the name of 
Babylonia (now Irak Arabi), sometimes also 
called Chaldrea, But compare Chald^ea. This 
district was a plain, subject to continual inunda- 
tions from the Tigris and Euphrates, which 
were regulated by canals, the chief of which 
was the Naarmalcha, i. e., Royal River or Caned 
(-Korau.be fiao'&eioc, 6i6pv% !3aot,?.iK7}, flumen re- 
gium), which extended from the Tigris at Se- 
leucia' due west to the Euphrates, and was navi- 
gable. The country was fertile, but deficient 
in trees. 

| Babylon (Ba6vl6v : near Fostat or Old Cairo), 
\ a fortress in Lower Egypt, on the right bank of 
! the Nile, exactly opposite to the pyramids, and 
j at the beginning of the canal which connected 
! the Nile with the Red Sea. Its origin was as- 
! cribed by tradition to a body of Babylonian de- 
j serters. " It first became an important place 
i under the Romans. Augustus made it the sta- 
| tiou of one of the three Egyptian legions. 
I Babylonia. Vid. Babylon. 
j Bacch.e (BaKxai), also called Mamades and 
] Thyiades. 1. The female companions of Diony- 
sus or Baeehu3 in his wanderings through the 
East, are represented as crowned with vine 
! leaves, clothed with fawn skins, and carrying in 
I their hands the thyrsus (vid. Diet, of Ant., s. v.). 
! — 2. Priestesses of Bacchus (Dionysus), who, by 
! wiue and other exciting causes, worked them 
i selves up to phrensy at the Dionysiac festivals. 
Baochiad/e (BcKViCif/ai), an Heraclid clan, de 
135 



BACCHIUM. 



BAGOAS. 



rived their names from Bacchis, king of Corinth, 
and retained the supreme rule in that state, first 
under a monarchical form of government, and 
next as a close oligarchy, till their deposition by 
Cypselus, about B.C. 657. They were, for the 
most part, driven into banishment, and are said 
to have taken refuge in different parts of Greece 
and even Italy. 

[BAcmivrst\BaKxelov), an island in the iEgean 
Sea, lying before the harbor of the city Phocaea, 
beautifully adorned with temples and works of 
art, which were destroyed by the Romans under 
JEmilius. B.C. 190.] 

Bacchius (BaKxelog). 1. The author of a short 
musical treatise called eloayayq rexvqc uovaKr/e, 
printed by Meibomius. in the Antiquce Musicce 
Auctores Septem, Amst., 1 652. — 2. Of Tanagra in 
Boeotia, one of the earliest commentators on the 
writiugs of Hippocrates : his writings have per- 
ished. — 3. Of Miletus, the author of a work on 
agriculture. 

Bacchus. Vid. Dionysus. 
Bacchylides (BaKxv?udi]g), one of the great ly- 
ric poets of Greece, born at Iulis in Ceos, and ne- 
phew as well as fellow-townsman of Simonides. 
He flourished about B.C. 470, and lived a long 
time at the court of Hiero in Syracuse, together 
with Simonides and Pindar. He wrote in the 
Doric dialect Hymns, Pfeans, Dithyrambs, &c. ; 
but all his poems have perished, with the ex- 
ception of a few fragments, and two epigrams in 
the Greek Anthology. The fragments have 
been published by .Neue, Bacchylides Cei Frag- 
menta, Berol., 1823, and by Bergk, Poetce Zyrici 
Graci, p. 820. 

Bacenis Silva, a forest which separated the 
Suevi from the Cherusci, probably the western 
part of the Thuringian Forest. 

Bacis (Buklc), the name of several prophets, 
of whom the most celebrated was the Boeotian 
seer, who delivered his oracles in hexameter 
verse at Heleon in Bceotia. In later times there 
existed a collection of his oracles, similar to the 
Sibylline books at Rome. 

Bactra or Zariaspa (to. Bdnrpa, ru ZapiaaTra 
and jj Zapida-nrj : now BalJch), the capital of 
Bactria, appears to have been founded by the 
early Persian kings, but not to have been a con- 
siderable city till the time of Alexander, who 
settled in it his Greek mercenaries and his dis- 
abled Macedonian soldiers. It stood at the 
northern foot of the Mount Paropamisus (the 
Hindoo Koosh), on the River Baetrus (now Adir- 
siah or Dehas), about twenty-five miles south of 
its junction with the Oxus. It was the centre of 
a considerable traffic. The existing ruins, twenty 
miles in circuit, are all of the Mohammedan 
period. 

Bactria or -iana (Bartrptav?} : BaK-poc, -ioi, 
-lavoi : now Bokhara), a province of the Persian 
empire, bounded on the south by Mount Paropa- 
misus, which separated it from Ariana, on the 
east by the northern branch of the same range, 
which divided it from the Saca?, on the northeast 
by the Oxus, which separated it from Sogdiana, 
and on the west by Margiana. It was inhab- 
ited by a rude and warlike people, who were 
subdued by Cyrus or his next successors. It 
was included in the conquests of Alexander, 
and formed a part of the kingdom of the Seleu- 
cidse until B.C. 255, when Theodotus, its gov- 



ernor, revolted from Antiochus II, and founded 
the Greek kingdom of Bactria, which lasted 
till B.C. 134 or 125, when it was overthrown 
by the Parthians, with whom, during its whole 
duration, its kings were sometimes at war, and 
sometimes in alliance against Syria. This Greek 
kingdom extended beyond the limits of the 
province of Bactria, and included at least a 
part of Sogdiana. Bactria was watered by 
the Oxus and its tributaries, and contained 
much fertile land; and much of the .com- 
merce between Western Asia and India passed 
through it. 

[Bactrus (Batc-pog), a river of Bactria. Vid, 
Bactria.] 

[Bacuntius (now Bosmth), a river of Lower 
Pannonia, which empties into the Savus near 
Sirmium.] 

Baduhenn^e Lucus, a wood in "Western Fries - 
land. 

B.ebia Gens, plebeian, the most important 
members of which are given under their sur- 
names, Dives, Suxca, Tamphilus. 

B^ecula, a town in Hispania Tarraconensis, 
west of Castulo, in the neighborhood of silver 
mines. 

[B^elon. Vid. Belon.] 

[B^esippo (now Porto Barbato), a harbor on 
Junonis Promontorium, not far from Gades, in 
Hispania Baetica.] 

B-iETERRiE (now Beziers) also called Biterrex- 
sis urbs, a town in Gallia ISTarbonensis, on the 
Obris, not far from JSarbo, and a Roman colony : 
its neighborhood produced good wine. 

Baetica. Vid. Hispania. 

B.etis (now Guadalquiver), a river in South- 
ern Spain, formerly called Tartessus, aud by the 
inhabitants Certis, rises in Hispania Tarraconen- 
sis, in the territory of the Oretani, flows south- 
west through Bsetica, to which it gives its name, 
past the cities of Corbuda and Hispalis, and faUs 
into the Atlantic Ocean by two mouths, north of 
Gades. 

[B^eturia (Bairovpla), the northwestern part 
of Baetica, between the Anas and Mount Ma- 
rianus.] 

Bagacum (now Bavai), the chief town of the 
Nervii in Gallia Belgica : there are many Roman 
remains in the modern town. 

Bagaud^e, a Gallic people, who revolted under 
Diocletian, and were with difficulty subdued by 
Maximiaa A.D. 286. 

[Bagistanus Mons (to Baylaravov opoc), a 
mountain range in Media, southeast of Ecbat- 
ana, and made by the Greeks sacred to Jupi- 
ter: the region around was called Bagistana. 
This mountain is now more correctly termed 
the " sacred rock of Behistun." According to 
the ancients, it had the figure of Semiramis cut 
upon it, with a Syrian inscription ; but Major 
Rawlinson has shown that the inscription on 
the rock was executed by order of Dariu3 Hys- 
j taspis.] 

Bagoas {Bayuac), a eunuch, highly trusted 
and favored by Artaxerxes III. (Ochns), whom 
he poisoned B.C. 338. He was put llPdeath by 
Darius III. Codomannus, whom he had attempted 
likewise to poison, 336. The name Bagoas fre- 
quently occurs in Persian histoiy, and is some- 
times used by Latin writers as synonymous with 
a eunuch. 



BAGRADAS. 



BARBARI. 



Bagradas (Baypudae : now Myerdah), a river 
of Northern Africa, falling into the Gulf of Car- 
thage near Utica. 

Bal*; (Baianus), a town in Campania, on a 
small bay west of Naples, and opposite Puteoli, 
was situated in a beautiful country, which 
abounded in warm mineral springs. The baths 
of Baiae were the most celebrated in Italy, and 
the town itself was the favorite watering-place 
of the Romans, who flocked thither in crowds 
for health and pleasure ; it was distinguished 
by licentiousness and immorality. The whole 
country was studded with the palaces of the 
Roman nobles and emperors, which covered 
the coast from Baiae to Puteoli : many of these 
palaces were built out into the sea. (Hor., 
Carm., ii., 18, 20.) The site of ancient Baiae 
is now, for the most part, covered by the sea. 

[Balan.ea, (Balavaia : now Banias), a city of 
Syria, on the coast, north of Aradus, by Ste- 
phanus Byzantinus assigned to Phoenicia,] 

[Balbillus, made governor of Egypt by Nero, I 
and wrote an account of that province.] 

Balbinus, D. Cjelius, was elected emperor 
by the 6enate along with M. Clodius Pupienus 
Maximus, after the murder of the two Gordians 
in Africa at the beginning of A.D. 238 ; but the 
new emperors were slain by the soldiers at 
Rome in June in the same year. 

Balbus, M\ Acilius, the name of two con- 
suls, one in B.C. 150, and the other in 114. 

Balbus, T. Ampius, tribune of the plebs B.C. 
63, was a supporter of Pompey, whom he join- 
ed in the civil war B.C. 49. He was pardoned 
by Caesar through the intercession of Cicero, j 
who wrote to him on the occasion (ad Fam., ' 
vi, 12). 

Balbus, M. Atius, of Aricia, married Julia, j 
the sister of Julius Caesar, who bore him a j 
daughter, Atia, the mother of Augustus Caesar, j 

Balbus, L. Cornelius. 1. Of Gades, served! 
under Q. Metellus and Pompey against Serto- 
rius in Spain, and received from Pompey the j 
Roman citizenship. He accompanied Pompey | 
on his return to Rome, B.C. 71, and was for a 
long time one of his most intimate friends. At 
the same time he gained the friendship of Caesar, 
who placed great confidence in him. As the 
friend of Caesar and Pompey, he had numerous 
enemies, who accused him in 56 of having ille- 
gally assumed the Roman citizenship ; he was 
defended by Cicero, whose speech has come 
down to us, and was acquitted. In the civil 
war, 49, Balbus did not take any open part 
against Pompey ; but he attached himself to 
Caesar, and, in conjunction with Oppius, had 
the entire management of Caesar's affairs at 
Rome. After the death of Caesar (44) he was 
equally successful in gaining the favor of Oeta- 
vianus, who raised him to the consulship in 40. 
Balbus wrote a diary (Ephemeris), which has 
not come down to us, of the most remarkable j 
occurrences in Caesar's life. He took care that j 
Caesar's Commentaries on the Gallic war should j 
be continued ; and we accordingly find the eighth ; 
book dedic^ed to him. — 2. Nephew of the pre- 
ceding, received the Roman franchise along 
with his uncle. He served under Caesar in the 
civil war ; he was quaestor to Asiuius Pollio in 
Further Spain in B.C. 43, and while there add- 
ed to his native town, Gades, a suburb ; many 



years afterward he was proconsul of Africa, and 
triumphed over the Garamantes in 1). He 
built a maguificcut theatre at Rome, which was 
dedicated in 13. 

Balbus, LucilIus. 1. L., a jurist, and broth- 
er of the following. — 2. Q.., a Stoic philosopher, 
and a pupil of Pansetius, is introduced by Cicero 
as one of the speakers in his Be Natura Deorum. 

Balbus, Octavius, a contemporary of Cicero, 
bore a high character as a judex ; he was put 
to death by the triumvirs, B.C. 43. 

Balbus, Sp. Thorius, tribune of the plebs 
about B.C. Ill, proposed an agrarian law. Vid. 
Bid. of Ant., art. Lex T«oria. 

Baleares {BaleapUeg, Ba/uapidec), also calk 
ed GymnesLe (Tv/uvnotai) by the Greeks, two 
islands in the Mediterranean, off the coast of 
Spain, distinguished by the epithets Major and 
Minor, whence their modern names Majorca and 
Minorca. They w r ere early known to the Car- 
thaginians, who established settlements there 
for the purposes of trade ; they afterward re- 
ceived colonies from Rhodes ; and their popula- 
tion was at a later time of a very mixed kind. 
Their inhabitants, also called Baleares, were 
celebrated as slingers, and were employed as 
such in the armies of the Carthaginians and 
Romans. Iu consequence of their piracies they 
provoked the hostility of the Romans, and were 
finally subdued, B.C. 123, by Q. Metellus, who 
assumed, accordingly, the surname Balearicus. 

Balista, prefect of the praetorians under Va- 
lerian, whom he accompanied to the East. Aft- 
er the defeat and capture of that emperor (A. 
D. 260), he rallied a body of Roman troops and 
defeated the Persians in Cilicia. His subse- 
quent career is obscure ; he is mentioned as 
one of the thirty tyrants, and was probably put 
to death, about 264, by Odenathus. 

[Balius (Ba/uoc), one of the horses of Achil- 
les, offspring of Zephyrus and the harpy Po- 
darge.] 

[Balsa and Balsa Felix (now Tavira), a city 
of Lusitania. 

Bambalio, M. Fulvius, father of Fulvia, the 
wife of M. Antonius, the triumvir, received the 
nickname of Bambalio, on account of a hesitancy 
in his speech. 

Bambyce. Vid. Hierapolis. 

Banasa (now Mamora ? ruins), a city of Mau- 
retania Tingitana, on the River Subur (now 
Sebou), near the western coast: a colony un- 
der Augustus, Valentia Banasa. 

BandusLe Fons (now Sambuco), a fountain in 
Apulia, six miles from Venusia. (Hor., Carm., 
iii., 13.) 

Bantia (Bantinus : now Banzi or Vanzi), a 
town in Apulia, near Venusia, in a woody dis- 
trict (salius Bantini, Hor. Carm., iii., 4, 15) : 
[near this place Marcellus fell a victim to the 
well-laid plans of Hannibal.] 

[Baphyras (Ba<pvpac), a river of Pieria, in 
Macedonia, empties into the Thermaic Gulf.] 

Barbana (now Bojana), a river in Illyria, 
flows through the Palus Labeatis. 

Barbari (Bdp6apot), the name given by the 
Greeks to all foreigners whose language was 
not Greek, and who were therefore regarded by 
the Greeks as an inferior race. The Romans 
applied the name to all people who spoke neither 
Greek nor Latin. 

137 



BARBARIA. 



BASSUS. 



Barbakia. lid. Abasia. 

[Babbaeium Pbomontorium (now Cabo de Es- 
vichel), a promontory of Lusitania, just below 
the mouth of the Tagus.] 

Baebatio, commander of the household troop3 
under Gallus. whom he arrested by command of 
Constantius, A.D. 354. In 355 he was made 
general of the infantry, and sent into Gaul to 
assist Julian against the Alemanni He was 
put to death by Constantius in 359. 

Babbatcs, M. Hoeatius, consul B.C. 449 with 
Valerius Publicola after the overthrow of the 
decemvirs. Vid. Publicola. 

Baelesula, a city and river (now Gnadiaro) 
in Hispania Bsetica, on the coast, north of Calpe.j 

Babbosthenes, a mountain east of Sparta. 

Baebula, jEmilius. 1. Q., consul B.C. 317, 
when he subdued Apulia, and consul again in 
311, when he fought against the Etruscans. — 2. 
L, consul in 281, canned on war against the Ta- 
rentines, Samnites, and Sallentines. — 3. M., consul 
in 230, carried on war against the Ligurians. 

Baeca, the surname of Haxiilcae, the father 
of Hannibal, is probably the same as the Hebrew 
Barak, which signifies lightning. His family 
wa3 distinguished subsequently as the " Barcine 
family/' and the demoeratieal party, which sup- 
ported this family, as the " Barciue party." 

Baeca or -e (Buptj] : BapKirrjc, Bapaalor, Bar- 
que). 1. (Now Merjeh, ruins), the second city 
of Cyrenaica, in northern Africa, one hundred 
stadia (ten geographical miles) from the sea, 
appears to have been at first a settlement of a 
Libyan tribe, the Barcsei, but about B.C. 560 
was colonized by the Greek seceders from Cy- 
rene, and became so powerful as to make the 
western part of Cyrenaica virtually independent 
of the mother city. In B.C. 510 it was taken 
by the Persians, who removed most of its inhab- 
itants to Bactria, aud under the Ptolemies its 
ruin was completed by the erection of its port 
into a new city, which was named Ptolemais, 
and which took the place of Barca as one of the 
cities of the Cyrena'ic Peutapolis. — 2. A town in 
Bactria, peopled by the removed inhabitants of 
the Cyrenaie Barca. 

Barcino (now Barcelona), a town of the Lale- 
tani, in Hispania Tarraconensis, afterward a 
Roman colony : the town was not large, but it 
possessed an excellent harbor. 

Bardan-es. Vid. Aesaces XXI. 

Baedylis or Baedyllis (Bdpdv'/.ir, Bdp6v'/7>tc), 
*tn Illyrian chieftain, carried on frequent wars 
with the Macedonians, but was at length de- 
feated and slain in battle by Philip, the father 
of Alexander the Great, B.C. 359. 

Bare a Soranus, consul suffectus in A.D. 52 
under Claudius, and afterward proconsul of Asia, 
was a man of justice and integrity. He was 
accused of treason in the reign of Nero and was 
eondemed to death, together with his daughter 
Servilia. The chief wituess against him was 
P. Egnatius Celer, a Stoic philosopher, and the 
teacher of Soranus. ( Vid. Juv , iii* 116.) 

BargCsii, a people in the northeast of Spain, 
between the Pyrenees and the Iberus. 

[Baegylia or Baegylle (Bapj-v/.ia, tu ; Bap- 
■f\'/.LuTTjC, Bapyv/.LijTLKug), a city of Caria, lying 
on the gulf, named from it, Bargylieticus Sinus, 
and named by the Carians Andanus ("Avdavoc); 
fomed for a statue of Diana.] 
138 



Barium (Barinus: now Bari), a town in A pa 
lia, on the Adriatic, a municipium, and celebrated 

for its fisheries {Barium piscosum, Hor., Sat^ i, 
5, 97). 

Barsaentes (Baoaaivr)]c) or Barzaentos (Bap- 
&£vroc), satrap of the Arachoti and Drangaa, 
took part in the murder of Darius III, and after- 
ward fled to India, where he was seized by the 
inhabitants aud delivered up to Alexander, who 
put him to death. 

B absents (Bapciv)]). 1. Daughter of Artaba- 
zus, and wife of Memnon the Rhodian, subse- 
quently married Alexander the Great, to whom 
she bore a son, Hercules. She aud her son were 
put to death by Polysperchon in 309. — 2. Also 
called Statira, elder daughter of Darius III, 
whom Alexander married at Susa, B.C. 324. 
Shortly after Alexander's death she was mur- 
dered by Roxana. 

[Barygaza (Bapvyai^a, now Baroaisch), a citj 
of India, on the eastern side of the River 
Xomadus, possessing an active and extensive 
land and sea trade with Bactria, Arabia, and 
Africa.] 

[Barzaentes (BapZaivTTjc). Vid. Barsaenthb.] 

Basakitis. Vid. Batanjsa. 

Basllia (now Basel or Bale), a town on the 
Rhine, in the neighborhood of which Valentinian 
built a fortress. — [2. An island. Vid. Abalub.] 

Basilina, the mother of Julian the apostate, 
beiug the second wife of Julius Constantius, bro- 
ther of Constantine the Great. 

Basilius (Baoi/.eioc), commonly called Basil 
the Great, was born A.D. 329, at Caasarea. He 
studied at Antioch or Constantinople under Ii 
banius, and subsequently continued his studies 
for four years (351-355) at Athens, chiefly under 
the sophists Himerius and Proaeresius. Among 
his fellow-students were the Emperor Julian 
and Gregory Xazianzen, the latter of whom be- 
came his most intimate friend. After acquiring 
the greatest reputatiou as a student for bis 
knowledge of rhetoric, philosophy, and science, 
he returned to Csesarea, where he began to 
plead causes, but soon abandoned his profes 
sion and devoted himself to a religious life. He 
now led an ascetic life for many years ; he 
was elected Bishop of Csesarea in 370 in place 
of Eusebius; he died in 379. The best edition 
of his works is by Gamier, Pam, 1721-1730, 
3 vols, folio. 

Basilus, L. Minucics, served under Caesar in 
Gaul, and commanded part of Caesars fleet in 
the civil war. He was one of Caesar's assassins 
(B.C. 44), and in the following year was mur 
dered by his own slaves. 

[Bassania, a city of Illyria, not far from Lis 
sus.] 

Bassabeus {Baacapsvg), a surname of Bacchus 
(Dionysus), probably derived from Baaaapir, a 
fox skin, worn by the god himself and the 
Maenads in Thrace. 

Bassus. Aufidius, an orator and hktoriao 
under Augustus and Tiberius, wrote an account 
of the Roman wars in Germany, and a work 
upon Roman history of a more general character, 
which was continued in thirty -one books by the 
elder Pliny. 

Bassus, Q. Ccecmics, a Roman eques, and an 
adherent of Pompey, fled to Tyre after the bat- 
tle of Pharsalia, B.C. £3. Shortly afterward he 



BASSUS, CiESIUS. 



BATTIAD/E. 



obtained possession of Tyre, and was joined by 
mo6t of the troop? of S<-xtus Caesar, the govern- 
or of Syria, who had been killed by his own sol- 
diers at the instigation of Bassus. He subse- 
quently settled down in Apamea, where he main- 
tained himself fo* three years (46-43) against 
C. Antistius Vetus, and afterward against Sta- 
tute Murcus and Marcius Crispus. On the ar- 
rival of Cassius in Syria in 43, the troops of 
Bassus went over to Gassius. 

Bassus, Cgsius, a Roman lyric poet, and a 
friend of Persius, who addresses his sixth satire 
to him, was destroyed, along with his villa, in 
A.D. 79, by the eruption of Vesuvius which 
overwhelmed Herculaneum and Pompeii. 

Bassus, Saleius, a Roman epic poet of con- 
siderable merit, contemporary with Vespasian. 

Bastarn^e or Bastern.r, a warlike German 
people, who migrated to the country near the 
mouth of the Danube. They are first mentioned 
in the wars of Philip and Perseus against the 
Romans, and at a later period they frequently 
devastated Thrace, and were engaged in wars 
with the Roman governors of the province of 
Macedonia. lu B.C. 30 they were defeated by 
Marcus Crassus, and driven across the Danube ; 
aad we find them, at a later time, partly settled 
between the Tyras (uow Dniester) and Borys- 
thenes (now Dnieper), and partly at the mouth 
of the Danube, uuder the name of Pcucini, from 
their inhabiting the island of Peuce, at the 
mouth of this river. 

[Basti (now Baza), a city of the Bastitani.] 

Bastitani (also Bastbtant, Bastuli), a peo- 
ple in Hispania Ba?tica. on the coast. 

[Bata (Bard, rd), a city and port of Sarmatia 
Asiatica, on the Euztne, opposite Sinope.] 

Batan^ea or Basanitis (Bo-avala, Baaavlnr: 
in the Old Testament. Ua-han, Basau), a district 
of Palestine, east of the Jordan, exteuding from 
the river Jabbok on the south to Mount Her- 
mon, in the AntftHbtmua chain, on the north. 
The 8 and v are mere dialectic varieties. 

Batavi or Bata vi (Lucan.. i., 431), a Celtic 
people who abandoned their homes in conse- 
quence of civil dissensions before the time of 
Julius Caesar, and settled in the. island formed 
by the Rhine, the Waal, and the Maas, which 
island was called after them, Insula Batavorum. 
They were for a long time allies of the Romans 
in their wars against the Germans, and were of 
great service to the former by their excellent 
■:avalry ; but at length, exasperated by the op- 
pressions of the Roman officers, thev rose in 
revolt under Claudius Civilia in A.D". 69, and 
were with great difficulty subdued. On their 
subjugation they were treated by the Romans 
with mildness, and w,ere exempt from taxation. 
Their country, which also extended beyond the 
island south of the Maas and the Waal, was 
called at a later time. Batavia. Their chief 
towns were Luffdunum (uow Leyden) and Ba- 
tavodurum (now Wyk-Durstad ?), between the 
Maas and the Waal The Caninefates or Can- 
-unefates were a branch of the Batavi, and 
dwelt iu the -west of the island. 

Batavodurum. Vid. Batavi. 

[Batea (Bdreia). 1. A Naiad, mother by OSba- 
ius of Tyndareus, Hippocoon, and Icarion. — 2. 
Daughter of Teucer, wife of Dardanus. mother 
of Ilus and Erichthonius.] 



Bathvcles (BaOvK/.r/c), a celebrated artist ©f 
Magnesia on the Moeander, constructed for the 
Lacedaemonians the colossal throne of the Amy- 
cla?au Apollo. He probably flourished about the 
time of Solon, or a little later. 

Bathyllus. 1. Of Samos, a beautiful youth 
beloved by Anaereou. — 2. Of Alexandres the 
freedman and favorite of Maecenas, brought to 
perfection, together with Pylades of Cilicia, the 
imitative dance or ballet called Pantomimw. 
Bathyllus excelled in comic, and Pylades in 
tragic personifications. 

[Bathys Portus (Baddc JufiTjv), the large deep 
harbor of Aulis, in which the Grecian fleet as- 
sembled before sailing to Troy.] 

Batn.e (Bdrvai : Barvalog). 1. (Now Saruj), 
a city of Osroeue in Mesopotamia, east of the 
Euphrates, and southwest of Edessa, at about 
equal distances ; founded by the Macedonians, 
and taken by Trajan; celebrated for its an- 
nual fair of Indian and Syrian merchandise. — > 
2. (Now Dahab), a city of Cyrrhestice, in Syria, 
between Bercea and Hierapolis. 

Bato (Burov). h The charioteer of Amphi- 
araus, was swallowed up by the earth along 
with Amphtarau*. — 2. The name of two leaders 
of the Pannouiaus and Dalmatians iu their in- 
surrection of the reign of Augustus, A.D. 6. 
Tiberius and Germanicus were both sent against 
them, and obtained some advantages over them, 
in consequence of which the Pannouians and 
Dalmatians concluded a peace with the Romans 
in A.D. 8. But the peace, was of short dura- 
tion. The Dalmatian Bato put his namesake 
to death, and renewed the war. Tiberius now 
finally subdued Dalmatia ; Bato surrendered to 
him in A.D. 9, upon promise of pardon ; he ac- 
companied Tiberius to Italy, and his life wa#t 
spared. 

Battiad.-*: (Barrid6ai), kings of Cyrene dur- 
ing eight generations. 1. Battus I., of Thera, 
led a colony to Africa at the command of the 
Delphic oracle, and founded Cyrene about B.C. 
631. He was the first king of Cyrene ; his gov- 
ernment was gentle and just, and after his death 
in 599 he was worshipped as a hero. — 2. Arcks- 
ilaus I., son of No. I, reigned B.C. 599-583. 
— 3. Battus II., surnamed '-the Happy," son 
of No. 2, reigned B.C. 583-560 ? In his reign 
Cyrene received a great number of colonists 
from various parts of Greece ; and in conse- 
quence of the increased strength of his king- 
dom, Battus wa3 able to subdue the neighboring 
Libyan tribes, and to defeat Apriee, king of 
Egypt (5*70), who had espoused the cause of the 
Libyans. — 4. Arcesilacs II., son of No. 3, sur- 
named " the Oppressive," reigned about B C. 
560-550. In consequence of dissensions be- 
tween himself and his brothers, the latter with- 
drew from Cyrene and founded Barca. He 
was strangled by his brother or friend Learchus. 
— 5. Battus III., or " the Lame," son of No. 
4, reigned about B.C. 550-530. Iu his time, 
Demonax, a Mantineau, gave a new constitu- 
tion to the city, whereby the royal power was 
reduced within very narrow limits. — 6. Arces- 
ilaus III., son of No. 5, reigned about B.C. 
530-514, was driven from Cyrene in an attempt 
to recover the ancient royal privileges, but re- 
covered his kingdom with the aid of Samian 
auxiliaries. He endeavored to strengthen him 
1.39 



BATTIADES. 



BELLEROPHON. 



self by making submission to Cainbyses in 525. 
He was, however, again obliged to leave Cy- 
rene; he fled to Alazir, king of Barca, whose 
daughter he had married, and was there slain 
by the Barcseans and some Cyrensean exiles. 
— *7. Battus IV., probably son of JSfo. 6, of 
whose life we have no accounts. — 8. Arcesi- 
laus IV., probably son of No. 1, whose victory 
in the chariot-race at the Pythian games, B.C. 
466, is celebrated by Pindar in his fourth and 
fifth Pythian odes. At his death, about 450, a 
popular government was established. 

[Battiades, a patronymic of Callimaehus, from 
his father Battus.] 

Battus (Buttoc), a shepherd whom Mercury 
(Hermes) turned into a stone because he broke a 
promise which he made to the god. 

Batulum, a town in Campania of uncertain 
site. _ 

Baucis. Vid. Philemon. 

Bauli (now Bacolo), a collection of villas rather 
than a town, between Misenum and Baias, in 
Campania. 

[Bautis, Bautes, or Bautisus, (now Hoangho), 
a river of Serica.] 

Bavius and Mjsyius, two malevolent poe- 
tasters, who attacked the poetry of Virgil and 
Horace. 

Bazira or Bezira (Bd^Lpa : Ba&pot : now Ba- 
jour, northwest of Peshavmr), a city in the Pa- 
ropamisus, taken by Alexander on his march into 
India. 

Bebryces {Be&pvKEs). 1. A mythical people in 
Bithynia, said to be of Thracian origin, whose 
king, Amycus, was slain by Pollux (p. 90, b.) — 
2. An ancient Iberian people on the coast of the 
Mediterranean, north and south of the Pyrenees : 
they possessed numerous herds of cattle. 

Bedriacum, a small place in Cisalpine Gaul, 
between Cremona and Verona, celebrated fur the 
defeat both of Otho and of the Vitellian troops, 
A.D. 69. 

Belbixa (Be?.6ira : Be/MvLrrjg). 1. (jS t ow St. 
George d' Arbori), an island in the ^Egasan Sea, 
off the south coast of Attica. — 2. Vid. Bexe- 

MINA. 

BelemIxa (BeXe/iLva, now Belemia), also called 
Belmina and Belbina, a town in the northwest 
of Laconia, on the borders of Arcadia. The sur- 
rounding district was called Behninatis and Bel- 
binatis. 

Belesis or Belesys (B'eAeclc, BeAecvc), a Chal- 
dean priest at Babylon, who is said, in conjunc- 1 
tion with Arbaces the Mede, to have overthrown j 
the old Assyrian empire. Vid. Arbaces. Bele- 
sis afterward received the satrapy of Babylon f 
from Arbaces. 

Belgje, one of the three great people into ! 
which Caesar divides the population of Gaul. ! 
They were bounded on the north by the Rhine, ! 
on the west by the ocean, on the south by the 
Sequana (now Seine) and Matrona (now Marne), ! 
and on the east by the territory of the Treviri. | 
They were of German origin, and had settled in j 
the country, expelling or reducing to subjection ' 
the former inhabitants. They were the bravest : 
of the inhabitants of Gaul, were subdued by ! 
Caesar after a courageous resistance, and were the 
first Gallic people who threw off the Roman do- 
minion. The Belgas were subdivided into the 
tribes of the Nervii, Bellovaci, Remi, Sue*;- I 
140 



sioxes, Morixi, Mexapii, Aduatici, and others ; 
and the collective forces of the whole nation 

were more than a million. 
Belgica. Vid. Gallia. 

Belgium, the name generally applied to the 
territory of the Bellovaci, and of the tribes de- 
pendent upon the latter, namely, the Atrebates, 
Ambiani, Velliocasses, Aulerci, and Caleti. Bel- 
gium did not include the whole country inhab- 
ited by the Belgse, for we find the Nervii, Remi, 
(fee, expressly excluded from it. (Caes., B. G., v. 
24.) 

[Belgius or Bolgius (Bolyioe), a leader of the 
Gauls, who invaded Macedonia and Ulyria in 
B.C. 280. He defeated the Macedonians in a 
great battle, in which their king, Ptolemy Cerau- 
nus, was slain.] 

[Belides, patronymic of Palamedes, as de- 
scended from Belus.] 

Belisarius, the greatest general of Justinian,, 
was a native of Ulyria, an*. . of mean extraction. 
In A.D. 534 he overthrew the Vandal kingdom 
in Africa, which had been established by Gen- 
seric about one hundred years previously, and 
took prisoner the Vandal king Gelimer, whom 
he led in triumph to Constantinople. In 535- 
540, Belisarius carried on war against the Goths 
in Italy, and conquered Sicily, but he was re- 
called by the jealousy of Justinian. In 541-544 
he again carried on war against the Goths in 
Italy, but was again recalled by Justinian, leav- 
ing his victories to be completed by his rival, 
Parses, in the complete overthrow of the Gothic 
kingdom, and the establishment of the exarchate 
of Ravenna. The last victory of Belisarius was 
gained in repelling an inroad of the Bulgarians, 
559. In 563, he was accused of a conspiracy 
against the life of Justinian; according to a 
popular tradition, he was deprived of his pro- 
perty, his eyes were put out, and he wandered 
as a beggar through Constantinople; but ac- 
cording to the more authentic account, he was 
merely imprisoned for a year in his own palace, 
and then restored to his honors. He died in 
565. 

Bellerophon or Bellerophoxtes (Be/,/lepo- 
(puv or Be7.7.epoo6vrr]c), son of the Corinthian 
king Glaucus and Eurymede, and grandson of 
Sisyphus, was originally called Hipponous, and 
received the name Bellerophon from slaying the 
Corinthian Bellerus. To be purified from the 
murder he fled to Prcetus, whose wife Ante a fell 
in love with the young hero; but as her offers 
were rejected by him, she accused him to her 
husband of having made improper proposals to 
her. Prcetus, unwilling to kill him with his 
own hands, sent him to his father-in-law, Io- 
bates, king of Lycia, with a letter, in which the 
latter was requested to put the young man to 
death. Iobates accordingly sent him to kill the 
monster Chimsera, thinking that he was sure 
to perish in the contest. After obtaining pos- 
session of the winged horse, Pegasus, Beller- 
ophon rose with him in the air, and killed the 
Chnmera with his arrows. Iobates, thus dis- 
appointed, sent Bellerophon against the Soly- 
mi, and next against the Amazons. In these 
contests he was also victorious ; and on his re- 
turn to Lycia, being attacked by the bravest 
Lycians, whom Iobates had placed in ambush 
for the purpose. Bellerophon slew them all. Io- 



BELLERUS. 



BERENICE. 



bates, now seeing that it was hopeless to kill 
the hero, gave him his daughter (Philonoe, An- 
ticlea, or Cassandra) iu marriage, and made him 
his successor on the throne. Bellerophon be- 
came the fatlu-r of Isauder, Hippolochus, and 
Laodamla. At last Bellerophon drew upon him- 
self the hatred uf the gods, and, consumed by 
grief, wandered lonely through the Aleian field, 
avoiding the paths of men. This is all that 
Homer says respecting Bellerophon's later fate : 
some traditions related that he attempted to fly 
to heaven upon Pegasus, but that Jupiter (Zeus) 
sent a gad-fly to sting the horse, which threw 
off the rider upon the earth, who became lame 
or blind in consequence. (Horace, Carm., iv., 
11, 26.) 

[Bellerus, a Corinthian. Vid. Bellero- 

PHON.] 

Belli, a Celtiberiau people in Hispania Tar- 
racouensis. 

[Bellienus, L. 1 Uncle of Catiline, proprie- 
tor iu Africa B.C. 104. — 2. Originally a slave of 
Demetrius, was the occasion of an insurrection 
in Intemelium during the civil war between 
Cajsar and Pompey.] 

Bellona, the Romau goddess of war, was 
probably a Sabiue divinity. She is frequently 
mentioned by the Roman poets as the compan- 
ion of Mars, or even as his sister or his wife, 
and is described as armed with a blood) scourge. 
(Virg., JEn., viii., 703.) During the Samnite 
wars in B.C. 296, Appius Claudius Caecus vowed 
a temple to her, which was erected in the Cam- 
pus Martius. Her priests, called Bellonarii, 
wounded their own arms or legs when they 
offered sacrifices to her. 

Bellovaci, the most powerful of the Belgse, 
dwelt in the modern Beauvais, between the 
Seine, Oise, Somme, aud Bresle. In Ciesar's 
time they could bring one hundred thousand 
men into the field, but they were subdued by 
Czesar with the other Belgae. 

Belon or B^elon (ISc'Auv, Bat?.uv, near Bolo- 
nia, ruins), a sea-port town in Hispania Baetica, 
on a river of the same name, (now Barbate), the 
usual place for crossing over to Tingis in Mau- 
retauia. 

Belus (B//Aof), snn of Neptune (Poseidon) 
and Libya or Eurynome, twin brother of Age- 
nor, and father of ^Egyptus and Danaus. He 
was believed to be the ancestral hero and na- 
tional divinity of several Eastern nations, from 
whom the legends about him were transplanted 
to Greece, aud there became mixed up with 
Greek myths. 

Belus (By?.oc : now Nahr Naman), a river of 
Phoenicia, rising at the foot of Mount Carmel, 
and falling into the sea close to the south of 
Ptolemais (now Acre), celebrated for the tradi- 
tion that its fine sand first led the Phoenicians 
.to the invention of glass. 

Benacus Lacus (now Lago di Garda), a lake 
iu the north of Italy (Gallia Trauspadana), out 
of which the Miucius flows. 

^ Beneventum (now Benevento), a town in Sam- 
uium, on the Appia Via, at the junction of the 
two valleys through which the Sabatus aud 
Calor flow, formerly called Maleventum on ac- 
count, it is said, of its bad air. It was one of 
the most ancient towns in Italy, having been 
founded, according to tradition, by Diomede. 



In the Samnite wars it was subdued by the Ro- 
mans, who sent a colony thither in B.C. 268, 
and changed its name Maleventum into Bene- 
ventum. It was colonized a second time by Au- 
j gustus, and was hence called Colonia Julia Con- 
cordia Augusta Felix. The modern town has 
several Roman remains, among others a tri- 
umphal arch of Trajan. 

Berecyntia (Bepenvvrla), a surname of Cyb- 
ele, which she derived from Mount Berecyn- 
tus where she was worshipped. 

[Berecyntus Mons (BepticvvToc), a mount- 
ain in Phrygia, sacred to Cybele. Vid. the 
foregoing.] 

Berenice (BepevUi]), a Macedonic form of 
Phereulce (^epevUrj), i. e., "Bringing Victory." 
1. First the wife of [Philip, son of Amyntas, a 
Macedonian officer], and afterward of Ptolemy 
I. Soter, who fell in love wilh her when she 
came to Egypt in attendance on his bride Eu- 
rydice, Antipater's daughter. She was cele- 
brated for her beauty and virtue, and was the 
mother of Ptolemy II. Philadelphus. — 2. Daugh- 
ter of Ptolemy II. Philadelphus, and wife of An- 
tiochus Theos, king of Syria, who divorced La- 
odice in order to marry her, B.C. 249. On the 
death of Ptolemy, B.C. 247, Antiochus recalled 
Laodice, who, notwithstanding, caused him to 
be poisoned, and murdered Berenice and her 
sou. — 3. Daughter of Magas, king of Cyrene, 
and wife of Ptolemy III. Euergetes. She was 
put to death by her son Ptolemy IV. Philopator 
on his accession to the throne, 221. The fa- 
mous hair of Berenice, which she dedicated for 
her husband's safe return from his Syrian ex- 
pedition in the temple of Arsinoe at Zephyrium, 
was said to have become a constellation. It 
was celebrated by Callimachus in a poem, of 
which we have a translation by Catullus. — 4. 
Otherwise called Cleopatra, daughter of Ptole- 
my VIII. Lathyrus, succeeded her father ou the 
throne B.C. 81, and married Ptolemy X. (Alex- 
ander II.), but was murdered by her husband 
nineteen days after her marriage. — 5. Daughter 
of Ptolemy XL Auletes, and eldest sister of the 
famous Cleopatra, was placed ou the throne by 
the Alexandrines when they drove out her fa- 
ther, B.C. 58. She afterward married Archelaus, 
but was put to death, with her husband, when 
Gabinius restored Auletes, 55. — 6. Sister of Her- 
od the Great, married Arisiobulus, who was put 
to death B.C. 6. She afterward weut to Rome, 
where she spent the remainder of her life. She 
was the mother of Agrippa I. — 7. Daughter of 
Agrippa I., married her uncle Herod, king of 
Chalcis, by whom she had two sous. After the 
death of Herod, A.D. 48, Berenice, then twenty 
years old, lived with her brother Agrippa 1 1., not 
without suspicion of an incestuous commerce 
with him. She gained the love of Titus, who 
was only withheld from making her his wife by 
fear of offending the Romans by such a step. — 
[8. Wife of Mithradates the Great, put to death 
by him with his other wives, to prevent their 
falling alive into the hands of the Romans.] 

Berenice (BepeviKij : Btpevinevc), the name 
of several cities of the period of the Ptolemies. 
1. Formerly Eziougeber (ruins near Akabah), in 

| Arabia, at the head of the Sinus ^Elauites, or 
eastern branch of the Red Sea. — 2. in Upper 

I Egypt (for so it was considered, though it lay 
141 



BERGISTANI. 



RIBACULUS. 



a little south of the parallel of Syene), on the 
eoaet of the Red Sea, on a gulf called Sinus 
hnmundus (aKudaproc koXhOc, now Foul Bay), 
where its ruins are still visible. It was named 
after the mother of Ptolemy EL Philadelphus, 
who built it, and made a road hence to Coptos, 
so that it became a chief emporium for the com- 
merce of Egypt with Arabia and India. Under 
the Romans it was the residence of a praefectus. 
— 3. B. Paxchrysos (B. Hdyxpvaoc or 7} Kara 
2a6ac), on the Red Sea coast in ^Ethiopia, con- 
siderably south of the above. — 4 B. Epioires 
(B. M AeipT/c), on the Promontory Dira, on the 
western side of the entrance to the Red Sea 
(now Straits of Bab-el-Mandeb). — 5. (Now Ben 
Ghazi, ruins), in Cyrenaica, formerly Hesperis 
('Ken-epic), the fabled site of the Gardens of the 
Sesperides. It took its later name from the 
wife of Ptolemy III Euergetes, and was the 
westernmost of the five cities of the Libyan 
Pentapolis. There were other cities of the 
name. 

Bergistani, a people in the northeast of Spain, 
between the Ibems and the Pyrenees, whose 
capital was Bergium. 

[Bergium (now Bamberg •). 1. A place in the 
♦xmntry of the Hermundui'i, in Germania Magna. 
— 2. Vid. Bergistani.] 

Bergosicm (Bergonias, -atis : now Bergamo), 
a town of the Orobii in Gallia Cisalpina, be- 
tween Comum and Brixia, afterward a muni- 
«piuin. 

[Bermius Mons (Bepfiiov opoc : now Xero Li- 
■oadho), a mountain of Macedonia, a continuation 
of the great range of Olympus.] 

Beroe (BepoV). 1. A Trojan woman, wife of 
Doryclus, one of the companions of ^Eneas, 
whose form Iris assumed when she persuaded 
the women to set fire to the ships of iEneas in 
Sicily. — [2. The nurse of Semele, whose form 
Juno (Hera) assumed for the purpose of per- 
suading Semele to request Jupiter to visit her 
in all his divine majesty. — 3. One of the ocean 
nymphs.] 

Bergza (Bcpoia, also Befipota, Bepor/ : BepoiEvc, 
Bepoialoc). 1. (Now Verria), one of the most 
ancient towns of Macedonia, on one of the low- 
er ranges of Mount Bermius, and on the As- 
trseus, a tributary of the Haliacmou, southwest 
of Pella, and about twenty miles from the sea. 
— 2. (Now Beria), a town in the interior of 
Thrace, was under the later Roman empire, 
together with Philippopolis, one of the most 
important military posts. — S. (Now Aleppo or 
Raleb), a town in Syria near Antioch, enlarged 
by Seleucus Nicator, who gave it the Macedo- 
nian name of Bercea. It is called Ilclbon or 
Ohelbon in Ezekiel (xxvii., 18), and Chalep in 
the Byzantine writers, a name still retained in 
ihe modern Ilaleb, for which Europeans have 
substituted Aleppo. 

Berosus (Bijpucoc, or Brjpoccoc), a priest of 
Belus at Babylou, lived in the reign of Antio- 
«ims II. (B.C. 261-246), and wrote in Greek a 
history of Babylonia, in nine books (called Ba- 
SvAovucd, and sometimes XaTidaiKu or laropiai 
Xa?.6aiKac). It embraced the earliest traditions 
about the human race, a description of Babylo- 
nia and its population, and a chronological list 
of its kings down to the time of the great Cyrus. 
Berosuftgfays that be derived the materials for 
142 



his work from the archives in the temple of 
Belus. The work itself is lost, but considerable 
fragments of it are preserved in Josephus. 
Eusebius, Syneellus, and the Christian fathers : 
the best editions of the fragments are by Rich- 
ter, Lips., 1825, and in Didot's Fragmenta Ilistor- 
icorum Gra?corv?n, vol. ii.. Paris, 1848. 

Berytus (B^px'ror : Bijpvrioc : now Beirut, 
ruins), one of the oldest sea-ports of Phoenicia, 
stood on a promontory near the mouth of the 
River Magoras (now Nahr Beirut), half way be- 
tween Byblus and Sidon. It was destroyed by 
the Syrian king Try phon (B.C. 140), and restored 
by Agrippa under Augustus, who made it a col- 
ony. It afterward became a celebrated seat of 
learning. 

Besa. Vid. Antinoopoxis. 

Bessi, a fierce and powerful Thraeian people, 
who dwelt along the whole of Mount Hecmus a* 
far as the Euxine. After the conquest of Mace- 
donia by the Romans (B.C. 168), the Bessi were 
attacked by the latter, and subdued after a se- 
vere struggle. 

Bessus (Bf/ccroc), satrap of Bactria under Da- 
rius III., seized Darius soon after the battle of 
Arbela, B.C. 331. Pursued by Alexander in the 
following year, Bessus put Darius to death, and 
fled to Bactria, where he assumed the title of 
king. He was betrayed by two of his followers 
to Alexander, who put him to death. 

Bestia, Calpurnius. 1. L., tribune of the 
plebs B.C. 121, and consul 111, when he earned 
on war against Jugurtha, but, having received 
large bribes, he concluded a peace with the Nu- 
midian. On his return to Rome, he was, in con- 
sequence, accused and condemned. — 2. L., one of 
the Catihnariau conspirators, B.C. 63, was at 
the time tribune of the plebs designatus, and 
not actually tribune, as Sallust says. In 59 he 
was osdile, and in 57 was an unsuccessful candi- 
date for the praetorship, notwithstanding his bri- 
bery, for which offence he was brought to trial 
in the following year, and condemned, although 
he was defended by Cicero. 

Betasii, a people in Gallia Belgica, between 
the Tungri and Nervii, in the neighborhood of 
Bcetz in Brabant. 

[Bevus (Bevoe), a river of Macedonia, an af- 
fluent of the Erigon.] 

Bezira. Vid. Bazira. 

Bianor. 1. Also called Ocnus or Aucnus v 
son of Tiberis and Manto, is said to have built 
the town of Mantua, and to have called it after 
his mother. — 2. A Bithyniau, the author of 
twenty-one epigrams in the Greek Anthology, 
lived under Augustus and Tiberius. 

BiAs(Bi'af.) 1. Son of Amy thaon, and broth tr 
of the seer Melampus. He married Pero. 
daughter of Neleus, whom her father had re- 
fused to give to any one unless he brought him 
the oxen of Iphiclus. These Melampus obtained 
by his courage and skill, and so won the princes* 
for his brother. Melampus also gained for Bias 
a third of the kingdom of Argos, in consequence 
of his curing the daughters of Prcetus and the 
other Argive women of their madness. — 2. Of 
Priene in Ionia, one of the seven sages of Greece, 
flourished about B.C. 550. 

BiBActaus, M. Furius, a Roman poet, born 
at Cremona B.C. 103, wrote iambics, epigrams, 
and a poem on Caesar' s Gaulish wars ; the open • 



BIBRACTE. 



BITHYNIA. 



ing line in the latter poem is parodied by Horace 
{Jfarius hibemas cana nivc c&itspuct Alpes, Sat., 
ai, 6, 41). It is probable that Bibaculus also 
wrote a poem entitled ^Ethiopia, containing an 
account of the death of Memnon by Achilles, 
and that the turgidui Alpinus of Horace (Sat, 
i, 10, S6) is no other than Bibaculus. The at- 
tacks of Horace against Bibaculus may probably 
be owing to the fact that the poems of Bibaculus 
contained insults against the Caesars. (Tac, Ann., 
iv„ 34.) 

Bibractk (now Aiituri), the chief town of the 
45dui iu Gallia Lugduneniis, afterward Aupus- 
todunum. 

Bibrax (now Bihre), a town of the tiemi in 
Gallia Belgica, not far from the Aisne. 

Bibolub Calpuexii-s. 1. L,, curule sedile B. 
0. 66, praetor 62, and consul 59, in each of which 
years he had C. Julius Caesar as his colleague. 
He was a stanch adherent of the aristocratical 
party, but was unable in his coa^ulship to re- 
sist the powerful combination of Caesar, Pom- 
pey, and Crassu3. After an ineffectual attempt 
to oppose Caesar's agrarian Jaw, he withdrew 
from the popular assemblies altogether ; whence 
it was said in joke that it was the consulship 
of Julius and Caesar. In 51 BibuluB was pro- 
consul of Syria ; and in the civil war he com- 
manded Fompey's fleet in the Adriatic, and 
died (48) while holding thi3 command off Cor- 
oyra. He married Porcia, the daughter of Cato 
Uticensis, by whom he had three sons, two of 
whom were murdered by the eoldiers of Gabin- 
ius, in Egypt, 50. — 2. L., son of No. 1, was a 
youth at his father's death, and was brought up 
by M. Brutus, who married bis mother Porcia. 
He fought with Brutus at the battle of Philippi 
in 42, but he was afterward pardoned by Anto- 
ny, and was intrusted by the latter with im- 
portant commands. He "died shortly before the 
battle of Actium. 

[Bicurdium (now Erf urt t), a city of the Ohe- 
rusci in Germany.] 

Bidis (Bidinus, Bidensis), a small town in Si- 
cily, west of Syracuse. 

Bigerra (now Beccrra ?), a town of the Ore- 
tani in Hispania Tarraconensis. 

Bigerriones or Bigkrei, a people in Aquita- 
nia, near the Pyrenees. 

Bilbilis (now Baubola), a town of the Oelti- 
beri in Hispania Tarraconensis, and a munici- 
pium with the surname Augusta, on the River 
JSalo, also called Bilbilis (now Xalon), was the 
birth-place of the poet Martial, and was cele- 
brated for its manufactories in iron and gold. 

BiLLiKus (BtXAatof : uow Filbas), a river of 
Bithynia, rising in the Hypii Montes, and falling 
into the Pontus Kuxiuus twenty stadia (two 
geographical miles) east of Tium. Some made 
it the boundary between Bithynia and Paphla- 
gonia. 

Binqium (now Bingen), a town on the Rhine, 
in Gallia Belgica. 

Bion (Biuv). 1. Of Smyrna, a bucolic poet, 
flourished about B.C. 280, and spent the last 
years of his life iu Sicily, where he was poison- 
ed. He was older than Moschus, who laments 
his untimely death, and calls himself the pupil 
of Bion. (Mosch., Id., iii.) The style of Bion 
Is refined, and his versification fluent and ele- 
gant, but he is inferior to Theocritus in strength 



and depth of fceliug. — Edition*, including Mos- 
chus, by Jacobs, Gotha, 1795 ; Wakefield, Lon- 
don, 1795; and Manso, Leipzig, 1807— 2. Of 
Borysthenes, uear the mouth of the Dnieper, 
flourished about B.C. 250. He was sold as a 
slave, when young, and received his liberty from 
his master, a rhetorician. He studied at Athens, 
and embraced the later Cyrenaic philosophy, 
as expounded by Tueodorus, the Atheist. He 
i lived a considerable time at the court of Antig- 
| onus Gonatas, king of Macedonia. Bion way 
' noted for his sharp sayings, whence Horace 
speaks of persons delighting Bioneis sermonihtf 
et sale nigro. (Episl., ii., 2, 60.) — [8. Of Soli in 
Cilicia, author of a work on ^Ethiopia (hldio- 
Tcind), of which a few fragments remain ; he 
wrote also a treatise on agriculture. — 4. A math- 
ematician of Abdera, the first who maintained, 
that there were certain regions where the night 
lasted six months, and the day the other six 
months of the year.] 

[Birtha (ruins at Bircdsjik), a city of Osrbcv- 
ene, on the Euphrates.] 

[BiSALT^E (BtcdZrai). Via\ Bxsaltia.] 
Bisaltia (BiaalrLa : BicuXttjs), a district kt 
Macedonia, on the western bank of the Stry- 
mon. The Bisaltae were Thracians, and at the 
invasion of Greece by Xerxes (B.C. 480) they 
were ruled by a I'hraeian prince, who was in- 
dependent of Macedonia ; but at the time of 
the Peloponneeian war we find them subject to- 
Macedonia. 

[Bisaltis, female patronymic from Bisaltes. L 
e., Theophane.] 

Bisanthe {\$iodv6i} : BicavQv,vb^ : now Bo 
dosto), subsequently Bhccdestum or Rh<zdcstus, a 
town in Thrace on the Propontis, with a good 
harbor, was founded by the Samians, and was 
in later time3 one of the great bulwarks of the 
neighboring Byzantium. 

Bistones (BlcTovee), a Thraciau people be 
tween Mount Rhodope and the iEgean Sea, on 
the Lake Bistoxis, in the neighborhood of Ab- 
dera, through whose land Xerxes marched cn 
his invasion of Greece (B.C. 480). From the 
worship of Bacchus (Dionysus) in Thrace the 
Bacchic women arc called Bistonides. (Hor.. 
Carm., ii, 19, 20.) 

Bithynia (Bidvvla : Bidvvoc), a district of Asia 
Minor, bounded on the west by Mysia, on the 
north by the Pontus Euxinus, on the east by 
Paphlagonia, and on the south by Phrygia Epic 
tetus, was possessed at an early period by Thra- 
cian tribes from the neighborhood of the Stry- 
mon, called Thyni (Qvvoi) and Bithyni (Bidvvoi), 
of whom the former dwelt on the coast, the 
latter in the interior. The earlier inhabitants 
were the Bebryces, Caucones, and Mygdones, 
and the northeastern part of the district was 
possessed by the Maeiandym. The country 
was subdued by the Lydians, and afterward be- 
came a part of the Persian empire under Cyrus, 
and was governed by the satraps of Phrygia. 
During the decline of the Persian empire, the 
northern part of the country became independ- 
ent, under native princes called trrapxot. who 
i resisted Alexander and his successors, and es- 
tablished a kingdom, which is usually consider- 
ed to begin with Zipcetes (about B.C. 287) or his 
son Nicomedes I. (B.C. 278), and which lasted 
! till the death of Nicomedes III. (B.C. 74). who. 

143 



BITHYjSTUM. 



BODIOCASSES 



bequeathed his kingdom, to the Romans. By, Blasio, M. Helvius, praetor B.C. 19T, defeated 
them it was first attached to the province of j the Celtiberi in Spain, and took IUiturgi. 
Asia, afterward to that of Pontus, and, under I [Blaudus (B?.av6oc). Vid. Bladus.] 
Augustus, it was made a proconsular province. | Blavia (now Blaye), a town of the Santonee 
Several changes were made in its boundaries ! in Gallia Aquitanica, on the Garumna. 
under the later emperors. It was a fertile ! Blemyes (B/Jjuveg, B'Aetxfivec), an ^Ethiopian 
country, intersected with wooded mountains, the } people on the borders of Upper Egypt, to which 
highest of which was the Mysian Olympus, on j their predatory incursions were very troublesome 
its southern border. Its chief rivers were the ; in the times of the Roman emperors. 
Sangarius and the Billjeus. [Blexdium (now Santander ?), a port of the 

Bithyxium (BlOvvlov), afterward Claudiopo- ' Cantabri in Hispania Tarraconensis.] 
us, an inland city of Bithynia, the birth-place of j Blera (Bleranus : now Bieda), a town in 
Hadrian's favorite Antinous. Etruria, on the Via Clodia, between Forum 

Bitox (Bituv). 1. A mathematician, the au- Clodii and Tuscania : there are many remains of 
thor of an extant work on Military Machines (/ca- the ancient town at Bieda. 

raoKEval Tro/^ejuiKuv opydvuv feat KaTaTrel-ui&v), Blosius or Blossius, the name of a noble 
whose history is unknown. The work is printed , family in Campania. One of this family, C. 
in Vet. Mathem. Op., Paris, 1693, p. 105, seq. — 'Blosius of Cumse, was a philosopher, a disciple 
[2. A friend of Xenophon, who, with Euclides, ! of Antipater of Tarsus, and a friend of Tiberius 
showed him kindness, and relieved his wants at j Gracchus. After the death of Gracchus (B.C. 
Ophrynium, on his return from Babylonia.] 133) he fled to Aristonicus, king of Pergamus, 

Brrox and Cleobis (K?.£o6lc), sons of Cydippe, and on the conquest of Aristonicus by the Rc- 
a priestess of Juno (Hera) at Argos. They were mans, Blosius put an end to his own life for fear 
celebrated for their affection to their mother, of falling into the hands of the Romans, 
whose chariot they once dragged during a fes- 1 Boadicea, queen of the Iceni in Britain, hav- 
tival to the temple of Juno (Hera), a distance ; ing been shamefully treated by the Romans, 
of forty-five stadia. The priestess prayed to j who even ravished her two daughters, excited 
the goddess to grant them what was best for j an insurrection of the Britons against their op- 
mortals ; and during the night they both died pressors during the absence of Suetonius Pau- 
while asleep in the temple. j linus, the Roman governor, on an expedition to 

Bituitus, in inscriptions Betultus, king of j the island of Mona. She took the Roman colo- 
the Arverni in Gaul, joined the Allobroges in ! nies of Camalodunum, Londinium, and other 
then' war against the Romans. Both the Ar- [ places, and slew nearly seventy thousand Ro- 
verni and Allobroges were defeated B.C. 121, at mans and their allies. She was at length de- 
the confluence of the Rhone and the Isara, by ; feated with great loss by Suetonius Paulinus, and 
Q. Fabius Maxrmus. Bituitus was subsequently put an end to her own life, A.D. 61. 
taken prisoner and sent to Rome. ' [Bo^e or Bavo (now Bua), an island on the 

Bituriges, a numerous and powerful Celtic : coast of Dalmatia, used by the later Roman em- 
people in Gallia Aquitanica, had in early times perors as a place of exile for state criminals.] 
the supremacy over the other Celts in Gaul. ; Boagrius {Bouypioe, now Terreinotto), a river 
(Liv., v., 34.) They were divided into, 1. Bit. j in Locris, also called Manes, flows past Thro- 
Cubi, separated from the Carnutes and iEdui nium into the Sinus Maliacus. 
by the Liger, and bounded on the south by the \ [Bobium (now Bobbio), a castrum of the Li- 
Lemovices, in the country of the modern Bour- gurians, on the Trebia.] 

ges : then- capital was Avaricum. 2. Bit. Vi- [Bocchar. 1. A brave king of the Mauri in 
visci or Ubisci on the Garumna : their capital Africa, a contemporary of Masinissa. — 2. An 
was Burdigala. officer of King Syphax, who fought against 

Bladus, Blaxdus, or Blaudus (Bau-, BMv-, Masinissa.] 
B?.av6og : B/.avdvvoc : Blaudesius), a city of Bocchus (Bok^oc). 1. King of Mauretania, 
Phrygia, near the borders of Mysia and Lydia. J and father-in-law of Jugurtha, with whom at 

Bl^esus, C. Semproxius, consul with Cn. Ser- j first he made war against the Romans, but 
vilius Caepio, B.C. 253, in the first Punic war. | whom he afterward delivered up to Sulla, the 
The two consuls sailed to the coast of Africa, quaestor of Marius, B.C. 106. — 2. Son of the 
and on their return were overtaken off Cape j preceding, reigned along with his brother Bo- 
Palinurus by a tremendous storm, in which one gud over Mauretania. Bocchus and Bogud as- 
hundred and fifty ships perished. I sisted Caesar in his war against the Pompeiaus 

Bl^esus, Juntos, governor of Pannonia at the in Africa, B.C. 46 : and in 45 Bogud joined 
death of Augustus, A.D. 14, when the formid- Caesar in his war in Spain. After the murder 
able insurrection of the legions broke out in of Caesar, Bocchus sided with Octaviauus, and 
that province. He obtained the government of Bogud with Antony. When Bogud was in 
Africa^ in 21, where he gained a victory over Spain in 38, Bocchus usurped the sole govern- 
Tacfarinas. Ou the fall of his uncle Sejanus in ment of Mauretania, in which he was confirmed 
31, he was deprived of the priestly offices which by Octavianus. He died about 33, whereupon 
he held, and in 36 put an end to his own life, to his kingdom became a Roman province. Bogud 
avoid falling by the hand of the executioner. had previously betaken himself to Antony, and 

Blaxda. 1. (Now Blanos), a town of the was killed on the capture of Methone by Agrip- 
Lacetani in Hispania Tarraconensis. — 2. (Now pa in 31. 

St. Biasio), a town in Lucania. [Boderia (Bodepia elcxvcic, Ptol). Vid, Bo- 

[Blaxdusia Foxs. Vid. Baxdusia.] dotria.] 

Blascox (now Brescou), a small island in the Bodexcus or Bodixcus. Vid. Padus. 
Gallicus Sinus, off the town of Agatha. Bodiocasses, a people in Gallia Lugdunen- 

144 



BODOTRIA. 



BOIL 



*!s; their capital was Augustodurum (now 
Bayeux). 

Bodotria or Boderia /Estuarium (now Firth 
of Forth), an ovstuary on the eastern coast of 
Scotland. 

[Boduogxati-s, leader of the Neryji in Gallia 
in the time of Julius Caesar.] 

BcE/E (Boia'i : Botanic : now Vatka), a town 
in the south of Laconica, near Cape Malea. 

[Bceaticus Sinus, to the east, or, rather, the 
eastern part, of the Laconicus Sinus, so called 
from tho town of Boeae, and now Gulf of Vatka.] 
Bcebe (BoWn : BoiOevg), a town in Pelasgio- 
tis in Thessaly, on the western shore of the 
Lake BffiBErs (Boidnic, now Bio), into which 
several rivers of Thessaly flow. 

Bokdeomius (Bondpofuoz), " the helper in dis- 
tress," a surname of Apollo at Athens, because 
he had assisted the Athenians. Vid. Diet, of 
Ant., art. Boedromia. 

[Bozo (Bot6), a Grecian poetess of Delphi, 
composed a hymn, of which Pausanias has pre- 
served a few lines.] 

Bocotia (Boiurca : Bolotoc : part of Livadia), 
a district of Greece, bounded north by Opun- 
tian Locris, east by the Euboean Sea, south by 
Attica, Megaris, and the Corinthian Gulf, and 
west by Phoeis. It is nearly surrounded by 
mountains, namely, Helicon and Parnassus on 
the west, Cithaeron and Parnes on the south, 
the Opuntian mountains on the north, and a 
range of mountains along the whole sea-coast 
on the east. The country contains several 
fertile plains, of which the two most important 
were the valley of the Asopus in the south, the 
inhabitants of which were called Parasopii, and 
the valley of the Cephisus in the north (the 
upper part of which, however, belonged to Pho- 
eis), the inhabitants of which were called Epi- 
cephisii. In the former valley the chief towns 
were Theb,e, Tanagua, Tiijssplb, and Pla- 
tjeje ; in the latter the chief towns Avere Or- 
chomexus, Ch^eronea, Coronea, Lebadea, and 
Haliartus ; the latter valley included the Lake 
Copais. The surface of Boeotia is said to be 
one thousand and eighty square miles. The at- 
mosphere was damp and thick, to which cir- 
cumstance some of the ancients attributed the 
dullness of the Bceotiau intellect, with which 
the Athenians frequently made merry ; but the 
deficiency of the Boeotians in this respect was 
more probably owing, as has been well re- 
marked, to the extraordinary fertility of their 
country, which probably depressed their intel- 
lectual and moral energies. In the earliest 
times Boeotia was inhabited by various tribes, 
the Aones (whence the country was called 
Aonia), Temmioes, Hyantes, Thracians, Lele- 
ges, <fec. Orchomenus was inhabited by the 
powerful tribe of the Minyans, and Thebes by 
the Cadmeans, the reputed descendants of Cad- 
mus. The Boeotians were an ^Eolian people, 
who originally occupied Arne in Thessaly, from I 
which they were expelled by the Thessalians I 
sixty years after the Trojan war, and migrated j 
into the country called after them Boeotia, partly 
expelling and partly incorporating with them- . 
selves the ancient inhabitants of the land. I 
Boeotia was then divided into fourteen inde- 
pendent states, which formed a league, with 
Thebes at its head. The chief magistrates of : 
10 



the confederacy were the Bceotarchs, elected 
annually, two by Thebes and one by each of 
the other states ; but as the number of states 
was different at different times, that of the 
Boeotarchs also varied. The government in 
most states was an aristocracy. Vid. Diet, of 
Ant., art. Bosotarches. 

Boethius, whose full name was Anicius Man- 
\ lius Severinus Boethius, a Roman statesman 
1 and author, was born between A.D. 470 and 475. 
He was famous for his general learning, and es- 
pecially for his knowledge of Greek philosophy, 
, which, according to a common account (though 
of doubtful authority), he studied under Proclus 
' at Athens. He was consul in 510, and was 
! treated with great distinction by Theodoric the 
Great ; but having incurred the suspicions of 
the latter by advocating the cause of the Ital- 
ians against the oppressions of the Goths, he 
was put to death by Theodoric about 524. Du- 
ring his imprisonment he wrote his celebrated 
work De Consolatione Philosophim, in five books, 
which is composed alternately in prose and 
verse. The diction is pure and elegant, and 
the sentiments are noble and exalted, showing 
that the author had a real belief in prayer and 
Providence, though he makes no reference to 
Christianity. Boethius was the last Roman of 
any note who understood the language and 
studied the literature of Greece. He translated 
many of the works of the Greek philosophers, 
especially of Aristotle, and wrote commenta- 
ries upon them, several of which have come 
down to us. He' also wrote a commentary, in 
six books, upon the Topica of Cicero, which is 
also extant. In the ignorance of Greek writers 
which prevailed from the sixth to the four- 
teenth century, Boethius was looked upon as 
the head and type of all philosophers, as Au- 
gustin was of all theology, and Virgil of all lit- 
erature ; but after the introduction of the works 
of Aristotle into Europe in the thirteenth cen- 
tury, Boethius's fame gradually died away. 
The best edition of his collective works was 
printed at Basel, 1570; the last edition of his 
De Consolatione is by Obbarius, Jenae, 1843. 

Boethus {Borjdoc). 1. A Stoic philosopher of 
uncertain date, wrote several works, from one 
of which Cicero quotes. — 2. A Peripatetic phi- 
losopher, was a native of Sidon in Phoenicia, a 
disciple of Andronicus of Rhodes, and an in- 
structor of the philosopher Strabo. He there- 
fore flourished about B.C. 30. He wrote sev- 
eral works, all of which are now lost — [3. A 
native of Tarsus, who gained the favor of An- 
tony by celebrating in verse the defeat of Brutus 
and Cassius at Philippi.] 

BctuM (Boiov, Boiov, Boiov : Boiutvc), an an- 
cient town of the Dorian Tetrapolis. 

Bogud. Vid. Bocchus, No. 2. 

Bon, one of the most powerful of the Celtic 
tribes, said to have dwelt originally in Gaul 
(Transalpina), but in what part of the country 
is uncertain. At an early time they migrated 
in two great swarms, one of which crossed the 
Alps and settled in the country between the Po 
and the Apennines ; the other crossed the Rhine, 
and settled in the part of Germany called Boi- 
hemum (now Bohemia) after them, and between 
the Danube and the Tyrol. The Boii in Italy 
long carried on a fierce struggle with the Ro- 
145 



BOIODURUM. 



BOREUS MONS. 



but they were at length subdued by the 
consul P. Seipio in B.C. 191, and were subse- 
quently incorporated in the province of Gallia 
Cisalpina. The Boh in Germany maintained 
their power longer, but were at length subdued 
by the Marconianni. and expelled from the coun- 
try. "We find 32,000 Boii takiDg part in the 
Helvetian migration ; and after the defeat of 
the Helvetians (B.C. 58), Caesar allowed these 
Boh to dwell among the jEdui. 

[BoionfBUM, (now Innstadt), a town of Vin- 
dehcia, at the junction of the JEnus (uow Inn) 
and the Danube.] 

Boiobix. 1. A chieftain of the Bon, fought 
against the Eomans in Cisalpine Gaul, B.C. 
194. — [2. King of the Cimbri, fought against the 
Romans under Marius, and fell in battle near 
Terona, B.C. 1G1.] 

Bola, Bol-£, or Vol^: (Bolanus), an ancient 
town of the ^Equi, belonging to the Latin league, 
not mentioned in later times. 

Bolanus, Vet-tits, governor of Britain in 
A.D. 69, is praised by Statius in the poem (Sllv., 
v., 2) addressed to Crispinus, the son of Bo- 
lanus. 

Bolbe (B6/.6v: now Beshek), a lake in Mace- 
donia, empties itself by a short river into the 
Strymonic Gulf near Bromiscus and Aulon : the 
lake is now about twelve miles in length, and 
six or eight in breadth. There was a town of 
the same name upon the lake. 

Bolbitixe (Bo/.6ltlv7] : Bo?.6irivTjr7]g : now 
Mosetta), a city of Lower Egypt, near the mouth 
of a branch of the Nile (the westernmost but 
one), which was called the Bolbitine mouth (to 
Bo/Mtivov Groiia). 

[Boleetum Peomoxtoeium, the southwest 
point of Britannia, now Lands End, in Corn- 
wall.] 

Bolixe (Bo/.ivn : Bo/uvaioc), a town in Achaia, 
the inhabitants of which Augustus transplanted 
to Patrae. 

Bolissus (Bo/.LGCor : Bo/.lggioq, now Yolisso), 
a town on the western coast of Chios. 

Bomilcab (Boui/.nap, Boaui/.Kap). I. Com- 
mander, with Hanno, of the Carthaginians 
against Agathocles, when the latter invaded 
Africa, B.C. 310. In 3CS he attempted to seize 
the government of Carthage, but failed, and was 
crucified. — 2. Commander of the Carthaginian 
supplies sent to Hannibal after the battle of 
Cannas, 216. He afterward attempted to re- 
lieve Syracuse when besieged by Marcellus, 
but was unable to accomplish any thing. — 3. A 
Numidian, deep in the confidence of Jugurtha. 
When Jugurtha was at Rome, 109, Bomilcar 
effected for him the assassination of Massiva. 
In 107 he plotted against Jugurtha. 

Bomius Mors, {BufiLog and oi Bofj.01), the west- 
ern part of Mount (Eta in iEtolia, inhabited by 
the Bomienses (Bufiulc). 

Boxa Dea. a Roman divinity, is described as 
the sister, wife, or daughter of Faunus, and was 
herself called Fauna, Fatna, or Oma. She was 
worshipped at Rome as a chaste and prophetic 
divinity; she revealed her oracles only to fe- 
males, as Faunus did only to males. Her festi- 
val was celebrated every year on the first of 
May, in the house of the consul or praetor, as 
the sacrifices on that occasion were offered on 
behalf of the whole Roman people. Tho so- 
146 



lemnities were conducted by the Vestals, and 
no male person was allowed to be in the house 
at one of the festivals. P. Clodius profaned the 
sacred ceremonies by entering the house of 
Caesar in the disguise of a woman, B.C. 62. 

Boxifacius, a Roman general, governor of 
Africa under Valentinian IH. Beheving that 
the Empress Placidia meditated his destruction, 
he revolted against the emperor, and invited 
Genseric, king of the Vandals, to settle in Afri-' 
ca. In 430 he was reconciled to Placidia, and 
attempted to drive the Vandals out of Africa, 
but without success. He quitted Africa in 431, 
and in 432 he died of a wound received in com- 
bat with his rival Aetius. 

Boxxa (now Bonn), a town on the left bank 
of the Rhine, in Lower Germany, and in the ter- 
ritory of the tTbii, was a strong fortress of the 
Romans and the regular quarters of a Roman 
legion. Here Drusus constructed a bridge 
across the Rhine. 

BoxoxLv (Bononiensis). L (Now Bologna)^ 
' a town in Gallia Cispadana, originally called 
Felsixa, was in ancient times an Etruscan city, 
i and the capital of northern Etruria, It after- 
j ward fell into the hands of the Boh, but it was 
; colonized by the Romans on the conquest of the 
I Boh, B.C. 191, and its name of Felsina was then 
I changed into Bononia. It fell into decay in the 
I civil wars, but it was enlarged and adorned by 
Augustus, 32. — 2. (Now Boulogne), a town in the 
north of Gaul. Vid. Gesoriacts. — 3. (Now Ba- 
nostor ?), a town of Pannonia, on the Danube. 

Boxosus, a Spaniard by birth, served with dis- 
tinction under Aurelian, and usurped the imperi- 
al title in Gaul in the reign of Probus. He was 
defeated and slain by Probus, A.D. 280 or 281. 
Bootes. Vid. Arcturus. 
Boebetomagus (now Worms), also called Van- 
gioxes, at a later time "Wormatia, a town of the 
Vangiones, on the left bank of the Rhine, in tip- 
per Germany. 

Boreas (Bopeag or Bopdc), the north wind, or, 
more strictly, the wind from the north-north- 
east, was, in mythology, a son of Astraeus and 
j Eos, and brother of Hesperus, Zephyrus, and 
! Notus. He dwelt in a cave of Mount Hsemus, 
in Thrace. He carried off Orithyia, daughter 
of Erechtheus, king of Attica, by whom he begot 
I Zetes, Calais, and Cleopatra, wife of Phineus,. 
; who are therefore called Boreadce. In the Per- 
sian war, Boreas showed his friendly disposition 
\ toward the Athenians by destroying the ships 
; of the barbarians. According to an Homeric 
tradition (II., xx., 223), Boreas begot twelve 
; horses by the mares of Erichthonius, which ■ 
1 commonly explained as a figurative mode of 
expressing the extraordinary swiftness of those 
horses. Boreas was worshipped at Athens,, 
where a festival, Boreasmi, was celebrated in 
his honor. 

Boeeum (Bopeiov). 1. (Now Malm Head?), the 
1 northern promontory of Hibernia (now Ireland), 
— 2. (Now Ras Teyonas), a promontory on the 
western coast of Cyrenaica, forming the eastern 
headland of the Great Syrtis. — 3. The northern 
extremity of the island of Taprobane (now 
Ceylon). 

Boeecs Moxs (Bopeiov opo^), a mountain in 
Arcadia, on the borders of Laconia, containing 
1 the sources of the rivers Alpheus and Eurotas. 



1 m 
aing 
>tas, 



BOREUS PORTUS. 



BRANCHID^E. 



Boreus Poetus (Bopeioc MfiT/v), a harbor iu 
the island of Tenedos, at the mouth of a river of 
the 6ame name. 

Borsippa (r« Bopanrira i Bopanriroyos : now 
Boursa), a city of Babylonia, on the western 
bank of the Euphrates, a little south of Babylon, 
celebrated for its manufactures of linen, and as 
the chief residence of the Chaldean astrologers. 
The Greeks held it sacred to Apollo and Diana 
(Artemis). 

Borysthknes (Bopvcdtvrjc : now Dnieper), af- 
terward Danapris, a river of European Sarma- 
tia flows into the Euxine, but its sources were 
unknown to the ancients. Near its mouth, and 
at its junction with the Hypanis, lay the town 

BORYSTHENES 01* BORYSTHENIS (nOW Kudak), 

also called Olbia, Olbiopolis, and Miletopolis, 
a colony of Miletus, and the most important 
Greek city on the north of the Euxine. (Eth- 
nic, BopvadevLTTjq, '0?Slotxo7j.tt]^) 

Bosporus (Boairopog), i. e., Ox-ford, the name 
of any straits among the Greeks, but especially 
applied to the two following: L The Thraci- 
an Bosporus, (now Channel of Constantinople), 
unites the Propontis, or Sea of Marmara, with 
the Euxine, or Black Sea. According to the 
legend, it was called Bosporus from Io, who 
crossed it in the form of a heifer. At the en- 
trance of the Bosporus were the celebrated 
Symplegades. Darius constructed a bridge 
across the Bosporus when he invaded Scythia. 
— 2. The Cimmerian Bosporus (now Straits of 
Kaffa) unites the Palus Maeotis, or Sea of Azof, 
with the Euxine or Black Sea. It formed, with 
the Tanais (now Don), the boundary between 
Asia and Europe, and it derived its name from 
the Cimmerii, who were supposed to have dwelt 
in the neighborhood. On the European side of 
the Bosporus, the modern Crimea, the Milesians 
founded the town of Panticapa3um, also called 
Bosporus, and the inhabitants of Panticapaeum 
subsequently founded the town of Phanagoria 
on the Asiatic side of the Straits. These cities, 
being favorably situated for commerce, soon be- 
came places of considerable importance ; and a 
kingdom gradually arose, of which Panticapae- 
um was the capital, and which eventually in- 
cluded the whole of the Crimea. The first 
kings we read of were the Arehaenactidas, who 
reigned forty -two years, from B.C. 480 to 438. 
They were succeeded by Spartacus I. and his 
descendants. Several of these kings were in 
close alliance with the Athenians, who obtained 
annually a large supply of corn from the Bos- 
porus. The last of these kings was Paerisades, 
who, being hard pressed by the Scythians, vol- 
untarily ceded his dominions to Mithradates the 
Great, On the death of Mithradates, his son 
Pharnaces was allowed by Pompey to succeed 
to the dominion of Bosporus ; and we subse- 
quently find a series of kings, who reigned in 
the country till a late period, under the protec- 
tion of the Roman emperors. 

Bostar (BucTup, Buarapog). 1. A Cartha- 
ginian general, who, with Hamilcar and Has- 
drubal, the son of Hanno, fought against M. 
Atilius Regulus, in Africa, B.C. 256, but was 
defeated, taken prisoner, and sent to Rome, 
where he is said to have perished in consequence 
of the barbarous treatment which he received 
from the sons of .Regulus. — 2. A Carthaginian 



general, under Hasdrubal, in Spain, set at lib- 
erty the Spanish hostages kept at Saguntum, 
hoping thereby to secure the affections of the 
Spaniards. 

Bostra (ra Boarpa, Old Testament Bozrah : 
Boot7]v6c and -aloe ■ now Busrah, ruins), a city 
of Arabia, in an Oasis of the Syrian Desert, a 
little more than ten degrees south of Damascus. 
It was enlarged and beautified by Trajan, who 
made it a colony. Under the later emperors it 
was the seat of an archbishopric. 

BOTTIA, B0TTI.<EA, BoTTI^EIS (BoTTia, BoTTl- 

ala, BoTTLaug : Borriatoc), a district in Macedo- 
nia, on the right bank of the River Axius, ex- 
tended in the time of Thucydides to Pieria on 
the west, It contained the towns of Pella and 
Ichnae near the sea. The Bottiaei were a Thra- 
cian people, who, being driven out of the coun- 
try by the Macedonians, settled in that part of 
the Macedonian Chalcidice, north of Olynthus, 
which was called Botticc (Bottikt}). 
Bottice. Vid. Bottia. 

[Bovenna (now Cabrera), a small island at 
the northern extremity of Sardinia.] 

Boyianum (Bovianius : now Bojano), the chief 
town of the Pentri in Samnium, was taken by 
the Romans in the Samnite wars, and was col- 
onized by Augustus with veterans. 

Bovillje (Bovillensis), an ancient town in- 
Latium, at the foot of the Alban Mountain, on 
the Appian "Way, about ten miles from Rome. 
Near it Clodius was killed by Milo (B.C. 52) ; 
and here was the sacrarium of the Julia gens. 

Bracara Augusta (now Braga), the chief 
town of the Callaici Bracarii, in Hispania Tart 
raconensis : at Braga there are the ruins of an 
amphitheatre, aqueduct, &e. 

Brachman^e or -i (BpaxfJ-aveg), is a name uSed 
by the ancient geographers, sometimes for a 
caste of priests in India (the Brahmins), some- 
times, apparently, for all the people whose re- : 
ligion was Brahminism, and sometimes for a 
particular tribe. 

Brachodes or Caput Vada (Bpo£o>d% d/cpa : 
now Has Kapoudiah), a promontory on the coast 
of Byzacena, in Northern Africa, forming the 
northern headland of the Lesser Syrtis. 

Brachylles or Brachyllas (Bpax6.?^V^ Bp4r 
XvXXac), a Boeotian, supported the Macedonian 
interests in the reigns of Antigonus Doson and 1 
Philip V. At the battle of Cynoscephake, B.C. 
197, he commanded the Bceotian troops in Phil- 
ip's army, and was murdered in 196 at Thebe* 
by the Roman party in that city. 

[Br ad anus (now, g Brmdano), a river of Lm- 
cania, which falls into the Sinus Tarentinus : it 
forms the boundary between ! Lucania and Apu- 
lia.] ..... ■ &dj 

Branchiae (at. Bpqyx^ at '■ now f^ronda, 
ruins) afterward Didyma or -i (ru. ob 
£u5v(iol), a place on the sea-coast of Ionia, a- 
little south of Miletus, celebrated for its temple 
and oracle of Apollo, surnamed Didymeus (A>- 
dvfievq), . This oracle, which the Tonians held 
in the highest esteem, was said to have been 
founded by Branchus, son of Apollo or Smicrus 
of Delphi, and: a Milesian woman. The reputed 
descendants of this -Branchus, the Rranchidae 
I (oi Bpayx'iAai), were the hereditary ministers of 
\ this oracle. They delivered up the treasures 
iof the temple to Darius or Xerxes ; and, when 



BRANCHUS. 



BRITANNIA. 



Xerxes returned from Greece, the Branchidae. 
fearing the revenge of the Greeks, begged him 
to remove them to a distant part of his empire. 
They were accordingly settled in Bactria or 
Sogdiana, where their descendants are said to 
have been punished by the army of Alexander 
for the treason of their forefathers. The tem- 
ple, called Didymaeum, which was destroyed by 
Xerxes, was rebuilt, and its ruins contain some 
beautiful specimens of the Ionic order of archi- 
tecture. 

Branchus (Bpdyxog). Vid. BranchuxiE. 

Branxovices. Vid. Auleeci. 

[Braxoduxitm (now Brancaster), a city of the 
Iceni or Simeni in Britannia Romana.] 

[Branogexium (now Worcester) or Braxoxi- 
UH, a town of the Boduni in Britannia Romana.] 

Beasidas (Bpacidag), son of Tellis, the most 
distingushed Spartan in the first part of the Pel- 
oponnesian war. In B.C. 424, at the head of 
a small force, he effected a dexterous march 
through the hostile country of Thessaly, and 
joined Perdiccas of Macedonia, who had prom- 
ised co-operation against the Athenians. By 
his military skill, and the confidence which his 
character inspired, he gained possession of 
many of the cities in Macedonia subject to 
Athens ; his greatest acquisition was Amphip- 
olis. In 422 he gained a brilliant victory over 
Cleon, who had been sent, with an Athenian 
force, to recover Amphipolis, but he was slain 
in the battle. He was buried within the city, 
and the inhabitants honored him as a hero by 
yearly sacrifices and by games. Vid. Diet, of 
Ant, art. Beasideia. 

Bratuspantiuji (now Bratuspante, near Bre- 
teuil ), the chief town of the Bellovaci in Gallia 
Belgica, 

Beaueox ( Bpavpuv : Bpavpuvioc : now Vrao- 
na or Vrana), a demus in Attica, on the eastern 
coast, on the River Erasinus, with a celebrated 
temple of Diana (Artemis), who was hence 
called Brauronia, and in whose honor the fes- 
tival Brauronia was celebrated in this place. 
Vid. Diet, of Ant., s. v. 

Beegetio (near Szdny, ruins, east of Co- 
morn), a Roman municipium in Lower Panno- 
nia on the Danube, where Valentinian I. died. 

Brennts. 1. The leader of the Senonian 
Gauls, who, in B.C. 390, crossed the Apennines, 
defeated the Romans at the Allia, and took 
Rome. After besieging the Capitol for six 
months, he quitted the city upon receiving one 
thousand pounds of gold as a ransom for the 
Capitol, and returned home safe with his booty. 
But it was subsequently related in the popular 
legends that Camillus and a Roman army ap- 
peared at the moment the gold was being 
weighed, that Brennus was defeated by Camil- 
lus, and that he himself and his whole army 
were slain to a man.— 2. The chief leader of 
the Gauls who invaded Macedonia and Greece, 
B.C. 280, 219. In 280 Ptolemy Ceraunus was 
defeated by the Gauls under Belgius, and slain 
m battle ; and Brennus in the following year 
penetrated into the south of Greece, but he was 
defeated near Delphi, most of his men were 
slain, tmd he himself put an end to his own fife. 

Beeuci, a powerful people of Pannonia, near 
the confluence of the Savus and the Danube, 
took an active part in the insurrection of the 
148 



Pannouians and Dalmatians against the Ro- 
j mans, A.D. 6. 

Breuxi, a Rsetian people, dwelt in the Tyrol 
: near the Brenner. (Hor., Carm., iv., 14, 11.) 

Beiaeeus. Vid. Mgmos. 

BeioinnLe (BptKivvtai), a place in Sicily not 
| far from Leontini. 

I Beigaxtes, the most powerful of the British 
; tribes, inhabited the whole of the north of the 
j island from the Abus (now Humber) to the Ro- 
man wall, with the exception of the southeast 
corner of Yorkshire, which was inhabited by the 
Parish. The Brigantes consequently inhabited 
the greater part of Yorkshire, and the whole of 
Lancashire, Durham, Westmoreland, and Cum- 
berland. Their capital was Eboeacum. They 
were conquered by Petilius Cerealis in the reign 
of Vespasian. There was also a tribe of Bri- 
gantes in the south of Ireland, between the riv- 
ers Birgus (now Barrow) and Dabrona (now 
Blackwater), in the counties of Waterford and 
Tipperary. 

Beigaxtii, a tribe in Viudelicia, on the Lake 
Brigantixtjs, noted for their robberies. 

Beigaxtinus Lacus (now Bodensee or Lake 
of Constance), also called Vexetus and Aceo- 
xius, through which the Rhine flows, was in- 
habited by the Helvetii on the south, by the 
Raetii on the southeast, and by the Vindelici on 
the north. Near an island on it, probably Rei- 
chenau, Tiberius defeated the Vindelici in a 
naval engagement. 

Beigaxtium. 1. (Now Brianron), a town of 
the Segusiani in Gaul, at the foot of the Cottian 
Alps. — 2. (Now Corunna), a sea-port town of 
the Lucenses, in Gallaecia in Spain, with a light- 
house, which is still used for the same purpose, 
having been repaired in 1791, and which is now 
called La Torre de Hercules. — 3. (Now Bregenz\ 
a town of the Brigantiui Vindelici, on the Lake 
of Constance. 

Beilessus (Bpilrjaaoc), a mountain in Attica, 
northeast of Athens. 

Belmo (BpLp.6), " the angry or the terrifying," 
a surname of Hecate and Proserpina (Perseph- 
one.) 

Beixiates, a people in Liguiia, south of the 
Po, near the modern Brignolo. 

Beiseis (BpcGrjic), daughter of Brises of Lyr- 
nessus, fell into the hands of Achilles, but was 
seized by Agamemnon. Hence arose the dire 
feud between the two heroes. Vid. Achilles. 
Her proper name was Hippodnmia. 

Britannia (77 BperravLKv or BpeTaviKq, sc. 
V7/goc, T] Bper-avla or Bperavta : Bper-avoi, Bpe- 
ravoi, Britanni, Brittones), the island of England 
and Scotland, which was also called Albion 
('Aa6iov, 'A?,ovluv, Insula A Ibionum). Hibernia 
or Ireland is usually spoken of as a separate 
island, but it is sometimes included under the gen- 
eral name of the Insulje Britanxic^e Bpera- 
vlkoI vijGOi), which also ccmpi ehended the small- 
er islands around the coast of Gi eat Bi itain. The 
etymology of the word Biitannia is uncertain, 
but it is derived by most writers from the Celtic 
word brith or- brit, " painted," with reference to 
the custom of tire inhabitants of staining their 
bodies with a blue color' : whatever may be the 
etymology of the word, it is cei tain that it was 
used by the inhabitants themselves, since in the 
Gaelic the inhabitants are called Erython, and 



BRITANNIA. 

their language Brythoneg. The name Albion is 
probably derived from the white cliffs of the 
island [for the more correct derivation, vid. Al- 
bion] ; but writers who derived the names of 
all lands and people from a mythical ancestor, 
connected the name with one Albion, the son 
of Neptune. The Britons were Celts, belong- 
ing to that branch of the race called Cymry, 
and were apparently the aboriginal inhabitants 
of the country. Their manners and customs 
were in general the same as the Gauls ; but, 
separated more than the Gauls from intercourse 
with civilized nations, they preserved the Celtic 
religion in a purer state than in Gaul, and hence 
Druidism, according to Caesar, was transplanted 
from Gaul to Britain. The Britons also retained 
many of the barbarous Celtic customs, which 
the more civilized Gauls had laid aside. They 
painted their bodies with a blue color extracted 
from woad, in order to appear more terrible in 
battle, and they had wives in common. At a 
later time the Belgae crossed over from Gaul, and 
settled on the southern and eastern coasts, driv- 
ing the Britons into the interior of the island. 
It was not till a late period that the Greeks and 
Romans obtained any knowledge of Britain. In 
early times the Phoenicians visited the Scilly 
Islands and the coast of Cornwall for the pur- 
pose of obtaining tin ; but w r hatever knowledge 
they acquired of the country they jealously kept 
secret, and it only transpired that there were 
Cassiterides, or Tin Islands, in the northern 
parts of the ocean. The first certain know- 
ledge which the Greeks obtained of Britain was 
from the merchants of Massilia, about the time 
of Alexander the Great, and especially from the 
voyages of Pytheas, who sailed round a great 
part of Britain. From this time it was gener- 
ally believed that the island was in the form of 
a triangle, an error which eoutinued to prevail 
even at a later period. Another important mis- 
take, which likewise prevailed for a long time, 
was the position of Britain in relation to Gaul 
and Spain. As the northwestern coast of Spain 
was supposed to extend too far to the north, and 
the western coast of Gaul to run northeast, the 
lower part of Britain was believed to lie between 
Spain and Gaul. The Romans first became per- 
sonally acquainted with the island by Caesar's 
invasion. He twice landed in Britain (B.C. 
55, 54), and though on the second occasion he 
conquered the greater part of the southeast 
of the island, yet he did not take permanent 
possession of any portion of the country, and 
after his departure the Britons continued as in- 
dependent as before. The Romans made no 
further attempts to conquer the island for nearly 
one hundred years. In the reign of Claudius 
(A.D. 43), they again landed in Britain, and per- 
manently subdued the country south of the 
Thames. They now began to extend their con- 
quests oyer the other parts of the island ; and the 
great victory (61) of Suetonius Paulinus over 
the Britons who had revolted under Boadicea, 
still further consolidated the Roman dominions. 
In the reign of Vespasian, Petilius Cerealis and 
Julius Frontinus made several successful expe- 
ditions against the Silures and the Brigantes ; 
and the conquest of South Britain was at length 
finally completed by Agricola, who in 6even 
campaigns (78-84) subdued the whole of the 



BRITANNIA. 

island as far north as the Frith of Forth and the 
Clyde, between which he erected a series of 
forts to protect the Roman dominions from the 
incursions of the barbarians in the north of 
Scotland. The Roman part of Britain was now 
called Britannia Jiomana, and the northern part, 
inhabited by the Caledonians, Britannia Barbara 
or Caledonia. The Romans, however, gave up 
the northern conquests of Agricola in the reign 
of Hadrian, and made a rampart of turf from 
the iEstuarium Ituna (now Solway Frith) to the 
German Ocean, which formed the northern 
boundary of their dominions. In the reign of 
Antoninus Pius the Romans again extended their 
boundary as far as the conquests of Agricola, 
and erected a rampart connecting the Forth and 
the Clyde, the remains of which are now called 
Grimes Dike, Grime in the Celtic language sig- 
nifying great or powerful. The Caledonians 
afterward broke through this wall ; and in eon- 
sequence of their repeated devastations of the 
Roman dominions, the Emperor Severus went 
to Britain in 208, in order to conduct the war 
against them in person. He died in the island 
at Eboracum (now York) in 211, after erecting 
a solid stone wall from the Solway to the mouth 
of the Tyne, a little north of the rampart of 
Hadrian. After the death of Severus, the Ro- 
mans relinquished forever all their conquests 
north of this wall. In 287 Carausius assumed 
the purple in Britain, and reigned as emperor, 
independent of Diocletian and Maximian. till 
his assassination by Allectus in 293. Allectus 
reigned three years, and Britain was recovered 
for the emperors in 296. Upon the resignation 
of the empire by Diocletian and Maximian (305), 
Britain fell to the share of Constantius, who 
died at Eboracum in 306, and his son Constan- 
tine assumed in the island the title of Caesar. 
Shortly afterward, the Caledonians, who now 
appear under the names of Picts and Scots, 
broke through the wall of Severus, and the 
Saxons ravaged the coasts of Britain ; and the 
declining power of the Roman empire was un- 
able to afford the province any effectual assist- 
ance. In the reign of Valentinian I., Theodo- 
sius, the father of the emperor of that name, 
defeated the Picts and Scots (367) ; but in the 
reign of Honorius, Constantine, who had been 
proclaimed emperor in Britain (407), withdrew 
all the Roman troops from the island, in order- 
to make himself master of Gaul. The Britons 
were thus left exposed to the ravages of the 
Picts and Scots, and at length, in 447, they 
called in the assistance of the Saxons, who be- 
came the masters of Britain. The Roman do- 
minions of Britain formed a single province till 
the time of Severus, and were governed by a 
legatus of the emperor. Severus divided the 
country into two provinces, Britannia Superior 
and Inferior, of which the latter contained the 
earliest conquests of the Romans in the south 
of the island, and the former the later conquests 
in the north, the territories of the Silures, Bri- 
gantes, <fec. Upon the new division of the prov- 
inces in the reign of Diocletian, Britain was 
governed by a vicarins, subject to the pratfecins 
prcetorio of Gaul, and was divided into four prov- 
inces : (1.) Britannia Prima, the country south 
of the Thames; (2.) Britannia Secun da, Wales; 
(3.) Maxima Cmariensis, the country between 
149 



BR1TANNICUS. 



BRUTUS. 



the Thames and the Humber ; (4.) Flavia Ccesar- j its importance. The Appia Via terminated at 
iensis, the country between the Humber and the j Brundisium, and it was the usual place of em- 
Roman wall Besides these, there was also a | barkation for Greece and the East It was an 
fifth province, Yalentia, which existed for a short ! ancient town, and probably not of Greek origin, 
time, including the conquests of Theodosius be- \ although its foundation is ascribed by some 
yond the Roman walL j writers to the Cretans, and by others to Diome- 

BRiTAxxicus, son of the Emperor Claudius j des. It was at first governed by longs of its 
and Messalina. was born A.D. 42. Agrippina. ; own, but was conquered and colonized by the 
the second wife of Claudius, induced the em- j Romans, B.C. 245. The poet Pacuvius was born 
peror to adopt her own son, and give him pre- at this town, and Virgil died here on his return 
eedence over Britannicus. This son, the Emper- ! from Greece, B.C. 19. 
or Jfero, ascended the throne in 54. and caused j [Brutidius Xiger. Yid. Xiger.] 
Britannicus to be poisoned in the following year, j [Bruttiaxus Lustricus. Yid. Lustricts.] 

[Brito2iaris. a leader of the Galli Senones, j [Bruttius. 1. A Roman knight, for whom Ci- 
who caused the Roman ambassadors to be put i cero wrote a letter of introduction to M\ Acilius 
to death, and their bodies to be mangled with ! Glabrio, proconsul in Sicily in B.C. 46. — 2. A 
every possible indignity : this act brought upon philosopher, with whom M. Cicero the younger 
him . and his people the vengeance of the Ro- j studied at Athens in B.C. 44.] 
mans.] i [Bruttius Sura. Yid. Sura.] 

Brltomariis (Bptroiiapric, usually derived Bruttioi. Brutttus, and Bruttiorum: Ager 
from iipLTvg, sweet or blessing, and udpric. a \ (Bperrla: Bruttius), more usually called Brut- 
maiden), was a Cretan nymph, daughter of Jupi- th, after the inhabitants, the southern extremi- 
ter (Zeus) and Carme, and beloved by Minos, who ty of Italy, separated from Lucania by a line 
pursued her nine months, till at length she drawn from the mouth of the Laus to Thurii, 
leaped into the sea and was changed bv Diana and surrounded on the other three sides by the 
(Artemis) into a goddess. She seems to have sea. It was the country called in ancient times 
been originally a Cretan divinity who presided (Enotria and Italia. The country is mountain- 
over the sports of the chase; on the introduc- ous. as the Apennines run through it down to 
tion of the worship of Diana (Artemis) into the Sicilian Straits : it contained excellent pas- 
Crete she was naturally placed in some relation turage for cattle, and the valley produced good 
with the latter goddess ; and at length the two corn, olives, and fruit. The earliest inhabitants 
divinities became identified, and Britomartis is of the country were OZnotrians. Subsequently 
called in one legend the daughter of Latona ( Le- some Lucanians, who had revolted from their 
to). At JEgina Britomartis was worshipped un- coimtrymen in Lucania, took possession of the 
der the name of Apha a a. country, and were hence called Bruttii or Bret- 

[Britoxes. Yid. Britaxxia.] Hi, which word is said to mean "rebels" in the 

[Brtvates Portus (now Bay de Pifvnebe; ac- language of the Lucanians. This people, how- 
cording to D'Anville. Brest), a harbor of the . ever, inhabited only the interior of the land ; 
X amnetes in Gallia Lugdunensis.] the coast was almost entirely in the possession of 

Brixelloi (Brixellanus : now Brcgella or the Greek colonies. At the close of the second 
Brescella), a town on the right bank of the Po. in Punic war, in which the Bruttii had been the 
Gallia Cisalpina, where the Emperor Otho put allies of Hannibal they lost their independence, 
himself to death, A.D. 69. and were treated by the Romans with great se- 

Bresta ( Brixianus : now Brescia), a town in verity. They were declared to be public slaves, 
Gallia Cisalpina, on the road from Comum to and were employed as lietors and servants of the 
Aquileia, through which the River Meila flowed magistrates. 

{jlavv.s qvam motti percurrit jlumine Mello, da- ■ Brutus. Junius. 1. L., son of It Junius and 
tulL, lxviL, 33). It was probably founded by of Tarquinia, the sister of Tarquinius Superbus, 
the Etruscans, was afterward a" town of the His elder brother was murdered by Tarquinius, 
Libui and then of the Cenomani. and finally and Lucius escaped his brothers fate only by 
became a Roman municipium with the rights of feigning idiocy, whence he received the sur- 
a colony, name of Brutus. After Lucretia had stabbed 

BRomius (Booucoc), a surname of Bacchus herself, Brutus roused the Romans to expel the 
(Dionysus), i. e., the noisy god. from the noise of Tarquins ; and upon the banishment of the lat- 
the Bacchic revelries (from Bptuu). ter, he was elected first consul with Tarquinius 

Broxtes. Yid. Cyclopes. Collatinus. He loved his country better than 

Bruchium. Yid. Axexaxurea. his children, and put to death his two sons, who 

Bructeri. a people of Germany, dwelt on each had attempted to restore the Tarquins. He fell 
side of the Amisia (now Ems), and extended in battle the same year, fighting against Aruns, 
south as far as the Luppia (now Lippe). The the son of Tarquinius. Brutus was the great 
Bructeri joined the Batavi in their revolt against hero in the legends about the expulsion of the 
the Romans in A.D. 69, and the prophetic virgin, Tarquins, but we have no means of determin- 
Veleoa, who had so much influence among the ing what part of the account is historical — 2. 
German tribes, was a native of their countrv. D.. surnamed Soeva, magister equitum to the 
A few years afterward the Bructeri were almost dictator Q. Publilius Philo, B.C. 339, and consul 
a nnihila ted by the Chamavi and Angrivarii. in 325. when he fought against the Vestini. — 
(Tac, Germ., 33.) 3. D.. surnamed Scjeva, consul 292, conquered 

BRuxDUsiuMor Brixdisium {BpsvrrjcLov, Bpei- the Faliscans. — i. ML, tribune of the plebs 195, 
Tmuov: Brundusinus: now Brindisi), a town in praetor 191, when he dedicated the temple of 
Calabria, on a small bay of the Adriatic, form- the Great Idaean Mother, one of the ambassa- 
ing'an excellent harbor, to which the place owed dors sent into Asia 189, and consul 178, when 
150 



BRUTUS. 



BUCEPHALA. 



-he subdued the Istri. He was again one of the 
ambassadors sent iuto Asia in 171. — 5. P., trib- 
une of the ptebs 195, curule aedile 192, praetor 
190, propra tor in Further Spain 189. — 6. D., 
surnamed Gallic us (Cali^ecus) or Callaicus, 
consul 138, eonimanded in Further Spain, and 
conquered a great part of Lusitania. From his 
victory over the Gallaeci he obtained his sur- 
name. He was a patron of the poet L. Accius, 
and well versed in Greek and Roman literature. 

7. D., son of No. 6, consul 77, and husband 

of Sempronia, who carried on an intrigue with 
Catiline. — 8. D., adopted by A. Postumius Al- 
bums, consul 99, and hence called Brutus Albi- 
nus. He served under Cassar in Gaul and in 
the civil war. He commanded Caesar's fleet at 
the siege of Massilia, 49, and was afterward 
placed over Further Gaul. On his return to 
Rome Brutus was promised the praetorship and 
the government of Cisalpine Gaul for 44. Nev- 
ertheless, he joined the conspiracy against Cae- 
sar. After the death of the latter (44) he went 
into Cisalpine Gaul, which he refused to sur- 
render to Antony, who had obtained this prov- 
ince from the people. Antony made war against 
him, and kept him besieged in Mutina, till the 
siege was raised iu April, 48, by the consuls 
Hirtius and Pansa, and Octavianus. But Bru- 
tus only obtained a short respite. Antony was 
preparing to march against hini from the north 
with a large army, and Octavianus, who had 
deserted the senate, was marching against him 
from the south. His only resource was flight, 
but he was betrayed by Camillus, a Gaulish 
chief, and was put to death by Antony, 43. — 9. 
M., praetor 88, belonged to the party of Marios, 
and put an end to his own life in 82, that he 
might not fall into the hands of Pompey, who 
commanded Sulla's fleet. — 10. L„ also "called 
Damasippus, praetor 82, when the younger Ma- 
rius was blockaded at Pnvneste, put to death 
at Rome by order of Marias several of the most 
eminent senators of the opposite party. — 11. M., 
married Servilia, the half-sister of Cato of 
Utica. He was tribune of the plebs 83, and in 
77 he espoused the cause of Lepidus, and was 
placed in command of the forces in Cisalpine 
Gaul, where he was slain by command of Pom- 
pey. — 12. M., the so-called tyrannicide, son of 
No. 11 and Servilia. He lost his lather when he 
was only eight years old, and was trained by his 
uncle Cato in the principles of the aristocratical 
party. Accordingly, on the breaking out of the 
civil war, 49, he joined Pompev, although he 
was the murderer of his father. After the bat- 
tle of Pharsalia, 48, he was not onlv pardoned 
by Caesar, but received from him the greatest 
marks of confidence and favor. Caesar made 
him governor of Cisalpine Gaul iu 46, and prae- 
tor in 44, and also promised him the govern- 
ment of Mac donia. But, notwithstanding all 
the obligations he was under to Caesar, he was 
persuaded by Cassius to murder his benefactor 
under the delusive idea of again establishing the 
republic. Vid. Cesar. After the murder of 
Caesar Brutus spent a short time in Italy, and 
±hen took possession of the province of Mace- 
donia. He was joined by Cassius, who com- 
manded in Syria, and their united forces were 
opposed to those of Octavianus and Antonv. 
Two battles were fought in the neighborhood 



of Philippi (42), in the former of which Brutus 
was ^ victorious, though Cassius was defeated, 
but in the latter Brutus also was defeated and 
put an end to liis own life. Brutus's wife was 
Porcia, the daughter of Cato. Brutus was an 
ardent student of literature and philosophy, but 
he appears to have been deficient in judgment 
and original power. He wrote several works, 
all of which have perished. He was a literary 
friend of Cicero, who dedicated to him his Tus- 
cidance Disputationes, De Mnibus, and Orator, 
and who has given the name of Brutus to his 
dialogue on illustrious orators. 

Bryaxis (Bpva^ig), an Athenian statuary in 
stone and metal, lived B.C. 372-312, [one of 
the artists engaged in adorning the tomb of 
Mausolus with bas reliefs.] 

Brygi or Bryges (Bpvyoi, Bpiyeg), a barbar- 
ous people in the north of Macedonia, probably 
of Blyrian or Thracian origin, who were still in 
Macedonia at the time of the Persian war. The 
Phrygians were believed by the ancients to have 
been a portion of this people, who emigrated to 
Asia in early times. Vid, Phrygia. 

[BrysiLe (Bpvaeat), a city of Laconia, south- 
west from Amyclae, on the Eurotas, contained 
a temple of Bacchus (Dionysus). It had been 
destroyed before the tune of Pausanias.] 

[Bubares (Bovdupiis), son of Megabazus, sent 
as a special messenger to Macedonia, but al- 
lowed himself to be bribed to neglect his duty. 
In conjunction with Artachaees, Bubares super- 
intended the construction of the canal which 
Xerxes made across the isthmus of Athos. Vid. 
Athos.] 

Bubassus {BvCaccog), an ancient city of Caria, 
east of Cnidus, which gave name to the bay 
(Bubassius Sinus) and the peninsula (Jj Xepao- 
v7]Gog ij Bv6aacLi}) on which it stood. Ovid 
speaks of Buba.s1.des nurus {Met, ix., 643.) 

Bubastis {BovftaorLc), daughter of Osiris and 
Isis, an Egyptian divinity, whom the Greeks 
identified with Diana (Artemis), since she was 
the goddess of the moon. The cat was sacred 
to her, and she was represented in the form of 
a eat, or of a female with the head of a cat. 

Bubastis or -us (BovCaartg or -oc ; Bov6aart- 
rrjg : ruins at Tel Basta), the capital of the No- 
mos Bubastites iu Lower Egypt, stood on the 
eastern bank of the Pelusiac branch of the Nile, 
and was the chief seat of the worship of Bubas- 
tis, whose annual festival was kept here. Un- 
der the Persians the city was dismantled, and 
lost much of its importance. 

Bubulcus, C. Junius, consul B.C. 317, a sec- 
ond time iu 313, and a third time in 311 ; in the 
last of these years he carried on the war against 
the Samnites with great success. He was cen- 
sor in 309, and dictator in 302, when he defeat- 
ed the iEquians; in his dictatorship he dedi- 
cated the temple of Safety which he had vowed 
in his third consulship. The walls of this tem- 
ple were adorned with paintings by C. Fabius 
Pietor. 

Bucephala or -Ik (BovntyaAa or -d?.eia : [now 
probably Mung, near] Jhelum), a city on the Hy- 
daspes (now Jhelum), in Northern India (the 
Punjab), built by Alexander after his battle with 
Porus, in memory of his favorite charger Bu- 
cephalus, whom he buried here. It stood at 
the place where Alexander crossed the river, 
151 



BUCEPHALUS. 



BUTES. 



and where General Gilbert crossed it (February 
1849) after the battle of Goojerat, 

Bucephalus (BovK£<pa'Aor),ihe celebrated horse 
of Alexander the Great, which Philip purchased 
for thirteen talents, and which no one was able 
to break in except the youthful Alexander. 
This horse carried Alexander through his Asi- 
atic campaigns, and died in India B.C. 327. 
Vid, Bucephala. 

[Bucllianus, called Bucolianus by Appian, 
one of the friends of Caesar who afterward con- 
spired against h i m : he was one of Caesar's mur- 
derers.] 

[Bucolicum Ostium, one of the mouths of the 
Nile, the same as the Phatneticum Ostium. 
Vid. Nilus.] 

[Bucoliox (BovkoIUov). 1. A son of Laome- 
don and the nymph Calybe. — 2. A prince of Ar- 
cadia, son of Lycaon, grandson of Cypselus.] 

[Bucoliox {BovnoHuv, rj), a small city of Ar- 
cadia.] 

Bud alia, a town in Lower Pannonia, near Sir- 
mium, the birth-place of the Emperor Decius. 

Budixi (Bovdlvoi), a Scythian people, who 
dwelt north of the Sauromatae, in the steppes of 
Southern Russia. Herodotus (iv., 108) calls the 
nation ylavnov ~e kcu Tzvppov, which some inter- 
pret "with blue eyes and red hair," and others 
" painted blue and red." [In their territory was 
a mountain called Budixus, near the sources of 
the Borysthenes.] 

Budorox (Bovoopov), a fortress in Salamis, on 
a promontory of the same name, opposite Me- 
gara. 

Bulis (Bov/ug) and Sperthias (iTrspdlvg), two 
Spartans, voluntarily went to Xerxes and offer- 
ed themselves for punishment to atone for the 
murder of the heralds whom Darius had sent to 
Sparta; but they were dismissed uninjured by 
the king. 

Bulis (Bovaiq \ BovXiog), a town in Phoeis, on 
the Corinthian Gulf, and on the borders of 
Boeotia. 

Bullis (Bullinus, Bullio, -onis, Bulliensis), a 
town of Illyria, on the coast, south of Apollonia, 
capital of the Bulliones. 

Bupalus and his brother Athenis, sculptors 
of Chios, lived about B.C. 500, and are said to 
have made caricatures of the poet Hipponax, 
which the poet requited by the bitterest satires. 

[Buphagium (Bov<pdyiov), a small town of Ar- 
cadia, on the Buphagus, which flows between 
the territories of Megalopolis and Heraea.] 

[Buphras (Bovfypuc), sl mountain in Messenia, 
near Pylos. 

[Buporthmus (Bov-opduog), a mountain in Ar- 
gons, between Hermione and Troezene: on it 
was a temple of Ceres and Proserpina, and one 
of Bacchus.] 

Buprasium (Bovrrpdacov : -cievg, -clcjv, -ffldijg), 
an ancient town in Elis, mentioned in the Iliad, 
which had disappeared in the time of Strabo. 

Bura (Bovpa : Bovpalog, Bovpiog : ruins near 
Kalavrytra), one of the twelve cities of Achaia, 
destroyed by an earthquake, together with He- 
lice, but subsequently rebuilt. 

Burdigala {Bovpdtyala : now Bordeaux), the 
capital of the Bituriges Vivisci in Aquitania, on 
the left bank of the Garumna (now Garonne), 
was a place of great commercial importance, 
and at a later time one of the chief seats of lit- 



152 



erature and learning. It was the birth-place of 
the poet Ausonius. 

Burgundiones or Burgundii, a powerful na- 
tion of Germany, dwelt originally between the 
Yiadus (now Oder) and the Vistula, and were of 
; the same race as the Vandals or Goths. They 
\ pretended, however, to be descendants of the 
| Romans, whom Drusus and Tiberius had left in 
I Germany as garrisons, but this descent was evi- 
! dently invented by them to obtain more easi- 
1 ly from the Romans a settlement west of the 
j Rhine. They were driven out of their original 
j abodes between the Oder and the Vistula by 
' the Gepidae, and the greater part of them mi- 
grated west and settled in the country on the 
Main, where they carried on frequent wars with 
their neighbors the Alemanni. In the fifth cen- 
tury they settled west of the Alps in Gaul, 
where they founded the powerful kingdom of 
Burgundy. Their chief towns were Geneva 
and Lyons. 

Burii, a people of Germany, dwelt near the 
sources of the Viadus (now Oder) and Vistula, 
and joined the Marcomanni in their war against 
the Romans in the reign of Marcus Aurelius. 

Burrus, Afraxius, was appointed by Clau- 
dius praefectus praetorio A.D. 52, and, in con- 
junction with Seneca, conducted the education 
of Nero. He opposed Nero's tyrannical acts, 
and was at length poisoned by command of the 
emperor, 63. 

Bursa. Vid, Plaxcus. 

Bursao (Bursaoensis, Bursavolensis), a town 
of the Autrigonae in Hispania Tarraconensis. 

Busiris (Bovaiptg), king of Egypt, son of Nep- 
tune (Poseidon) and Lysianassa, is said to have 
sacrificed all foreigners that visited Egypt. 
Hercules, on his arrival in Egypt, was likewise 
seized and led to the altar, but he broke his 
chains and slew Busiris. This myth seems to 
point out a time when the Egyptians were ac- 
customed to offer human sacrifices to their 
deities. 

Busiris (Bovaipig : Bovciptrvg). 1. (Now 
Abousir, ruins), the capital of the Nomos Busi- 
rites in Lower Egypt, stood just in the middle 
of the Delta, on the western bank of the Nile, 
and had a great temple of Isis, the remains of 
which are still standing. — 2. (Now Abousir, near 
Jizeh), a small town a little northwest of 
Memphis. 

[Butas (Bovrag), a Greek poet of uncertain 
age, who wrote in elegiac verse an account of 
early Roman history. Some lines on the fabu- 
lous origin of the Lupercalia are preserved in 
Plutarch's Life of Romulus.] 

Buteo, Fabius. 1. N., consul B.C. 247, in 
the first Punic war, was employed in the siege 
of Drepanum. — 2. M., consul 245, also in the 
first Punic war. In 216 he was appointed dic- 
tator to fill up the vacancies in the senate oc- 
casioned by the battle of Cannae. — 3. Q., praetor 
181, with the province of Cisalpine Gaul Id 
179 he was one of the triumvirs for founding a 
Latin colony in the territory of the Pisani. 

Butes (BovT7jg). 1. Son of either Teleon, or 
Pandion, or Amycus, and Zeuxippe. He was 
one of the Argonauts, and priest of Minerva 
(Athena) and of the Erechthean Neptune (Po- 
seidon). The Attic family of the Butadae or 
Eteobutadae derived their origin from him ; and 



BUTHROTUM. 



CABILLONUM. 



in the Erechtheum on the Acropolis there was 
an altar dedicated to Butes.— [2. An Argive, 
who went with Tlcpolemus, son of Hercules, 
to Rhodes: when the latter sailed for Troy, 
he gave over the island to Butes— 3. Armor- 
bearer of Anehises, afterward given as a com- 
panion to lulus by his father ^Eneas. Apollo 
assumed his form 'to dissuade lulus from con- 
tinuing the tight.— 4. A Trojan companion of 
^Eneas, slain by Camilla.] 

Buthrotpm ( BovdpuTov : Bovdpurioc : now Bu- 
trinto), a town of Epirus, on a small peninsula 
opposite Corcyra, was a flourishing sea-port, and 
was colonized by the Romans. 

Buto (Bovtu), an Egyptian divinity, worship- 
ped principally in the town of Buto. She was 
the nurse of Horus and Bubastis, the children of 
Osiris and Isis, and she saved them from the 
persecutions of Typhon by concealing them in 
the floating island of Chemmis. The Greeks 
identified her with Leto, and represented her 
as the goddess of night. The shrew-mouse 
(fivyalri) and the hawk were sacred to her. 

Buto (Bovtu, Bovtt), or Bovrog : Bovroir?/g : 
now Baltim ? ruins), the chief city of the Nomos 
Chemmites in Lower Egypt, stood near the Se- 
bennytic branch of the Nile, on the Lake of 
Buto (Bovtik?) Al/ivt], also 1>e6evvvtik7]), and was 
celebrated for its oracle of the goddess Buto, in 
honor of whom a festival was held at the city 
every year. 

Buxentum (Buxeutlnus, Buxentius : now Po- 
licastro), originally Pyxus (Ilvtovg), a town on 
the west coast of Lueania and on the River 
Buxentius, was founded by Micythus, tyrant 
of Messana, B.C. 471, and was afterward a Ro- 
man colony. 

Byblini Montes (ra Bv6?jva dp?}), the mount- 
ains whence the Nile is said to flow in the myth- 
ical geography of /Esehylus (Prom., 811). 

Byblis (BufiAic), daughter of Miletus and Ido- 
thea, was in love with her brother Caunus, 
whom she pursued through various lands, till at 
length, worn out with sorrow, she was changed 
into a fountain. 

Byblus (BvfiAoc : Bv6?uog : now Jebeil), a very 
ancient city on the coast of Phoenicia, between 
Berytus and Tripolis, a little north of the River 
Adonis. It was the chief seat of the worship of 
Adonis. It was governed by a succession of 
petty princes, the last of whom was deposed by 
Pompey. 

Bylazora (Bi /.aCwpa : now Bilias), a town in 
Paeonia, in Macedonia, on the River Astycus. 

BYRSA^(Bvpcra), the citadel of Carthago. 

Byzacium or Byzackn v Regio (BvCuklov, Bv- 
Canlg x"P a •■ southern part of Tunis), the south- 
ern portion of the Roman province of Africa. 
Vid. Africa, p. 28, b. 

ByzantIni Si riptGres, the general name of 
the historians who have given an account of 
the Eastern or Byzantine empire from the time 
of Constantino the. Great, A.D. 325, to the de- 
struction of the empire, 1453. They all wrote 
in Greek, and may be divided into different 
classes. 1. The historians whose collected 
works form an uninterrupted history of the By- 
zantine empire, and whose writings are there- 
fore called Carpus Historice Byzantince. They 
are, (1.) Zonaras, who begins with the creation 
of the world, and brings his history down to 



1188. (2.) Nicephorus Acominatus, whose his- 
tory extends from 1188 to 1206. (3.) Nicepho- 
rus Gregoras, whose history extends from 
1204 to 1331. (4.) Laonicus Chalcondyles, 
whose history extends from 129*7 to 1462: his 
work is continued by an anonymous writer to 
1565. — 2. The chronograpkers, who give a brief 
chronological summary of universal history from 
the creation of the world to their own times. 
These writers are very numerous: the most 
important of them are Georgius Syncellus, 
Theophanes, Nicephorus, Cedrents, Simeon 
Metaphrastes, Michael Glycas, the author? 
of the Ckronicon Paschale, &c. — 3. The writers 
who have treated of separate portions of Byzan- 
tine history, such as Zosimus, Procopius, Aga- 
thias, Anna Comnena, &c. — 4. The writers who 
have treated of the constitution, antiquities, 
&c, of the empire, such as Laurentius Lydus, 
Constantinus VI. Porphyrogennetus. A col- 
lection of the Byzantine writers was published 
at Paris by command of Louis XIV., in 36 vols, 
fol., 1645-1711. A reprint of this edition, with 
additions, was published at Venice, in 23 vols, 
fol., 1727-1733. A new edition of the Byzantine 
writers was commenced by Niebuhr, Bonn, 1828, 
8vo, and is still in course of publication. 

Byzantium (Bv^dvrtov : Bv^dvrtog, Byzantius ; 
now Constantinople), a town on the Thracian 
Bosporus, founded by the Megarians, E.C. 658, 
is said to have derived its name from Byzas, 
the leader of the colony and the son of Neptune 
(Poseidon). It was situated on two hills, was 
forty stadia in circumference, and its acropolis 
stood on the site of the present seraglio. Its 
favorable position, commanding as it did the 
entrance to the Euxine, soon rendered it a place 
of great commercial importance. It was taken 
by Pausanias after the battle of Platan, B.C. 
479 ; and it was alternately in the possession 
of the Athenians and Lacedaemonians during 
the Peloponnesian war. The Lacedaemonians 
were expelled from Byzantium by Thrasybulus 
in 390, and the city remained independent for 
some years. Afterward it became subject in 
succession to the Macedonians and the Romans. 
In the civil war between Pescennius Niger and 
Severus, it espoused the cause of the former : 
it was taken by Severus A.D. 196, after a siege 
of three years, and a considerable part of it de- 
stroyed. A new city was built by its side (330) 
by Constantine, who made it the capital of the 
empire, and changed its name into Constanti- 
nopolis. 

[Byzas (Bvfcg), mythic founder of Byzanti- 
um, q. v.~] 

c. 

Cabalia or -is (Ka6a?/ca, Ka6a/uc '■ Ka6a?.Ev<:, 
Ka6a/Uoc), a small district of Asia Minor, be- 
tween Lycia and Pamphylia, with a town of the 
same name. 

Cabasa or -us (KdSaooc : KaSaairrjg), the chief 
city of the Nomos Cabasites, in Lower Egypt. 

Cabillonum [or Caballinum (Ka6a?,?uvov :. 
now] Chdlo7is-sur-Sa6ne), a town of the JEdui, 
on the Arar (now Sadne), in Gallia Lugdunen- 
sis, was a place of some commercial activity 
when Caesar was in Gaul (B.C. 53). At a later 
time the Romans kept a small fleet here. 

153 



CABIRA. 



CADYTIS. 



Cabira (tu Ku6eipa : now Sivas), a place in 
Pontus, on the borders of Armenia, near Mount 
Paryadres : a frequent residence of Mithradates, 
•who was defeated here by Lucullus, B.C. 71. 
Pompey made it a city, and named it Diospolis. 
Under Augustus it was called Sebaste. 

CabIri (KdCsipoi), mystic divinities who oc- 
cur in various parts of the ancient world. The 
meaning of their name, their character and na- 
ture, are quite uncertain. They were chiefly 
worshipped at Samothrace, Lemnos, and Im- 
bros, and their mysteries at Samothrace were 
solemnized with great splendor. Vid. Diet, of 
Ant, art. Cabeiria. They were also worship- 
ped at Thebes, Anthedon, Pergamus, and else- 
where. Most of the early writers appear to 
have regarded them as the children of Yulcan 
(Hephaestus), and as inferior divinities dwelling 
in Samothrace, Lemnos, and Imbros. Later 
writers identify them with Ceres (Derneter), 
Proserpina (Persephone), and Rhea, and regard 
then' mysteries as solemnized in honor of one 
of these goddesses. Other writers identify the 
Cabiri with the Dioscuri (Castor and Pollux), 
and others, again, with the Roman penates ; but 
the latter notion seems to have arisen with those 
writers who traced every ancient Roman institu- 
tion to Troy, and thence to Samothrace. 

Cabyle {Ka&vXrj : KuBvlnvog : now Golowitza), 
a town in the interior of Thrace, conquered by 
M. Lucullus, probably the Goloe of the Byzan- 
tine writers. 

Cages, son of Vulcan, was a huge giant, who 
inhabited a cave on Mount Aventine, and plun- 
dered the surrounding country. When Her- 
cules came to Italy with the oxen which he had 
taken from Geryon in Spain, Cacus stole part 
of the cattle while the hero slept ; and, as he 
dragged the animals into his cave by their tails, 
it was impossible to discover their traces. But 
when the remaining oxen passed by the cave, 
those within began to bellow, and were thus 
discovered, whereupon Cacus was slain by Her- 
cules. In honor of his victory, Hercules dedi- 
cated the am maxima, which continued to exist 
ages afterward in Rome. 

Cacyparis (Ka/cvTrapic or KanorrapLc : now 
■Cassibili), a river in Sicily, south of Syracuse. 

Cadexa (tu Kudr/va), a strong city of Cappa- 
doeia, the residence of the last king, Archelaiis. 

Cadi (Kddot : Kadnvoc : now Kodus), a city 
of Phrygia Epictetus, on the borders of Lydia. 

Cadmea. Vid. Theb^e. 

Cadmus (Kddfioc). 1. Son of Agenor, king of 
Phoenicia, and of Telephassa, and brother of 
Europa. Another legend makes him a native 
of Thebes in Egypt, When Europa was car- 
ried off by Jupiter (Zeus) to Crete, Agenor sent 
Cadmus in search of his sister, enjoining him 
not to return without her. Unable to find her, 
Cadmus settled in Thrace, but, having consult- 
ed the oracle at Delphi, he was commanded by 
the god to follow a cow of a certain kind, and 
to build a town on the spot where the cow 
should sink down with fatigue. Cadmus found 
the cow in Phocis, and followed her into Bceotia, 
where she sank down on the spot on which Cad- 
mus built Cadrnea, afterward the citadel of 
Thebes. Intending to scrifice the cow to Mi- 
nerva (Athena), he sent some persons to the 
neighboring well of Mars (Ares) to fetch water. 
154 



I This well was guarded by a dragon, a son of 
! Mars (Ares), who killed the men sent by Cad- 
| miis. Thereupon Cadmus slew the dragon, 
I and, on the advice of Minerva (Athena), sowed 
the teeth of the monster, out of which armed 
i men grew up, called Sparti or the Sown, who 
| killed each other, with the exception of five, 
J who were the ancestors of the Thebans. Mi- 
! nerva (Athena) assigned to Cadmus the govern- 
; ment of Thebes, and Jupiter (Zeus) gave him 
j Harmonia for his wife. The marriage solem- 
| nity was honored by the presence of all the 
I Olympian gods in the Cadmea. Cadmus gave 
j to Harmonia the famous peplus and necklace 
] which he had received from Vulcan (Hephaes- 
! tus) or from Europa, and he became by her the 
j father of Autonoe, Ino, Semele. Agave, and 
! Polydorus. Subsequently Cadmus and Har- 
j monia quitted Thebes, and went to the Enche- 
| Hans : this people chose Cadmus as their king, 
j and with his assistance they conquered the II- 
| lyrians. After this Cadmus had another son, 
whom he called IUyrius. In the end, Cadmus 
and Harmonia were changed into serpents, and 
j were removed by Jupiter (Zeus) to Elysium. 
; Cadmus is said to have introduced into Greece, 
I from Phoenicia or Egypt, an alphabet of sixteen 
j letters, and to have been the first who worked 
I the mines of Mount Pangaeon in Thrace. The 
| story of Cadmus seems to suggest the immigra- 
j tion of a Phoenician or Egyptian colony into 
j Greece, by means of which the alphabet, the 
art of mining, and civilization, came into the 
country. But many modern writers deny the 
j existence of any such Phoenician or Egyptian 
! colony, and regard Cadmus as a Pelasgian di- 
, vinity. — 2. Of Miletus, a son of Pandion, the 
1 earliest Greek historian or logographer, lived 
j about B.C. 540. He wrote a work on the foun- 
| dation of Miletus and the earliest history of 
| Ionia generally, in four books, but the work ex- 
j tant in antiquity under the latter name was con- 
I sidered a forgery. 

Cadmus (Kddfioc). 1. (]S T ow Mount Baba), a 
| mountain in Caria, on the borders of Phrygia, 
j containing the sources of the rivers Cadmus 
j and Lycus. — 2. A small river of Phrygia, flowing 
| north into the Lycus. 

j Cadurct, a people in Gallia Aquitaniea. in the 
country now called Querci (a corruption of Ca- 
durci), were celebrated for their manufactories of 
linen, coverlets, <fec. Their capital was Diyo>a, 
afterward Ciyitas Cadurcorum, now Cahors, 
where are the remains of a Roman amphitheatre 
and of an aqueduct. A part of the town still 
i bears the name les Cadurcas. 

Cadusii (Kadovoioi) or Gei^e (Ty/.ai), a pow- 
' erful Scythian tribe in the mountains southwest 
! of the Caspian, on the borders of Media Atro- 
I patene. Under the Medo-Persian empire they 
, were troublesome neighbors, but the Syrian 
; kings appear to have reduced them to tributary 
i auxiliaries. 

i Cadytis (KuSvtic), according to Herodotus, a 
; great city of the Syrians of Palestine, not much 
l smaller than Sardis, was taken by Necho, king 
! of Egypt, after his defeat of the " Syrians" at 
j Magdolus. It is now pretty well established 
i that by Cadytis is meant Jerusalem, and that 
j the battle mentioned by Herodotus is that in 
' which Necho defeated and slew King Josiah at 



CECILIA. 



CiEDICUS. 



Megidd>, B.C. 608. (Compare Herod., ii., 159 ; 
iii., 5, with 2 Kings, xxiii., and 2 Chron., xxxv., 
xxxvD. 

Cecilia. 1. Caia, the Romau name of Tan- 
aquil, wife of Tarquiaius Priscus.— [2. Me- 
tella, daughter of Q. Caecilius Metellus Mace- 
donieus, consul B.C. 143, married C. Servilius 
Vatia, and was by him mother of P. Servili- 
us Vatia Isauricus, cousul B.C. 79 ; a second 
daughter married P. Cornelius Scipio Nasiea, 
consul B.C. Ill- — 3. Daughter of L. Caecilius 
Metellus Calvus, married to L. Lieinius Lucul- 
lus, and by him mother of the celebrated Lucul- 
lus,' the conqueror of Mithradates. — 4. Daugh- 
ter of Q. Caecilius Metellus Balearicus, consul 
B.C. 123, was wife of Ap. Claudius Pulcher.] — 
5. Metella, daughter, of L. Metellus Dalmati- 
cus, consul B.C. 119, was first married to /Emil- 
ius Scaurus, consul in 115, and afterward to 
the dictator Sulla. She fell ill in 81, during the 
celebration of Sulla's triumphal feast; and, as 
her recovery was hopeless, Sulla, for some re- 
ligious reasons, sent her a bill of divorce, and 
had her removed from his house, but honored 
her memory with a splendid funeral. — 6. Daugh- 
ter of T. Pomponiue Attic us, called Ciecilia, 
because her father took the name of his uncle, 
Q. Caecilius, by whom he was adopted. She 
was married to M. Vipsauius Agrippa. Vid. 
Atticus. 

Cecilia Gens, plebeian, claimed descent 
from C^eculus, the founder of Praeneste, or 
Caecas, the companion of JEneas. Most of the 
Csecilii are mentioned uuder their cognomens, 
Bassus, Metellus, Rufus : for others, see be- 
low. 

CiECiLius. 1. Q,, a wealthy Roman eques, 
who adopted his nephew Atticus in his will, and 
left the latter a fortune of ten millions of ses- 
terces. — 2. Caecilius Cai.actints, a Greek rhet- 
orician at Rome in the time of Augustus, was 
a native of Cale Acte in Sicily (whence his 
name Calactinus). He wrote a great number 
of works on rhetoric, grammar, and historical 
subjects. All these works are now lost ; but 
they were in great repute with the rhetori- 
cians and critics of the imperial period. — 3. C.e- 
cilius Statics, a Romau comic poet, the im- 
mediate predecessor of Terence, was by birth an 
Insubrian Gaul, and a native of Milan. Being a 
slave, he bore the servile appellation of Statius, 
which was afterward, probably when he receiv- 
ed his freedom, converted into a sort of cogno 
men, and he became kuowu as Caecilius Sta- 
tius. He died B.C. 108. We have the titles 
of forty of his dramas, but only a few fragments 
of them are preserved. They appear to have 
belonged to the class of Palliatce, that is, were 
free translations or adaptations of the works of 
Greek writers of the new comedy. The Ro- 
mans placed Caecilius in the first rank of comic 
poets, classing him with Plautus and Terence. 
[The best edition of the fragments is by Spen- 
gel, Monachii, 1829, 4to ; they are given also 
in Bothe's PoeUp Scenici Latini, vol. v., p. 128, 
segq.-] 

Caecina, the name of a family of the Etrus- 
can city of Volaterrae, probably derived from the 
River Caecina, which flows by the town. 1. A. 
CjEctxa, whom Cicero defended in a law-suit, 
B.C. 69. — 2. A. CiEciNA, son of the preceding, 



published a libellous work against Caesar, and 
was, in consequence, sent into exile after the 
battle of Pharsalia, B.C. 48. He afterward 
joined the Pompeiaus in Africa, and upon the 
defeat of the latter in 46, he surrendered to 
Caesar, who spared his life. Cicero wrote sev- 
eral letters to Caecina, and speak3 of him as a 
man of ability. Caecina was the author of a 
work on the Mrusca Disciplina. — 3. A. Cjecina 
Severus, a distinguished general in the reigns 
of Augustus and Tiberius. He was governor 
of Mcesia in A.D. 6, when he fought against the 
two Batos in the neighboring provinces of Dal- 
matia and Pannonia. Vid. Bato. In 15 he 
fought as the legate of Germanicus against 
Arminius, and, in consequence of his success, 
received the insignia of a triumph. — 4. Caecina 
Tuscus, son of Nero's nurse, appointed govern- 
or of Egypt by Nero, but banished for making 
use of the baths which had been erected in an- 
ticipation of the emperor's arrival in Egypt. He 
returned from banishment on the death of Nero, 
A.D. 68. — 5. A. C<ecina Aliends, was quaes- 
tor in Baetica in Spain at Nero's death, and was 
one of the foremost in joining the party of Gal- 
ba. He was rewarded by Galba with the com- 
mand of a legion in Upper Germany ; but being 
detected in embezzling some of the public mon- 
ey, the emperor ordered him to be prosecuted. 
Caecina, in revenge, joined Vitellius, and was 
sent by the latter into Italy with an army of 
thirty thousand men toward the end of 68. 
After ravaging the country of the Helvetii, he 
crossed the Alps by the pass of the Great St. 
Bernard, and laid siege to Placentia, from which 
he was repulsed by the troops of Otho, who had 
succeeded Galba. Subsequently he was joined 
by Fabius Valens, another general of Vitellius, 
! and their uuited forces gained a victory over 
j Otho's army at Bedriacum. Vitellius having 
j thus gained the throne, Caecina was made con- 
j sul on the first of September, 69, and was short- 
ly afterward sent against Antoninus Primus, the 
j general of Vespasian. But he again proved a 
I traitor, and espoused the cause of Vespasian. 
Some years afterward (79) he conspired against 
Vespasian, and was slain by order of Titus. — 
t 6. Decius Albinus Caecina, a Romau satirist 
j in the time of Arcadius and Honorius. 

C^ecinl's (Kainivog or Kaitclvog), a river in 
Bruttium, flowing into the Sinus Scylacius by 
the town C^ecinum. 

C^ecubus Ager, a marshy district in Latium, 
bordering on the Gulf of Amyclae, close to Fundi, 
celebrated for its wine (Ccecubum) in the age of 
Horace. In the time of Pliny the reputation 



of this wine was entirely gone. Vid. Diet, of 
Ant., p. 1207, a, second edition. 

Ceculus, an ancient Italian hero, son of ViuV. 
can, is said to have founded Praeueste. 

[C^edicius, M. 1. A Roman centurion, was 
elected commander by the Romans that had fled 
to Veii after the destruction of the city by the 
Gauls, B.C. 390 : he is said to have carried to 
Camillus the decree of the senate appointing 
him to the command. — 2. C, one of the legates 
of the consul L. Papirius Cursor, commanded 
the cavalry in the great battle with the Sam- 
nites, B.C. 293.] 

[Cepicus, two mythical personages men- 
tioned in the ^Eneid of Virgil.] 

155 



CL'ELES. 



CAESAR. 



Celes or Celius Vibenna, the leader of au 
Etruscan army, is said to have come to Rome 
in the reign either of Romulus or of Tarquinius 
Priscus, and to have settled with his troops on 
the hill called after him the Caelian. 

C^elius or Coelius. I. Antipater. Vid. 
Antipater. — 2. Aur e lianus . Vid. Aurelia- 
jtos. — 3. Caldus. Vid. Caldus. — 4. Rufus. Vid. 
Rufus. 

CjElitts or Cgslius Mons. Vid. Roma. 

Cjenm (Kaivai: now Seym), a city of Meso- 
potamia, on the west bank of the Tigris, oppo- 
site the mouth of the Lycus. 

C^ene, CLenepolis, or Neapolis (Kaivi) iroTug, 
Ne?7 nolle : now Keneh), a city of Upper Egypt, 
on the right bank of the Nile, a little below Cop- 
tos, and opposite to Tentyra. 

Cjsneus (Katvevg), one of the Lapithae, son 
of Elatus or Coronus, was originally a maiden 
named C^enis, who was beloved by Neptune 
(Poseidon), and was by this god changed into a 
man, and rendered invulnerable. As a man, 
he took part in the Argonautic expedition and 
the Calydonian hunt. In the battle between 
the Lapithae and the Centaurs at the marriage 
of Pirithous, he was buried by the Centaurs 
under a mass of trees, as they were unable to 
kill him, but he was changed into a bird. In 
the lower world Caeneus recovered his female 
form. (Virg. jEh., vi., 448.) 

C^eni or C^enici, a Thracian people between 
the Black Sea and the Panysus. 

CiENiNA (Caeninensis), a town of the Sabines 
in Latium, whose king, Acron, is said to have 
carried on the first war against Rome. After 
their defeat, most of the inhabitants removed to 
Rome. 

Cenis. Vid. Caeneus. 

Cents (Kalvvc: now Capo di Cavallo or Coda 
di Volpe), a promontory of Bruttium opposite 
Sicily. 

Ceparius, M., of Tarracina, one of Catiline's 
conspirators, was to induce the shepherds in 
Apulia to rise: he escaped from the city, but 
was overtaken in his flight, and was executed 
with the other conspirators, B.C. 63. 

C,epio, Servilius. 1. Cn., consul B.C. 253, 
in the first Punic war, sailed with his colleague, 
C. Sempronius Blsesus, to the coast of Africa. — 
2. Cn., curule aedile 207, praetor 205, and con- 
sul 203, when he fought against Hannibal near 
Croton, in the south of Italy. He died in the 
pestilence in 174. — 3. Cn., son of No. 2. curule 
sedile 179, praetor 174, with Spain as his pro- 
vince, and consul in 169. — 4. Q., son of No. 3, 
consul 142, was adopted by Q. Fabius Maximus. 
Vid. Maximus. — 5. Cn., son of No. 3, consul 141, 
and censor 125. — 6. Cn., son of No. 3, consul 
140, carried on war against Viriathus in Lusi- 
tania, and induced two of the friends of Viria- 
thus to murder the latter — 7. Q., son of No. 6, 
was consul 106, when he proposed a law for 
restoring the judicia to the senators, of which 
they had been deprived by the Sempronia lex 
of C. G-racchus. He was afterward sent into 
Gallia Narbonensis to oppose the Cimbri, and 
was in 105 defeated by the Cimbri, along with 
the consul Cn. Mallius or Manlius, on which oc- 
casion eighty thousand soldiers and forty thou- 
sand camp-followers are said to have perished. 
Caepio survived the battle, but ten years after- i 
156 



ward (95) he was brought to trial by the tribune 
C. Norbanus on account of his misconduct in 
this war. He was condemned and cast into 
prison, where, according to one account, he 
died, but it was more generally stated that he 
escaped from prison, and lived in exile at Smyr- 
na. — 8. Q., quaestor urbanus 100, opposed the 
lex frumentaria of Saturninus. In 91 he op- 
posed the measures of Drusus, and accused two 
of the most distinguished senators, M. Scaurus 
and L. Philippus. He fell in battle in the Social 
War, 90. 

C^epio, Fannius, conspired with Murena against 
Augustus B.C. 22, and was put to death. 

CjEre (Cae rites, Caeretes, Caeretani : now Cer- 
vetri), called by the Greeks Agylla ("AyvXXa : 
poet. Agyllina urbs, Virg., JEn., vii. 652), a city 
in Etruria, situated on a small river (Ceeritis 
amnis), west of Veii, and fifty stadia from the 
coast. It was an ancient Pelasgic city, the 
capital of the cruel Mezentius, and was after- 
ward one of the twelve Etruscan cities, with a 
territory extending apparently as far as the 
Tiber. In early times Caere was closely allied 
with Rome ; and when the latter city was taken 
by the Gauls, B.C. 390, Caere gave refuge to the 
Vestal virgins. It was from this event that the 
I Romans traced the origin of their word ccerimo- 
| nia. The Romans, out of gratitude, are said to 
have conferred upon the Caerites the Roman 
franchise without the suffragium,* though it is 
not improbable that the Caerites enjoyed this 
honor previously. In 353, however, Caere join- 
ed Tarquinii in making war against Rome, but 
was obliged to purchase a truce with Rome for 
one hundred years by the forfeiture of half of 
its territory. From this time Caere gradually 
sunk in importance, and was probably destroy- 
ed in the wars of Marius and Sulla. It was re- 
stored by Drusus, who made it a municipium ; 
and it continued to exist till the thirteenth cen- 
tury, when part of the inhabitants removed to 
a site about three miles off, on which they be- 
stowed the same name (now Ceri), while the 
old town was distinguished by the title of Vetus 
or Ccere Vet ere, corrupted into Cervetri which is 
a small village, with one hundred or two hund- 
red inhabitants. Here have been discovered, 
within the last few years, the tombs of the an- 
cient Caere, many of them m a state of complete 
preservation. The country round Caere pro- 
duced wine and a great quantity of corn, and in 
its neighborhood were warm baths, which were 
much frequented. Caere used as its sea-port the 
town of Ptrgi. 

C^erellia, a Roman lady frequently mention- 
ed in the correspondence of Cicero as distin- 
guished for her acquirements and her love of 
philosophy. 

[CAERITES. Vid. C^ERE.] 

CLesar, the name of a patrician family of the 
Julia gens, which traced its origin to lulus, the 
son of ^Eneas. Vid. Julia Gens. Various ety- 
mologies of the name are given by the ancient 
writers ; but it is probably connected with tho 

* The Casrites appear to have been the first body of 
Roman citizens who did not enjoy the suffrage. Thus, 
when a Roman citizen was struck out of his tribe by the 
censors and made an aerarian, he was said to become 
one of the Caerites, since he had lost the suffrage : henc* 
we find the expressions in tabulas Cceritum referre and 
cerariumfacere used as synonymous. 



CiESAR, JULIUS. 



CAESAR, JULIUS. 



Latin word ooes-ar-ies, aud the Sanscrit kesa, 
** hair," for it is in accordance with the Roman 
custom for a surname to be given to an indi- 
vidual from sot 1 1 * ■ peculiarity in his personal ap- 
pearance. The name was assumed by Augus- 
tus as the adopted son of the dictator C. Julius 
Caesar, and was by Augustus handed down to 
his adopted son llberius. It continued to be 
used by Caligula, Claudius, and Nero, as mem- 
bers either by adoption or female descent of 
Caesar's famih ; but, though the family became 
extinct with Nero, succeeding emperors still 
retained the name as part of their titles, and it 
was the practice to prefix it to their own name, 
as, for instance, Imperator Ccesar Dornitianus Au- 
gustus. When Hadrian adopted iElius Verus, 
he allowed the latter to take the title of Ca3sar ; 
and from this time, though the title of Augustus 
continued to be confined to the reigning prince, 
that of Ccesar was also granted to the second 
person in the state and the heir presumptive to 
the throne. 

Caesar, Julius. 1. Sex., praetor B.C. 208. 
with Sicily as his province. — 2. Sex., curule 
.aedile 165, when the Hecyra of Terence was 
exhibited at the Megalesiau games, and consul 
157. — 3. L., consul 90, fought against the Socii, 
and in the course of the same year proposed the 
Lex Julia de Civitate, which granted the citizen- 
ship to the Latins and the Socii who had re- 
mained faithful to Rome. Caesar was censor 
in 89 ; he belonged to the aristocratical party, 
and was put to death by Marius in 87. — 4. C., 
surnamed Strabo Vopiscus, brother of No. 3, 
was curule aedile 90, was a candidate for the 
consulship in 88, and was slain along with his 
brother by Marius in 87. He was one of the 
chief orators and poets of his age, aud is one of 
the speakers in Cicero's dialogue Be Oratore. 
Wit was the chief characteristic of his oratory ; 
but he was deficient in power and energy. The 
names of two of his tragedies are preserved, the 
Adrastus and Tecmessa. — 5. L., son of No. 3, 
and uncle by his sister Julia of M. Antony the 
triumvir. He was consul 64, and belouged, like 
his father, to the aristocratieal party. He ap- 
pears to have deserted this party afterward : 
we find him in Gaul in 52 as one of the legates 
of C. Caesar, and he continued in Italy during 
ihe civil war. After Caesar's death (44) he 
sided with the senate in opposition to his nephew 
Antony, and was, in consequence, proscribed by 
the latter in 43, but obtained his pardon through 
the influence of his sister Julia.— 6. L., son of 
No. 5, usually distinguished from his father by 
the addition to his name of filius or adolcscens. 
He joined Pompey on the breaking out of the 
^civil war in 49, aud was sent by Pompey to 
Caesar with proposals of peace. In the course 
cf the same year he crossed over to Africa, 
where the command of Clupea was intrusted to 
him. In 46 he served as proquaestor to Cato in 
Utica, and after the death of Cato he surren- 
dered to the dictator Caesar, and was shortly 
afterward put to death, but probably not by the 
dictator's orders.— 7. C, the father of the dic- 
tator, was praetor, but in what year is uncertain, 
and died suddenly at Pisae in 84. — 8. Sex., 
brother of No. 7, was consul 91. — 9. C, the Dic- 
tator, son of No. 7 and of Aurelia, was born on 
the 12th of July, 100, in the consulship of C. 



Marius (VI.) and L. Valerius Flaccus, and was 
consequently six years younger than Pompey 
and Cicero. He had nearly completed his fifty- 
sixth year at the time of his murder, on the 15th 
of March, 44. Caesar was closely connected 
with the popular party by the marriage of his 
aunt J ulia with the great Marius ; aud in 83, 
though only seventeen years of age, he married 
Cornelia, the daughter of L. Cinna, the chief 
leader of the Marian party. Sulla commanded 
I him to put away his wife, but he refused to 
| obey him, and was consequently proscribed. 
He concealed himself for same time in the 
| country of the Sabines, till his friends obtained 
| his pardon from Sulla, who is said to have ob- 
served, when they pleaded his youth, " that that 
I boy would some day or other be the ruin of the 
aristocracy, for that there were many Mariuses 
in him." Seeing that he was not safe at Rome, 
he went to Asia, where he served his first cam- 
paign under M. Minucius Thermus, and, at the 
capture of Mytilene (80), was rewarded with a 
civic crown for saving the fife of a fellow-sol- 
dier. On the death of Sulla in 78, he returned 
to Rome, and in the following year gained great 
renown as an orator, though he was only twen- 
ty-two years of age, by his prosecution of Cn. . 
Dolabella on account of extortion in his prov- 
ince of Macedonia. To perfect himself in ora- 
tory, he resolved to study in Rhodes under 
Apollonius Molo, but on his voyage thither he 
was captured by pirates, and only obtained his 
liberty by a ransom of fifty talents. At Mile- 
tus he manned some vessels, overpowered the 
pirates, and conducted them as prisoners to 
Pergamus, where he crucified them, a punish- 
; ment with which he had frequently threatened 
l them in sport when he was their prisoner. He 
! then repaired to Rhodes, where he studied un- 
der Apollonius, and shortly afterward returned 
J to Rome. He now devoted all his energies 
to acquire the favor of the people. His lib- 
erality was unbounded, and as his private for- 
tune was not large, he soon contracted enor- 
1 mous debts. But he gained his object, and 
| became the favorite of the peeple, and was 
raised by them in succession to the high offices 
! of the state. He was quaestor in 68, and aedile 
in 65, when he spent enormous sums upon the 
public games and buildings. He was said by 
many to have been privy to Catiline's con- 
i spiracy in 63, but there is no satisfactory evi- 
dence of his guilt, and it is improbable that he 
j would have embarked in such a rash scheme. In 
j the debate in the senate on the punishment of 
j the conspirators, he opposed their execution in a 
very able speech, which made such an impres- 
sion, that their fives would- have been spared but 
for the speech of Cato in reply. In the course 
of this year (63), Caesar was elected Pon- 
tifex Maximus, defeating the other candidates, 
Q. Catulus and Servilius Isauricus, who had 
both been consuls, and were two of the most 
illustrious men in the state. In 62 Caesar 
was praetor, and took an active part in support- 
ing the tribune Metellus in opposition to his col- 
league Cato ; in consequence of the tumults 
that ensued, the senate suspended both Caesar 
and Metellus from their offices, but were obliged 
to reinstate him in his dignity after a few days. 
In the following year (61) Caesar went as pro- 
157 



CAESAR, JULIUS. 



CAESAR, JULIUS. 



praetor into Further Spain, where he gained 
£reat victories over the Lusitanians. On his 
return to Rome he became a candidate for the 
consulship, and was elected, notwithstanding 
the strenuous opposition of the aristocracy, who 
succeeded, however, in carrying the election of 
Bibulus as his colleague, who was one of the 
warmest supporters of the aristocracy. After 
his election, but before he entered upon the 
consulship, he formed that coalition with Pom- 
pey and M. Crassus, usually known by the name 
of the first triumvirate. Pompey had become j 
estranged from thp aristocracy since the senate 
had opposed the ratification of his acts in Asia 
and an assignment of lands which he had prom- 
ised to his veterans. Crassus, in consequence 
of his immense wealth, was one of the most 
powerful men at Rome, but was a personal ene- 
my of Pompey. They were reconciled by 
means of Caesar, and the three entered into an 
agreement to support one another, and to divide 
the power in the state between them. In 59 
Caesar was consul, and being supported by Pom- 
pey and Crassus, he was able to carry all his 
measures. Bibulus, from whom the senate had 
expected so much, could offer no effectual oppo- 
sition, and, after making a vain attempt to 
resist Caesar, shut himself up in his own house, 
and did not appear again in public till the ex- 
piration of his consulship. Caesar's first meas- 
ure was an agrarian law, by which the rich 
Campanian plain was divided among the poorer 
citizens. He next gained the favor of the equi- 
tes by relieving them from one third of the 
sum which they had agreed to pay for the farm- 
ing of the taxes in Asia. He then obtained the 
confirmation of Pompey's acts. Having thus 
gratified the people, the equites, and Pompey, 
he was easily able to obtain for himself the prov- 
inces which he wished. By a vote of the peo- 
ple, proposed by the tribune Vatinius, the prov- 
inces of Cisalpine Gaul and IUyricum were 
granted to Caesar, with three legions, for five 
years ; and the senate added to his government 
the province of Transalpine GauL with another 
legion, for five years also, as they saw that a 
bill would be proposed to the people for that 
purpose if they did not grant the province them- 
selves. Caesar foresaw that the struggle be- 
tween the different parties at Rome must event- 
ually be terminated by the sword, and he had 
therefore resolved to obtain an army, which he 
might attach to himself by victories and re- 
wards. In the course of the same year Caesar 
united himself more closely to Pompey by giving 
him his daughter Julia in marriage. During the 
next nine years Caesar was occupied with the 
subjugation of Gaul. He conquered the whole 
of Transalpine Gaul, which had hitherto been 
independent of the Romans, with the exception 
of the southeastern part called Provincia; he 
twice crossed the Rhine, and twice landed in 
Britain, which had been previously unknown to 
the Romans. In his first campaign (58) Caesar 
conquered the Helvetii, who had emigrated 
from Switzerland with the intention of settling 
in Gaul. He next defeated Ariovistus, a Ger- 
man king, who had taken possession of part of 
the territories of the iEdui and Sequani, and 
pursued him as far as the Rhine. At the con- 
clusion of the campaign Caesar went into Cisal- 
158 



pine Gaul to attend to the civil duties of his 
province, and to keep up his communication 
with the various parties at Rome. During the 
whole of his campaigns in Gaul, he spent the 
greater part of the winter in Cisalpine GauL 
In his second campaign (5*7) Caesar carried on 
war with the Belgae, who dwelt in the northeast 
of Gaul, between the Sequana (now Seine) and 
the Rhine, and after a severe struggle completely 
subdued them Caesar's third campaign in Gaul 
(56) did not commence till late in the year. He 
was detained some months in the north of 
Italy by the state of affairs at Rome. At Luca 
(now Lucca) he had interviews with most of the 
leading men at Rome, among others with Pom- 
pey and Crassus, who visited him in April. He 
made arrangements with them for the contin- 
uance of their power : it was agreed between 
them that Crassus and Pompey should be the con- 
suls for the following year ; that Crassus should 
have the province of Syria, Pompey the two 
Spains; and that Caesar's government, which 
would expire at the end of 54, should be prolong- 
ed for five years after that date. After making 
these arrangements he crossed 4he Alps, and car- 
ried on war with the Veneti and the other states 
in the northwest of Gaul, who had submitted to 
\ Crassus, Caesar's legate, in the preceding year. 
I but who had now risen in arms against the Ro- 
mans. They were defeated and obliged to sub- 
; mit to Caesar, and during the same time Crassus 
! conquered Aquitania. Thus, in three cam- 
i paigns, Caesar subdued the whole of Gaul ; but 
! the° people made several attempts to recover 
; their independence ; and it was not till their re- 
! volts had been again and again put down by Cae- 
i sar, and the flower of the nation had perished in 
! battle, that they learned to submit to the Ro- 
j man yoke. In his fourth campaign (55) Caesar 
crossed the Rhine in order to strike terror into 
(the Germans, but he only remained eighteen. 
S days on the further side of the river. Late m 
! the summer he invaded Britain, but more with 
the view of obtaining some knowledge of the 
j island from personal observation than with the 
! intention of permanent conquest at present. He 
! sailed from the port Itius (probably Witsand. 
i between* Calais and Boulogne), and effected a 
I landing somewhere near the South Foreland, 
after a severe struggle with the natives. The 
I late period of the year compelled him to return 
j to Gaul after remaining only a short time in thfe 
J island. In this year, according to his arrange- 
l ment with Pompey and Crassus, who were now 
j consuls, his government of the Gauls and Ulyri- 
j cum was prolonged for five years, namely, 
from the first of January, 53, to the end of De- 
I cember, 49. Caesar's fifth campaign (54) was 
chiefly occupied with his second invasion of 
Britain. He landed in Britain at the same place 
as in the former year, defeated the Britons in a 
series of engagements, and crossed the Tamesis 
(now Thames). The Britons submitted, and 
promised to pay an annual tribute; but their 
subjection was only nominal, for Caesar left no 
garrisons or military establishments behind him, 
and Britain remained nearly one hundred years 
longer independent of the Romans. During the 
winter, one of the Roman legions, which had 
been stationed, under the command of T. Tituri- 
us Sabinus and L. Aurunculeius Cotta, in the 



CAESAR, JULIUS. 

country of the Eburones, was cut to pieces by 
Ambiorix and the Eburones. Ambiorix then 
proceeded to attack the camp of Q. Cicero, the 
brother of the orator, who was stationed with 
a legion amoug the Nervii; but Cicero defend- 
ed himself with bravery, and was at length re- 
lieved by Caesar in person. In September of 
this year, Julia, Caisar's only daughter and Pom- 
pey's wife, died in childbirth. In Caesar's sixth 
campaign (53) several of the Gallic nations re- 
volted, but Caasar soon compelled them to re- 
turn to obedience. The Treviri, who had re- 
volted, had been supported by the Germans, and 
Caesar accordingly again crossed the Rhine, but 
made no permanent conquests on the further 
side of the river. Caesar's seventh campaign 
(52) was the most arduous of all. Almost all 
the nations of Gaul rose simultaneously in re- 
volt, and the supreme command was given to 
Vercingetorix, by far the ablest general that 
Caesar had yet encountered. After a most se- 
vere struggle, in which Caesar's military genius 
triumphed over every obstacle, the war was 
brought to a conclusion by the defeat of the 
Gauls before Alesia and the surrender of this 
city. The eighth and ninth campaigns (51, 50) 
were employed in the final subjugation of Gaul, 
which had entirely submitted to Caesar by the 
middle of 50. Meanwhile, an estrangement had 
taken place between Caesar and Pompey. Cae- 
sar's brilliant victories had gained him fresh 
popularity and influence, and Pompey saw with 
ill-disguised mortification that he was becoming 
the second person in the state. He was thus 
led to join again the aristoeratical party, by the 
assistance of which he could alone hope to re- 
tain his position as the chief man in the Roman 
state. The great object of this party was to de- 
prive Caesar of his command, and to compel him 
to come to Rome as a private man to sue for 
the consulship. They would then have formal- 
ly accused him, and as Pompey was in the neigh- 
borhood of the city at the head of an army, the 
trial would have been a mockery, and his con- 
demnation would have been certain. Caesar of- 
fered to resign his command if Pompey would do 
the same ; but the senate would not listen to any 
compromise. Accordingly, on the 1st of Janua- 
ry, 49, the senate passed a resolution that Caesar 
should disband his army at a certain day, and 
that if he did not do so, he should be regarded 
as an enemy of the state. Two of the tribunes. 
M. Antonius and Q. Cassius, put their veto 
upon this resolution, but their opposition was set 
at naught, and they fled for refuge to Caesar's 
camp. Under the plea of protecting the tribunes, 
Caesar crossed the Rubicon, which separated 
his province from Italy, and marched toward 
Rome. Pompey, who had been intrusted by 
the senate with the conduct of the war, soon 
discovered how greatly he had overrated his 
own popularity and influence. His own troops 
deserted to his rival in crowds ; town after town 
in Italy opened its gates to Caesar, whose march 
was like a triumphal progress. The only town 
which offered Ca?sar any resistance was Cor- 
finium, into which L. Domitius Ahenobarbus had 
thrown himself with a strong force ; but even 
this place was obliged to surrender at the end 
of a few days. Meantime, Pompey, with the 
magistrates and senators, had fled from Rome to 



CAESAR, JULIUS. 

Capua, and now, despairing of opposiug Caesar 
in Italy, he marched from Capua to Brundisium, 
and on the 17th of March embarked for Greece. 
Caesar pursued Pompey to Brundisium, but he 
was unable to follow him to Greece for want of 
ships. He therefore marched back from Brun- 
disium, and repaired to Rome, having thus in 
three months become master of the whole of 
Italy. After remaining a short time in Rome, 
he set Out for Spain, where Pompey's legates, 
Afranius, Petreius, and Varro, commanded pow- 
erful armies. After defeating Afranius and Pe- 
treius, and receiving the submission of Varro, 
Caesar returned to Rome, where he had mean- 
time been appointed dictator by the praetor M. 
Lepidus. He resigned the dictatorship at the 
end of eleven days, after holding the consular 
comitia, in which he himself and P. Servilius- 
Vatia Isauricus were elected consuls for the 
next year. At the beginning of January, 48,. 
Caesar crossed over to Greece, where Pompey 
had collected a formidable army. At first the 
campaign was in Pompey's favor ; Caesar was 
repulsed before Dyrrhachium with considerable 
loss, and w T as obliged to retreat toward Thes- 
saly. In this country, on the plains of Pharsalus 
or Pharsalia, a decisive battle was fought be- 
tween the two armies on the 9th of August., 
48, in which Pompey was completely defeated. 
Pompey fled to Egypt, pursued by Caesar, but 
he was murdered before Caesar arrived in the 
country. Vid. Pompeius. His head was brought 
to Caesar, who turned away from the sight, shed 
tears at the untimely death of his rival, and put 
his murderers to death. When the news of the 
battle of Pharsalia reached Rome, various hon- 
ors were conferred upon Caesar. He was ap- 
pointed dictator for a whole year and consul for 
five years, and the tribunician power was con- 
ferred upon him for life. He declined the con- 
sulship, but entered upon the dictatorship irx 
September in this year (48), and appointed M. 
Antony his master of the horse. On his arrival 
in Egypt, Caesar became involved in a war, 
which gave the remains of the Pompeian party 
time to rally. This war, usually called the Alex- 
andrine war, arose from the determination of 
Caesar that Cleopatra, whose fascinations had 
won his heart, should reign in common with her 
brother Ptolemy ; but this decision was opposed 
by the guardians of the young king, and the war 
which thus broke out was not brought to a close 
till the latter end of March, 47. It was soon af- 
ter this that Cleopatra had a son by Caesar. Vid. 
Cesarion. Caesar returned to Rome through 
Syria and Asia Minor, and on his march through 
Pontus attacked Pharnaces, the son of Mithra- 
dates the Great, who had assisted Pompey. He 
defeated Pharnaces near Zela with such ease., 
that he informed the senate of his victory by 
the words Veni, vidi, vici. He reached Rome 
in September (47), was appointed consul for the 
following year, and before the end of September 
set sail for Africa, where Scipio and Cato had 
collected a large army. The war was termina- 
ted by the defeat of the Pompeian army at the. 
battle of Thapsus, on the 6th of April, 46. Cato, 
unable to defend Utica, put an end to his own 
life. Caesar returned to Rome in the latter end 
of July. He was now the undisputed master 
of the Roman world, but he used his victory 
159 



CESAR, JULIUS. 



CAESAR, C. AKJD L. 



with the greatest moderation. Unlike other 
conquerors in civil wars, he freely forgave all 
who had borne arms against him, and declared 
that he would make no difference between Porn- 
peians and Caesarians. His clemency was one 
of the brightest features of his character. At 
Rome all parties seemed to vie in paying him 
honor: the dictatorship was bestowed on him 
for ten vears, and the censorship, under the new 
title of Prcefectus Morum, for three years. He 
celebrated his victories in Gaul, Egypt. Pontus, 
and Africa by four magnificent triumphs. Caesar 
now proceeded to correct the various evils which 
had crept into the state, and to obtain the en- 
actment of several laws suitable to the altered 
condition of the commonwealth. The most im- 
portant of his measures this year (46) was the 
reformation of the calendar. As the Roman 
year was now three months in advance of the 
real time, Caesar added ninety days to this year, 
and thus made the whole year consist of four 
hundred and forty-five days ; and he guarded 
against a repetition of similar errors for the 
future by adapting the year to the sun's course. 
Vid. Diet, of Ant, art. Calexdarium. Mean- 
time the two sons of Pompey, Sextus and Cneius, 
had collected a new army in Spain. Caesar set 
out for Spain toward the end of the year, and 
brought the war to a close by the battle of 
Munda. on the 17th of March, 45, in which the 
enemy were only defeated after a most obsti- 
nate resistance. Cn. Pompey was killed shortly 
afterward, but Sextus made good his escape. 
Caesar reached Rome in September, and entered 
the city in triumph. Fresh honors awaited him. 
His portrait was to be struck on coins ; the has been lost. The purity of his Latin and the 
month of Quintilis was to receive the name of j clearness of his style were celebrated by the 
Julius in his honor ; he received the title of im- 1 ancients themselves, and are conspicuous in his 
perator for life ; and the whole senate took an Commentarii, which are his only works that have" 
oath to watch over his safety. To reward his come down to us. They relate the history of 
followers, Caesar increased the number of sen- 1 the first seven years of the Gallic war in seven 
ators and of the public magistrates, so that there j books, and the history of the Civil war down to 
were to be sixteen praetors, forty quaestors, and the commencement of the Alexandrine in three 
six aediles. He began to revolve vast schemes \ books. Neither of these works completed the 
for the benefit of the Roman world. Among \ history of the Gallic and Civil wars. The his- 
his plans of internal improvement, he proposed : tory of the former was completed in an eighth 
to frame a digest of all the Roman laws, to es- j book, which is usually ascribed to Hirtius, and 
tablish public libraries, to drain the Pomptine i the history of the Alexandrine, African, and 
marshes, to enlarge the harbor of Ostia, and to Spanish wars were written in three separate 
dig a canal through the isthmus of Corinth. To ' books, which are also ascribed to Hirtius, but 
protect the boundaries of the Roman empire, he their authorship is uncertain. The lost works 
meditated expeditions against the Parthians and of Caesar are, 1. Anticato, in reply to Cicero's 
the barbarous tribes on the Danube, and had . Cato, which Cicero wrote in praise of Cato after 
already begun to make preparations for his de- j the death of the latter in 46. 2. De Analogia, 
parture to the East. Possessing royal power, j or, as Cicero explains it, De Ratione Latine lo- 
he now wished to obtain the title of king, and quendi, dedicated to Cicero, contained investi- 
Antony accordingly offered him the diadem in gations on the Latin lauguage, and were writ- 
public on the festival of the Lupercalia (the 15th ten by Caesar while he was crossing the Alps, 
of February); but, seeing that the proposition 3. Libri Auspiciorum,or Auguralia. 4.DeAstris. 
was not favorably received by the people, he 5. Apopltthegmata, or Dicta collectanea, a c«Jlec- 
declined it for the present. But Caesar's power tion of good sayings. 6. Poemata. Two of 
was not witnessed without envy. The Roman these, written in his youth, Laudes Herculis and 
aristocracy, who had been so long accustomed (Edipus, were suppressed by Augustus. Of the 
to rule the Roman world and to pillage it at numerous editions of Caesar's Commentaries, the 
their pleasure, could ill brook a master, and re- best are by Oudendorp, Lugd. Bat., 1737, Stutt- 
solved to remove him by assassination. The gard, 1822 ; by Moras, Lips., 1780 ; by Oberiin, 
conspiracy against Caesar s life had been set Lips., 1805, 1819 ; [and by Herzog, Lips., 1831- 
afoot by Cassius, a personal enemy of Caesar's, 34, 2 vols. ; and of the Gallic War separately 
and there were more than sixty persons privy by Nipperdey, Lips., 1849.] 
to it Many of these persons had been raised j C. Cesar and L. Cesar, the sons of M Yips.i- 
by Caesar to wealth and honor ; and some of nius Agrippa and Julia, and the grandson of A«- 
160 



them, such as M. Brutus, hved with him on 
terms of the most intimate friendship. It has 
been the practice of rhetoricians to speak of the 
murder of Caesar as a glorious deed, and to rep- 
resent Brutus and Cassius as patriots ; but the 
mask ought to be stripped off these false pa- 
triots ; they cared not for the republic, but only 
for themselves ; and their object in murdering 
Caesar was to gain power for themselves and 
their party. Caesar had many warnings of his 
approaching fate, but he disregarded them alL 
j and fell by the daggers of his assassins on the 
j Ides or 15th of March, 44. At an appointed 
signal the conspirators surrounded him ; Casca 
1 dealt the first blow, and the others quickly drew 
j their swords and attacked him ; Caesar at first 
defended himself, but when he saw that Brutus, 
| his friend and favorite, had also drawn his sword, 
he exclaimed Tu quoque Brute I pulled his toga 
I over his face, and sunk pierced with wounds at 
i the foot of Pompey's statue. Julius Caesar was 
the greatest man of antiquity. He was gifted 
by nature with the most various talents, and 
I was distinguished by the most extraordinary at- 
| tainments in the most diversified pursuits. He 
was at one and the same time a general, a states- 
I man, a lawgiver, a jurist, an orator, a poet, a 
: historian, a philologer, a mathematician, and an 
! architect. He was equally fitted to excel in all 
' and has given proofs that he would have sur- 
j passed almost all other men in any subject to 
! which he devoted the energies of his extraordi- 
! nary mind. During the whole of his busy life 
; he found time for literary pursuits, and was the 
author of mauv works, the majority of which 



CkESARAUGUSTA. 



CALAMUS. 



gustus. L. Caesar died at Massilia, on his way 
to Spain, A.D. 2, and C. Cajsar iu Lycia, A D. 4, 
of a wound which he hud received in Armenia. 

Cesaraugi-sta (uow Zaragoza or Saragassa), 
more ancieutly Salduba, a town of the Edetani, 
on the Iberus. in Hispauia Tarraconensis, was 
colonized by Augustus B.C. 27, and was the 
seat of a Couvcntus Juridicus. It was the birth- 
place of the poet Prudentius. 

CyESARfiA (Kaioupeia : Kaiaapeyc: Caesarien- 
sis), a name given to several cities of the Ro- 
man empire in honor of one or other of the Cae- 
sars. 1. Cesakea ad Arceum, formerly Ma 
zaoa, also Eusebia (K. if rrpog r<p 'ApyaU), ra 
Mu&Ka, Evoe6eia : uow Kesarieh, ruins), one of 
the oldest cities of Asia Minor, stood upon 
Mount Argaeus, about the centre of Cappadocia, 
in the district (praefectura) called Cilicia. It 
was the capital of Cappadocia, and when that 
country was made a Roman province by Tibe- 
rius (A.D. 18), it received the name of Cassarea. 
It was ultimately destroyed by an earthquake. — 
2. C. PniLirri or Paneas (K. rj ^lXltztzov, New 
Testament ; K. Tlaveidc : uow Banias), a city of 
Palestine at the southern foot of Mount Hermon, 
on the Jordan, just below its source (via 1 . Pa- 
nium), built by Philip the tetrarch, B.C. 3 : King 
Agrippa called it Neronias, but it soon lost thii 
name. — 3. C. Pal./Estin t .<e, formerly Stratonis 
Turris (Lrpdruvog nvpyoc : now Kaisariyeh, 
ruins), au important city of Palestine, ou the 
sea-coast, just above the boundary liue between 
Samaria and Galilee. It was surrounded with 
a wall and decorated with splendid buildings by 
Herod the Great (B.C. 13), who called it Caes- 
area, in honor of Augustus. He also made a 
splendid harbor for the city. Under the Ro- 
mans it was the capital of Palestine and the 
residence of the procurator. Vespasian made 
it a oolony, and Titus conferred additional fa- 
vors upon it; hence it was colled Colouia Fla- 
via. — 4. C. Mauretanle, formerly Iol (Twa 
Kaioupeia : now Zershell, ruins), a Phoenician 
city on the north coast of Africa, with a harbor, 
the residence of King Juba, who named it Caes- 
area, iu honor of Augustus. When Claudius 
erected Mauritania into a Roman proviuce, he 
made Caesarea a colouy, and the capital of the 
middle division of the province, which was 
thence called Mauretania Caesariensis. — 5. C. 
ad Anazarbum. Vid. Anazarbus. There are 
several others, which are better kuown by other 
names, and several which are not important 
enough to be mentioned here. 

CiESARioN, 6on of C. Julius Caesar and Cleo- 
patra, originally called Ptolemteus as an Egyp- 
tian prince, was born B.C. 47. In 42 the tri- 
umvirs allowed him to receive the title of King 
of Egypt, and in 34 Antony conferred upon him 
the title of king of kings. After the death of 
his mother iu 30, he was executed by order of 
Augustus. 

CjESaroduxum (now Tours), chief town of 
the Turoues or Turoui, subsequently called Tu- 
roni, on the Liger (now Loire), in Gallia Lugdu- 
neusis. 

C^esaromagus. 1. (Now Beauvais), chief 
towu of Um Ik'llovaei in Gallia Belgica. — 2. 
(Now Chelmsford), a town of the Triuobuntes 
iu Briraiu. 

CjESKxa (Caesenas, -atis: now Cesena), a towu 
11 



j iu Gallia Cispadana, on the Via JEmilia, not far 
from the Rubicon, 
j CvEsennius Lento. Vid. Lento. 

C.ESENNIUS P^ETUS. Vid. P^TUS. 

Cjesetius Flavus. Vid. Flavus. 
j C-esia, a surname of Minerva, a translation 
of the Greek yTLavKtimc. 

C/esia Silva (now Hascrnwald), a forest in 
Germany between the Lippe and the Yssel. 

C^esonia, first the mistress and afterward 
the wife of the Emperor Caligula, was a woman 
of the greatest licentiousness, and was put to 
death with Caligula, together with her daughter, 
A.D. 41. 

Cjesonius, M., a judex at the trial of Oppi- 
anicus for the murder of Clueutius, B.C. 74, and 
aedile with Cicero iu 69. 

Caicus (Ka'iKoc : now Aksou or Bakir), a river 
of Mysia, rising in Mount Temuus, and flowing 
j past Pergamus into the Cumaeau Gulf, 
j [Caicus. 1. Son of Oceanus and Tethys, 
god of the Mysian river. — 2. A companion of 
[ ^Eueas in his voyage from Troy to Italy.] 
1 Caieta (Caietanus : now Gaeta), a town in 
j Latium, on the borders of Campania, forty stadia 
south of Formiae, situated on a promontory of 
the same name, aud on a bay of the sea called 
after it Sinus Caietanus. It possessed an ex- 
cellent harbor (Cic, pro Leg. Man., 12), aud was 
said to have derived its name from Caieta, the 
nurse of ^Eueas, who, according to some tradi- 
tions, was buried at this place. 

Caius, the jurist. Vid. Gaius. 

Caius Caesar. Vid. Caligula. 

Calaber. Vid. Quintus Smyrnjsus. 

Calabria (Calabri), the peninsula in the 
southeast of Italy, extending from Tareutum 
j to the Promontorium lapygium, formed part 
I of Apulia, q. v. 

Calacta (K<za?) 'Akttj : KaXaKTivoc : ruins 
1 near Caronia). a town on the northern coast of 
Sicily, founded by Ducetius, a chief of the Siceli, 
about B.C. 447. Calacta was, as its name im- 
' ports, originally the name of the coast. (He- 
rod, vi., 22.) 

Ca lactinus. Vid. C^ecilius Calactinus. 

[Calagorris (now Cazeres), a small town of 
the Conveuae in Aquitauia, southwest of Tolosa.] 

Calagurris (Calagurritanus : now Calahor- 
ra). a town of the Vascones aud a Roman ma- 
nicipium in Hispauia Tarraconeusis, near the 
Iberus, memorable for its adherence to Serto- 
rius and for its siege by Pompey and his gen- 
erals, iu the course of which mothers killed aud 
salted their chddren, B.C. 71. (Juv., xv., 93.) 
It was the birth-place of Quiutilian. 

Calais, brother of Zetes. Vid. Zetes. 

Calama. 1. (Now ICahna, ruins), an import- 
ant town in Numidia, betweeu Cirta and Hippo 
Regius, on the eastern bank of the Rubricates 
(now Seibous). — 2. (Now Kalat-al- Wad) a town 
in the west of Mauretania Caesariensis, on the 
eastern bank of the Malva, near its mouth. 

Calamine, iu Lydia, a lake with floating 
islands, sacred to the uy mphs. 

Calamis (Kdla/uic), a statuary aud embosser 
at Athens, of great celebrity, was a contempo- 
rary of Phidias, and flourished B.C. 467-429. 

Calamus (Ku/m/joc : now El-Kulmon), a town 
on the coast of Phceuieia, a little oouth of Trip- 
olis. 

161 



OALANUS. 



CALIGULA. 



Oalanus (Kuaclvoc), an Indian gymnosophist, 
followed Alexander the Great from India, and 
having been taken ill, burned himself alive in 
the presence of the Macedonians, three months 
before the death of Alexander (B.C. 323), to 
whom he had predicted his approaching end. 

Calasiries (Ka/.aalpiec), one of the two di- 
visions (the other being the Hermotybii) of the 
warrior-caste of Egypt Their greatest strength 
was two hundred and fifty thousand men, and 
their chief abode in the western part of the 
Delta. They formed the king's body guard. 

Calatia (Calatinus : now Cajazzo), a town 
in Samnium, on the Appia Via, between Capua 
and Beneventum, was conquered by the Romans 
B.C. 313, and was colonized by Julius Caesar 
with his veterans. 

Calatinus, A. Atilius, consul B.C. 258, in 
the first Punic war, carried on the war with 
success in Sicily. He was consul a second 
time, 254, when he took Panormus; and was 
dictator, 249, when he again carried on the war 
in Sicily, which was the first instance of a dic- 
tator commanding an army out of Italy. 

Calackea, -ia (Ka/.avpeia, Ka/.avpia : Ka/.av- 
purrje : now Poro), a small island in the Saronie 
Gulf, off the coast of Argolis, and opposite Troe- 
zen, possessed a celebrated temple of Nep- 
tune (Poseidon), which was regarded as an in- 
violable asylum. Hither Demosthenes fled to 
escape Antipater, and here he took poison, B.C. 
322. This temple was the place of meeting of 
an ancient Amphictyonia. Vid. Diet of Ant., 
p. 79, b, second edition. 

CalavIus, the name of a distinguished family 
at Capua, the most celebrated member of which 
was Pacuvius Calavius, who induced his fellow- 
citizens to espouse the cause of Hannibal after 
the battle of Cannce, B.C. 216. 

Calbis (6 Kd/Jic), also Indus (now Quingui 
or Tanas), a considerable river of Caria, which 
rises in Mount Cadmus, above Cibyra, and after 
receiving (according to Pliny) sixty small rivers 
and one hundred mountain torrents, falls into 
the sea west of Caunus and opposite to Rhodes. 

Calchas (Kd/tfag), son of Thestor of Mycenje 
or Megara, the wisest soothsayer among the 
Greeks^at Troy, foretold the length of the Tro- 
jan war, explained the cause of the pestilence 
which raged in the Greek army, and advised 
the Greeks to build the wooden horse. An or- 
acle had declared that Calchas should die if he 
met with a soothsayer superior to himself; and 
this came to pass at Claros, near Colophon, for 
here Calchas met the soothsayer Mopsus, who 
predicted things which Calchas could not 
Thereupon Calchas died of grief. After his 
death he had an oracle in Daunia. 

Caldus, C. Celius. 1. Rose from obscurity 
by his oratory, was tribune of the plebs B.C. 
107, when he proposed a lex tabellaria, and con- 
sul 94. In the civil war between Sulla and the 
party of Marius, he fought on the side of the 
latter, 83. — 2. Grandson of the preceding, was 
Cicero's quaestor in Cilicia, 50. 

Cale (now Oporto), a port-town of the Cal- 
laeci in Hispania Tarraconensis, at the mouth 
of the Durius. From Porto Cale the name of 
the country Portugal is supposed to have come. 

Caledonia Vid. Britannia. 

Calentum, a town probably of the Calenses 
162 



Emanici in Hispania Baetica, celebrated for its 
manufacture of bricks so light as to swim upon 
water. 

Calenus. Q. Fufius, tribune of the plebs B.C. 
61, when he succeeded in saving P. Clodius 
from condemnation for his violation of the mys- 
teries of the Bona Dea. In 59 he was praetor, 
and from this time appears as an active partisan 
of Caesar. In 51 he was legate of Caesar in 
Gaul, and served under Caesar in the civil war. 
In 49 he joined Caesar at Brundisium and ac- 
' companied him to Spain, and in 48 he was sent 
; by Caesar from Epirus to bring over the re- 
mainder of the troops from Italy, but most of 
I his ships were taken by Bibulus. After the 
battle of Pkarsalia (48) Calenus took many cities 
in Greece. In 47 he was made consul by Cae- 
sar. After Caesar's death (44) Calenus joined 
M. Antony, and subsequently had the command 
of Antony's legions in the north of Italy. At 
the termination of the Perusinian war (41) Ca- 
lenus died, and Octavianus was thus enabled to 
obtain possession of his army. 

Cales or -ex (Kd/.r/c or -7/t; : now Halabli), a 
river of Bithynia, southwest of Heraclea Pon- 
tica. (Thuc., iv., 75.) 

Cales (-is. usually PI. Cales, -ium : Calenus i 
now Calvi), chief town of the Caleni, an Auso- 
nian people in Campania, on the Via Latina, said 
to have been founded by Calais, son of Boreas, 
and therefore called Threicia by the poets. Ca- 
les was taken and colonized by the Romans, 
B.C. 335. It was celebrated for its excellent 
wine. 

Caletes or -i, a people in Belgic GauL near 
the mouth of the Seine: their capital was Ju- 

LIOBONA. 

Caletor (Ka?.7/rcjp), son of Clytius, slain at 
I Troy by the Telamonian Ajax. 

Calidius. 1. Q., tribune of the plebs B.C. 
99, carried a law for the recall of Q. Metellus 
Numidicus from banishment. He was praetor 
79, and had the government of one of the Spains, 
j and on his return was accused by Q. Lollius 
! and condemned. — 2. M., son of the preceding 
! distinguished as an orator. In 57 he was prae 
• tor, and supported the recall of Cicero from ban 
I ishment. In 51 he was an unsuccessful can- 
\ didate for the consulship, and on the breaking 
; out of the civil war, 49, he joined Caesar, who 
> placed him over Gallia Togata, where he died 
'in4S. 

i Caligtjla. Roman emperor, A.D. 37-41, so» 
I of Germanicus and Agrippina, was born A.D. 
i 12, and was brought up among the legions in 
; Germany. His real name was Caius Cccsar, 
and he was always called Caius by his contem- 
I poraries : Caligula was a surname given hiin 
I by the soldiers from his wearing in his boyhood 
j small caligce, or soldiers' boots. Having es- 
caped the fate of his mother and brother, he 
j gained the favor of Tiberius, who raised him to 
offices of honor, and held out to him hopes of 
j the succession. On the death of Tiberius (37), 
! which was either caused or accelerated by Ca- 
' ligula, the latter succeeded to the throne. He 
was saluted by the people with the greatest en- 
thusiasm as the son of Germanicus. His first 
acts gave promise of a just and beneficent reign. 
He pardoned all the persons who had appeared 
as witnesses or accusers against his family ; he 



CALINGJ2. 



CALLIAS. 



released all the state-prisoners of Tiberius ; he | 
restored to the magistrates full power of juris- 
diction, without appeal to his person, and prom- 
ised the senate to govern according to the laws. 
Toward foreign princes he behaved with great 
generosity. He restored Agrippa, the grand- 1 
son of Herod, to his kingdom of Judaea, and' 
Antiochus IV. to his kingdom of Commagene. : 
But at the end of eight months the conduct of ! 
Caligula became suddenly changed. After a 
serious illness, which probably weakened his 
mental powers, he appears as a sanguinary and 
licentious madman. He put to death Tiberius, 
the grandson of his predecessor, compelled his : 
grandmother Antonia and other members of 1 
his family to make away with themselves, often 
caused persons of both sexes and of all ages to 
be tortured to death for his amusement while 
taking his meals, and on one occasion, during 
the exhibition of the games in the circus, he 
ordered a great number of the spectators to be 
seized and to be thrown before the wild beasts. 
Such was his love of blood that he wished the 
Roman people had only one head, that he might 
cut it otf with a blow. His licentiousness was 
as great as his cruelty. His marriages were 
disgracefully contracted and speedily dissolved ; 
:ind the only woman who exercised a permanent 
influence over him was his last wife Csesonia. 
In his madness he considered himself a god ; 
he even built a temple to himself as Jupiter La- 
tiaris, and appointed priests to attend to his 
worship. He sometimes officiated as his own 
priest, making his horse Incitatus, which he 
afterward raised to the consulship, his col- 
league. His monstrous extravagances soon 
exhausted the coffers of the state. One in- 
stance may show the Benseless way in which he 
spent his money. He constructed a bridge of 
boats between Baue and Putcoli, a distance 
of about three miles, and after covering it with 
earth, he built houses upon it. When it was 
finished, he gave a splendid banquet in the mid- 
dle of the bridge, and concluded the entertain- 
ment by throwing numbers of the guests into 
the sea. To replenish the treasury, he exhaust- 
ed Italy and Rome by his extortions, and then 
marched into Gaul in 40, which he plundered in 
all directions. With his troops he advanced to 
the ocean, as if intending to cross over into 
Britain ; he drew them up in battle array, and 
then gave them the signal — to collect shells, 
which he called t&e spoils of conquered Ocean. 
The Roman world at length grew tired of such 
a mad tyrant. Four months after his return to 
the city, on the 24th of January, 41, he was 
murdered by Cassius Chrerea, tribune of a prae- 
torian cohort, Cornelius Sabinus, and others. 
■His wife Oaesonia and his daughter were like- 
wise put to death. 

Caling^e, a numerous people of India intra 
Gaugem, on the eastern coast, below the mouths 
of the Ganges. 

Calinipaxa (now Canonge? a little above 2*7° 
north latitude), a city on the Ganges, north of 
its confluence with the Jomanes (now Jumna), 
said to have been the furthest point in India 
reached by Seleucus Nicator. 

Callaici, Call^eci. Vid. Galljjct. 

[Callas (Ku/Aaf), a river of Euboea, flowing 
from Mount Telethrius into the sea near Oreus.] 



Oallatis (Ku?.?.aTtc, Kdl.aTie : Ka?^artavoc : 
now Kollat, Kollati), a town of Moesia, on the 
Black Sea, originally a colony of Miletus, and 
afterward of Heraclea 

[Calliades (KalJ.iddnc), archon eponymus 
at Athens at the time of the second Persian in- 
vasion, B.C. 480.] 

[Callianassa (Ka?.ALuvaacra), one of the 
daughters of Nereus, mentioned in the Iliad] 

Calliarus (Ka?Jucpoi), a town in Locris, 
mentioned by Homer. 

Callias and Hipponicus {YLalliac, 'Itttovi- 
koc), a noble Athenian family, celebrated for 
their wealth. They enjoyed the hereditary dig- 
nity of torch-bearer at the Eleusinian myste- 
ries, and claimed descent from Triptolemus. 
1. Hipponicus I, acquired a large fortune by 
fraudulently making use of the information he 
had received from Solon respecting the intro- 
duction of his GEiadxdeia, B.C. 594. (Plut., 
Sol., 15.) — 2. Callias L, son of Phaenippus, an 
opponent of Pisistratus, and a conqueror at the 
Olympic and Pythian games. — 3. Hipponicus II., 
surnamed Amnion, son of No. 2. — 4. Callias 
IX, son of No. 3, fought at the battle of Mara- 
thon, 490. He was afterward ambassador from 
Athens to Artaxerxes, and, according to some 
accounts, negotiated a peace with Persia, 449, 
on terms most humiliating to the latter. On 
his return to Athens he was accused of having 
taken bribes, and was condemned to a fine of 
fifty talents. — 5. Hipponicus III., son jpf No. 4, 
one of the Athenian generals in their incursion 
into the territory of Tanagra, 426, also com- 
manded at the battle of Delium, 424, where he 
was killed. It was his divorced wife, and not 
his widow, whom Pericles married. His daugh- 
ter Hipparete was married to Alcibiades, with 
a dowry of ten talents : another daughter was 
married to Theodoras, and became the mother 
of Isocrates the orator. — 6. Callias III., son of 
No. 5, by the lady who married Pericles, dissi- 
pated all his ancestral wealth on sophists, flat- 
terers, and women. The scene of Xenophon's 
Banquet, and also that of Plato's Protagoras, is 
laid at his house. He is said to have ultimately 
reduced himself to absolute beggary. In 400 he 
was engaged in the attempt to crush Andocides. 
In 392 he commanded the Athenian heavy-arm- 
ed troops, when Iphierates defeated the Spar- 
tans ; and in 371 he was one of the envoys em- 
powered to negotiate peace with Sparta. 

Callias. i. A wealthy Athenian, who, on 
condition of marrying Cimon's sister, Elpinice, 
paid for him the fine of fifty talents which had 
been imposed on Miltiades. He appears to have 
been unconnected with the nobler family of 
Callias and Hipponicus. — 2. Tyrant of Chalcis 
in Eubcea, and the rival of Plutarchus, tyrant of 
Eretria. He was defeated by the Athenians 
under Phocion, B.C. 350, and thereupon betook 
himself to the Macedonian court; but as he 
could not obtain aid from Philip, he formed an 
alliance with the Athenians, and by their means 
obtained the supremacy in the island. — 3. A 
poet of the old comedy, flourished B.C. 412 ; the 
names of six of his comedies are preserved. 
[The fragments of his plays are given in Mei- 
neke's Fragm. Comic. Grcec, vol. i., p. 417- 
421, edit minor.]— 4. Of Syracuse, a Greek his- 
torian, was a contemporary of Agathocles, and 
163 



CALLIBIUS. 



CALLIOPIUS. 



wrote a history of Sicily in twenty-two books, I Apolloxius, Xo. 6. He is said to have written 
embracing the reign of Agathucles, B.C. 317- , eight hundred works, in prose and in verse, on 
289. [A few fragments remain, which have an infinite variety of subjects, but of these wo 
been collected by Miiller in his Fragm. Hist, possess only some of his poems, which are char- 
Gtcbc, vol. ii., p. 382-3.] acterized rather by labor and learning than by 

[Callibhjs (Ka/UX&of). 1. The commander real poetical genius. Hence Ovid (Am^ i„ 15, 
of the Spartan garrison at Athens in the time of 14) says of Calliniachus, Quamvis ingeuio non, 
the thirtv tyrants, B.C. 404. He allowed the valet, arte valet, 'i he extant works of Calliina- 
tyrants to make free use of his soldiers in car- chus are six Hymns in hexameter verse, five in 
rying out their abitrary measures in return for the Ionic dialect, and one, on the bath of Pal- 
the deference paid him by those tyrants. — 2. One las, in the D.-ric dialect, and seventy -two Epi- 
of the leaders of the democratic party at Tegea, grains, which belong to the best specimen-* of 
B.C. 370, failing, in a peaceable attempt, to this kind of poetry, and were incorporated in 
unite the Arcadian towns into one body, had re- the Greek Anthology at an early time. We 
course to arms ; though at first defeated by the have ouly a few fragments of his elegies, which 
oligarchical party, he afterward triumphed over enjoyed great celebrity, and were imitated by 
them, and put the most obnoxious to death] { the Roman poets, the most celebrated of whose 

Callickatls (Ka/./.Lhpurr/g). 1. An Achaean, imitations is the De Coma Berenice* of Catullus, 
exerted all his influence in favor of the Romans. Of the lost poems of Callimachus the most im- 
On the conquest of Macedonia by the Romans, portant were, Atria, Causes, an epic poem in 
B.C. 168, Callicrates pointed out oue thousand tour books, on the causes of the various niyth- 
Achseans as having favored the cause of Per- \ ical stories. <fcc, and an epic poem entitled He- 
sens, who were taken to Rome, and among cole, the name of an aged woman who received 
them was the historian Polybius. Callicrates , Theseus h sp tab'.y ■when he weut out to fight 
died at Rhodes, 149. — [2. Xame given by Xepos \ against the Marathoni>n bull. — Editions: By 
to the murderer of Dion, called Callippus by : bpanheim, Ultraj., 1697, re-edited by Ernesti, 
Diodorus and Plutarch. Yid. Callippis.] — 3. J LugcL Batav., 1761, 2 vols. 8vo; by Blomfield, 
One of the architects of the Parthenon on ; Loud.. 1815; by Yolger, Lips., 1817. — 3. An ar- 
the Acropolis of Athens. — 4. A Lacedaemonian chitect and statuary, of uncertain country, who 
sculptor, made ants and other animals out of , is said to have invented the Corinthian column, 
ivory, so small that oue could not distinguish j and who must have lived before B.C. 396. He 
the different limbs. — [5. A Greek historiau in j was so anxious to give his works the last touch 
the time of the Emperor Aureliau, a native of j of perfection that he lost the grand and sublime, 
Tyre. He wrote the history of Aureliau, and whence Dionysius compares him fr> the orator 
is called by Vopiseus the most learned Gr eek \ Lysias. Callimachus was never satisfied with 
writer of his time.] j himself, and therefore received the ephithet «a- 

Callicratidas (Ka/./uKparldac), a Spar tan, j KtCOrexvog, which Piiuy interprets as calumniator 
succeeded Lysander as admiral of the Lacedae- j sui, [where Sillig conjectures, after some MSS, 
monran fleet, B.C. 406, took Methymna, and shut « that Karar7j^Lrexvog must be read instead of /co- 
up Couon in Mytileue ; but the Athenians sent j ki&tsxvoc, but the latter seems to be supported 
out a fleet of one hundred and fifty sail, and de- j by the translation in Pliny. — i. One of the gen- 
feated Callicratidas off the Argiuusae. Calli- j erals of Mithradates, who, by his skill ru eugi- 
eratidas fell in the battle. Callicratidas was a . neering, de ended the town of Amisus, in Pon- 
plain, blunt Spartan of the old school. Witness ; tus, for a considerable time against the Romans 
his answer, when asked what sort of men the ! in B.C. 71, and when unable to defend it longer, 
Ionians were : " Bad freemen, but excellent ! set it on fire : he afterward fell into the hands 
slaves." i of Lucullus at the capture of Kisibis, aud was 

Callldroml's or -um (Ka/./udpouoc). part of the j put to death by him in revenge for the burning 
range of Mount (Eta., near Thermopylae. ; of Amisus.] 

Callif^e (Callifauus : now Calvisi), a town Callimedox (Ka/./.tfied^v), one of the orators 
in Samuium, perhaps in the territory of Allifae. i at Athens in the Macedonian interest, and a 

Callimachus (Ka/./.l/iaxog). 1. The Athenian friend of Phocion, was condemned to death by 
polemarch, commanded the right wing at Mara- 1 the Athenians in his absence, B.C. 317. 
thon, where he was slain, after behaving with ! OALLnricus Seleucus. Vid. Seleucus. 
much gallantry, B.C. 490. This is the last re- ' Callisus (Ka/Juvoc), of Ephesus, the earliest 
corded instance of the polemarch performing Greek elegiac poet, probably flourished about 
the military duties which his name implies. — B.C. 700. Only one of his elegies is extant, 
2. A celebrated Alexandrine grammarian aud consisting of twenty-one lines, in which he ex- 
poet, was a native of Cyrene iu Africa, and a horts his cum ry men to courage and persever- 
descendaut of the Battiadae, whence he is some- auee against their enemies. Printed iu Bergks 
times called Battiades. He lived at Alexaudrea : Poetai Lt/rici Gra>ci, p. 303. 
in the reigns of Ptolemy Philadelphus aud Eu- Calliope. Vid. Mls^e. 

ergetes, and was chief librarian of the famous ' Calliope (Ka/.MoTrn), a considerable city in 
library of Alexandria from about B.C. 260 until the west of Partbia, founded, or else enlarged, 
his death about 240. He founded a celebrated by Seleucus Nica tor. 

grammatical school at Alexaudrea, and among [Calliopius, a grammarian, probably of the 
his pupils were Eratostheues. Aristophanes of ninth century, who is thought to have revised 
Byzautium, and Apollouius Rhodius. We have and corrected the text of the plays of Terence: 
no other particulars of the life of Callimachus it has been maintained by some writers that 
except his enmity with his former pupil Apollo the name is a mere epithet, and does nut deu-'te 
oius Rhodius, which is related elsewhere. Vid. any individual.] 
164 



CALL1PH0N. 



GALLIUM. 



Calliphon (Ka'A?u<ptiv), a Greek philosopher, 
and probably a disciple of Epicurus, is condemn- 
ed by Cicero as making the chief good of man 
to consist in a union of virtue {honestas) and 
bodily pleasure (Jjdovij, voluptas). 

Callipolis (Ka?.?.'nro?AS : KaMuiroMrfif). _ 1. 
(Now Gallipoli), a Greek town on the Tarentine 
Gulf in Calabria.— 2. A town on the eastern 
coast of Sicily, not far from iEtua. — 3. (Now 
Gallipoli), a town in the Thracian Chersonese, 
opposite Lampsacus. — 4. A town in JStolia. 
rid. Gallium. 

[Callippid^e (Ka?./u77mdai), a nation sprung 
from a union of Greeks and Scythians, dwelling 
on the Hypanis, in the vicinity of Olbia.] 

Callippides (Ka?JuTrmd7]r), of Athens, a cele- 
brated tragic actor, a contemporary of Alcibiades, 
and Agesilaus. 

Callippus (Ku}.?im7og). 1. An Athenian, ac- 
companied Dion to Syracuse, where he mur- 
dered the latter, B.C. 353. Callippus now usurp- 
ed the government of Syracuse, but was ex- 
pelled the city at the end of thirteen months, 
and, after wandering about Sicily with his mer- 
cenaries, was at length put to death by his own 
friends. — 2. An astronomer of Cyzicus, came to 
Athens, where he assisted Aristotle in rectify- 
ing and completing the discoveries of Eudoxus. 
Callippus invented the period or cycle of sev- 
enty-six years, called after him the Callippic, 
which commenced B.C. 330. 

Callirrhoe (Ka?Jjf>puj]). 1. Daughter of 
Oceanus, wife of Chrysaor, and mother of Ge- 
ryoues and Echidna. — 2. Daughter of Achelous 
and wife of Alcmaeou, induced her husband to 
procure her the peplus and necklace of Harmo- 
nia, by which she caused his death. Vid. Alc- 
M/Eon. — 3. Daughter of Seamauder, wife of 
Tros, and mother of Ilus ;md Ganymedes. 

Callirrhoe (KaTih^porj). 1. Afterward call- 
ed Enxeacrumjs (FAvtuKpovvoc), or the "Nine 
Springs," because its water was distributed by 
nine pipes, was the most celebrated well in 
Athens, and still retains its ancient name Cal- 
lirrhoe. It was situated in the southeastern ex- 
tremity of the city, between the Olympieum and 
the llissus. — [2. A fountain and bathing-place in 
Peraa, on the east side of the Dead Sea, with 
warm springs, which were accounted healthy.] 

[Calllste (KaAAmr^), one of the Sporades 
Islands, the later Thera.] 

Callisthenes (KaMuodwrie), of Olynthus, a 
relation and a pupil of Aristotle, accompanied 
Alexander the Great to Asia. In his intercourse 
with Alexander he was arrogant and bold, and 
took every opportunity of exhibiting his inde- 
pendence. He expressed his indignation at 
Alexander's adoption of Oriental customs, and 
especially at the requirement of the ceremony 
of adoration. He thus rendered himself so ob- 
noxious to the king, that he was accused of 
being privy to the plot of Hermolaus to assassin- 
ate Alexander ; and, after being kept in chains 
for seven months, was either put to death or 
died of disease. Callisthenes wrote an account 
of Alexanders expedition ; a history of Greece, 
in ten books, from the peace of Antalcidas to 
the seizure of the Delphic temple by Philome- 
lus (B.C. 387-357) ; and other works, all of 
which have perished. 

Callisto (KaZXioTu), an Arcadian nymph, ! 



hence called Nonacrlna virgo (Ov., Met., ii., 409) 
from Nonacris, a mountain in Arcadia, was 
daughter either of Lycaon, or of Nycteus, or of 
Ceteus, and a companion of Diana (Artemis) in 
the chase. She was beloved by Jupiter (Zeus), 
who metamorphosed her into a she-bear that 
Juno (Hera) might not become acquainted with 
the amour. But Juno (Hera) learned the truth, 
and caused Diana (Artemis) to slay Callisto dur- 
ing the chase. Jupiter (Zeus) placed Callisto 
among the stars under the name of Arctos, or 
the Bear. Arcas was her son by Jupiter (Zeus). 
According to Ovid, Jupiter (Zeus) overcame the 
virtue of Callisto by assuming the form of Diana 
(Artemis); Juno (Hera) then metamorphosed 
Callisto into a bear ; and when Arcas, during the 
chase, was on the point of killing his mother, 
Jupiter placed both among the stars. Vid. Arc- 
tos. According to K. O. Muller, Callisto is 
merely another form of Calliste, a surname of 
Diana (Artemis), and she is therefore the 6ame 
as this goddess. The she-bear was the symbol 
of the Arcadian Diana (Artemis). 

Callistratia (Ka?i?.icT(jaria), a town in Paph- 
lagonia, on the coast of the Euxine, near the 
Promontorium Carambis. 

Callistratus (KalXLGTparog). 1. An Athe- 
nian orator, son of Callicrates of Aphidna. His 
oratory was greatly admired by Demosthenes, 
and his speech on the affair of Oropus, B.C. 366, 
is said to have excited the emulation of De- 
mosthenes, and to have caused the latter to de- 
vote himself to oratoiy. After taking an active 
part in public affairs, generally in favor of Spar- 
ta, Callistratus was condemned to death by the 
Athenians in 361, and went into banishment to 
Methone in Macedonia. He ultimately returned 
to Athens, and was put to death. During his 
exile he is said to have founded the city of 
Datum, afterward Philippi. — [2. Son of Empe- 
dus, commander of a body of Athenian cavalry 
in Sicily during the expedition of Nicias. After 
cutting his way through the enemy's forces, he 
was finally slain in an attack on those who were 
plundering the Athenian camp. — 3. One of the 
body of knights under the command of Lysima- 
chus, who were employed by the government of 
the ten to keep in check the exiles under Thra- 
sybulus in the Pira3us ; but he was taken by the 
latter and put to death in revenge for the out- 
rages committed by Lysimachus.] — 4. A Greek 
grammarian, and a disciple of Aristophanes of 
Byzantium, [who lived about the middle of the 
second century before Christ. He appears to 
have devoted himself principally to the study 
of the great poets of Greece, such as Homer, 
Pindar, the tragedians, Aristophanes, and some 
others ; and the results of his studies, were em- 
bodied in commentaries upon those poets, which 
are now lost.] — 5. A Roman jurist, frequently 
cited in the Digest, wrote at least as late as the 
reign (A.D. 198-211) of Severus and Antoninus 
(i. e., Septimius Severus and Caracalla). 

Callistus, C. Julius, a freedman of Caligula, 
possessed great influence in the reigns of Calig- 
ula and Claudius, and is the person to whom 
the physician Scribonius Largus dedicates his 
work. 

Callium (Kd?Mov: KalAievc), called Callipo- 
lis by Livy (xxxvi., 30), a town in ^Etolia, in the 
valley of the Spercheus, southwest of Hvpata. 

165 



CALLIXENUS. 



CAMARINA. 



Calllxexus {Ka/Ju^evoc), the leader in the 
prosecution of the Athenian generals who had 
conquered at the Arginusae, B.C. 406. Not long 
after the execution of the generals, the Athe- 
nians repented of their unjust sentence, and 
decreed the institution of criminal accusations 
against Calhxenus, but he escaped from Athens. 
On the restoration of democracy, 403, Callixenus 
took advantage of the general amnesty, and re- 
turned to Athens, but no man would give him 
either water or light for his fire, and he perished 
miserably of hunger. 

Callox (KdXlvv). 1. An artist of iEgina, 
flourished B.C. 516.— 2. An artist of Elis, lived 
before B.C. 436. 

Calor. 1. A river in Samnium, flows past 
Beneventum, and falls into the Vulturnus. — 2. 
(Now Colore), a river in Lucania, falls into the 
Silarus. 

Calpe (KuAtttj : now Gibraltar), a mountain 
in the south of Spain, on the Straits, between the 
Atlantic and Mediterranean. This and Mount 
Abyla, opposite to it, on the African coast, were 
called the Columns of Hercules. Vid. Abtla. 

Calpe (Kd?,~n : now Ktrpeh), a river, pi*ora- 
ontory, and town on the coast of Bithynia, be- 
tween the rivers Psilis and Sangarius. 

Calpurnia, daughter of L. Calpurnius Piso, 
consul B.C. 58, and last wife of the dictator 
Csesar, to whom she was married in 59. The 
reports respecting the conspiracy against Cae- 
sar*s life filled Calpurnia with the liveliest ap- 
prehensions ; she in vain entreated her husband 
not to leave home on the Ides of March, 44. 

Calpurxia Gexs, plebeian, pretended to be 
descended from Calpus, a son of Numa. It was 
divided into the families of Bestia, Bibulus. 
Flamma, and Piso. 

Calpurnius, T. Siculus, the author of eleven 
Eclogues in Latin verse, which are close imita- 
tions of Virgil, perhaps lived about A.D. 290. — 
Editions ; In the Poetce Latini Minores of Werns- 
dorff ; and by Glaeser, Gotting., 1842. 

[Calus, more correctly Caus, (Kaouc), a city 
of Arcadia, on the River Laden, containing a 
temple of ^Esculapius.] 

Calva, a surname of Venus at Rome, prob- 
ably in honor of the Roman women, who are 
said, during the war with the Gauls, to have 
cut off their hair for the purpose of making 
bow-strings. 

Calven'tius, an Insubrian Gaul, of the town 
of Placentia, whose daughter married L. Piso, 
the father of L. Piso Caesoninus, consul B.C. 
58. In his speech against the latter, Cicero up- 
braids him with the low origin of his mother, and ! 
calls him Ccesoninus Semiplacentinus Calventins. \ 

Calvixus, Doiiitius. 1. Cx., curule aedile j 
B.C. 299, consul 283, and dictator and censor I 
280. In his consulship he, together with his I 
colleague Dolabella, defeated the Gauls and i 
Etruscans, and hence received the surname ! 
31aximus.—2. Cx., tribune of the plebs, 59, \ 
when he supported Bibulus against Caesar, ; 
praetor 56, and consul 53, through the influence ! 
of Pompey. In the civil war he joined Caesar. ' 
In 49 he fought under Curio in Africa ; and in 
48 he fought under Caesar in Greece, and com- 
manded the centre of Caesar's army at the bat- 
tle _of Pharsalia. In 4=1 he had the 'command of j 
Asia, and in 46 he fought in Africa against the 
166 



Pompeian party. After Caesar's death (44) he 
fought under Octavianus and Antony against the 
republicans. In 40 he was consul a second 
time, and in 39 went as proconsul to Spain, 
where he defeated the revolted Cerretani. 

Calvixus, L. Sextius, consul B.C. 124, de- 
feated the Salluvii and other people in Transal- 
pine Gaul, and in 123 founded the colony of 
Aquae Sextiae (now Aix). 

Calvixus, T. Veturius, twice consul, B.C. 
334 and 321. In his second consulship he and 
his colleague Sp. Postumius Albiuus were de- 
feated by the Sabines at Claudium. For details, 
vid. Albixus, No. 3. 

Calvisius Sabixus. Vid. Sabixus. 

Calvus, Licixius. Vid. Licixius. 

[Calybe, a priestess of Juno, whose form 
Allecto assumed when she excited Turnus to 
war against ^Eueas.] 

Calycadxus (Ka?,vKaSvoc. 1. (Now Chink 
Sooyoo), a considerable river of Cilicia Traoheia, 
navigable as far up as Seleucia. — 2. The prom- 
ontory of this name, mentioned by Poly bins 
(xxii., 26) and Livy (xxxviii., 38), appears to 
be the same as Anemurium. 

Calyi>x.e (Kalvdvai vrjcoi). 1. Two small 
islands off the coast of Troas, between Tenedos 
and the Promontorium Lectura. — 2. A group of 
islands off the coast of Caria, northwest of 
Cos, belonging to the Sporades. The largest 
of them was called Calydna, and afterward Ca- 
lymna (now Kcdimno). 

Calydox (Ka?.vS6v : Ka/,v66vioc), an ancient 
town of ^EtoUa, on the Evenus, in the land of 
the Curetes, said to have been founded by Mto- 
lus or his son Calydon. The surrounding coun- 
try produced wine, oil, aud corn ; and in the 
mountains in the neighborhood the celebrated 
hunt of the Calydonian boar took place. The 
inhabitants were removed by Augustus to Ni- 

COPOLIS. 

Calymna. Vid, Calydx^e, No. 2. 

Calyxca (Kd?,vvda : Ka?.vv6evc), a city of 
Caria, east of Caunus, and sixty stadia (six 
geographical miles) from the sea. The Calyn- 
dians formed a part of the fleet of Xerxes, un- 
der their king Damasithymus : afterward they 
were subject to the Caunians; and both cities 
were added by the Romans to the territory of 
Rhodes. 

CALYrso (Ka/c'iyw), daughter of Oceauus and 
Tethys, or of Nereus, or, according to Homer, 
of Atlas, was a nymph inhabiting the island of 
Ogygia, on which Ulysses was shipwrecked. 
Calypso loved the unfortunate hero, and prom- 
ised him immortality if he would remain with 
her. Ulysses refused, and after she had detain- 
ed him seven years, the gods compelled her to 
allow him to continue his journey homeward. 

Camaloduxum (uow Colchester), the capital 
of the Trinobantes in Britain, and the first Ro- 
man colony in the island, founded by the Em- 
peror Claudius, A.D. 43. 

Camarixa (Kaudpiva : Kauapivalog : now Cot- 
merino), a town on the southern coast of Sicily, 
at the mouth of the Hipparis, founded by Syra- 
cuse, B.C. 599. It was several times destroy- 
ed by Syracuse; and in the first Punic war it 
was taken by the Romans, and most of the in- 
habitants sold as slaves. Scarcely any vestiges 
of the ancient town remain. In the neighbor- 



CAMBUN1 MONTES. 



C AMIS A. 



hood was .1 marsh, which the inhabitants drain- 
ed contrary to the command of an oracle, and 
thus opened a way to their enemies to take the 
town : hence arose the proverb ftq k'lvu Ka^apt- 
vav, ne movcas Camarinam. 

Cambuni Montes (now Bolutza), the mount- 
ains which separate Macedonia and Thessaly. 

Cambysese (Ka/x6var]VTi), a district of Armenia 
Major, on the borders of Iberia and Colchis. 

Cambyses (KafiCvang). 1. Father of Cyrus 
the Great — 2. Second king of Persia, succeed- 
ed his father Cyrus, and reigned B.C. 529-522. 
In 525 he conquered Egypt; but an army which 
he sent against the Ammonians perished in the 
sands, and the forces, which he led in person 
against the ./Ethiopians south of Egypt, were 
compelled by failure of provisions to return. On 
his return to Memphis he treated the Egyptians 
with great cruelty ; he insulted their religion, 
and slew their god Apis with his own hands. 
He also acted tyrannically toward his own fam- 
ily and the Persians in general. He caused his 
own brother Smerdis to be murdered ; but a 
Magian personated the deceased prince, and set 
up a claim to the throne. Vid. Smerdis. Cam- 
byses forthwith set out from Egypt against this 
pretender, but died in Syria, at a place named 
Ecbatana, of an accidental wound in the thigh, 
■522. 

Cambyses (Kau&varjc). 1. (Now lora), a river 
of Iberia and Albania, which, after uniting with 
the Alazon (now Alasan), falls into the Cyrus. 
— 2. A small river of Media, falling into the 
Caspian between the Araxes and the Amardus. 

Camen^e (not Canmnop), also called Casmenoe, 
Carmence. The name is connected with carmen, 
a " prophecy." The Camenas accordingly were 
prophetic nymphs, and they belonged to the re- 
ligion of ancient Italy, although later traditions 
represent their worship as introduced into Italy 
from Arcadia, and some accounts identify them 
with the Muses. The most important of these 
goddesses was Carmenta or Carmentis, who 
had a temple at the foot of the Capitoline Hill, 
and altars near the porta Carmentalis. Re- 
specting festivals, vid. Diet, of Ant., art. Car- 
mentalia. The traditions which assigned a 
Greek origin to her worship state that her orig- 
inal name was Nicostrate, and that she was by 
Mercury (Hermes) the mother of Evander, with 
whom she fled to Italy. 

Cameria (Camerinus), an ancient town of 
Latium, conquered by Tarquinius Priscus. 

Camerinum or Camarinum, more anciently 
Camers (Camertes: now Canierino), a town in 
Umbria, on the borders of Picenum, an ally of 
the Romans against the Etruscans, B.C. 308, 
and also an ally of the Romans in the second 
Punic war, subsequently a Roman colony. 

CamerInls, the name of a patrician family 
of the Sulpicia gens, the members of which fre- 
quently held tho consulship in the early times 
of the republic (B.C. 500, 490,461, 393, 345). 
After B.C. 345 the Camerini disappear from his- 
tory for 400 years, but they are mentioned again 
as one of the noblest Roman families in the 
early times of the empire, 

Camerims, a Roman poet, contemporary with 
Ovid, wrote ■ poem on the capture of Troy by 
Hercules. 

Camicus (KauiKor ; KaiuKioc), an ancient town 



of the Sicani, on the southern coast of Sicily, on 
a river of the same name, occupied the 6ite of 
the citadel of Agrigentum. 

Camilla, daughter of King Metabus, of the 
Volscian town of Privernum, was one of the 
swift-footed servants of Diana, accustomed to 
the chase and to war. She assisted Turnus 
against iEneas, and, after slaying numbers of 
the Trojans, was at length killed by Aruns. 

Camillus, Furius. 1. M., one of the great 
heroes of the Roman republic. He was censor 
B.C. 403, in which year Livy erroneously places 
his first consular tribunate. He was consular 
tribune for the first time in 401, and for the sec- 
ond time in 398. In 396 he was dictator, when 
he gained a glorious victory over the Faliscans 
and Fidenates, took Veii, and entered Rome in 
triumph, riding in a chariot drawn by white 
horses. In 394 he was consular tribune for the 
third time, and reduced the Faliscans. The 
story of the schoolmaster who attempted to be- 
tray the town of Falerii to Camillus belongs to 
this campaign. In 391 Caffiillus was accused 
of having made an unfair distribution of the 
booty of Veii, and went voluntarily into exile 
to Ardea. Next year (390) the Gauls took 
Rome, and laid siege to Ardea. The Romans 
in the Capitol recalled Camillus, and appointed 
him dictator in his absence. Camillus hastily 
collected an army, attacked the Gauls, and de- 
feated them completely. Vid. Brennus. His 
fellow-citizens saluted him as the second Rom- 
ulus. In 389 Camillus was dictator a third 
tune, and defeated the Volscians, iEquians, 
and other nations. In 386 he was consular 
tribune for the fourth, in 384 for the fifth, and 
in 381 for the sixth time. In 368 he was ap- 
pointed dictator a fourth time to resist the roga- 
tions of C. Licinius Stolo. Next year, 367, he 
was dictator a fifth time, and, though eighty 
years of age, he completely defeated the Gauls. 
He died of the pestilence, 365. Camillus was 
the great general of his age, and the resolute 
champion of the patrician order. His history 
has received much legendary and traditional 
fables, and requires a careful critical sifting. — 
2. Sp., son of No. 1, first prsetor 367.-3. lu, 
also son of No. 1, was dictator 350, in order to 
hold the comitia, and consul 349, when he de- 
feated the Gauls. — 4. L., son of No. 2, consul 
338, when he took Tibur, and, in conjunction 
with his colleague Maanius, completed the sub- 
jugation of Latium. In 325 he was consul a 
second time. — 5. M., proconsul of Africa in the 
reign of Tiberius, defeated the Numidian Tae- 
fariuas, A.D. 17. — 6. M., surnamed Scriboni- 
anus, consul A.D. 32, under Tiberius. At the 
beginning of the reign of Claudius he was le- 
gate of Dalmatia, where he revolted, but was 
conquered, 42, sent into exile, and died 53. 

Camirus (Kdfieipog : Kajueipevc), a Dorian 
town on the western coast of the island of 
Rhodes, said to have been founded by Camirus, 
son of Cercaphus and Cydippe, and the princi- 
pal town in the island before the foundation of 
Rhodes. It was the birth-place of the poet Pi- 
sander. 

Camisa (Kd/ucaa), a fortress in Cappadocia, 
1 twenty-three Roman miles east of Sebaste, [de- 
j stroyed in the time of Strabo, but rebuilt at a 
1 later period.] 

167 



CAMISSARES. 



GANM 



[Camissares, a Carian, father of the cele- 
brated Datames, was made satrap of part of 
Cilicia bordering on Cappadoeia by Artaxerxes 
Moemon : he fell in the war of Artaxerxes 
against the Cadusii, B.C. 385.] 

Camcen^:. Vid. Camen^e. 

Campania (Campanus : now Terra di Lavoro), 
a district of Italy, the name of which is proba- 
bly derived from campus, " a plain," was bound- 
ed on the northwest by Latium, north and east by 
Samnium, southeast by Lucania, and south and 
southwest by the Tyrrhenian Sea. It was sep- 
arated from Latium by the River Liris, and from 
Lucania at a later time by the River Silarus, 
though in the time of Augustus it did not ex- 
tend further south than the promontory of Mi- 
nerva. In still earlier times the Ager Campa- 
nus included only the country round Capua. 
The country along the coast from the Liris to 
the Promontory of Minerva is a plain inclosed 
by the Apennines, which sweep round it in the 
form of a semicircle. Campania is a volcanic 
country, to which circumstance it was mainly 
indebted for its extraordinary fertility, for which 
it was celebrated in antiquity above all other 
lands. It produced corn, wine, oil, and every 
kind of fruit in the greatest abundance, and in 
many parts crops could be gathered three times 
in the year. The fertility of the soil, the beauty 
of the scenery, and the softness of the climate, 
the heat of which was tempered by the delicious 
breezes of the sea, procured for Campania the 
epithet Felix, a name which it justly deserved. 
It was the favorite retreat in summer of the Ro- 
man nobles, whose villas studded a considerable 
part of its coast, especially in the neighborhood 
of Baije. The principal river was the Vultur- 
jjus : the minor rivers were the Liris, Savo, 
Clanius, Sebethus, Sarntjs, and Silarus. The 
chief lakes were Lucrinus, Acherusia, Aver- 
nus, and Literna, most of them craters of ex- 
tinct volcanoes. The earliest inhabitants of the 
country were the Ausones and Osci or Opici. 
They were subsequently conquered by the Etrus- 
cans, who became the masters of almost all the 
country. > In the time of the Romans we find 
three distinct people, besides the Greek popula- 
tion of Cum^e: 1. The Campani, properly so call- 
ed, a mixed race, consisting of Etruscans and 
the original inhabitants of the country, dwell- 
ing along the coast from Sinuessa to Psestum. 
They were the ruling race : their history is 
given under Capua, their chief city. 2. Sidi- 
cini, an Ausonian people, in the northwest of 
the country, on the borders of Samnium. 3. Pi- 
centini, in the southeast of the country. 

[Campanus, one of the leaders of the Tungri 
in the war of Civilis against the Romans in A. 

D. n.] 

Campe (KauTcri), a monster which guarded the 
Cyclopes in Tartarus, was killed by Jupiter 
(Zeus) when he wanted the assistance of the 
Cyclopes against the Titans. 

[Campi Canini, a tract of country in the land 
of the Reeti, corresponding to the moderm Tessin 
valley.] 

[Campi Diomedei or Diomedis, a district of 
Apulia. Vid. Diomedes and Canusium.] 

Campi Lapidei (iredtov lid&der : now la Crau), 
" Plain of Stones" in the south of Gaul, east of 
the Rhone, near the Mediterranean, and on the 
168 



road from Aries to Marseilles. These stones 
were probably deposited by the Rhone and the 
Druentia (now Durance) when their course was 
different from what it is at present. This sin- 
gular plain was known even to iEschylus, who 
says that Jupiter (Zeus) rained down these 
stones from heaven to assist Hercules in his 
fight with the Ligurians, after the hero had shot 
away all his arrows. A sweet herbage grows 
underneath and between the stones, and con- 
sequently, in ancient as well as in modern times, 
flocks of sheep were pastured on this plain. 

Campi Maori (Manpol Ku/uttoi), the " Long 
Plains," a tract of country between Parma and 
Modena, celebrated for the wool of its sheep. 
There appears to have been a place of the same 
name, where annual meetings of the neighbor 
ing people were held even in the time of Stra! 

[Campi Phlegr^ei, a volcanic district of Ca: 
pania, extending from Puteoli to Cumag, an 
containing Mount Vesuvius.] 

Campi Raudii, a plain in the north of Italy, 
near Verona, where Marius and Catulus defeat- 
ed the Cimbri, B.C. 101. 

[Campodunum (KafiTTodovvov : now Kempten), 
a city of ancient Rsetia.] 

Campus Martius, the " Plain of Mars," fre- 
quently called the Campus simply, was, in its 
widest signification, the open plain at Rome 
outside the city walls, lying between the Tiber 
and the hills Capitolinus, Quirinal, and Pincius ; 
but it was more usually used to signify the 
northwest portion of the plain lying in the bend 
of the Tiber, which nearly surrounded it on 
three sides. The southern portion of the plain, 
in the neighborhood of the Circus Flaminius, 
was called Circus Flaminius, or Campus Fla- 
minius, or Prata Flaminia. The Campus Mar- 
tius is said to have belonged originally to the 
Tarquins, and to have become the property of 
the state, and to have been consecrated to Mars 
upon the expulsion of the kings. Here the Ro- 
man youths were accustomed to perform their 
gymnastic and warlike exercises, and here the 
comitia of the centuries were held. At a later 
time it was surrounded by porticoes, temples, and 
other public buildings. It was included within 
the city walls by Aurelian. Some modern writ- 
ers make three divisions of the Campus Mar- 
tius, and suppose that there was a portion of 
the plain lying between the Campus Martius 
proper and the Circus Flaminius, called Cam- 
pus Tiberinus or Campus Minor, but this sup- 
position does not rest on sufficient evidence. 
The Campus Minor mentioned by Catullus (lv., 
3) probably refers to another Campus altogether. 
Respecting the other Campi, vid. Roma. 

Canace (KavaK?]), daughter of iEolus and 
Enarete, bore several children to Neptune (Po- 
seidon). 

Canachus (Kdvaxog). 1. A Sicyonian artist, 
flourished B.C. 540-508, and executed, among 
other works, a colossal statue of Apollo Phile- 
sius at Miletus, which was carried to Ecbatana 
by Xerxes, 479. — 2. A Sicyonian artist, proba- 
bly grandson of the former, from whom he is 
not distinguished by the ancients. He and Pa- 
trocles cast the statues of two Spartans, who 
had fought in the battle of iEgospotamos, B.C 
405. 

Canje (Kdvai : now Kanot-K'oi), a sea-port 



CAN A STRUM. 



CAPANEUS. 



of vEolis, in Asia Minor, opposite to Lesbos. 
[Near this was the Promoutoiy Ganae, the term- 
ination of a range of mountains called by tiiis 
sanie name ; aim named Herod. vffya.] 

Canastrum or Canastr^eum (Kdvaorpov^ Ka- 
vaorpaiov, se. dupuTTjpiov, r/ Kavaarpaij] dicpn : 
now Cape Failtari), the southeastern extremity 
of the peuinsula Pallene in Macedonia. 

Candace {\Lav6dKtj), a queen of the iEthio- 
pians of Meroe, invaded Egypt B.C. 22, but was 
driven back anil defeated by Petronius, the Ro- 
man governor of Egypt. Her name seems to 
have been common to all the queens of ^Ethio- 
pia. 

Candaules (KavSavlrjc), also called Myrsilus, 
last Heraclid king of Lydia. His wife compel- 
led Gyges to put her husband to death, in con- 
sequence of personal exposure. Gyges then 
married the queen and mounted the throne, B. 
C. 716. 

Candavia, Candavii Montes (now Crasta), 
the mountains separating lllyricum from Mace- 
donia, across which the Via Egnatia ran. 

Candidum Promontorium (now Eas-el-Abiad, 
Cape Bianco), northwest of Hippo Zaritus, on the 
northern coaet of Zeugitaua, in Africa, forms 
the western headland of the Sinus Hippouensis. 

[Canens, daughter of Janus, married Picus, 
king of Latium in Italy. Via 1 . Picus.] 

Canicula. Vid. Cams. 

Canidia, whose real name was Gratidia, was 
a Neapolitan female, held up by Horace to con- 
tempt as an old sorceress. (Epod., 5, 17 ; Sat., 
i, 8.) 

Camnius Gallus. Vid. Gallus. 

Cammus Rebilus. Vid. Rebilus. 

Cams (Kvcjv), the iH^lilliilinii of the Great 
Dog. The most important star in this constel- 
lation was specially DUN(i Canis or Canicxda, 
and also Sirlus. About B.C. 400 the heliacal 
rising of Sirius at Athens, corresponding with 
the entrance of the sun into the sign Leo, mark- 
ed the hottest seasou of the year, and this ob- 
servation being taken on trust by the Romans, 
without considering whether it suited their age 
and country, the Canes Ca?iiculares became pro- 
verbial among them, as the Dog Days are among 
ourselves. The constellation of the Little Dog 
was called Procyon (llpoKvuv), literally trans- 
lated Ante canon, Antccanis, because in Greece 
this constellation rises heliacally before the 
Great Dog. When Bootes was regarded as 
Icarius (vid. Arctos), Procyon became Maera, 
the dog of Icarius. 

CannjE (Canuensis : now Canne), a village in 
Apulia, northeast of Cauusium, situated in an 
extensive plain east of the Aufidus and north of 
the small river Yerijellus, memorable for the 
defeat of the Rot nans by Hannibal, B.C. 216. 

Canninefates. Vid. Batavi. 

Canobus or Canopls (KdvuBoc or Kuvuttoc), 
according to Grecian story, the helmsman of 
Menelaus, who. on his return from Troy, died 
in Egypt, and was buried on the site of the town 
of Canobus, which derived its name from him. 

Canobus or Canoi-us (YLdvu6oc, Kuvuttoc : Ka- 
ouU-nc : ruins west of Aboukir), an important 
city on the coast of Lower Egypt, near the west- 
ernmost mouth of the Nile, which was hence 
called the Canopic Mouth (to Kavudmov oro/xa). 
It was one hundred and twenty stadia (twelve 



geographical miles) east of Alexandrea, and 
was (at least at one time) the capital of the 
Nomos Menelaites. It had a great temple of 
Serapis, and a considerable commerce ; and its 
inhabitants were proverbial for their luxury 
(Kayu6to/ii6r). After the establishment of Chris- 
tianity, the city rapidly declined. 

Cantabri, a people in the north of Spain. 
The Romans originally gave this name to all 
the people on the northern coast of Spain ; but 
when they became better acquainted with the 
country, the name was restricted to the people 
bounded on the east by the Astures and on the 
west by the Autrigones. The Cantabri were a 
tierce and warlike people, and were only sub- 
dued by Augustus after a struggle of several 
years (B.C. 25-19). 

Cantharus (Kdvdapoc). 1. A statuary and 
embosser of Sicyon, flourished about B.C. 268. — 
[2. Cantharus, a comic poet of Athens, proba- 
bly of the old comedy, of whom a few frag- 
ments are extant, collected in Meineke's Fragm. 
Comic. Grose, vol., i., p. 462-3.] 

[Cantharus (Kdvdapoc), one of the three sub- 
divisions of the Piraeus, the harbor of Athens, 
so called from its resemblance to a Kuvdapoc.] 

Canthus (KdvOoc), an Argonaut, son of Cane- 
thus or of Abas of Eubcea, was slain in Libya 
by Cephalion or Caphaurus. 

Cantium (Cantii : now Kent), a district of 
Britain nearly the same as the modern Kent, 
but included Londimum : [the eastern extremity 
of this district formed the Cantium Promontori- 
um, now North Foreland] 

Canuleius, C, tribune of the plebs B.C. 445, 
proposed the law establishing connubium, or the 
right of intermarriage, between the patricians 
and plebs. He also proposed that the people 
should have the right of choosing the consuls 
from either the patricians or the plebs ; but this 
proposal was not carried, and it was resolved 
instead, that military tribunes, with consular 
power, should be elected from either order in 
place of the consuls. 

Canusium (Canusinus: now Canosa), a town 
in Apulia, on the Aufidus, and on the high road 
from Rome to Brundisium, founded, according 
to tradition, by Diomede, whence the surround- 
ing country was called Camptis Diomedis. It 
was, at all events, a Greek colony, and both 
Greek and Oscan were spoken there in the time 
of Horace. (Canusini more bilinguis, Hor., Sat. t 
i., 10, 30.) Canusium was a town of consid- 
erable importance, but suffered greatly, like 
most of the other towns in the south of Italy, 
during the second Punic war. Here the re- 
mains of the Roman army took refuge after 
their defeat at Cannae, B.C. 216. It was cele- 
brated for its mules and its woollen manufac- 
tures, but it had a deficient supply of water. 
(Hor., Sat, i., 5, 91.) There are still ruins of 
the ancient town near Canosa. 

Canutius or Cannutius. 1. P., a distin- 
guished orator, frequently mentioned in Cice- 
ro's oration for Cluentius. — 2. Ti., tribune of 
the plebs B.C. 44, a violent opponent of Antony, 
and, after the establishment of the triumvirate, 
of Octavianus also. He was taken prisoner at 
the capture of Perusia, and was put to death by 
Octavianus, 40. 

Capaneus (Kairavevc), son of Hippouous and 
169 



CAPARA. 



UAPIT0L1UM. 



Astynome or Laodice, and father of Sthenelus, 
was one of the seven heroes who marched from 
Argos against Thebes. He was struck by Ju- 
piter (Zeus) with lightning, as he was scaling 
the walls of Thebes, because he had dared to 
defy the god. While his body was burning, his 
wife, Evadne, leaped into the flames and de- 
stroyed herself. 

[CapIra (now las Ventas da Caparra), a city 
of Lusitania, in the territory of the Vettones.] 

Capella, the star. Vid, Capra. 

Capella, Martianus Mineus Felix, a native 
of Carthage, probably flourished toward the 
close of the fifth century of our era. He is the 
author of a work in nine books, composed in a 
medley of prose and various kinds of verse, after 
the fashion of the Satyra Menippea of Varro. 
It is a sort of encyclopaedia, and was much es- 
teemed in the Middle Ages. The first two 
books, which are an introduction to the rest, 
consist of an allegory, entitled the Nuptials of 
Philology and Mercury, while in the remaining 
seven are expounded the principles of the seven 
liberal arts, Grammar, Dialectics, Rhetoric, Ge- 
ometry, Arithmetic, Astronomy, and Music, in- 
cluding Poetry. — Editions : By Hugo Grotius, 
Lugd. Bat., 1599 ; and by Kopp, Francf., 1836. 

Capena (Capenas, -atis : now Civitucola, an 
uninhabited hill), an ancient Etruscan town 
founded by and dependent on Veii, submitted 
to the Romans B.C. 395, the year after the con- 
quest of Veil, and subsequently became a Ro- 
man municipium. In its territory was the cel- 
ebrated grove and temple of Eeronia, on the 
small river Capenas. Vid. Feronia. 

Capena Porta. Vid, Roma. 

[Capenas (now Taglia Fosso), a small river 
of Etruria. Vid, Capena.] 

Caper, Flavius, a Roman grammarian of un- 
certain date, whose works are quoted repeat- 
edly by Priscian, and of whom we have two 
short treatises extant: printed by Putschius, 
Grammat. Latin. Auct. Antiqu., p. 2239-2248, 
Hanov., 1605. 

[Capernaum (KaTrepvaovfi, now Tell-Hum), a 
place in Galilee, on the northern shore of Lake 
Tiberias.] 

Capetus Silvius. Vid. Silvtus. 

Caphareus (Ka^pevc : now Capo (TOro), a 
rocky and dangerous promontory on the south- 
east of Eubcea, where the Greek fleet is said to 
have been wrecked on its return from Troy. 

[Caphaurus (Kd<pavpoc), son of Amphithemis 
and the nymph Tritonis, slew the Argonaut 
Canthus.] 

[Caphira (Kdyetpa), daughter of Oceanus, is 
said to have reared Neptune (Poseidon) in 
Rhodes.] 

CaphyjE (KaQvat : Kafyvevg, Ka<pvuTnc), a 
town in Arcadia, northwest of Orchomenus. 

Capito, C. Ateius. 1. Tribune of the plebs 
B.C. 55, when he opposed the triumvirs. — 2. 
Son of No. 1, an eminent Roman jurist, was ap- 
pointed Curator aquarum publicarum'm A.D. 13, 
and held this office till his death, 22, He gained 
the favor of both Augustus and 'Tiberius by 
flattery and obsequiousness. He wrote numer- 
ous legal works, which are cited in the Digest 
and elsewhere. Capito and his contemporary 
Labeo were reckoned the highest legal author- 
ities of their day, and were the founders of two ! 
170 



legal schools, to which most of the great jurists 
belonged. The schools took their respective 
names from distinguished disciples of those ju- 
rists. The followers of Capito were called 
from Masurius Sabinus, Sabiniani ; and after- 
ward from Cassius Longinus Cassiani. The 
followers of Labeo took from Proculus the name 
Procideiani. 

Capito, C. Fonteius. 1. A friend of M. Anto- 
ny, accompanied Maecenas to Brundisium, B.C. 
37, when the latter was sent to effect a reconcil- 
iation between Oetavianus and Antony. (Hor., 
Sat, i., 5, 32.) Capito remained with Antony, 
and went with him to the East. — [2. C. Fon- 
teius, son of No. 1, was consul in A.D. 12, to- 
gether with Germanicus, and afterward had, as 
proconsul, the administration of the province 
of Asia ; he was accused subsequently on ac- 
count of his conduct in Asia, but was acquitted.] 
Capitolinus, Julius, one of the Scriptores 
Historice Augustce, lived in the reign of Diocle- 
tian (A.D. 284-305), and wrote the lives of nine 
emperors: 1. Antoninus Pius; 2. M. Aurelius ; 
3. L. Verus; 4. Pertinax ; 5. Clodius Albinus; 
6. Opilius Macrinus ; 7. The two Maximini; 8. 
The three Gordiani ; 9. Maximus and Balbiuus. 
The best editions of the Scriptores Historice Au- 
gusta are by Salmasius, Par., 1620 ; Schreve- 
lius, Lugd. Bat, 1671. 

Capitolinus, Manlius. Vid. Manlius. 
Capitolinus Mons. Vid. Capitolium, Roma. 
Capitolinus, Petillius, was, according to 
the Scholiast on Horace (Sat, i., 4, 94), intrust- 
ed with the care of the temple of Jupiter on the 
Capitol (whence he was called Capitolinus), and 
was accused of having stolen the crown of Ju- 
piter, but was acquitted by the judges in conse- 
quence of his being a friend of Augustus. The 
surname Capitolinus appears, however, to have 
been a regular family-name of the gens. 
Capitolinus, Quintius. Vid. Quintius. 
Capitolium, the temple of Jupiter Optimus 
Maximus at Rome, was situated on the Mons 
Capitolinus, which derived its name from the 
temple. This hill is in figure an irregular ob- 
long, with two more elevated summits at the 
northern and southern ends. The northern 
summit, which is somewhat higher and steeper, 
was the Arx or citadel of Rome, and is now 
occupied by the church of Ara Celi ; while the 
southern summit, which is now covered in part 
by the Palazzo Caffarelli, was the site of the 
Capitolium. The temple is said to have been 
called the Capitolium, because a human head 
{caput) was discovered in digging the founda- 
tions. The building of it was commenced by 
Tarquinius Priscus, and it was finished by Tar- 
quinius Superbus, but was not dedicated till the 
third year of the republic, B.C. 507, by the con- 
sul M. Horatius. It was burned down in the 
civil wars, 83, but was rebuilt by Sulla, and was 
dedicated by Q. Catulus, 69. It was burned 
down a second time by the soldiers of Vitellius, 
A.D. 69, and was rebuilt by Vespasian ; but it 
was burned down a third time in the reign of 
Titus, 80, and was again rebuilt by Domitian 
with greater splendor than before. The Capi- 
tol contained three cells under the same roof: 
the middle cell was the temple of Jupiter, hence 
described as " media qui sedet sede Deus" (Ov., 
! ex Pont, iv., 9, 32), and on either side were 



CAPPADOCIA. 



CAPSA. 



the cells of bis attendant deities, Juno and Mi- 
nerva. The Capitol was one of the most im- 
posing buildings at Rome, and was adorned as 
befitted tbe majesty of the king of the gods. It 
was in the form of a square, namely, two hund- 
red feet on each side, and was approached by 
a flight of one huudred steps. The gates were 
of bronze, and the ceilings and tiles gilt. The 
gilding alone cost Domitian twelve thousand 
talents. In the Capitol were kept the Sibylline 
books. Here the consuls, upon entering on their 
office, offered sacrifices and took their vows ; 
and hither the victorious general, who entered 
the city in triumph, was carried in his triumphal 
car, to return thanks to the father of the gods. 
Although the words Arx Capitoliwngue are prop- 
erly used to signify the whole hill, yet we some- 
times find the term Arx applied alone to the 
whole hill since the hill itself constituted a nat- 
ural citadel to the city, and sometimes the term 
Capitolium to the whole hill, on account of the 
importance and reverence attaching to the tem- 
ple. Moreover, as the Capitol was nearly as 
defensible as the Arx, it is sometimes called 
Arx Tarpeia or Capitolina, but the epithet Tar- 
peia or Capitolina is applied to distinguish it 
from the Arx properly so called. 

Cappadocia (Ka-Tradonia : Ka-TTudo^, Cappa- 
dox), a district of Asia Minor, to which different 
boundaries were assigned at different times. 
Under the Persian empire it iucluded the whole 
country inhabited by a people of Syrian origiu, 
who were called (from their complexion) White 
Syrians {Aevmcvpoi), and also Cappadoces, 
which appears to have been a word of Persian 
origin. Their country seems to have embraced 
the whole northeastern part of Asia Minor east 
of the Halys and north of the Taurus. After- 
ward (but whether under the Persians or after 
the Macedonian conquer!, is a disputed point) 
the country was divided into two parts, which 
were named respectively from their proximity 
to the Euxine and to the Taurus, the northern 
part being called Cappadocia ad Poutum, and 
then simply Pontls. the southern part Cappa- 
docia ad Taurum, and then simply Cappadocia : 
the former was also called Cappadocia Minor, 
and the latter Cappadocia Major. Under the 
Persian Empire, the -whole country was govern- 
ed by a line of hereditary satraps, who traced 
their descent from Auaphas, an Achaemenid, one 
of the seven chieftains that slew the pseudo- 
Smerdis, and who soon raised themselves to the 
position of tributary kings. After a temporary 
suspension of their power during the wars be- 
tween the successors of Alexander, when Aria- 
rathes I. was defeated and slain by Perdiccas 
(B.C. 822), the king.-; of southern Cappadocia (re- 
specting the other part, vid. Pontus) recovered 
their independence under Ariarathes II., whose 
history and that of his successors will be found 
under Ariarathes and Ariobarzanes. In A.D. 
17, Archelaus, the last king, died at Rome, and 
Tiberius made Cappadocia a Roman province. 
Vid. Archelaus, No. 6. Soon afterward the 
districts of Cataonia and Meliteue, which had 
before belonged to Cilicia, were added to Cap- 
padocia, and the province then comprised the 
ten praefectura? of Melitene, Cataonia, Cilicia, 
Tyanitis, Garsauritis, Laviniasene, Sargarau- 
sene, Sarauravene, Chamanene, and Morimene. 



There were other divisions under the later em- 
perors. Cappadocia was a rough and generally 
sterile mountain region, bordered by the chains 
of the Paryadres on the north, the Scydisses 
on the east, and the Taurus on the south, and 
intersected by that of the Anti-Taurus, on the 
side of whose central mountain, Arg^eus, stood 
the capital Mazaca, afterw T ard CjEsarea ad Ar- 
GiEUM. Its chief rivers were the Halys and the 
Melas. Its fine pastures supported abundance 
of good horses and mules. 

Cappadox (KamrdSo^ : now Konax), a tribu- 
tary of the Halys, rising in Mount Lithrus, in 
the chain of Paryadres, and forming the north- 
western boundary of Cappadocia, on the side of 
Galatia. 

Capra or Capella (A?£), the brightest star 
in the constellation of the Auriga or Charioteer, 
is sometimes called Olenia Capella, because it 
rested on the shoulder (knl rye cjMvvr) of the 
Auriga. This star was said to have been orig- 
inally the nymph or goat who nursed the infant 
Jupiter (Zeus) in Crete. Vid. ^Ega, Amalthea. 
Its heliacal rising took place soon before the 
winter solstice, and thus it was termed signum 
pluviale. 

Capraria or Caprasia. 1. (Now Capraja), a 
small island off the coast of Etruria, between 
Populonia and the northern extremity of Cor- 
sica, inhabited only by wild goats, whence its 
name : called by the Greeks Atytlov. — 2. (Now 
Cabrera), a small island off the south of the Ba- 
learis Major (now Majorca), dangerous to ships. 
— 3. Vid. ^Egates. — 4. Vid. Fortunate Insula. 

Capre^e (now Capri), a small island, nine 
miles in circumference, off Campania, at the 
southern entrance of the Gulf of Puteoli, and 
two aud a half miles from the Promontory of 
Minerva, from which the island had been sepa- 
rated by an earthquake. It is composed of cal- 
careous rocks, which rise to two summits, the 
highest of which is between one thousand six 
huudred and one thousand seven hundred feet 
above the sea. The scenery is beautiful, and 
the climate soft and genial. According to tra- 
dition, it was originally inhabited by the Tele- 
boee, but afterward belonged to the inhabitants 
of Neapolis, from whom Augustus either pur- 
chased it or obtained it iu exchange for the 
island Pithecusa. Here Tiberius lived the last 
ten years of his reign, indulging in secret de- 
bauchery, aud accessible only to his creatures. 
He erected many magnificent buildings on the 
island, the chief of which was the villa Jovis, 
aud the ruins of which are still to be seen. 

Capria (Kairpia), a large salt lake in Pam- 
phylia, near the coast, between Perge and As- 
pendus. 

Capricornus (Aiyoicepuc), the Goat, a sign of 
the zodiac, between the Archer and the Water- 
man, is said to have fought with Jupiter against 
the Titans. 

Caprus (Kurcpoc). 1. (Now Little Zab), a 
river of Assyria, rising in Mount Zagros (now 
Mountains of Kurdistan), and flowing southwest 
into the Tigris, opposite to Cssnse. — 2. A little 
river of Phrygia, rising at the foot of Mount 
Cadmus, and flowing north into the Lycus. 

Capsa (Capsetanus : now Ghafsah), a strong 
and ancient city in the southwest of Byzaceua, in 
Northern Africa, iu a iertile oasis, surrounded by 
171 



CAPUA. 



CARAUSIUS. 



a sandy desert abounding in serpents. Its foun- 
dation was ascribed by tradition to the Libyan 
Hercules. In the war with Jugurtha, who used 
ita6 a treasure-city, it was destroyed by Marius; 
but it was afterward rebuilt and erected into a 
colony. 

Capua (Capuanus, Capuensis, but more com- 
monly Campanus: now Capua), originally call- 
ed Vulturnum, the chief city of Campania after 
the fall of Cumje, is said to have derived its 
name from Capys. Vid. Capts, No. 2. Capua 
was either founded or colonized by the Etrus- 
cans, according to some, fifty years before the 
foundation of Rome, and it became at an early 
period the most prosperous, wealthy, and luxu- 
rious city in the south of Italy. In B.C. 420 it 
was conquered by the warlike Samuites ; and 
the population, which had always been of a 
mixe>i nature, now consisted of Ausonians, Os- 
cans, Etruscans, and Samnites. At a later time, 



was to obtain the sole government by the mur- 
der of his brother ; and after making several 
unsuccessful attempts upon the life of Geta, he 
at length pretended to be recouciled with him, 
and having thus thrown him off his guard, he 
caused him to be murdered in the arms of his 
mother, 212. The assassination of Geta was 
followed by the execution of mauy of the most 
distinguished men of the state, whom Caracalla 
suspected of favoring his brother's cause : the 
celebrated jurist Papinian was one of his vic- 
tims. His cruelties and extravagances knew 
no bounds ; and after exhausting Italy by his 
extortions, he resolved to visit the different 
provinces of the empire, which became the 
scenes of fresh atrocities. In 214 he visited 
Gaul, Germany, Dacia, and Thrace ; and, in con- 
sequence of a campaign agaiust the Alemanni, 
he assumed the surname Alemanvicus. In 215 
he went to Syria and Egypt ; his sojourn at 



Capua, again attacked by the Samnites, placed : Alexandrea was marked by a general slaughter 
itself under the protection of Rome, 343. It j of the inhabitants, in order to avenge certain 
revolted to Hannibal after the battle of Cannae, sarcastic pleasantries in which they had indul- 
216, but was taken by the Romans in 211, was 1 ged against himself and his mother. In 216 he 
fearfully puuished, and never recovered its for- j crossed the Euphrates, laid waste Mesopotamia, 



mer prosperity. It was now governed by a 
prrefeetus, who was sent annually to the city 
from Rome. It received a Roman colony by 
the lex agraria of Julius Csesar, 59, and under 
Nero a colony of veterans was settled there. 
It was subsequently destroyed by the barbarians 
who invaded Italy. The modern towu of Capua 
is built about three miles from the ancient one, 
the site of which is indicated by the ruins of an 
amphitheatre. 

Caput Vada Promontorium. Vid, Bracho- 
des. 

Capys (Karris). 1. Son of Assaracus and 
Hieromuemone, and father of Auehises. — 2. A 
companion of ..Eneas, from whom Capua was 
said to have derived its name. 

Capys Silvius. Vid. Silvius. 



and returned to Edessa, where he wintered^ 
Next year he again took the field, intending to 
cross the Tigris, but was murdered near Edessa 
by Macrinus, the praetorian praefect. Caracalla 
gave to all free inhabitants of the empire the 
name and privileges of Romau citizens. 

Caractacus, king of the Silures in Britain, 
bravely defended his country against the Ro- 
j mans, in the reign of Claudius. He was at 
' length defeated by the Romans, and fled for pro- 
| tection to Cartismandua, queen of the Brigan- 
tes ; but she betrayed him to the Romans, who 
carried him to Rome, A.D. 51. When brought 
before Claudius, he addressed the emperor in so 
noble a manner that the latter pardoned him 
and his friends. 

Caralis or Carales (Caralitanus : now Cag- 



Capytium or Capitium (now Capizzi), ealled [ liari), the chief town of Sardinia, with an excel- 



by Cicero Capitina Civitas, a town in Sicily 
near Mount JEtna. 

Car (Kap), son of Phoroneus, and king of 
Megara, from whoin the acropolis of this town 
was called Caria. 

[Cara (now Cares, near Puente la Reyna). a 
city of the Yascones in Hispania Tarraconen- 
sis.] 

Caracalla, emperor of Rome A.D. 211-217, 
was son of Septimius Severus and his second 
wife Julia Domna, and was born at Lyons A.D. 
188. He was originally called Bassianus after 
his maternal grandfather, but afterward Marcus 
Aurelius A?ito?iimis, which became his legal 
name, and appears on medals and inscriptions. 
Caracalla was a nickname derived from a long 
tunic worn by the Gauls, which he adopted as 
his favorite dress after he became emperor. In 
198, Caracalla, when ten years old, was declar- 
ed Augustus, and in the same year accompanied 
his father Severus iu the expedition against the 
Parthians. He returned with Severus" to Rome 



lent harbor, situated on the Sinus Caralita- 
nus and on a promontory of the same name 
(now Capo S. JElia). It was founded by the 
Carthaginians ; under the Romans it was the 
residence of the prastor, and at a later period 
enjoyed the Roman franchise. 

Carambis (Kdpap6ig utcpa : now Kerempe), a 
promontory, with a city of the same name, on 
the coast of Paphlagonia, almost exactly oppo- 
site the Kriu Metopon, or southern promontory 
of the Chersonesus Tauriea (now Crimea). An- 
imaginary line joining these two headlands 
would make an almost equal division of the 
Euxine, which w r as hence called di5vp.T) ■ddXacca^ 
(Soph., Antig^ 978.) 

Caranus (Kdpavoc). 1. Of Argos, a descend- 
ant of Hercules, and a brother of Phidon, is said 
to have settled at Edessa in Macedonia with an 
Argive colony about B.C. 750, and to have be- 
come the founder of the dynasty of Macedonian 
kings. — 2 Son of Philip and half-brother of Al- 
exander the Great. — 3. A general of Alexander 



in 202, and married Plautilla. daughter of Plau- \ the Great, 



tianus, the praetorian praefect. In 208 he went 
with Severus to Britain ; and on the death of 



Carausius, born among the Menapii in Gaul, 
was intrusted by Maximiau with the command 



the latter at York. 211, Caracalla and his brother j of the fleet which was to protect the coasts of 
Geta succeeded to the throne, according to their 1 Gaul against the ravages of the Franks. But 
father's arrangements. Caracalla's first object | Maximian, having become dissatisfied with the- 
172 



CARBO, PAPIRIUS. 



CARIA. 



•conduct of Carausius in this command, gave 
orders for the execution of the latter. Carau- 
sius forthwith crossed over to Britain, where 
he assumed the title of Augustus, A.D. 287. Af- 
ter several ineffectual attempts to subdue him, 
Diocletian and Maximian acknowledged him as 
their codeague in the empire, and he continued to 
reign in Britaiu till 293, when he was murdered 
by his chief officer, Allectus. 

Carbo, PapIuIc.'s. 1. C, a distinguished ora- 
tor, and a man of great talents, but of no prin- 
ciple. He commenced public life as one of the 
three commissioners or triumvirs for carrying 
into effect the agrarian law of Tiberius Grac- 
chus. His tribuueship of the plebs, B.C. 131, 
was characterized by the most vehement oppo- 
sition to the aristocracy ; and he was thought 
even to have murdered Scipio Africanus, the 
champion of the aristocratical party, 129. But 
after the death of C. Gracchus (121), he sud- 
denly deserted the popular party, and in his con- 
sulship (120) actually undertook the defence 
of Opimius, who had murdered C. Gracchus. 
In liy Carbo was accused by L. Licinius Cras- 
sus, who brought a charge against him, and as 
he foresaw his condemnation, he put an end to 
his life. — 2. Cn., consul 113, was defeated by 
the Cimbri near Nbreia, and being afterward ac- 
_ cused by Marcus Autouius, he put an end to his 
own life. — 3. C, with the surname Arvina, son 
of No. 1, was a supporter of the aristocracy. 
In his tribuneship (90), Carbo and his colleague, 
Marcus Plautius iSilvauus, carried a law {Lex 
Papiria Plautia), giviug the Roman franchise to 
the citizens of the federate towns. Carbo was 
murdered in 82, by the praetor Brutus Damasip- 
pus, at the commaud of the younger Marius. Vid. 
Brutus, No. 10. — 1. Cn., sou of No. 2, was one 
of the leaders of the Marian party. He was 
thrice consul, namely, in 85, 81, and 82. In 82 
he carried on war against Sulla and his generals, 
but was at length obliged to abandon Italy : he 
fled to Sicily, where he was taken prisoner, and 
put to death by Pompey at Lilybaeum in the 
course of the same year. 

Carcaso (now Carcassone), a town of the Tec- 
tosages in Gallia Narbouensis, [possessing the Jus 
Latii, used by Caesar in his Gallic wars as a 
place of arms.] 

Carcathiockrta (Kapnadio/cepTa : now Kart- 
purt or Diarbekr), the capital of the district of 
Sophene in Armenia Major. 

Carcinus (Kap/civoc). 1. A tragic poet and a 
contemporary of Aristophanes {Nub., 1263 ; Pax, 
791).— 2. A youuger tragic poet, lived about 
B.C. 380 ; [Suidas attributed to him one hun- 
dred and sixty tragedies, but we possess the titles 
and fragments of nine ouly, and some fragments 
of uncertain dramas : all that remains of this 
poet has been collected and published in War- 
ner's Tragic. Gnec. Fragm. (Didot's Bibliotheca), 
p. 81— 88. J 

Cardam irLE {Kaptauvlri ■ KapdauvMrrjc.) 1. 
A town in Messeuia, oue of the seven towns prom- 
ised by Agamemuou to Achilles.— 2. An island 
near, or perhaps a town in, Chios. 

Cardea, a Roman divinity protecting the 
hinges of doors {cardo), was a nymph beloved 
by Jauus, who rewarded her for her favors by 
giving her the protection of the hinges of doors, 
and the power of preventing evil demons from 



I entering houses. Ovid {Past., vi., 101, seq.) con- 
| founds tliis goddess with Carna. 

Cardia {\Lap6ia: Kapdiavoc), a town on the 
| western side of the Thraciau Chersonese, on the 
. Gulf of Melas, founded by Miletus and Clazom- 
I enae, and subsequently colonized by the Athe- 
nians under Miltiades. It was destroyed by Ly- 
simachus, who built the town of Lysimachia in 
its immediate neighborhood. Cardia was the 
birth-place of Eumenes and of the historian 
Hierouymus. 

Carduchi {Kapdovxoi), a powerful and warlike 
people in the southeast of Greater Armenia, on 
the northeastern margin of the Tigris valley, 
probably the same as the Yop6valoL and TopdvTjvo'i 
of the late geographers and the Kurds of mod- 
em times. They dwelt in the mountains which 
divided Assyria on the northeast from Armenia 
{Mountains of Kurdistan), and were never thor- 
oughly subdued by the Persians, Greeks, or Ro- 
mans. 

Caresus {Kupnaoe), a town of the Troad, on a 
river of the same name flowing into the ^Esepus : 
destroyed before the time of Strabo : [the sur- 
rounding district was called Caresene.] 

[Carfulenus, D., called Carsuleius by Ap- 
pian, served under Julius Caesar in the Alexan- 
drine war, B.C. 47, in which he is spoken of as a 
man of great military skill. He subsequently 
took an active part in the war against Antony, 
and fell in the battle of Mutina.] 

Caria {Kapia : Kdp, pi. oi Kupeg), a district of 
Asia Miuor, in its southwestern corner, bound- 
ed on the north and northeast by the mountains 
Messogis and Cadmus, which divided it from 
Lydia and Phrygia, and adjacent to Phrygia and 
Lycia on the east and southeast. It is inter- 
sected by low mountain chains running out far 
into the sea in long promontories, the northern- 
most of which was called Mycale or Trogilium 
(opposite to Samos) ; the next Posidium (on 
which stood Miletus and Branehidae) ; the next 
is the long tongue of laud terminated by the two 
headlands of Zephyrium and Termerium (with 
Halicarnassus on its southern side) ; next the 
Cuidian Chersonesus, terminated by the Cape 
Triopium and the city of Cnidus ; then the Rho- 
dian Chersonesus, the southern point of which 
was called Cynossema, opposite to Rhodes ; and, 
lastly, Pedalium or Artemisium, forming the 
western headland of the Bay of Glaucus. The 
chief gulfs formed by these promontories were 
the Maeandrian, between Trogilium and Posidi- 
um ; the Iassian, between Posidium and Zephy- 
rium ; and the Ceraunian or Dorian, between 
Termerium and Triopium. The valleys between 
these mountain chains were well watered and 
fertile. The chief river was the Maeander, be- 
tween the chains of Messogis and Latmus, to the 
south of which the country was watered by its 
tributaries, the Marsyas, Harpasus, ami Mosy- 
nus, besides some streams flowing west and 
south into the sea, the most considerable of 
which was the Calbis. Vid. the articles. The 
chief products of the country were corn, wiue, 
oil, and figs ; for the last of which, Cauuus, on 
the southern coast, was very famous. An ex- 
tensive commerce was carried on by the Greek 
colonies on the coast. Even before the great 
colonization of the coasts of Asia Minor, Dorian 
settlements existed on the Triopiau and Cuidian 
173 



CARINA. 



CARNUTES. 



promontories, and this part of Carta, with the.: JElyas), a range of mountains in Palestine, 
adjacent islands, received at that time other ■ branching off, on the northern border of Sama- 
Dorian colonies, and obtained the name of Do- ! ria, from the central chain (which extends south 
ris; while to the north of the Iassian Gulf the J and north between the Jordan and the Mediter- 
coast was occupied by Ionian colonies, and thus , ranean), and running north and northwest through 
formed the southern part of Ionia. The inhab- < the southwest part of Galilee, till it terminates in 



itants of the rest of the country were Carians 
(Kupec) a wide-spread race of the Indo-Ger- 
manie stock, nearly allied to the Lydians and 
Mysians, which appears, in the earliest times 
of which we know any thing, to have occupied 
the greater part of the western coast of Asia 
Minor and several islands of the iEgean, in con- 
junction with the Leleges, from whom the Ca- 
rians are not easily distinguishable. The con- 
nection between the Carians, Lydians, and My- 
sians is attested by their common worship of 
Zeus Carios at Mylasa : the Carians had also a 
common sanctuary of Zeus Chrysaoreus. Their 
language was reckoned by the Greeks as a bar- 
barian tongue (i. e., unintelligible), though it 
early received an intermixture of Greek. The 
people were considered mean and stupid, even 
for slaves. The country was governed by a 
race of native princes, who fixed their abode at 
Halicarnassus after its exclusion from the Do- 
rian confederacy. Vid. Halicarxassus. These 
princes were subject allies of Lydia and Persia, 
and some cf them rose to great distinction in 
war and peace. Vid, Artemisia, Mausobus, 
and Ada. After the Macedonian conquest, the 
southern portion of the country became subject 
to Rhodes (vid. Rhodus), and the northern part 
to the kings of Peegames. Under the Romans, 
Caria formed a part of the province of Asia. 
Carina. Via. Roma. 

CaeIxts, M. Aurelics, the elder of the two 
sons of Carus, was associated with his father 
in the government, A.D 283, and remained in 
the west, while his father and brother Numeri- 
anus proceeded to the east to carry on war 
against the Persians. On the death of his father, 
in the course of the same year, Carinus and 
ISTumerianus succeeded to the empire. In 284 
rTumerianus was slain, and Carinus marched 
into Moesia to oppose Diocletian, who had been 
proclaimed emperor. A decisive battle was 
fought near Margum, in which Carinus gained 
the victory, but, in the moment of triumph, he 
was slain by some of bis own officers, whose 
wives he had seduced, 285. Carinus was one 
of the most profligate and cruel of the Roman 
emperors. 

Carmaxa (Kupuava : now Kerman, ruins), the 
capital of Carmania Propria, 3° longitude east 
of Persepolis. 

Carmaxia (Kap/iavla : Kapudvioc, Kap/u.avtT7jc : 
now Kirman), a province of the ancient Persian 
empire bounded on the west by Persis, on the 
north by Parthia, on the east by Gedrosia, and 
on the south by the Indian Ocean. It was di- 
vided into two parts, C. Propria and C. Deserta, 
the former of which was well watered by sev- 
eral small streams, and abounded in corn, "wine, 
and cattle. The country also yielded gold, Silver, 
eopper, salt, and cinnabar. The people were akin 
to the Persians. 

Carmaxor (Kapudvop), a Cretan, said to have 
purified Apollo and Diana (Artemis) after slay- 
ing the monster Python. 

Carmeixs and -em (Kdpun/,oc: now Jebel- 
174 



the promontory of the same name (now Cape 
Carmel), the height of which is twelve hundred 
feet above the Mediterranean. 

Caemexta, Carmextis. Vid. C amende. 
Carmo (now Garmona), a fortified town in 
Hispania Baetica, northeast of Hispalis. 

Carxa, a Roman divinity, whose name is 
probably connected with caro, flesh, for she was 
regarded as the protector of the physical well- 
being of man. Her festival was celebrated on the 
first of June, and was believed to have been in- 
stituted by Brutus in the first year of the repub- 
lic. Ovid confounds this goddess with Cardea. 

Carxeades (KcpvEadijg), a celebrated philoso- 
pher, born at Cyrene about B.C. 213, was the 
founder of the Third or New Academy at Athens. 
In 155 he was sent to Rome, with Diogenes and 
Critolaus, by the Athenians, to deprecate the 
fine of five hundred talents which had been im- 
posed on the Athenians for the destruction of 
Oropus. At Rome he attracted great notice 
from his eloquent declamations on philosophical 
subjects, and it was here that he first delivered 
his famous orations on Justice. The first ora- 
tion was in commendation of the virtue, and the 
next day the second answered all the arguments 
of the first, and showed that justice was not a 
virtue, but a matter of compact for the mainte- 
nance of civil society. Thereupon Cato moved 
the senate to send the philosopher home to his 
school, and save the Roman youth from his de- 
moralizing doctrines. Carneades died in 129, at 
the age of eighty-five. He was a strenuous op- 
ponent of the Stoics, and maintained that neither 
our senses nor our understanding supply us with 
a sure criterion of truth. 

Carneus (Kapveloc), a surname of Apollo, un- 
der which he was worshipped by the Dorians, 
is derived by some from Camus, a son of Jupi- 
ter (Zeus) and Latona (Leto), and by others from 
Camus, an Acarnanian soothsayer. The latter 
was murdered by Hippotes, and it was to pro- 
pitiate Apollo that the Dorians introduced his 
worship under the surname of Carneus. The fes- 
tival of the Cornea, in honor of Apollo, was one 
of the great national festivals of the Spartans. 
Vid Diet, of Ant, s. v. 

Caeni, a Celtic people, dwelling north of the 
Yeneti in the Alpes Carnicae. Vid p. 48, b. 

Carxuxtum (Kapvovc, -ovvroe : ruins between 
Deutsch-Altenbarg and JPctroncll), an ancient 
Celtic town in Upper Pannonia on the Danube, 
east of Yindobona (now Vienna), and subsequent- 
ly a Roman municipium or a colony. It was one 
of the chief fortresses of the Romans on the Dan- 
ube, and was the residence of the Emperor Mar- 
cus Aurelius during his wars with the Marcoman- 
ni and Quadi. It was the station of the Roman 
fleet on the Danube and the regular quarters of 
the fourteenth legion. It was destroyed by the 
Germans in the fourth century, but was rebuilt, 
and was finally destroyed by the Hungarians in 
the Middle Ages. 
Carxus. Vid. Carneus. 
Carxvtes or -i. a powerful people in Gallia 



CARP ASIA. 



CARTHAGO. 



Lugdunensis, between the Liger and Sequana : 
their capital was Genabum. 

Carpasia (Kap-rraala : now Karpass), a town 
in the southeast of Cyprus. 

Carpates, also called Alpes Bastarnice (now 
Carpathian Mountains), the mountains separat- 
ing Dacia from Sarmatia. 

Carpathus (KdpnaOoe : now Scarpanto), an 
island between Crete and Rhodes, in the sea 
named after it Mare Carpathium: its chief towns 
were Posidium and Nisyrus. 

[Caepentoracte (now Carpentras, with many 
Romau remains), a city of the Memini in Gallia 
Narbonensis, at a late period also called Colonia 
Julia Meminoru/n.] 

Carpetani, a powerful people in Hispania 
Tarraconensis, with a fertile territory on the riv- 
ers Anas and Tagus, in the modern Castille and 
Estremadura : their capital was Toletum. 

Carpi or Carpia.ni, a German people between 
the Carpathian Mountains and the Danube. 

[Carpis (Kdp7ric), a tributaiy of the Ister, on 
the southern side.] 

Carrje or CarrHvE (Kupp'ai : Haran or Charran 
of Scripture: now liar ran), a city of Osroene in 
Mesopotamia, not far from Edessa. It was here 
that Crassus met his death after his defeat by 
the Parthians, B.C. 53. 

Carrinas or Carinas. 1. C, one of the com- 
manders of the Marian part}-, fought B.C. 83 
against Pompey, and in 82 against Sulla and his 
generals. After the battle at the Colline gate 
at Rome, in which the Marian army was defeat- 
ed, Carrinas took to flight, but was seized and 
put to death. — 2. C, sou of No. 1, was sent by 
Caesar, in 45, into Spain against Sextus Pom- 
peius, but he did not accomplish any thing. In 
43 he was consul, and afterward served as one 
of the generals of Octuvianus against Sextus 
Pompeius in Sicily in M, aud as proconsul in 
Gaul in 31. — 3. Seccnpus, a rhetorician, expelled 
by Caligula from Rome because he had, by way 
of exercise, declaimed against tyrants in his 
school. 

[Carruca, a town of Hispania Bsetica, north- 
ward from Munda.] 

Carseoli (Carseolanus : now Carsoli), a town 
of the iEqui in Lati urn, colonized by the Romans 
at an early period. 

Carsul^: (Carsulanus: now Monte Castrilli), 
a town in Umbria, originally of considerable im- 
portance, but afterward declined. 

[Cartalo. Vid. Carthalo.] 

Carteia (also called Carthasa, Carpia, Car- 
pessus, KapTTjia : now Crantia), more anciently 
Tartessus, a celebrated town and harbor in the 
south of Spain, at the head of the gulf of which 
Mount Calpe forms one side, founded by the 
Phoenicians, and colonized B.C. 170 by four thou- 
sand Romau soldiers, whose mothers were Span- 
ish women. 

Cartenna or Cartinna (now Tennez), a colony 
on the coast of Mauretania Csesariensis in north- 
ern Africa, founded by Augustus. 

Carth-Ea (KapOaia : now Poles, ruins), a town 
on the south side of the island of Ceos, where 
eonsiderable ruins are fouud at the present day. 

Carthago, Magna Carthago (Kapxv^w : 
Kapxv^ovtoc, Carthaginiensis, Poeuus : ruins 
near El-Marsa, northeast of Tunis), one of the 
most celebrated cities of the ancient world, 



stood in the recess of a large bay (Sinus Car- 
thaginiensis), inclosed by the headlands Apolli- 
nis aud Mercurii (uow (Jape Farina and Cape 
Bon), in the middle and northernmost part of 
the north coast of Africa, in latitude about 36° 
55' north, and longitude about 10° 20' east 
The coast of this part of Africa has been much 
altered by the deposits of the River Bagradas 
and the sand which is driven 6eaward by the 
northwest winds. In ancient times Carthago 
stood upon a peninsula surrounded by the sea 
on all sides except the west ; but now the whole- 
space between the northern side of this penin- 
sula and the southern side of the Apollinis Prom- 
ontorium (now Cape Farina) is filled up and 
converted into a marsh; Utica, which was on 
the sea-shore, being left some miles inland ; and 
the course of the Bagradas itself being turned 
considerably north of its original channel, so 
that, instead of flowing about half way between 
Utica and Carthage, it now runs close to the 
ruins of Utica, and falls into the sea just under 
Cape Farina. The northeastern and southeast- 
ern sides of the peninsula are still open to the 
sea, which has, indeed, rather encroached here, 
for ruins are fouud under water. The southern 
side of the peninsula was formed by an inclosed 
bay, connected with the sea only by a narrow 
opening (now called the Goletta, or, in Arabic,. 
Haket-el- Wad, i. e., Throat of the River), which 
still forms the port of Tunis (ancient Tunes),, 
which stauds at its furthest end ; but it is nearly 
choked up with the deposit of the sewers of the 
city. The circuit of the old peninsula may be 
estimated at about thirty miles ; the width of 
the isthmus is three miles. The greatest cir- 
cumference of the city itself was probably about 
fifteen miles. The original city appears to have 
stood on the northeastern part of the peninsula, 
between Ras Ghammart and Ras Bousaid (now 
Cape Carthage), where the remains of cisterns 
are seen under water : these, and the aqueduct, 
whose ruins may be traced for fifty-two miles 
to Zaghwan, are the only remains of the old 
city. Its port, called Ccthon, was on the north- 
west side of the peninsula, where a little village- 
(now inland) still retains the name of El-Marsa f 
i. e., the Fort. The Roman city, which was 
built after the destruction of the original Car- 
thage, lay to the south of it. The Tyrian col- 
ony of Carthage was founded, according to tra- 
dition, about one hundred years before the build- 
ing of Rome, that is, about B.C 853. There 
were several more ancient Phoenician colonies 
along the same coast, between two of which, 
Utica and Tunes, the new settlement was fixed, 
about twenty-seven miles (Roman) from the 
former, and ten from the latter. The mythical 
account of its foundation is given under Dido. 
The part of the city first built was called, in the 
Phoenician language, Betzura or Bosra, i. e., 
a castle, which was corrupted by the Greeks into 
Byrsa (Bvpca), i. e., a hide, and hence probably 
arose the story of the way in which the natives 
were cheated out of the ground. As the city 
grew, the Byrsa formed the citadel : it stood on 
a low hill ; but its site can no longer be identi- 
fied, as there are several such hills within the 
circuit of the ancient city. The Cothon, or Port, 
is said to have been excavated, and the quarter 
of the city adjoining to it built forty years later,. 

175 



CARTHAGO. 

B.C. 81S. This Cothon was the inner harbor, 
and was used for ships of war : the outer har- 
bor, divided from it by a tongue of land three 
hundred feet wide, was the station for the mer- 
chant ships. The fortifications of the city con- 
sisted of a single wall on the side toward the 
sea, where the steep shore formed a natural de- 
fence, and a triple wall of great height, with bat- 
tlements and towers, on the land side ; on this 
side were barracks for forty thousand soldiers, 
and stables for three hundred elephants and 
four thousand horses. Beyond the fortifica- 
tions was a large suburb, called Magara or Ma- 
galia, containing many beautiful gardens and 
villas. The aqueduct already mentioned is 
supposed, on good grounds, to have been built 
at an early period of the existence of the city. 
The most remarkable buildings mentioned with- 
in the city were the temple of the god whom 
the Greeks and Romans identified with iEscu- 
lapius, and that of Apollo (Baal or the Sun) in 
the market-place. The population of Carthage, 
at the time of the third Punic war, is stated at 
seven hundred thousand. The constitution of 
Carthage was a municipal oligarchy, somewhat 
resembling that of Venice. The two chief mag- 
istrates, called Suffetes (probably the same word 
as the Hebrew Shophetim, i. e., Judges) appear 
to have been elected for fife ; the Greek and 
Roman writers call them kings. The generals 
and foreign governors were usually quite dis- 
tinct fi'om the suffetes, but the two offices were 
sometimes united in the same person. The 
governing body was a senate, partly hereditary 
and partly elective, within which there was a 
select body of one hundred or one hundred and 
four, called Gerusia, whose chief office was 
to control the magistrates, and especially the 
generals returning from foriegn service, who 
might be suspected of attempts to establish a 
tyranny. The Gerusia was first formed about 
B.C. 400, when the power of the house of Mago 
excited suspicion; and its efficacy was shown 
in the defeat of the attempts made by Hanno 
(B.C. 340) and Hamilcar (B.C. 306) to seize 
the supreme power. Its members are said by 
Aristotle to have been elected by the pentar- 
chies, bodies of which we have very little infor- 
mation, but which appear to have been commit- 
tees of five, chosen from the most eminent 
members of the senate, and intrusted with the 
control of the various departments of the gov- 
ernment. Important questions, especially those 
on which the seuate and the suffetes disagreed, 
were referred to a general assembly of the cit- 
izeus; but concerning the mode of proceeding 
in this assembly, and the extent of its powers, 
we know very little. It seems to have elected 
the magistrates, the senate having either the 
power of previous nomination or of a veto, it is 
not clear which. The generals were chosen by 
the gerusia, and approved by the assembly of 
the citizeus. The general tone of social mo- 
rality at Carthage appears to have been high, 
at least during its earlier history: (here was a 
censorship of public morals, under the care of 
the gerusia; and all the magistrates were re- 
quired, during their term of office, to abstain 
from wine: the magistrates were also unpaid. 
Their punishments were very severe, and the 
usual mode of inflicting death was bv crucifix- 
176 



CARTHAGO. 

ion. The religion of Carthage was that of the 
mother couutry : especial mention is made of 
the cruel rites of their tutelar deity Melcarth 
(i. e., king of the city, no doubt the same as Mo- 
loch), which were abolished by the treaty with 
Gelon of Syracuse, BC. 480; and also of the 
worship of Ashtaroth and Astarte, and iEscu- 
lapius. The chief occupations of the people 
were commerce and agriculture : in the former 
they rivalled the mother city, Tyre ; and the 
latter they pursued with such success that the 
country around the city was one of the best 
cultivated districts in the ancient world, and a 
great work on agriculture, in twenty-eight 
books, was composed by Mago, a suffete. The 
revenues of the state were derived from the 
subject provinces ; and its army was composed 
of mercenaries from the neighboring couutry, 
among whom the Numidian cavalry were espe- 
cially distinguished. Of the History of Carthage 
a brief sketch will suffice, as the most import- 
ant portions of it are related in the ordinary his- 
tories of Rome. The first colonists preserved 
the characters of peaceful traders, and main- 
tained friendly relations with the natives of the 
country, to whom they long continued to pay a 
rent or tribute for the ground on which the city 
was built. Gradually, however, as their com- 
mei-ce brought them power and wealth, they 
were enabled to reduce the natives of the dis- 
trict round the city, first to the condition of al- 
lies, and then to that of tributaries. Mean- 
while, they undertook military expeditious at 
sea, and possessed themselves, first of the small 
islands near their own coast, and afterward of 
Malta, and the Lipari and Baleaiie Islands: they 
also sent aid to Tyre, when it was besieged by 
Nebuchaduezzar (B.C. 600), and took part in 
wars between the Etruscans and the Phoca3an 
colonies. On the coast of Africa they founded 
numerous colonies, from the Pillars of Hercules 
to the bottom of the Great Syrtis, where they 
met the Greek colonists of Cyreuaica: the 
people of these colonies became intermixed 
with the Libyans around them, forming a pop- 
ulation who are called Libyo-Phceuiciaus. Jn 
connection with their commercial enterprises, 
they no doubt sent forth various expeditions 
of maritime discovery, among which we have, 
mention of two, which were undertaken during 
the long peace which followed the war with 
Gelon in B.C. 480, to explore the western coasts 
of Europe and Africa respectively. The record 
of the latter expedition, under Hanno, is still 
preserved to us in a Greek translation, (vid. 
Hanno), from which we learn that it reached 
probably as far south as 10° north latitude, if 
not further. The relations of the Carthaginians 
with the interior of Northern Africa appear to 
have been very extensive, but the country actu- 
ally subject to them, and which formed the true 
Carthaginian territory, was limited to the dis- 
trict contained betweeu the River Tusca (now 
Zain) on the west, and the lake and river Tri- 
ou, at the bottom of the Lesser Syrtis, on the 
south, corresponding very nearly to the modern 
regency of Tunis; and even within this ter- 
ritory there were some ancient Phoenician col- 
onies, which, though in alliance with Caithag^, 
preserved their independent municipal govern- 
ment, such as Hippo Zaritus, Utieu, Hadrmne- 



CARTHAGO. 



CARUS, AL AURELIUS. 



turn, and Leptis. The first great development 
of the power of Carthage for foreign conquest 
-was made by Mago (about B.C. 550-500), who 
is said to have first established a sound disci- 
pline in the armies of the republic, aud to have 
freed the city from the tribute which it still 
paid to the Libyans. His sons, Hasdrubal and 
Hamilcar, reduced a part of the island of Sar- 
dinia, where tbe Carthaginians founded the 
colonies of Caralis and Sulci ; and by this time 
the fame of Carthage had spread so far, that 
Darius is said to have sent to ask her aid 
against the Greeks, which, however, was re- 
fused. The Carthaginiaus, however, took ad- 
vantage of the Persian war to attempt the con- 
quest of Sicily, whither Hamilcar was sent with 
a great force, in B.C. 480, but his army was de- 
stroyed and himself killed in a great battle un- 
der the walls of Himera, in which the Sicilian 
Greeks were commanded by Gelou, the tyrant 
of Syracuse, and which was said to have beeo 
fought on the same day as the battle of Salamis. 
Their uext attempt upon Sicily, in B.C. 410, led 
to a protracted war, which resulted in a treaty 
betweeu the Syracusaus, under Timoleon, and 
the Carthaginians, by which the latter were 
coufirmed in the possession of the western part 
of the island, as far as the River Halicus. From 
B.C. 310-307 there was another war between 
Syracuse and the Carthaginians, which was 
chiefly remarkable for the bold step taken by 
Agathocles, who invaded the, Carthaginian ter- 
ritory in Africa, aud thus, though unable to 
maintain himself there, set an example which 
was followed a century later by Scipio, with 
fatal results to Carthage. Passing over the 
wars with Pyrrhus and Hiero, we come to the 
long struggle between Rome and Carthage, 
known as the Puuie Wins, which are fully re- 
lated iu the histories of Rome. Vid. also Ha- 
milcar. The first lasted from B.C. 265-242, 
and resulted in the loss to Carthage of Sicily 
aud the Lipari Islauds. It was followed by a 
fierce contest of some years betweeu Carthage 
and her disbanded mercenaries, which is called 
the Libyan War, and which was terminated by 
Hamilcar Barcas. After a hollow peace, during 
which the Romans openly violated the last 
treaty, and the Carthaginians conquered Spain 
as far as the Iberus (now Ebro), the Second Pu- 
nic War, the decisive contest between the two 
rival states, which were too powerful to co- 
exist, begau with the siege of Saguntum (B.C. 
218), and terminated (B.C. 201) with a peace by 
which Carthage was stripped of all her power. 
Vid. Hannibal, Snrio. Her destruction was 
now only a question of time, and, though she 
scrupulously observed the terms of the last 
peace for fifty years, in spite of every provoca- 
tion from the Romans and their ally Masinissa, 
the king of Numidia, a pretext was at length 
fouud for a new war (B.C. 149), which lasted 
only three years, during which the Carthagini- 
ans, driven to despair by the terms proposed to 
them, sustained a siege so destructive, that out 
of seven hundred thousand persons who were 
living in the city at its commencement, only fifty 
thousand surrendered to the Romans. The city 
was razed to the ground, and remained in ruins 
for thirtj 3 ears. At the end of that time a col- 
ony was established on the old site by the Grac- 
12 



chi, which remained in a feeble condition till the 
times of Julius and Augustus, under whom a 
new city was built south of the former, on the 
southeastern side of the peninsula, with the 
name of Colonia Carthago. It soon grew so 
much as to cover a great part (if not the whole) 
of the site of the ancient Tyrian city : it became 
the first city of Africa, and occupied an import- 
ant place in ecclesiastical as well as in civil 
history. It was taken by the Vandals in A.D. 

j 439, retaken by Belisarius in A.D. 533, and de- 

J stroyed by the Arab conquerors in A.D. 698. 

j Respecting the territory of Carthage under the 

| Romans, vid. Africa, No. 2. 

Carthago Nova (Kapxijdwv y via : now Car- 
thagena), a town on the eastern coast of His- 
pauia Tarraconensis, founded by the Cartha- 

! ginians under Hasdrubal, B.C. 243, and subse- 

\ quently conquered and colonized by the Romans, 

! from which time its full name was Colonia Vic- 
trix Julia Nova Carthago. It is situated on a 
promontory running out into the sea, and pos- 
sesses one of the finest harbors in the world : 
at the entrance of the harbor, was a small island 
called Scombraria, from the great number of 
scombri or mackerel caught here, from which 
such famous pickle was made. In ancient times 

I Carthago Nova was one of the most important 
cities in all Spain ; its population was numer- 
ous, its trade flourishing, and its temples and 

| other public buildings handsome and imposing. 
It was, together with Tarraco, the residence of 
the Roman governor of the province. In the 
neighborhood were valuable silver mines ; and 
the country produced an immense quantity of 
Spartum or broom, whence the town bore the 

1 surname Spartaria, and the country was called 

! Campxis Spar tana's. 

[Carthalo. 1. Commander of the Cartha- 
ginian fleet in the first Punic war.— 2. The Car- 
thaginian commander of the cavalry in the army 
of Hannibal. He was slain by a Roman soldier 
after laying dowu his arms at the capture of 
Tareutum by the Romans.] 

[Cartismandua or Cartimandua, queen of the 
Brigantes iu Britannia, betrayed to the Romans 

I Caractacus, who had fled to her for protection 
when defeated by the propraetor Ostorius, A.D. 
50. She afterward repudiated her husband 
Venutius, and gave her hand and kingdom to 
his armor- bearer, Vellocatus. Venutius, sup- 
ported by a great portion of the Brigantes, took 
up arms, aud finally succeeded in regaining the 
sovereignty, though Cartismandua was rescued 

j and protected by the Romans.] 

Carura (ru Kapovpd : now Sarikivi), a Phry- 

I gian city, in the territory of Caria, on the left 

' bank of the Maeauder, celebrated for its hot 

| springs and its temple of Men Carus. 

Carus, M. Aurelius, Roman emperor A.D. 

; 282-283, probably born at Narbo in Gaul, was 
prsefectus prsetorio under Probus, and on the 
murder of the latter was elected emperor. 
After defeating the Sarmatians, Carus invaded 
the Persian dominions, took Seleucia and Ctes- 
iphon, and was preparing to push his conquests 
beyond the Tigris, when he was struck dead by 
lightning, toward the close of 283. He was 
succeeded by his sons Carinus and Numeria- 
nus. Carus was a victorious general and able 
ruler. 

177 



CARUSA 



CASPII MCLNTES. 



Carusa (fj Kapovaa : now Kerzeh), a city on 
the coast of Paphlagonia, south of Sinope. 

Carvextum, a town of the Volsci, to which 
the Carvextaxa Arx, mentioned by Livy, be- 
longed; a town of the Volsci, between Signia 
and the sources of the Trerus. 

Caryilics Maxijtus. 1. Sp., twice consul, 

B. C. 293 and 273, both times with L. Papirius 
Cursor. In their first consulship they gained 
brilliant victories over the Samnites, and in 
their second they brought the Satnnite war to a 
close. — 2. Sp., son of the preceding, twice con- 
sul, 234 and 228, was alive at the battle of Can- 
nae, 216, after which he proposed to fill up the 
vacancies iu the senate from the Latins. This 
Carvilius is eaid to have been the first person 
at Rome who divorced his wife. 

Cary^e (Kapvai : Kapvurrjc, fern. Kapvdne), a 
town in Laconia, near the borders of Arcadia, 
originally belonged to the territory of Tegea in 
Arcadia. It possessed a temple of Artemis 
(Diana) Caryatis, and an annual festival in hon- 
or of this goddess was celebrated here by the 
Lacedaemonian maidens with national dances. 
Respecting the female figures in architecture 
called Caryatides, vid. Diet, of Ant., s. v. 

Caryaxda (ra Kapvavda : Kapvavdevc : now 
Karakoyan), a city of Caria, on a little island, 
once probably united with the main land, at the 
northwestern extremity of the peninsula on 
which Halicarnassus stood. It once belonged 
to the Ionian league ; and it was the birth-place 
of the geographer Scylax. 

Caryatis. Vid. Cary^e. 

Carystics (Kapvcrioc), a Greek grammarian 
of Pergamus, lived about B.C. 120, and wrote 
numerous works, all of which are lost. 

Carystus (Kdpvaroc : Kapvarioc : now Karysto 
or Castel Rosso), a town on the southern coast 
of Eubcea. at the foot of Mount Oche, founded 
by Dryopes ; called, according to tradition, after 
Carystus, son of Chiron. In the neighborhood 
was excellent marble, which was exported in 
large quantities, and the mineral called Asbes- 
tos was also found here. 

Casca, P. SEEviLius, tribune of the plebs, B. 

C. 44, was one of the conspirators against Cae- 
sar, and aimed the first stroke at his assassina- 
tion. He fought in the battle of Philippi (42), 
and died shortly afterward. C. Casca, the broth- 
er of the preceding, was also one of the con- 
spirators against Caesar. 

[Cascantcm (now Cascante), a municipium 
of the Vascone8 in Hispania Tarraconensis.] 
• Cascellius, A., an eminent Roman jurist 
(Hor., Ar. Polity 371), contemporary with Cae- 
sar and Augustus, was a man of stern repub- 
lican principles, and spoke freely against the 
pi'oscriptioDS of the triumvirs. 

Castlixum (Casilinas, -atis), a town in Cam- 
pania, on the Vulturnus, and on the same site as 
the modern Capua, celebrated for its heroic de- 
fence against Hannibal B.C. 216. It received 
Roman colonists by the Lex Julia, but had 
greatly declined in the time of Pliny. 

Casixum (Casinas, -atis : now St. Germano), 
a town in Latium, on the River Casixus, and 
on the Via Latina, near the borders of Cam- 
pania • colonized by the Romans in the Samnite 
wars; subsequently a municipium; its citadel, 
containing a temple of Apollo, occupied the same 
178 



site as the celebrated convent Monte Cassino ; 
the ruins of an amphitheatre are found at St. 

Germano. 

[Casixus, a small river on the borders of La- 
tium and Campania, emptying into the Liris.] 

Casiotis. Vid. Casius. 

Casius. 1. (Now Ras Kasaroun), a mountain 
on the coast of Egypt, east of Pelusium, with a 
temple of Jupiter on its summit. Here also was 
the grave of Pompey. At the foot of the mount- 
ain, on the land side, on the high road from Egypt 
to Syria, stood the town of Casium (now Ka- 
rtell). The surrounding district was called Ca- 
siotis. — 2. (Now Jebel Okrah), a mountain on the 
coast of Syria, south of Antioch and the Orontes, 
five thousand three hundred and eighteen feet 
above the level of the sea. The name of Casio- 
tis was applied to the district on the coast south 
j of Casius, as far as the northern border of 
Phoenicia. 

! Casmena, -js. (Kaauevi), Herod. : Kaouivai r 

; Thuc. : Kaauevaloc ), a town in Sicily, founded 

j by Syracuse about B.C. 643. 

Casperia or Casperula, a town of the Sa- 

j bines, northwest of CureB, on the River Himella 

j (now Aspra). 

CaspLe Port.e or Pyl.e (Kucmat r:v7.ai, i. e, 
the Caspian Gates), the principal pass from Me- 

; dia into Parthia and Hyrcania, through the Cas- 

' pii Moxtes, was a deep ravine, made practica- 
ble by art, but still so narrow that there was 
only room for a single wagon to pass between 
the lofty overhanging walls of rock, from the 
sides of which a constant drip of salt water fell 
upon the road. The Persians erected iron gate? 
across the narrowest part of the pass, and main- 
tained a guard for its defence. This pass was 
near the ancient Rhagae or Arsacia ; but there 
were other passes through the mountains round 
the Caspian, which are called by the same name, 
especially that on the western shore of the Cas- 
pian, through the Caucasus, near Derbent, which 
was usually called Albania? or Caucasiae Porta?. 
The Caspian Gates, being the most important 
pass from "Western to Central Asia, were re- 
garded by many of the ancients as a sort of cen- 
tral point, common to the boundaries between 
Western and Eastern Asia, and Northern and 
Southern Asia ; and distances were reckoned 
from them. 

Caspii (Kda-LOi), the name of certaiu Scythi- 
an tribes near the Caspian Sea, is used rathgr 
loosely by the ancient geographers. The Cas- 
pii of Strabo are on the west side of the sea, 
and their country, Caspiane, forms a part of 
Albania. Those of Herodotus and Ptolemy are 
in the east of Media, on the borders of Parthia . 
in the neighborhood of the Casple Pyl.*. 
Probably it would not be far wrong to apply the 
name generally to the people round the south- 
western and southern shores of the Caspian in 
and about the Caspii Monies. 

Caspii Moxtes (rd Kdo-ia bp-q : now Elburz 
Mountains) or Caspius Moxs, is a name applied 
generally to the whole range of mountains 
which surround the Caspian Sea, on the south 
and southwest, at the distance of from fifteen 
to thirty miles from its shore, on the borders of 
Armenia, Media, Hyrcania, and Parthia ; and 
more specifically to that part of this range south 
of the Caspian, in which was the pass called 



CASPIRI 



CASSANDREA. 



Oasple PyLjE. The term was also loosely ap 
plied to other mountains near the Caspian, espe 
cially, by Strabo, to the eastern part of the Cau- 
casus, between Colchis and the Caspian. 

Caspiri or CAsrm^i (Kdonupoi, Kaampalot), 
a people of India, whose exact position is doubt- 
ful : they are generally placed in Cashmecr and 
Nepaul. 

Caspium Mark (7/ Kaairia ddlaaoa, the Cas- 
pian Sea), also called Hyrcanum, Albanum, and 
Scythicum, all names derived from the people 
who lived on its shores, is a great salt-water 
lake in Asia, according to the ancient division 
of the continents, but now on the boundary be- 
tween Europe and Asia. Its average width 
from east to west is about two hundred and ten 
miles, and its length from north to south, in a 
straight line, is about seven hundred and forty 
■miles ; but as its northern part makes a great 
bend to the east, its true length, measured along 
a curve drawn through its middle, is about nine 
hundred miles; its area is about one hundred 
and eighty thousand square miles. The notions 
of the ancients about the Caspian varied very 
much; and it is curious that two of the erro- 
neous opinions of the later Greek and Roman 
geographers, namely, that it wa3 united both 
with the Sea of Aral aud with the Arctic Ocean, 
expressed what, at some remote period, were 
probably real facts. Their other error, that its 
greatest length lay west and east, very likely 
arose from its supposed union with the Sea of 
Aral. Another consequence of this error was 
the supposition that the rivers Oxus and Jax- 
artes flowed into the Caspian. That the former 
really did so at some tune subsequent to the 
separation of the two lakes (supposing that they 
were once united) is pretty well established; 
but whether this hus been the case within the 
historical period can not l>e determined (vid 
Oxus). The country between the two lakes 
has evidently been greatly changed, and the 
sand-hills which cover it have doubtless been 
accumulated by the force of the east winds 
bringing down sand from the steppes of Tar- 
tary. Both lakes have their surface considera- 
bly below that of the Black Sea. the Caspian 
being nearly three hundred and fifty feet, and 
the Aral about two hundred feet, lower than the 
level of the Black Sea, and both are still sink- 
ing by evaporation. Moreover, the whole coun- 
try between and around them for a considera- 
ble distance is a depression, surrounded by lofty- 
mountains on every side, except where the val- 
ley of the Irtish and Obi stretches away to the 
Arctic Ocean. Besides a uumber of smaller 
streams, two gre at rivers flow T into the Cas- 
pian; the Eha (now Volga) on the north, and 
the united Cyrus and Araxes (now Kour) on 
the west; but it loses more by evaporation than 
it receives from these rivers. 

[Caspius Mons (to Kdaxiov 600c). Vid. Cas- 

PII MONTES.] 

Cassanoank (KaooavddvT)), wife of Cyrus the 
Great and mother of Cambyses. 

Cassander ( Kdfroavdpoc ), son of Antipater. 
His father, on his death-bed (B.C. 319), appoint- 
ed Polysperchon regent, and conferred upon 
Cassander only the secondary dignity of chili- 
arch. Being dissatisfied with this arrange- 
ment, Cassander strengthened himself by an 



alliance with Ptolemy and Antigonus, and en- 
tered iuto war with Polysperchon. In 318 Cas- 
sander obtained possession of Athens and most 
of the cities in the south of Greece. In 317 he 
was recalled to Macedonia to oppose Olympias. 
He kept her besieged in Pydna throughout the 
winter of 317, and on her surrender in the spring 
of the ensuing year he put her to death. The 
way now seemed open to him to the throne of 
Maeedou. He placed Roxana and her young 
son, Alexander .^Egus, in custody at Amphipo- 
lis, not thinking it safe as yet to murder them ; 
and he connected himself with the regal family 
by a marriage with Thessalonica, half-sister to 
Alexander the Great In 315 Cassander joined 
Seleucus, Ptolemy, and Lysimachus in their 
war against Antigonus, of whose power they 
had all become jealous. This war was, upon 
the whole, unfavorable to Cassander, who lost 
most of the cities in Greece. By the general 
peace of 311, it was provided that Cassander 
was to retain his authority in Europe till Alexan- 
der iEgus should be grown to manhood. Cas- 
sander thereupon put to death the young king 
and his mother Roxana. In 310 the war was 
renewed, and Hercules, the son of Alexander 
by Barsine, was brought forward by Polysper- 
chon as a claimant to the Macedonian throne ; 
but Cassander bribed Polysperchon to murder 
the young prince and his mother, 309. In 306 
Cassander took the title of king, when it was 
assumed by Antigonus, Lysimachus, and Ptole- 
my. In the following years, Demetrius Polior- 
cetes, the son of Antigonus, carried on the war 
in Greece with great success against Cassan- 
der ; but in 302 Demetrius was obliged to pass 
into Asia, to support his father ; and next year, 
301, the decisive battle of Ipsus wa3 fought, in 
which Antigonus and Demetrius were defeated, 
and the former slain, and which gave to Cas- 
sander Macedonia and Greece. Cassander died 
of dropsy in 297, and was succeeded by his son 
Philip. 

Cassandra (KaaadvSpa), daughter of Priam 
and Hecuba, and twin-sister of Helenus. She 
and her brother, when young, were left asleep 
in the sanctuary of Apollo, when their ears were 
purified by serpents, so that they could under^ 
stand the divine sounds of nature aud the voices 
of birds. Cassandra sometimes used to sleep 
afterward in the same temple ; and when she 
grew up, her beauty won the love of Apollo. 
The god conferred upon her the gift of prophecy, 
upon her promising to comply with his desires; 
but when she had become possessed of the pro- 
phetic art, she refused to fulfill her promise. 
Thereupon the god, in anger, ordained that no 
one should believe her prophecies. She pre- 
dicted to the Trojans the ruin that threatened 
them, but no one believed her ; she was looked 
upon as a mad woman, and according to a late 
account, was shut up and guarded. On the 
capture of Troy she fled into the sanctuary of 
Minerva (Athena), but was torn away from the 
statue of the goddess by Ajax, son of Oileus, 
and, according to some accounts, was even 
ravished by him in the sanctuary. On the di- 
vision of the booty, Cassandra fell to the lot of 
Agamemnon, who took her with him to My- 
ceme. Here she was killed by Clytaemnestra. 

Cassandrea. Vid. Potid.ea. 

179 



CASSIA GENS. 



CASSirs. 



Cassia Gexs. Vid. Cassius. 
Cassiepea, Cassiopea, or Cassiope (Kacau- 
Treia, KaoGio-ELa, Kaaaio-TTj]), wife of Cepheus in 
^Ethiopia, and mother of Andromeda, whose 
beauty she extolled above that of the Nereids. 
Vid. Andromeda. She was afterward placed 
among the stars. 

Cassiodorus. Magnus Aurelius, a distin- 
guished statesman, and one of the few men of 
learning at the downfall of the Western Em- 1 
pire, was born about AJD. 468, at Scylaciurn in I 
Bruttium, of an ancient and wealthy Roman 
family. He enjoyed the full confidence of The- 
odoric the Great and his successors, and under 
a variety of different titles he conducted for a j 
long series of years the government of the Os- j 
trogothic kingdom. At the age of seventy he j 
retired to the monastery of Viviens, which he ! 
had founded in his native province, and there j 
passed the last thirty years of his life. His ; 
time was devoted to study and to the composi- \ 
tion of elementary treatises on history, meta- j 
physics, the several liberal arts, and divinity, i 
while his leisure hours were employed in the 
construction of philosophical toys, such as sun- 
dials, water-clocks, &c. Of his numerous writ- 
ings the most important is his Variorum (Epis- j 
tolarum) Libri XII., an assemblage of state j 
papers drawn up by Cassiodorus in accordance j 
with the instructions of Theodoric and his sue- 1 
cessors. The other works of Cassiodorus are | 
of less value to us. The principal are, L Chro- j 
nicon, a summary of Universal History ; 2. De 
Orthographia Liber ; 3. De Arte Grammatica ad j 
Donati Mentem ; 4. De Artibus etc Disciplinis j 
Liber alium Litcrarum, much read in the Middle ; 
Ages ; 5. De Aniraa ; 6. Libri XII. De Rebus \ 
Gestis Gothorum, known to us only through the : 
abridgment of Jornandes ; 7. De Institutione 
Divinarmn Literarura, an introduction to the 
profitable study of the Scriptures. There are 
also several other ecclesiastical works of Cas- 1 
siodorus extant. The best edition of his collected j 
works is by D. Garet, Rouen, 1679, 2 vols. foL, 
reprinted at Venice, 1729. 

Cassiope (KacawTnj), a town in Corcyra, on a 
promontory of the same name, with a good har- 
bor and a temple of Jupiter (Zeus). 

Cassiopea. Vid. Cassiepea. 

Cassiterides. Vid. Britannia, p. 149, a. 

Cassius, the name of one of the most dis- 
tinguished of the Roman gentes, originally pa- 
trician, afterwards plebeian. 1. Sp. Cassius Vis- 
cellixus, thrice consul : first, B.C. 502, when he 
conquered the Sabines ; again, 493, when he 
made a league with the Latins ; and, lastly, 
486, when he made a league with the Herni- 
eans,^ and carried his celebrated agrarian law, 
the first which was proposed at Rome. It prob- 
ably enacted that the portion of the patricians 
in the public land should be strictly defined, and 
that the remainder should be divided among the 
plebeians. In the following year he was ac- 
cused of aiming at regal power, and was put to 
death. The manner of his death is related dif- 
ferently, but it is most probable that he was ac- 
cused before the comitia curiata by the quaes- 
tores parricidii. and was sentenced to death by 
his fellow-patricians. His house was razed to the 
ground, and his property confiscated. His guilt 
is doubtful ; he had made himself hateful to the 
180 



patricians by his agrarian law, and it is most 
likely that the accusation was invented for the 
purpose of getting rid of a dangerous oppo- 
nent. He left three sons ; but, as all the subse- 
quent Cassii are plebeians, his sons were per- 
haps expelled from the patrician order, or may 
have voluntarily passed over to the plebeians, on 
account of the murder of their father. — 2. C. 
Cass. Loxgixus, consul 17 1, obtained as his pro- 
vince Italy and Cisalpine Gaul, and without the 
authority of the senate attempted to march 
into Macedonia through IUyricum, but was 
obliged to return to Italy. In 154 he was cen- 
sor with M. Messala ; and a theatre, which these 
censors had built, was pulled down by order of 
the senate, at the suggestion of P. Scipio Na- 
sica, as injurious to public morals. — 3. Q. Cass. 
Loxgixus, praetor urbanus B.C. 167, and consul 
164. died in his consulship. — 4. L. Cass. Lon- 
ginus Ravilla, tribune of the plebs, 137, when 
he proposed a law for voting by ballot (tabella- 
ria lex); consul 127, and censor 125. He was 
very severe and just as a judex. — 5. L. Cass. 
Loxgixus, praetor 111, when he brought Jugur- 
tha to Rome ; consul 107, with C. Marius, and 
received as his province Gallia Narbonensis, in 
order to oppose the Cimbri, but was defeated 
and killed by the Tigurini. — 6. L. Cass. Loxgi- 
xus, tribune of the plebs 104, brought forward 
many laws to diminish the power of the aris- 
tocracy. — 7. C. Cass. Loxgixus Varus, consul 
73, brought forward with his colleague M. Te- 
rentius, a law (lex Terentia Cassia), by which 
corn was to be purchased and then sold in Rome 
at a small price. In 72 he was defeated by 
Spartacus near Mutina ; in 66 he supported the 
Manilian law for giving the command of the 
Mithradatie war to Pompey ; and in his old age 
was proscribed by the triumvirs and killed, 43. 
— 8. C. Cass. Loxgixus, the murderer of Julius 
Caesar. In 53 he was quaestor of Crassus in his 
campaign against the Parthians, in which he 
greatly distinguished himself by his prudence 
and military skill. After the death of Crassus, 
he collected the remains of the Roman army, 
and made preparations to defend Syria against 
the Parthians. In 52 he defeated the Parthians, 
who had crossed the Euphrates, and in 51 he 
again gained a still more important victory over 
them. Soon afterward he returned to Rome. 
In 49 he was tribune of the plebs, joined the 
aristocratical party in the civil war, and fled 
with Pompey from Rome. In 48 he commanded 
the Pompeian fleet ; after the battle of Pharsalia 
he went to the Hellespont, where he accidentally 
fell in with Caesar, and surrendered to him. He 
was not only pardoned by Caesar, but in 44 was 
made praetor, and the province of Syria was 
promised him for the next year. But Cassius 
had never ceased to be Caesar's enemy ; it was 
he who formed the conspiracy against the dicta- 
tor's life, and gained over M. Brutus to the plot 
After the death of Caesar, on the 14th of March, 
44 (vid. Caesar), Cassius remained in Italy for a 
few months, but in July he went to Syria, which 
he claimed as his province, although the senate 
had given it to Dolabella, and had conferred 
upon Cassius Cyrene in its stead. He defeated 
Dolabella, who put an end to his own life ; and, 
after plundering Syria and Asia most umuerci- 
fullv, he crossed over to Greece with Brutus in 



CASSIUS. 



CASTELLUM. 



42, in order to oppose Octavianus and Antony. 
At the battle of Philippi, Cassius was defeated 
by Antony, while Brutus, who commanded the 
other wing of the army, drove Octavianus off 
the field ; but Cassius, ignorant of the success 
of Brutus, commanded his freedman to put an 
end to his life. Brutus mourned over his com- 
panion, calling him the last of the Romans. 
Cassius was married to Junia Tertia or Ter- 
tulla, half-sister of M. Brutus. Cassius was 
well acquainted with Greek and Roman litera- 
ture ; he was :i follower of the Epicurean phi- 
losophy ; his abilities were considerable, but he 
was vain, proud, and revengeful. — 9. L. Cass. 
Longinus, brother of No. 8, assisted M. Late- 
rensis in accusing Cn. Plancius, who was de- 
fended by Cicero in 54. He joined Caesar at 
the commencement of the civil war, and was 
one of Caesar's legates in Greece in 48. In 44 
he was tribune of the plebs, but was not one of 
the conspirators against Caesar's life. He sub- 
sequently espoused the side of Octavianus, in 
opposition to Antony ; and on their reconcilia- 
tion in 43, he fled to Asia : he was pardoned by 
Antony in 41. — 10. Q. Cass. Longinus, the /ra- 
ter (as Cicero calls him, by which he probably 
means first-cousin) of No. 8. In 54 he weut as 
the quaestor of Pompey into Spain, where he 
was universally hated on account of his rapaci- 
ty and cruelty. In 49 he was tribune of the 
plebs, and a warm supporter of Caesar, but was 
obliged to leave the city and take refuge in 
Caesar's camp. In the same year he accom- 
panied Caesar to Spain, and after the defeat of 
Afranius and Petreius, the legates of Pompey, 
Caesar left him governor of Further Spain. His 
eruelty and oppressions excited an insurrection 
against him at Cordoba, hut tin's was quelled by 
Cassius. Subsequently two legions declared 
against him, and M. Maretllus, the quaestor, put 
lumself at their head lie was saved from this 
danger by Lepidus. and left the province in 47, 
but his ship sank, and was lost~ at the mouth 
of the Iberus. — 11. L. Cass. Longinus, a com- 
petitor with Cicero for the consulship for 63 ; 
was one of Catiliue's conspirators, and under- 
took to set the city on fire ; he escaped the fate 
of his comrades by quitting Rome before their 
apprehension. — 12. L. Cass. Longinus, consul 
A.D. 30, married to Drusilla, the daughter of 
Germanicus, with whom her brother Caligula 
afterward lived. Cassius was proconsul in Asia 
A.D. 40, and was commanded by Caligula to be 
brought to Rome, because an oracle had warned 
the emperor to beware of a Cassius : the oracle 
was fulfilled in the murder of the emperor by 
Cassius Chaerea. — 13. C. Cass. Longinus, the 
celebrated jurist, governor of Syria A.D. 50, in 
the reign of Claudius. He was banished by 
Nero in A.D. 66, because he had, among his an- 
cestral images, a statue of Cassius, the mur- 
derer of Caesar. He was recalled from banish- 
ment by Vespasian. Cassius wrote ten books 
on the civil law (Libri Juris Civilis), and Com- 
mentaries on Vitellius and Urseius Ferox, which 
are quoted in the Digest. He was a follower 
of the school of Ateius Capito ; and as he re- 
duced the principles of Capito to a more scien- 
tific form, the adherents of this school received | 
the name of Cassiani. — 14. L. Cass. Hemina, a 
Roman annalist, lived about B.C. 140, and wrote I 



a history of Rome from the earliest times to the 
end of the third Punic war. — 1 5. Cass. Parmen- 
sis, so called from Parma, his birth-place, was 
one of the murderers of Caesar, B.C. 43 ; took 
an active part in the war against the triumvirs ; 
and, after the death of Brutus and Cassius, car- 
ried over the fleet which he commanded to 
Sicily, and joined Sextus Pompey ; upon the de- 
feat of Pompey he surrendered himself to An- 
tony, whose fortunes he followed until after the 
battle of Actium, when he went to Athens, and 
was there put to death by the command of Oc- 
tavianus, B.C. 30. Cassius was a poet, and his 
productions were prized by Horace (Bp. i., 4, 
3). He wrote two tragedies, entitled Thyestes 
and Brutus, epigrams, and other works. — 16. 
Cass. Etruscus, a poet censured by Horace 
(Sat., i., 10, 61), must not be confounded with 
No. 15. — 17. Cass. Avidius, an able general of 
M. Aurelius, was a native of Syria. In the Par- 
thian war (A.D. 162-165) he commanded the 
Roman army as the general of Verus, and after 
defeating the Parthians he took Seleucia and 
Ctesiphon. He was afterward appointed gov- 
ernor of all the Eastern provinces, and discharg- 
ed his trust for several years with fidelity ; but 
in A.D. 175 he proclaimed himself emperor. 
He reigned only a few months, and was slain 
by his own officers before Marcus Aurelius ar- 
rived in the East. Vid. p. 132, a. — 18. Dionysius 
Cassius, of Utica, a Greek writer, lived about 
B.C. 40, and translated into Greek the work of 
the Carthaginian Mago on agriculture. — 19. 
Cass. Felix, a Greek physician, probably lived 
under Augustus and Tiberius ; wrote a small 
work entitled 'larpucal 'A.Tzopiat nal ILpoB/^/Ltara 
Qvglku., Qucestiojies Medico: et Problemata Natu- 
ralia : printed in Ideler's Physici et Medici Grazci 
Minorcs, Berol., 1841. — 20. Cass. Chorea. Vid. 
Cilerea. — 21. Cass. Dion. Vid. Dion Cassi 
us. — 22. Cass. Severus. Vid, Severus. 

Cassivelaunus, a British chief, ruled over the 
country north of the Tamesis (now TJiames), 
and was intrusted by the Britons with the su- 
preme command on Caesar's second invasion of 
Britain, B.C. 54. He was defeated by Caesar, 
and was obliged to sue for peace. 

Cassope (KaGaunn : KaaacjTvalog : now Cas- 
sopo or Agioi Saranta), a town in Thesprotia, near 
the coast. 

Castabala (tu, KaaTa6a?.a). 1. [Now Dsjahel 
or Chokel ; according to Leake, Nigde], a city 
of Cappadocia, near Tyana, celebrated for its 
temple of Artemis (Diana) Perasia. — 2. A town 
in Cilicia Campestris, near Issus. 

Castalia (KaoTalia), a celebrated fountain 
on Mount Parnassus, in which the Pythia used 
to bathe ; sacred to Apollo and the Muses, who 
were hence called Casta lides ; said to have 
derived its name from Castalia, daughter of 
Achelous, who threw herself into the fountain 
when pursued by Apollo. 

[Castellum often occurs as the designation of 
a place: 1. Castellum Cattorum (now Cassel), 
a place in the territory of the Catti in Germa- 
ny. — 2. Castellum Drusi et Germanici (now 
Altkamig stein), a fortress built by Drusus and 
Germanicus in the territory of the Mattiaci. — 
3. Castellum Menafiorum (now Kessel), a for- 
tress of the Meuapii in Gallia Belgica, on the 
Meuse. — f. Castellum Morinorum (now Mount 
181 



CASTHANjEA. 



CATELAUNI. 



Ca*sel), a fortress of the Morini in Gallia Bel- 1 
giea.] 

[Casthax.ea (Kacdavala), a city of Magnesia I 
in Thessaly, at the foot of Mount Pelion (Hdt.) ; ! 
elsewhere it is written Castancea. Erom this 
place chestnuts, Castcmece nuces, were said to 
have derived their name.] 

[Castiaxira (Kacriaveipa), wife of Priam, j 
and mother of Gorgvthion, famed for her beau- 
ty-] 

[Casticus, mentioned in Caesar as having : 
seized the government of the Sequani, at the 
instigation of Orgetorix, about B G 50.] 

Castor, brother of Pollux. Vid. Dioscurl 

Castor (Kugtwo.) 1. A Greek grammarian, 
surnamed Philoromceus, probably lived about B.C. 
160, and wrote several books ; a portion of his i 
rexv?] pnropiKij is still extant, and printed in 
"Walz's Bhetores Graei, vol. iii., p. 712. seq. — 2. 
Grandson of Deiotarus. Vid. Deiotarus. 

Castra, a " camp," the name of several 
towns, which were originally the stationary 
quarters of the Roman legions. 1. Coxstantia, 1 
in Gaul, near the mouth of the Sequana (now 
Seine) — 2. Haxxibalis, in Bruttium, on the j 
southeastern coast, north of Scylacium, arose j 
out of the fortified camp which Hannibal main- 
tained there during the latter years of the sec- j 
ond Punic war. — 3. Herculis, in Batavia, per- l 
haps near Heussen. — 4. Minerva (now Castro). \ 
in Calabria, with a temple of Minerva, south of j 
Hydruntum ; the most ancient town of the Sa- 
lentini, subsequently colonized by the Romans ; 
its harbor was called Portus Veneris (now Porto j 
Badisco.) — 5. Vetera (now Xanten), in Gallia 
Belgica, on the Rhine : many Roman remains ' 
have been found at Xanten. — 6. Corxelia (now I 
Gellah ), a place in the Carthaginian territory • 
(Zeugitana) in northern Africa, where Scipio Af- : 
ricanus the elder established his camp when he 
invaded Africa in the second Punic war. It ' 
was between Utica and Carthage, on the north- j 
ern side of the River Bagradas, but its site is now j 
south of the river, in consequence of the altera- 1 
tions described under Carthago. 

Castrum. 1. Ixui, a town of the Rutuli, on j 
the coast of Latium, confounded by some writers ; 
with No. 2. — 2. Novum (now T rrre di Chiaruc- j 
cia), a town in Etruria, and a Roman colony on 
the coast. — Novum (now Ghdia Xova), a town 1 
in Picenum, probably at the mouth of the small 
river Batiuum (now SalineUo), colonized by the 
Romans B.C. 264, at the commencement of the 
first Punic war. — [4. Castrum Tiberii, a land- j 
ing-place on an island in the Lacus Brigantinus, j 
used by Tiberius as a place of arms during his j 
war with the Vindelici.] 

Castulo (Ka.GTa?.uv : now Cazlona), a town j 
of the Oretani. on the Baetis, and near the fron- 1 
tiers of Baetica, at the foot of a mountain which : 
bore a great resemblance to Parnassus, was under 
the Romans an important place, a municipium j 
with the Jus Latii, and included in the jurisdiction 
of Carthago Nova : its inhabitants were called j 
Casari venales. In the mountains (Saltus Castu- 1 
lonensis) in the neighborhood were silver and lead 
fames. The wife of Hannibal was a native of 
Castillo. 

' Casuextus (now Basiento), a river iu Luca- j 
nia, flows into the sea near Metapontum. 

[Casus (Ka<roc : now Caso). one of the Spo- 1 
182 



rades Insulae, south of Carpathos, containing a 
city with the same name as the island.] 

Casystes (Kaavarnc : now Chismeh), a fine 
sea-port on the coast of Ionia ; the harbor of 

Eryihr^e. 

Catabathmus Magnus (Kara6a8fj.6g, i. e., de- 
scent : now Marsa Sollern, i. e., Port of the Lad- 
der), a mountain and sea-port, at the bottom of 
a deep bay on the northern coast of Africa 
(about 25° 5' east longitude), was generally con- 
sidered the boundary between Egypt and Cy- 
renaica. Ptolemy distinguishes from this' a 
place called Catabathmus Parvus, in the interior 
of Africa, near the borders of Egypt, above Parae- 
tonium. 

Catadupa or -I {rd KarddovTra, oi KarddovTTOi), 
a name given to the cataracts of the Nile, and also 
to the parts of ^Ethiopia iu their neighborhood. 
Vid. Nilus. 

Catalauxi or Catelauxi, a people in Gaul in 
the modern Champagne, mentioned only by later 
writers : their capital was Durocatelauxi or 
Catelauxi (now Chalons sur Marne), in the 
neighborhood of which Attila was defeated by 
Aetius and Theodoric, A.D. 451. 

CatamTtus, the Roman name for Ganymedes, 
of which it is only a corrupt form. 

Cataxa or Catixa (Karuvn : Karavaloe : now 
Catania), an important town in Sicily, on the 
eastern coast, at the foot of Mount ^Etna, found- 
ed B.C. 730 by Xaxos, which was itself founded 
by the Chalcidians of Eubcea. In B.C. 476 it 
was taken by Hiero L, who removed its inhabit- 
ants to Leontini, and settled five thousand Syr- 
acusans aud five thousand Peloponnesians in 
the town, the name of which he changed into 
^Etna. Soon after the death of Hiero (467), the 
former inhabitants of Catana again obtained 
possession of the town, and called it by its orig- 
inal name. Catana. Subsequently Catana was 
conquered by Dionysius. was then governed by 
native tyrants, next became subject to Agath- 
ocles, and finally, in the first Punic war, fell un- 
der the dominion of Rome. It was colonized by 
Augustus with some veterans. Catana frequent- 
ly suffered from earthquakes and eruptions of 
Mount iEtna. It is now one of the most flourish- 
ing cities in Sicily. 

Cataoxia (Karaovla), a distinct in the south- 
eastern part of Cappadoeia, to which it was first 
added under the Romans, with Melitene, whieh 
lies east of it. These two districts form a large 
and fertile plain, lying between the Anti-Taurus 
and the Taurus and Amanus, and watered by 
the River Pyramus. Cataonia had no large 
towns, but several strong mountain fortresses. 

Catarrhactes (KarappuKTvc). 1. (Now B*u- 
den-Soo), a river of Pamphylk, which descends 
from the mountains of Taurus in a great broken 
waterfall (whence its name, from KaTapp , 7}yi'Vfju), 
and which, after flowing beneath the earth in 
two parts of its course, falls into the sea east 
of Attalia. — 2. The term is also applied, first by 
Strabo, to the cataracts of the Nile, which are 
distinguished as C. Major and C. Minor (vid Ni- 
lus). in which use it must, of course, be regarded 
as a common noun, equivalent to the Latin cata- 
racta, but whether derived from the name of the 
Pamphylian river, or at once from the Greek 
verb, can not be determined. 

Catelauxi. Vid. Catalausi. 



CATH^EL 



CATILINA. 



Cathju (Kadaioi), a great and warlike people 
of India intra Gangem, upon whom Alexander 
made war. Some of the best Orientalists sup- 
pose the name to be that, not of a tribe, but of 
the warrior caste of the Hindoos, the Kshatriyas. 

Catilina, L. Skrgiits, the descendant of an 
ancient patrician family which had sunk into 
poverty. His youth and early manhood were 
stained by every vice and crime. He first ap- 
pears in history as a zealous partisan of Sulla ; 
and during the horrors of the proscription, he 
killed, with his own hand, his brother-in-law, 
Q. Csecilius, a quiet, inoffensive man, and put to 
death by torture M. Marius Gratidianus, the 
kinsman and fellow-townsman of Cicero. He 
was suspected of an intrigue with the vestal 
Fabia, sister of Tcrentia, and was said and be- 
lieved to have made away with his first wife, 
and afterward with his son, in order that he 
might marry Aurelia Orestilla, who objected to 
the presence of a grown-up step-child ; but, not- 
withstanding this infamy, he attained to the dig- 
nity of praetor in B.C. 68, was governor of Africa 
during the following year, and returned to 
Rome in 66, in order to sue for the consulship. 
The election for 63 was carried by P. Autronius 
Paetus and P. Cornelius Sulla, both of whom 
were soon after convicted of bribery, and their 
places supplied by their competitors and accu- 
sers, L. Aurelius Cotta and L. Manlius Torqua- 
tus. Catiline had been disqualified for becom- 
ing a candidate, in consequence of an impeach- 
ment for oppression in his province, preferred 
by P. Clodius Pulcher, afterward so celebrated 
as the enemy of Cicero. Exasperated by their 
disappointment, Autronius and Catiline formed 
a project, along with Cn. Piso, to murder the 
new consuls when they entered upon their 
office upon the first of January. This design is 
said to have been frustrated solely by the im- 
patience of Catiline, who. upon the appointed 
day, gave the signal prematurely, before the 
whole of the armed agents bad assembled. En- 
couraged rather than disheartened by a failure 
which had so nearly proved a triumph, Catiline 
now determined to organize a more extensive 
conspiracy, in order to overthrow the existing 
government, and to obtain for himself and his 
followers all places of power and profit. Hav- 
ing been acquitted in 65 upon his trial for ex- 
tortion, he was left unfettered to mature his 
plans. The time was propitious to his schemes, 
rhe younger nobility were thoroughly demoral- 
ized, with ruined fortunes, and eager for any 
change which might relieve them from their 
embarrassments ; the Roman populace were 
restless and dUcqntented, ready to follow at the 
bidding of any demagogue ; while many of the 
veterans of Sulla, who had squandered their ill- 
gotten wealth, w. re now anxious for a renewal 
of those scenes of blood which they had found 
so profitable. Among such men Catiline soon 
obtaiued numerous supporters ; and his great 
mental and physical powers, which even his 
enemies admitted, maintained his ascendency 
over his adherents. The most distinguished 
men who joined him, and were present at a 
meeting of the conspirators which he called in 
June, 64, were P. Cornelius Lentulus Sura, who 
had been consul in B.C. 71, but, having been j 
over by the censors, had lost his seat I 



in the senate, wluch he was now seeking to 
recover by standing a second time for the prae- 
torship ; C. Cornelius Cethegus, distinguished 
throughout by his headstrong impetuosity and 
sanguinary violence ; P. Autronius, spoken of 
above ; L. Cassius Longinus, at this time a 
competitor for the consulship ; L. Vargunteius, 
who had been one of the colleagues of Cicero 
in the quaestorship, and had subsequently been 
condemned for bribery ; L. Calpurnius Bestia, 
tribune elect ; Publius and Servius Sulla, neph- 
ews of the dictator ; M. Porcius Laeca, &c. 
The first object of Catiline was to obtain the 
consulship for himself and C. Antonius, whose 
co-operation he confidently anticipated. But in 
this object he was disappointed : Cicero and 
Antonius were elected consuls. This disap- 
pointment rendered him only more vigorous in 
the prosecution of his designs ; more adherents 
were gained, and troops were levied in various 
parts of Italy, especially in the neighborhood of 
Feesulae, under the superintendence of C. Man- 
lius, one of the veteran centurions of Sulla. 
Meantime Cicero, the consul, was unrelaxing 
in his efforts to preserve the state from the 
threatened danger. Through the agency of 
Fulvia, the mistress of Curius, one of the con- 
spirators, he became acquainted with every cir- 
cumstance as soon as it occurred, and was en- 
abled to counteract all the machinations of Cat- 
iline. Cicero, at the same time, gained over 
his colleague Antonius by promising him the 
province of Macedonia. At length Cicero open- 
ly accused Catiline, and the senate, now aware 
of the danger which threatened the state, passed 
the decree, " that the consuls should take care 
that the republic received no harm," in virtue of 
which the consuls were invested for the time 
being with absolute power, both civil and mili- 
tary. In the consular elections which followed 
soon afterward, Catiline was again rejected. 
On the night of the 6th of November, B.C. 
63, he met the ringleaders of the conspiracy at 
the dwelling of M. Porcius Laaca, and informed 
them that he had resolved to wait no longer, 
but at once to proceed to open action. Cicero, 
informed as usual of these proceedings, sum- 
moned the senate on the 8th of November, and 
there delivered the first of his celebrated ora- 
tions against Catiline, in which he displayed a 
most intimate acquaintance with all the pro- 
ceedings of the conspirators. Catiline, who 
was present, attempted to justify himself, but 
scarcely had he commenced when his words 
were drowned by the shouts of " enemy"' and 
" parricide" which burst from the whole as- 
sembly. Finding that he could at present ef- 
fect nothing at Rome, he quitted the city in the 
night (8th-9th November), and profceded to the 
camp of Manlius, after leaving the chief con- 
trol of affairs at Rome in the hands of Lentulus 
and Cethegus. On the 9th, when the flight of 
Catiline was known, Cicero delivered his sec- 
ond speech, addressed to the people in the fo- 
rum, in which he justified his recent conduct. 
The senate declai'ed Catiline and Manlius pub- 
he enemies,^ind soon afterward Cicero obtained 
legal evidence of the guilt of the conspirators 
within the city, through the ambassadors of the 
Allobroges. These men had been solicited by 
Lentulus to join the plot, and to induce their 
183 



CATILLUS. 



CATO. PORCIUS. 



own countrymen to take part in the insurrec- 
tion. They revealed what they had heard to 
Q. Fabius 'Sanga, the patron of their state, who , 
in his turn acquainted Cicero. By the instruc- 
tions of the latter, the ambassadors affected 
great zeal in the undertaking, and having ob- j 
tained a written agreement, signed by Lentu- ■ 
lus, Cethegus. and Statilius, they quitted Rome ! 
soon after midnight on the 3d of December, but i 
were arrested on the Milvian bridge by Cice- 
ro's order. Cicero instantly summoned the i 
leaders of the conspiracy to his presence, and ; 
conducted them to the senate, which was as- 1 
sembled in the temple of Concord (4th of De- j 
cember). He proved the guilt of the conspira- 
tors by the testimony of witnesses and their 
own signatures. They were thereupon con- i 
signed to the charge of certain senators. Cie- 
ero then summoned the people, and delivered ' 
what is called his third oration against Catiline, 
in which he informed them of all that had taken 
place. On the following day, the nones (5th) 1 
of December, the day so frequently referred to ' 
by Cicero in after times with pride, the senate 
was called together to deliberate respecting the \ 
punishment of the conspirators. After an ani- j 
mated debate, of which the leading arguments ; 
are expressed in the two celebrated orations ! 
assigned by Sallust to Caesar and to Cato, a de- 
cree was passed that Lentulus and the con- 
spirators should be put to death. The sentence 
was executed the same night in the prisoa 
Cicero's speech in the debate in the senate is 
preserved in his fourth oration against Catiline. 
The consul Antonius was then sent against 
Catiline, and the decisive battle was fought 
early in 62. Antonius, however, unwilling to 
fight against his former associate, gave the com- 
mand on the day of battle to his legate, M. Pe- 
treius. Catiline fell in the engagement after 
fighting with the most daring valor. The history 
of Catiline's conspiracy has been written by 
Sallust 

[Catullus (Virg, uEn., viL, 670) and Catilus 
(Hor., OcL i., 18, 2), son of Amphiaraus, with his 
brothers Coras and Tiburtus migrated to Italy, 
and there founded the city Tibur (now Tivoli), 
on the Anio.] 

Catius. [1. Q. Cattus, plebeian aedile B.C. 
210 with L. Porcius Li'jinius ; served under C. 
Claudius Nero against Hasdrubal, B.C. 207 ; and 
was subsequently sent to Delphi to present to 
the temple there some of the booty obtained in 
the victory over Hasdrubal.] — 2. An Epicurean 
philosopher, a native of Gallia Transpadana 
(Insuber). composed a treatise in four books 
on the nature of things and on the chief good 
(de Serum Xatura & de svmrno Bono); died B.C. 
45. " 

Cato, Dioxtsius. the author of a small work, 
entitled Disticha de Jforibus ad FiliioJi, consist- 
ing of a series of sententious moral precepts. 
Nothing is known of the author or the time 
when he lived, but many -writers place him 
under the Antonines. The best edition is by j 
Arntzenius. Amsterdam. 1754. 

Cato. Porcius. 1. M., frequentlv»surnamed , 
Ces'sorr-s or Cevsoe, also Cato Major, to dis- 
tinguish him from lus great-grandson Cato TJti- 1 
eensis (vid. No. 8). Cato was born at Tuseu- ' 
lum, B.C. 234, and was brought up at hi« fa- 1 
184 



ther's farm, situated in the Sabine territory. 
In 217 he served his first campaign, in his seven- 
teenth year, and during the remaining years of 
the second Punic war he greatly distinguished 
himself by his courage and military abilities. 
In the intervals of war he returned to his Sa- 
bine farm, which he had inherited from his fa- 
ther, and there led the same frugal and simple 
life, which characterized him to his last days. 
Encouraged by L. Valerius Flaccus, a young 
nobleman in the neighborhood, he went to 
Rome, and became a candidate for office. He 
obtained the quasstorship in 204, and served un- 
der the proconsul Scipio Africanus in Sicily and 
Africa. From this time we may date the enmi- 
ty which Cato always displayed toward Scipio ; 
their habits and views of life were entirely dif- 
ferent ; and Cato, on his return to Rome, de- 
nounced in the strongest terms the luxury and 
extravagance of his commander. On his voy- 
age home he is said to have touched at Sardinia, 
and to have brought the poet Ennius from the 
island to Italy. In 199 he was aedile, and in 
198 praetor; he obtained Sardinia as his prov- 
ince, which he governed with justice and econ- 
omy. He had now established a reputation for 
pure morality and strict virtue. In 195 he was 
consul with his old friend and patron L. Valerius 
Flaccus. He carried on war in Spain with the 
greatest success, and received the honor of a 
Triumph on his return to Rome in 194. In 191 
he served, under the consul M'. Aeilius Glabrio,, 
in the campaign against Antiochus in Greece, 
and the decisive victory at Thermopylae was 
mainly owing to Cato. From this time Cato's 
military career, which had been a brilliant one, 
appears to have ceased. He now took an act- 
ive part in civil affairs, and distinguished him- 
self by his vehement opposition to the Roman 
nobles, who introduced into Rome Greek luxu- 
ry and refinement. It was especially against 
the Scipios that his most violent attacks were 
directed, and whom he pursued with the bitterest 
animosity. He obtained the condemnation of 
L. Scipio, the conqueror of Antiochus, and com- 
pelled his brother P. Scipio to quit Rome in or- 
der to avoid the same fate. Vid, Scipio. In 
184 he was elected censor with L. Valerius 
Flaccus, having been rejected in his applica- 
tion for the office in 189. His censorship was 
a great epoch in his life. He applied himself 
strenuously to the duties of his office, regard- 
less of the enemies he was making ; but all his 
efforts to stem the tide of luxury which was 
now setting in proved unavailing. Hi s strong 
national prejudices appear to have diminished 
in force as he grew older and wiser. He ap- 
plied himself in old age to the study of Greek 
literature, with which in youth he had no ac- 
quaintance, although he was not ignorant of the 
Greek language. But his conduct, continued to 
be guided by prejudices against classes and na- 
tions, whose influence he deemed to be hostile 
to the simplicity of the old Roman character. 
He had an antipathy to physicians, because they 
were mostly Greeks, and therefore unfit to be 
trusted with Roman lives. When Athens sent 
Carneades. Diogenes, and Critolaus as ambas- 
sadors to Rome, he recommended the senate to 
send them from the city on account of the dan- 
gerous doctrines taught by Carneades. Fwt 



CATO, PORCIUS. 



CATTI. 



Carneades. Oato retained his bodily and men- 
tal vigor in bis old age. In the year before his 
death he was one of the chief instigators of the 
third Punic war. He had been one of the Ro- 
man deputies sent to Africa to arbitrate between 
Masinissa and the Carthaginians, and he was 
so struck with the flourishing condition of Car- 
thage that on his return home he maintained 
that Rome would never be safe as long as Car- 
thage was in existence. From this time forth, 
whenever he was called upon for his vote in 
the senate, though the subject of debate bore no 
relation to Carthage, his words were Delenda 
est Carthago. Very shortly before his death, 
he made a powerful speech in accusing Galba 
on account of his cruelty and perfidy in Spain. 
He died in 149, at the age of eighty -five. Cato 
wrote several works, of which only the Dc He 
Rustica has come down to us, though even this 
work is not exactly in the form in which it pro- 
ceeded from his pen : it is printed in the Scrip- 
tores liei Rustics, edited by Gesuer (Lips., 
1773-4), and Schneider (Lips., 1794-7). His 
most important work was entitled Origincs, but 
only fragments of it have been preserved, The 
first book contained the history of the Roman 
kings; the second and third treated of the origin 
of the Italian towns, and from these two books 
the whole work derived its title. The fourth 
book treated of the first Punic war, the fifth 
book of the second Punic war, and the sixth 
and seventh continued the narrative to the year 
of Cato's oleath. — 2. M., son of No. 1, by his first 
wife Licinia, and thence called Liciniamis, was 
distinguished as a jurist. In the war against 
Perseus, 168, he fought with great bravery un- 
der the consul zEmilius Paulus, whose daugh- 
ter, ^Emilia Tertia. he afterward married. He 
died when prcetor designatus, about 152. — 8. 
M., son of No. 1, by hn seeond wile Salonia, 
and thence called Sakmiantu, was born 154, 
when his father had completed his eightieth 
year. — 4. M., son of No. 2. consul 118, died in 
Africa in the same year. — 5. G, also son of No. 

2, consul 114, obtained Macedonia as his prov- 
ince, and fought unsuccessfully against the 
Scordisci. He was accused of extortion in 
Macedonia, and was sentenced to pay a fine. 
He afterward went to 1'arraco in Spain, and be- 
came a citizen of that town. — G. M., son of No. 

3, tribunus plebis, died when a candidate for 
the praetorship.— 7. L., also son of No. 3, con- 
sul 89, was killed in battle against the Socii. — 
8. M., son of No. 0, by Livia, great-grandson of 
Cato the Censor, and surnamcd Uticensis from 
Utica, the place of his death, was born B.C. 95. 
In early childhood he lost both his parents, and 
was brought up in the house of his mother's 
brother, M. Linns Drusns, along with his sister 
Poreia and the children of his mother by her 
second husband. M. Serviliua Caepio. In early 
years he discovered a stern and unyielding 
character; he applied himself with great zeal 
to the study of oratory and philosophy, and be- 
came a devoted adherent of the Stoic school; 
and among the profligate nobles of the age he 
soon became conspicuous for his rigid morality. 
He served his first campaign as a volunteer, 
72, in the servile war of Spartaeus, and after- 
ward, about 07. as tribunus militum in Mace- 
donia. In 65 he was quaestor when he correct- 



ed numerous abuses which had crept into the 
administration of the treasury. In 63 he was 
tribune of the plebs, and supported Cicero in 
proposing that the Catiliuarian conspirators 
should suffer death. Vid. Catilina. He now 
became one of the chief leaders of the aristo- 
cratical party, and opposed with the utmost ve- 
hemence the measures of Caesar, Pompey, and 
Crassus. In order to get rid of bun, he was 
sent to Cyprus in 58 with the task of uniting 
that island to the Roman dominions. He return- 
ed in 56, and continued to oppose the triumvirs; 
but all his efforts were vain, and he was reject- 
ed when he became a candidate for the praetor- 
ship. On the breaking out of the civil war (49), 
he was intrusted, as propraetor, with the de- 
fence of Sicily; but, on the landing of Curio 
with an overwhelming force, he abandoned the 
island and joined Pompey in Greece. After 
Pompey's victory at Dyrrachium, Cato was left 
in charge of the camp, and thus was not present 
at the battle of Pharsalia (48). After this bat- 
tle he set sail for Corcyra, and thence crossed 
over to Africa, where he joined Metellus Scipio, 
after a terrible march across the desert. The 
army wished to be led by Cato ; but he yielded 
the command to the consular Scipio. In oppo- 
sition to the advice of Cato, Scipio fought with 
Caesar, and was utterly routed at Thapsus (April 
6th, 46). All Africa now, with the exception 
of Utica, submitted to Caesar. Cato wanted 
the Romans in Utica to stand a siege ; but when 
he saw that they were inclined to submit, he 
resolved to die rather than fall alive into the 
hands of the conqueror. Accordingly, after 
spending the greater part of the night in perus- 
ing Plato's Phaedo several times, he stabbed him- 
self below the breast. In falling, he overturned 
an abacus : his friends, hearing the noise, ran 
up, found him bathed in blood, and, while he was 
fainting, dressed his wound. When, however, 
he recovered feeling, he tore open the bandages, 
let out his entrails, and expired at the age of 
49. Cato soon became the subject of biography 
and panegyric. Shortly after his death appear- 
ed Cicero's Cato, which provoked Caesar's Anti- 
cato. In Lucan the character of Cato is a per- 
sonification of godlike virtue. In modern times 
the closing events of his bfe have been often 
dramatized ; and few dramas have gained more 
celebrity than the Cato of Addison. — 9. M., a 
son of No. 8, fell at the battle of Philippi, 42. 

Cato, Valerius, a distinguished grammarian 
and poet, lost his property in his youth during 
the usurpation of Sulla. He is usually consid- 
ered the author of an extant poem in one hund- 
red and eighty-three hexameter verses, entitled 
Dircc; edited by Putsch, Jena, 1828. 

[Catreus (Karpsvc) or Creteus, son of Minos 
and Greta.] 

Catti or Chatti, whose name is connected 
with the old German word cat or cad, "war," 
one of the most important nations of Germany, 
bounded by the Visurgis (now Weser) on the 
east, the Agri Deeumates on the south, and the 
Rhine on the west, in the modern Hesse and 
the adjacent countries. They were a branch 
of the Hermiones, and are first mentioned by 
Caesar under the erroneous name of Suevi. 
Although defeated by Drusus, Germanicus, and 
other Roman generals, thev were never com- 
185 



CATUALDA. 



CAUCASUS. 



pleteiy subjugated by the Romans ; and their following spring he defeated Lepidus in the bat- 
power was greatly augmented on the decline of tie of the Milvian bridge, and forced him to take 



the Cherusci. Their capital was Mattium. 



refuge in Sardinia. He opposed the Gabinian 



[Catualda, a noble youth of the Gotones, in and Manilian laws which conferred extraordi- 
the time of Tiberius, who drove Maroboduus nary powers upon Pompey (67 and 66). He 
from the throne of the Marcomanni, and was : was censor with Crassus in 65, and died in 60. 



himself driven out in turn by the Hermunduri 
under the command of Vibilius.] 

Catullus, Valerius, a Roman poet, born at 
Verona or in its immediate vicinity. B.C. 87. 
Catullus inherited considerable property from 



Caturiges, a Ligurian people in Gallia JSTar- 
bonensis, near the Cottian Alps : their chief 
towns were Eburodunum and Caturig^e or 
Catorimagus (now Chorges.) 

Catus Decianus, procurator of Britain in the 



his father, who was the friend of Julius Cae- \ reign of ISero, was by his extortion one of the 
sar ; but he squandered a great part of it by in- j chief causes of the revolt of the people under 
dulging freely in the pleasures of the metropo- j Boadicea, AD. 62. He fled to Gaul, 
lis. In order to better his fortunes, he went to ; Cauca (now Coca), a town of the Vaccaei in 
Bithynia in the train of the praetor Memmius, j Hispania Tarraconensis ; birth-place of the Em- 
but it appears that the speculation was attend- j peror Theodosius I. 

ed with little success. It was probably during j [Caucalus (Kavica/.oc). of Chios, a rhetori- 
this expedition that his bi'other died in the j cian, brother of the historian Theopornpus, 
Troad — a loss which he deplores in the affect- j wrote a eulogium on Hercules, which no longer 
ing elegy to Hortalus. On his return he con- j exists.] 

tinued to reside at Rome or at his country-seats i CaucasLe Pyl^e. Yid. Caucasus. 
on the promontory of Sirmio and at Tibur. He | Caucasus, Caucasii Montes (6 Kavnaaoc, to 
probably died about B.C. 47. The extant works j Kavudatov opoc, ru KavKuata op?j : now Cauca- 
of Catullus consist of one hundred and sixteen ! sus). 1. A great chain of mountains in Asia, 
poems, on a variety of topics, and composed in j extending west-northwest and east-southeast 
different styles and metres. Some are lyrical, j from the eastern shore of the Pontus Euxinus 
others elegies, and others epigrams ; while the j (now Black Sea) to the western shore of the 
Nuptials of Peleus and Thetis, in four hundred j Caspian. Its length is about seven hundred 
and nine hexameter lines, is an heroic poem, miles ; its greatest breadth one hundred and 
Some of his poems are translations or imitations j twenty, its least sixty or seventy. Its greatest 
from the Greek, as, for instance, his De Coma j height exceeds that of the Alps, its loftiest 
Berenices, which was taken from Callimachus. ! summit (now Mount Elbrooz, nearly in*43° north 
In consequence of the intimate acquaintance j latitude and 43° east longitude) being sixteen 
which Catullus displays with Greek literature ! thousand eight hundred feet above the sea, and 
and mythology, he was called doctus by Tibul- j to the east of this are several other summits 
lus, Ovid, and others. Catullus adorned all he j above the line of perpetual snow, which, in the 



touched, and his shorter poems are character- 
ized by original invention and felicity of expres- 



Caucasus, is from ten to eleven thousand feet 
above the sea. The western part of the chain 



eion. — Editioiis: By Volpi, Patav., 1710; by is much lower, no summit west of Mount El- 



Doering, Altona, 1834. 2d 
mann, Berol., 1S29. 

Catulus, Lutatius, 1. C. 



:d. : and bv Lach- 



consul B.C. 242, 



brooz rising above the snow line. At both ex- 
tremities the chain sinks down to low hills. 
There are two chief passes over the chain, both 



defeated as proconsul in the following year the : of which were known to the ancients : the one, 
Carthaginian fleet off the iEgates Insulae, and j between its eastern extremity and the Caspian, 
thus brought the first Punic war to a close, 241. j near Derbent, was called Albaniae and some- 
— 2. Q., consul 102 with C. Marius IV., and as times Casple Pyl.e ; the other, nearly in the 
proconsul next year gained along with Marius | centre of the range, was called Caucasian Pylae 
a decisive victory over the Cimbri near Vercel- ! (now Pass of Dariel). In ancient times, as is 
lae (now Yercelli), in the north of Italy. Catu- j still the case, the Caucasus was inhabited by a 
lus claimed the entire honor of this victory, and i great variety of tribes, speaking different lan- 



asserted that Marius did not meet with the ene- 
my till the day was decided ; but at Rome the 



guages (Strabo says, at least seventy), but all 
belons^ncr to that familv of the human race 



whole merit was given to Marius. Catulus be- j which has peopled Europe and Western Asia, 
longed to the aristocratical party ; he espoused ; and which has obtained the name of Caucasian 



the cause of Sulla ; was included by Marius in 
the proscription of 87 ; and as escape was im- 
possible, put an end to his life by the vapors 
•of a charcoal fire. Catulus was well acquaint- 



irom the fact that in no other part of the world 
are such perfect examples of it found as among 
the mountaineers of the Caucasus. That the 
Greeks had some vaarue knowledge of the Call- 



ed with Greek literature, and famed for the casus in very early times, is proved by the 
grace and purity with which he spoke and wrote myths respecting Prometheus and the Argo- 
his own language. He was the author of sev- nauts, from which it seems that the Caucasus 
eral orations, of an historical work on his own j was regarded as at the extremity of the earth, 
consulship and the Cimbric war, and of poems ; on the border of the River Oceanus. The ac- 
but all these have perished with the exception count which Herodotus gives is good as far as 
of two epigrams. — 3. Q., son of No. 2, a distin- j it goes (i., 203) ; but it was not till the march 
.guished leader of the aristocracy, also won the of Pompey, in the Mithradatic War, extended 
respect and confidence of the people by his up- to the banks of the Cyrus and Araxes, and to 
right character and conduct Being consul with the foot of the great chain, that means were ob- 
M. Lepidus in 78, he resisted the efforts of his tained for that accurate description of the Cau- 
•eolleague to abrogate the acts of Sulla, and the ; casus which Strabo dves in his eleventh book. 
186 



CAUCI. 



CECROPS. 



The country about the east part of the Cauca- 
sus was called Albania : the rest of the chain 
divided Iberia and Colchis, on the south, from 
Sarmatia Asiatic* on the north. — 2. When the 
soldiers of Alexander advanced to that great 
range of mountains which formed the northern 
boundary of Ariaua, the Paropamisus, they sup- 
posed that they had reached the great Cauca- 
sian chain at the extremity of the world men- 
tioned by the early poets, and they applied to 
it the name of Caucasus ; afterward, for the sake 
of distinction, it was called Caucasus Indicus. 
Vid, Paropamisus. 

Cauci. Vid, Chauci. 
. Caucones (Kavicuvec), the name of communi- 
ties both in Greece and Asia, but whether of the 
same or different tribes cannot be determined 
with certainty. The Caucones in the north-west 
of Greece, in Elis and Achaia, were supposed by 
the ancient geographers to be an Arcadian 
people. The Caucones in the northwest of Asia 
Minor are mentioned by Homer as allies of the 
Trojans, and are placed in Bithynia and Paphla- 
gouia by the geographers who regarded them 
as Pelasgians, as though some thought them Scy- 
thians. 

Caudium (Caudlnus), a town in Samnium, on 
the road from Capua to Beneventum. In the 
neighborhood were the celebrated Furcul^e 
Caudin/E, or Caudine Forks, narrow passes in the 
mountains, where the Roman army surrendered 
to the Samnites, and was sent under the yoke, 
B.C. 321 : it is now called the valley of Ar- 
paia. 

Caulon or Caulonia (Cauloniata : now Castel 
Vctere), a town in Bruttium, northeast of Locri, 
originally called Aulon or Aulonia ; founded by 
the inhabitants of Croton or by the Aehaians ; 
destroyed by Dionysius the elder, who removed 
its inhabitants to Syracuse, and gave its territory 
to Locri ; afterward rebuilt, but again destroyed 
in the war with Pyrrhue ; rebuilt a third time, 
and destroyed a third time in the second Punic 
war. It was celebrated for its worship of the 
Delphian Apollo. Its name is preserved in 
the hill Caulone, in the neighborhood of Castel 
Vetere. 

Caunus. Vid. Byblis. 

Caunus {tj Kavvoc : Kaovior : now Kaigucs), 
one of the chief cities of Caria, on its southern 
coast, a little east of the mouth of the Calbis, in a 
very fertile but unhealthy situation. It had a 
citadel called Imbros, an inclosed harbor for ships 
of war, and safe roads for merchant vessels. It 
was founded by the Cretans. Its dried figs 
(Cauneaa ficus) were highly celebrated. The 
painter Protogenea was born here. 

[Caura (now OortOy) a town of Hispania 
Baetica, between the Ba-tis and Anas.] 

Caurus, the Argestes ('Apyiar^) of the 
Greeks, the northwestern wind, is in Italy a 
stormy wind. 

Cavares or -i, a people in Gallia Narbonensi3, 
east of the Rhone, between the Druentia and the 
Isara. 

^ Cavarint>, a Seuonian, whom Caesar made 
king of his people, was expelled by his subjects 
and compelled to fly to Caesar, B.C. 54. 

Caystrus (Kuvarpoc, Ion. Kavorpuc : now 
Kara Su, i. e., the Black River, or Kuchuk-Mein. 
der, i. e., Little Mctander), a celebrated river of 



Lydia and Ionia, rising in the Cilbiani Mountains 
(the eastern part of Tmolus), and flowing be- 
tween the ranges of Tmolus and Messogis into 
the ^Egean, a little northwest of Ephesus. To 
this day it abounds in swans, as it did in Ho- 
mer's time. The valley of the Caystrus is called 
by Homer " the Asian meadow," and is probably 
the district to which the name of Asia was first 
applied. There was an inland town of the same 
name on its southern bank. 
[Cea. Vid. Ceos.] 

CebennaMons or Gebenna (to Kcfifievov opoc. : 
now Cevennes), mountains in the south of Gaul, 
two thousand stadia in length, extending north a3 
far as Lugdunum, and separating the Arverni 
from the Helvii : Cassar found them in the winter 
covered with snow six feet deep. 

Cebes (Ks6t}c), of Thebes, a disciple and fricud 
of Socrates, was present at the death of hi3 
teacher. He wrote three philosophical works, 
one of which, entitled Tiiva^ or Picture [com- 
monly cited by its Latin title, Cebetis Tabula, i.e., 
Picai], is extant. This work is an allegorical 
picture ef human life, which is explained by an 
old man to a circle of youths. The drift of the 
book is to show that only the development of 
our mind and the possession of real virtue can 
make us happy. Few works have enjoyed a 
greater popularity. Of the numerous editions, the 
best are by Schweighaiiser, Argent., 1806, and 
by Coraes in his edition of Epietetus, Paris, 
1826. 

[Cebren (Ke6pr/i>), a river of the Troad, said to 
have been so called from Cebren, father of Aste- 
rope. Vid. Cebuene.] 

Cebrene {Ketprjvr] : Ke6p?jviog and KeOprjvievc), 
a city in the Troad, on mount Ida; which fell into 
decay when Antigonus transplanted its inhab- 
itants to Alexandrea Tros. A little river, which 
flowed past it, was called Cebren (Kedpijv) 
and the surrounding district Cebrenia (Ke- 
BpTjvia). 

[Cebriones (KeSpwvTjc), a son of Priam by a 
female slave ; charioteer of Hector, and slain by 
Patroelus.J 

Cecropia. Vid. Athene, p. 122, a. 

Cecrops (Kettpoip), a hero of the Pelasgic race, 
said to have been the first king of Attica, He 
was married to Agraulos, daughter of Actajus, 
by whom he had a son, Erysichthon, who suc- 
ceeded him as king of Athens, and three daugh- 
ters, Agraulos, Herse, and Pandrosos. In his 
reign Neptune (Poseidon) and Minerva (Athena) 
contended for the possession of Attica, but Ce- 
crops decided in favor of the goddess. Vid. 
Athena. Cecrops is said to have founded 
Athens, the citadel of which was called Cecropia 
after him, to have divided Attica into twelve 
communities, and to have introduced the first 
elements of civilized life ; he instituted marriage, 
abolished bloody sacrifices, and taught his sub- 
jects how to worship the gods. He is sometimes 
called dtQvjjc or geminus, an epithet which some 
explain by his having instituted marriage, 
while others suppose it to have reference to the 
legends, in which the upper part of his body 
was represented as that of a man, and the lower 
part as that of a serpent. The later Greek 
writers describe Cecrops as a native of Sais in 
Egypt, who led a colony of Egyptians into 
Attica, and thus introduced from Egypt the 
187 



CECRYPHALIA. 



CELTiE. 



arts of civilized life ; but this account is rejected 
by some of the ancients themselves, and by the 
ablest modern critics. 

Cecryphalia (K£fcpv6u?>eLa), a small island in 
the Saronic Gulf, between ^Egina and Epidau- 
rus. 

Cedreje (Kf dpeat or -slat, KedpeuT7jg or -alog), 
a town of Caria, on the Caremic Gulf. 

Cedrenus, Georgius, a Byzantine writer, of 
whose life nothing is known, the author of an 
historical work, which begins with the creation 
of the world, and goes down to A.D. 1057. The 
last edition is by Bekker, Bonn, 1838-39. 

[Celadon (Keldduv), a tributary of the Al- 
pheus in Elis.] 

[Celadon. 1. An Egyptian, slain at the nup- 
tials of Perseus. — 2. One of the Lapithae, slain at 
the nuptials of Pirithous.] 

Cel^en^e (KeXaivat, Ke?mivltt/c). the greatest 
city of southern Phrygia, before the rise of its 
neighbor, Apamea Cibotus, reduced it to insigni- 
ficance. It lay at the sources of the rivers 
Maeander and Marsyas. In the midst of it was 
a citadel built by Xerxes, on a precipitous rock, 
at the foot of which, in the Agora of the city, 
the Marsyas took its rise, and near the river's 
source was a grotto celebrated by tradition as 
the scene of the punishment of Marsyas by 
Apollo. Outside of the city was a royal palace, 
with pleasure gardens and a great park (rrapa- 
detaog) full of game, which was generally the 
resideuee of the satrap. The Maeauder took its 
rise in the very palace, and flowed through the 
park and the city, below which it received the 
Marsyas. 

CeljEno (Ke?,acvu). 1. A Pleiad, daughter of 
Atlas and Pleione, beloved by Neptune (Posei- 
don). — 2. One of the Harpies. Vid, Harpyle. 

Celeia (now Cilly), an important town in the 
southeastern part of Noricum, and a Romau 
colony with the surname Claudia, was in the 
Middle Ages the capital of a Slavonic state call- 
ed Zeliia ; hence the modern name of the town, 
which possesses Roman remains. 

Celenderis (Ke Mvdspig : now Khelindreh), a 
sea-port town of Cilicia, said to have been found- 
ed by Sandarus the Syrian, and afterwards col- 
onized by the Samians. 

Celenna, a town of Campania, mentioned by 
Virgil (^En., vii., 739), but nowhere else.] 

Celer, together with Severus, the architect of 
Nero's immense palace, the golden house. He 
and Severus began digging a canal from the 
Lake Avernus to the mouth of the Tiber. 

Celer, P. Egnatius. Vid. Barea. 

Celetrum (now Kastoria), a town in Mace- j 
douia. on a peninsula of the Lacus Castoris, pro- 
bably the same towu afterward called Diocle- | 
tianopolis. 

Celeus (Ke/eoo,) king of Eleusis, husband of i 
Metanira, and father of Demophon and Triptole- 1 
mus. He received Ceres (Demeter) with hospi- j 
tality at Eleusis when she was wandering in J 
search of her daughter. The goddess, in return. I 
wished to make his son Demophon immortal, and ! 
placed him in the fire in order to destroy his j 
mortal parts; but Metanira screamed aloud at I 
the sight, and Demophon was destroyed by the | 
flames. Ceres (Demeter) then bestowed great ; 
favors upon Triptolemus. Vid. Triptolevius. ! 
Celeus is described ;is the first priest and his 
188 



daughters as the first priestesses of Ceres 
(Demeter) at Eleusis. 

Celsa (now Velilla, ruins near Xelsa), a town 
in Hispania Tarraconensis, on the Iberus, with a 
stone bridge over this river, and a Roman colony 
with the name Victrix Julia Celsa. 

Celsus. 1. One of the thirty tyrants, usurped 
the purple in Africa, and was slain on the seventh 
day of his reign, A.D., 265. — 2. An Epicurean 
philosopher, lived in the time of the Antonines, 
and was a friend of Lucian. He is supposed to 
be the same as the Celsus who wrote the work 
against Christianity called Aoyor. alrjdrjg, which 
acquired so much notoriety from the answer 
written to it by Origen. Vid. Origenes. — 3. A. 
Cornelius Celsus, probably lived under the 
reigns of Augustus and Tiberius. He wrote 
several works of which only one remains entire, 
his treatise Be Medicina, " On Medicine," ia 
eight books. The first two books are principally 
occupied by the consideration of diet, and the 
general principles of therapeutics and pathology ; 
the remaining books are devoted to the consider- 
ation of particular diseases and their treatment - r 
the third and fourth to internal diseases ; the 
fifth and sixth to external diseases and to 
pharmaceutical preparations; and the last two 
to those diseases which more particularly belong 
to surgery. The work has been much valued 
from the earliest times to the present day. — Edi- 
tions : By Milligan, Edinb., 1826 ; by Ritter and 
Albers, Colon, ad Rhea, 1835. — Julius Celsus, 
a scholar at Constantinople in the seventh cen- 
tury after Christ, made a recension of the text 
of Caesar's Commentaries. Many modem 
writers have attributed to him the life of 
CaBsar, which was, in reality, written by 
Petrarch. — 5. P. Juventius Celsus, two Roman 
jurists, father and son, both of whom are cited 
in the Digest. Very little is known of the elder 
Celsus. The younger Celsus, who was the 
more celebrated, lived under Nerva and Trajan, 
by whom he was highly favored. He wrote 
Digesta in thirty-nine books, Epistolce, Quas- 
tiones, and Bistitutiones in seven books. — 6. P. 
Marius Celsus, an able general, first of Galba 
and afteward of Otho. After the defeat of 
Otho's army at the battle of Bedriacum, Celsus 
was pardoned by Yitellius, and was allowed 
by him to enter on the consulship in July (A.D. 
69). 

Celt^e, a powerful race, which occupied a 
great part of Western Europe. The Greek and 
Roman writers call them by three names, which 
are probably only variations of one name, name- 
ly, Celt^e (Ke?~a'i, Ke?~oi), Galat^e (Ta?,drai). 
and Galli (Tu/.?.oi). Their name was originally 
given to all the people of Northern and West- 
ern Europe who were not Iberians, and it was 
not till the time of Coasar that the Romans 
made any distinction between the Celts and the 
Germans : the name of Celts then began to be 
confined to the people between the Pyrenees 
and the Rhine. The Celts belonged to the great 
Indo-Germanic race, as their language proves> 
Like the other Indo-Germanic races they came 
from the East, and, at a period long antecedent 
to all historical records, settled in the west of 
Europe. The most powerful part of the nation 
appears to have taken up their abode in the cen- 
tre of the country called after them Gallia, be- 



CELTIBERI. 



CENTAURI. 



tweeu the Garumna iu the south aud the Se- 
quana and Matrona in the north. From this 
country they spread over various parts of Eu- 
rope, and they appear in early times as a migra- 
tory race, ready to abandon their homes, and 
settle in any district which their swords could 
win. Besides the Celts in Gallia, there were 
ei^ht other differeut settlements of the nation, 
which may be distinguished by the following 
names: 1. Iberian Celts, who crossed the Pyr- 
enees and settled in Spain. Vid. Celtiberi. — 
2. British Celts, the most ancient inhabitants of 
Britain. Vid. Britannia.— 3. Belgic Celts, the 
earliest inhabitants of Gallia Belgica, at a later 
time much mingled with Germans. — 4. Italian 
Celts, who crossed the Alps at different periods, 
and eventually occupied the greater part of the 
North of Italy, which was called after them 
Gallia Cisalpina. — 5. Celts in the Alps and on 
the Danube, namely, the Helvetii, Gothini, Osi, 
Vindelici, Rseti, Norici, and Carni. — 6. lllyrian 
Celts, who, under the name of Scordisci, settled 
on Mount Scordus. — 7. Macedonian and Thra- 
cian Celts, who had remained behind in Mace- 
donia when the Celts invaded Greece, and who 
are rarely mentioned. — 8. Asiatic Celts, the To- 
listoboii, Trocmi, aud Tectosages, who founded 
the kingdom of Galatia. Some ancient writ- 
ers divided the Celts into two great races, one 
consisting of the Celts in the south and centre 
of Gaul, in Spain, aud in the north of Italy, who 
were the proper Celts, and the other consisting 
of the Celtic tribes on the shores of the ocean 
and iu the east as far as Scytbia, who were 
called Gauls : to the latter race the Cimbri be- 
longed, and they are considered by some to be 
identical with the Cimmerii of the Greeks. 
This two-fold division of the Celts appears to 
correspond to the two races into which the Celts 
are at present divided in Great Britain, namely, 
the Gael aud the Kynu-y, who differ in language 
and customs, the Gael being the inhabitants of 
Ireland and the north <>f Scotland, and the 
Kymry of Wales. The Celts are described by 
the ancient writers as men of large stature, of 
fair complexion, aud with flaxen or red hair. 
They were brave and warlike, impatient of con- 
trol, and prone to change. They fought with 
long swords ; their first charge in battle was 
the most formidable, but if firmly resisted they 
usually gave way. They Avere long the terror 
of the Romans : once they took Rome, and laid 
it in ashes (B.C. 390). For details respecting 
their later history and political organization, 
vid. Gallia. 

Celtiberi (Ke/m^pec), a powerful people in 
Spain, consisting of Celts, who crossed the Pyr- 
enees at an early period, and became mingled 
with the Iberians, the original inhabitants of the 
country. They dwelt chiefly in the central part 
of Spain, in the highlands which separate the 
Iberus from the rivers which flow toward the 
west, and in which the Tagus and the Durius 
rise. They were divided into various tribes, the 
Arevace, Berones, and Pelendones, which 
were the three most important, the Lusones, 
Belli, Dittaxi, <fcc. Their chief towns were 
Segobriga, Numantia, Bilbilis, <fcc. Their 
country, called Celtiberia, was mountainous 
and unproductive. They were a brave and war- 
Jike people, and proved formidable enemies to 



the Romans. They submitted to Scipio Africa- 
nus iu the second Punic war, but the oppres- 
sions of the Roman governors led them to rebel, 
aud for many years they successfully detied the 
power of Rome. They were reduced to sub- 
mission on the capture of Numantia by Scipio 
Africauus the youuger (B.C. 134), but they 
agaiu took up arms under Sertorius. aud it was 
not till his death (72) that they began to adopt 
the Roman customs and language. 

Celtici. 1. A Celtic people iu Lusitania, be- 
tween the Tagus and Auas— 2. A Celtic people 
iu Gallaecia, near the promontory Nerium, which 
was called Celticum after them (now Gape Fin- 
isterre). 

Centum (Krjvalov anpov : now Kanaia or Ia- 
tar), the northwestern promontory of Eubcea, 
opposite Thermopylae, with a temple of Jupiter 
(Zeus) Cen£eus. 

CenchriLe (Keyxpecu). 1. (Now Kenkri), the 
eastern harbor of Corinth, on the Saronic Gulf, 
important for the trade and commerce with the 
East. — 2. A town in Argolis, south of Argos, on 
the road to Tegea. 

[Cenchrius {Keyxpiog), a. river of Ionia, flow- 
ing through the territory of Ephesus.] 

Cenomani, a powerful Gallic people, original- 
ly a branch of the Aulerci, crossed the Alps at 
an early period, and settled iu the north of ! taly 
in the couutry of Brixia, Verona, and Mantua, 
and extended north as far as the confines of 
Raetia. They were at constant feud with the 
neighboring tribes of the lnsubres, Boii, &c, aud 
hence usually assisted the Romans iu their wars 
with these people. 

Censorinus. 1. Oue of the thirty tyrants, 
assumed the purple at Bologna A.D. 270, but 
was shortly afterward put to death by his own 
soldiers. — 2. Author of a treatise eutitled de Die 
Natali, which treats of the generation of man, 
of his natal hour, of the influence of the stars 
and genii upon his career, and discusses the 
various methods employed for the division and 
calculation of time. The book is dedicated to 
Q. Cerellius, aud was composed A.D. 238. A 
fragment de Metris and lost tracts de Accentibus 
and de Geometria are ascribed to this Censori- 
nus. — Editions : By Havercamp, Lug. Bat, 
1743; by Gruber, Noremb., 1805. 

Censorinus, Marcius. 1. C, son of C. Mar- 
cius Rutilus, first plebeian dictator (B.C 356), 
was originally called Rutilus, and was the first 
member of the family who had the surname 
Censorinus. He was consul in B.C. 310, and 
conducted the war in Samuium. He was censor 
294, and a second time 265, the only instance in 
which a person held the office of censor twice. 
— 2. L., consul 149, the first year of the I bird 
Punic war, conducted the war against Carthage 
with his colleague M\ Manilius. — 3. C, one of 
the leaders of the Marian party, fought agaiust 
Sulla in the battle near the Colliue gate, was 
taken prisoner, and put to death by Sulla's order. 
Censorinus was one of the orators of his time, 
and versed in Greek literature. — 4. L., a parti- 
san of M. Antony, prastor 43, and consul 39. — 
5. C, consul B.C. 8, died in Asia A.D. 2, while 
in attendance upon C. Caesar, the grandson of 
Augustus. 

Centauri (Ktvravpoi), that is, the Bull-killers, 
were an ancient race, inhabiting Mount Pelion 
189 



OEKTIMANI. 



CEPHALUS. 



in Thessaly. They led a wild and savage life, 
and are hence called ffipec or -&/jpec in Homer. 
In later accounts they were represented as half 
horses and half men. Their origin is variously 
related. According to the most ancient account, 
Centaurus, the offspring of Ixion and a cloud, 
begot the Hippocentaurs by mixing with Mag- 
nesian mares. From most accounts it would 
appear that the Centaurs and Hippocentaurs 
were originally regarded as two distinct classes 
of beings, although the name of Centaurs is ap- 
plied to both by ancient as well as modern wri- 
ters. The Centaurs are particularly celebrated 
in ancient story for their light with the Lapitha?, 
which arose at the marriage-feast of Pirithous. 
This fight is sometimes placed in connection 
with a combat of Hercule3 with the Centaurs. 
It ended by the Centaurs being expelled from 
Iheir country, and taking refuge on Mount Pin- 
dus, on the frontiers of Epirus. Chiron is the 
most celebrated among the Centaurs. Vid. 
Chiron. "We know that hunting the bull on 
horseback was a national custom in Thessaly, 
and that the Thessalians were celebrated riders. 
Hence may have arisen the fable that the Cen- 
taurs were half men and half horses, just as the 
Americans, when they first saw a Spaniard on 
horseback, believed horse and man to be one 
being. The Centaurs were frequently repre- 
sented in ancient works of art, and generally as 
men from the head to the loins, while the re- 
mainder of the body is that of a horse with its 
four feet and tail. 

[Cextlma.ni ^Y.Kar6yxsipeg), " the hundred- 
hauded," the three giants Cottus, iEgseon or 
Briareus, and Gyges, sons of CGelus (Uranus) 
and Terra (Ge). They had a hundred hands and 
fifty heads, and were of extraordinary strength 
and terrible size. They helped Jupiter (Zeus) 
conquer the Titans, and had to guard the latter 
when cast, fettered, into Tartarus.] 

Centrites {KevTpirrtg : now Bedlis), a small 
river of Armenia, which it divided from the land 
of the Carduchi, north of Assyria. It rises in 
the mountains south of the Arsissa Palus (now 
Lake Van), and flows into the Tigris. 

[Centrones (Kevrpovec), an Alpine nation in 
Gallia ISarbonensis, through whose country ran 
the public route from Italy to Lugdunum in 
Gallia.] 

Centumalus, Fulvius. I, Cn., legate of the 
dictator M. Valerius Corvus B.C. SOI ; consul 
298, when he gained a victory over the Sam- 
nites ; and propraetor 295, when he defeated the 
Etruscans. — 2. C>\, consul 229, defeated the 
lUyrians subject to the queen Teuta. — 3. Cn., 
eurule aadile 214; preetor 213, with Suessula 
as his province; and consul 211; in the next 
year he was defeated by Hannibal near Her- 
donia in Apulia, and was killed in the battle. — 
4. M., praetor urbanus 192, superintended the 
preparations for the war against Antiochus the 
Great. 

Centum Cell^ (now Civita Vecchia), a sea- 
port town in Etruria, first beeame a place of im- 
portance under Trajan, who built a villa here 
and constructed an excellent harbor. It was 
destroyed by the Saracens in the ninth century, 
but was rebuilt on its ancient site, and was 
hence called Civita Vecchia. 

Centurip^ (rd. Kevropira, ai KtvrovoLTcai ■ 
190 



Kevropixivoc, in Thue. oi KevTopinec, Centuripl- 
I nus : now Centorbi), an ancient town of the Si- 
| culi in Sicily, at the foot of Mount iEtna, on the 
| road from Catana to Panormus, aud not far from 
the River Symaethus ; in its neighborhood a 
' great quantity of corn was grown, and it became 
under the Romans one of the most flourishing 
cities in the island. 

Ceos, also Cea or Cia (Keoc, Ion. Keoc : Keloc, 
Ion. K/yi'oc, Ceus : now Zea), an island in the 
iEgean Sea, one of the Cyclades, between the 
Attic promontory Sunium and the island Cyth- 
nus, celebrated for its fertile soil and its genial 
climate. It was inhabited by Ionians, and orig- 
inally contained four towns, Iulis, Carthaea, Co- 
ressus, and Poeeessa ; but the two latter perish- 
ed by an earthquake. Simonides was a native 
of Iulis in Ceos, whence we read of the Cea; 
munera nenice. (Hor., Carm., ii., 1, 38.) 

Cephale (Ketpa?.^), an Attic demus, on the 
right bank of the Erasinus, belonging to the 
tribe Acamantis. 

Cephallenia (K.e<t>a?J.7]v'ia, Ke<pa?>ijv'ta : Ks* 
(pa7.7.^x>, pi. Ke<pa?./S]vec : now Cephaloma), called 
by Homer Same (2a/i?/) or Samos (lufioc), the 
largest island in the Ionian Sea, separated from 
Ithaca on the east by a narrow channel, eon 
tains 848 square miles. It is said to have been 
originally inhabited by Taphians, and to have 
derived its name from the mythical Cephalus. 
Even in Homer its inhabitants are called Ce- 
phallenes, and are the subjects of Ulysses ; but 
the name Cephallenia first occurs in Herodotus. 
The island is very mountainous {Kai-aAoeaoi)) ; 
and the highest mountain, called jEnos, on 
which stood a temple of Jupiter (Zeus), rises 
more than four thousand feet above the sea. 
Cephallenia was a tetrapolis, containing the four 
towns Same, Pale, Cranii, and Proni. It 
never attained political importance. In the Per- 
sian wars the inhabitants of Pale are alone men- 
tioned. In the Peloponnesian war Cephallenia 
surrendered to the Athenians. Same ventured 
to oppose the Romans, but was taken by M. Ful- 
vius B.C. 189. In modern times the island was 
for a long while in possession of the Venetians, 
but is now one of the seven Ionian islands un- 
der the protection of Great Britain. 

Cephalozdium (Ke<pa?,otdioi> : Cephalcedita.- 
nus: now Cefali or Cephalic), & town on the north- 
ern coast of Sicily, in the territory of Himera. 

Cephalus (Ke(i>a?,oc). 1. Son of Mercury 
(Hermes) and Herse, was carried off by Aurora 
(Eos), who beeame by him the mother of Titho- 
nus in Syria. — 2. Son of Deion and Diomede, 
and husband of Procris or Procne, daughter of 
Erechtheus, whom he tenderly loved. He was 
beloved by Aurora (Eos), but as he rejected her 
advances from love to his wife, she advised him 
to try the fidelity of Procris. The goddess then 
metamorphosed bim into a stranger, and sent 
him with rich presents to his house. Procris 
was tempted by the brilliant presents to yield 
to the stranger, who then discovered himself to 
be her husband, whereupon she tied in shame 
to Crete. Diana (Artemis) made her a present 
of a dog and a spear, which were never to miss 
their object, and then sent her back to Cepha- 
lus in the disguise of a youth. In order to ob- 
tain this dog and spear, Cephalus promised to 
love the youth, who then made herself known 



OEPHEUS. 

to him as his wife Procris. This led to a rec- 
onciliation between them. Procris, however, 
still feared the lova of Aurora (Eos,) and there- 
fore jealously watched Cephalus when he went 
out huntiug, but on one occasion he killed her 
by accident with the never-erring spear. A 
somewhat dittVront version of the same story 
is given by Ovid. {Met., vii., 685, seq.) > Sub- 
sequently Ceplmlus fought with Amphitryon 
against the Teleboans, upon the conquest ^ of 
whom he was rewarded with the island which 
he called after his own name Cephalienia. — 3. 
A Syracusan, and father of the orator Lysias, 
came to Athens at the invitation of Pericles. 
He is one of the speakers in Plato's Republic. 
—4. An eminent Athenian orator of the Colly - 
tean demus, flourished B.C. 402. 

Cepheus (Kj^et'c). 1. King of ^Ethiopia, son 
of Belus, husbaud of Cassiepea, and father of 
Andromeda, was placed among the stars after 
his death. — 2. Sou of Aleus and Neaera or Cle- 
obule, one of the Argonauts. He was king of 
Tegea in Arcadia, and perished, with most of 
his sons, in au expedition against Hercules. 

Cephisia or Ckphissia (KTjQtola more correct 
than K7j<j)ioo'ia : Kij^iaievg : now Kivisia), one 
of the twelve Cecropiau towns of Attica, and 
afterward a demus belonging to the tribe Erech- 
theis, northeast of Athens, on the western slope 
of Mount Pentelicus. 

Cephisodorus (K?j<f>ia66upog). 1. An Athe- 
nian comic poet of the old comedy, flourished 
B.C. 402. [A few fragments of his comedies 
are given by Meiueeke, Fragm. Com. Grcec, vol. 
i., p. 484-6.] — 2. Au Athenian orator, a disci- 
ple of Isocrates, wrote an apology for Isocrates 
against Aristotle, entitled at npdc 'ApiaroreXy 
uvTcypatiaL 

Cephisodotus (KtjytnotSoToc;). 1. An Atheni- 
an general and orator, is mentioned on various 
occasions from B.C. 371 to 355. — 2. An Athe- 
nian sculptor, whose rafter W the first wife 
of Phocion, flourished 372. He belonged to that 
younger school of Attic artists who had aban- 
doned the stern and majestic beauty of Phidias, 
and adopted a more animated and graceful 
style. — 3. An Athenian sculptor, usually called 
the Younger, a eon of the great Praxiteles, 
flourished 300. 

Cephisophon (K?/tpLoo(pcjv), a friend of Eurip- 
ides, is said not only to have been the chief 
actor in his dramas, but also to have aided him 
with his advice in the composition of them. 

Cephisus or Cephissus (VLri^iaog, Krj<piaa6c). 
1. (Now Mavronero), the chief river in Phocis 
and Bceotia, rises near Lilaja in Phocis, flows 
through a fertile valley in Phocis and Boeotia, 
and falls into the Lake Copais, which is hence 
called Cephisis in the Iliad (v., 709). Vid. Co- 
pais. — 2. The largest river in Attica, rises in 
the western slope of Mount Pentelicus, and 
flows past Athens on the west into the Saronic 
Gulf near Phalerum.— [3. Another river of At- 
tica, in the territory of Eleusis, called, for dis- 
tinction's sake, C. Eleusinius.]— 4. There was 
also a river of this name in Argolis, Salatnis, 
Sicyonia, and Scyros. 

[Cepi (K//-ot, i. e ., the Gardens), a city ofj 
Asiatic Sarmatia, on the island formed by an 
arm of the River Anticites and the Maaotis (now I 
the island Taman) : it was a settlement of the ' 



CEROID AS. 

| Milesians, and probably called Kr/rroc from it* 
1 pleasant situation. 

Cer (Kyp), the personified necessity of death 
(Kjjp or Kypec -fravdroio). The Kr/pec are de- 
scribed by Homer as formidable, dark and hate- 
ful, because they carry off men to the joyless 
house of Hades. According to Hesiod, they are 
the daughters of Nyx (Night) and sisters of the 
Mcerae, and punish men for their crimes. 

Ceramus {t] Kepa/uoc : now Keramo), a Dorian 
seaport town on the northern side of the Cnid- 
ian Chersouesus, on the coast of Caria, from 
which the Ceramic Gulf (6 Kepafieacbe Kolnog : 
now Gulf of Kos, or Golfo di Stanco) took its 
name. Vid. Caria. 

Cerasus {Kepaaovg : Kepaoovv-tog) [ruins near 
Skefe ; the modern Kheresoun is the ancient 
Pharnacia, q. v.] : a flourishing colony of Sinope, 
on the coast of Poutus, at the mouth of a river of 
the same name ; chiefly celebrated as the place 
from which Europe obtained both the cherry 
and its name. Lucullus is said to have brought 
back plants of the cherry with him to Rome, 
but this refers probably only to some particular 
sorts, as the Romans seem to have had the tree 
much earlier. Cerasus fell into decay after the 
foundation of Pharnacia. 

Cer ata (rd Kepara), the Horns, a mountain 
on the frontiers of Attica and Megaris. 

Ceraunii Montes (Kepavvta oprj : now Khim- 
ara), a range of mountains extending from the 
frontier of Illyricum along the coast of Epirus, 
derived their name from the frequent thunder- 
storms which occurred among them (icepavvoc). 
These mountains made the coast of Epirus 
dangerous to ships. They were also called Aero- 
ceraunia, though this name was properly ap- 
plied to the promontory separating the Adriatic 
and Ionian Seas. The inhabitants of these 
mountains were called Ceraunii. 

Cerberus (Kep6epo$), the dog that guarded 
the entrance of Hades, is mentioned as early as 
the Homeric poems, but simply as "the dog," 
and without the name of Cerberus. (7?., viii., 
368 ; Od., xi., 623.) Hesiod calls him a son of 
Typhaon and Echidna, and represents him with 
fifty heads. Later writers describe him as a 
monster with only three heads, with the tail of 
a serpent, and with serpents round his neck. 
Some poets, again, call him many-headed or 
hundred-headed. The den of Cerberus is usu- 
ally placed on the further side of the Styx, at 
the spot where Charon landed the shades of the 
departed. 

Cercasorum, or -us, or -esura (KcpKuaupoc; 
7r6?uc, Herod. : KepKeaovpa, Strab. : now El-Ar- 
kas), a city of Lower Egypt, on the western bank 
of the Nile, at the point where the river divided 
into its three principal branches, the eastern 
or Pelusiac, the western or Canopic, and the 
northern between them. 

Cerckt.* or -ii (Kepnerat, probably the Cir- 
cassians), a people of Sarmatia Asiatica, beyond 
the Cimmerian Bosphorus, on the eastern coast 
of the Palus Mseotis (now Sea of Azov).. 

Cercetius, a mountain in Thessaly, part of 
the range of Pindus. 

[Cercidas (KepKtddc), a poet, philosopher, and 
legislator for his native city, Megalopolis. He 
was a disciple of Diogenes, whose death he re- 
corded in some Meliambic lines. He appears to 
191 



CERCINA. 



CETHEGUS, CORNELIUS. 



be the same person as Cercidas the Arcadian, 
who is mentioned by Demosthenes among those 
Greeks who, by their cowardice and corruption, 
enslaved their states to Philip.] 

Cercixa aod Cercixitis (KepKiva, Kepnivirte : 
now Karkenah ls^ Ramlah and Gherba) two low 
islands off the northern coast of Africa, in the 
mouth of the Lesser Syrtis, united by a bridge, 
and possessing a fine harbor. Cercina was the 
larger, and had on it a town of the same name. 

CercIne (KepKh'7] : now Kara-dagh), a mount- 
ain in Macedonia, between the Axius and Stry- 
mon, forming the boundary between Sintice and 
Pasonia. 

Ceecixitis (KepKivtric), a lake in Macedonia, 
near the mouth of the Strymon, through which 
this river flows. 

Ceecixium. a towa in Thessaly, on the Lake 
Boebe'is. 

Ceeco, Q. Ltjtatius, consul with A. Manlius 
Torquatus B.C. 241, in which year the first 
Punic war was brought to a close by the victory 
of C. Lutatius Catulus at the ./Egates. Cerco, 
in conjunction with his colleague, subdued the 
Falisci or people of Falerii, who revolted from 
the Romans. 

Cercopes (KepKOTrec), droll and thievish 
gnomes, robbed Hercules in his sleep, and were 
taken prisoners by him, and either given to Om- 
phale, or killed, or set free again. Some placed 
them at Thermopylae (Herod., vii., 216) ; but the 
comic poem Cercopes, which bore the name of 
Homer, probably placed them at (Echalia in Eu- 
bcea. Others transferred them to Lydia, or the 
islands called Pithecusae, which derived their 
name from the Cercopes who were changed into 
monkeys by Jupiter (Zeus) for having deceived 
him. 

Cercops (Kepnoip). 1. One of the oldest Or- 
phic poets, also called a Pythagorean, was the 
author of an epic poem " on the descent of Or- 
pheus to Hades." — 2. Of Miletus, the contem- 
porary and rival of Hesiod, is said to have been 
the author of an epic poem called jEgimius, 
which is also ascribed to Hesiod. 

Cercyon (Kepuvuv), son of Neptune (Posei- 
don) or Vulcan (Hephaestus), a cruel tyrant at 
Eleusis, put to death his daughter Alope, and 
killed all strangers whom he overcame in wrest- 
ling ; he was, in the end, conquered and slain by 
Theseus. 

Cerdylium (Kep6v?uov) a small town in Mac- 
edonia, on the right bank of the Strymon, op- 
posite Amphipolis. 

Cerealis, Petilius. 1. Served under Vettius 
Bolanus, in Britain, A.D. 61 ; was one of tbe 
generals who supported the claim of Vespasian 
to the empire, 69 ; suppressed the revolt of Ci 
vilis on the Rhine, 70 ; and was governor of 
Britain, 71, when he conquered a great part of 
the Brigantes. — [2. C.Anicius, consul desiguatus 
AD. 65, proposed in the senate, after the detec- 
tion of Piso's conspiracy, that a temple should 
be built to Nero as quickly as possible at the 
public expense. Next year he fell under Ne- 
ro's suspicions, was condemned, and put him- 
self to death.] 

Cereat^e, (now Cerretano), a town of the 
Hernici in Latium, between Sora and Anagnia. 

Ceres. Vid. Demeter. 

Cerilli (Cirella Vecchia), a town in Bruttium, 
192 



j on the coast, a little south of the mouth of the 

I Laus. 

Cerinthus (Kqptvdog), a town on the eastern 
! coast of Eubcea, on the River Budorus. 

Cerne (KspvTj : Kepvatoc : now probably Ar- 
guin), an island off the western coast of Africa, 
to which the Phoenicians appear to have traded. 
Its position is uncertain, and Strabo even denied 
its existence.. 

Ceron, a fountain in Histiaeotis in Thessaly, 
said to have made all the sheep black which 
drank of it. 

Cerretani, au Iberian people in Hispania 
Tarraconensis, inhabited the modern Cerdagne 
in the Pyrenees, and were subsequently divid- 
ed into the two tribes of the Juliani and Augus- 
tani ; they were celebrated for their hams. 

Cersobleptes (Kepoo6?i.ETTTTjc), son of Cotys, 
king of Thrace, on whose death, in B.C. 358, he 
inherited the kingdom in conjunction with Beri- 
sades and Amadocus, who were probably his 
brothers. As an ally of the Athenians, Cerso- 
bleptes became involved in war with Philip, by 
whom he was frequently defeated, and was at 
length reduced to the condition of a tributary, 
343. 

Cersus (Kepaoc: now Merkes), a river of Ci- 
licia, flowing through the Pylae Syro-Cilieiae, 
into the eastern side of the Gulf of Issus. 

[Certema, a fortified town of the Celtiberi in 
Hispania Tarraconensis, captured by Tiberius 
Gracchus.] 

Certonium (Kepruvtov), a town in Mysia, men- 
tioned only by Xenophon (Anab., vii., 8, § 8). 

Cervidius Scjsvola. Vid. Sc^eyola. 

[Cerynites, a river of Aehaia, flowing from 
the mountain Cerynea in Arcadia.] 

Ceryx (KypvZ), an Attic hero, son of Mercury 
(Hermes) and Aglauros, from whom the priestly 
family of the Ceryces at Athens derived their 
origin. 

[Cestrine (KeG-pivr]), a district of Epirus, 
said to have derived its name from Cestriuus, 
q. v.] 

[Cestrinus (KeGrplvoc), son of Hellenus and 
Andromache, succeeded his father in the sov- 
ereignty of Epirus.] 

Oestrus (Kearpoc: now Ak-su). a consider- 
able river of Pamphylia, flowing from the Tau- 
rus southward into the Mediterranean. It was 
navigable in its lower course at least as far as 
the city of Peige, which stood on its western 
bank, sixty stadia (ten geographical miles) above 
its mouth. 

Cetei (K^TEioi). a people of Mysia, the old in- 
habitants of the country about Pergamus, men- 
tioned by Homer (Od., xi., 521). Their name 
is evidently connected with that of the River 
Cetius. 

Cethegus, Cornelius, an ancient patrician 
family. They seem to have kept up an old 
fashion of wearing their arms bare, to which 
Lucan (ii., 543) alludes when he describes the 
associate of Catiline by the words cxsertique ma- 
nun veaayia Cethegi. [Horace, however, by his 
cinctuti Cethegi (Ars Poet., 50), *refers to tbe 
earlier members of the family.] 1. M., curule 
szdi'e and pontifex maximus B.C. 213 ; praetor 
211, wheu he had the charge of Apulia; censor 
209, and consul 204. Iu the next year he com- 
manded as proconsul in Cisalpine Gaul, where 



CETIUS. 



CHALCEDON. 



he defeated Mago, brother of Hannibal. He 
died 196. His eloquence was rated very high, 
so that Ennius gave him the name of Suadce me- 
dulla, and Horace twice refers to him as an an- 
cient authority for the usage of Latin words 
(Epist, ii., 2. lit; Ars. Poet, 50).— 2. C, com- 
manded in Spain as procousul 200 ; was aedile 
199 ; consul 197, when he defeated the Insu- 
brians aud Cenomanians in Cisalpine Gaul ; and 
censor 194.— 3. P., curule aedile 187, praetor 185, 
and consul 181. The grave of Numa was dis- 
covered in his consulship. — 4. M., consul 160, 
when he drained a part of the Pontine Marshes. 
— 5. P., a friend of Marius, proscribed by Sulla 
88, but in 83 went over to Sulla and was par- 
doned. — 6. C, one of Catiline's crew, was a 
profligate from his early youth. When Catiline 
left Rome, 63, after Cicero's first speech, Cethe- 
gus stayed behiud under the orders of Lentulus. 
His charge was to murder the leading senators ; 
but the tardiness of Lentulus prevented any 
thing being done. Cethegus was arrested and 
condemned to death with the other conspira- 
tors. 

Cetius (KijTeiog), a small river of Mysia, flow- 
ing from the north through the district of Ela- 
itis, and falling into the Caicus close to Per- 
gamus. 

[Ceto (Kr)ru>), daughter of Pontus and Gaea 
(Terra), wife of Phorcys ; mother of the Graeae 
and of the Gorgons.] 

Ceutrones or Centrones, a people in Gallia 
Belgica, dependents of the Nervii. 

Ceyx (Kyi)!;), king of Trachys, husband of 
Alcyone. His death is differently related. Vid. 
Alcyone. He was the father of Hippasus, who 
fell fighting as the ally of Hercules. 

[Chaa (Xda : now Chaiappa), a city of Tri- 
phylian Elis, in the plain of ^Epasium : it was 
probably the $ eta of Homer (//., vii., 135). Vid. 
Pheia.J 

Chaboras. Vid. Aborrhas. 

Chabrias (Xafywac). a celebrated Athenian 
general. In B.C. 392 he succeeded Iphicrates 
in the command of the Athenian forces at Cor- 
inth. In 388 he assisted Evagoras in Cyprus 
against the Pei 'siaus. In 378 he was one of the 
commanders of the forces seut to the aid of 
Thebes against Agesilaus, when he adopted for 
the first time that manoeuvre for which he be- 
came so celebrated, ordering his men to await 
the attack with their spears pointed against the 
enemy and their shields resting on one knee. 
A statue was afterward erected at Athens to 
Chabrias in this posture. In 376 he gained an 
important victory off Naxos over the Lacedae- 
monian fleet under the command of Pollis. In 
361 he took the command of the naval force of 
Tachos, kiug of Egypt, who was in rebellion 
against Persia. In 358 he was sent as the 
Athenian commander in Thrace, but was com- 
pelled by Charidemus to make a peace unfavor- 
able to Athens. On the breaking out of the 
Social war in 357, Chabrias commanded the 
Athenian fleet At the siege of Chios he sailed 
into the harbor before the rest of the fleet, and, 
when his ship was disabled, he refused to save 
his life by abandoning it, aud fell fighting. 
Chorea, C. Cassius, tribune of the praeto- 
rian cohorts, formed the conspiracy by which 
the Emperor Caligula was slain, A.D. 41. Chae- 
13 



rea was put to death by Claudius upon his ac- 
cession. 

[Ch^erecrates (XcupeicpaTTjc), a disciple of 
Socrates, who is well spoken of by Xeuophon 
in an enumeration of those whose lives testi- 
fied to the excellence of the instruction of Soc- 
rates (Mem., i., 2. § 48).] 

Ch^remon (Xatp7}fMjv). 1. One of the most 
celebrated of the later tragic poets at Athens, 
flourished B.C. 380. He is erroneously called 
a comic poet by some writers. There are three 
epigrams ascribed to Chseremon in the Greek 
Anthology. [The fragments of his plays have 
been collected and published by Bartsch, Mo- 
gunt., 1843, 4to.] — 2. Of Alexandrea, a Stoic 
philosopher, chief librarian of the Alexandrean 
library, was afterward called to Rome, and be* 
came the preceptor of Nero, in conjunction with 
Alexander of iEgae. He wrote a history of 
Egypt, on Hieroglyphics, on Comets, and a 
grammatical work. Martial (xi., 56) wrote an 
epigram upon him. [The fragments of Chae- 
remon are given by Miiller, Fragrn. Hist. Grcec, 
vol. iii., p. 495-99.] 

Ch^erephon (Xaipstpuv), a well-known dis- 
ciple of Socrates, was banished by the thirty 
tyrants, and returned to Athens on the restora- 
tion of democracy, B.C. 403. He was dead 
when the trial of Socrates took place, 399. 

[Ch^erippus {Xaipi-Kiroc;), a Greek, a friend of 
Cicero and his brother Quiutus, whom he ac- 
companied to his province of Asia.] 

Chaeronea (Xaipuveia : Xaipuvevc : now Ca- 
puma), the Homeric Arne according to Pausa- 
nias, a town in Bceotia on the Cephisus, near 
the frontier of Phocis, memorable for the defeat 
of the Athenians by the Boeotians, B.C. 447, 
still more for Philip's victory over the Greeks, 
338, and for Sulla's victory over the army of 
Mithradates, 86. Chaeronea was the birth-place 
of Plutarch. Several remains of the ancient 
city are to be seen at Capuma, more particu- 
larly a theatre excavated in the rock, an aque- 
duct, and the marble lion (broken in pieces), 
which adorned the sepulchre of the Boeotians 
who fell at the battle of Chaeronea. 

Chal^eum (Xdlacov : XaAalog), a port-town 
of the Locri Ozolae on the Crissaean Gulf, on 
the frontiers of Phocis. 

Chalastra (XaldoTpa, in Herod. XaAeorpij : 
XaAaarpaiog : now Gulacia), a town in Mygdo- 
nia in Macedonia, at the mouth of the River 
Axius. 

Chalce, or -m, or -ia (Xuakt}, XaAnat, XaAKta : 
XaAnaloc or -ltt)c: now Charki), an island of 
the Carpathian Sea, near Rhodes, with a town 
of the same name, and a temple of Apollo. 

Chalcedon (XaAK7jd6v, more correctly KaAxv 
66v : XaAKTjdovLo? : ruins, now Chalkedon, Greek ; 
Kadi-Kioi, Turk.), a Greek city of Bithynia, on 
the coast of the Propontis at the entrance of the 
Bosporus, nearly opposite to Byzantium, was 
founded by a colony from Megara in B.C. 685i 
After a long period of independence (only in- 
terrupted by its capture by the Persians and its 
recovery by the Athenians), it became subject 
to the kings of Bithynia, and suffered by the 
transference of most of its inhabitants to the 
city of Nicomedia (B.C. 140). The Romans 
restored its fortifications, and made it the chief 
city of the province of Bithynia, or Pontica 
193 



CHALCIDICE. 



CHAONES. 



Prima. After various fortunes under the em- 
pire, it was entirely destroyed by the Turks. 
The fourth oecumenical council of the Church 
met here, A.D. 451. 

Chalcidice (Xa?M6iKij). 1. A peninsula, in 
Macedonia, between the Thermaic and Strymo- 
nic gulfs, runs out into the sea like a three-prong- 
ed fork, terminating in three smaller peninsulas, 
Pallexe, Sithoxia, and Acte or Athos. It de- 
rived its name from Chalcidian colonists. Vid. 
Chalcis, No. 1. — [2. A district of Syria. Vid. 
Chalcis, No. 3.] 

Chalcidius, a Platonic philosopher, who lived 
probably in the sixth century of the Christian 
era, translated into Latin the Timaeus of Plato, 
on which he likewise wrote a voluminous com- 
mentary ; edited by Meursius, Leyden, 1617, 
and by Fabricius, Hamburg. IT 18, at the end of 
the second volume of the works of Hippolytus. 

Chalcicecus (Xa?iKtoiKoc), " the goddess of 
the brazen house," a surname of Minerva (Athe- 
na) at Sparta, from the brazen temple which she 
had in that city. 

Chalcis (Xa/vac : Xa/.Kidevr, Chalcidensis). 
L (Now Egripo or Negroponte), the principal 
town of Eubcea, situated on the narrowest part 
of the Euripus, and united with the main land by 
a bridge. It was a very ancient town, original- 
ly inhabited by Abantes or Curetes, and colo- 
nized by Attic Ionians under Cothus. Its flour- 
ishing condition at an early period is attested 
by the numerous colonies which it planted in 
various parts of the Mediterranean. It found- 
ed so many cities in the peninsula in Macedonia 
between the Strymonic and Thermaic Gulfs, that 
the whole peninsula was called Chalcidice. In 
Italy it founded Cumse, and in Sicily Naxos. 
Chalcis was usually subject to Athens during 
the greatness of the latter city, and afterward 
passed into the hands of the Macedonians, An- 
tiochus, Mithradates, and the Romans. It was 
a place of great military importance, as it com- 
manded the navigation between the north and 
south of Greece, and hence it was often taken 
and retaken by the different parties contending 
for the supremacy in Greece. The orator Isaeu's 
and the poet Lycophron were born at Chalcis. 
and Aristotle died here. — 2. (Now Galata), a 
town in JStolia, at the mouth of the Evenus, 
situated at the foot of the mountain Chalcis, 
and hence also called Hypochalcis. — 3. (Now 
JCinnesrin, ruins), a city of Syria, in a fruitful 
plain, near the termination of the River Chalus ; 
the chief city of the district of Chalcidice, which 
lay to the east of the Orontes. — 4. A city of 
Syria, on the Belus, in the plain of Marsyas. 

Chalcocoxdyles, or, by contraction, Chal- 
coxdvles, Laoxicus or Nicolaus, a Byzantine 
historian, flourished A.D. 1446, and wrote a his- 
tory of the Turks and of the later period of the 
Byzantine empire, from the year 1298 down to 
the conquest of Corinth and the invasion of the 
Peloponnesus by the Turks in 1463, thus in- 
cluding the capture of Constantinople in 1453 ; 
edited by Fabrot, Paris, 1650. [It is also in- 
cluded in the new edition of the Byzantine his- 
torians, and edited by Imm. Bekker. Bonn, 
1843.] 

[Chalcodox {Xcl\ku6uv), king of the Abantes 
in^Euboea, father of Elpenor, and one of the 
suitors of Helen.] 
194 



[Chalcox (Xu?.kuv), a Myrmidon, father of 
Bathycles.] 

Chald^ea {Xa?.6dia : Xa/.daioc), in the nar- 
rower sense, was a province of Babylonia, about 
the lower course of the Euphrates, the border 
of the Arabian Desert, and the head of the Per- 
sian Gulf. It was intersected by numerous 
canals, and was extremely fertile. In a wider 
sense, the term is applied to the whole of Baby- 
lonia, and even to the Babylonian empire, on ac- 
count of the supremacy which the Chaldaeans 
acquired at Babylon. Vid. Babylon. Xeno- 
phon mentions Chaldaeans in the mountains 
north of Mesopotamia ; and we have other 
statements respecting this people, from which 
it is very difficult to deduce a clear view of their 
early history. The most probable opinion is, 
that their original seat was in the mountains- 
of Armenia and Kurdistan, whence they de- 
scended into the plains of Mesopotamia and 
Babylonia, Respecting the Chaldaeans as the 
ruling class in the Babylonian monarchy, vid. 
Babylon. 

[Chaloxitis (XaAuvZrig), a district in the 
southeast of Assyria, around Mount Zagros, 
with a city called Chala.~] 

Chalus (XaAoc : now Koweik), a river of 
Northern Syria, flowing south past Bercea and 
Chalcis, and terminating in a marshy lake. 

Chalybes (Xd?,v6ec), a remarkable Asiatic 
people, about whom we find various statements 
in the ancient writers. They are generally 
represented, both in the early poetic legends 
and in the historical period, as dwelling on the 
southern shore of the Black Sea, about The- 
miscrya and the Thermodon (and probably to a 
wider extent, for Herodotus clearly mentions 
them among the nations west of the Halys), 
and occupying themselves in the working of 
iron. Xenophon mentions Chalybes in the 
mountains on the borders of Armenia and Me- 
sopotamia, who seem to be the same people 
that he elsewhere calls Chaldaeans ; and sev- 
eral of the ancient geographers regarded the 
Chalybes and Chaldaei as originally the same 
people. 

Chalybox (Xa?.v6uv : Old Testament Hel- 
bon,) a considerable city of Northern Syria, 
probably the same as Bercea. The district 
about it was called Chalybonitis. 

Chameleon" (Xa/zai/iuv), a Peripatetic phi- 
losopher of Heraclea on the Pontus, one of the 
immediate disciples of Aristotle, wrote works 
on several of the ancient Greek poets, and like- 
wise on philosophical subjects. 

Chamavi, a people in Germany, who were 
compelled by the Roman conquests to change 
their abodes several times. They first appear 
in the neighborhood of the Rhine, but afterward 
migrated east, defeated the Bructeri, and set- 
tled between the Weser and the Harz. At a 
later time they dwelt on the Lower Rhine, and 
are mentioned as auxiliaries of the Franks. 

Chaoxes (Xuovec), a Pelasgian people, one of 
the three communities which inhabited Epirus, 
were at an early period in possession of the 
whole of the country, but subsequently dwelt 
along the coast from the River Thyamis to the 
Acroceraunian promontory, which district was 
therefore called Chaoxia. By the poets Chao 
nius is used as equivalent to Epirot 



CHAOS. 



CHARIS. 



Chaos (Xuoc), the vacant and infinite space 
which existed, according to the ancient cosmog- 
onies, previous to the creation of the world, and 
out of which the gods, men, and all things arose. 
Chaos was called the mother of Erebos and Nyx. 

Chaeadra (XapdSpa : Xapadpalog). 1. A town 
in Phocis, on the Hirer Cbaradrus, situated on 
an eminence not far from LilaBa. — 2. A town in 
Epirus, northwest of Ambracia. — 3. A town in 
Hessenia, built by Pelops. 

Chaeadeus (Xdpadpoc). 1. A small river in 
Phocis, a tributary of the Cephisus. — 2. A small 
river in Argolis, a tributary of the Inachus. — 3. 
A small river in Messenia, rises near (Echalia. 
— [4. A small stream of Achaia, near Argyre, 
now Velvitsi.] 

Chaeax (Xa'pa£), of Pergamus, an historian, 
wrote a work in forty books, called 'E/lAr/vua, 
and another named XpoviKu. [The fragments 
of his works have been collected by Miiller, 
Fragm. Hist. Grac, vol. iii., p. 636-45.] 

Chaeax (Xdpa%, i. e., a palisaded camp : Xapa- 
KTjvus), the name of several cities, which took 
their origin from military stations. The most re- 
markable of them stood at the mouth of the Ti- 
gris. Vid. Alexanueea, No. 4. There were 
others, which only need a bare mention, in the 
Chersonesus Taurica, iu Northern Media, near 
Celaeuae in Phrygia, in Corsica, and on the Great 
Syrtis in Africa, and a few more. 

Chaeaxus (Xdpa^og) of Mytilene, son of Sca- 
maudrouymus and brother of Sappho, fell in 
love with Rhodopis. 

Chaees (Xdprjc). 1. Au Athenian general, 
who for a loug series of years contrived by pro- 
fuse corruption to maintain his influence with 
the people, in spite of his very disreputable 
character. In B.C. 367 he was seat to the aid 
of the Phliasians, who were hard pressed by the 
Arcadiaus and Argiv es, and he succeeded in 
relieving them. In the Social war, after the 
death of Chabrias, 356, he had the commaud of 
the Athenian fleet along with Iphicrates and 
Timotheus. His colleagues having refused, in 
consequence of a storm, to risk au engagement, 
Chares accused them to the people, aud they 
were recalled. Beiug now left in the sole com- 
mand, and being in want of money, he entered 
into the service of Artabazus, the revolted sa- 
trap of Western Asia, but was recalled by the 
Atheuians on the eomplaint of Artaxerxes III. 
In the Olynthian war, 349, he commanded the 
mercenaries sent from Athens to the aid of 
Olynthus. In 340 he commanded the force 
sent to aid Byzantium against Philip; but he 
effected nothing, and was accordingly super- 
seded by Phocion. Iu 338 he was oue of the 
Athenian commaudeis at the battle of Chaaro- 
nea. When Ah -xander invaded Asia in 334, 
Chares was living at Sigeum ; and in 333 he 
commanded for Darius at Mytilene.— 2. Of Myt- 
ilene, an officer at the court of Alexander the 
Great, wrote a history of Alexander in ten 
books. [His fragments are given by Geier in 
his Scriptores Jiist. Alexandra, Lips., 1844, p. 
293-308.]— 3. Of Liudus in Rhodes, a statuary 
in bronze, the favorite pupil of Lysippus, flour- 
ished B.C. 290. His chief work was the statue 
of the Suu, which, under the name of " The 
Colossus of Rhodes," was celebrated as one of 
the seven wonders of the world. Its height 



was upward of one hundred and five English 

feet ; it was twelve years in erecting, B.C. 292- 
280, and cost three hundred talents. It stood 
at the entrance of the harbor of Rhodes, but 
there is no authority for the statement that its 
legs extended over the mouih of the harbor. It 
was overthrown and broken to pieces by an 
earthquake fifty-six years after its erection, B. 
C. 224. The fragments remained on the ground 
eight hundred aud ninety-six years, till they 
were sold by the general of the Calif Othman 
IV. to a Jew of Emesa, who carried them away 
on nine hundred camels, A.D. 672. 

Chaeicles (XaptKl7jc). 1. An Athenian dem- 
agogue, son of Apollodorus, was one of the 
commissioners appointed to investigate the af- 
fair of the mutilation of the Hermse, B.C. 415 
was one of the commanders of the Athenian 
fleet, 413; and one of the thirty tyrants on the 
capture of Athens by Lysander, 404. — 2. An 
eminent physician at Rome, attended the Em- 
peror Tiberius. 

Chaeiclo {XapcK?,6). 1. A nymph, daughter 
of Apollo, wife of the Centaur Chiron, and moth- 
of Carystus and Ocyroe. — 2. A nymph, wife of 
Eueres and mother of Tiresias. 

Chaeidemus (XaptdTjpog). 1. Of Oreus in Eu- 
bcea, of mean origin, became the captain of a 
band of mercenaries, and served in this capa- 
city under the Athenian generals Iphicrates and 
Timotheus. He next entered the service of the 
satrap Artabazus, who had revolted against Ar- 
taxerxes HI., aud subsequently of Cotys, king 
of Thrace, whose daughter he married. On the 
murder of Cotys, 358, Charidemus adhered to 
the cause of his son Cersobleptes, and on be- 
j half of the latter carried on the struggle with 
the Atheuians for the possession of the Cherso- 
j nesus. In 349 he was appointed by the Atheni- 
j ans commander in the Olynthian war, but next 
year was superseded and replaced by Chares. 
— 2. An Athenian, one of the orators whose sur- 
reuder was required by Alexander in B.C. 335, 
after the destruction of Thebes, fled to Asia, 
! and took refuge with Darius, by whose orders 
; he was put to death, 333, shortly before the bat- 
j tie of Issus. 

Chaeilaus or Chaeillus {Xapilaog, Xdpi'k- 
\ ?.og), king of Sparta, son of Polydectes, is said 
j to have received his name from the general joy 
excited by the justice of his uncle Lycurgus 
when he placed him, yet a new-born infant, on 
the royal seat, and bade the Spartans acknowl- 
edge him for their king. He carried on war 
against Argos and Tegea ; he was taken pris- 
oner by the Tegeans, but was dismissed with- 
out ransom on giving a promise (which he did 
not keep) that the Spartans should abstain in 
future from attacking Tegea. 

Chaeis (Xdpt$y the personification of Grace 
and Beauty. In the Iliad (xviii., 382) Charis 
is described as the wife of Vulcan (Hephsestus), 
but in the Odyssey Venus (Aphrodite) appears 
as the wife of Vulcan (Hephaestus), from which 
we may infer, if not the identity of Aphrodite 
and Charis, at least a olose connection in the 
I notions entertained about the two divinities. 
The idea of personified grace and beauty was 
at an eady period divided into a plurality of be- 
ings, and even iu the Homeric poems the plural 
Charites occurs several times. The Charites, 
195. 



CHARISIUS. 



CHAUCI. 



called Gratia by the Romans, are usually de- 
scribed as the daughters of Jupiter (Zeus), and 
as three in number, namely, Euphrosyne, Aglaia, 
and Thalia. The names of the Charites suffi- 
ciently express their character. They were the 
goddesses who enhanced the enjoyments of life 
by refinement and gentleness. They are most- 
ly described as in the service of other divini- 
ties, and they lend their grace and beauty to 
every ihiug that delights and elevates gods and 
men. The gentleness and gracefulness which 
they impart to man's ordinary pleasures are ex- 

gressed by their moderating the exciting in- 
ueuce of wine (Hor., Carm., iii., 19, 15), and by 
their accompanying Venus (Aphrodite) and Cu- 
pid (Eros). Poetry, however, is the art which 
is especially favored by them, and hence they 
■are the friends of the Muses, with whom they 
live together in Olympus. In early times the 
"Charites were represented dressed, but after- 
ward their figures were always naked : speci- 
mens of both representations of the Charites 
are still extant. They appear unsuspicious 
maidens in the full bloom of life, and they usu- 
ally embrace each other. 

Chaeisius. 1. Aurelius Arcadius, a Ro- 
man jurist, lived in the reign of Constautiue 
the Great, and wrote three works, De Testibus, 
De Muneribus civilibus, and De Officio Prcefecti 
prcetorio, all of which are cited in the Digest. — 
2. Flavius Sosjpater, a Latin grammarian, who 
flourished A.D. 400, author of a treatise in five 
books, drawn up for the use of his son, entitled 
Iristitutiones Grammaticte, which has come dowu 
to us in a very imperfect state. Edited by 
Putschius in Grammaticte Latino? Auctores An- 
tigui, Hauov., 1605, aud by Lindemann, in Cor- 
pus Grammat. Latin. Veterum, Lips., 1840. 
Charites. Vid. Charis. 

Chariton (XapiTov), of Aphrodisias, a town 
of Caria, the author of a Greek romance, in 
eight books, on the Loves of Chaereas and Cai- 
lirrhoe. The name is probably feigned (from 
%apic and 'A<j>pod'iT7]), as the time and position 
of the author certainly are. He represents him- 
self as the secretary of the orator Athenagoras, 
evidently referring to the Syracusan orator 
mentioned by Thucydides (vi., 35, 36) as the 
political opponent of Hermocrates. Nothing is 
known respecting the real life or the time of 
the author; but he probably did not live earlier 
than the fifth century after Christ. Edited by 
D'Orville, 3 vols., Amst., 1750, with a valuable 
commentary ; reprinted with additional notes 
by Beck, Lips., 1783. 

Charmande (Xapfiuvdr] : near Haditha or Hit), 
a great city of Mesopotamia, on the Euphrates. 

[Charmadas, otherwise called Charmides. 
Vid. Charmides, No. 2.] 
<Oharmides (Xapfitdnc). 1. An Athenian, sou 

'of Glaucon, cousin to Critias, and uncle by the 
mother's side to Plato, who introduces him in 

' the dialogue which bears his name as a very 
young man at the commencement of the Pelo- 

, ponnesiau war. In B.C. 404 he was one of the 
Ten, and was slain fighting against Thrasybu- 

■lus at the Piraeus.— 2. Called also Charmadas 

*by Cicero, a friend of Philo of Larissa, in con- 
Junction with whom he is sad by some to have j 
been the founder of a fourth academy. He I 
ffiouri&ed B.C. 100. 

196 



[Charminus (Xap/xlvoc), a naval commander 
of the Athenians, who was defeated by the 
Spartan admiral Astyochus near Syme, B.C. 
411, with a loss of six ships. — 2. A Lacedaemo- 
nian, was sent by Thibron, the Spartan harmost 
in Asia, to the Greeks who had served under 
Cyrus, then at Selymbria and in the service of 
Seuthes, to induce them to enter the Lacedaemo- 
nian service against Persia, B.C. 399.] 

Charon (Xuptov). 1. Son of Erebos, con- 
veyed in his boat the shades of the dead across 
the rivers of the lower world. For this service 
he was paid with an obolus or danace, which 
coin was placed in the mouth of every corpse 
previous to i(s burial. He is represented as an 
aged man with a dirty beard and a mean dress. 
— 2. A distinguished Thebao, concealed Pe- 
lopidas and his fellow-conspirators in his house 
when they returned to Thebes with the view of 
delivering it from the Spartans, B.C. 379. — 3. 
Au historian of Lampsacus, flourished B.C. 464, 
and wrote works on ^Ethiopia, Persia, Greece, 
<kc, the fragments of which are collected by 
Muller, Fragm. Histor. Grcec, vol. i., p. 32-35, 
Paris, 1841. 

Charondas (Xapuvdac), a law-giver of Cafana, 
who legislated for his own and the other cities 
of Chalcidian origin in Sicily and Italy. His 
date is uncertain. He is said by some to have 
been a disciple of Pythagoras ; and he must 
have lived before the time of Anaxilaus, tyrant 
of Rhegium, B.C. 494-476, for the Rhegians 
used the laws of Charondas till they were abol- 
ished by Anaxilaus. The latter fact sufficiently 
refutes the common account that Charondas 
drew up a code of laws for Thurii, since this 
city was not founded till 443. A tradition re- 
lates that Charondas one day forgot to lay aside 
his sword before he appeared in the assembly, 
thereby violating one of his own laws, and that^ 
on being reminded of this by a citizen, he ex- 
claimed, " By Zeus, I will establish it," and im- 
mediately stabbed himself. The laws of Cha- 
rondas were probably in verse. 

Charops (Xdpoip). 1. A chief among the 
Epirots, sided with the Romans in their war 
with Philip V., B.C. 198.— 2. A grandson of the 
above. He received his education at Rome, 
aud after his return to his own country adhered 
to the Roman cause ; but he is represented by 
Polybius as a monster of cruelty. He died at 
Brundisium, 157. — [3. Son of the Trojan Hip- 
pasus, slain by Ulysses. — 4. Son of an JEschy- 
lus, who was the first decennial archou in Ath- 
ens, B.C. 752.] 

Charybdis. Vid. Sotlla. 

Chasuari, or Chasuarii, or ChatttJarii, a 
people of Germany, allies or dependents of the 
Cherusci. Their position is uncertain. They 
dwelt north of the Ciiatti ; and in later times 
they appear between the Rhine aud the Maas 
as a part of the Franks. 

Chatti. Vid. Catti. 

Chauci or Cauci, a powerful people in the 
northeast of Germany, between the Amisia (now 
Ems) and the Albis (now Elbe), divided by the 
Visurgis (now Weser), which flowed through 
their territory, iuto Majores and Minores, the 
former west and the latter east of that river. 
They are described by Tacitus as the noblest 
aud the justest of the German tribes. They 



CHELIDON. 



CHIMERA. 



formed an alliance with the Romans A.D. 5, and 
assisted the latter iu their wars against the Che- 
rusci ; but this alliance did not last long. They 
were at war with the Romans in the reigns of 
Claudius and Nero, but were never subdued. 
They are mentioned for the last time in the 
third century, when they devastated Gaul, but 
their name subsequently became merged in the 
general name of baxous. 

Chelidon, the mistress of C. Verres, often 
mentioned by Cicero. 

Chelidonis (Xe?x6ovLc), wife of Cleonymus, 
to whom she proved unfaithful in consequence 
of a passion for Acrotatus, son of Areus I. 

ChelidonLe Insula (Xe'Aidoviat vyaoi : now 
Khelidoni), a group of five (Strabo only mentions 
three) small islauds, surrounded by dangerous 
shallows, off the promontory called Hiera or 
Chelidonia (now Khelidoni), on the southern 
coast of Lycia. 

Chelonatas (Xe?.uvdrac : now Cape Tornese), 
a promontory in Elis, opposite Zacynthus, the 
most westerly point of the Peloponnesus. 

Chemmis, afterward Panopolis (Xe/^f, Ua- 
vdrco/ug- : Xeftftcrng : ruins at Ekhmim). 1. A 
great city of the Thebais, or Upper Egypt, on 
the eastern bank of the Nile, celebrated for its 
manufacture of linen, its stone-quarries, and its 
temples of Pan and Perseus. It was the birth- 
place of the poet Nonuus. — [2. An island in a 
deep lake near the city Buto, in Lower Egypt, 
containing a spacious temple of Apollo. He- 
rodotus, iu speaking of it. says that the Egyp- 
tians told him that it was a floating island, but 
that he, for his part, never saw it float about 
or even move-.] 

Chenoboscia (XT/rnCorrKLa : ruius at Kasees- 
Said), a city of Upper Egypt, on the right bank 
of the Nile, opposite Diotpeto Parva. 

Cueops (Xeo\p), an rarij king of Egypt, god- 
less and tyrannical, reigned fifty years, and 
built the first and largest pyramid by the com- 
pulsory labor of his subjects. 

Chephren (Xefpyv), king of Egypt, brother 
and successor of Cheops, whose example of 
tyranny he followed, reigned fifty-six years, and 
built the second pyramid. The Egyptians so 
hated the memory of these brothers, that they 
called the pyramids, not by their name, but by 
that of Philition, a shepherd who at that time 
fed his flocks near the place. 

Chersiphron (Xepoicppuv) or Ctesiphon, an 
architect of Cnosus in Crete, in conjunction 
with his sou Metagenes, built, or commenced 
building, the great temple of Diana (Artemis) 
at Ephesus. He flourished B.C. 560. 

Chersonesus (XepodvriGos, Att. Xepp'ovvcoc), 
" a land-island." that is, " a peninsula" (from 
Xepcoc, "land,'" and vyaoc, "island"). 1. Ch. 
Thracica (now Peninsula of the Dardanelles or 
of Gallipoli), usually calied at Athens "The 
Chersonesus" without any distinguishing epi- 
thet, the narrow slip of laud, four'hundred and 
twenty stadia in length, running between the 
Hellespont and the Gulf of Melas, and connect- 
ed with the Thracian main land by an isthmus, 
which was fortified by a wall thirty-six stadia 
across, near Cardia. The Chersonese was col- 
onized by the Athenians under Miltiades, the 
contemporary of Pisistratus.— 2. Taurica or 
Scythica (now Crimea), the peninsula between 



the Poutus Euxinus, the Cimmerian Bosporus, 
and the Palus Maeotis, united to the main land 
by an isthmus forty stadia in width. The an- 
cients compared this peninsula with the Pelo- 
ponnesus both in form and size. It produced a 
great quantity of com, which was exported to 
Athens and other parts of Greece. The east- 
ern part of the peninsula was called Tpnxtn or 
the Rugged (Herod., iv., 99). Respecting the 
Greek kingdom established in this country, see 
Bosporus. There was a town on the south- 
ern coast of this peninsula called Chersonesus, 
founded by the inhabitants of the Pontic Hera- 
clea, and situated on a small peninsula, called 
r] fiiKpu Xep., to distinguish it from the larger, 
of which it formed a part. — 3. Cimbrica (now 
Jutland). Vid. Cimbri. — [4. Chersonesus Au- 
rea. Vid. Aurea Chersonesus.] — 5. (Now 
Cape Chersonisi), a promontory in Argolis, be- 
tween Epidaurus and TroGzen. — 6. (Now Cher- 
soneso), a town in Crete, on the Promontory 
Zephyrium, the harbor of Lyctus in the interior. 

Cherusci, the most celebrated of all the 
tribes of ancient Germany. The limits of their 
territory cannot be fixed with accuracy, since 
the ancients did not distinguish between the 
Cherusci proper and the nations belonging to 
the league, of which the Cherusci were at the 
head. The Cherusci proper dwelt on both sides 
of the Visurgis (now Weser), and their territo- 
ries extended to the Harz and the Elbe. They 
were originally in alliance with the Romans, 
but they subsequently formed a powerful league 
of the German tribes for the purpose of expell- 
ing the Romans from the country, and under 
the chief Arminius they destroyed the army of 
Varus and drove the Romans beyond the Rhine, 
A.D. 9. In consequence of internal dissensions 
among the German tribes the Cherusci soon lost 
their influence. Their neighbors, the Catti, 
succeeded to their power. 

Chesium (XijGiov), a promontory of Sarnos, 
with a temple of Diana (Artemis), who was 
worshipped here under the surname of Xnaidg. 
Near it was a little river Chesius, flowing past 
a town of the same name. 

Chilon (Xei?.uv, Xl7mv) 1. Of Lacedasmon, 
6on of Damagetus, and one of the Seven Sages, 
flourished B.C. 590. It is said that he died of 
joy when his son gained the prize for boxing 
at the Olympic games. The institution of the 
Ephoralty is erroneously ascribed by some to 
Chilon. — [2. A Spartan of the royal house of 
the Eurypontids, who, on the death of Cleome- 
ues III, being passed over in the selection of 
king, excited a revolution and slew the ephori ; 
but, the people not sustaining him, he was com- 
pelled to take refuge in Achaia.] 

Chim^era (Xifiaipa), a fire-breathing monster, 
the fore part of whose body was that of a lion, 
the hind part that of a dragon, and the middle 
that of a goat. According to Hesiod, she was a 
daughter of Typhacn and Echidna, and had three 
heads, one of each of the three animals before 
mentioned. She made great havoc in Lycia 
and the surrounding countries, and was at 
length killed by Bellerophon. Virgil places her, 
together with other monsters, at the entrance 
of Orcus. The origin of the notion of this fire- 
breathing monster must probably be sought for 
in the volcano of the name of Chimrera, near 
197 



CHIMERICS. 



CHOARENE. 



Phaselis, in Lycia. In the works of art recent- 1 which aspired to the honor of being the birth- 
ly discovered in Lycia, we find several repre- place of Homer, Chios [alone, with any plausi- 
sentations of the Chimeera in the simple form bility, contested the claim with Smyrna, though 
of a species of lion still occurring in that country, ; the latter is generally considered by modern 

Chimerics, a promontory and harbor of Thes- ! critics to have the best claim : Vid. Homeeus ;] 
protia in Epirus. | and it numbered among its natives the trage- 

Cmox {Xicjv), of Heraclea on the Pontus, a j dian Ion, the historian Theopompus, the poet 
disciple of Plato, put to death Clearchus, the j Theocritus, and other eminent men. Its chief 
tyrant of his native town, and was in conse- j city, Chios (now Khio), stood on the eastern side 
quence killed, B.C. 353. There are extant j of the island, at the foot of its highest mountain, 
fliirteen letters which are ascribed to Chion, Pelinaeus : the other principal places in it were 
but which are undoubtedly of later origin. Ed- 1 Posidium, Phanae, Notium, Elaeus, and Leuco- 
ited by Coberus. Lips., and Dresd., 1765, and by , nium. 

OrellCin his edition of Memnon, Lips., 1816. Chirisophus (Xeiplco&og), a Lacedaemonian, 

CbSorb (X«oVj7). 1. Daughter of Boreas and j was sent by the Spartans to aid Cyrus in his 
Orithyia, became by Neptune (Poseidon) the expedition against his brother Artaxerxes, B.C. 
mother of Eumolpus.— 2. Daughter of Dseda-j401. After the battle of Cunaxa and the sub- 
lion, beloved by Apollo and Mercury (Hermes), ! sequent arrest of the Greek generals, Chiriso- 
gave birth to twius, Autolycus and Philammou, I phus was appointed one of the new generals, 
the former a son of Mercury (Hermes) and the and, in conjunction with Xenophon, had the 
latter of ApoUo. She was killed by Diana (Ar- i chief conduct of the retreat, 
temis) for having compared her beauty to that j Chiron (Xeipov), the wisest and justest of all 
of the goddess. the Centaurs, son of Saturn (Cronos) and Phily- 

Chioxides (XiuvidTjg and Xtovi'%), an Athe- ra, and husband of Naais or Chariclo, lived on 
nian poet of the old comedy nourished B.C. | Mount Pelion. He was instructed by Apollo 
460, and was the first poet who gave the Athe- j and Diana (Artemis), and was renowned for his 
nian comedy that form which it retained down j skill in hunting, medicine, music, gymnastics, 
to the time of Aristophanes. [His fragments and the art of prophecy. All the most distin- 
are given by Meineke, Comic Grac. Fragm., guished heroes of Grecian story, as Peleus, 
vol. L, p. 3-5, edit, minor. j Achilles, Diomedes, <fcc, are described as the 

Chios (Xloc : Xloc, Chins : now Greek Kliio, \ pupils of Chiron in these arts. His friendship 
Italian Scio, Turkish Saki-Andassi, i. e., Mastic- ■ with Peleus, who was his grandson, is partieu- 
island). one of the largest and most famous ' larly celebrated. Chiron saved him from the 
islands of the Aegean, lay opposite to the pen- other Centaurs, who were on the point of killing 
insula of Clazomena^, on the coast of Ionia, him, and he also restored to him the sword 
and was reckoned at nine hundred stadia (nine- ! which Acastus had concealed. Chiron further 
ty geographical miles) in circuit. Its length informed him in what manner he might gain 
from north to south is about thirty miles, its j possession of Thetis, who was destiued to marry 
greatest breadth about ten, and the width of a mortal. Hercules, too, was his friend ; but 
the strait, which divides it from the main land, j one of the poisoned arrows of this hero was 
about eight. It is said to have borne, in the nevertheless the cause of his death. While 
earliest times, the various names of iEthalia, fighting with the other Centaurs, one of the 
Maoris, and Pityusa, and to have been inhab- poisoned arrows of Hercules struck Chiron, 
ited by Tyrrhenian Pelasgians and Leleges. It who, although immortal, would not five any 
was colonized by the Ionians at the time of j longer, and gave his immortality to Prometh- 
their great migration, and became an import- eus. According to others, Chiron, in looking at 
ant member of the Ionian league ; but its pop- j one of the arrows, dropped it on his foot, and 
ulation was mixed. It remained an independ- wounded himself. Jupiter (Zeus) placed Chiron 
ent and powerful maritime state, under a demo- among the stars. 

cratic form of government, till the great naval Chitone (Xiruvrj), a surname of Diana (Arte- 
defeat of the Ionian Greeks by the Persians, mis), derived either from the Attic demus of 
B.C. 494, after which the Chians, who had ! Chitone, or because the goddess is represented 
taken part in the fight with one hundred ships, j with a short chiton. 

were subjected to the Persians, and their island Chloe (X/.otj), the Blooming, a surname of 
was laid waste and their voung women carried j Ceres (Demeter) as the protectress of the green 
off into slavery. The battle of Mycale, 479, fields : hence Sophocles {(Ed. Col., 1600) calls 
freed Chios from the Persian yoke, and it be- her A^uj^p evx"a° oc - 

came a member of the Athenian league, in [Chloreus, a priest of Cybele, followed ^Eneas 
which it was for a long time the closest and ! from Troy into Italy, and was slain by Turnus.] 
most favored ally of Athens ; but an unsuccess- 1 Chloris (Xau/wc). 1. Daughter of the The- 
ful attempt to revolt, in 412, led to its conquest ban Amphion and Niobe : she and her brother 
and devastation. It recovered its independence. Amyclas were the only children of Niobe not 
with Cos and Rhodes, in 358, and afterward killed by Apollo and Diana (Artemis). She ia 
shared the fortunes of the other states of Ionia. | often confounded with No. 2. — 2. Daughter of 
Chios is covered with rocky mountains, clothed j Amphion of Orchomenos, wife of Neleus. king 
with the richest vegetation. It was celebrated of Pylos, and mother of Nestor.— 3. Wife of 
for its wine, which was among the best known Zephpms, and goddess of flowers, identical with 
to the ancients, its figs, gum-mastic, and other the Roman Flora. 

natural products, also for its marble and pottery, Choarene (Xoaprjv^), a fertile valley in the 
and for the beauty of its women, and the lux- west of Parthia, on the borders of Media, be- 
urious life of its inhabitants. Of all the states ! tween two ranges of the Caspii Montes. 
198 



CHOASPES. 



CHRYSOGONUS. 



Choasfks (Xouonyc). Now Kerah or Ka- 
ra-Su), a river of Susiana, falling into the Tigris. 
Its water was to pure that the Persian kings 
used to cany it with them in silver vessels 
when on foreign expeditions. It is wrongly 
identified by some geographers with the Eul^- 
us.— 2. (Now Attock), a river in the Paroparmsus, 
falling into the Cophes (now Cabul), apparently 
identical with the Suastus of Ptolemy and the 
Guraeus of Arrian ; and if so, the Choes of Arrian 
is probably the Kama ; but the proper naming 
of these rivers is very difficult. 

Chqsrades (Xmpudec). two small rocky islands 
off the coast of Italy, near Tarentum. 

Chqbeilus (Xoipf'/lof or XoipiM.og). 1. Of 
Athens, a tragic poet, contemporary with Thes- 
pis, Phrynichus, and ^Escbylus, exhibited trage- 
dies for forty years, B.C. 523-483, and gained 
the prize thirteen times. — 2. Of Samos, the au- 
thor of an epic poem on the Persian wars : the 
chief action of the poem appears to have been 
the battle of Salamis. He was born about 470, 
and died at the court of Archelaus, king of Ma- 
cedonia, consequently not later than 399, which 
was the last year of Archelaus. [The frag- 
ments of Chcerilus are given by Nake, Choerili 
Samii Fragmenta, Lips., 1817.] — 3. Of Iasos, a 
worthless epic poet iu the train of Alexander the 
Great, is said to have received from Alexander a 
gold stater for every verse of his poem. (Hor., 
Fp., ii., 1, 232; Art. Poet, 357.) 

Choes. Vid. Choaspes, No. 2. 

Chollid.,e (Xo?? tidai, or Xo?Ju6ai : XolXeld^g, 
-idyc), a demus iu Attica belonging either to the 
tribe Leontis or Acamautis. 

Chonia (Xuvia), the name in early times of 
a district in the south of Italy, inhabited by the 
Choxes (Xwvec), an (Enotrian people, who de- 
rived their name from the town of Chone 
(Xuvtj). Chonia appears to have included the 
southeast of Lucania. and the whole of the 
east of Bruttium as far as the promontory Ze- 
phyrium. 

Chorasmii (Xupuvjutot), a people of Sogdiana, 
who inhabited the banks and islands of the lower 
course of the Oxus. They were a branch of the 
Sacae or Massageta 3 . 

Chosroes. 1. King of Parthia. Vid. Arsa- 
ces, No. 25. — 2. Kiug" of Persia. Vid. Sassani- 
vm. 

[Chromis (Xpoitis), son of Midon, was, with 
Eunomus, leader of the Mysians in the Trojan 
war. Three or four other persons of this name 
are mentioned iu the ^Eneid of Virgil and in 
Ovid.] 

[Chromius (\,v,/uor). l. Son of Neleus and 
Chloris ; slain by Hercules. — 2. Son of Priam, 
slain, together with his brother Echemou, by 
Diomedes. — 3. Son of Agesidamus, a Syracusan, 
conqueror at the Nemean games. Two or three 
other persons of this name of no importance are 
mentioned iu the Iliad.] 

Chrysa or -f: (Xpvaa, -?/), a city on the coast 
of the Troad, near Thebes, with a temple of 
Apollo Smiutheus; celebrated by Homer, but 
destroyed at an early period, and succeeded by 
another city of the same name, on a height 
further from the sea, near Hamaxitos. This 
second city fell into decay in consequence of 
the removal of its inhabitants to Alexaxdrea 
Troas. 



Chrysantas (Xpvadvrag), described by Xeno- 
phon in the Cyropaedla as a brave and wise Per- 
sian, high iu the favor of Cyrus, who rewarded 
him with the satrapy of Lydia and Ionia. 

[Chrysanthis (XpvGavdcg), an Argive female, 
who informed Ceres, when she came to Argos, of 
the abduction of her daughter.] 

Chrysaor (Xpvadup). 1. Son of Neptune 
(Poseidon) and Medusa, husband of Callirrhoe, 
and father of Geryones and Echidna. — 2. The god 
(or goddess) with the golden sword, a surname of 
several divinities, as Apollo, Diana (Artemis), and 
Ceres (Demeter). 

Chrysas (Xpvaag: now Dittaino), a small 
river in Sicily, an affluent of the Symsethus, was 
worshipped as a god in Assorus, in the neigh- 
borhood of which there was a Fanum Chrysce. 

Chryseis (Xpvcrjts), daughter of Chryses, priest 
of Apollo at Chrysa, was taken prisoner by 
Achilles at the capture of Lyrnessus or the Hy- 
poplacian Thebe. In the distribution of the booty 
she was given to Agamemnon. Her father Chry- 
ses came to the camp of the Greeks to solicit her 
ransom, but was repulsed by Agamemnon with 
harsh words. Thereupon Apollo sent a plague 
into the camp of the Greeks, and Agamemnon 
was obliged to restore her to her father to ap- 
pease the anger of the god. Her proper name 
was Astynome. 

Chryses. Vid, Chryseis. 
Chrysippus (XpvGnrTros). 1. Son of Pelops 
and Axioche, was hated by his step-mother Hip- 
podamia, who induced her sons Atreus and Thy- 
estes to kill him. — 2. A Stoic philosopher, son 
of Apollonius of Tarsus, born at Soli in Cilicia, 
B.C. 280. When young, he lost his paternal 
property and went to Athens, where he became 
the disciple of the Stoic Cleanthes. Disliking 
the Academic skepticism, he became one of the 
most strenuous supporters of the principle that 
knowledge is attainable and may be established 
on certain foundations. Hence, though not the 
founder of the Stoic school, he was the first per- 
son who based its doctrines on a plausible sys- 
tem of reasoning, so that it was said, " if Chry- 
sippus had not existed, the Porch could not 
have been." He died 207, aged seventy-three. 
He possessed great acuteness and sagacity, and 
his industry was so great that he is said to have 
seldom written less than five hundred lines a 
day, and to have left behind him seven hundred 
and five works. [His fragments have been col- 
lected by Baguet, De Chrynppi vita et reliquiis, 
Lovanii, 1822, 4to.] — 3. Of Cnidos, a physician, 
sometimes confounded with the Stoic philoso- 
pher, but he lived about a century earlier. He 
was son of Erineus, and pupil of Eudoxus of 
Cnidos : his works, which are not now extant, 
are quoted by Galen. — [4. A learned freedman 
of Cicero, who ordered him to attend upon his 
son in B.C. 52 ; but as he left young Marcus 
without the knowledge of his patron, Cicero de- 
termined to declare his manumission void. He 
afterward appears, however, to have been in 
favor again with his patron. 5. A freedman of 
the architect Cyrus, and himself also an archi- 
tect.] 

Chrysoceras, the " Golden Horn," the prom- 
ontory on which part of Constantinople was 
built. 

Chrysogonus, L. Cornelius, a favorite freed- 
199 



CHRYSOPOLIS. 



CICERO, TULLIUS. 



man of Sulla, and a man of profligate character, 
was the false accuser of Sextus Roscius, whom 
Cicero defended, B.C. 80. 

Chrysopolis (XpvooTzo^ic : now Scutari) a for- 
tified place on the Bosporus, opposite to Byzan- 
tium, at the spot where the Bosporus was gener- 
ally crossed. It was originally the port of Chal- 
cedon. 

Chrysorrhoas (Xpvaofipoac : now Barrada), 
also called Bardines, a river of Coele-Syria, flow- 
ing from the eastern side of Anti-Libanus, past 
Damascus, into a lake now called Bahr-el-Merj. 

Chrysostomus, Joannes (Xpva6(jTo i uoc, "gold- 
en-mouthed" so surnamed from the power of 
his eloquence,) usually called St. Chrysostom, 
was born at Antioch, of a noble family, A.D. 
347. He received instruction in eloquence from 
Libauius; and after being ordained deacon (381) 
and presbyter (386) at Antioch, he became so 
celebrated as a preacher that he was chosen 
archbishop of Constantinople on the death of 
Neetarius, 397. Chrysostom soon gave great 
offence at Constantinople by the simplicity of 
his mode of living, by the sternness with which 
he rebuked the immorality of the higher classes, 
and by the severity which he showed to the 
worldly-minded monks and clergy. Among his 
enemies was the Empress Eudoxia; and they 
availed themselves of a dispute which had 
arisen between Chrysostom und Theophilus, 
patriarch of Alexaudrea, to accuse Chrysostom 
of Origen'sm, and to obtain his deposition by a 
synod held at Chalcedon in 403. But the same 
causes which had brought on Chrysostom the 
hatred of the higher orders had made him the 
idol of the people. A few days after he had left 
the citv an earthquake happened, which the 
enraged people considered as a proof of the di- 
vine anger at his banishment. Eudoxia, fear- 
ing a popular insurrection, recalled him, but two 
months after his return he again excited the 
anger of the empress, and was banished a sec- 
ond time to the desolate town of Cucusus on 
the borders of Isauria and Cilicia. He met with 
much sympathy from other churches, and his 
cause was advocated by Innocent, bishop of 
Rome ; but all this excited jealousy at Constan- 
tinople, and he was ordered to be removed to 
Pityus in Pontus. He died on the journey at 
Comana in Pontus, 407, in the sixtieth year of 
his age. His bones were brought back to Con- 
stantinople in 438, and he received the honor of 
canonization. His works are most voluminous. 
They consist of, 1. Homilies, Sermons on differ- 
ent parts of Scripture and points of doctrine and 
practice. 2. Commentaries on the Scriptures. 3. 
Epistles. 4. Treatises on various subjects, e. y., 
the Priesthood, Providence, &c. 5. Liturgies. 
The best edition of his works is by Montfaucon, 
Paris, 1718-38, 13 vols, folio: [reprinted Paris, 
1835-40, 13 vols, royal 8vo.] 

[Chrysothemis (XpvaodEfiic), a daughter of 
Agamemnon, offered by him in marriage to 
Achilles to bring about a reconciliation.] 

Chthonius (Xdovioc) and Chthonia (X6ovlo.\ 
epithets of the gods and goddesses of the lower 
world (from " the earth"), as Hades, Hec- 

ate. Demeter, Persephone, <tc. 

Chytri (XvTpoi). 1. (Now Chytri,) a town in 
Cyprus, on the road from Cerynia to Salamis. — 
2. Warm springs at Salamis. 
200 



Ciaca, a border fortress of the Romans in Les- 
ser Armenia. 

Cibal^e or Cibalis, a town in Pannonia, on the 
Lake Hiulcas. between the Dravus aud Savus, 
near which Coustautine gained a decisive victory 
over Licinius, A.D. 31.4: the birth-place of Val- 
entiniau and Gratian. 

Cibotus. Vid. Alexandrea, No. 1 ; Apamea 
No. 3. 

Cibyra (Ki6vpa: Kc6vpuT?jc : now Cibyrata\ 
1. Magna {rj [leyd'Ar/ : ruins at Bumz or Aron- 
don ?), a great city of Phrygia Magna, in the fer- 
tile district of Milyas, on the borders of Caria, 
said to have been founded by the Lydians, but 
afterward peopled by the Pisidians. In Strabo's 
time four native dialects were spoken in it be- 
sides Greek, namely, those of the Lydians, the 
Pisidians, the Milyae, and the Solymi. Under 
its native princes, the city ruled over a large 
district called Cibyratis ( kc6vpaTic), and could 
send into the field an army of thirty thousand 
men. In B.C. 83 it was added to the Roman 
empire, and was made the seat of a conventus 
juridicus. After being nearly destroyed by an 
earthquake, it was restored by Tiberius, under 
the names Caesarea and Civitas Cibyratica. 
The city was very celebrated for its manufac- 
tures, especially in irou. — 2 Parva (K. fitupu : 
now Ibura), a city of Pamphylia, on the borders 
of Cilicia. 

Cicereius, C, secretary of the elder Scipio 
Africanus, was a candidate for the praBtorship, 
B.C. 174, along with Scipio's son, but resigned 
in favor of the latter. He was praetor in the 
following year, and conquored the Corsieans, but 
was refused a triumph. In 172 and 167 he was 
one of the ambassadors sent to the Illyrian king 
Gentius, and in 168 he dedic ted on the Alban 
Mount a temple to Juno Moueta. 

Cicero, Tullius. 1. M., grandfather of the 
orator, lived at his native town Arpinum, which 
received the full Roman franchise in B.C. 1S8. 
— 2. M., son of No. 1, also lived at Arpinum, and 
died 64. — 3. L., brother of No. 2. was a friend 
of Marcus Antonius the orator. — L L., son of 
No. 3, school-fellow of the orator, died 68, much 
regretted by his cousin. — 5. M., the orator, eld- 
est son of No. 2 and Helvia, was born on the 
third of January, B.C. 106, at the family resi- 
dence in the vicinity of Arpinum. He was edu- 
cated along with his brother Quintus, and the 
two brothers displayed such aptitude for learn- 
ing that his father removed with them to Rome, 
where they received instruction from the best 
teachers iu the capital. One of their most cele- 
brated teachers was the poet Archias of Antioch. 
After receiving the manly gown (91) the young 
Marcus was placed under the care of Q. Mu- 
cius Scaavola, the augur, from whom he learn- 
ed the principles of jurisprudence. Iu 89 he 
served his first and only campaign under Co. 
Pompeius Strabo in the Social war. During the 
civil wars between Marius and Sulla, Cicero 
identified liimself with neither party, but de- 
voted his time to the study of law, philosophy, 
and rhetoric. He received instruction in phi- 
losophy from Pheedrus the Epicurean, Philo, the 
chief of the New Academy, and Diodotus the 
Stoic, and in rhetoric from Molo the Rhodian. 
Having carefully cultivated his powers, Cicero 
came forward as a pleader in the forum as soon 



CICERO. 



OICERO. 



tranquillity was restored by the final over- 
throw of the Marian party. His first extant 
speech was delivered in 81, when he was twen- 
ty-six years of age, on behalf of P. Quintius. 
Next year (80) he defended Sextus Roscius of 
Ameria, charged with parricide by Chrysogonus, 
a favorite freedman of Sulla. Shortly afterward 
(79) Cicero went to Greece, ostensibly for the 
improvement of his health, which was very del- 
icate, but perhaps because he dreaded the re- 
sentment of Sulla. He first went to Athens, 
where he remained six months, studying phi- 
losophy under Antiochus of Ascalon, and rhet- 
oric under Demetrius Syrus ; and here he made 
the acquaintance of Pompouius Atticus, who re- 
mained his firm friend to the close of his life. 
FroA Athens he passed over to Asia Minor, re- 
ceiving instruction from the most celebrated 
rhetoricians in the Greek cities of Asia; and 
finally passed some time at Rhodes (78), where 
he once more placed himself under the care of 
Molo. After an absence of two years, Cicero 
returned to Rome (77), with his health firmly 
established, and his oratorical powers greatly 
improved. He again came forward as an orator 
in the forum, and soon obtained the greatest 
distinction. His success in the forum paved for 
him the way to the high offices of state. In 75 
he was quaestor iu Sicily under Sex. Peducaeus, 
praetor of Lilybaeum, and discharged the duties 
of his office with an integrity and impartiality 
which secured for him the affections of the pro- 
vincials. He returned to Rome in 74, and for 
the next four years was engaged in pleading 
causes. In 70 he distinguished himself by the 
impeachment of Verres, and in 69 he was cu- 
rule aedile. In 66 he was praetor, and while 
holding this office he defended Cluentius iu the 
speech still extant, and delivered his celebrated 
oration in favor of the Manilian law, which ap- 
pointed Pompey to the command of the Mith- 
radatic war. Two years afterward he gained 
the great object of his ambition, and, although 
a novushomo, was elected consul with C. Anto- 
uius as a colleague. He entered upon the office 
on the first of January, 63. Hitherto Cicero 
had taken little part in the political struggles of 
his time. As far as he had interfered in public 
affairs, he had sided with the popular party, 
which had raised him to power ; but he appears 
never to have had auy real sympathy with that 
party ; and as soon as he had gained the high- 
est office in the state he deserted his former 
friends, and connected himself closely with the 
aristocracy. The consulship of Cicero was dis- 
tinguished by the outbreak of the conspiracy 
of Catiline, which was suppressed and finally 
crushed by Cicero's prudence and energy. Vid. 
Catilina. For tlus service Cicero received the 
highest honors ; he was addressed as " father 
of his country." and th<inksgivings in his name 
were voted to the gods. But as 60on as he had 
laid down the consulship, the friends of the con- 
spirators, who had been condemned to death by 
the senate, and whose sentence had been car- 
ried into execution by Cicero, accused him loud- 
ly of having put Roman citizeus to death ille- 
gally. Cicero had clearly been guilty of a vio- 
lation of the fundamental principles of the Ro- 
man constituiiou, which declared that no citizen 
could be put to death until sentenced by the 



: whole body of the people assembled in the co- 
\ mitia. Cicero's enemies were not slow in avail- 
I ing themselves of this vulnerable point. The 
j people, whose cause he had deserted, soon be- 
gan to show unequivocal signs of resentment 
against him. Shortly afterward (62) he mor- 
tally offended Clodius by bearing witness against 
him, when the latter was accused of a violation 
of the mysteries of the Bona Dea. Clodius 
vowed deadly vengeance against Cicero. To 
accomplish his purpose more securely, Clodius 
was adopted into a plebeian family, was then 
elected tribune of the plebs, and as tribune (58) 
brought forward a bill, interdicting from fire and 
water (i. e., banishing) any one who should be 
found to have put a Roman citizen to death un- 
tried. The triumvirs, Caesar, Pompey, and Cras- 
sus, left Cicero to his fate ; and despairing of 
offering any successful opposition to the meas- 
ure of Clodius, Cicero voluntarily retired from 
Rome before it was put to the vote, and crossed 
over to Greece. He took up his residence at 
Thessalonica in Macedonia. Here he gave way 
to unmauly despair ; and his letters during this 
period are filled with groans, sobs, and tears. 
Meanwhile his friends at Rome had not deserted 
him ; and, notwithstanding the vehement oppo- 
sition of Clodius, they obtained his recall from 
banishment in the course of next year. In Au- 
gust, 57, Cicero landed at Brundisium, and in 
September he was again at Rome, where he was 
received with distinguished honor. Taught by 
experience, Cicero would no longer join the sen- 
ate in opposition to the triumvirs, and retired to 
a great extent from public life. In 52 he was 
compelled, much against his will, to go to the 
East as governor of Cificia. Here he distin- 
guished himself by his integrity and impartial 
administration of justice, but, at the same time, 
made himself ridiculous by the absurd vanity 
which led him to assume the title of imperator 
and to aspire to the honors of a triumph on ac- 
count of his subduing some robber tribes iu his 
province. He returned to Italy toward the end 
of 50, and arrived in the neighborhood of Rome 
on the fourth of January, 49, just as the civil war 
between Caesar and Pompey broke out. After 
long hesitating which side to join, he finally de- 
termined to throw iu his lot with Pompey, and 
crossed over to Greece in June. After the bat- 
tle of Pharsalia (48), Cicero abandoned the 
Pompeian party and returned to Brundisium, 
where he lived in the greatest anxiety for many 
months, dreading the vengeance of Caesar. But 
his fears were groundless : he was not only 
pardoned by Caesar, but, when the latter landed 
at Brundisium in September, 47, he greeted 
Cicero with the greatest kindness and respect, 
and allowed him to return to Rome. Cicero 
now retired into privacy, and during the next 
three or four years composed the greater part 
of his philosophical and rhetorical works. The 
murder of Caesar on the 15th of March, 44, 
again brought Cicero into public life. He put 
himself at the head of the republican party, and 
in his Philippic orations attacked M. Antony 
with unmeasured vehemence. But this proved 
his ruin. On the formation of the triumvirate 
between Octavianus. Antony, and Lepidus (27th 
of November, 43), Cicero's name was in the 
list of the proscribed. Cicero was warned of 
201 



CICERO. 



CICERO. 



his danger while at hi3 Tusculan villa, and em- rum ad C. Herennium Libri IV. The author of 
barked at Antium, intending to escape by sea, this work is uncertain, but it was certainly not 
but was driven by stress of weather to Circeii, ! written by Cicero. — II. Philosophical Works. 
from whence he coasted along to Formise, where \ i. Political Philosophy : 1. Be Republica Libri 
he landed at his villa. From Formise his at- j VI. A work on the best form of government 
tendants carried him in a litter toward the shore, and the duty of the citizen, in the form of a 
but were overtaken by the soldiers before they dialogue founded on the Republic of Plato ; 
could reach the coast. They were ready to de- written in 54. This work disappeared in the 
fend their master with their lives, but Cicero I tenth or eleventh century of our era with the 
commanded them to desist, and, stretching for- ! exception of the episode of the Somnium Scipi- 
ward, called upon his executioners to strike, i onis, which had been preserved by Macrobius ; 
They instantly cut off his head and hands, which j but in 1822, Angelo Mai found among the Pa- 
were conveyed to Rome, and, by the orders of 1 limpsests in the Vatican a portion of the lost 
Antony, nailed to the Rostra. Cicero perished treasure. Thus the greater part of the first 
on the 7th of December, 43, and, at the time of } and second books, and a few fragments of the 
his death, had nearly completed his sixty-fourth ; others were discovered. Editions by Mai, 
year. By his first wife, Terentia, Cicero had ; Rome, 1822, and by Creuzer and Moser, Frankt, 
two children, a daughter, Tullia, whose death j 1826. — 2. Be Legilnis Libri III. A dialogue, 
in 45 caused him the greatest sorrow, and a j founded on the Laws of Plato ; probably writ- 
son Marcus. Vid. No. 7. His wife Terentia, i ten 52. A portion of the three books is lost, 
to whom he had been united for thirty years, j and it originally consisted of a greater number, 
he divorced in 46, in consequence, it would ap- j Edited by Moser and Creuzer, Frankfort, 1824, 
pear, of some disputes connected with peeuni- ; and by Bake, Lugd. Bat., 1842. — n. Philosophy 
ary transactions ; and soon afterward he mar- 1 of Morals : 1. De Officiis Libri III. Written 
ried a young and wealthy maiden, Publilia, his : in 44 for the use of his son Marcus, at that time 
ward, but, as might have been anticipated, found [ residing at Athens. The first two books were 
little comfort in this new alliance, which was \ chiefly taken from Panaetius, and the third book 
speedily dissolved. As a statesman and a citi- j was founded upon the work of the Stoic Hecato ; 
zen Cicero can not command our respect. He i but the illustrations are taken almost exclu- 
did good service to his country by the suppres- ' sively from Roman history and Roman litera- 
sion of the conspiracy of Catiline ; but this was j ture. Edited by Beier, Lips., 1820-1821, 2 vols, 
almost the only occasion on which he showed j — 2. Co.to Major s. De Senectute, addressed to At- 
vigor and decision of character. His own let- ' ticus, and written at the beginning of 44 : it 
ters condemn him. In them his inordinate van- ; points out how the burden of old age may be 
ity, pusillanimity, and political tergiversation j most easily supported. — 3. Lcelius s. De Amici- 
appear in the clearest colors. It is as an author ' tia, written after the preceding, to which it may 
that Cicero deserves the highest praise. In his i be considered as forming a companion : also 
works the Latin language appears in the great- 1 addressed to Atticus. [Edited by Beier, Lips, 
est perfection. They may be divided into the 1828, and by Seyffert, Brandenburg, 1844.]— 4. 
following subjects : I. Rhetorical Works : 1. ! De Gloria Libri II, written 44, is now lost, 
Rhetor icorums. De Inventionc Rhetor ica Libri II. \ though Petrarch possessed a MS. of the work. 
This appears to have been the earliest of Cic- j — 5. De Consolatione s. De Luctu minuendo.vrcit- 
ero's prose works. It was intended to exhibit i ten 45, soon after the death of his daughter 
in a systematic form all that was most valuable i Tullia, is also lost. — in. Speculative Philos- 
in the works of the Greek rhetoricians, but it j ophy : 1. Academicorura Libri II, a treatise upon 
was never completed. — 2. De Partitione Orato- j the Academic pliilosophy, written 45. Edited 
ria Dialogus. A catechism of Rhetoric, accord- \ by Goerenz, Lips., 1810, and Orelli, Tunc, 1827. 
ing to the method of the middle Academy, by ! — 2. De Finibus Bonorum et Malorum Libri V. 
way of question and answer, drawn up by Cic- i Dedicated to M. Brutus, in which are discussed 
ero for the instruction of his son Marcus, writ- j the opinions of the Epicureans, Stoics, and Per- 
ten in 46. — 3. Be Oratore ad Quinturn Fratrem | ipatetics, on the Supreme Good, that is, the finis, 
Libri III A systematic work on the art of or end, toward which all our thoughts and ac- 
Oratory, written in 55 at the request of his ' tions are, or ought to be, directed. Written in 
brother Quintus. This is the most perfect of j 45. Edited by Otto, Lips., 1831, and by Mad- 
Cicero's rhetorical works. Best edition by El- vig, Copenhagen, 1839. — 3. Tuscxdanarum Bis- 
lendt, Regiomont,, 1840. — 1. Brutus s. Be Claris putationum Libri V. This work, addressed to 
Oratoribus. It contains a critical history of Ro- j M. Brutus, is a series of discussions on various 
man eloquence, from the earliest times down ; important points of practical philosophy, sup- 
to Hortensius inclusive. Editions by Meyer. ; posed to have been held in the Tusculanum of 
Halse, 1838, and by Ellendt, Regiomont,, 1844.— j Cicero. Written in 45. Edited by Kuhner, 
5. Ad M. Brutum Orator, in which Cicero gives I Jenee, 1846, third edition, and by Moser, Hannov, 
his views of a faultless orator: written 45. | 3 vols., 1836-1837. — 4 Paradoxa, six favorite 
Edited by Meyer, Lips., 1827. — 6. Be Optimo Paradoxes of the Stoics explained in familiar 
Genere Oratorum. An introduction to Cicero's 1 language, written early in 46. [Edited by Mo- 
translation of _ the orations of ^schines and ; ser, Gottingen, 1846.] — 5. Hortensius s. Be Phi- 
Demosthenes in the case of Ctesiphon : the losophia, a dialogue in praise of philosophy, of 
translation itself has been lost. — 7. Topica ad which fragments only are extant, written in 45. 
C. Trebatium. An abstract of the Topics of Ar- —6. Timanis s. Be Universo, a translation of Pla- 
istotle, iUustrated by examples derived chiefly to's Timaeus, of which we possess a fragment 
from Roman law instead of from G ivek philos- j — iv. Theology: 1. Be Natura Beorum Libri 
-ophy : it was written in July, 44.— . Rhetorico- III. An account of the speculations of the 
202 



CICERO. 



CICIRRHUS, MESSIUS. 



Epicureans, the Stoics, and the Academicians, 
on the existence, attributes, and providence of 
a Divine Being: dedicated to M. Brutus, and 
writteu early in 44 ; edited by Moser and Creu- 
zer, Lips., 1818.— 2. De Divinatione Libri //., a | 
' continuation of the preceding work. It presents 
the opinions of the different schools of philoso- 
phy upon the reality of the science of divina- 
: tion. Written iD 44, after the death of Caesar ; 
edited by Creuzer, Kayser, and Moser, Frankf., 
> 1828.— 3. De Fato Liber Swgularis, only a frag- 
' rnent.— III. Orations. The following is a list 
[ of Cicero's extant speeches, with the date at 
' which each was delivered. Some account of 
' each oration is given separately with the biog- 
raphy of the person principally concerned. 1. 
Pro P. Quintio, B.C. 81.— 2. Pro Sex. Roscio 
■ Amerino, 80.— 3. Pro Q. Roscio Comcedo, 76. 

—4. Pro M. Tullio, 71.— 5. In Q. Cascilium, 70. 
I —6. In Verrem Actio I, 5th of August, 70. — 7. 
i In Verrem Actio II. Not delivered. — 8. Pro 
I M. Fonteio, 69.-9. Pro A. Carina. 69, proba- 
bly.— 10. Pro Lege Manilia, 66.— 11. Pro A. 
Cluentio Avito, 66.— 12. Pro C. Cornelio, 55. 
—13. Oratio in Toga Candida, 64—14. De Lege 
Agraria, three orations, 63. — 15. Pro C. Rabirio, 
<53. — 16. In Catilinarn, four orations, 63. — 17. 
Pro Murena, 63.— 18. Pro P. Cornelio Sulla, 62. 
: —19. Pro A. Lieinio Arehia, 61.— 20. Pro L. 
Valerio Flacco, 59. — 21. Post Reditum in Senatu, 
5th of September, 57—22. Post Reditum ad 
Quirites, 6th or 7th of September, 57.-23. Pro 
Domo sua ad Pontifie<s, 29th of September, 57. 
! — 24. De Haruspieum Responsis, 56. — 25. Pro 
P. Sextio, 55.-26. In Vatiuium, 56.-27. Pro 
M. Cailio Rufo, 56.-28. Pro. L. Cornelio Balbo, 
56. — 29. De Provineii* Cousularibus, 56. — 30. 
In L. Pisonem, 55. — 81. Pro Cn. Plaucio, 55. 
—32. Pro C. Rabirio Poetumo, 54.-33. Pro M. 
^Emilio Scauro, 54.-84. Pro T. Annio Miloue, 
52.-35. Pro M. Marcello, 47.-36. Pro Q. Li- 
gario, 46. — 37. Pro Rege Deiotaro, 45. — 38. 
Oratioues Philippic;;-, fourteen orations against 
M. Antoniu?, 44 and 43. — IV. Epistles. Cicero, 
during the most important peiiod of his life, 
maintained a close em r- spondenee with Atticus, 
and with a wide circle of literary and political 
friends and connection?. We now have up- 
ward of eight hundred letters, undoubtedly gen- 
uine, extending over a space of twenty-six years, 
and commonly arranged in the following man- 
ner: 1. Epistolarum ad Familiares s. Epistola- 
rum ad Diversos Libri XVI., a series of four 
hundred and twenty -six epistles, commencing 
with a letter to Pompey, written in 62, and 
terminating with ;i letter to Cassius, July, 43. 
They are not plae< d in chronological order, but 
those addressed to tlie same individuals, with 
their replies, whei - these exist, are grouped to- 
gether, without reference to the date of the rest. — 
2. Epistolarum ad T. Pompoidum Atticum Libri 
XVL, a series of three hundred and ninety-six 
epistles addressed to Atticus, of which eleveu 
were written in 68, 67, 65. and 62, the remain- 
der after the end of 62, and the last in Novem- 
ber, 44. They are, for the most part, in chro- 
nological order, although dislocations occur here 
and there. — 3. Epistolarum ad Q. Fratrem Libri 
LJL, a series of tweuty-nine epistles addressed 
to his brother, the first written iu 59, the last in 
54. — 4. We find in most editions Epistolarum ad 



Brutum LAber, a series of eighteen epistles, all 
written after the death of Caesar. To these are 
added eight more, first published by Cratander. 
The genuineness of these two books is doubt- 
ful. The most useful edition of Cicero's letters 
is by Schiitz, 6 vols. 8vo, 1809-1812, in which 
they are arrauged in chronological order. Cicero 
also wrote a great number of other works on 
historical aud miscellaneous subjects, all of 
which are lost. He composed several poems, 
most of them in his earlier years, but two at a 
later period, containing a history of his consul- 
ship, aud an account of his exile and recall. A 
line in one of his poems contained the unlucky 
jingle so well known to us from Juvenal (x., 
122), O fortunatam natam me conmle Romam. 
The best edition of the collected works of Cicero 
is by Orelli, Turic., 1826-1837, 9 vols. 8vo, in 
thirteen parts. — 6. Q., brother of the orator, was 
born about 102, and was educated along with 
his brother. In 67 he was aedile, in 62 praetor, 
and for the next three years governed Asia as 
propraetor. He returned to Rome in 58, and 
warmly exerted himself to procure the recall 
of his brother from banishment. In 55 he went 
to Gaul as legatus to Caesar, whose approbation 
he gained by his military abilities and gallantry : 
he distinguished himself particularly by the re- 
sistance he offered to a vast host of Gauls, who 
had attacked his camp, when he was stationed 
for the winter with one legion in the country 
of the Nervii. In 51 he accompanied his broth- 
er as legate to Cilicia ; and on the breaking out 
of the ci vil war in 49 he joined Pompey. After 
the battle of Pharsalia he was pardoned by Cae- 
sar. He was proscribed by the triumvirs, aud 
was put to death in 43. Quintus wrote several 
works, which are all lost, with the exception 
of an address to his brother, entitled De Peti- 
tione Considatus. Quintus was married to Pom- 
ponia, sister of Atticus; but, from incompati- 
bility of temper, their union was an unhappy 
one. — 7. M., only son of the orator and his wife 
Terentia, was born 65. He accompanied his 
father to Cilicia, and served in Pompey's army 
in Greece, although he was then only sixteen 
years of age. In 45 he was sent to Athens to 
pursue his studies, but there fell into irregular 
and extravagant habits. On the death of Cae- 
sar (44) he joined the republican party, served 
as military tribune under Brutus in Macedonia, 
and after the battle of Philippi (42) fled to Sex. 
Pompey in Sicily. When peace was concluded 
between the triumvirs and Pompey in 39, Cicero 
returned to Rome, was favorably received by 
Octavianus, who at length assumed him as his 
colleague in the consulship (B.C. 30, from 13th 
of September). By a singular coiucidence, the 
dispatch announcing the capture of the fleet of 
Auiony, which was immediately followed by 
his death, was addressed to the new consul in his 
official capacity, and thus, says Plutarch, "the 
divine justice reserved the completion of An- 
tony's punishment for the house of Cicero." — 8. 
Q., son of No. 6, and of Pomponia, sister of Atti- 
cus, was born 66 or 67, and perished with his 
father iu the proscription, 43. 

Cichyrus {Kixvpoc), called Ephyra ('E<f>vpi]) 
in Homer, a town of Thesprotia in Epirus, be- 
tween the Acherusian Lake and the sea. 

[Cicirrhus, Messius, a native of Campania, 
203 



CICONES. 



CBIBRL 



a character introduced by Horace (fifth satire of 
the first book) in a ridiculous controversy with 
the slave Sarmeutus.] 

CIcones (KiKovec), a Thracian people on the 
Hebrus, and near the coast. 

[Cicynethus (KtKvvTjdoc : now Po7itiko), an 
island and city in the Pagasaeus Sinus.] 

Gicynna (KiKvvva : Kikvvvevc), a deinus of At- 
tica, belonging to the tribe Cecropis, and after- 
ward to the tribe Acamantis. 

Cilicia (KOuklo. : Ki/U£, fern. K'tfuocra), a dis- 
trict in the southeast of Asia Minor, bordering 
to the east on Syria, to the north on Cappadocia 
and Lycaonia, to the northwest and west on 
Pisidia and Pamphylia. On all sides, except 
the west, it is inclosed by natural boundaries, 
namely, the Mediterranean on the south, Mount 
Am mus on the east, and Mount Taurus on the 
north. The western part of Cilicia is intersected 
by the offshoots of the Taurus, while in its east- 
ern part the mountain chains inclose much 
larger tracts of level country : and hence arose 
the division of the country into C. Aspera (K. t] 
Tpaxda, or t paxe lQt yo), and C. Campestris (K. 
fl Tredidg) ; the latter was also called Cilicia 
Propria (rj Idlcog K.) Numerous rivers, among 
wldch are the Pyramus, Sarus, Cydncs, Caly- 
cadnus, and smaller mountain streams, descend 
from the Taurus. The eastern division, through 
which most of the larger rivers flow, was ex- 
tremely fertile, and the narrower valleys of 
Cilicia Aspera contained some rich tracts of 
land; the latter district was famed for its fine 
breed of horses. The first inhabitants of the 
country are supposed to have been of the Syr- 
ian race. The mythical story derived their 
name from Cilix, the son of Agenor, who start- 
ed, with his brothers Cadmus and Phoenix, for 
Europe, but stopped short on the coast of Asia 
Minor, and peopled with his followers the plain 
of Cilicia. The country remained independent 
till the time of the Persian Empire, under which 
it formed a satrapy, but appears to have been 
still governed by its native princes. Alexan- 
der subdued it on his march into Upper Asia; 
and, after the division of his empire, it formed 
a part of the kingdom of the Seleucidse; its 
plains were settled by Greeks, and the old in- 
habitants were for the most part driven back 
into the mountains of C. Aspera, where they 
remained virtually independent, practicing rob- 
bery by land and piracy by sea, till Pompey 
drove them from the sea in his war against the 
pirates, and, having rescued the level country 
from the power of Tigranes, who had overrun it, 
he erected it into a Roman province, B.C. 67-66. i 
The mountain country was not made a province 
till the reign of Vespasian. The people bore a 
low character among the Greeks and Romans. 
The Carians, Cappadocians, and Cilicians were 
called the three bad K's. 

CilicLe PvljE or Port.e (at llvlat t//c Kt- 
Ai/aosc : now Kolinboghaz), the chief pass between 
Cappadocia and Cilicia, through the Taurus, on | 
the road from Tyaua to Tarsus. This was the 
way by which Alexander entered Cilicia, 

Cilicidm Mare (jj Kiluda Mhaooa), the north- 
eastern portion of the Mediterranean, between 
Cilichi and Cyprus, as far as the Gulf of lssus. 

Cilix (K£lt£), son of Agenor and Telephassa, I 
was, with his brother.?, Cadmus and Phcenix I 
204 



j sent out by their father in search of Europa, 
who had been carried off by Jupiter (Zeus). 
Cilix settled in the country called after him CI 
licia. 

Cilla (Ki?.?m) a small town in the Troad, on 
the River Cilleus, at the foot of Mount Cillaeus, in 
the range of Gargarus, celebrated for its temple 
of Apollo suruamed Cillseus. Its foundation was 
ascribed to Pelops. 

Cilnii, a powerful family in the Etruscan 
town of Arretium, were driven out of their na- 
tive town in B.C. 301, but were restored by the 
Romans. The Ciluii were nobles or Lucumonea 
in their state, and some of them in ancient times 
may have held even the kingly dignity. (Com- 
pare Hor., Carm^ i., 1.) The name has been ren- 
dered chiefly memorable by C. Cilnius Maecenas. 

Vid. MAECENAS. 

[Cllo or Chilo, P. Magius. 1. A friend and 
client of M. Claudius Mai cellus, whom he mur- 
dered at the Piraeus, B.C. 45, at the instiga- 
tion, as some asserted, of Caesar, but more prob- 
ably from auger at being refused a sum of mon- 
ey which Cilo wished to obtain from Marcellus 
to relieve him from his embarrassments. — 2. Ju- 
nius, procurator of Pontus in the reign of Claud- 
ius, brought the Bosporan Mithradates to Rome 
in A.D. 50, and received afterward the consular 
insignia.] 

Cimber, C. Annius, had obtained the praetor- 
ship from Caesar, and was one of Antony's sup- 
porters, B.C. 43, on which account he is attacked 
by Cicero. He was charged with having killed 
his brother, whence Cicero calls him ironically 
Philadelphus. 

Cimber, L. Tillius (not Tullius), a friend of 
Caesar, who gave him the province of Bithynia, 
but subsequently one of Caesar's murderers, B. 
C. 44. On the fatal day, Cimber was foremost 
in the ranks, under pretext of presenting a 
petition to Caesar praying for his brother's re- 
call from exile. After the assassination, Cim- 
ber went to his province and raised a fleet, 
with which he rendered service to Cassius and 
Brutus. 

Cimbri, a Celtic people, probably of the same 
race as the Cymry. Vid. Celt^e. They are 
generally, but incorrectly, supposed to have in- 
habited the peninsula which was called after 
them Chersonesus Cimbrica (now Jutland); 
the greatest uncertainty, however, prevailed 
among the ancients respecting their original 
abode. In conjunction with the Teutoni and 
Ambrones, they migrated south, with their 
wives and children, toward the close of the 
second century B.C.; and the whole host is 
said to have contained three hundred thousand 
fighting men They defeated several Roman 
armies, and caused the greatest alarm at Rome 
In B.C. 113 they defeated the consul Papirius 
Carbo near Noreia, and then crossed over into 
Gaul, which they ravaged in all directions. In 
109 they defeated the consul Junius Silanus. in 
107 the consul Cassius Longinus, who fell in 
the battle, and in 105 they gained their most 
brilliant victory near the Rhone over the united 
armies of the consul Cn. Malliu3 and the pro- 
consul Servilius Caepio. Instead of crossing 
the Alps, the Cimbri, fortunately for Rome, 
marched into Spain, where they remained two 
or three years. The Romans meantime bad 



CIMINUS. 



CINEAS. 



been making preparations to resist their for- 
midable foes, and had placed their troops under 
the command of Marius. The barbarians re- 
turned to Gaul in 102. In that year theTeutoni 
! were defeated, and cut to pieces by Marius, near 
Aqua? Sextise (now Aix) in Gaul ; and next year 
1 (101) the Cimbri and their allies were likewise 
! destroyed by Marius and Catulus, in the deci- 
sive battle of the Campi Raudii, near Vercellae, 
in the north of Italy. In the time of Augustus, 
the Cimbri, who were then a people of no im- 
portance, sent an embassy to the emperor. 

Ciminus or Ciminius Mons (now Monte Cilni- 
no, also Monte Fogiiano), a range of mountains 
in Etruria, thickly covered with wood, (Saltus 
Ciminius, Silva Ciminia), near a lake of the 
same name, northwest of Tarquinii, between 
the Lacus Vulsiuiensis and Soracte. 

[Cimmericum (Kifi(iepiKov, Strab. ; ra Kt/ifiepia 
te'ixv, Herod. ; and Ki/j./j.epiK?) Kcjfin, Strab. : now 
Exki-Krimm), a village in the Tauric or Cim- 
merian Chersonesus, west of Kaffa : in its neigh- 
borhood was Mons Cimmerius (now Aghirmisch- 
Dagh).] 

Cimmerii (Ki/x/j.Eptoi), the name of a mythical 
and of an historical people. The mythical Cim- 
merii, meutioned by Homer, dwelt in the fur- 
thest west on the oceau, enveloped in constant 
mists and darkness. Later writers sought to 
localize them, aud accordingly placed them 
either iu Italy near the Lake Averuus, or in 
Spain, or in the Tauric Chersonesus. The his- 
torical Cimmerii dwelt on the Palus Maeotis 
(now Sea of Azov), in the Tauric Chersonesus, 
and in Asiatic Sarmutia. Driven from their 
abodes by the Scythians, they passed into Asia 
Minor on the noitheast, and peuetrated west as 
far as jEolis aud Ionia. They took Sardis B.C. 
635 in the reign of Ardys, king of Lvdia, but 
they were expelled from Asia by Alyattes, the 
grandson of Ardys. 

Cimmerius Bosporus. Vid. Bosporus. 

Cimolus (KifiuAoc : KifiijAtoc; : now Cimoli or 
Argentiere), an island in the ^Egean Sea, one 
of the Cyclades, between Siplmos and Melos, 
celebrated for its fiue white earth, used by full- 
ers for cleaning cloths. 

Cimon (Kljuuv). I. Son of Stesagoras, and 
father of Miltiades, victor at Marathon, gaiued 
three Olympic victories with his four-horse 
chariot, and after his third victory was secretly 
murdered by order of the 6on3 of Pisistratus.— 
2. Grandson of the preceding, and son of the 
great Miltiades. Ou the death of his father 
(B.C. 489), he was imprisoned because he was 
unable to pay his fiue of fifty talents, which 
was eveutually paid by Callias on his marriage 
with Elpiniee, Cimon's sister. Cimon first dis- 
tinguished himself on the invasion of Greece by 
Xerxes (480), and after the battle of Platase 
was brought forward by Aristides. He fre- 
quently commauded the Athenian fleet in their 
aggressive wars against the Persians. His 
most brilliant success was iu 466, when he de- 
feated a large Persian fleet, and on the same 
day lauded and routed their laud forces also ou ! 
the River Enrymedou iu Pamphylia. The 
death of Aristides aud the banishment of The- j 
mistocles left Cimou without a rival at Athens | 
for some years. But his influence gradually 
declined as that of Pericles increased. In 461 ! 



Cimon marched at the head of some Athenian 
troops to the assistance of the Spartans, who 
were hard pressed by their revolted subjects. 
The Athenians were deeply mortified by the in- 
sulting mauner in which their offers of assist- 
ance were decliued, and were enraged with 
Cimon, who had exposed them to this insult 
His enemies, in consequence, succeeded iu ob- 
taining his ostracism this year. He was sub- 
sequently recalled, in what year is uncertain, 
and through his intervention a five years' truce 
was made between Athens and Sparta, 450. 
In 449 the war was renewed with Persia; Ci- 
mon received the commaud, and with two hund- 
red ships sailed to Cyprus: here, while be- 
sieging Citium, illness or the effects of a wound 
carried him off. Cimon was of a cheerful con- 
vivial temper, frank and affable iu his manners. 
Having obtaiued a great fortune by his share of 
the Persian spoils, he displayed unbouuded lib- 
erality. His orchards and gardens were thrown 
open ; his fellow demusmen were free daily to 
his table, and his public bounty verged on os- 
tentation. With the treasure he brought from 
Asia the southern wall of the citadel was built, 
aud at his own private charge the foundation of 
the long walls to the Piraeus was laid down. — 
3. Of Cleonae, a painter of great renown, flour- 
ished about B.C. 460, and appears to have been 
the first paiuter of perspective. 

Cinadon (Kivdduv), the chief of a conspiracy 
against the Spartan peers (o/ioiot) in the first 
year of Agesilaus II. (B.C. 398-397). The plot 
was discovered, and Cinadon and the other con- 
spirators were put to death. 

CinjEthon (KtvaiOuv), of Lacedaemon, one of 
the most fertile of the Cyclic poets, flourished 
B.C. 765. 

Cinara or Cinarus (now Zinara), a small 
island iu the iEgean Sea, east of Naxos, cele- 
brated for its artichokes (nivapa). 

Cincinnatus, L. Quintius, a favorite hero of 
the old Roman republic, aud a model of old Ro- 
man frugality aud integrity. He lived on his 
farm, cultivating the land with his own hand. 
In B.C. 460 he was appointed consul suffectus 
in the room of P. Valerius. Iu 458 he was 
called from the plough to the dictatorship, iu 
order to deliver the Roman consul aud army 
from the perilous position in which they had 
been placed by the j^quians. He saved the 
Roman army, defeated the enemy, and, after 
holding the dictatorship ouly sixteen days, re- 
turned to his farm. In 439, at the age of eighty, 
he was a second time appointed dictator to op- 
pose the alleged machinations of Sp. Maelius. 
Several of the descendants of Cincinnatus held 
the consulship and consular tribunate, but none 
of them is of sufficient importance to require a 
separate notice. 

Cincius Alimentus. Vid. Alimentus. 

Cineas (Kiveac). [1. A Thessaliau prince, 
contemporary with and an ally of the Pisistra- 
tids, born at Conium iu Phiygia.] — 2. A Thes- 
salian, the friend and minister of Pyrrhus, king 
of Epirus. He was the most eloquent man of 
his day, and reminded his hearers of Demos- 
thenes, whom he heard speak in his youth. 
Pyrrhus prized his persuasive powers so highly, 
that "the words of Cineas (he was wont to say) 
had won him more cities thau his own arms.'' 
205 



CINESIAS. 



CIRTA. 



The most famous passage in bis life is his em- j nown, the friend of Catullus. In B.C. 44 he 
bassy to Rome, with proposals of peace from j was tribune of the plebs, when he was murder- 
Pyrrbus, after the battle of Heraclea (B.C. 280). 1 ed by the mob, who mistook him for his name- 
Cineas spared no arts to gain favor. Thanks ! sake Cornehus Cinna, though he was at the 
to his wonderful memory, on the day after his time walking in Caesar's funeral procession, 
arrival he was able (we are told) to address all ; His principal work was an epic poem entitled 
the senators and knights by name. The senate, ; Smyrna. 

however, rejected his proposals mainly through j Ginnamus, Joannes ('liodvvr/c Klvvafiog), one 
the dying eloquence of old App. Claudius Caeeus. of the most distinguished Byzantine historians. 
The ambassador returned and told the king that lived under the Emperor Manuel Comnenua 
there was no people like that people — their city , (who reigned A.D. 1143-1180), and wrote the 
was a temple, their senate an assembly of kings, j history of this emperor and of his father Calo- 
Two years after (278), when Pyrrhus was about Joannes, in six books, which have come down 
to cross over into Sicily. Cineas was again sent \ to us. Edited by Du Cange, Paris, 1670, foL, 
to negotiate peace. He appears to have died j and by Meineke, Bonn, 1836, 8vo. 
in Sicily shortly afterward. j Cinyps or Cinyphus (Ktvvrp, Kivv<pog : now 

Cixesias (Kivrjciac), a dithyrambic poet of \ Wad-Khakan or Kinifo), a small river on the 
Athens, of no merit, ridiculed by Aristophanes 1 northern coast of Africa, between the Syrtes, 
and other comic poets. But he had his re- j forming the eastern boundary of the proper ter- 
venge, for he succeeded in procuring the abo- ' ritory of the African Tripolis. The district 
litiou of the Choragia, as far as regarded com- j about it was called by the same name, and was 
edy, about B.C. 390. j famous for its fine-haired goats. 

Cinga (now Oinca), a river in Hispania Tar- 1 Cinyras (Kivvpac), son of Apollo, king of Cy- 
raconensis, falls with the Sicoris into the Iberus. j prus, and priest of the Paphian Venus (Aphro- 

Cingetorix. 1. A Gaul, one of the first men j elite), which latter office remained hereditary in 
in the city of the Treviri (now Treves, Trier), at- J his family, the Cinyradae. He was married to 
tached himself to the Romans, though son-iu- j Metharne, the daughter of the Cyprian king 
law to Indutiomarus, the head of the independ- ' Pygmalion, by whom he had several children, 
ent party. When this leader had been put to i and among them was Adonis. According to 
death by Caesar, he became chief of his native j some traditions, he unwittingly begot Adonis by 
city. — [2. Caesar (B. G., v., 22) mentions anoth- '■ his own daughter Smyrna, and killed himself on 
er Cingetorix, a chief of the Kentish Britons.] j discovering the crime he had committed. Ac- 

Cixgulum: (Ciugulanus : now Cingolo), a town \ cording to other traditions, he had promised to 
in Picenum, on a rock, built by Labienus shortly \ assist Agamemnon ; but as he did not keep his 
before the breaking out of the civil war, B.C. j word, he was cursed by Agamemnon, and per- 
49. i ished in a contest with Apollo. 

Cinna. Cornelies. 1. L., the famous leader ! Cipus or Cippes, Gexucius, a Roman praetor, 
of the popular party during the absence of Sulla j on whose head it is said that horns suddenly 
in the East (B.C. 87-84). In 87 Sulla allowed j grew, as he was going out of the gates of the 
Cinna to be elected consul with Cn. Octavius, ■ city, and, as the haruspices declared that if he 
on condition of his taking an oath not to alter j returned to the city he would be king, he im- 
the constitution as then existing. But as soon j posed voluntary exile upon himself, 
as Sulla had left Italy, he began his endeavor j Circe {Ktpuj]), a mythical sorceress, daughter 
to overpower the senate, and to recall Marius i of Helios (the Sun) by the Oceanid Perse, and 
and his party. He was, however, defeated by j sister of JEete3, lived in the island of iEaea. 
his colleague Octavius in the forum, was obliged j Ulysses tarried a whole year with her, after she 
to fly the city, and was deposed by the senate \ had changed several of his companions into pigs, 
from the consulate. But he soon returned ; j By UlyBses she became the mother of Agrius 
with the assistance of Marius, who came back j and Telegonus. The Latin poets relate that 
to Italy, he collected a powerful army, and laid j she metamorphosed Scylla, and Picus, king of 
siege to Rome. The capture of the city, and | the Ausonians. 

the massacre of Sulla's friends which followed, j Circeii (Circeiensis : now Circello, and the 
more properly belong to the life of Marius. For ' ruins Citta Vccchia), an ancient town of Latium, 
the next three years (S6, 85, 84) Cinna was j on the Promontory Circeium, founded by Tar- 
<ionsul. In 84 Sulla prepared to return from J quiuius Superbus, never became a place of im- 
Greece ; and Cinna was slain by his own troops, | portance, in consequence of its proximity to 
when he ordered them to cross over from Italy ! the unhealthy Pontine marshes. The oysters 
to Greece, where he intended to encounter \ caught off Circeii were celebrated. (Hor., Sat., 
Sulla. — 2. L., son of No. 1, joined M. Lepidus '. ii., 4, 33 ; Juv., iv., 140.) Some writers sup- 
in his attempt to overthrow the constitution of i pose Circe to have resided on this promontory. 
Sulla, 78; and on the defeat and death of Lep- and that hence it derived its name, 
idus in Sardinia, he went with M. Perperna to \ Circesium {KipK^Giov : now KerJcesiah), a city 
join Sertorius in Spain. Caesar procured his i of Mesopotamia, on the eastern bank of the Eu- 
recall from exile. He was made praetor by j phrates, at the mouth of the Aborrhas : the ex- 
Caesar in 44, but was, notwithstanding, one of i treme border fortress of the Roman empire, 
the enemies of the dictator. Though he would : Circes. Vid. Roma. 

not join the conspirators, he approved of their j Cirphis (Kipdic), a town in Phocis, on a 
act; and so great was the rage of the mob mountain of the same name, which is separated 
against him, that they nearly murdered him. ! by a vallev from Parnassus. 
Vid below, Cinna, Helvius. ' Cirrha." Vid. Crissa. 

Cinna, C Helvius. a poet of considerable re- 1 Cirta, afterward Constantina (ruins at Con- 
206 



CISPIUS. 



CLAUDIA. 



gtantineh), a city of the Massylii in Ifumidia, 
fifty Roman miles from the sea ; the capital of 
Syphax, and of Masinissa and his successors. 
Its position on a height, surrouuded by the River 
Ampsagas, made it almost impregnable, as the 
Romans found in the Jugurthine, and the French 
in the Algeriue wars. It was restored by Con- 
stautine the Great, in honor of whom it received 
its later name. 

[Cispius, M. 1. Tribune of the plebs B.C. 57, 
the year in which Cicero was recalled from ban- 
ishment, took au active part in Cicero's favor. 
He was afterward defended by Cicero when ac- 
cused of bribery (ambitus), but could not obtain 
a verdict in his favor. — 2. L., one of Caesar's offi- 
cers in the African war, commanded part of the 
fleet, B.C. 46.] 

[Cissa (Kcaca), a city of the Jacetani in His- 
pania Tarraconeusis ; called by Livy (xxi., 60) 
ticissum (where for Scissis Alschefski writes Cis- 
sis), and probably the Ginna of Ptolemy.] 

Cisseus (Kicaevc). 1. A king in Thrace, and 
father of Theauo, or, according to others, of Hec- 
uba, who is hence called Cisseis (YLiacrjic). — [2. 
Son of Melampus, fought on the side of Turnus, 
and was slain by ./Eneas.] 

Cissia (Kiaala), a very fertile district of Susi- 
ana, on the Choaspcs. The inhabitants (Kiaaiot) 
were a wild free people, resembling the Persians 
in their manners. 

Cissus (Kicauc), a town in Macedonia, on a 
mountain of the same name, south of Thessalon- 
ica, to which latter place its inhabitants were 
transplanted by Cassander. 

Cisthene (Kio6r/vTj). 1. A town on the coast 
of Mysia, on the promontory of Pyrrha, on the 
Gulf of Adramyttium. — 2. (Now Castel-Rosso), 
an island and town on the coast of Lycia. — 3. In 
the mythical geography of JEschylus (Prom., 
799) the " plains of Cistheue" are made the abode 
of the Gorgons. 

Cith^ron (KiOatpuv : now Cithceron, and its 
highest summit Elatia), a lofty range of mount- 
ains, separated Bceotia from Megaris and Attica. 
It was covered with wood, abounded in game, 
and was the scene of several celebrated legends 
in mythology. It was said to have derived its 
name from Cithseron, a mythical king of Bceo- 
tia. Its highest summit w T as sacred to the 
Cithteronian Jupiter (Zeus), and here was cele- 
brated the festival called Doedala. Vid. Diet, 
of Ant. s. v. 

Citharista, a sea-port town (uow Ceireste), 
and a promontory (uow Cape d'Aigle) in Gallia 
Narbonensis, near Massilia. 

Citium (Kiriov : Ki-uvc). 1. (Ruins near Lar- 
neca), one of the nine chief towns of Cyprus, 
with a harbor and salt-works, two hundred sta- 
dia from Salamis, uoar the mouth of the Tetius : 
here Cimon, the celebrated Athenian, died, and 
Zeuo, the founder of the Stoic school, was born. 
— 2. A town in Macedonia, on a mountain Citius, 
northwest of Beroea. 

Cius (KiOf : KZoc or Kuoc, Cianus : now Ohio, 
also Ghemlio and Kanlik). 1. An ancient city in 
Bithynia, on a bay of the Propontis called Cia- 
nus Sinus, was colonized by the Milesians, and 
became a place of much commercial importance. 
It joined the iEtolian league, and was destroyed 
by Philip III., king of Macedonia, but was re- 
built by Prusias, king of Bithynia. from whom i 



[ it was called Prusias. — [2. A river of Lower 
j Mcesia, flowing into the Ister or Danube.] 

[Civica Cerealis, under the Emperor Domi- 
tian, proconsul of Asia : he was put to death by 
the emperor's orders, just before A.D. 90.] 

Civilis, Claudius, sometimes called Julius, 
the leader of the Batavi in their revolt from 
Rome, A.D. 69-70. He was of the Batavian 
royal race, and, like Hannibal and Sertoriu3,had 
lost an eye. His brother, Julius Paulus, was 
put to death on a false charge of treason by 
Fonteius Capito (A.D. 67 or 68), who sent Civilis 
in chains to Nero at Rome, where he was heard 
and acquitted by Galba. He was afterward 
prefect of a cohort, but under Vitellius he be- 
came an object of suspicion to the army, and 
with difficulty escaped with his life. He vowed 
vengeance. His countrymen, who were shame- 
fully treated by the officers of Vitellius, were 
easily induced to revolt, and they were joined by 
the Canninefates and Frisii. He took up arms 
under pretence of supporting the cause of Ves- 
pasian, and defeated in succession the generals of 
Vitellius in Gaul and Germany, but he continued 
in open revolt even after the death of Vitellius. 
In 70 Civilis gained fresh victories over the Ro- 
mans, but was at length defeated in the course 
of the year by Petilius Cerealis, who had been 
sent into Germany with an immense army. 
Peace was concluded with the Batavi on terms 
favorable to the latter, but we do not know what 
became of Civilis. 

Cizara (Kifcpa), a mountain fortress in the 
district of Phazemonitis in Pontus ; once a royal 
residence, but destroyed before Strabo's time. 

Cladaus (K?.udaoc or K7A6eoc), a river in 
Elis, flows into the Alpheus at Olympia. 

Clampetia, called by the Greeks Lampetia 
(Aa/j.7zeTta, AcfureTeca), a town of Bruttium, on 
the western coast : in ruins in Pliny's time. 

Clams. 1. (Now Chiano), a river of Etruria, 
rises south of Arretium, forms two small lakes 
near Clusium, west of Lake Trasimenus, and 
flows into the Tiber east of Vulsiuii. — 2. The 
more ancient name of the Liris. — 3. (Now Olan 
in Steiermark), a river in the Noric Alps. 
Clanius. Vid. Litermjs. 
Clarus (rj K?.dpoc : ruins near Zille), a small 
town on the Ionian coast, near Colophon, with a 
celebrated temple and oracle of Apollo, sur- 
named Clarius. 

[Clarus, one of the companions of ./Eneas.] 
Clarus, Sex. Erucius, a friend of the younger 
Pliny, fought under Trajan in the East, and took 
Seleucia, A.D. 115. His son Sextus was a pa- 
tron of literature, and was consul under Antoni- 
nus Pius, A.D. 146. 

Classicus, Julius, a distinguished man of the 
Treviri, was prefect of an ala of the Treviri in 
the Roman army under Vitellius, A.D. 69, but 
afterward joined Civilis in his rebellion against 
the Romans. Vid. Civilis. 

Clastidium (now Casteggio or Schiateggio), a 
fortified town of the Auauesin Gallia Cispadana, 
not far from the Po, on the road from Dertona 
to Placentia. 

Claterna, a fortified town in Gallia Cispa- 
dana, not far from Bononia : its name is retained 
in the small river Quaderna. 

Claudia. 1. Quinta, a Roman matron, not a 
I Vestal Virgin, as is frequently stated. When 

207 



CLAUDIA GENS. 



CLAUDIUS. 



the vessel conveying the image of Cybele from 
Pessinus to Rome had stuck fast in a shallow at 
the mouth of the Tiber, the soothsayers announced 
that only a chaste woman could move it. Clau- 
dia, who had been accused of incontinence, took 
hold of the rope, and the vessel forthwith fol- 
lowed her, B.C. 204.— 2. Or Clodia, eldest of 
the three sisters of P. Clodius Pulcher, the en- 
emy of Cicero, married Q. Marcius rex. — 3. Or 
Clodia, second sister of P. Clodius, married Q. 
Metellus Celer, but became infamous for her de- 
baucheries, and was suspected of having poison- 
ed her husband. Cicero in his letters frequently 
calls her Bou7rig. — 4. Or Clodia, youngest sister 
of P. Clodius, married L. Lucullus, to whom she 
proved unfaithful. All three sisters are said to 
have had incestuous intercourse with their broth- 
er Publius. 

Claudia Gens, patrician and plebeian. The 
patrician Claudii were of Sabine origin, and 
came to Rome in B.C. 504, when they were re- 
ceived among the patricians. Vid. Claudius, 
No. 1. They were noted for their pride and 
haughtiness, their disdain for the laws, and their 
hatred of the plebeians. They bore various sur- 
names, which are given under Claudius, with the 
exception of those with the cognomen Nero, who 
are better known under the latter name. The 
Plebeian Claudii were divided into several fam- 
ilies, of which the most celebrated was that of 
Maiicellus. 

Claudianus, Claudius, the last of the Latin 
classic poets, flourished under Theodosius and his 
sons Arcadius and Honorius. He was a native 
of Alexandrea, and removed to Rome, where we 
find him in A.D. 395. He enjoyed the patron- 
age of the all-powerful Stilicho, by whom he 
was raised to offices of honor and emolument. 
A statue was erected to his honor in the Forum 
of Trajan by Arcadius and Honorius, the inscrip- 
tion on which was discovered at Rome in the 
fifteenth century. He also enjoyed the patron- 
age of the Empress Serena, through whose inter- 
position be gained a wealthy wife. The last his- 
torical allusion in his writings belongs to 404 • 
whence it is supposed that he may have been in- 
volved in the misfortunes of S ilicho, who was 
put to death in 408. He was a heathen. His 
extant works are, 1. The three panegyrics on the 
third, fourth, and sixth consulships of Honorius. 
2. A poem on the nuptials of Honorius and Ma- 
ria. 3. Four short Fescennine lays on the same 
subject, 4. A panegyric on the consulship of 
Probinus and Olybrius. 5. The praises of Stili- 
cho, in two books, and a panegyric on his consul- 
ship, in one book. 6. The praises of Serena, the 
wife of Stilicho. 7. A panegyric on the consul- 
ship of Flavius Mallius Theodorus. 8. The Epi- 
thalamium of Palladius and Celerina. 9. Au 
invective against Rufinus, in two books. 10. An 
invective against Eutropius, in two books 11. 
Be Bello Gildonico, the first book of an histor- 
ical poem on the war in Africa against Gildo. 
12. Be Bello Getico, an historical poem on the 
successful campaign of Stilicho against Alaric 
and the Goths, concluding with the battle of Pol- 
leutia. 13. Raptus Proserpina, three books of 
an unfinished epic on the rape of Proserpina. 
14 Gigantomachia, a fragment extending to one 
hundred and twenty-eight lines only. 15. Five 
short epistles. 16. Eidyllia, a colleciion of seven 
208 



j poems, chiefly on subjects connected with natural 
' history. 17. Epigrammata, a collection of short 
occasional pieces. The Christian hymns found 
among his poems in most editions are certainly 
spurious. The poems of Claudian are distin- 
guished by purity of language and real poetical 
genius. The best edition is by Burmann, Arnst, 
1760. 

Claudiopolis (K/Mvdi67ro?ag), the name of 
some cities called after the Emperor Claudius, 
the chief of which were, 1. In Bithynia (vid. 
Bithynium). 2. A colony in the district of Ca- 
taonia, in Cappadocia. 

Claudius, patrician. Vid. Claudia Gens. 
1. App. Claudius Sabincs Regillensis, a Sabine 
of the town of Regillum or Regilli, who in his 
own country bore the name of At us Clausus, 
being the advocate of peace with the Romans, 
when hostilities broke out between the two 
nations, withdrew with a large train of follow- 
ers to Rome, B.C. 504. He was received into 
the ranks of the patricians, and lands beyond the 
Anio were assigned to his followers, who were 
formed into a new tribe called the Clandian. 
He exhibited the characteristics which marked 
his descendants, and showed the most bitter 
hatred toward the plebeians. He was consul 
495, and his conduct toward the plebeians led 
to their secession to the M<ins Sacer, 494. — 2. 
App. Cl. Sab. Regill., son of No. 1, consul 471, 
treated the soldiers whom he commanded with 
such severity that his troops deserted him. 
Next year be was imptached by two of the 
tribunes, but, according to the common story, 
he died or killed himself before the trial. — 3. 
C. Cl. Sab. Regill., brother of No. 2, consul 
460, when App. Herdonius seized the Capitol. 
Though a stanch supporter of the Patiiciaus, 
he warned the decemvir Appius against au im- 
moderate use of his power. His remonstrances 
being of no avail, he withdrew to Regillum, 
but returned to defend Appius when impeached. 
— 4. App. Cl. Crassus Regill. Sab., the decem- 
vir, commonly considered sou of No. 2, but mora 
probably the same person. He was consul 451, 
and on the appointment of the decemvirs in 
that year, he became one of them, and was 
reappointed the followiug year. His real char- 
acter now betrayed itself in the most tyrannous 
conduct toward the plebeiaus, till his attempt 
against Virginia led to the overthrow of the 
decemvirate. Appius was impeached by Vir- 
giuius, but did not live to abide his trial. He 
either killed himself, or was put to death in 
prison by order of the tiibuues. — 5. App. Clau- 
dius C^egus, became blind before his old age. 
In his censorship (312), to which he was elected 
without having been consul previously, he built 
the Appian aqueduct, and commenced the Appi- 
an road, which was continued to Capua. He 
retained the censorship four years in opposition 
to the law which Unfiled the length of the office 
to eighteen months. He was twice consul in 
307 and 296 ; and in the latter \ ear he fought 
against the Samuites and Etruscans. Ju his 
old age, Appius, by his eloquent speech, induced 
the senate to reject the terms of peace which 
Cineas had proposed on behalf of Pv rrhus. Ap- 
pius was the earliest Roman writer in pi < se 
aud verse whose name has come down to us. 
He was the author of a poem known to Cicero 



CLAUDIUS. 

through the Greek, and he also wrote a legal 
treatise, Be Umrpationibus. He left four sons 
and five daughters. [Some fragments of his 
speeches are given by Meyer, Oratorum Roma- 
norurn Fracpnenta, Zurich, 1842, p. 105-6.]— 6. 
App. Cl. Cavdex, brother of No. 5, derived his 
surname from his attention to naval affairs. He 
was consul 264, and conducted the war against 
the Carthaginians in Sicily.— 7. P. Cl. Pulcher, 
son of No. 5, consul 249, attacked the Cartha- 
ginian fleet in the harbor of Drepanum, in defi- 
ance of the auguries, and was defeated, with the 
loss of almost all his forces. He was recalled 
and commanded to appoint » dictator, and there- 
upon named M. Claudius Glycias or Glicia, the 
son of a freedman, but the nomination was im- 
mediately superseded. He was impeached and 
condemned. — 8. C. Cl. Centho or Cento, son 
of No. 5, consul 240, and dictator 213.— 9. Tib. 
Cl. Nero, son of No. 5. An account of his de- 
scendants is given under Nero. — 10. App. Cl. 
Pulcher, son of No. 7, aedile 217, fought at Can- 
nae 216, and was praetor 215, when he was sent 
into Sicily. He was consul 212, and died 211 
of a wound which he received in a battle with 
Hannibal before Capua. — 11. App. Cl. Pulcher, 
son of No. 10, served in Greece for some years 
under Flamininus, Baebius, and Glabrio (197- 
191). He was praetor 187 and consul 185, when 
he gained some advantages over the Ingaunian 
Ligurians. He was sent as ambassador to 
Greece 184 and 176. — 12. P. Cl. Pulcher, 
brother of No. 11, curule sedile 189, praetor 188, 
and consul 184. — 13. C. Cl. Pulcher, brother 
of Nos. 11 and 12, praetor 180 and consul 177, 
when he defeated the Istrians and Ligurians. 
He was censor 160 with Tiberius Sempronius 
Gracchus. He died 167. — 14. App. Cl. Cento, 
aedile 178 and praetor 175, when he fought with 
success against the Celtiberi in Spain. He 
afterward served in Thessaly (173), Macedonia 
(172), and Illyricum (170).— 15. App. Cl. Pul- 
cher, son of No. 11, consul 143, defeated the 
Salassi, an Alpine tribe. On his return a tri- 
umph was refused him; and when one of the 
tribunes attempted to drag him from his car, 
his daughter Claudia, one of the Vestal Virgins, 
walked by his side up to the Capitol. He was 
eensor 136. He gave one of his daughters in 
marriage to Tiberius Gracchus, and in 133, with 
Tiberius and C. Gracchus, was appointed trium- 
vir for the division of the lands. He died 
shortly after Tiberius Gracchus.— 16. C. Clau- 
dius Pulcher, curule aedile 99, praetor in Sicily 
95, consul in 92.— 17. App. Cl. Pulcher, consul 
79, and afterward governor of Macedonia. — 18. 
App. Cl. Pulcher, praetor 89, belonged to Sulla's 
party, and perished in the great battle before 
Home 82.— 19. App. Cl. Pulcher, eldest son 
of No. 18. In 70 he served in Asia under his 
brother-in-law Lucullus ; in 57 he was praetor, 
and though he did not openly oppose Cicero's 
recall from banishment, he tacitly abetted the 
proceedings of his brother Publius. In 56 he 
was propraetor iu Sardinia ; and in 54 was con- 
sul with L. Domitius Ahenobarbus, when a re- 
conciliation was brought about between him and 
Cicero, through the intervention of Pompey. 
In 53 he went as proconsul to Cilicia, which he 
governed with tyranny and rapacity. In 51 he 
was succeeded in the government by Cicero, 



CLAUDIUS. 

j whose appointment Appius received with dis- 
pleasure. On his return to Rome he was im- 
peached by Dolabella, but was acquitted. In 50 
he was censor with L. Piso, and expelled sev- 
eral of Caesar's friends from the senate. On 
the breaking out of the civil war, 49, he fled 
with Pompey from Italy, and died in Greece 
before the battle of Pharsalia. He was an au- 
gur, and wrote a work on the augural discipline, 
which he dedicated to Cicero. He was also 
distinguished for his legal and antiquarian 
knowledge. — 20. C. Cl. Pulcher, second son 
of No. 18, was a legatus of Caesar, 58, praetor 
56, and propraetor in Asia 55. On his return he 
was accused of extortion by M. Servilius, who 
was bribed to drop the prosecution. He died 
shortly afterward. — 21. P. Cl. Pulcher, usu- 
ally called Clodius and not Claudius, the young- 
est son of No. 18, the notorious enemy of Ci- 
cero, and one of the most profligate characters 
of a profligate age. In 70 he served under his 
brother-in-law, L. Lucullus, in Asia ; but, dis- 
pleased at not being treated by Lucullus with 
the distinction he had expected, he encouraged 
the soldiers to mutiny. He then betook himself 
to his other brother-in-law, Q. Marcius Rex, 
proconsul in Cilicia, and was intrusted by him 
with the command of the fleet. He fell into 
the hands of the pirates, who, however, dismiss- 
ed him without ransom, through fear of Pom- 
pey. He next went to Antioch, and joined the 
Syrians in making war on the Arabians. On 
his return to Rome in 66 he impeached Catiline 
for extortion in his government of Africa, but 
was bribed by Catiline to let him escape. In 
64 he accompanied the propraetor L. Murena 
to Gallia Transalpina, where he resorted to the 
most nefarious methods of procuring money. 
In 62 he profaned the mysteries of the Bona 
Dea, which were celebrated by the Roman ma- 
trons in the house of Caesar, who was then prae- 
tor, by entering the house disguised as a female 
musician, in order to meet Pompeia, Caesar's 
wife, with whom he had an intrigue. He was 
discovered, and next year, 61, when quaestor, 
was brought to trial, but obtained an acquittal 
by bribing the judges. He had attempted to 
prove an alibi, but Cicero's evidence showed 
that Clodius was with him in Rome only three 
hours before he pretended to have been at In- 
teramna. Cicero attacked Clodius in the senate 
with great vehemence. In order to revenge 
himself upon Cicero, Clodius was adopted into a 
plebeian family that he might obtain the formid- 
able power of a tribune of the plebs. He was 
tribune 58, and, supported by the triumvirs Cae- 
sar, Pompey, and Crassus, drove Cicero into 
exile ; but, notwithstanding all his efforts, he 
was unable to prevent the recall of Cicero in 
the following year. Vid. Cicero. In 56 Clo- 
dius was aedile. and attempted to bring his ene- 
my Milo to trial. Each had a large gang of 
gladiators in his pay, and frequent fights took 
place in the streets of Rome between the two 
parties. Iu 53, when Clodius was a candidate 
for the praetorship, and Milo for the consulship, 
the contests between them became more vio- 
lent and desperate than ever. At length, on the 
20th of January, 52, Clodius and Milo met, ap- 
parently by accident, on the Appian Road near 
Bovilla?. An affray ensued between their fol- 
209 



CLAUDIUS. 



CLEANTHES. 



lowers, in which Clodius was murdered. The 
mob was infuriated at the death of their favor- 
ite ; and such tumults followed at the burial of 
Clodius, that Pompey was appointed sole con- 
sul in order to restore order to the state.' For 
the proceedings which followed, vid. Milo. The 
second wife of Clodius was the notorious Fulvia. 
— 22. App. Cl. Pulcher, the elder son of No. 
20, was one of the accusers of Milo on the death 
of P. Clodius, 52.-23. App. Cl. Pulcher, broth- 
er of No. 22, joined his brother in prosecuting 
Milo. As the two brothers both bore the pree- 
nomen Appius, it is probable that one of them 
was adopted by their uncle Appius. Vid. No. 
19. — 24. Sex. Clodius, probably a descendant 
of a freedman of the Claudia gens, was a man 
of low condition, and the chief instrument of P. 
Clodius in all his acts of violence. On the death 
of the latter in 52, he urged on the people to 
revenge the death of their leader. For his acts 
of violence on this occasion, he was brought to 
trial, was condemned, and after remaining in 
exile eight years, was restored in 44 by M. An- 
tonius. 

Claudius I., Roman emperor A.D. 41 — 54. 
His full name was Tib. Claudius Drusus Nero 
Germanicus. He was the younger son of Dru- 
sus, the brother of the Emperor Tiberius, and 
of Antonia, and was born on August 1st, B.C. 
10, at Lyons in Gaul. In youth he was weak 
and sickly, and was neglected and despised by 
his relatives. When he grew up he devoted 
the greater part of his time to literary pursuits, 
but was not allowed to take any part in public 
affairs. He had reached the age of fifty, when 
he was suddenly raised by the soldiers to the 
imperial throne after the murder of Caligula. 
Claudius was not cruel, but the weakness of his 
character made him the slave of his wives and 
freedmen, and thus led him to consent to acts 
of tyranny which he would never have com- 
mitted of his own accord. He was married 
four times. At the time of his accession he 
was married to his third wife, the notorious 
Valeria Messalina, who governed him for some 
years, together with the freedman Narcissus, 
Pallas, and others. After the execution of Mes- 
salina, A.D. 48, a fate which she richly merited, 
Claudius was still more unfortunate in choosing 
for his wife his niece Agrippina. She prevailed 
upon him to set aside his own son, Britannicus, 
and to adopt her son, Nero, that she might secure 
the succession for the latter. Claudius soon after 
regretted this step, and was, in consequence, 
poisoned by Agrippina, 54. Several public 
works of great utility were executed by Claudi- 
us. He built, for example, the famous Claudian 
aquaeduct (now Aqua Claudia), the port of Os- 
tia, and the emissary by which the water of 
Lake Fucinus was carried into the River Liris. 
In his reign the southern part of Britain was 
made a Roman province, and Claudius himself 
we»t to Britain in 43, where he remained, how- 
ever, only a short time, leaving the conduct of 
the war to his generals. Cladius wrote sev- 
eral historical works, all of which have perish- 
ed. Of these, one of the most important was a 
history of Etruria, in the composition of which 
he made use of genuine Etruscan sources. 

Claudius II.. (M. Aurelius Claudius, sur- 

named Gothicus), Roman emperor A.D 268 

210 



2*70, was descended from an obscure family in 
Dardania or Illyria, and by his military talents 
rose to distinction under Decius, Valerian, and 
Gallienus. He succeeded to the empire on the 
death of Gallienus (268), and soon after his ac- 
cession defeated the Alemanni in the north 
of Italy. Next year he gained a great victory 
over an immense host of Goths near Naissus in 
Dardania, and received, in consequence, the 
surname Gothicus. He died at Sirmium in 2*70, 
and was succeeded by Aurelian. 

Clazomenjs (ai Kla^ofievai : Kla^ofievLog : now 
Kelisman), an important city of Asia Minor, and 
a member of the Ionian Dodecapolis, lay on the 
northern coast of the Ionian peninsula, upon the 
Gulf of Smyrna. The city was said to have 
been founded by the Colophonians under Para- 
lus, on the site of the later town of Chytrium, 
but to have been removed further east, as a de- 
fence against the Persians, to a small island, 
which Alexander afterward united to the main 
land by a causeway. It was one of the weaker 
members of the Ionian league, and was chiefly 
peopled, not by Ionians, but by Cleonaeans and 
Phliasians. Under the Romans it was a free 
city. It had a considerable commence, and was 
celebrated for its temple of Apollo, Diana (Arte- 
mis), and Cybele, and still more as the birth- 
place of Anaxagoras. 

Oleander (KAeavdpoe). 1. Tyrant of Gela, 
reigned seven years, and was murdered B.C. 
498. He was succeeded by his brother Hippo- 
crates, one of whose sons was also called Ole- 
ander. The latter was deposed by Gelon when 
he seized the government, 491. — 2. A Lacedae- 
monian, harmost at Byzantium, 400, when the 
Greek army of Cyrus under Xenophon return- 
ed from Asia. — 3. One of Alexander's officers, 
was put to death by Alexander in Carmania, 
325, in consequence of his oppressive govern- 
ment in Media. — 4. A Phrygian slave, and sub- 
sequently the profligate favorite and minister 
of Commodus. In a popular tumult, occasion- 
ed by a scarcity of corn, he was torn to deatb 
by the mob. 

[Cleandridas (KXeavSptdac), a Spartan gen- 
eral, who had to flee from his native land for 
having acted treacherously in a war with Athens, 
He was condemned to death, but fled to Thurii 
in Italy.] 

[Cleanor (Kledvup), an Arcadian of Orchom- 
enus, served in the Greek army of Cyrus the 
younger; he took an active part in conducting, 
the retreat along with Xenophon, after the as- 
sassination of Clearchus and the other generals.] 

Cleanthes (KXedvdjis). 1. A Stoic, born at 
Assos in Troas about B.C. 300. He entered 
life as a boxer, and had only four drachmas of 
his own when he began to study philosophy. 
He first placed himself under Crates, and then 
under Zeno, whose disciple he continued for 
nineteen years. In order to support himself r 
he worked all night at drawing water from gar- 
dens: but as he spent the whole day in philo- 
sophical pursuits, and had no visible means of 
support, he was summoned before the Areop- 
agus to account for his way of living. The 
judges were so delighted by the evidence of in- 
dustry which he produced, that they voted him 
ten minas, though Zeno would not permit him to 
accept them. He was naturally slow, but his iron 



CLEA.RCHUS. 



CLEOMEDES. 



industrv overcame all difficulties; &ud on the 
death of Zeuo in 263, Cleanthes succeeded him 
in his school. Ho died about 220, at the age of 
eighty, of voluntary starvation. A hymn of his 
to° Jupiter (Zeus) is still extant, and contains 
some striking sentiments: edited by Sturz, 1785, 
and Mei *, 1835.— 2. An ancient painter 

of Corinth, [mentioned amoog the inventors of 
that art by Pliny and Athenagoras.] 

Cleasgbob {jLhfapX°s)' 1 - A Spartan, distin- 
guished himself in several important commands 
during the latter part of the Peloponnesian war, 
and :it the close of it persuaded the Spartans to 
'send him as general to Thrace, to protect the 
Greeks in that quarter against the Thracians. 
But having been recalled by the ephors, and re- 
fusion to obey their orders, he was condemned to 
death. He thereupon crossed over to Cyrus, col- 
lected for him a large force of Greek mercenaries, 
and marched with him into Upper Asia, 401, in 
order to dethrone his brother Artaxerxes, being 
the only Greek who was aware of the prince's 
real object. After the battle of Cunaxa and the 
death of Cyrus, Clearchus and the other Greek 
generals were made prisoners by the treachery 
of Tissaphernes, and were put to death. — 2. A 
citizen of Heraclea on the Euxine, obtained the 
tyranny of his native town, B.C. 365, by putting 
himself at the head of the popular party. He 
governed with cruelty, and was assassinated 353, 
after a reign of twelve years. He is said to have 
been a pupil of Plato and of Tsocrates. — 3. Of 
Soli, one of Aristotle's pupils, author of a num- 
ber of works, none of which are extant, on a 
great variety of subjects. — 1. An Athenian poet 
of the new comedy, whose time is unknown. 
[His fragments are given by Meineke, Comic. 
Grcec. Fragm., vol. ii., p. 1168-9.] 

[Clearidas (KAeap'idac), a brave young Spar- 
tan, made governor of Amphipolis by Brasidas; 
he took part in the battle before Amphipolis be- 
tween the Spartans and Athenians, in which both 
Brasidas and Cleou were killed. He afterward 
had the charge of surrendering the city to the 
Athenians, but gave it, in fact, to the Amphipo- 
Hfeans.] 

Clemens. 1. T. Flavius, cousin of the Em- 
peror Domitian, by whom he was put to death. 
He appears to have been a Christian. — 2. Ro- 
manus, bishop of Rome at the end of the first 
century, probably the same as the Clement 
whom St. Paul mentions (Phil., iv., 3). He 
wrote two epistles in Greek to the Corinthian 
Church, of which the first and part of the sec- 
ond are extant. The second, however, is prob- 
ably not genuine. The Recognitions, which 
bear the name of Clement, were not written by 
him. The epistles are printed in the Patres 
ApostoUd, of which the most convenient edi- 
tions are by Jacobson, Oxford, 1838, and by 
Hefele, Tubingen, 1839.— 3. Alexandrixus, so 
called from his long residence at Alexandres 
was ardently devoted in early life to the study 
of philosophy, which had a great influence upon 
his views of Christianity. He embraced Chris- 
tianity through the teaching of Pautaenus at 
Alexaudrea, was ordained presbyter about A.D. 
190, and died about 220. Hence he flourished 
under the reigns of Severus and Caracalla, 193- 
217. Hi3 three principal works constitute parts of 
a whole. In the Hortatory Address to the Greeks 



(Aoyoc FLpoTpe-TiKoc, &o.) his design was to con- 
vince the heathens and to convert them to Chris- 
tianity. The Pedagogue (Uaidayuyoc) takes up 
the new convert at the point to which he is sup- 
posed to have been brought by the hortatory ad- 
dress, and furnishes him with rules for the regu- 
lation of his conduct. The Stromata (Irpu/xaTelc) 
are in eight books: the title (Stromata, i. e., 
patch-work) indicates its miscellaneous charac- 
ter. It is rambling and discursive, but con- 
tains much valuable information on many points 
of antiquity, particularly the history of philos- 
ophy. The principal information respecting 
Egyptiau hieroglyphics is contained in the 
fifth book. The object of the work was to de- 
lineate the perfect Christian or Gnostic, after he 
had been instructed by the Teacher, and thus 
prepared by sublime speculations in philosophy 
and theology. — Editions : By Potter, Oxon., 1715, 
fol., 2 vols.; by Klotz, Lips., 1830-34, 12mo, 4 
vols. 

Cleobis. Vid. Bitox, 

Cleobuline (lOieoCovAivn) or Cleobule (K/U- 
oBovArj), daughter of Cleobulus of Lindus, cele- 
brated for her skill in riddles, of which she com- 
posed a number in hexameter verse ; to her is 
ascribed a well-known one on the subject of the 
year : " A father has twelve children, and each 
of these thirty daughters, on one side white, and 
on the other side black, and though immortal 
they all die." 

Cleobulus (KAe66ov?,oc), one of the Seven 
Sages, of Lindus in Rhodes, son of Evagoras, 
lived about B.C. 580. He wrote lyric poems, as 
well as riddles, in verse ; he was said by some to 
have been the author of the riddle on the year, 
generally attributed to his daughter Cleobuline. 
He was greatly distinguished for strength and 
beauty of person. 

Cleochares (KXeoxup7]c), a Greek orator of 
Myrlea in Bithynia, contemporary with the orator 
Demochares and the philosopher Arcesilas, to- 
ward the close of the third century B.C. 

[Cleod^us (K?.eo6atog), son of the Heraclid 
Hyllus, who, at the head of the Heraclids, made 
an unsuccessful attempt to conquer the Pelopon- 
nesus.] 

Cleombrotus (KAeofidporoc). 1. Son of Anax- 
andrides, king of Sparta, became regent after the 
battle of Thermopylae, B.C. 480, for Plistarchus, 
infant son of Leonidas, but died in the same year, 
and was succeeded in the regency by bis son 
Pausanias. — 2. I. King of Sparta, son of Pausa- 
nias, succeeded his brother Agesipolis I, and 
reigned B.C. 380-371. He commanded the Spar- 
tan troops several times against the Thebans, and 
fell at the battle of Leuctra (371), after fighting 
most bravely. — 3. II. King of Sparta, son-in-law 
of Leonidas II, in whose place he was made 
king by the party of Agis IV. about 243, On 
the return of Leonidas, Cleombrotus was de- 
posed and banished to Tegea, about 240. — 4. An 
Academic philosopher of Ambracia, said to have 

; killed himself after reading the PJuedon of Plato ; 
not that he had any sufferings to escape from, 
but that he might exchange this life for o> 

; better. 

{ Cleomedes (K/.eo/ir/dnc). 1. Of the island As- 
I typalrea, an athlete of gigantic strength. — 2. A 
j Greek mathematician, probably lived in the see- 
I ond and third centuries of the Christian era: 

211 



CLEOMENES. 



CLEOPATRA. 



the author of a Greek treatise in two books on 
the Circular Theory of the Heavenly Bodies (Kvk- 
Iiktic Oeopcag Mereupuv Bt6?ua dvo), which is 
still extant. It is rather an exposition of the sys- 
tem of the universe than of the geometrical prin- 
ciples of astronomy : edited by Balfour, Burdigal., 
1605 ; bv Bake, Lugd. Bat, 1820 ; and by Schmidt, 
Lips., 1832. 

Cleomenes (Kheofievrjg). h King of Sparta, 
son of Auaxandrides, reigned B.C. 520-491. 
He was a man of an enterprising but wild char- 
acter. His greatest exploit was his defeat of 
the Argives, in which six thousand Argive citi- 
zens fell ; but the date of this event is doubt- 
ful. In 510 he commanded the forces by whose 
assistance Hippias was driven from Athens, and 
not long after he assisted Isagoras and the aris- 
tocratical party against Clisthenes. By bribing 
the priestess at Delphi, he effected the deposi- 
tion of his colleague Demaratus, 491. Soon 
afterward he was seized with madness and kill- 
ed himself. — 2. King of Sparta, son of Cleom- 
brotus I., reigned 310-309 ; but during this long 
period we have no information about him of any 
importance. — 3. King of Sparta, son of Leonidas 
II., reigned 236-222. While still young, he 
married Agiatis, the widow of Agis IV.; and 
following the example of the latter, he endeav- 
ored to restore the ancient Spartan constitu- 
tion, and to regenerate the Spartan character. 
He was endowed with a noble mind, strength- 
ened and purified by philosophy, and possessed 
great energy of purpose. His first object was 
to gain for Sparta her old renown in war ; and 
for that purpose he attacked the Achseans, and 
carried on war with the league with great suc- 
cess. Having thus gained military renown, he 
felt himself sufficiently strong in the winter of 
226-225 to put the ephors to death and restore 
the aucient constitution. The Achasans now call- 
ed in the aid of Antigonus Doson, king of Mace- 
donia, and for the next three years Cleomenes 
carried on war against their united forces. He 
was at length completely defeated at the battle 
of Sellasia (222), and fled to Egypt, where 
he was kindly received by Ptolemy Euergetes, 
but on the death of that king he was imprisoned 
by his successor Philopator. He escaped from 
prison, and attempted to raise an insurrection, 
but finding no one join him, he put himself to 
death, 220. 

Cleomenes. h A Greek of Naucratis in 
Egypt, appointed by Alexander the Great no- 
march of the Arabian district (vo/uog) of Egypt, 
and receiver of the tribute from the districts of 
Egypt, B.C. 331. His rapacity knew no bounds, 
and he collected immense wealth by his extor- 
tions. After Alexander's death he was put to 
death by Ptolemy, who took possession of his 
treasures. — 2. A sculptor, son of Apollodorus of 
Athens, executed the celebrated statue of the 
Venus de Medici, as appears from an inscription 
on the pedestal. He lived between B.C. 363 
and 146. 

Cleon (KUuv) son of Cleaenetus, was origi- 
nally a tanner, and first came forward in public 
as an opponent of Pericles. On the death of 
this great man, B.C. 429, Cleon became the fa- 
vorite of the people, and for about six years of 
the Peloponnesiau war (428-422) was the head 
«flf ithe ,party opposed to peace. He is repre- 
\212 



sented by Aristophanes as a demagogue of the 
lowest kind, mean, ignorant, cowardly, and ve- 
nal ; and this view of his character is confirmed 
by Thucydides. But much weight can not be 
attached to the satire of the poet ; and the usual 
impartiality of the historian may have been 
warped by the sentence of his banishment, if it 
be true, as has been conjectured with great 
probability, that it was through Cleon that Thu- 
cydides was sent into exile. Cleon may be 
considered as the representative of the middle 
classes of Athens, and by his ready, though some- 
what coarse eloquence, gained great influence 
over them. In 427 he strongly advocated in 
the assembly that the Mytileuaeans should be 
put to death. In 424 he obtained his greatest 
glory by taking prisouers the Spartans in the 
island of Sphacteria, and bringing them in safety 
to Athens. Puffed up by this success, he ob- 
tained the command of an Athenian army, to 
oppose Brasidas in Thrace ; but he was defeated 
by Brasidas, under the walls of Amphipolis, and 
fell in the battle, 422. The chief attack of Aris- 
tophanes upon Cleon was in the Knights (424), 
in which Cleon figures as an actual dramatis 
persona, and, in default of an artificer bold 
enough to make the mask, was represented by 
the poet himself with his face smeared with wine 
lees. 

_ Cleonj; (KXeuvai: K?.eovaloc). 1. An an- 
cient town in Argolis, on the road from Corinth 
to Argos, on a river of the same name which 
flows into the Corinthian Gulf, and at the foot 
of Mount Apesas; said to have been built by 
Cleones, son of Pelops. — 2. A town in the penin- 
sula Athos in Chalcidice. — 3. Vid. Hyampolis. 

Cleonymus (K?ie6vv/LLoc). L An Atheaian, fre- 
quently attacked by Aristophanes as a pestilent 
demagogue. — 2. A Spartan, son of Sphodrias, 
much beloved by Archidamus, the son of Agesi- 
laus: he fell at Leuctra, B.C. 371. — 3. Younger 
son of Cleomenes II, king of Sparta, was exclu- 
ded from the throne on his father's death, 309, 
in consequence of his violent and tyrannical 
temper. In 303 he crossed over to Italy to as- 
sist the Tarentines against the Lucaniaus. He 
afterward withdrew from Italy, and seized Cor- 
ey ra; and in 272 he invited Pyrrhus to attempt 
the conquest of Sparta Vid. Acrotatus. — [4. A 
Theban, celebrated for his victories at the Isth 
mian games.] 

Cleopatra (KXeoTrurpa). 1. (Myth.) Daughter 
of Idas and Marpessa, and wife of Meleager, is 
said to have hanged herself after her husband's 
death, or to have died of grief. Her real name 
was Alcyone. — 2. (Hist.) Niece of Attalus, mar- 
ried Philip, B.C. 337, on whose murder she was 
put to death by Olympias. — 3. Daughter of Philip 
and Olympias, and sister of Alexander the Great, 
married Alexander, king of Epii-us, 336. It was 
at the celebration of her nuptials that Philip was 
murdered. Her husband died 326. After the 
death of her brother she was sought in marriage 
by several of his generals, and at length prom- 
ised to marry Ptolemy ; but, having attempted 
to escape from Sardis, where she had been kept 
for years in a state of honorable captivity, she 
was assassinated by Autigouus — 4. Daughter 
of Autiochus III. the Great, married Ptolemy 
V. Epiphaues, 193. — 5. Daughter of Ptolemy V. 
Epiphanes and No. 4, married her brother Ptol- 



CLEOPATRA. 



CLINIAS. 



emy VI. Philometor, and on his death, 14G, her 
other brother Ptolemy VI. Physcon. She was 
soon afterward divorced by Physcon, and fled 
into Syria.— 6. Daughter of Ptolemy VI. Phil- 
ometor and of No. 5, married first Alexander 
Balas(lfiO), the Syrian usurper, and on his death 
Demetrius Nicator. During the captivity of the 
latter in Parthia, jealous of the connection which 
he there formed with Rhodogune, the Parthian 
princess, she married Antiochus VII. Sidetes, 
his brolh-i. ind also murdered Demetrius on 
his return.' She likewise murdered Seleucus, 
her son by Nicator, who, on his father's death, 
assumed the government without her consent. 
Her other son by Nicator, Antiochus VIII. Gry- 
pus, succeeded to the throne (125) through her 
influence ; aud he compelled her to drink the 
poison which she had prepared for him also. 
Vid, Antiochus VIII. She had a son by Side- 
teg, Antiochus IX., surnamed Cyzicenus. — 7. 
Another daughter of Ptolemy VI. Philometor 
and No. 5, married her uncle Physcon when 
the hitter divorced her mother. On the death 
of Physcon she reigned in conjunction with her 
elder son, Ptolemy VIII. Lathyrus, and then in 
conjunction with her younger son Alexander. 
She was put to death by the latter in 89. — 8. 
Daughter of Ptolemy Physcon and No. 7, mar- 
ried first her brother Ptolemy VIII. Lathyrus, 
and next Antiochus IX. Cyzicenus. She was 
put to death by Tryphcena, her own sister, wife 
of Antiochus Grypus. — 9. Usually called Selene, 
another daughter of Ptolemy Physcon, married 
first her brother Lathyrus (on her sister No. 8 
being divorced) ; secondly, Antiochus XL Epiph- 
anes ; and thirdly, Antiochus X. Eusebes. — 10. 
Daughter of Ptolemy VIII. Lathyrus, usually 
called Berenice. Vid. Berenice, No. 4. — 11. 
Eldest daughter of Ptolemy Auletes, celebrated 
for her beauty and fascination, was seventeen 
at the death of her father (51), who appointed 
her heir of his kingdom in conjunction with her 
younger brother, Ptolemy, whom she was to 
marry. She was expelled from the throne by 
Pothinus and Achillas, his guardians. She re- 
treated into Syria, and there collected an army, 
with which she was preparing to enter Egypt, 
when Caesar arrived in Egypt in pursuit of 
Pompey, 47. Her charms gained for her the 
support of Caesar, who replaced her on the 
throne in conjunction with her brother. This 
led to the Alexandrine war, in the course of 
which young Ptolemy perished. Cleopatra thus j 
obtained the undivided rule. She was, how- 
ever, associated by Osesarwith another brother 
of the same name, and still quite a child, to 
whom she was also nominally married. She 
had a son by Oaosar, called Cesarion, aud she 
afterward followed him to Rome, where she ap- j 
pears to have been at the time of his death, 44. 
She then returned to Egypt, aud in 41 she met ' 
Antony in Cilieia. She was now in her twenty- j 
eighth year, and in the perfection of matured I 
beauty, which, in conjunction with her talents 
and eloqueu<<e. completely won the heart of An- j 
tony, who henceforth appears as her devoted 
lover and slave. He returned with her to Egypt, 
but was obliged to leave her for a short time, 
in order to marry Oetavia, the sister of Octavi- 
anus. But Oetavia was never able to gain his 
affections ; he soon deserted Ins wife and re- 



j turned to Cleopatra, upon whom he conferred 
I the most extravagant titles and honors. In the 
| war between Octavianus and Antony, Cleopatra 
( accompanied her lover, and was present at the 
j battle of Actium (31), iu the midst of which she 
j retreated with her fleet, and thus hastened the 
loss of the day. She fled to Alexandrca, where 
she was joined by Antony. Seeing Antony's 
fortunes desperate, she entered into negotia- 
tions with Augustus, and promised to make 
away with Antony. She fled to a mausoleum 
I she had built, and then caused a report of her 
death to be spread. Antony, resolving not to 
survive her, stabbed himself, and was drawn up 
into the mausoleum, where he died in her arms. 
She then tried to gain the love of Augustus, but 
her charms failed iu softening his colder heart. 
Seeing that he was determined to carry her cap- 
tive to Rome, she put an end to her own life, 
either by the poison of an asp, or by a poisoned 
comb, the former supposition being adopted by 
most writers. She died in the thirty-ninth year 
of her age (B.C. 30), and with her ended the 
dynasty of the Ptolemies in Egypt, which was 
now made a Roman province. — 12. Daughter 
of Antony and No. 11, born with her twin brother 
Alexander in 40, along with whom she was car- 
ried to Rome after the death of her parents. Au- 
gustus married her to Juba, king of Numidia. 
— 13. A daughter of Mithradates, married Ti- 
granes, king of Armenia. 

Cleopatris. Vid. Arsinoe, No. 6. 

Cleopiion (Kleotitov), an Athenian demagogue, 
of obscure, and, according to Aristophanes, of 
Thracian origin, vehemently opposed peace with 
Sparta in the latter end of the Peloponnesian 
war. During the siege of Athens by Lysander, 
B.C. 404, he was brought to trial by the aris- 
tocratical party, and was condemned and put to 
death. 

[Cleopompus (KAfo7ro//7roe), son of Clinias, a 
leader of the Athenians in the Peloponnesian 
war.] 

[Cleosthenes (K?,eoadevric). 1. One of the 
Spartan ephors. — 2. An Epidamniau, a celebrat- 
ed Olympian victor in the chariot-race.] 

Cleostratus (KAeoarparoc), an astronomer 
of Tenedos, said to have introduced the divi- 
sion of the zodiac into signs, probably lived be- 
tween B.C. 548 and 432. 

Clevum, also Glevum and Glebon (now Glou- 
cester), a Roman colony in Britain. 

Clides (at K?,el6eg : now Cape S. Andre), " the 
Keys," a promontory on the northeast of Cy- 
prus, with two islands of the same name lying 
off it. 

Climax (K/ufiai; : now Ekder), the name ap- 
plied to the western termination of the Taurus 
range, which extends along the western coast of 
the Pamphylian Gulf, north of Phaselis in Lycia. 
Alexander made a road between it and the sea. 
There were other mountains of the same name in 
Asia and Africa. 

Climberrum. Vid. Ausci. 

Clinias (K?.siviag) 1. Father of the famous 
Alcibiades, fought at Artemisium B.C. 480, in 
a ship built and manned at his own expense : 
he tell 447, at the battle of Corouea, — 2. A 
younger brother of the famous Alcibiades. — 3. 
Father of Aratus of Sicyon, was murdered by 
Abantidas, who seized the tyranny, 264. — 4. A 
213 



CLIO. 



CLUENTIITS HABITUS. 



Pythagorean philosopher of Tarentum, a eon- 
temporary and friend of Plato. [A fragment 
of his writings, preserved by Stobaeus, is given in 
Orelli's Opusc. Grcec. Vett. Sent, iL, p. 324.] 
Clio. Vid, Mus.se. 

Clisthexes (K.?»EiGdevi]s). 1. Tyrant of Sic- 
yon. In B.C. 595, he aided the Amphictyons 
in the sacred war against Cirrha, which ended, 
after ten years, in the destruction of the guilty 
city. He also engaged in war with Argos. His 
death can not be placed earlier than 582, in 
which year he won the victory in the chariot- 
race at the Pythian games. His daughter Aga- 
rista was given in marriage to Megacles the 
Alcmseonid. — 2. An Athenian, son of Megacles 
and Agarista, and grandson of No. 1, appears 
as the head of the AlcmaBonid clan on the ban- 
ishment of the PisistratidaB. Finding, how- 
ever, that he could not cope with his political 
rival Isagoras except through the aid of the 
commons, he set hiniself to increase the jDower 
of the latter. The principal change which he 
introduced was the abolition of the four ancient 
tribes and the establishment of ten new ones 
in their stead, B.C. 510. He is also said to have 
instituted ostracism. Isagoras and Ins party 
called in the aid of the Spartans, but Clisthenes 
and his friends eventually triumphed. — 3. An 
Athenian, whose foppery and effeminate profli- 
gacy brought him under the lash of Aristophanes. 

[Clitagora (K/uetrayopa), a lyric poetess of 
Laconia or Thessaly, mentioned in the Vespa? of 
Aristophanes.] 

Clitarchus (K/.etTapxoc). 1. Tyrant of Ere- 
tria in Euboea, was supported by Philip against 
the Athenians, but was expelled from Eretria 
by Phoeion, B.C. 341. — 2. Son of the historian 
Dinon, accompanied Alexander the Great in his 
Asiatic exjjedition, and wrote a history of it. 
This work was deficient in veracity and inflated 
in style, but appears nevertheless to have been 
much read. [The fragments of his history are 
collected by Geier, Alex. Hist. Scrip., p. 160 — 90.] 

Cliterxum or Cliternia (Chterninus), a town 
of the Frentani, in the territory of Larinum. 

Clitomachus (K/uEiropaxoc). 1. A Cartha- 
ginian by birth, and called Hasdrubal in his 
own language, came to Athens in the fortieth 
year of his age, and there studied under Car- 
neades, on whose death he became the head of 
the New Academy, B.C. 129. Of his works, 
which amounted to four hundred books, only a 
few titles are preserved. His main object in 
writing them was to make known the philosophy 
of his master Carneades. When Carthage was 
taken in 146, he wrote a work to console his 
unfortunate countrymen. — [2. A Theban athlete, 
who gained several victories at the Olympian 
and Pythian games. — 3. Of iEgina, an 'athlete 
who conquered in wrestling at the Isthmian 
games.] 

Clitor or Clitorium (Kleitap : K?,eir6pioc : 
ruins near Mazi), a town in the north of Arcadia, 
on a river of the same name, a tributary of the 
Aroanius : there was a fountain in the neighbor- 
hood, the waters of which are said to have given 
to persons who drank of them a dislike for wine. 
(Ov., Met, xv., 322.) 

Clitumxus (now (Mtwn.no), a small liver in 
Umbria, springs from a beautiful rock in a grove 
of cypress-trees, where was a sanctuary of the 
214 * 



god Clitumnus, and falls into the Tinia, a tributa- 
ry of the Tiber. 

Clitus (K/,elror or K?,eit6c). [1. (Mytholog- 
ical) A Trojan, son of Pisenor, slain by Teucer. 
— 2. Son of Mantius, carried off by Aurora on 
account of his beauty.] — 3. (Historical) Son of 
Bardylis, king of Illyria, defeated by Alexander 
the Great, B.C. 335. — 4 A Macedonian, one of 
Alexander's generals and friends, surnamed the 
Black (Mevtac). He saved Alexander's life at 
the battle of Granicus, 334. In 328 he was 
slain by Alexander at a banquet when both 
parties were heated with wine, and Clitus had 
provoked the king's resentment by insolent lan- 
guage. Alexander was inconsolable at his 
friend's death. — 5. Another of Alexander's offi- 
cers, surnamed the "White (Aevnoc), to distin- 
guish him from the above. — 6. An officer who 
commanded the Macedonian fleet for Antipater 
in the Lamian war, 323, and defeated the Athe- 
nian fleet. In 321 he obtained from Antipater 
the satrapy of Lydia, from which he was ex- 
pelled by Antigonus, 319. He afterward com- 
manded the fleet of Polysperchon, and was at 
first successful, but his ships were subsequently 
destroyed by Antigonus, and he was killed on 
shore, 318. 

Oloaoina or Cluactna, the " Purifier" (from 
cloare or cluere, " to wash" or " purify"), a sur- 
name of Venus at Rome. 

[Cloaxthes, one of the followers of iEneas, 
from whom the Roman Cluentii pretended to de- 
duce the origin of their name and family.] 

[Clodia. Vid. Claudia.] 

Clodius, another form of the name Claudius. 
just as we find both caudex and codex, claustrum 
and clostrum, cauda aud coda. Vid. Claudius. 

Clodius Albixus. Vid. Albinus. 

Clodius Macer. Vid. Macer. 

Clozlia, a Roman virgin, one of the hostages 
given to Porsena, is said to have escaped from 
the Etruscan camp, and to have swum across 
the Tiber to Rome. She was sent back by the 
Romans to Porsena, who was so struck with her 
gallant deed that he not only set her at liberty, 
but allowed her to take with her a part of the 
hostages. Porsena also rewarded her with a 
horse adorned with splendid trappings, and the 
Romans with the statue of a female on horseback, 
which was erected in the Sacred "Way. 

Clcelia or Cluilia Gexs, of Alban origin, said 
to have been received among the patricians on 
the destruction of Alba. A few of its members, 
with the surname Siculus, obtained the consulship 
in the early years of the republic. 

Cloxas (K?lovuc), a poet, and one of the earli- 
est musicians of Greece, either an Arcadian or a 
Boeotian, probably lived about B.C. 620. 

Clonks (KImvloc). 1. A leader of the Boeo- 
tians in the war against Troy, slain by Agenor. 
— [2. A companion of iEneas, slain by Turnus. 
— 3. Another companion of ^Eneas, slain by 
Messapus.] 

[Cloxus, an artist mentioned by Virgil as the 
maker of a belt presented to Pallas, son of Evan- 
der, on which were represented in gold the fifty 
daughters of Danaus.] 

Clota iEsTUARiuM (now Frith of Clyde), on 
the western coast of Scotland. 

Clotho. Vid. Moir^e. 

Cluextius Habitus, A., of Larinum, accused 



CLUNIA. 



CNOSUS. 



in B.C. 74 bis own step-father, Statius Albius 
Oppianicus, of bavin? attempted to procure bis 
death by poison. Oppiauicus was condemned, 
and it was generally bebeved that the judges 
bad been bribed by Clueutius. In 66, Cluentius 
was himself accused by young Oppianicus, son 
of Statius Albius, who had died m the interval, 
of three distinct acts of poisoning. He was de- 
fended by Cicero iu the oration still extant. 

Clunia (ruins on a bill betweeu Coruna del 
Conde and Pcnnalba de Castro), a town of the 
Arevaeaj in Hispania Tarraconensis, and a Ro- 
man colony. 

Clupea or Clypea. Vid. Aspis. 

Clusium (Clusiuus: now Chiusi), one of the 
most powerful of the twelve Etruscan cities, 
situated on an eminence above the River Clanis, 
and southwest of the Lacus Clusinus (now 
Lago di Chiusi). It was more anciently called 
Gamers or Camahs, whence we may conclude 
that it was founded by the Umbrian race of the 
Camertes. It was the royal residence of Por- 
sena, and in its neighborhood was the celebrated 
sepulchre of this king in the form of a labyrinth, 
of which such marvellous accounts have come 
down to us. ( Vid. Diet, of Ant, art. Labyrin- 
thus.) Subsequently Clusium was in alliance 
with the Romans, by whom it was regarded as 
a bulwark against the Gauls. Its siege by the 
Gauls, B.C. 391, led, as is well known, to the 
capture of Rome itself by the Gauls. Clusium 
probably became a Roman colony, since Pliny 
speaks of Clusini Yeteres et Novi. In its neigh- 
borhood were warm baths. (Hor., Ep., i., 15, 

*r • •„ 

Clusius (now Chiese), a river in Cisalpine 
Gaul, a tributary of the Ollius, forming the 
boundary between the Cenomani and Iusubres. 

Cluvius, a family of Campanian origin, of 
which the most important person was M. Clu- 
vius Rufus, consul suffectus A.D. 45, and gov- 
ernor of Spain under Galba, A.D. 69, on whose 
death he espoused the cause of Vitellius. He 
was an historian, and wrote an account of the 
times of Nero, Galba, Otbo, and VitelHus. 

Clymene (K?.vjuev7j). 1. Daughter of Ocea- 
nus and Tethys, and wife of Iapetus, to whom 
she bore Atlas, Prometheus, and others. — 2. 
Daughter of Iphis or Minyas, wife of Phylacus 
or Cephalus, to whom she bore Ipbiclus and 
Alcimede. According to Hesiod and others, she 
was the mother of Phaethon by Helios. — 3. A 
relative of Menelaus and a companion of He- 
lena, with whom she was carried off by Paris. 
— [4. Daughter of Catreus, mother of Palame- 
des.— 5. One of the Nereids enumerated by Ho- 
mer (//., xviii., 47.)] 

[Clymenus. 1. King of the Miny£e, in Or- 
chomeuos ; he was slain by the Thebans at a 
festival of Neptune (Poseidon) at Thebes. — 2. 
Son of Caeueus, king of Arcadia, married Epi- 
caste of Argos, by whom he had Harpalyce and 
several other children. — 3. A companion of 
Phineus at the nuptials of Perseus.] 

[Clysonymus (K?,vguvv/u.oc), son of Amphida- 
mas of Opus, was unintentionally slain by Pa- 
troclus, who had to seek refuge on this account 
at the court of Peleus.] 

Clyt.emnestra (KXvTaifiv?]GTpa), daughter of 
Tyndareus and Leda, sister of Castor, and half- 
sister of Pollux and Helena. She was married 



to Agamemnon. During her husband's absence 
at Troy she bved in adultery with ^Egisthus, 
and on his return to Mycenae she murdered 
him with the help of JSgisthus.. Vid. Agamem- 
non. She was subsequently put to death by 
her son Orestes, who thus avenged the murder 
of his father. For details, vid. Orestes. 

[Clytie (Klvria, Ion. KXvrcrj). 1. Daughter 
of Oceanus and Tethys.— 2. A female beloved 
by Apollo, died from grief at the unfaithfulness 
of that god, and was changed by him into a he- 
liotrope. — 3. Mother of King Chalcon in the 
island of Cos.] 

[CLYTrus (K/.vtloc). 1. Son of Laomedon, 
brother of Priam. — 2. Son of Alcmaaon and 
father of Piraeus. — 3. Son of the CEchalian king 
Eurytus, slain by iEetes in the Argonautic ex- 
pedition. — 4. A partisan of Phineus, slain by 
Theseus. — 5. One of the companions of iEneas, 
son of iEolus, slain by Turnus. Two other he- 
roes of this name are mentioned in the uEneid.] 

[Clytomedes {KXvToixTjdrjc), son of Enops, 
conquered by Nestor in boxing.] 

[Clytoneus (K?iVTov7}og), son of King Alci- 
nous, surpassed all his contemporaries in run- 
ning.] 

Cnemis {KvrjfXLc), a range of mountains on the 
frontiers of Phocis and Locris, from which the 
northern Locrians were called Epicnemidii. A 
branch of these mountains runs out into the sea, 
forming the promontory Cnemides {K.vr)ju6ec) 
with a town of the same name upon it, oppo- 
site the promontory Cenaeum in Euboea. 

Cxeph (K w/0) or Cnuphis (Kvov^ig), an Egyp- 
tian divinity, worshipped in the form of a ser- 
pent, and regarded as the creator of the w T orld. 

Cnidus or Gnidus (Kvidoc : Kvtdcoc : ruins 
at Cape Krio), a celebrated city of Asia Minor, 
on the promontory of Triopium, on the coast of 
Caria, was a Lacedaemonian colony, and the 
chief city of the Dorian Hexapolis. It was 
built partly on the main land and partly on an 
island joined to the coast by a causeway, and 
had two harbors. It bad a considerable com- 
merce ; and it was resorted to by travellers 
from all parts of the civilized world, that they 
might see the statue of Venus (Aphrodite) by 
Praxiteles, which stood in her temple here. 
The city possessed also temples of Apollo and 
Neptune (Poseidon.) The great naval defeat 
of Pisander by Conon (B.C. 394) took place off 
Cnidus. Among the celebrated natives of the 
city were Ctesias, Eudoxus, Sostratus, and 
Agatbarchides. It is said to have been also 
called, at an early period, Triopia, from its 
founder Triopas, and, in later times, Stadia. 

Cnosus or Gnosus, subsequently Cnossus or 
Gnossus (Kvugoc, Tvugoc, Kvuggoc, Tvuggoc : 
K.v6gloc, Kvuggloc : now Makro Teikho), an an- 
cient town of Crete, and the capital of King Mi- 
nos, was situated in a fertile country on the 
River C^eratus (which was originally the name 
of the town), at a short distance from the north- 
ern coast. It was at any early time colonized by 
Dorians, and from it Dorian institutions spread 
over the island. Its power was weakened by 
the growing importance of Gortyn and Cydo- 
nia ; and these towns, when united, were more 
than a match for Cnosus. Cnosus is frequent- 
ly mentioned by the poets in consequence of 
its connection with Minos. Ariadne, the Mi- 
215 



COBUS. 



COLANICA 



uotaur, and the Labyrinth; and the adjective 
Cnosius is frequently used as an equivalent to 
Cretan. 

Cobus or Cohibus (Kwfioc), a river of Asia, 
flowing from the Caucasus into the eastern side 
of the Euxine. 

Cocalus (Koka/loc), a mythical king of Sicily, 
who kindly received Dcedalus on his flight from 
Crete ; and, [when Minos subsequently came 
thither in pursuit of him, put that monarch to 
death.] According to others, [Minos] was killed 
by the daughters of Cocalus. 

Cocceius Nerva. Vid. Nerva. 
; Coche (Kuxv), a city on the Tigris, near Cte- 
siphon. 

Cocinthum or Cocintum (now Punta di Slilo), 
a promontory on the southeast of Bruttium, in 
Italy, with a town of the same name upon it. 

Cocles, Horatius, that is, Horatius the " one- 
eyed," a hero of the old Roman lays, is said to 
have defended the Subliciau bridge along with 
Sp. Lartius and T. Herminius against the whole 
Etruscan army under Porsena, while the Ro- 
mans broke down the bridge behind them. 
When the work was nearly finished Horatius 
sent back his two companions. As soon as the 
bridge was quite destroyed, he plunged into the 
stream and swam across to the city in safety 
amid the arrows of the enemy. The state rais- 
ed a statue to his honor, which was placed in 
the comitium, and allowed him as much land as 
he could plough round in one day. Polybius 
relates that Horatius defended the bridge alone, 
and perished in the river. 

Cocossates, a people in Aquitania in Gaul, 
mentioned along with the Tarbelli. 

Cocylium (Konv?uov), an iEolian city in My- 
sia, whose inhabitants (KoKv?urai) are mention- 
ed by Xenophon, but which was abandoned be- 
fore Pliny's time. 

Cocytus (Kw/curoc) a river in Epirus, a tribu- 
tary of the Acheron. Like the Acheron, the 
Cocytus was supposed to be connected with the 
lower world, and hence came to be described as 
a river in the lower world. Homer (Od., x., 
513) make the Cocytus a tributary of the Styx; 
but Virgil (^En., vi., 295) represents the Ache- 
ron as flowing into the Cocytus. 

Codanus Sinus, the southwestern part of the 
Baltic, whence the Danish islands are called 
Codanonia. 

CODOMANNUS. Vid. DARIUS. 

Codrus (KoSpog). 1. Son of Melanthus, and 
last king of Athens. When the Dorians invad- 
ed Attica from Peloponnesus (about B.C. 1068 
according to mythical chronology), an oracle 
declared that they should be victorious if the 
life of the Attic king was spared. Codrus there- 
upon resolved to sacrifice himself for .his coun- 
try. He entered the camp of the enemy in dis- 
guise, commenced quarrelling with the soldiers, 
and was slain in the dispute. When the Dori- 
ans discovered the death of the Attic king, they 
returned home. Tradition adds, that as no one 
was thought worthy to succeed such a patriotic 
king, the kingly dignity was abolished, and Me- 
don, son of Codrus, was appointed archon for life 
instead. — 2. A Roman poet, ridiculed by Virgil. 
Juvenal also speaks of a wretched poet of the 
same name. The name is probably fictitious, 
and appears to have been applied by the Roman 
216 



poets to those poetasters who annoyed other 
people by reading their productions to them. 

Coela (rd KolXa r^c tlvCocag), " the Hollows 
of Euboea," the western coast of Eubcea, be- 
tween the promontories Caphareus and Cher- 
sou esus, very dangerous to ships : here a part 
of the Persian fleet was wrecked, B.C. 480. 

Ccele (KolXtj), an Attic demus belonging to 
the tribe Hippothooutis, a little way beyond the 
Melitian gate at Athens: here Cimon and Thu 
cydides were buried. 

Ccelesyria (// KoD\,t) 'Lvpia, i. e., Hollow Syr- 
ia), was the name given after the Macedonian 
conquest to the great valley (El-Bukaa) between 
the two ranges of Mount Lebanon (Libauus 
and Anti-Libanus), in the south of Syria, bor- 
dering upon Phoenicia on the west, and Pales- 
tine on the south. In the wars between the 
Ptolemies and the Seleucidoe, the name was ap- 
plied to the whole of the southern portion of 
Syria, which became subject for some time to 
the kings of Egypt ; but, under the Romans, 
when Phoenicia and Judsea were made distinct 
provinces, the name of Ccelesyria was confined 
to Ccelesyria proper, together with the district 
east of Anti-Libanus, about Damascus, and a 
portion of Palestine east of the Jordan; and 
this is the most usual meaning of the term. 
Under the later emperors it was considered as 
a part of Phoenicia, and was called Phoeuice 
Libanesia. The country was for the most part 
fertile, especially the eastern district about the 
River Chrysorrhoas : the valley of Ccelesyria 
proper was watered by the Leontes. The in- 
habitants were a mixed people of Syrians, Phoe- 
nicians, and Greeks, called Syrophoenicians 
po(f>oivLKsg). 

CoeLETjE or C gel alette, a people of Thrace, 
divided into Majores and Minores, in the district 
Cgsletica, between the Hebrus and the Gulf of 
Melas. 

Cgelius. Vid. C^elius. 

Ccelossa (KoiAwcrcra), a mountain in the Sicy- 
onian territory, near Phlius, an offshoot of the 
Arcadian mountain Cyllene. 

Ccslus (KoZAoc Tii/njv) or Ccsla (KolXa), a sea- 
port town in the Thracian Chersonese, near 
which was the Kwdg cr/fia, or the grave of Hec- 
uba. Vid. Cynossema. 

Ccenus (Kolvog), son-in-law of Parmenion, 
one of the ablest generals of Alexander the 
Great, died on the Hyphasis, B.C. 327. 

Coenyra (Kocvvpa), a place in the island Tha- 
sos, opposite Samothrace. 

[Cceranus (Koipavog). 1. A Lycian, slain by 
Ulysses in the Trojan war. — 2. Charioteer of 
Meriones, slain by Hector. — 3. A Stoic philoso- 
pher, flourished in the reign of the Emperor 
.Nero.] 

[Cceus (Koloc), son of Uranus (Ccelus) and 
Gaea (Terra), one of the most powerful of the 
Titans.] 

Coes (Kw?/r), of Mytilene, dissuaded Darius 
Hystaspis, in his Scythian expedition, from 
breaking up his bridge of boats over the Danube. 
For this good counsel he was rewarded by Da- 
rius with the tyranny of Mytilene. On the 
breaking out of the Ionian revolt, B.C. 501, he 
was stoned to death by the Mytilenaaans. 

[Colanica (now Lanark), a city of the Dam- 
mi in Britannia Barbara.] 



V 



COLAPIS. 



COLUMELLA, L. JUNIUS. 



Colapis (Ko'Aoip in Dion Cass.: now Kulpa),& 
river in Pannonia, flows into the Savus: on it 
dwelt the Colapiani. 

Colchis {Kol X k- KoA^of), a country of Asia, 
[comprising the modern Mingrelia and part ot 
Imireti], bounded on the west by the Euxiue, on 
the north by the Caucasus, on the east by Iberia; 
on the souih and southwest the boundaries were 
somewhat indefinite, and were often considered 
to exteud as far as Trapezus (now Trebizond). 
The land of Colchis (or Ma.) and its river Phasis 
are famous in fch* Creek mythology. Vid, Ar- 
The name of Colchis is first mentioned 



GONAUT.E. 



by JSscbylus and Pindar. The historical ac- 
quaintance of the Creeks with the country may 
be ascribed to the commerce of the Milesians. 
It was a very fertile country, and yielded tim- 
ber, pitch, hemp, flax, and wax, as articles of 
commerce ; but it was most famous for its man- 
ufactures of linen, on account of which, and of 
certain physical resemblances, Herodotus sup- 
posed the Colchians to have been a colony from 
Egypt. The laud was governed by its native 
priuces until Mithradates Eupator made it sub- 
ject to the kingdom of Pontus. After the Mith- 
radatic war it was overrun by the Romans, but 
they did not subdue it till the time of Trajan. 
Under the later emperors the country was called 
Lazica, from the name of one of its principal 
tribes, the Lazi. 

Colias (KwAtuc), a promontory on the western 
coast of Attica, twenty stadia south of Phalerum, 
with a temple of Aphrodite, where some of the 
Persian ships were cast after the battle of Sa- 
lamis. Colias is usually identified with the 
cape called the Three Towers, (Tpelc Hvpyoc), 
but it ought to be placed southeast, near "Ay/of 
Koofiuc. 

Collatia (Collatinus). 1. (Now Castellaccio), 
a Sabine town in Latium, near the right bank 
of the Anio, taken by Tarquinius Priscus. — 2. A 
town in Apulia, only mentioned under the em- 
pire. 

Collatinus, L. Tarquinius, son of Egerius, and 
nephew of Tarquinius Priscus, derived the sur- 
name Collatinus from the town Collatia, of which 
his father had been appointed governor. He 
was married to Lucretia, and it was the rape of 
the latter by Sextus Tarquinius that led to the 
dethronement of Tarquinius Superbus. Collati- 
nus and L. Junius Brutus were the first consuls ; 
but, as the people could not endure the rule of 
any of the hated race of the Tarquins, Collatinus 
resigned his office, and retired from Rome to La- 
vinium. 

Collina Porta. Vid. Roma. 

Collytus (Ko/2vTor ) also Kolv-rog: Ko/J.v- 
reve), a demus in Attica, belonging to the tribe 
^Egeis, was included within the walls of Athens, 
and formed one of the districts into which the 
city was divided : it was the demus of Plato, and 
the residence of Timon the misanthrope. 

Coloe (K0A6;/), a lake in Lydia, generally 
called Gygtea. Vid. Gyg.ea Palus.] 

Colons (Ko/Mvai), a small town in theTroad, 
mentioned in Greek history, but destroyed before 
the time of Pliny. 

Colonia Agrippina or Agrippinensis (now 
Cologne on the Rhine), originally the chief town 
of the Ubii, aud called Oppidum or Civitas Ubio- 
rwn, was a place of small importance till A.D. 



51, when a Roman colony was planted in the 
town by the Emperor Claudius, at the instigation 
of his wife Agrippina, who was born here, and 
from whom it derived its new name. Its inhab- 
itants received the jus Italicum. It soon became 
a large aud flourishing city, and was the capital 
of Lower Germany. At Cologne there are still 
several Roman remains, an ancient gate with the 
inscription C. 0. A. A., i. e., Colonia Claudia 
Augusta Agrippinensis, the foundations of the 
Roman walls. <fec. 

Colonia Equestris. Vid. Noviodunum. 

Colonus (Koluvog : Ko?iovevc, -vltvc, -vidri/c), 
a demus of Attica, belonging to the tribe JSgeis, 
afterward to the tribe Antiochis, ten stadia, or a 
little more than a mile, northwest of Athens; 
near the Academy, lying on and round a hill ; 
celebrated for a temple of Neptune (Poseidon) 
(hence called KoXovog "lTnreioc), a grove of the 
Eumenides, and the tomb of CEdipus. Sophocles, 
who was a native of this demus, has described 
the scenery and religious associations of the spot 
in his CEdipus Coloneus. There was a hill at 
Athens called Colonus Agorseus (Ko'Acjvbr <5 
dyopaiog). 

Colophon {KoAoyuv : ruins at Zille), one of 
the twelve Ionian cities of Asia Minor, was said 
to have been founded by Mopsus, a grandson of 
Tiresias. It stood about two miles from the 
coast, on the River Halesus, which was famous 
for the coldness of its water, between Lebedus 
and Ephesus, one hundred and twenty stadia 
(twelve geographical miles) from the former, and 
seventy stadia (seven geograpical miles) from the 
latter: its harbor was called Notium. It was 
one of the most powerful members of the Ioniara 
confederacy, possessing a considerable fleet and 
excellent cavalry ; but it suffered greatly in war, 
being taken at different times by the Lydians. 
the Persians, Lysimachus, and the Ciliciau pi- 
rates. It was made a free city by the Romans 
after their war with Antiochus the Great. Be- 
sides claiming to be the birth-place of Homer, 
Colophon was the native city of Mimnermus, 
Hermesianax, and Nicander. It was also cele- 
brated for the oracle of Apollo Clarius in its 
neighborhood. Vid. Clarus. 

Colossi (Koloauai, afterward KoAaaoat : Ko- 
Aoaarjvoc, Strab., ~Ko?,oooaevc, New Testament; 
ruins at Khonas), a city of Great Phrygia. on the 
River Lycus, once of great importance, but so re- 
duced by the rise of the neighboring cities of La- 
odicea and Hierapolis that the later geographers 
do not even mention it, and it might have been 
forgotten but for its place in the early history 
of the Christian Church. In the Middle Ages it 
was called Xtivai, and hence the modern name 
of the village on its site. 

Colotes (Kol6r?]c). 1. Of Lampsacus, a hear- 
er of Epicurus, against whom Plutarch wrote two 
of his works. — 2. A sculptor of Paros, flourished 
B.C. 444, and assisted Phidias in executing the 
colossus of Jupiter (Zeus) at Olympia. — [3. A 
painter of Teos, a contemporary and rival of Ti- 
manthes, B.C. 396.] 

Columella, L. Junius Moderatus, a native of 
Gades in Spain, and a contemporary of Seneca. 
We have no particulars of his life ; it appears, 
from his own account, that at some period of his 
life he visited Syria and Cilicia ; but Rome ap- 
pears to have been his ordinary residence. H& 
217 



COLUMNS HERCULIS. 



COMUM. 



•wrote a work upon agriculture (Be Rc Rustica), 
in twelve books, which is still extant. It treats 
not only of agriculture proper, but of the culti- 
vation of the vine and the olive, of gardening, of 
rearing cattle, of bees, &c. The tenth book, 
which treats of gardening, is composed in dacty- 
lic hexameters, and forms a sort of supplement 
to the Georgics. There is also extant a work 
Be Arboribus, in one book. The style of Colu- 
mella is easy and ornate. The best edition of his 
works is by Schneider, in the Scriptores Rei Rus- 
tics, 4 vols. 8vo, Lips., 1794. 

Columns Herculis. Vid. Abyla, Calpe. 

Coluthus (K6?.ov8og), sl Greek epic poet of 
Lycopolis in Egypt, lived at the beginning of 
the sixth century of our era. He is the author 
of an extant poem on "the Rape of Helen" 
TStKevijf; ap-irayri), consisting of three hundred and 
ninety-two hexameter lines. Edited by Bekker, 
Berl., 1816, and Scbtefer, Lips., 1825. 

[Colymbas (Ko?iVfi6ug), one of the daughters 
of Pierus. Vid. Pierides.] 

CoLYTTUS. Vid. COLLYTUS. 

Comana (Ku/j-ava). 1. C. Pontica (ruins at 
Gfuminik), sl flourishing city of Pontus, upon the 
River Iris, celebrated for its temple of Diana 
(Artemis) Taurica, the foundation of which tra- 
dition ascribed to Orestes. The high-priests of 
this temple took rank next after the king, and 
their domain was increased by Pompey after the 
Mithradatic war. — 2. Cappadocle, or C. Chryse 
{now Bostan), lay in a narrow valley of the Anti- 
Taurus, in Cataonia, and was also celebrated for 
a temple of Diana (Artemis) Taurica, the found- 
ation of which was likewise ascribed by tradition 
to Orestes. 

[Comarus (Kofiapog), a harbor of Epirus, on 
the Ambracius Sinus, in the district of Molossis.] 

Combrea (KupBpeia), a town in the Macedonian 
district of Crossaea. 

[Cometes (Ko/ir/rrjc). 1. Father of the Argo- 
naut Asterion — 2. One of the Lapithae, slain at 
the marriage festival of Pirithous.j 

Cominium, a town in Samnium, destroyed by 
the Romans in the Samnite wars. 

[Cominius, P. 1. A Roman knight, who, with 
bis brother L. or C, accused C. Cornelius of ma- 
jestas, B.C. 66 : the matter did not come to trial, 
but next year they renewed the accusation, and 
Cornelius, who was defended by Cicero, was ac- 
quitted. The speech delivered by Cominius was 
extant in the time of Asconius, who praises it ; 
Cominius is also well spoken of by Cicero as a 
lively and clear speaker. — 2. One of Caesar's offi- 
cers, taken prisoner near Thapsus, in crossing 
over to Africa, B.C. 47.] 

Commagene (Kofi/w/7]vr/), the northeastern- 
most district of Syria, was bounded on the east 
and southeast by the Euphrates, on the north 
and northwest by the Taurus, and on the south 
by Cyrrhestiee. It formed a part of the Greek 
kingdom of Syria, after the fall of which it main- 
tained its independence under a race of kings who 
appear to have been a branch of the family of the 
Seleucidae, and was not united to the Roman 
Empire till the reign of Vespasian. Under Con- 
r,tantine, if not earlier, it was made a part of 
Cyrrhestiee. The district was remarkable for its 

rtility. 

Commius, king of the Atrebates, was advanced 
to that dignity by Caesar, who had great confi- 
218 



dence in him. He was sent by Caesar to Brit- 
ain to accompany the ambassadors of the Brit- 
ish states on their return to their native coun- 
try, but he was cast into chains by the Britons, 
and was not released till the Britons had been 
defeated by Caesar, and found it expedient to sue 
for peace. In B.C. 52 he joined the other Gauls 
in their great revolt against the Romans, and 
continued in arms even after the capture of Ale- 
sia. 

Commodus, L. Ceionius, was adopted by Ha- 
drian, A.D. 136, when he took the name of L. 
^Elius Verus Caesar. His health was weak ; he 
died on the first of January, 138, and was interred 
in the mausoleum of Hadrian. His son, L. Aure- 
lius Verus, was the colleague of Antoninus Pius 
in the empire. Vid. Verus. 

Commodus, L. Aurelius, Roman emperor A.D. 
180-192, son of M. Aurelius and the younger 
Faustina, was born at Lanuvium 161, and was 
thus scarcely twenty when he succeeded to the 
empire. He was an unworthy son of a noble 
father. Notwithstanding the great care which 
his father had bestowed upon his education, he 
turned out one of the most sanguinary and licen- 
tious tyrants that ever disgraced a throne. It 
was after the suppression of the plot against his 
life, which had been organized by his sister Lu- 
cilla, 183, that he first gave uncontrolled sway 
to his ferocious temper. He resigned the gov- 
ernment to various favorites, who followed each 
other in rapid succession (Perennis, Oleander, 
Laetus, and Eciectus), and abandoned himself 
without interruption to the most shameless de- 
bauchery. But he was at the same time the 
slave of the most childish vanity, and sought to 
gain popular applause by fighting as a gladiator, 
and slew many thousands of wild beasts in the 
amphitheatre with bow and spear. In consequence 
of these exploits he assumed the name of Hercu- 
les, and demanded that he should be worshipped 
as that god, 191. In the following year his con- 
cubine Marcia found on his tablets, while he was 
asleep, that she was doomed to perish, along 
with Laetus and Eciectus, and other leading men 
in the state. She forthwith administered poison 
to him ; but, as its operation was slow, Narcissus, 
a celebrated athlete, was introduced, and by him 
Commodus was strangled on the 31st of Decem- 
ber, 192. 

Comnena. Vid. Anna Comnena. 

Complutum (now Alcala de Henares), a town 
of the Carpetani in Hispania Tarraconensis, be- 
tween Segovia and Bilbilis. 

Compsa (Compsanus : now Co?iza), a town of 
the Hirpini in Samnium, near the sources of the 
Aufidus. 

Comum (Comensis: now Como), a town in 
Gallia Cisalpina, at the southern extremity of 
the western branch of the Lacus Larius (now 
Bago di Como). It was originally a town of the 
Insubrian Gauls, and was colonized by Pom- 
peius Strabo, by Cornelius Scipio, and by Julius 
Caesar. Caesar settled there six thousand col- 
onists, among whom were five hundred distin- 
guished Greek families; and this new popula- 
tion so greatly exceeded the number of the old 
inhabitants, that the town was called Novum 
Comum, sl name, however, which it did not re- 
tain. Comum was a place of importance, and 
carried on considerable commerce with the 



COMUS. 



CONSTANT! A 



rth. It was celebrated for its iron manufac- . matician aud astronomer, lived in the time of 



tories; it was the birth-place of the younger 
Pliny. 

[Comus (Kuuog), in later antiquity god of fes- 
tive mirth and' joy. was represented as a winged 
youth.] 

[Coxcaxi, a people of Hispania among the 
Cautabri ; said by Horace to delight in the blood 
of horses (Od., 3, 4, 34): their chief city was 
Coucana (now Santillana or Onis).] 

Coxcordia, a Roman goddess, the personifi- 
cation of concord, had several temples at Rome. 
The earliest was built by Camillus in commem- 
oration of the reconciliation between the patri- 
cians and plebeians, after the enactment of the 
Liciuian rogations, B.C. ' 367. In this temple 
the senate frequently met. Concordia is rep- 
resented on coins as a matron, holding in her 
left hand a cornucopia, and in her right either 
an olive branch or a patera. 

Coxdate, the name of many Celtic towns, 
said to be equivalent in meaning to Confluentes, 
t. e., the union of two rivers. 

[Coxdivioum. Vid. Namxetes.] 

[Co-ndochates, a navigable tributary of the 
Ganges in India intra Gaugem.] 

Coxdrusi, a German people in Gallia Belgica, 
the dependents of the Treviri, dwelt between 
the Eburones and the Treviri in the district of 
Co'/idros, on the Maas and Ourthe. 

Coxfluextes (now Coblenz), a town in Ger- 
many, at the confluence of the Moselle and the 
Rhine. 

[Coxn, a people of Hispania, west of the Co- 
lumnar Hereulis.] 

[Coximbriga (now Coimbra), a town of Lusi- 
tania.] 



the Ptolemies Philadelphus and Euergetes (B, 
C. 283-222), and was the friend of Archimedes, 
who praises him in the highest terms. None 
of his works are preserved. — i. A grammarian 
of the age of Augustus, author of a work enti- 
tled Ainyrjoeic, a collection of fifty narratives re- 
lating to the mythical and heroic period. An 
epitome of the work is preserved by Photius. 
— [Editions : By Teucher, Lips., 1802 ; and by 
Westermann iu Scriptores Poeticce Historic 
Grceci, Brunsvigse, 1843.] 

Coxopa (Kovottci : Kuvu~ev£, --nirnc, nato?), 
a village in iEtolia, on the Achelous, enlarged 
by Arsinoe, wife of Ptolemy II, and called after 
her name. 

Coxsextes Dn, the twelve Etruscan gods 
who formed the council of Jupiter. They con- 
sisted of six male and six female divinities : we 
do not know the names of all of them, but it is 
certain that Juno, Minerva, Summanus, Yulcan, 
Saturn, and Mars were among them. 

Coxsextia (Consentluus : now Cosenza), chief 
town of the Bruttii on the River Crathis : here 
Alaric died. 

Coxsextius, P., a Roman grammarian, prob- 
ably flourished in the fifth century of the Chris- 
tian era, and is the author of two extant gram- 
matical works, one published in the Collection 
of grammarians by Putscbius, Hanov., 1605 (De 
Duabus Partibus Orationis, Nomine et Verbo), 
and the other (De Barbarismis et Metaplasmis) 
\ by Buttmaun, Berol., 1817. 

I Coxsidius Loxgus, C. 1. Proprsetor in Africa. 
I left his province shortly before the breakiug out 
I of the civil war B.C. 49, intrusting the govern- 
I ment to Q. Ligarius. He returned to Africa 



Coxisalus (Kovioa/.os), a deity worshipped \ soon afterward, and held Adrumetum for the 



at Athens along with Priapus, 

[Coxistorgis (Koviarupytc), the ancient capi- 
tal of the Conii in Lusitania.] 

[Coxxa, Coxxi, or Coxiuii (Koviov TroMr, 
Hierocl., not far from the modern Altun-Tasli), 
a city of Phi'ygia Palatiaua.] 



Pompeian party. After the defeat of the Pom- 
peians at Thapsus, he attempted to fly into 
Mauretania, but was murdered by the Gaetuli- 
ans. — [2. Q. C. Gallus, a contemporary of 
Cicero, one of the judges in the case of Verres, 
praised by Cicero for his integrity and knowl- 



Coxox (Kovov). 1. A distinguished Athenian! edge of law. — 3. P., served undej* Caesar in his 
general, held several important commands in | first campaign in Gaul, B.C. 58, and is spoken 
the latter part of the Peloppnnesian war. After j of as an experienced soldier.] 



the defeat of the Athenians. by Lysander at iEgos 
Potami (B.C. 405), Conon, who was one of the 
generals, escaped with eight ships, and took ref- 
uge with Evagoras in Cyprus, where he remain- 
ed for some years. He was subsequently ap- 
pointed to the command of the Persian fleet 
along wdth Pharuabazus, and in this capacity 
was able to render the most effectual service 
to his native country. In 394 he gained a de- 
cisive victory over Pisander, the Spartan ad- 
miral, off Cnidus. After clearing the iEgean 
of the Spartans, he returned to Athens in 393, 
and commenced restoring the long walls and the 



[Coxsilixum (now Consignano), a city of the 
Bruttii, north of Locri.] 

Coxstaxs, youngest of the three sons of Con- 
stantine the Great and Fausta, received after 
his father's death (A.D. 337) Illyricum, Italy, 
and Africa as his share of the empire. After 
successfully resisting his brother Constantine, 
who was slain in invading his territory (340), 
Constans became master of the whole West. 
His weak and profligate character rendered him 
an object of contempt, and he was slain in 350 
by the soldiers of the usurper Magxextius. 
Coxstaxtia. 1. Daughter of Constantius 



fortifications of Piraeus. When the Spartans Chlorus and half-sister of Constantine the 
opened their negotiations with Tiribazus, the Great, married to Licinius, the colleague of 
Persian satrap, C. nou was sent by the Atheni- Constantine in the empire.— 2. Daughter of 
ans to counteract the intrigues of Antaleidas, Constantius II. and grand-daughter of Constan- 
but was thrown into prison by Tiribazus. Ac- \ tine the Great, married the Emperor Gratian. 
cording to sou,,- accounts, he Avas sent into the' Coxstaxtia, the name of several cities, all of 
interior of Asia, and there put to death ; but j which are either of little consequence, or better 
according to the most probable account, he ! known by other names. 1. In Cyprus, named 
escaped to Cyprus, where he died.— 2. Son of j after Constantius (vid. Salamis). 2. In Phce- 
Timotheus. grandson of the preceding, lived nicia, after the same (vid. Axtaradus). 3. In 
about 318.— 3. Of Samos. a distinguished mathe- i Palestine, the port of Gaza, named after the 

219 



CONSTANTINO. 



CONSTANTINUS. 



sister of Constantine the Great, and also called 
Majuma. 4. In Mesopotamia. Vid. Antoni- 
xopolis. 

Constaxttxa, daughter of Constantine the 
Great and Fausta, married to Hannibalianus. 
and after the death of the latter to Gallus Caesar. 
Constantina, the city. Vid. Cirta. 
Constaxtixopolis (Kuvaravrtvov tt6?ac : now 
Constantinople), built on the site of the ancient 
Byzantium: by Constantine the Great, who call- 
ed it after his own name, and made it the capi- 
tal of the Roman empire. It was solemnly con- 
secrated A.D. 330. It was built in imitation of 
Rome. Thus it covered seven hills, was di- 
vided into fourteen regiones, and was adorned 
with various buildings in imitation of the capi- 
tal of the Western world. Its extreme length 
was about three Roman miles; and its walls 
included eventually a circumference of thirteen 
or fourteen Roman miles. It continued the 
capital of the Roman empire in the East till its 
capture by the Turks in 1453. An account of 
its topography and history does not fall within 
the scope of the present work. 

Coxstantixus. 1. I. Surnamed " the Great," 
Roman emperor A.D. 306-337, eldest son of 
the Emperor Constantius Chlorus and Helena, 
was born A.D. 272, at Naissus (now Nissa), a 
town in Upper Moesia. He was early trained to 
arms, and served with great distinction under 
Galerius in. the Persian war. Galerius became 
jealous of him and detained him for some time 
in the East ; but Constantine at last contrived 
to join his father in Gaul just in time to accom- 
pany him to Britain on his expedition against 
the Picts, 306. His father died at York itt the 
same year, and Constantine laid claim to a 
share of the empire. Galerius, who dreaded a 
struggle with the brave legions of the West, 
acknowledged Constantine as master of the 
countries beyond the Alps, but with the title 
of Caesar only. The commencement of Con- 
stantine's reign, however, is placed in this year, 
though he did not receive the title of Augustus 
till 308. Constantine took up his residence at 
Treviri (now Treves), where the remains of his 
palace are still extant. He governed with jus- 
tice and firmness, beloved by his subjects, and 
feared by the neighboring barbarians. It was 
not long, however, before he became involved 
in war with his rivals in the empire. In the 
same year that he had been acknowledged Cae- 
sar (306), Maxentius, the son of Maximian, had 
seized the imperial power at Rome. Constan- 
tine entered into a close alliance with Maxen- 
tius by marrying his sister Fausta. But in 310 
Maximian formed a plot against Constantine, 
and was put to death by his son-in-law at Mas- 
silia. Maxentius resented the death of his fa- 
ther, and began to make preparations to attack 
Constantine in Gaul. Constantine anticipated j 
his movements, and invaded Italy at the head 
of a large amry. The struggle was brought to i 
a close by the defeat of Maxentius at the village 
of Saxa Rubra, near Rome, on the 27th of Octo- 1 
ber, 312, Maxentius tried to escape over the 
Milvian bridge into Rome, but perished in the 
river. It was in this campaign that Constan- 
tine is said to have been converted to Christian- 
ity. On his march to Rome, either at Autun in 
Gaul, or near Anderaach on the Rhine or xt 
220 



Verona, he is said to have seen in the sky a 
luminous cross with the inscription hv tovto 
vifca, By this, Conquer ; and on the night be- 
fore the last and decisive battle with Maxen- 
tius, a vision is said to have appeared to Con- 
stantine in his sleep, bidding him inscribe the 
shields of his soldiers with the sacred monogram 
of the name of Christ. The tale of the cross 
seems to have grown out of that of the vision, 
and even the latter is not entitled to credit. It 
was Constantine's interest to gain the affections 
of his numerous Christian subjects in his strug- 
gle with his rivals ; and it was probably only 
self-interest which led him at first to adopt 
Christianity. But, whether sincere or not in his 
conversion, his conduct did little credit to the 
religion which he professed. The miracle of 
his conversion was commemorated by the im- 
perial standard of the Labarum, at the summit 
of which was the monogram of the name of 
Christ, Constantine, by his victory over Max- 
entius, became the sole master of the West. 
Meantime important events took place in the 
East. On the death of Galerius in 311, Licini- 
us and Maximiuus had divided the East be- 
tween them ; but in 313 a war broke out be- 
tween them, Maximinus was defeated, and died 
at Tarsus. Thus there were only two emper- 
ors left, Licinius in the East and Constantine in 
the West ; and between them also war broke 
out in 314, although Licinius had married in the 
preceding year Constantia. the half-sister of 
Constantine. Licinius was defeated at Cibalis 
in Panuonia and afterward at Adrianople. Peace 
was then concluded on condition that Licinius 
should resign to Constantine Illyricum, Mace- 
donia, and Achaia, 314. This peace continued 
undisturbed for nine years, during which time 
Constantine was frequently engaged in war 
with the barbarians on the Danube and the 
Rhine. In these wars his son Crispus greatly 
distinguished himself. In 323 the war between 
Constantine and Licinius was renewed. Licin- 
ius was again defeated in two great battles, 
first near Adrianople, and again at Chaleedon. 
He surrendered himself to Constantine on con- 
dition of having his life spared, but he was short- 
ly afterward put to death at Thessalonica by or- 
der of Constantine. Constantine was now sole 
master of the empire. He resolved to remove 
the seat of empire to Byzantium, which he call- 
ed after his own name Constantinople, or the 
city of Constantine. The new city was solemn- 
ly dedicated in 330. Constantino reigned in 
peace for the remainder of his life. In 325 he 
supported the orthodox bishops at the great 
Christian council of Nicaea (Nice), which con- 
demned the Arian doctrine by adopting the 
word o/ioovGLov. In 324 he put to death his 
eldest son Crispus on a charge of treason, the 
truth of which, however, seems very doubtful. 
He died in May, 337, and was baptized shortly 
before his death by Eusebius. His three sons 
Constantine, Constantius, and Constans suc- 
ceeded him in the empire. — 2. II. Roman em- 
peror 337-340, eldest of the three sons of Con- 
stantine the Great by Fausta, received Gaul, 
Britain, Spain, and part of Africa at his father's 
death. Dissatisfied with his share of the em- 
pire, he made war upon his younger brother 
Constans, who governed Italy, but was defeat- 



CONSTANTIUS. 



COPTOS. 



ed and slain near Aquileia.— S. A usurper, who 
assumed the purple in Britain in the reign of 
Arcadius and Honorius, 407. He also obtained 
possession of Gaul and Spain, and took up his 
residence in the former country. He reigned 
four years, but was defeated in 411 by Constan- 
tius, the general of Honorius, was taken prisoner 
and carried to Ravenna, where he was put to 

death. 4. Coustantiue is likewise the name of 

many of the later emperors of Constantinople. 
Of these Oowtentioe VII. Porphyrogeuitus, 
who reigned 911-959, was celebrated for his 
literary works, many of which have come down 
to us. 

Constantius. 1. I. Surnamed Chlorus, " the 
pale," Roman emperor A.D. 305-306, was the 
son of Eutropius. a noble Dardanian, and of 
Claudia, daughter of Crispus, brother of Clau- 
dius II. He was one of the two Caesars ap- 
pointed by Maximian and Diocletian in 292, 
and received the government of Britain, Gaul, 
and Spain, with Treviri (now Treves), as his resi- 
dence. At the same time he married Theodora, 
the daughter of the wife of Maximian, divorcing 
for that purpose his wife Helena. As Caesar he 
rendered the empire important services. His 
first effort was to reunite Britain to the empire, 
which, after the murder of Carausius, was gov- 
erned by Allectus. After a struggle of three 
years (293-296) with Allectus, Constantius 
established his authority in Britain. He was 
equally successful against the Alemanui, whom 
he defeated with, great loss. Upon the abdica- 
tion of Diocletian and Maximian in 305, Con- 
stantius and Galerius became the Augusti. 
Constantius died fifteen months afterward (July, 
306), at Eboraeum (now York), in Britain, on an 
expedition against the Picts, in which he was 
accompanied by his sou Constantine, afterward 
the Great, who succeeded him in his share of 
the government. — 2. II. Roman emperor 337— 

361, third son of Constantine the Great by his 
second wife Fausta. On the death of his fa- 
ther in 337, he received the East as his share 
of the empire. Upon his accession he became 
involved in a serious war with the Persians, 
w T hich was carried on with a few interruptions 
during the greater part of his reign. This war 
prevented him from taking any part in the strug- 
gle between his brothers Constantine and Con- 
stans, which ended in the defeat and death of 
the former, and the accession of the latter to 
the sole empire of the West, 340. After the 
death of Coustans in 350, Constantius marched 
into the West in order to oppose Magnentius 
and Vetrauio, both of whom had assumed the 
purple. Vetranio submitted to Constantius, and 
Magnentius was fiually crushed in 353. Thus 
the whole empire again became subject to one 
ruler. In 354 Constantius put to death his cous- 
in Gallus, whom he had left in command of the 
East, while he marched against the usurpers in 
the West. In 355 Constantius made Julian, 
the brother of Gallus, Caesar, and sent him into 
Gaul to oppose the barbarians. In 360 Julian 
was proclaimed Augustus by the soldiers at 
Paris. Constantius prepared for war and set 
out for Europe, but died on his march in Cilicia, 

362. He was succeeded by Julian. — 3. III. A 
distinguished general of Honorius, emperor of 
.the West A.D. 421. He defeated the usurper 



Constantine in 411, and also fought successfully 
against the barbarians. He was rewarded for 
these seiwices with the hand of Placidia, the sis- 
ter of Honorius. In 421 he was declared Augus- 
tus by Honorius, but died in the seventh month 
of his reign. 

Consus, an ancient Roman divinity, who was 
identified by some in later times with Neptune. 
Hence Livy (i., 9) calls him Neptunus Equestris. 
He was regarded by some as the god of secret 
deliberations, but he was most probably a god 
of the lower world. Respecting his festival of 
the Consualia, vid. Diet, of Ant, s. v. 

[Contestant a people of Hispania Tarraconen- 
sis, in the eastern part of modern Murcia and 
western part of Valencia : in their territory lay 
Carthago Nova.] 

Contrebia, one of the chief towns of the Celti- 
beri in Hispania Tarraconensis, southeast of Sar- 
agossa. 

Convene, a people in Aquitania near the Pyr- 
enees and on both sides of the Garumna, a mixed 
race which had served under Sertorius, and were 
settled in Aquitania by Pompey. They possessed 
the Jus Latii. Their chief town was Lugdunum 
(now St. Bertrand de Comminges), situated on a 
solitary rock: in its neighborhood were celebra- 
ted warm baths, Aqu^e Convenarum (now Bag- 
neres). 

Copje {KQirai : Koiraievc : near Topoglia), an 
ancient town in Bceotia, on the northern side of 
the Lake Copais, which derived its name from 
this place. It was originally situated on an isl- 
and in the lake, which island was subsequently 
connected with the main land by a mole. 

Copais (Kutratc Xnivif), a lake in Bceotia, and 
the largest lake in Greece, formed chiefly by the 
River Cephisus, the waters of which are emptied 
into the Eubcean Sea by several subterraneous 
canals, called Katabothra by the modern Greeks. 
The lake was originally called Cephisis, under 
which name it occurs in Homer, and subsequent- 
ly different parts of it were called after the 
towns situated on it, Haliartus, Orchomenus, 
Onchestus, Copte, &c. ; but the name Copais 
eventually became the most common, because 
near Copae the waters of the lake are the deep- 
est and are never dried up. In the summer the 
greater part of the lake is dry, and becomes a 
green meadow, in which cattle are pastured. 
The eels of this lake were much prized in an- 
tiquity, and they retain their celebrity in modern 
times. 

Cophen or Cophes (Kofr/v, Arrian., Kcj^c, 
Strab. : now Cabul), the only grand tributary river 
which flows into the Indus from the west. It 
was the boundary between India and Ariana. 

Coponius, C, praetor B.C. 49, fought on the 
side of Pompey ; he was proscribed by the tri- 
umvirs in 43, but his wife obtained his pardon 
from Antony by the sacrifice of her honor. 

Coprates (KoTrpuTTjc : now Abzal), a river of 
Susiaua, flowing from the north into the Pasitigris 
on its western side. 

Copreus (Kowpsvc), son of Pelops, who, after 
murdering Iphitus, fled from Elis to Mycenae, 
where he was purified by Eurystheus. 

Coptos (Koirroc : ruins at Kofi), a city of the 
Theba'is or Upper Egypt, lay a little to the east 
of the Nile, some distance below Thebes. Un- 
der the Ptolemies it was the central point of 
221 



CORA. 



U)RL\.V\. 



the commerce with Arabia and India, by way of 
Berenice and Myos-Hormos. It was destroyed 
by Diocletian, but again became a considerable 
place. The neighborhood was celebrated for its 
emeralds and other precious stones, Mid produced 
also a light wine. 

Cora (Coranus : now Cori), an ancient town in 
Latium, in the Volscian Mountains, southeast of 
Veiitrse, said to have been founded by the Argive 
Corax. At Cori there are remains of Cyclopian 
walls and of an ancient temple. 

Coracesium (Kopanqciov : now Alaya), a very 
strong city of Cilicia Aspera, on the borders of 
Pamphylia, standing upon a steep rock, and 
possessing a good harbor. It was the only 
place in Cilicia which opposed a successful re- 
sistance to Alexander, and, after its strength 
had been tried more than once in the wars of 
the Seleucidae, it became at last the head-quar- 
ters of the Cilician pirates, and was taken by 
Pompey. 

[Coralius (Kupd?uog, also Kovdptog). 1. A 
river of Thessaly, flowing into the Peneus. — 2. A 
river of Bceotia, near Coronea, flowing into the 
Copais Lacus.] 

CorassI^e {Kopaociai), a group of small islands 
in the Icarian Sea, southwest of Icaria. They 
must not be confounded, as they often are, with 
the islands Corses or CorsLe (Kopaeai or Kop- 
aiai), off the Ionian coast, and opposite the prom- 
ontory Ampelos in Samos. 

Corax (K6pa£), a Sicilian rhetorician, who ac- 
quired so much influence over the citizens by his 
oratorical powers that he became the leading 
man in Syracuse after the expulsion of Thrasybu- 
lus, B.C. 467. He wrote the earliest work on the 
art of rhetoric, aud his treatise (entitled Texv?]) 
was celebrated in antiquity. 

[Corax (K6pa£). 1. (Now Coraca or Vardhnsi 
according to Leake), a mountain in iEtolia, near 
Naupactus. — 2. (Now Cape Aynda ?), a promon- 
tory of Chersonesus Taurica.] 

[Corbio. 1. (Now Berga), a city of Hispania 
Tarraconensis. — 2. A city in the territory of the 
.iEqui in Latium, captured by Coriolanus ; at a 
later period by ths Volsci,] 

Corbulo, Cn. Domitius, a distinguished general 
under Claudius and Nero. In A.D. 47 he carried 
on war in Germany with success, but his fame 
rests chiefly upon his glorious campaigns against 
the Parthians in the reign cf Nero. Though be- 
loved by the army, he continued faithful to Ne- 
ro, but his only reward was death. Nero, who 
had become jealous of his fame and influence, 
invited him to Corinth. As soon as he landed at 
Cenchreae, he was informed that orders had been 
issued for his death, whereupon he plunged 
his sword into his breast, exclaiming, " Well de- 
served!" 

Corcyra (Kepuvpa, later Kopavpa : Kspuvp- 
alog : now Corfu, from the Byzantine KopvQu), an 
island in the Ionian Sea, off the coast of Epirus, 
about thirty-eight miles in length, but of very 
unequal breadth. It is generally mountainous, 
but possesses many fertile valleys. Its two 
chief towns were Corcyra, the modern town of 
Corfu, in the middle of the eastern coast, and 
Cassiope, north of the former. The ancients 
universally regarded this island as the Homeric 
Scheria (IxepiT]), where the enterprising and 
sea-loving Phaeaeiaus dwelt, governed bv their 
222 



i king Aleinous. The island is said to have also 
j borne the name of Drepane (ApeTtavrj), or the 
" Sickle/' in ancient times. About B.C. 700 it was 1 
colonized by the Corinthians under Chersicrates, 
one of the Bacchiadag, who drove out the Libur- 
nians, who were then inhabiting the island. It 
soon became rich and powerful by its extensive 
commerce ; it founded many colonies on the oppo- 
site coast, Epidamnus, Apollonia, Leucas, Anac- 
torium ; and it exercised such influence in the 
Ionian and Adriatic Seas as to become a formi- 
dable rival to Corinth. Thus the two states early 
became involved in war, and about B.C. 664 a 
battle was fought between their fleets, which is 
memorable as the most ancient sea-fight on re- 
cord. At a later period, Corcyra, by invoking 
the aid of Athens against the Corinthians, became 
one of the proximate causes of the Peloponnesian 
war, 431. Shortly afterward her power declined 
in consequence of civil dissensions, in which both 
the aristocratical and popular parties were- 
guilty of the most horrible atrocities against eaeiu 
other. At last it became subject to the Ro- 
mans with the rest of Greece. Corfu is at pres - 
ent one of the seven Ionian islands undes- th&- 
protection of Great Britain, and the seat of; gov - 
ernment. 

Corcyra Nigra (now Curzola, in Slavonic- 
Karkar), an island off the coast of Illyricum, sur- - 
named the "Black" on account of its numerous, 
forests, to distinguish it from the more celebrated . 
Corcyra, It contained a Greek town-.of the same 
name, founded by Cnidos. 

Cordijba (now Cordova), one of the largest cit - 
ies in Spain, and the capital of Baetica, on the • 
right bank of the Baetis ; made a Roman colony 
B.C. 152, and received the surname Patricia, be- 
cause some Roman patricians settled there ; ta- - 
ken by Caesar in 45 because it. sided with the 
Pompeians ; birth-place of the two Senecas and 
of Lucan. In the Middle Ages it was the capital ; 
of the kingdom of the Moors, but is now a decay- - 
ing place with 55,000 inhabitants. 

Corduene. Vid. Gordyene. . 

Cordus, Cremutius, a Roman historian under 
Augustus and Tiberius, was accused in A.D. 25. 
of having praised Brutus and denominated Cas- 
sius " the last of the* Romans," As the empe- 
ror had determined upon his death, he put an 
end to his own life by starvation. His works 
were condemned to be burned, but some copies 
were preserved by his daughter Marcia and by 
his friends. 

Core {Koprf), the Maiden, a name by which Per- 
sephone is often called. Vid. Persephone. 

Coressus (Kopecoog). l.\ A lofty mountain in 
Ionia, forty stadia (four geographical miles) from 
Ephesus, with a place of the same name at its 
foot, — 2. A town in the, island of.Ceos. Vid. 
Ceos. 

Corfinium (Corfiniensi.s), chief town of the-Pe- 
ligni in Samnium, not far from the Aternus, strong- 
ly fortified, and memorable as the place which 
the Italians in the Social war destined to be the 
new capital of Italy in place of Rome, on which 
account it was called Itatica. 

Corinna (Kopivva) a Greek poetess, of Tana- 
gra in Bceotia, sometimes called the Theban on > 
account, of her long residence in Thebes. She • 
flourished about B.C. 490, and was a contempo- 
rary, of ^Pindar,, whom she is said, to have in- 



CORINTHIACUS ISTHMUS. 



coriolanus. 



structed, and over whom she gained a victory 
at the pubhe games at Thebes. Her poems 
were written in the ^Eolic dialect. They were 
collected in five books, and were chiefly lyrical. 
Only a few fragments have been preserved; 
[published iu the collections of Schneidewin, 
BoetceMegiaci, Gottiug., 1839, and of Bergk, Poe- 
tce Lyrici Qrmm, Lips., 1843.] 

Corinthiacls Isthmus ('la6/xdg Kjpivdov), 
often called simply the Isthmus, lay between the 
Corinthian and Saronic G-ulfs, and conuected the 
Peloponnesus with the mam laud or Hellas prop- 
er. In its narrowest part it was forty stadia or 
five Roman miles across : here was the temple 
of Neptuue (Poseidon), and here the Isthmian 
games were celebrated ; and here, also, was the 
Diolcos (AwAKoc), or road by which ships were 
dragged across from the Bay of Schoeuus to the 
harbor of Lechamm. Four unsuccessful at- 
tempts were made to dig a canal across the 
Isthmus, namely, by Demetrius Poliorcetes, Ju- 
lius Caesar, Caligula, and Nero. 

Corinthiacus Sinus (Kopcvdiandc or Koplvdwc, 
Kol-og : now Ghdf of Lepanto), the gulf between 
the north of Greece and Peloponnesus, begins, 
according to some, at the mouth of the Ache- 
lous in JEtolia and the promontory Araxus in 
Aebaia, according to others at the straits be- 
tween Rhium and Antirrhium. In early times 
it was called the Crissajan Gulf (Kpicoaloc ku?»- 
itoc), and its eastern part the Alcyouian Sea (i/ 
'AXkvovic &uAaoca). 

Corinthus (Kopivdog : KopivBioc), called in 
Homer Epiiyra ('EyOpn), a city on the above- 
mentioned isthmus. Its territory, called Co- 
rinthia (KoptvOia), embraced the greater part 
of the Isthmus, with the adjacent part of the 
Peloponnesus : it was bounded north by Mega- 
ris and the Corinthian Gulf, south by Argolis, 
west by Sicyouia and Phliasia, and east by the 
Sarouic Gulf. In the north and south the coun- 
try is mountainous, but iu the ceutre it is a plain 
with a solitary and steep mountain rising from 
it, the Acrocorinthus ('AhpoKopivdog), nineteen 
hundred feet in height, which served as the cit- 
adel of Corinth. The city itself was built on 
the northern side of this mountain; and the 
walls, which included the Acrocorinthus, were 
eighty-six stadia in circumference. It had two 
harbors, Cenchre.e and Schcenus on the east, 
or Saronic Gulf, and one, Legh^eum, on the west 
or Corinthian Gulf. Its favorable position be- 
tween two seas, the difficulty of carrying goods 
round Peloponnesus, and the facility with which 
they could be transported across the Isthmus, 
raised Corinth in very early times to great com- 
mercial prosperity, and made it the emporium 
of the trade between Europe and Asia. Its 
navy was numerous and powerful. At Corinth 
the first triremes were built, and the first sea- 
fight ou record was between the Corinthians 
and their colonists the Corcyraeans. Its great- 
ness at an early period is attested by numerous 
colonies, Ambracia, Corcyra, Apollonia, Poti- 
daea, <irc. It was adorned with magnificent 
buildings, and in no other city of Greece, except 
Athens, were the flue arts prosecuted with so 
much vigor and success. Its commerce brought 
great wealth to its inhabitants ; but with their 
wealth, they became luxurious and licentious. 
Thus the worship of Venus (Aphrodite) pre- 



j vailed in this city, and in her temples a vast 
number of courtesaus was maintained. Corinth 
was originally inhabited by the iEolic race. 
Here ruled the JEoWc Sisyphus and his descend- 
ants. On the conquest of Peloponnesus by the 
Dorians, the royal power passed into the hands 
of the Heraclid Aletes. The conquering Dori- 
ans became the ruling class, and the iEolian in- 
habitants subject to them. After Aletes and 
his descendants had reigned for five generations, 
royality was abolished, and in its stead was es- 
tablished an oligarchical form of government, 
confined to the powerful family of the Bacchia- 
dte. This family was expelled B.C. 655 by Cvr- 
selus, who became tyrant, and reigned thirty 
years. He was succeeded, 625, by his son Pe- 
riander, who reigned forty years. On the 
death of the latter, 585, his nephew Psammeti- 
chus reigned for three years, and on his fall in 
581, the government again became an aristocra- 
cy. In the Peloponnesian war Corinth was one 
of the bitterest enemies of Athens. In 346 Ti- 
mophanes attempted to make himself master of 
the city, but he was slain by his brother Timo- 
leon. Jt maintained its independence till the 
time of the Macedonian supremacy, when its 

j citadel was garrisoned by Macedonian troops.. 

| This garrison was expelled by Aratus in 243,. 

I whereupon Corinth joined the Achaean league, 

J to which it continued to beloug till it was taken. 

j and destroyed in 146 by L. Mummius, the Ro- 

! man consul, who treated it in the most bar- 
barous manner. Its inhabitants were sold as 
slaves ; its works of art, which were not de- 
stroyed by the Roman soldiery, were conveyed 
to Rome; its buildings were razed to the 
ground ; and thus was destroyed the lumen to- 
rtus Grcecice, as Cicero calls the city. For a 
century it lay in ruins ; only the buildings on 
the Acropolis and a few temples remained stand- 
ing. In 46 it was rebuilt by Caesar, who peopled 
it with a colony of veterans and descendants 
of freedmen. It was now called Colonia Julia 
Corinthus ; it became the capital of the Roman 
province of Achaia, and soon recovered much 
of its ancient prosperity, but, at the same time,, 
it became noted for its former licentiousness, as 
we see from St. Paul's epistles to the inhabit- 
ants. The site of Corinth is indicated by seven, 
Doric columns, which are the only remains of 
the ancient city. 

Coriolanus, the hero of one of the most beau- 
tiful of the early Roman legends. His original 
name was C. or Cn. Marches, and he received 
the surname Coriolanus from the heroism he 
displayed at the capture of the Volscian town 
of Corioli. His haughty bearing toward the 
commons excited their fear and dislike, and 
when he was a candidate for the consulship 
they refused to elect him. After this, when 
there was a famine in the city, and a Greek 
prince sent corn from Sicily, Coriolanus ad- 
vised that it should not be distributed to the 
commons, unless they gave up their tribunes. 
For this he was impeached and coudemned to 
exile, B.C. 491. He now took refuge among 
the Volscians, and promised to assist them in 
war against the Romans. Attius Tullius, the 
king of the Volscians, appointed Coriolanus 
general of the Volscian army. Coriolanus took 
many towns, and advanced unresisted till he 
223 



CORIOLI. 



CORONUS. 



came to the fossa Ohdtia, or Cluilian dike close 
lo Rome, 489. Here he encamped, and the Ro- 
mans, in alarm, sent to him embassy after em- 
bassy, consisting of the most distinguished men 
of the state. But he would listen to none of 
them. At leugth the noblest matrons of Rome, 
headed by Veturia, the mother of Coriolanus, 
and Volumnia, his wife, with his two little chil- 
dren, came to his tent. His mother's reproach- 
es, and the tears of his wife and the other ma- 
trons, bent his purpose. He led back his army, 
and lived in exile among the Volscians till his 
death, though other traditions relate that he was 
killed by the Yolscians on his return to their 
country. 

Corioli (Coriolanus), a town in Latium, cap- 
ital of the Yolsci, from the capture of which, in 
B.C. 493, C. Marcius obtained the surname of 
Ooriolanus. 

Cormasa (Kop/uaaa), an inland town of Pam- 
phylia or of Pisidia, taken by the consul Man- 
lius. 

Cornelia. 1. One of the noble women at 
Rome, guilty of poisouing the leading men of the 
state, B.C. 331.— 2. Elder daughter of P. Scipio 
Africanus the elder, married to P. Seipio Nasica. 
— 3. Younger sister of No. 2, married to Ti. 
Sempronius Gracchus, censor 169, was by him 
the mother of the two tribunes Tiberius and 
Caius. She was virtuous and accomplished, 
and united in her person the severe virtues of 
the old Roman matron, with the superior knowl- 
edge and refinement which then began to pre- 
vail in the higher classes at Rome. She super- 
intended with the greatest care the education 
of her sons, whom she survived. She was al- 
most idolized by the people, who erected a 
statue to her, with the inscription Cornelia, 
mother of the Gracchi. — <£. Daughter of L. 
Cinna, married to C. Caesar, afterward dictator. 
She bore him his daughter Julia, and died in 
his quaestorship, 68.-5. Daughter of Metellus 
Scipio, married first to P. Crassus, the son of 
the triumvir, who perished in the expedition 
against the Parthians, 53. Next year she mar- 
ried Pompey the Great, by whom she was 
tenderly loved. She accompanied Pompey to 
Egypt after the battle of Pharsalia, and saw him 
murdered. She afterward returned to Rome, 
and received from Caesar the ashes of her hus- 
band, which she preserved on his Alban estate. 

Cornelia Orestilla. Vid. Orestilla. 

Cornelia Gens, the most distinguished of all 
die Roman geutes. All its great families be- 
longed to the patrician order. The names of 
the patrician families are, Arvina, Cethegus, 
Cinna, Cossus, Dolabella, Lentulus, Malu- 
ginensis, Mammula, Merula, Rufinus, Scipio, 
Sisenna, and Sulla. The names of the ple- 
beian families are Balbus and Gallus, and we 
also find various cognomens, as Chrysogonus, 
tfec, given to freedmen of this gens. 

Cornelius Nepos. Vid. Nepos. 

Cornioulum (Corniculauus), a town in La- 
tium, in the mountains north of Tibur, taken and 
destroyed by Tarquiuius Priscus, and celebrated 
as the residence of the parents of Servius Tul- 
lius. 

Cornificius. 1. Q., a friend of Cicero, was 
tribune of the plebs B.C. 69, and one of Cic- 
ero's competitors for the consulship in 64 
224 



When the Catilinarian conspirators were ar- 
rested, Cethegus was committed to his care. - 

2. Q., son of No. 1. In the civil war (48) he 
was quaastor of Caesar, who sent him into Illyr- 
icum with the title of propraetor: he reduced 
this province to obedience. In 45 he was ap- 
pointed by Caesar governor of Syria, and in 44 
governor of the province of Old Africa, where 
he was at the time of Caesar's death. He main- 
tained this province for the senate, but on the 
establishment of the triumvirate was defeated 
and slain in battle by T. Sextius. Cornificius 
was well versed in literature. Mauy have at- 
tributed to him the authorship of the " Rhetor- 
ica ad Herennium,'' usually printed with Cic- 
eero's works ; but this is only a conjecture. The 
Cornificius who is mentioned by Quintilian as 
the author of a work on rhetoric was probably 
a different person from the one we are speaking 
of. — 3. L., one of the generals of Octavianus in 
the war against Sex. Pompey, and consul 35. 

Cornus, a town on the west of Sardinia. 

Cornutus, L. AnnvEus, a distinguished Stoic 
philosopher, was born at Leptis in Libya. He 
came to Rome, probably as a slave, and was 
emancipated by the Annsei. He was the teach- 
er and friend of the poet Persius, who has ded- 
icated his fifth satire to him, and who left him 
his library and money. He was banished by 
Nero, A.D. 68, for having too freely criticised 
the literary attempts of the emperor. He wrote 
a large number of works, all of which are lost : 
the moft important of them was on Aristotle's 
Categories. — [Editions: by Osann, Cornutus 
(Phurnutus) de Natura Deorum. Gotting., 1844.} 

Corcebus (KopoiSog). 1. A Phrygian, son of 
Mygdon, loved Cassandra, and for that reason 
fought on the side of the Trojans : he was slain 
by Neoptolemus or Diomedes. — 2. An Elean, 
who gained the victory in the stadium at the 
Olympic games, B.C. 776 : from this time the 
Olympiads begin to be reckoned. 

Corone (Kopuvrj: Kopuvevg, -vcuevg : now Co- 
ron), a town in Messenia on the western side 
of the Messenian Gulf, founded B.C. 371 by the 
Messenians after their return to their native 
country, with the assistance of the Thebans : 
it possessed severnl public buildings, and in its 
neighborhood was a celebrated temple of Apollo. 

Coronea (Kopuveia : Kopuvalog, Kopuvetog, 
-viog). 1. (Near modern Gamari), a town in 
Bceotia, southwest of the Lake Copais, situate 
on a height between the rivers Phalarus and 
Coralius ; a member of the Boeotian league ; in 
its neighborhood was the temple of Athena Iton- 
ia, where the festival of the Pambceotia was 
celebrated. Near Coronea the Boeotians gained 
a memorable victory over the Athenians under 
Tolmides, B.C. 447 ; and here Agesilaus de- 
feated the allied Greeks, 394. — 2. A town in 
Phthiotis in Thessaly. 

Coronis (Kopuvig). 1. The mother of JEscn- 
lapius. — 2. Daughter of Phoroneus, king of Pho- 
cis, metamorphosed by Minerva (Athena) iuto a 
crow when pursued by Neptune (Poseidon). 

[Coronta (Kopovra), a city of Acarnania, at 
the mouth of the Achelous.] 

[Coronus (Kopovog). 1. Son of Cseneus, and 
one of the princes of the Lapithae ; slain b\ Her- 
cules. — 2. Son of Thersander, grandson of Sis- 
yphus, reputed founder of Coronea.] 



CORSEJ£. 



COS. 



CORSE/E. Vid. CORASSI^E. 

Corsia (Kopoeia, also Kopaiai), a town in 
Bocotia, on the borders of Phocis. 

Corsica, called Cyrnus by the Greeks (Kvp- 
vog: Kvpvior, Kvpvaloc, Corsus: now Corsica), 
an island north of Sardinia, spoken of by the 
ancients as one of the seven large islands in 
the Mediterrauean. The ancients, however, 
exaggerate lor the most part the size of the 
island ; its greatest length is one hundred and 
sixteen miles, and its greatest breadth about 
fifty-one. It is mountainous, and was not much 
cultivated in autiquity. A range of mountains 
running from south to north separates it into 
two parts, of which the eastern half was more 
cultivated, while the western half was covered 
almost entirely with wood. Honey and wax 
were the principal productions of the island; 
but the honey had a bitter taste, from the yew- 
trees with which the island abounded (Cyrne- 
us taxos, Virg., Eel., ix., 30). The inhabitants 
were a rude mountain race, addicted to robbery, 
and paying little attention to agriculture. Even 
in the time of the Roman empire their charac- 
ter had not much improved, as we see from the 
description of Seneca, who was banished to this 
island. The most ancient inhabitants appear to 
have been Iberians ; but in early times Ligu- 
rians, Tyrrhenians, Carthaginians, and even 
Greeks (vid. Aleria), settled in the island. It 
was subject to the Carthaginians at the com- 
mencement of the first Punic war, but soon 
afterward passed into the hands of the Romans, 
and subsequently formed a part of the Roman 
proviuce of Sardinia. The Romaus founded 
several colonies in the island, of which the most 
important were Mariana and Aleria. 

Corsote (Kopauri/ : ruius at Ersey), a city of 
Mesopotamia, on the Euphrates, near the mouth 
of the Mascas or Saocoras (now Wady-el-Seba), 
which Xenophon found already deserted. 

Cortona (Cortouensis : now Cortona), one 
of the twelve cities of Etruria, lay northwest of 
theTrasimene Lake, and was one of the most an- 
cient cities in Italy. It is said to have been orig- 
inally called Cory thus from its reputed found- 
er Corythus, who is represented as the father 
of Dardanus. It is also called Croton, CotJior- 
nia, Cyrtonium, (fee. The Creston mentioned 
by Herodotus (i., 57) was probably Crestou in 
Thrace and not Cortona, as many modern writ- 
ers have supposed. Cortona is said to have 
been originally fouuded by the Umbrians, then 
to have been conquered by the Pelasgians, and 
subsequently to have passed into the hands of 
the Etruscans. It was afterward colonized by 
th-. Romaus, but under iheir dominion sunk into 
insignificance. The remains of the Pelasgic 
walls of this city are some of the most remark- 
able in all Italy : there is one fragment one 
hundred and twenty feet in length, composed 
of blocks of enormous magnitude. 

Corunoanius, Tl, consul B.C. 280, with P. 
Valerius Laevinus, fought with success against 
the Etruscans and Pyrrhus. He was the first 
plebeian who was created pontifex maximus. 
He was one of the most remarkable men of his 
age, possessed a profound knowledge of pon- 
tifical and civil law, and was the first person at 
Rome who gave regular instruction in law. 
Corvincs Mrssala. Vid. Messala. 
15 



Corvus, M. Valerius, one of the most illus- 
trious men in the early history of Rome. He 
obtained the surname of Corvus, or " Raven," 
because, when serving as military tribune under 
Camillus, B.C. 349, he accepted the challenge 
of a gigantic Gaul to single combat, and was 
assisted in the conflict by a raven which settled 
upon his helmet, and flew in the face of the bar- 
barian. He was six times consul B.C. 348, 346, 
343, 335, 300, 299, and twice dictator, 342, 301, 
and by his military abilities rendered the most 
memorable services to his country. His most 
brilliant victories were gained iu his third con- 
sulship, 343, when he defeated the Samnites at 
Mount Gaurus and at Suessula ; and in his other 
consulships he repeatedly defeated the Etrus- 
cans and other enemies of Rome. He reached 
the age of one hundred years, and is frequently 
referred to by the later Roman writers as a 
memorable example of the favors of fortune. 

Corybantes, priests of Cybele or Rhea in 
Phrygia, who celebrated her worship with en- 
thusiastic dances, to the sound of the drum and 
the cymbal. They are often identified with the 
Curetes and the Jdasan Dactyli, and thus are 
said to have been the nurses of Jupiter (Zeus) 
in Crete. They were called Galli at Rome. 

Corycia (Kopvuta or Kupvuic), a nymph who 
became by Apollo the mother of Lycorus or Ly- 
coreus, and from whom the Corycian cave in 
Mount Parnassus was believed to have derived 
its name. The Muses are sometimes called by 
the poets Corycides Nymphce. 

Corycus (KupvKog : KcopvKioc, Corycius). 1. 
(Now Koraka), a high rocky hill on the coast of 
Ionia, forming the southwestern promontory of 
the Erythraean peninsula. — 2. A city of Pam- 
phylia, near Phaselis and mount Olympus : colo- 
nized afresh by Attalus II. Philadelpbus ; taken, 
and probably destroyed, by P. Servilius Isauri- 
cus. — 3. (Ruins opposite the island of Khorgos), 
a city in Cilicia Aspera, with a good harbor, 
between the mouths of the Lamus and the Ca- 
lycadnus. Twenty stadia (two geographical 
miles) from the city was a grotto or glen in the 
mountains, called the Corycian Cave (Kupvutov 
uvrpov), celebrated by the poets, and also famous 
for its saffron. At the distance of one hundred 
stadia (ten geographical miles) from Corycus 
was a promontory of the same name. 

Corydallus (Kopvda?J^6c : Kopv6aX},evc), a 
demus in Attica belonging to the tribe Hippo- 
thooutis, situate on the mountain of the same 
name, which divides the plain of Athens from 
that of Eleusis. 

Coryphasium (Kopvtpuaiov), a promontory in 
Messenia, inclosing the harbor of Pylos on the 
north, with a town of the same name upon it 
(now Old Navarino). 

Corythus (Kopvdog). 1. An Italian hero, son 
of Jupiter, husband of Electra, and father of 
Iasius and Dardanus, is said to have founded 
Corythus (now Cortona). — [2. Sou of Marmarus, 
wounded Pelates with a javelin at the marriage 
festival of Perseus.] 

Cos, C5os, Coiis (Kuc, Koug ■ Kuoc, Coiis : now 
Eos, Stanco), one of the islands called Sporades, 
layoff the coast of Caria, at the mouth of the Ce- 
ramic Gulf, opposite to Halicaruassus. In early 
times it was called Meropis and Nymphoea. It 
was colonized by jEoliaus. but became a mem- 
225 



COSA. 



COTYLUS. 



ber of the Dorian confederacy. Its chief city, 
Cos, stoood on the northeast side of the island, 
in a beautiful situation, and had a good harbor. 
[Near it stood the Asclepieurn, or temple of As- 
clepius ( JSsculapius), to whom the island was 
sacred, aud from whom its chief family, the As- 
elepiadae, claimed their descent. The island 
was very fertile ; its chief productions were 
wine, ointments, and the light transparent dress- 
es called " Cose vestes." It was the birthplace 
of the physician Hippocrates, who was an As- 
clepiad, of the poet Philetas, and of the painter 
Apelles, whose pictures of Antigonu3 and of 
Yenus Anadyomene adorned the Asclepieum. 
Under the Koreans, Cos was favored by Clau- 
dius, who made it a free state, and by Antoni- 
nus Pius, who rebuilt the city of Cos after its 
destruction by an earthquake. 

Cos a or Cossa (Cossanus). 1. (Now Anse- 
ihnla, about five miles southeast of Orbetello), a 
city of Etruria, near the sea, with a good har- 
bor, called HereuHs Port us, was a very ancient 
place, and after the fall of Falerii one of the 
twelve Etruscan cities. It was colonized by 
the Romans B.C. 278, and received in 197 an 
addition of one thousand colonists. There are 
still extensive ruins of its walls and towers, 
built of polygonal masonry. — 2. A town in Lu- 
cania, near Thurii. — [3. (Now Cosa), or Cosas, 
a river of Latium, near Frusino.] 

Coscoxius. 1. C, praetor in the Social war, 
B.C. 89, defeated the Samnites.— 2. C, praetor 
in the consulship of Cicero, 63 ; governed in the 
following year the province of Further Spain ; 
was one of the twenty commissioners in 59, to 
carry into execution the agrarian law of Julius 
Caesar, but died in this year. — 3. C, tribune of 
the plebs 59, aedile 5*7, aud one of the judiees at 
the trial of P. Sextius, 56. 

Cosmas (Koo/mr), commonly called Indico- 
pleustes (Indian navigator), an Egyptian monk, 
flourished in the reign of Justinian, about A.D. 
535. In early life he followed the employment 
of a merchant, and visited many foreign coun- 
tries, of which he gave an account in his To- 
joypafyia XpiGTiavuiii}, Topographic/. Christiana, 
in twelve books, of which the greater part is 
extant. 

Cosroes. 1. King of Parthia. Vid, Arsa- 
ces, No. 25.-2. King of Persia. Vid, Sassa- 
yiDJE. 

Coss-EA (Koccaia), a district in and about 
Mount Zagros, on the northeast side of Susiana, 
and on the confines of Media and Persia, in- 
habited by a rude, warlike, predatory people, 
the Cossaei (KocraaloL), whom the Persian kings 
never subdued, but, on the contrary, purchased 
their quiet by paying them tribute." Alexander I 
conquered them (B.C. 325-324), and with dif- j 
ficulty kept them in subjection ; after his death j 
they soon regained their independence. Their j 
name is supposed to have been the origin of the ; 
modern name of Susiana, Khuzistan, aud is pos- 1 
sibly connected with the Cush of the Old Testa- : 
ment 

Cossus, Cornelius, the name of several il- ! 
lustrious Romans in the early history of the j 
republic. Of these the most celebrated was 
Sei\ Cornelius Cossus, consul B.C. 428, who j 
killed Lar Tolumnius, the king of the Yeii, iu ' 
single combat, aud dedicated his spoils iu 'the ; 
226 



j temple of Jupiter Feretrius — the second of the 
j three instances in which the spolia opima were 
I won. 

Cossutius, a Roman architect, who rebuilt 
at the expense of Antiochus Epiphanes, the tem- 
ple of the Olympian Jupiter (Zeus) at Athens, 
about B.C. 168, in the most magnificent Corinth- 
ian style. 

Cosyra (now Pantelaria), also written Cos- 
syra, Cosyrus, Cosura, Cossura, a small island 
in the Mediterranean near Malta. 

Cothox. Vid. Carthago. 

Cotiso, a king of the Dacians, conquered in 
the reign of Augustus by Lentulus. 

Cotta, Aurelius. 1. C, consul B.C. 252 and 
24S, in both of which years he fought in Sicily 
against the Carthagiuians with success. — 2. C, 
consul 200, fought against the Boii and the other 
Gauls in the north of Italy. — 3. L., tribune of 
the plebs 154, and consul 144. — i. L., consul 
119, opposed C. MariuSj who was then tribune 
of the plebs. — 5. C, was accused under the lex 
Yaria, 91, of supporting the claims of the Italian, 
allies, and went into voluntary exile. He re- 
turned to Rome when Sulla was dictator, 82 :. 
and in 75 he was consul with L. Octavius. He 
obtained the government of Gaul, and died im- 
mediately after his return to Rome. He was 
one of the most distinguished orators of his- 
time, and is introduced by Cicero as one of the 
speakers in the Be Oratore, and the Be Natitra 
Beorum, in the latter of which works he main- 
tains the cause of the Academics. — 6. M., broth- 
er of No. 5, consul 74, with L. Liciuius Lucui- 
lus, obtained Bithynia for his province, and was 
defeated by Mithradates near Chalcedon. — 7. 
L., brother of Nos. 5 and 6, praetor 70, when he 
carried the celebrated law {lex Amelia judicia- 
ria) which intrusted the judicia to the senators, 
equites, and tribuni aerarii. He was consul 65 
with L. Manlius Torquatus, after the consuls 
elect, P. Sulla and P. Autronius Paetus, had 
been condemned of ambitus. He supported 
Cicero during his consulship, and proposed his 
recall from exile. In the civil war he joined 
Caesar, whom he survived. 

Cotta, L. Aurunculeius, one of Caesar's le- 
gates in Gaul, perished along with Sabinus in 
the attack made upon them by Ambiorix, B.C. 
54. Vid. Ambiorix. 

Cottius, son of Donnus, king of several Li 
gurian tribes in the Cottian Alps, which derived 
their name from him. Vid. Alpes. He sub- 
mitted to Augustus, who granted him the sover- 
eignty over twelve of the tribes, with the title ol 
Praefectus. Cottius thereupon made roads over 
the Alps, and erected (B.C. 8) at Segusio (now 
Suza) a triumphal arch in honor of Augustus, 
extant at the present day. His authority was 
transmitted to his son, upon whom Claudius 
conferred the title of king. On his death his 
kingdom was made a Roman province by Nero. 

Cottus, a giant with one hundred hands, son 
of Uranus (Co3lus)and Gaea (Terra). 

[Cotyaeum or Cotiaeuh (Korvueiov or Ku- 
rtueiov : now Kiutayah), a city of Phrygia Epic 
tetus on the Thymbris.] 

Cotyla, L. Varius, one of Antony's most in- 
timate friends, fought on his side at Mutina, B. 
C. 43. 

Cotylus (KorvZoc), the highest peak of Mount 



COTYORA 



CRASSUS, LICINIUS. 



Ida in the Troad, containing the sources of the 
rivers Scarnauder, Granicus, and iEsepus. 

Cotyora (Korvupa), a colony of Sinope, in 
the territory of the Tibareni, on the coast of 
Pontus Poloniouiacus, at the west end of a bay 
of the same name, celebrated as the place \vhere 
the ten thousand Greeks embarked for Sinope. 
The foundation of Pharnacia reduced it to in- 
significance. 

Cotys or Cotitto (Korvc or Kotvttu), a 
Thracian divinity, whose festival, the Cotyttia 
{vid. Diet, of Ant., s. v.), resembled that of the 
Phrygian Cybele, and was celebrated with licen- 
tious Revelry. Iu later times her worship was 
introduced at Athens and Corinth. Those who 
celebrated her festival were called Baptae, from 
the purifications which were originally connect- 
ed with the solemnity. 

Cotts (Korvc). 1. King of Thrace B.C. 382- 
358, was for a short time a friend of the Atheni- 
ans, but carried on war with them toward the 
close of his reign. He was cruel and sanguin- 
ary, and was much addicted to gross luxury 
and drunkenness. He was murdered by two 
brothers whose father he had injured. — 2. King 
of the Odrysa? in Thrace, assisted Perseus 
against Rome, B.C. 168. His son was taken 
prisoner and carried to Rome, whereupon he 
sued for peace and was pardoned by the Ro- 
mans. — 3. A king of Thrace, who took part 
against Cresar with Pompey, 48. — 4. King of 
Thrace, sou of Rhcemctalces, in the reigns of 
Augustus and Tiberius. He carried on war 
with his uncle Rhescuporis, by whom he was 
murdered, A.D. 19. Ovid, during his exile at 
Tomi, addressed an epistle to him (Ex Pont, 
ii, 9).^ 

Cragus (Kpuyot ). a mountain consisting of 
eight summits, being ■ continuation of Taurus 
to the west, and forming, at its extremity, the 
southwestern promontory of Lycia (now Ycdy- 
Booroon, i. e., Seven ( 'apes). Some of its sum- 
mits show traces of volcanic action, and the an- 
cients had a tradition to the same effect. At 
its foot was a town of the same name, on the 
sea-shore, between Pydua and Patara. Paral- 
lel to it, north of the River Glaucus, was the 
chain of Anticragus. The greatest height of 
Cragus exceeds three thousand feet. 

[Crambltsa (Kpdu6ovaa). 1. A city of Lycia, 
at the foot of the Lycian Olympus, oue hundred 
stadia (ten geographical miles) from Phaselis. 
— 2. An island on the coast of Cilicia, not far 
from the promontory Oorycus.] 

Cranae (Kpai'dy), the island to which Paris 
first carried Helen fi om Peloponnesus (Horn., 
11., hi., 445), is said by some to be an island 
off Gythium iu Laconia, by others to be the isl- 
and Helena off Attiea, and by others, again, to 
be Cythera. 

Cranaus ([ipava.'.r), king of Attiea, the son- 
in-law and successor of Cecrops. He was de- 
prived of his kingdom by his son-in-law Am- 
phietyon. 

Craxii or Cranium (Kpdvioi, Kpdvtov : Kpd- 
vloc : now Krania, near Argostoli), a town of 
CephaUeuia, on the southern coast 

Cranon or Crannon (Kpavuv, Kpavvuv : 
Kpavvojvioc : now Sarliki or Tzeres), in ancient 
times Ephyra, a town in Pelasgiotis in Thessa- 
ly, not far from Larissa. 



Crantor (Kpdvrop), of Soli in Cilicia, an 
Academic philosopher, studied at Athens under 
Xenocrates and Polemo, and flourished B.C. 
300. He was the author of several works, all 
of which are lost, and was the first who wrote 
commentaries on Plato's works. Most of his 
writings related to moral subjects (Hor., Ep., 
i., 2, 4). One of his most celebrated works was 
On Grief, of which Cicero made great use in 
the third book of his Tusculan Disputations, and 
in the Consolatio, which he composed on the 
death of his daughter Tullia. 

Crassipes Furius, Cicero's son-in-law, the 
second husband of Tullia, whom he married B. 
C. 56, but from whom he was shortly afterward 
divorced. 

Crassus, Lieixius. 1. P., praetor B.C. 176, 
and consul 171, when he carried on the war 
against Perseus. — 2. O, brother of No. 1., prae- 
tor 172, and consul 168. — 3. O, probably son of 
No. 2, tribune of the plebs 145, was distinguish- 
ed as a popular leader. — 4. P., surnamed Dives 
or Rich, elected pontifex maximus 212, curule 
osdile 211, prastor 208, and consul 205, with 
Scipio Africanus, when he carried on war 
against Hannibal in the south of Italy. He 
died 183. — 5. P., surnamed Dives Mucianus, son 
of P. Mucius Seaevola, was adopted by the son 
of No. 4. In 131 he was consul and pontifex 
maximus, and was the first priest of that rank 
who went beyond Italy. He carried on war 
against Aristonicus in Asia, but was defeated 
and slain. He was a good orator and jurist. — 
6. M., surnamed Agelastus, because he is said 
never to have laughed, was grandfather of Cras- 
sus the triumvir. — 7. P., surnamed Dives, son 
of No. 5, and father of the triumvir. He was 
the proposer of the lex Licinia, to prevent ex- 
cessive expense in banquets, but in what year 
is uncertain. He was consul 97, and carried on 
war in Spain for some years. He was censor 
89 with L. Julius Caesar. In the civil war he 
took part with Sulla, and put an end to his own 
life when Marius and Cinna returned to Rome at 
the end of 87. — 8. M., surnarned Dives, the trium- 
vir, younger son of No. 7. His life was spared 
by Cinna after the death of his father; but, 
fearing Cinna, he afteward escaped to Spain, 
where he concealed himself for eight months. 
On the death of Cinna in 84, he collected some 
forces and crossed over into Africa, whence he 
passed into Italy in 83 and joined Sulla, on 
whose side he fought against the Marian party. 
On the defeat of the latter, he was rewarded 
by donations of confiscated property, and thus 
greatly increased his patrimony. His ruling pas- 
sion was money, and he devoted all his energies 
to its accumulation. He was a keen and saga- 
cious speculator. He bought multitudes of 
slaves, aud, in order to increase their value, had 
them instructed in lucrative arts. He worked 
silver mines, cultivated farms, and built houses, 
which he let at high rents. In 71 he was ap- 
pointed prastor in order to carry on the war 
against Spartacus and the gladiators ; he de- 
feated Spartacus, who was slain in the battle, 
and he was honored with an ovation. In 70 
Crassus was consul with Pompey ; he enter- 
tained the populace at a banquet of ten thousand 
tables, and distributed corn enough to supply the 
family of everv citizen for three months. He 
227 



CRASTINUS. 



CRATHIS. 



did not, however, co-operate cordially with Poni- 
pey, of whose superior influence he was jealous. 
He was afterward reconciled to Pompey by Cae- 
sar's mediation, and thus was formed between 
them, in 60, the so-called triumvirate. ( Vid. 
p. 158, a.) In 55 Crassus was again consul 
with Pompey, and received the province of 
Syria, where he hoped both to increase his 
wealth and to acquire military glory by attack- 
ing the Parthians. He set out for his province 
before the expiration of his consulship, and con- 
tinued his march notwithstanding the unfavor- 
able omens which occurred to him at almost 
every step. After crossing the Euphrates in 
54, he did not follow up the attack upon Parthia, 
but returned to Syria, where he passed the win- 
ter. In 53 he again crossed the Euphrates ; he 
was misled by a crafty Arabian chieftain to 
march into the plains of Mesopotamia, where 
he was attacked by Surenas, the general of the 
Parthian king, Orodes. In the battle which fol- 
lowed Crassus was defeated with immense 
slaughter, and retreated with the remainder of 
his troops to Carrhae (the Haran of Scripture). 
The mutinous threats of his troops compelled 
him to accept a perfidious invitation from Sure- 
nas, who offered a pacific interview, at which 
he was slain, either by the enemy, or by some 
friend who desired to save him from the dis- 
grace of becoming a prisoner. His head was 
cut off and sent to Orodes, who caused melted 
gold to be poured into the mouth of his fallen 
enemy, saying, "Sate thyself now with that 
metal of which in life thou wast so greedy." — 9. 
M„ suruamed Dives, son of No. 8, served un- 
der Caesar in Gaul, and, at the breaking out of 
the civil war in 49, was preefect in Cisalpine 
Gaul. — 10. P., youuger son of No 8, was Cae- 
sar's legate in Gaul from 58 to 55. In 54 he 
followed his father to Syria, and fell in the bat- 
tle against the Parthians. — 11. L., the celebrated 
orator. At the age of twenty-one (B.C. 119), 
he attracted great notice by his prosecution of 
C. Carbo. He was consul in 95 with Q. Scae- 
vola, when he proposed a law to compel all who 
were not citizens to depart from Rome : the 
rigor of the law was one of the causes of the 
Social war. He was afterward proconsul of 
Gaul. In 92 he was censor, when he caused 
the schools of the Latin rhetoricians to be closed. 
He died in 91, a few days after opposing in the 
senate the consul L. Philippus, an enemy of the 
aristocracy. Crassus was fond of elegance and 
luxury. His house upon the Palatium was one 
of the most beautiful at Rome, and was adorn- 
ed with costly works of art. As an orator he 
surpassed all his contemporaries. In the treat- 
ise De Oratore Cicero introduces him as one of 
the speakers, and he is understood to express 
Cicero's own statements. [The fragments of 
his orations are collected and published by 
Meyer, Oratorum Roman. Fragmenta, p. 291-317, 
Zurich, 1842.] 

CrastLxus, one of Caesar's veterans, com- 
menced the battle of Pharsalia B.C. 48, and 
died fighting bravely in the foremost line. 

[Crat^eis (Kparaug), according to one legend, 
the mother of Scylla ; goddess of sorcerers and 
enchanters.] 

_ [Crat^emenes (Kparai/u.£V7]g), a native of Chal- 
ks, founded the city of Zancle in Sieilv.] 
228 



Ckaterus (Kparepoc). 1. A distinguished gen- 
eral of Alexander the Great, on whose death 
(B.C. 323) he received, in common with Antip- 
ater, the government of Macedonia and Greece. 
He arrived in Greece in time to render effectual 
assistance to Antipater in the Lamian war. At 
the close of this war he married Phila, the 
daughter of Antipater. Soon after, he accom- 
panied Antipater in the war against the ^Eto- 
lians, and in that against Perdiccas in Asia. He 
fell in a battle against Eumenes in 321. — 2. 
Brother of Antigonus Gona'tas, compiled histor- 
ical documents relative to the history of Attica. 
— 3. A Greek physician, who attended the fam- 
ily of Atticus, mentioned also by Horace (Sat, 
ii., 3, 161). 

Crates (Kpdrng). 1. An Athenian poet of the 
old comedy, began to flourish B.C. 449, and was 
one of the most celebrated of the comic poets. 
He excelled chiefly in mirth and fun, and was 
the first Attic poet who brought drunken per- 
sons on the stage. [His fragments are collect- 
ed and edited by Meineke, Comic. G-rcec. Fragm., 
voL i., p. 78-86, edit, minor.]— 2. Of Tralles, an 
orator or rhetorician of the school of Isocrates. 
— 3. Of Thebes, a pupil of the Cynic Diogenes, 
and one of the most distinguished of the Cynic 
philosophers, flourished about 320. Though 
heir to a large fortune, he renounced it all, and 
lived and died as a true Cynic, disregarding all 
external pleasures, and restricting himself to 
the most absolute necessaries. He received 
the surname of the " Door-opener," because it 
was his practice to visit every house at Athens 
and rebuke its inmates. He married Hippar- 
chia, the daughter of a family of distinction, 
who threatened to commit suicide when her 
parents opposed her union with the philosopher. 
He wrote several works which are lost, for the 
epistles extant under his name are not genuine. 
— 4 Of Athens, the pupil and friend of Polemo, 
and his successor in the chair of the Academy, 
about 270. He was the teacher of Areesilaiis, 
Theodorus, and Bion Borysthenites. — 5. Of 
Mallus in Cilicia, a celebrated grammarian. He 
was brought up at Tarsus, whence he removed 
to Pergamos, where he founded the Pergamene 
school of grammar, in opposition to the Alexan- 
drean. He wrote a commentary on the Ho- 
meric poems, in opposition to Aristarchus, and 
supported the system of anomaly {uvuuaXta) 
against that of analogy (avahoyia). He also 
wrote commentaries on the other Greek poets, 
and works on other subjects, of which only frag- 
ments have come down to us. In 157 he was 
sent by Attalus as an ambassador to Rome, 
where he introduced far the first time the study 
of grammar. [His fragments have been pub- 
lished by C. F. Wegener, De Aula Attalica Litt. 
Artiumque fautrice, vol. i., Havniae, 1836.] 

[Cratesippidas (Kpa-noiTrmdag), a Lacedae- 
monian admiral, seized the citadel of Chios, and 
effected the restoration of the Chian exiles ; he 
was succeeded by Lysander.] 

Crathis (Kpadtg). 1. (Now Crata), a river 
in Achaia, rises in a mountain of the same name 
in Arcadia, receives the Styx flowing down from 
Nouacris, and falls into the Corinthian Gulf near 
iEgse. — 2. (Now Crati), a river in lower Italy, 
forming the boundary on the east between Lu- 
cania and Bruttii, and falling into the sea near 



CRATINUS. 



CRETA. 



Sybaris. At its mouth was a celebrated tem- 
ple of Minerva : its waters were fabled to dye 
the hair blonde. 

Cratinus (Kparivoc). 1. One of the most 
celebrated of the Athenian poets of the old com- 
edy, was born B.C. 519, but did not begin to 
exhibit till 454, when he was sixty-five years 
of age. He exhibited twenty-one plays, and 
gained nine victories. He was the poet of the 
old comedy. He gave it its peculiar character, 
and he did not, like Aristophanes, live to see its 
decline. Before his time the comic poets had 
aimed at little beyoud exciting the laughter of 
their audience : he was the first who made com- 
edy a terrible weapon of personal attack, and 
the comic poet a severe censor of public and 
private vice. He is frequently attacked by Ar- 
istophanes, who charges him with habitual in- 
temperance, an accusation which was admitted 
by Cratinus himself, who treated the subject in 
a very amusing Avay in his ILvtlvij. This play 
was acted in 423, when the poet was ninety-six 
years of age: it gained the prize over the Con- 
nus of Amipsias and the Clouds of Aristophanes. 
Cratinus died in the following year at the age 
of ninety-seven. [His fragments are given by 
Meineke, Comic. Greer. Fragm., vol. i., p. 7-78, 
edit minor.] — 2. The younger, an Athenian poet 
of the middle comedy, a contemporary of Plato 
the philosopher, flourished as late as 324. [His 
fragments are given by Meineke, Comic. Grcec. 
Fragm., vol. ii., p. 684-7, edit, minor.] 

Cratippus (Kpdri ttttoc ). 1. A Greek historian 
and contemporary of Thucydides, whose work 
he completed. — 2. A Peripatetic philosopher of 
Mytilene, a contemporary of Pompey and Cic- 
ero, the latter of whom praises him highly. He 
accompanied Pompoy in his flight after the bat- 
tle of Pharsalia, B.C.* 48. He afterward settled 
at Athens, where young 11 Cicero was his pupil 
in 44. Through the influence of Cicero, Cratip- 
pus obtained from Caisur the Roman citizenship. 

Cratos (Kpuroi), the personification of 
streugth, a son of [Pallas and the Oceanid 
Styx, represented as placed uear the throne of 
Jupiter (Zeus) for having aided him against the 
Titans.] 

CRATixus (Kparv?.oc), a Greek philosopher, a 
pupil of Heraclitus, and one of Plato's teachers. 
Plato introduces him as one of the speakers in 
the dialogue which bears his name. 

Cremera, a small river in Etruria, which falls 
into the Tiber a little above Rome : memorable 
for the death of the three hundred Fabii. 

Cremna (Kpf/fiva : ruins at Gkerme), a strong- 
ly fortified city of Pisidia, built on a precipitous 
rock in the Taurus range, and noted for repeated 
obstinate defences : a colony under Augustus. 

Cremni (Kpijfivoi), an emporium of the free 
Scythians on the western side of the Palus 
Masotis. 

Cremona (Cremouensis : now Cremona), a 
Roman colony in the north of Italy, north of the 
Po, and at no great distance from the conflu- 
ence of the Addua and the Po, was founded, to- 
gether with Placentia, B.C. 219, as a protection 
against the Gauls and Hannibal's invading army. 
It soon became a place of great importance, aud 
one of the most flourishing cities in the north 
of Italy ; but, having espoused the cause of Vi- 
tellius, it was totally destroyed by the troops of 



Vespasian, A.D. 69. It was rebuilt by Vespa- 
sian, but never recovered its former greatness. 

Cremonis Jugum. Vid. Alpes. 

Cremutius Cordus. Vid. Cordus. 

[Cren.e (Kpr/vai, i. e., the springs : now Ar- 
myro), a place near Argos Amphiloehicum in 
Acarnania.] 

[Crenides (Kprjvidec), earlier name of the city 
Philippi. Vid. PmLirn.] 

Creon (Kpeov). 1. King of Corinth, son of 
Lyeaathus, whose daughter, Glauce or Creusa, 
married Jason. Medea, thus forsaken, sent 
Glauce a garment which burned her to death 
when she put it on ; the palace took fire, and Cre- 
on perished in the flames. — 2. Son of Menoecus, 
and brother of Jocaste, the wife of Laius. After 
the death of Laius, Creon governed Thebes for a 
short time, and then surrendered the kingdom 
to CEdipu- 1 , who had delivered the country from 
the Sphinx. Vid. CEdipus. When Eteocles and 
Polynices, the sons of GSdipus, fell in battle 
by each other's hands, Creon became king of 
Thebes. His cruelty in forbidding burial to the 
corpse of Polynices, and his sentencing Antig- 
one to death for disobeying his orders, occa- 
sioned the death of his own son Haamon. For 
details, vid. Antigone. — [3. Father of Lycome- 
des, mentioned in the Iliad. — 4. Father of Sco- 
pas, who ruled in Thessalian Cranon.] 

[Creontiades, patronymic from Creon, as Ly- 
comedes, &o. Via. Creon, No. 3.] 

Creophylus (Kpecj(j)v?.oc), of Chios, one of the 
earliest epic poets, said to have been the friend 
or son-in-law of Homer. The epic poem Olxa- 
?ua or Oixa?uac u?,g)gic, ascribed to him, related 
the contest which Hercules, for the sake of Iole, 
uudertook with Eurytus, and the capture of 
(Echalia. 

Cresphontes {Kprjo(p6vTi]c), an Heraclid, sou 
of Aristomachus, and one of the conquerors of 
Peloponnesus, obtained Messenia for his share. 
During an insurrection of the Messenians, he 
and two of his sons were slain. A third son, 
^Epytus, avenged his death. Vid. ^Epytus. 

Crestonia (Kprjarovia : rj Kpt]artovLKri), a dis- 
trict in Macedonia between the Axius and Stry- 
mon, near Mount Cercine, inhabited by the 
Creston^ei (KprjGTiovaioi), a Thraeian people : 
their chief town was Creston or Crestone 
(Kpnarcov, Kprjaruvj]), founded by the Pelas- 
gians. This town is erroneously supposed by 
some writers to be the same as Cortona in Italy. 

Creta (KpifTTj : Kpnraloe : Creticus : now 
Candia), one of the largest islands in the Medi- 
terranean Sea, nearly equidistant from Europe, 
Asia, and Africa, but always reckoned as part 
of Europe. Its length from east to west is 
about one hundred and sixty miles : its breadth 
is very unequal, being in the widest part about 
thirty -five miles, and in the narrowest only six. 
A range of mountains runs through the whole 
length of the island from east to west, sending 
forth spurs north and south : in the centre of 
the island rises Mount Ida far above all the 
others. Vid. Ida. The rivers of Crete are nu- 
merous, but are little more than mountain-tor- 
rents, and are for the most part dry in summer. 
The country was celebrated in antiquity for its 
fertility and salubrity. Crete was inhabited at 
an early period by a numerous and civilized 
population. Homer speaks of its hundred cities; 

229 



CRETEUS. 



CRITIAS. 



{Kp7jrrj iaaTofi-o/us, II. iL, 649) ; and, before the 
Trojan war, mythology told of a king Mixos 
who resided at Cnosus, and ruled over the 
greater part of the island. He is said to have 
given laws to Crete, and to have been the first 
prince who had a navy, with which he sup- 
pressed piracy in the ^Egeau. After his de- 
scendants had governed the island for some 
generations, royalty was abolished, and the 
cities became independent republics, of which 
Cnosus and Gortyna were the most important, 
and exercised a kind of supremacy over the rest. 
The ruling class were the Dorians, who settled 
in Crete about sixty years after the Dorian con- 
quest of Peloponnesus, and reduced the former 
inhabitants, the Pelasgians and Achaeans, to sub- 
jection. The social and political institutions of 
the island thus became Dorian, and many of 
the ancients supposed that the Spartan consti- 
tution was borrowed from Crete. The chief 
magistrates in the cities were the Cosmi, ten in 
number, chosen from certain families : there 
was also a Gerusia, or senate ; and an Eccle&ia, 
or popular assembly, which, however, had very 
little power. (For details, vid. Diet, of Ant., art 
Cosmi.) At a later time the power of the aris- 
tocracy was overthrown, and a democratical 
form of government established. The ancient 
Doric customs likewise disappeared, and the 
people became degenerate in their morals and 
character. The historian Polybius accuses them 
of numerous vices, and the Apostle Paul, quot- 
ing the Cretan poet Epimenides, describes them 
as " always bars, evil beasts, slow bellies" (Titus, 
i., 12). The Cretans were celebrated as arch- 
ers, and frequently served as mercenaries in the 
armies of other nations. The island was con- 
quered by Q. Meteltus, who received in conse- 
quence the surname Creticus (B.C. 68-66), and 
it became a Roman province. Crete and Cy- 
reuaica subsequently formed one province. 

Creteus or Catreus (Kpqrevc), son of Minos 
by Pasiphae" or Crete, and father of Althemenes. 

Ceetbeus (Kp7]devc), son of ^Eolus and En- 
arete, husband of Tyro, and father of JEson, 
Pheres, Amythaou, and Hippolyte : he was the 
founder of Iolcus. 

[Crethox (Kptjdur), son of Diodes of Pherae, 
slain by iEneas before Troy.] 

Cretopolis (Kpr/To-o?,ir). a town in the dis- 
trict of Milyas in Asia Minor, assigned some- 
times to Pisidia, sometimes to Pamphylia. 

Creusa (Kpsovaa). 1. A Naiad, daughter of 
Oceauus, became by Peneus the mother of Hyp- 
seus and Stilbe. — 2. Daughter of Erechtheus 
and Praxithea, wife of Xuthus, and mother of 
Achseus and Ion. She is said to have been be- 
loved by Apollo, whence Ion is sometimes call- 
ed her son by this god. — 8. Daughter of Priam 
and Hecuba, wife of iEneas, and mother of As- 
canius. She perished on the night of the cap- 
ture of Troy, having been separated from her 
husband in the confusion. — 4. (Or Glauce), a 
daughter of Creon. who fell a victim to the ven- 
geance of Medea. Vid. Creon, No. 1. 

Creusis or Crevsa (Kpevmc, Kpsovca : Kpev- 
aieve), a town on the eastern coast of Bceotia, 
the harbor of Thespia.'. 

Crimisa or Crimissa (Kptfitca, Kptjuicaa: 
now Capo dell' Alice), a promontory on the east 
ern coast of Bruttium. with a town of the same 
230 



' name upon it, said to have been founded by Phi- 
' loctetes, a little south of the River Crimisus. 

Crimisus or Cremissus (Kpi[iia6r, Kpifiiaaoc), 
| a river in the west of Sicily, falls into the 
I Hypsa : on its banks Timoleon defeated the 
! Carthaginians, B.C. 339. 

Crixagoras (Kpivayopac), of Mytilene, the au- 
; thor of fifty epigrams in the Greek Anthology. 
' lived in the reign of Augustus. 

[Crispixa, wife of the Emperor Commodus ; 
'having proved unfaithful, she was banished to 
1 Capreae, and there put to death.] 

[Crispixilla, Calvia, a Roman female of rank, 
! notorious for her intrigues at the court of Nero ; 
I she is called by Tacitus Nero's instructor in 
voluptuousness. Notwithstanding her intrigues 
I and plots, she managed to escape with impu- 
; nity, and even to be in favor in the succeeding 
\ reigns of Galba, Otho, and Vitellius.] 

Crispixus, a person ridiculed by Horace (Sat, 
i., 1. 120), is said to have written bad verses on 
the Stoic philosophy, and to have been surnamed 
( Aretalogus. 

Crispus, Flavics Jcxius, eldest son of Con- 
stantine the Great, was appointed Caesar A.D, 
i 317, and gained great distinction in a campaign 
against the Franks and in the war with Licin- 
ius; but, having excited the jealousy of his 
step-mother Fausta, he was put to death by his 
, father, 326. 

Crispus Passiexus, husband of Agrippina, and 
[ step-father of the Emperor Nero, was distin- 
guished as an orator. 

Crispus, Vibius, of Vercelli, a contemporary 
| of Quintilian, and a dist nguished orator. [The 
few fragments that remain of his speeches have 
! been collected by Meyer, Orat. Roman. Fragm., 
■p. 585-588.] 

Crissa or Crisa (Kpiaaa, Kplaa: KpLcroaloc), 
and Cirrha (Klppa : Ktppalor), towns in Phocis, 
regarded by some ancient, as well as by some 
modern writers, as the same ; but it seems most 
probable that Crissa was a town inland south- 
west of Delphi, and that Cirrha was its port on 
the Crissaean Gulf. The inhabitants of the 
towns levied contributions upon the pilgrims 
frequenting the Delphic oracle, in consequence 
of which the Amphictyons declared war against 
them, B.C. 595. and eventually destroyed them. 
Their territory, the rich Crissaean plain, was 
declared sacred to the Delphic god, and was for- 
bidden to be cultivated. The cultivation of this 
plain by the inhabitants of Amphissa led to the 
Sacred war, in which Philip was chosen general 
of the Amphictyons, 338. Crissa remained in 
j ruins, but Cirrha was afterward rebuilt, and be- 
: came the harbor of Delphi. 

Critias (Kptriac). 1. Son of Dropides, a con- 
temporary and relation of Solon's. — 2. Son of 
\ Calkesehrus, and grandson of the above, was 
\ one of the pupils of Socrates, by whose instruc- 
: tions he profited but little in a moral point of 
view. He was banished from Athpns, and on 
j his return he became leader of the oligarchical 
! party. He was one of the thirty tyrauts estab- 
lished by the Spartans B.C. 404, and was con- 
spicuous above all his colleagues for rapacity 
and cruelty. He was slain at the battle of Mu- 
nychia in the same year, fighting against Thra- 
sybulus and the exiles. He was a distinguish- 
ed orator, and some of his speeches were ex- 



CRITOLAUS. 



CROTON. 



tant in the time of Cicero. He also wrote po- 
ems, drama?, and other works. Some frag- 
merits of his elegies are still extant, [and have 
been collected by Bach, Criticc carmina, etc., qum 
super sunt, Lips., 1827.] 

Critolals {KpiTblaos). 1. Of Phaselis in 
Lycia, studied philosophy at Athens under Aris- 
ton of Ceos, whom he succeeded as the head of 
the Peripatetic school. In B.C. 155 he was sent 
by the Athenians as ambassador to Rome with 
Carueades and Diogenes. Vid. Carneades. 
He lived upward of eighty-two years, but we 
have no further particulars of his life. — 2. Gen- 
eral of the Achaean League, 147, distinguished 
by his bitter enmity to the Romans. He was 
defeated by Mctellus, and was never heard of 
after the battle. 

Critox (Kpiruv). 1. Of Athens, a friend and 
disciple of Socrates, whom he supported with 
his fortune. He had made every arrangement 
for the escape of Socrates from prison, and tried, 
in vain, to persuade him to fly, as we see from 
Plato's dialogue named after him. Criton wrote 
.seventeen dialogues on philosophical subjects, 
which are lost. — [2. A comic poet of the new 
comedy, of whose plays a few fragments remain, 
collected by Meineke, Comic. Grcec. Fragm., 
toI. ii., p. 1153— i, edit, minor.] — 3. A physician 
at Rome in the first or second century after 
Christ, perhaps the person mentioned by Mar- 
tial (Epigr., xi., 60, 6) : he wrote several medi- 
cal works. 

CRiu-METorox (Kplov ixtTUTzov), i. c., " Ram's 
Front." 1. A promontory at the scAith of the 
Tauric Chersonesus. — 2. (Now Capo Krio), a 
promontory at the southwest of Crete. 

CrIus (Kploc), one of the Titans, son of Ura- 
nus (Ccelus) and (Jo (Terra). 

Croc5dilopolis (KpnKo6u/MV nolle). 1. (Now 
Embeshimda?),sx city of Upper Egypt, in the No- 
mos Aphroditopolites. — 2. Vid. Absinoe, No. 7. 

Crocus, the beloved friend of Smilax, was 
changed by the gods into a saffron plant. 

Croctlea (rd. KpoKv/.eia), according to Homer 
(77., ii., 633), a place in Ithaca, but according to 
Strabo, in Leucas in Aearnania. 

[Crocylion (YLpoK.v7.iov), according to Thucyd- 
ides (3, 96), a place in yEtolia. otherwise un- 
known.] 

Crcesus (KpoiGoc), last king of Lydia, son of 
Alyattes, reigned B.C. 560-546, but was proba- 
bly associated in the kingdom during his fa- 
ther's life. The early part of his reign was 
most glorious. He subdued all the nations be- 
tween the JSgean and the River Halys, and 
made the Greeks in Asia, Minor tributary to him. 
The fame of his power and wealth drew to his 
court at Sardis all the wise men of Greece, and 
among them Solon, whose interview with the 
king was celebrated in antiquity. In reply to 
the question who was the happiest man he 'had 
ever seen, the sage taught the king that no man 
should be deemed happy till he had finished his 
life in a happy way. Alarmed at the growing 
power of the Persians, Crcesus sent to consult 
the oracle of Apollo at Delphi whether he 
should march against the Persians. Upon the 
reply of the oracle, that, if he marched against j 
the Persians, he would overthrow a great em- 
pire, he collected a vast army and marched J 
against Cyrus. Near Sinope an indecisive bat- ' 



tie was fought between the two armies ; where- 
upon he returned to Sardis, and disbanded his 
forces, commanding them to reassemble in the 
following spring. But Cyrus appeared unex- 
pectedly before Sardis ; Croesus led out the 
forces still remaining with him, but was defeat- 
ed, and the city was taken after a siege of four- 
teen days. Crcesus, who was taken alive, was 
condemned to be burned to death. As he stood 
before the pyre, the warning of Solon came to 
his mind, and he thrice uttered the name of So- 
lon. Cyrus inquired who it was that he called 
on ; and, upon hearing the story, repented of his 
purpose, and not only spared the life of Croesus, 
but made him hi3 friend. Crcesus survived Cy- 
rus, and accompanied Cambyses in his expedi- 
tion against Egypt. 

Crommyox or Cromyon (Kpo/uftvuv, Kpofwuv), 
a town in Megaris, on the Saronic Gulf, after- 
ward belonged to Corinth ; celebrated in my- 
thology on account of its wild sow, which was 
slain by Theseus. 

[Cromna (Kpuuva), a town and fortress on 
the coast of Paphlagonia, between Cytorus and 
Amastris.] 

[Cromni or Cromi (Kpufivot, and in Pausanias 
Kpu/ioi), a stronghold in Arcadia, on the borders 
of Messenia, in the district named from it Cro- 
mitis (Kpu/iiTic) its inhabitants were removed 
to Megalopolis.] 

Cronius Mons (Kpovtov opoc), a mountain in 
Elis, near Olympia, with a temple of Cronus 
(Saturn.) 

Cronus (Kpovoc), the youngest of the Titans, 
son of Ccelus (Uranus) and Terra (Ge), father 
by Rhea of Hestia, Ceres (Demeter), Juno 
(Hera), Pluto (Hades), Neptune (Poseidon), and 
Jupiter (Zeus). At the instigation of his moth- 
er, Saturn (Cronus) unmanned his father for 
having thrown the Cyclopes, who were likewise 
his children by Terra (Ge), into Tartarus. Out 
of the blood thus shed sprang up the Erinnyes. 
When the Cyclopes were delivered from Tar- 
tarus, the government of the world was taken 
from Ccelus (Uranus) and given to Saturn (Cro- 
nus), who in his turn lost it through Jupiter 
(Zeus), as was predicted to him by Terra (Ge) 
and Ccelus (Uranus.) Vid. Zeus. The Romans 
identified their Saturnus with Cronus. Vid. 
Saturnus. 

Cropia (Kpu-Keia), an Attic deraus belonging 
to the tribe Leontis. 

[Cross^ea (Kpoooaia), a district of Macedonia, 
on the eastern coast of the Thermaicus Sinus: 
it was also called Kpovatc.] 

Croton or Crotona (Crotoniensis, Crotonen- 
sis, Crotoniata : now Crotona), a Greek city on 
the eastern coast of Bruttium, on the River 
iEsarus, and in a very healthy locality, was 
founded by the Achaeans under Myscellus of 
JSgEe, assisted by the Spartans, B.C. 710. Its 
extensive commerce, the virtue of its inhabit- 
ants, and the excellence of its institutions, made 
it the most powerful and flourishing town in the 
south of Italy. It owed much of its greatness 
to Pythagoras, who established his school here. 
Gymnastics were cultivated here in greater per- 
fection than in any other Greek city ; and one 
of its citizens, Milo, was the most celebrated 
athlete in Greece. It attained its greatest pow- 
er by the destruction of Sybaris in 510; but it 
231 



CRLSTUMERIA. 



CUMJS. 



subsequently declined in consequence of the i 
severe defeat it sustained from the Locrians on 
the River Sagras. It suffered greatly in the 
■wars with Dionjsius, Agathocles, and Phyrrhus ; 
and in the second Punic war a considerable part 
of it had ceased to be inhabited. It received a 
colony from the Romans in 195. 

Crustcmeria, -rium, also Crustumium (Crus- ! 
tuminus), a town of the Sabines, situated in the 
mountains near the sources of the Allia, was 
conquered both by Romulus and Tarquinius 
Priscus, and is not mentioned in later times. 
Cteatus. Vid. Moliones. 
Ctesias {Krijclac), of Cnidus in Caria, a con- j 
temporary of Xenophon, was private physician 
of Artaxerxes Mnemon, whom he accompanied J 
in his war against his brother Gyrus, B.C. 401. ■ 
He lived seventeen years at the Persian court, ] 
and wrote in the Ionic dialect a great work on j 
the history of Persia (YlepcLiid), in twenty-three | 
books. The first six contained the history of 
the Assyrian monarchy down to the foundation j 
of the kingdom of Persia. The next seven con- 
tained the history of Persia down to the end of J 
the reign of Xerxes, and the remaining ten car- ! 
ried the history down tp the time when Ctesias j 
left Persia, i. e., to the year 398. All that is 
now extant is a meagre abridgment in Photius 
and a number of fragments preserved in Diodo- 
rus and other writers. The work of Ctesias 
•was compiled from Oriental sources, and its 
statements are frequently at variance with those 
of Herodotus. Ctesias also wrote a work on 
India ('lvdi/cu) in one book, of which we possess 
an abridgment in Photius. This work con- 
tains numerous fables, but it probably gives a 
faithful picture of India, as it was conceived by 
the Persians. The abridgment which Photius 
made of the Persica and Indica of Ctesias has 
been printed separately by Lion, Gottingen, 
1823, and by Bahr, Frankfort, 1824. 

Ctesibius (K~j]Gi6tog), celebrated for his me- 
chanical inventions, lived at Alexandrea in the 
reigns of Ptolemy Philadelphus and Euergetes, 
about B.C. 250. His father was a barber, but 
his own taste led him to devote himself to me- 
chanics. He is said to have invented a clepsy- 
dra or water-clock, a hydraulic organ (vSpavlig), 
and other machines, and to have been the first 
to discover the elastic force of air and apply it 
as a moving power. He was the teacher, and 
has been supposed to have been the father of 
Hero Alexandrinus. — [2. A Greek historian, 
who probably lived at the time of the first Ptole- 
mies ; according to Apollodorus, he lived to the 
age of one hundred and four years, but accord- 
ing to Lucian, to the age of one hundred and 
twenty-four.] 

Ctesiphon (KrriGiduv), son of Leosthenes of 
Anaphlystus, was accused by iEschines for hav- 
ing proposed the decree that Demosthenes 
should be honored with the crown. Vid, ^Es- 
chines. 

Ctesiphon {Ktijglquv : Ktvglqgjvtioc : ruins 
at Takti Kesra), a city of Assyria, on the eastern 
bank of the Tigris, three Roman miles from Se- 
leucia on the western bank, first became an im- 
portant place under the Parthians, whose kings 
used it for some time as a winter residence, 
and afterward enlarged and fortified it, and 
made it the capital of their empire. It is said I 
232 



to nave contained at least one hundred thousand 
inhabitants. In the wars of the Romans with 
the Parthians and Persians, it was taken, first 
by Trajan (A.D. 115), and by several of the later 
emperors, but Julian did not venture to attack 
it, even after his victory over the Persians be- 
fore the city. 

Ctesippus (Kr^oL-n-TToc). 1. Two sons of Her- 
cules, one by Deianira, and the other by Asty- 
damia. — 2. Son of Polytherses of Same, one of 
the suitors of Penelope, killed by Philoetius, the 
cow-herd. — [3. A Greek historian, of uncertain 
date ; Plutarch quotes his history of the Scyth- 
ians, but nothing further is known of him. — 4. A 
pupil of Socrates, who is often mentioned by 
Plato.] 

[Ctesius (Kr/joior), son of Ormenus, and 
father of Eumaeus, whom the Phoenicians car- 
ried off from him, and sold to Laertes in Ithaca.] 

[Cteviene (K-1/j.svj}), sister of Ulysses, young- 
est child of Laertes.] 

[Cucusus (KovKovcog) or Cocusus (Kokkov- 
cog), a place in Cappadoeia, to which St. Chry- 
sostom was banished. Vid. Chrysostomus.] 

[Cuda (now Cod), a tributary of the Durius, 
in Hispania Tarraconensis.] 

Cularo, afterward called Gratianopolis 
(now Grenoble) in honor of the Emperor Gra- 
tian, a town in Gallia Xarbonensis, on the Isara 
(now Isire.) 

Culleo or Culeo, Q. TerextIus. 1. A sen- 
ator of distinction, was taken prisoner in the 
second Punic war, and obtained his liberty at 
the conclusion of the war B.C. 201. To show 
his gratitude to P. Scipio, he followed his tri- 
umphal car, wearing the pileus or cap of liberty, 
like an emancipated slave. In 187 he was prje- 
tor peregrinus, and in this year condemned L. 
Scipio Asiaticus, on the charge of having mis- 
appropriated the money gained in the war with 
Autiochus. — 2. Tribune of the plebs, 58, exerted 
himself to obtain Cicero's recall from banish- 
ment. In the war which followed the death of 
Csesar (43), Culleo was one of the legates of 
Lepidus. 

CimM(Kv]LL7j : Kv/ialog, Cumanus). 1. A town 
in Campania, and the most ancient of the Greek 
colonies in Italy and Sicily, was founded by 
Cyme in .zEolis, in conjunction with Chalcis and 
Eretria in Euboea. Its foundation is placed in 
B.C. 1050, but this date is evidently too early. 
It was situated on a steep hill of Mount Gaurus, 
a little north of the promontory Misenum. It 
became in early times a great and flourishing 
city ; its commerce was extensive ; its terri- 
tory included a great part of the rich Campa- 
nian plain ; its population was at least sixty 
thousand ; and its power is attested by its col- 
onies in Italy and Sicily, Puteoli, Palaeopolis 
afterward Xeapolis, Zancle afterward Messana. 
But it had powerful enemies to encounter in 
the Etruscans and the Italian nations. It was 
also weakened by internal dissensions, and one 
of its citizens, Aristodemus, made himself ty- 
rant of the place. Its power became so much 
reduced that it was only saved from the at- 
tacks of the Etruscans by the assistance of 
Hiero, who annihilated the Etruscan fleet, 4*74. 
It maintained its independence till 417, when it 
was taken by the Campanians, and most of its 
inhabitants sold as slaves. From this time 



CUKAXA. 



CURTIUS. 



Capua became the chief city of Campania ; and 
although Cuniae was subsequently a Roman 
muuicipium and a colony, it continued to de- 
cline in importance. At last the Acropolis was 
the ouly part of the town that remaiued, and 
this was eventually destroyed by Narses in his 
wars with the Goths. Cuinae was celebrated 
as the residence of the earliest Sibyl, and as 
the place where Tarquinius Superbus died. Its 
ruins are still to be seen between the Logo di 
Patria and fusaro.— [2. A city of JEolis. Vid. 
Cyme.] 

Cunaxa (Kovvatja), a small town in Babylo- 
nia, on the Euphrates, famous for the battle 
fought here betweeu the younger Cyrus and 
his brother Artaxerxes Mnemon, in which the 
former was killed (B.C. 401). Its position is 
uucertaiu. Plutarch (Artax., 8) places it five 
hundred stadia (fifty geographical miles) above 
Babylou ; Xenophon, who does not mention it 
by name, makes the battle field three hundred 
and sixty stadia (thirty -six geographical miles) 
from Babylou. 

[Cuneus. 1. Ager (now Algarvc), the south- 
ern part of Lusitania, where the Conii dwelt, 
from whom it was probably so called, and not 
from its wedgc-like shape. — 2. Promontorium (now 
Cabo di S. Maria), the southern point of the 
Cuneus Ager.] 

[Cupencus, a Virgilian hero, one of the follow- 
ers of Turnus, slain by JEneas.] 

[Cupido. Vid. Eros.] 

Cupiennius, attacked by Horace (Sat., i., 2, 36), 
is said by the Scholiast to have been a friend of 
Augustus, but is probably a fictitious name. 

Cupra (Cupreusis). 1. Maritima (now Ma- 
rano, at the mouth of the Monecchia), a town in 
Piceuum, with an ancient temple of Juno, found- 
ed by the Pelasgians and restored by Hadrian. — 
2. Montana, a town near No. 1, in the mount- 
ains. 

Cures (Gen. Curium), an ancient town of the 
Sabines, celebrated as the birth-place of T. Ta- 
tius and Numa Pompilius : from this town the 
Romans are said to have derived the name of 
Quirites. 

Curetes (Kovp//Ti/s), a mythical people, said 
to be the most ancient inhabitants of Acarnania 
and ./Etolia ; the latter country was called Cu- 
retis from them. They also occur in Crete as 
the priests of Jupiter (Zeus), and are spoken of 
in connection with the Corybantes and Ideean 
Dactyli. The infant Jupiter (Zeus) was intrusted 
to their care by Rhea ; and by clashing their 
weapons in a warlike dance, they drowned the 
cries of the child, and prevented his father Sat- 
urn (Cronus) from ascertaining the place where 
he was concealed. 

Curias. Vid. Curium. 

Curiath, a celebrated Alban family. Three 
brothers of this family fought with three Roman 
brothers, the Horatii, and were conquered by 
the latter. In consequence of their defeat, Alba 
became subject to Rome. 

Curiatiis Maternus. Vid. Maternus. 

Curio, C. S» iubonius. 1. Praetor B.C. 121, 
was one of the most distinguished orators of his 
time. — 2. Son of No. 1, tribune of the plebs B.C. 
90 ; afterward served under Sulla in Greece J 
was praetor 82 : consul 76; and after his con- 
sulship obtained the province of Macedonia, 



where he carried on war against the barbarians 
as far north as the Danube. He was a personal 
enemy of Caesar, and supported P. Clodius when 
the latter was accused of violating the sacra of 
the Bona Dea. In 57 he was appointed ponti- 
fex maximus, aud died 53. He had some rep- 
utation as an orator, aud was a friend of Cicero,. 
— 3. Son of No. 2, also a friend of Cicero, was 
a most profligate character. He was married 
to Fulvia, afterward the wife of Antony. He 
at first belonged to the Pompeian party, by 
whose influence he was made tribune of the 
plebs, 50 ; but he was bought over by Caesar, 
and employed his power as tribune against his 
former friends. On the breaking out of the 
civil war (49), he was sent by Caesar to Sicily 
with the title of propraetor. He succeeded in 
driving Cato out of the island, aud then crossed 
over to Africa, where he was defeated and slain 
by Juba and P. Attius Varus. 

Curiosolit^e, a Gallic people on the ocean 
in Armorica, near the Veneti, in the country of 
the modern Corseult, near St. Malo. 

Curium (Kovpcov : Kovpcevg : ruins near Pis- 
copia), a town on the southern coast of Cyprus, 
near the promontory Curias, west of the mouth 
of the Lycus. 

Curius Dentatus. Vid. Dentatus. 

Curius, M'. 1. An intimate friend of Cicero 
and Atticus, lived for several years as a nego- 
tiator at Patrae in Peloponnesus. In his will he 
left his property to Atticus and Cicero. Sev- 
eral of Cicero's letters are addressed to him. — 
[2. Q., a Roman senator, who was candidate 
for the consulship B.C. 64, but lost his election, 
and for his vices was ejected from the senate : 
ho joined the conspiracy of Catiline, and it was 
through his mistress Fulvia, to whom he related 
their designs, that Cicero obtained the informa- 
tion which enabled him to crush the conspiracy.] 

Cursor, L. Papirius. 1. A distinguished 
Roman general in the second Samnite war, was 
five times consul (B.C. 333, 320, 319, 315, 313), 
and twice dictator (325, 309). He frequently 
defeated the Samnites, but his greatest victory 
over them was gained in his second dictator- 
ship. Although a great general, he was not 
popular with the soldiers on account of his se- 
verity. — 2. Son of No. 1, was, like his father, a 
distinguished general. In both his consulships 
(293, 272) he gained great victories over the 
Samnites, and in the second he brought the 
third Samnite war to a close. 

Curtius, Mettus or Mettius, a distinguish- 
ed Sabine, fought with the rest of his nation 
against Romulus. According to one tradition, 
the Lacus Curtius, which was part of the Roman 
forum, was called after him ; because in the 
battle with the Romans he escaped with diffi- 
culty from a swamp, into which his horse had 
plunged. But the more usual tradition respect- 
ing the name of the Lacus Curtius related that 
in B.C. 362 the earth in the forum gave way, and 
a great chasm appeared, which the soothsayers 
declared could only be filled up by throwing into 
it Rome's greatest treasure ; that thereupon M. 
Curtius, a noble youth, mounted his steed in full 
armor ; and declaring that Rome possessed no 
greater treasure than a brave and gallant citizen, 
leaped into the abyss, upon which the earth closed 
over him 

233 



CURTIUS MONTANUS. 



CYCNUS. 



: twelve iu number ; but their number is increas- 
ed by other writers. The most important of 

I them were Delos, Ceos, Cythxos, Seriphos, 

! Rhexia, Siphxos, Cimolos, Naxos, Paros, Sx- 

I eos, Mycoxos, Texos, Axdros. 

Cyclopes (Kvk/.uttsc), that is, creatures with 
round or circular eyes, are described differently 
by different writers. Homer speaks of them as 
a gigantic and lawless race of shepherds in Si- 
cily, who devoured human beings and cared 



CURTIUS MoXTAXUS. Vid. MoXTAXUS. 

Cuetics Rufus, Q., the Roman historian of 
Alexander the Great. Respecting his life, and 
the time at which he lived, nothing is known 
with certainty. Some critics place him as early 
as the time of Vespasian, and others as late as 
Constantine ; but the earlier date is more prob- 
able than the later. The work itself, entitled 
De Rebus Gcstis Alezandri Magni, consisted of 
ten books, but the first two are lost, and the re- 
maining eight are not without considerable I nought for Jupiter (Zeus) : each of them had 



gaps. It is written in a pleasing though some- 
what declamatory style. It is taken from good 
sources, but the author frequently shows his 
ignorance of geography, chronology and tactics. 
The best editions are by Zumpt" Berlin, 1826, 
small edition; Miitzell, Berlin. 1843 
Zumpt, Berlin, 1849, with copious comment- 
ary.] 

CutilLe Aql\e. Vid. Aqu.e, No. 3. 
Oyane (Kvuvrj), a Sicilian nymph and play- 
mate of Proserpina (Persephone), changed into a 

fountain through grief at the loss of the goddess. They were afterward killed by Apollo for having 
Cyaxe.e Ixsulje (Kvdveai vt/gol or iterpai, \ furnished Jupiter (Zeus) with the thunderbolts 
now Urek-Jaki), two small rocky islands at the | to kill iEsculapius. A still later tradition re- 
Bosporus 



only one eye in the centre of his forehead : the 
chief among them was Polyphemus. Accord- 
ing to Hesiod, the Cyclopes were Titans, sons 
of Ccelus (Uranus) and Terra (Ge), were three 
in number, Aeges, Steropes, and Broxtes, and 
[and by each of them had only one eye on his forehead. 

They were thrown into Tartarus by Saturn (Cro- 
nus), but were released by Jupiter (Zeus), and, 
in consequence, they provided Jupiter (Zeus) 
with thunderbolts and lightning, Pluto with a 
helmet, and Neptune (Poseidon) with a trident 



entrance of the Thracian Bosporus into the 
Euxine, the Plaxctj: {Ii7.ayK.Tal) and Symple- 
gades ^Lvfi^rjyddeg) of mythology, so called 
because they are said to have been once mova- 
ble and to have rushed together, and thus de- 
stroyed every ship that attempted to pass 
through them. After the ship Argo had passed 
through them in safetv, they became stationary. 
Yid. p. 91, a. 

Cyaxares {Kva^dprjr), king of Media B.C. 
634-594, son of Phraortes, and grandson of 
Deioces. He was the most warlike of the Me- 
dian kings, and introduced great military re- 
forms. He defeated the Assyrians, who had 
slain his father in battle, and he laid siege to 
Ninus (Nineveh). But while he was before 
the city, he was defeated by the Scythians, who 
held the dominion of Upper Asia for twenty- 
eight years (634-607), but were at length driven 
out of Asia by Cyaxares. After the expulsion 
of the Scythians, Cyaxares again turned his 
arms against Assyria, and with the aid of the 
King of Babylon (probably the father of Nebu- 
chadnezzar), he took and destroyed Ninus in 
606 He subsequently carried on war for five 
years against Alyattes, king of Lydia. Vid. 
Alyattes. Cyaxares died in 594, and was suc- 
ceeded by his son Astyages. Xenophon speaks 
of a Cyaxares II., king of Media, son of Astya- 
ges, respecting whom, vid. Cyrus. 
Cybele. Vid. Rhea. 

Cybistra (rd Kv6iGrpa), an ancient city of 
Asia Minor, several times mentioned bv Cicero 



arded the Cyclopes as the assistants of Vulcan 
J (Hephaestus). Volcanoes were the work-shops 
i of that god, and Mount iEtna in Sicily and the 
j neighboring isles were accordingly considered 
as their abodes. As the assistants of Vulcan 
' (Hephsestus), they make the metal armor and 
j ornaments for gods and heroes. Their number 
j is no longer confined to three ; and besides the 
! names mentioned by Hesiod, we also find those 
I of Pyeacmox and Acamas. The name of Cy- 
i clopian walls was given to the walls built of 
great masses of unhewn stone, of which speci- 
j mens are still to be seen at M^eeuse and other 
! parts of Greece, and also in Italy. They were 
! probably constructed by the Pelasgians ; and 
! later generations, being struck by their gran- 
i deur, ascribed their building to a fabulous race 
of Cyclopes. 

Cycxus (KvKvog). 1. Son of Apollo by Hyrie, 
lived in the district between Pleuron and Caly- 
don, and was beloved by PhyUius ; but as Phyl- 
lius refused him a bull, Cycnus leaped into a 
lake and was metamorphosed into a swan. — 2. 
Son of Neptune (Poseidon), was king of Colonse 
in Troas, and father of Tenes and Hemithea. 
His second wife, Philonome, fell in love with 
Tenes, her step-son, and as he refused her of- 
fers, she accused him to his father, who threw 
Tenes with Hemithea in a chest into the sea. 
Tenes escaped and became king* of Tenedos. 
Vid, Texes. In the Trojan war both Cycnus 
j and Tenes assisted the Trojans, but both were 
j slain by Achilles. As Cycnus could not be 
{Bp. ad Fam., xv., 2, 4; ad Att., v., 18, 20), who j wounded by iron, Achilles strangled him with 
describes it as lying at the foot of Mount Taurus, the thong of his helmet, or killed him with a 
in the part of Cappadocia bordering on Cilicia. j stone. When Achilles was going to strip Cyc- 



Strabo places it three hundred stadia (thirty geo- 
graphical miles) from Tyana, Mention is "made 
of a place of the same name (now Kara Hissar), 
between Tyana and Ccesarea ad Argseum ; but 
this latter can hardly be believed to be identical 
with the former. 

Cyclades (KvK/.dSeg), a group of islands in 
the _ JEgean Sea, so called because they lay in 
a circle (ev kvk/.u) around Delos, the most im- 
portant of them. According to Strabo thev were 
234 



nus of his armor, the body disappeared, and was 
changed into a swan. — 3. Son of Mars (Ares) 
and Pelopia, slain by Hercules at Itone. — 4. Son 
of Mars (Ares) and Pyrene, likewise killed by 
Hercules. — 5. Son of Sthenelus, king of the 
Ligurians, and a friend and relation of Phaethoii. 
While he was lamenting the fate of PhaSthon on 
the banks of the Eridanus, he was metamorph- 
osed by Apollo into a swan, and placed among 
the stars. 



CYDIAS. 



CYNOSURA. 



Cydias. 1. A celebrated painter from tbe island from Mouut Phricius, and hence it had the epi- 
of Cythuus, B.C. 864, whose picture of the Ar- i thet bptKwig. It was the native place of Epho- 
gonauts was exhibited in a porticus by Agrippa , rus, and the mutber city of Side in Pamphylia 
at Rome. — [3. Au Athenian orator, a coutempo- ; and of Cumae in Campania, 
rary of Demosthejje* 5 an oration of his -nepl I [Cymodoce (KvpodoKT]), one of the Nereids 

- (Horn, and Hes.) ; iu Virgd, one of those nymphs 



rf/r Htdpov k/ //oovxtac, is mentioned by Aristotle. 
— S. An curly Greek poet, classed by Plutarch 
with Mimucrmus and Archilochus. His frag- 
ments are given iu the collections of Schneide- 
win and Bergk.) 
Cydippe. Vtd. Aoontius. 
Cydxus (Kw'rof : now Termos-Ghai), a river 
of Cilicia Campestris, risiug in the Taurus, and 
ilowing through the midst of the city of Tarsus, 
where it is one hundred and twenty feet wide 
(Kinueir: Xeuophou says two plethra=two 
hundred and two feet). It was celebrated for 
the clearness and coldness of its water, which 
was esteemed useful in gout and nervous dis- 
eases, but by bathing in which Alexander nearly 
lost his life. At its mouth the river spread into 
a lagune, which formed the harbor of Tarsus, 



into whom Cybele metamorphosed the ships of 
iEueas.] 

[Cymothoe (Kv/iodurj), one of the Nereids.] 
Otna. Vid. Cynane 

Cynjegirus (Kvvacyeipor), brother of the poet 
JEschylus, distinguished himself by his valor at 
the battle of Marathon, B.C. 490. According 
to Herodotus, when the Persians were endeav- 
oring to escape by sea, Cynsegirus seized one 
of their ships to keep it back, but fell with his 
right hand cut off. In the later versions of the 
story, Cynajgirus is made to perform still more 
heroic deeds. 

CynvEtha (Kvvaida : Kvvatdevc, -Oacev'g), a 
town iu the north of Arcadia, whose inhabit- 
ants, unlike the other Arcadians, had a dislike 



but which is now choked with sand. In the I to music, to which circumstance Polybius at 



Middle Ages the river was called Hierax. 

Cydonia, more rarely Cydonis (Kvdovta, Kv6u- 
vlg : KvdwviuT/jc: : now Khania), one of the chief 
cities of Crete, the rival and opponent of Cno- 
sus and Gortyna, was situated on the north- 



tributes their rough and demoralized character. 

Cynane, Cyna, or Cynna (Kvvuvt], Kvva, Kw- 
va), half-sister to Alexander the Great, daugh- 
ter of Philip by Audata, an Illyrian woman. 
She was married to her cousin Amyntas; and 



western coast, aud derived its name from the ! after the death of Alexander she crossed over 



Cydoxes (Kvduvtr), a Cretan race, placed by 
Homer in the western part of the island. At a 
later time a colony of Zaeyuthians settled in 
Cydonia ; they were driven out by the Samians 
about B.C. 524 , and the Samians were in their 



to Asia, intending to marry her daughter Euryd- 
ice to Arrhidreus, who had been chosen king. 
Her project alarmed Perdiccas, by whose order 
she was put to death. 

Cynesii or Cynetes (Kvvt/gloi, KvvijTeg), a 



turn expelled by the yEginetans. Cydonia was \ people, according to Herodotus, dwelling in the 
the place from which quiuces (Cydonia mala) ! extreme west of Europe, beyond the Celts, ap- 



were first brought to Italy, aud its inhabitants 
were some of the best Cretan archers {Gydonio 
crcu, Hor., CamK, iv., 19, 17). 

[Cydrara (Kvdpapa), a city on the borders of 
Phrygia aud Lydia, where a monument was set 



up by Croesus to mark the boundaries.] 
CyiLARoa (Kiv '/ ajwr). a beautiful 



parently iu Spaiu. 

[Cynict. Vid. Diogenes, Antisthenes.] 
Cynisca (Kvv'iGKa), daughter of Archidamus 
II, king of Sparta, was the first woman who 
kept horses for the games, and the first who 
gained an Olympic victory, 
centaur, I Cynopolis (Kvvor rro?ur : now Samalloitt), a 
killed at the weddiug least of Pirithous. The | city of the Heptanomis, or Middle Egypt, on an 
horse of Castor was likewise called Cyllarus. j island in the Nile ; the chief seat of the worship 
Cyllene (Kv//j/v7i). 1. (Now Zyria), the of Anubis. There was a city of the same name 



highest mountain in Peloponnesus on the front- 
iers of Arcadia aud Aehaia, sacred to Hermes 
(Mercury), who had a temple on the summit, 
was said to have been born there, and was hence 
called Cyllenius. — 2. (Now Ghiarenza), a sea- 
port town of Elis. 

Cylon (KlAuv), an Athenian of noble family, 



in the Delta. 

Cynos (Kvvor: Kvvioc. Kvvalog), the chief 
sea-port in the territory of the Locri Opuntii. 

Cynosarges (to Kvvoaapyeg),. a gymnasium, 
sacred to Hercules, outside Athens, east of the 
city, and before the gate Diomea, for the use of 
those who were not of pure Athenian blood : 



married the daughter of Theagenes, tyrant of I here taught Antisthenes, the founder of the 
Megara, and gamed an Olympic victory B.C. | Cynic school. 

o40. Encouraged by the Delphic oracle, he Cynoscephalj: (Kvvor neya/.a'c), '-Dogs' 
seized the Aeropolis, intending to make him- j Heads." 1. Two hills near Scotussa in Thes- 
self tyrant of Athena Pressed bv famine, Cy- ! saly, where Flaminius gained his celebrated 
ion aud his adhereuts were driven to take refuge j victory over Philip of Macedonia, B.C. 197.— 
at the altar oi Minerva (Athena), whence they 2. A hill between Thebes and Thespice, in Bee- 
were induced to withdraw by the archon Meo-- 1 otia. 

acies, the Alema onid, on a promise that thetr ! Cynossema (Kvvbc aJj/ia), " Dog's Tomb," a 
lives should be spared. But their enemies put ! promontory in the Thracian Chersonesus, near 
them to death as soon as they had them iu their ! Madytus, so called because it was supposed to 
power. k e tomb of Hecuba, who had been previous- 

Cymi: (E.«w : Ka^aZoc : now SandakU), the ly changed into a dog. 
largest ot the .Eohau cities of Asia Minor, stood ! Cynosura (Kvvogovpa), an Idaan nymph, and 
upon the coast of yEolis, on a bay named after j one of the nurses of Jupiter (Zeus), who placed 
it Oumams (also Elaiticus) Sinus (6 Kv/xalor ■ her among the stars. Vid. Arctos. 
Kolrcog : now G idf of SandakU), and had a good Cynosura (Kvvbrovpa), " Dog's Tail," a prom- 
narbor. It was founded by a colony of Locrians ontory in Attica, south of Marathon. 

235 



CYNTHIA. 



CYRENAICA. 



Cynthia and Cynthius (Kvvdta aud Kvvdio^), 
surnames respectively of Diana (Artemis) and 
Apollo, which they derived from Mount Cynthus 
in the island of Delos, their birth-place. 

Cynuria (Kvvovpta : Kvvovpiog), a district on 
the frontiers of Argolis and Laconia, for the 
possession of which the Argives and Spartans 
carried on frequent wars, and which the Spar- 
tans at length obtained about B.C. 550. Vid. 



p. y^, a. 



The inhabitants were Ionians. 



Cyparissia (KvirapiooLa). 1. A town in Mes- 
senia, on the western coast, south of the River 
Cyparissus, and on a promontory and bay of the 
same name. Homer {II., ii., 593) speaks of a 
town Cyparisseis (KvTcapLtjaTjeLg) subject to 
Nestor, which is probably the same as the pre- 
ceding, though Strabo places it in Triphylia. — 
2. A town in Laconia, on a peninsula near the 
Asopus. 

Cyparissus (Kv-rrdpiaaog), son of Telephus, 
beloved by Apollo or Silvanus. Having inad- 
vertently killed his favorite stag, he was seized 
with immoderate grief, and metamorphosed into 
a cypress. 

Cyparissus (Kv-upiacoc), a small town in 
Phocis, on Parnassus, near Delphi. 

Cyphanta (tu KvQavTa), a town on the east- 
ern coast of Laconia, near Prasise. 

Cypria, Cypris, surnames of Venus (Aphro- 
dite), from the island of Cyprus. 

Cypriaxus, a celebrated father of the Church, 
was a native of Africa. He was a heathen by 
birth, and before his conversion to Christianity 
he taught rhetoric with distinguished success. 
He was converted about A.D. 246, was ordain- 
ed a presbyter 247, and was raised to the bish- 
opric of Carthage 248. When the persecution 
of Decius burst forth (250), Cyprian fled from 
the storm, and remained two years in retire- 
ment. A few years afterward the emperor Vale- 
rian renewed the persecution against the Chris- 
tians. Cyprian was banished by Paternus the 
proconsul to the maritime city of Curubis, where 
he resided eleven months. He was then recall- 
ed by the new governor, Galerius Maximus, and 
was beheaded in a spacious plain without the 
walls A.D. 258. He wrote several works which 
have come down to us. They are characterized 
"by lucid arrangement, and eloquent, though de- 
clamatory style. The best editions are by Pell, 
Oxford, 1682, fol., to which are subjoined the 
Annates Cyprianici of Pearson ; and that com- 
menced by Baluze, and completed by a monk 
of the fraternity of St. Maur, Paris, 1126, fol. 
[A convenient and useful edition is that pub- 
lished in the collection of Caillau and Guillon, 
Paris, 1829, 8vo.] 

Cyprus (Kvirpog : Kv7?pioc : now Cyprus, call- 
ed by the Turks Kebris), a large island in the 
Mediterranean, south of Cilicia, and west of 
Syria. It is called by various names in the 



i more than seven thousand feet in height. The 
plains are chiefly in the south of the island, and 
were celebrated in ancient as well as in modern 
times for their fertility. The largest plain, call- 
ed the Salaminian plain, is in the eastern part 
of the island, near Salamis. The rivers are lit- 
tle more than mountain torrents, mostly dry in 
summer. Cyprus was colonized by the Phoeni- 
cians at a very early period ; and Greek colo- 
nies were subsequently planted in the island, 
according to tradition soon after the Trojan 
war. We read at first of nine independent 
states, each governed by its own king, Salamis, 
Citium, Amathus, Curium, Paphos, Marium. 
Soli, Lapethus, Cerynia. The island was sub- 
dued by Amasis, king of Egypt, about B.C. 540. 
Upon the downfall of the Egyptian monarchy, it 
became subject to the Persians ; but Evagoras 
of Salamis, after a severe struggle with the Per- 
sians, established its independence about 385, 
and handed down the sovereignty to his son 
Nicocles. It eventually fell to the share of the 
Ptolemies in Egypt, and was governed by them, 
sometimes united to Egypt, and sometimes by 
separate princes of the royal family. In 58 the 
Romans made Cyprus one of their provinces, 
and sent M. Cato to take possession of it. Cy- 
prus was one of the chief seats of the worship 
of Aphrodite (Venus), who is hence called Cy- 
pris or Cypria, and whose worship was intro- 
duced into the island by the Phosnicians. 

Cypsela (ra Kvtp£?.a : Kvijje?uvog, -?.rjv6g, 1. 
A town in Arcadia, on the frontiers of Laconia. 
— 2. (Now Ipsalla), a town in Thrace, on the 
Hebrus and the Egnatia Via. 

Cypselus (Kt^eAoc). 1. Father of Merope 
and grandfather of JEpytus. Vid. jEpytus. — 
2. Of Corinth, son of ^Eetion. The mother of 
Cypselus belonged to the house of the Bacehia- 
dse, that is, to the Doric nobility of Corinth, 
According to tradition, she married iEetion, be- 
cause, being ugly, she met with no one among 
the Bacchiadse who would have her as his wife* 
As the oracle of Delphi had declared that her 
son would prove formidable to the ruling party 
at Corinth, the Bacchiadae attempted to murder 
the child. But his mother concealed him in a 
chest (icvipe2.il), from which he derived his name 
Cypselus. When he had grown up to manhood, 
he expelled the Bacchiadae, with the help of the 
people, and then established himself as tyrant. 
He reigned thirty years, B.C. 655-625, and was 
succeeded by his son Periander. The cele- 
brated' chest of Cypselus, consisting of cedar 
wood, ivory, and gold, and richly adorned with 
figures in relief, is described at length by Pau- 
samas (v., 11, (fee). 

Cyraunis (Kvpavvic), an island off the north- 
ern coast of Africa, mentioned by Herodotus (iv. t 
95) ; probably the same as Cerctne. 

Cyrenaica (57 Kvpnvaia, >; Kvprjvatn x<*>p7], He- 



poets, Cerastia or Cerastis, Malaria, Sphecia, ! rod. : now Dernah or Jebel-Akhdar, i. e., the 
Acamantis, Amathusia, and also Paphos. The J Green Mountain, the northeastern part of Trip- 
island is of a triangular form: its length from I oli), a district of Northern Africa, between Mar- 
east to west is about one hundred and forty j marica on the east and the Regio Syrtica on 
miles; its greatest breadth, which i3 in the ' the west, was considered to extend in its widest 
western part, is about fifty miles from north to j limits from the Pbikenoruin Arae at the bottom 
south, but it gradually narrows towards the east, of the Great Syrtis to the Chersonesus Magna 
A range of mountains, called Olympus by the or northern headland of the Gulf of Platea (now 
ancients, runs through the whole length of the j Gulf of Bomba), or even to the Catabathmus 
island from east to west, and rises in one part j Magnus (now Marsa Solium) ; but the part ac- 
236 



CYRENAICA. 



CYRILLUS. 



tually possessed aud cultivated by the Greek 
colonists can only be considered as beginning 
at the northern limit of the sandy shores of the 
Great Syrtis, at Boreum Promontorium (now 
72a* Teyonai, south of Ben-Ghazi), between 
which and the Chersouesus Magna the country 
projects into the Mediterranean in the form of 
a segment of a circle, whose chord is above 
one hundred and fifty miles long and its arc 
above two hundred. From its position, forma- 
tion, climate, aud soil, this region is perhaps 
one of the most delightful ou the surface of the 
globe. Its centre is occupied by a moderately 
elevated table-land, whose edge runs parallel 
to the coast, to which it sinks down in a suc- 
cession of terraces, clothed with verdure, inter- 
sected by mountain streams running through 
ravines filled with the richest vegetation, ex- 
posed to the cool sea-breezes from the north, 
and sheltered by the mass of the mountain from 
the sands and hot winds of the Sahara. These 
slopes produced the choicest fruits, vegetables, 
and flowers, and some very rare plants, such 
as the silpbium, yielding the birbq Kvprjvalog. 
The various harvests, at the different eleva- 
tions, lasted for eight months of the year. With 
these physical advantages, the people naturally 
became prone to luxury. Their country was, 
however, exposed to actual ravages by locusts. 
The belt of mountainous land extends inward 
from the coast about seventy or eighty miles. 
The first occupation of this by the Greeks, of 
which we have any clear account, was effected 
by Battus, who led a colouy from the island of 
Thera, and first established himself on the isl- 
and of Platea at the eastern extremity of the 
district, and afterward built Cyrene (B.C. 631), 
where he founded a dynasty, which ruled over 
the country during eight reigns, though with 
comparatively little power over some of the 
other Greek cities. Of these the earliest found- 
ed were Teuchira aud Hesperis, then Barca, 
a colony from Cyrene ; and these, with Cyrene 
itself aud its port Apollonia, formed the orig- 
inal Libyan Peutapolis, though this name seems 
not to have come into general use till under the 
Ptolemies. The comparative independence of 
Barca, and the temporary conquest of the coun- 
try by the Persians under Cambyses, diminish- 
ed the power of the later kiugs of Cyrene, and 
at last the dynasty was overthrown and a re- 
public established in the latter part of the fifth 
century B.C. When Alexander invaded Egypt, 
the Cyreuaoans formed an alliance with him ; 
but their country was made subject to Egypt by 
Ptolemy, the son of Lagus. It appears to have 
flourished under the Ptolemies, who pursued 
their usual policy of raising new cities at the 
expense of the ancient ones, or restoring the 
latter under new names. Thus Hesperis be- 
came Berenice, Teuchira was called Arsinoe, 
Barca was entirely eclipsed by its port, which 
was raised iuto a city under the name of Ptole- 
ma'is, aud Cyrene suffered from the favors be- 
stowed upon its port Apollonia. The country 
was now usually called Peutapolis, from the five 
cities of Cyrene, Apollonia, Ptolema'is, Arsinoe, 
and Berenice. In B.C. 95 the last Egyptian 
governor, Apion, an illegitimate son of Ptole- 
my Physcon, made the country over to the Ro- 
mans, who at first gave the cities their free- 



dom, and afterward formed the district under 
the name of Cyrenaica, with the island of Crete, 
into a province. Under Constantiue Cyrenaica 
was separated from Crete, and made a distinct 
province under the name of Libya Superior. 
The first great blow to the prosperity of the 
country was given by the murderous couflict 
which ensued on an insurrection of the Jews 
(who had long settled here in great numbers) in 
the reign of Trajan. As the Roman empire de- 
clined, the attacks of the native Libyan tribes 
became more frequent and formidable, aud the 
sufferings caused by their inroads and by lo- 
custs, plague, and earthquakes, are most pathet- 
ically described by Synesius, bishop of Ptole- 
ma'is, in the fifth century. In the seventh cen- 
tury the country was overrun by the Persiaus, 
and soon afterward it fell a final prey to the 
great Arabian invasion. 

Cyrene (YLvprivrj), daughter of Hypseus, moth- 
er of Aristseus by Apollo, was carried by the 
god from Mount Pelion to Libya, where the city 
of Cyrene derived its name from her. 

Cyrene (K^pr/y?; : Kvprjvalog: now Ghrennah, 
with very large ruins), the chief city of Cyre- 
naica in Northern Africa, was fouuded by Bat- 
tus (B.C. 631) over a fountain consecrated to 
Apollo, and called Cyre (Kvpn : 'Airolluvog 
Kp-Qvrj), which supplied the city with water, and 
then ran down to the sea through a beautiful 
ravine. The city stood eighty stadia (eight 
geographical miles) from the coast, on the edge 
of the upper of two terraces of table-land, at 
the height of eighteen hundred feet above the 
sea, in one of the finest situations in the world. 
The road which connected it with its harbor, 
Apollonia, still exists, aud the ruins of Cyrene, 
though terribly defaced, are very extensive, 
comprising streets, aqueducts, temples, thea- 
tres, tombs, paintings, sculpture, and inscrip- 
tions. In the face of the terrace on which the 
city stands is a vast subterranean necropolis. 
For the history of the city and surrounding 
country, vid. Cyrenaica. Among its celebrated 
natives were the philosopher Aristippus, the 
poet Callimachus, and the Christian bishop and 
orator Synesius. 

[Cyrenius. Vid. Quirinius.] 

Cyreschata or Cyropolis (Kvpeaxara, Kvpa, 
Kvpov nolic), a city of Sogdiana, on the Jaxartes, 
the furthest of the colonies founded by Cyrus, 
and the extreme city of the Persian empire : 
destroyed, after many revolts, by Alexander. 
Its position is doubtful, but it was probably not 
far from Alexandreschata (now Kokand). 

[Cyrnus (Kvpvog), Greek name of Corsica. 
Vid. Corsica.] 

[Cyropolis (Kvpov tto/Uc). Vid. Cyreschata.] 

Oyrillus (Kvpi\?Mg). 1. Bishop of Jerusa- 
lem, A.D. 351-386, was a firm opponent of the 
Arians, by whose influence he was banished 
three times from Jerusalem. His works are 
not numerous. The most important are lec- 
tures to catechumens, &c, and a letter to the 
Emperor Constantius, giving an accouut of the 
luminous cross which appeared at Jerusalem, 
351. The best editions are by Miles, Oxford, 
1703, fol., and by Touttee, Paris, 1720, fol — 
2. Bishop of Alexandrea A.D. 412-444, of which 
city he was a native. He was fond of power, 
and of a restless and turbulent spirit. He per- 
237 



CYRRHESTICE. 



CYRUS. 



secuted the Jews, whom he expelled from Alex- 
aadrea ; and after a long-protracted struggle he 
procured the desposition of Nestorius, bishop of 
Constantinople. He was the author of a large 
number of works, many of which are extant ; 
but in a literary view they are almost worthless. 
The best edition is by Aubert, Paris, 1638, 6 

Vols., fol. 

Cyrrhestice (KvpfieaTiK.//), the name given 
under the Seleucidae to a proviuce of Syria, ly- 
ing between Commagene on the north and the 
plain of Antioeh on the south, between Mount 
Amanus on the west and the Euphrates on the 
■east. After the time of Constantine, it was 
united with Commagene into one province, un- 
der the name of Euphratesia. 

Cyrrhus or Cyrus (Kvfifioc, Kvpo£ : now 
Korus ?), a city of Syria, founded under the Se- 
leucidse, and called after the city of the same 
-lame in Macedonia ; chiefly remarkable as the 
residence and see of Theodoret, Avho describes 
its poverty, which he did much to relieve. 
Justinian rebuilt the walls, and erected an 
aqueduct. 

Cyrrhus, a town in Macedonia, near Pella. 

Cyrus (Kvpoc). 1. The Elder, the founder 
of the Persian empire. The history of his life 
was overlaid in ancient times with fables and 
romances, and is related differently by Herodo- 
tus, Ctesias, and Xenophon. The account of 
Herodotus best preserves the genuine Persian 
legend, and is to be preferred to those of Ctesias 
and Xenophon. It is as follows : Cyrus was 
the son of Cambyses, a noble Persian, and of 
Mandane, daughter of the Median king Astyages. 
In consequence of a dream, which seemed to 
portend that his grandson should be master of 
Asia, Astyages sent for his daughter when she 
was pregnant ; and, upon her giving birth to a 
son, he committed it to Harpagus, his confiden- 
tial attendant, with orders to kill it. Harpagus 
gave it to a herdsman of Astyages, who was to 
expose it. But the wife of the herdsman hav- 
ing brought forth a still-born child, they substi- 
tuted the latter for the child of Mandane, who 
was reared as the son of the herdsman. When 
lie was ten years old, his true parentage was 
discovered by the following incident. In the 
sports of his village, the boys chose him for 
their king. One of the boys, the son of a noble 
Median named Artembares, disobeyed his com- 
mands, and Cyrus caused him to be severely 
scourged. Artembares complained to Astyages, 
who sent for Cyrus, in whose person and cour- 
age he discovered his daughter's son. The 
herdsman and Harpagus, being summoned be- 
fore the king, told him the truth. Astyages for- 
gave the herdsman, but revenged himself on 
Harpagus by serving up to him at a banquet the 
flesh of his own son. As to his grandson, by 
the advice of the Magians, who assured him that 
his dreams were fulfilled by the boy's having 
been a king in sport, he sent him back to his 
parents in Persia When Cyrus grew up, he 
conspired with Harpagus to dethrone his grand- 
father. He induced the Persians to revolt from 
the Median supremacy, and at their head march- 
ed against Astyages. The latter had given the 
command of his forces to Harpagus, who de- ! 
verted to Cyrus. Astyages thereupon placed 1 
himself at the head of his troops, but wa? cicf-at- 
238 



ed by Cyrus and taken prisoner, B.C. 559. The 
Medes accepted Cyrus for their king, and thus 
the supremacy which they had held passed to 
the Persians. It was probably at this time that 
Cyrus received that name, which is a Persian 
word (Kohr), signifying the Sun. Cyrus now 
proceeded to conquer the other parts of Asia 
In 526 he overthrew the Lydian monarchy, and 
took Croesus prisoner. Vid. Crcesus. The 
Greek cities in Asia Minor were subdued by his 
general Harpagus. He next turned his arms 
agaiust the Assyrian empire, of which Babylon 
was then the capital. After defeating the Baby- 
lonians in battle, he laid siege to the city, and 
after a long time he took it by diverting the 
course of the Euphrates, which flowed through 
the midst of it, so that his soldiers entered Bab- 
ylon by the bed of the river. This was in 538. 
Subsequently he crossed the Araxes, with the 
intention of subduing the Massagetae, a Scythian 
people, but he was defeated and slain in battle. 
Tomyris, the queen of the Massagetai, cut off his 
head, and threw it into a bag filled with humar 
blood, that he might satiate himself (she said) 
with blood. He was killed in 529. He was 
succeeded by his son Cambyses. Xenophon 
represents Cyrus as brought up at his grand- 
father's court, as serving in the Median army 
under his uncle Cyaxares II., the son and suc- 
cessor of Astyages, of whom Herodotus and 
Ctesias know nothing ; as making war upon 
Babylon simply as the general of Cyaxares ; as 
marrying the daughter of Cyaxares ; and at 
length dying quietly in his bed, after a sage and 
Socratie discourse to his children and friends. 
Xenophon s account is preserved in the Gyro- 
pcedla, in which he draws a picture of what a 
wise and just prince ought to be. The work 
must nut be regarded as a genuine history. In 
the East Cyrus was long regarded as the great- 
est hero of antiquity, and hence the fables by 
which his history is obscured. His sepulchre 
at Pasargadse was visited by Alexander the 
Great. The tomb has perished, but the name 
is found on monuments at Murghab, north of 
Persepolis. — 2. The Younger, the second of the 
four sons of Darius Xothus, king of Persia, and 
of Pary satis, was appointed by his father com- 
mander of the maritime parts of Asia Minor, and 
satrap of Lydia, Phrygia, and Cappadocia, B.C. 
407. He assisted Lysander and the Lacedae- 
monians with large sums of money in their war 
against the Athenians. Cyrus was of a daring 
aud ambitious temper. On the death of his 
father aud the accession of his elder brother Ar- 
taxerxes Mnemon, 404, Cyrus formed a plot 
against the life of Artaxerxes. His design was 
betrayed by Tissaphernes to the king, who con- 
demned him to death ; but, on the intercession, 
of Parysatis, he spared his life and sent him 
back to his satrapy. Cyrus now gave himself 
up to the design of dethroning his brother. He 
collected a powerful native army, but he placed 
his chief reliance on a force of Greek merce- 
naries. He set out from Sardis in the spriug 
of 401, and, having crossed the Euphrates at 
Thapsacus, marched down the river to the plain, 
of Cunaxa, five hundred stadia from Babylon. 
Here he found Artaxerxes prepared to meet 
him. Artaxerxes had from four hundred thou- 
sand to a million of men ; Cyrus had about ouf* 



GYRUS. 



DACIA. 



hundred thousand Asiatics and thirteen thou- 
sand Greeks. The battle was at first altogether , 
in favor of Cyrus. His Greek troops on the 
right routed the Asiatics who were opposed to 
them ; and he himself pressed forward in the 
centre agamst his brother, and had even wound- 
ed him, when he was killed by one of the kings, 
body-guard. Artaxerxes caused his head and 
right hand to be struck off, and sought to have 
it believed that Cyrus had fallen by his hand. 
The character of Cyrus is drawn by Xenophon 
in the brightest colors. It is enough to say that 
his ambition was gilded by all those brilliant 
qualities which win men's hearts. — 3. An archi- 
tect at Rome, who died on the same day as 
Clodius, 52. 

Cyrus (Kvpoc: now Kour), one of the two 
great rivers of Armenia, rises in the Caucasus, 
flows through Iberia, and after forming the 
boundary between Albania and Armenia, unites 
with the A raxes, aud falls into the western side 
of the Caspian. There were small rivers of the 
same name in Media and Persia. 

Cvta or CytuBA (Kvra, Kvrata : Kvrator, Ky- 
Taievc), a town in Colchis on the River Phasis, 
where Medea was said to have been born. 

Cythera (Kvdnpa : Kudt/piog : now Cerigo), a 
mountainous island off the southwestern point 
of Laconia, with a town of the same name in 
the interior, the harbor of which was called 
Scaxdea (5ka»»<Seta). It was colonized at an 
early time by the Phoenicians, who introduced 
the worship of Venus (Aphrodite) into the isl- 
and, for which it became celebrated. This god- 
dess was heuce called Cytherea, Cythereis ; 
and, accordiug t<> some traditions, it was in the 
neighborhood of this island that she first rose 
from the foam of the B6&. The Argives subse- 
quently took possession of Cythera, but were 
driven out of it by the Lacedemonians, who 
added it to their dominions. 

Cytheris, a celebrated courtesan, the mis- 
tress of Antony, and subsequently of the poet 
Gallus, who mentioned her in his poems under 
the name of Lycoris. 

[Cytiierius (Kvd//pior), a river of Pisatis in 
Elis, a tributary of the Alpheus.] 

Cytiierus (Ki'dypoc : KvO/jpiog), one of the 
twelve ancient towns of Attica, and subsequent- 
ly a demus, belonging to the tribe Pandionis. 

Cytiinus (KvOvoc : Kvdvioc : now Thermia), 
an island in the iEgaeau Sea, one of the Cycla- 
des, with a tow n of the same name, celebrated 
for its cheese, aud also for its warm springs, 
wheuce its modern name. 

Cytintum (Kvrtfiov : Kvnvtdrnc), one of the 
tour cities in Doris, on Parnassus. 

Cytorus or hum {RvrupoQQV -ov ; now Kidros), 
a town on the coast of Paphlagonia, between 
Amastris and the promontory Carambis, was a 
commercial settlement of the people of Siuope. 
It stdod upon or near the mountain of the same 
name, which is mentioned by the Romans as 
abounding in box-trees. 

Cyzicus (Kv&ko?), son of ^Eneus and iEnete, 
the daughter of Eusorus, or son of Eusorus, or 
son of Apollo by Stilbe. He was king of the 
Dolione3 at Cyzicus on the Propontis. For his 
connection with the Argonauts, vid. p. 90, b. 

Cyzicis (Kivkoc : Kv^LKi]v6g : ruins at Bed 
Kiz or Chizico), one of the most ancient and 



powerful of the Greek cities in Asia Minor 
stood upon an island of the same name in the 
Propontis (uow T Sea of Marmara). This island, 
the earlier name of which was Arctonnesus 
{"ApKTuv vf/Goc), lay close to the shore of Mys- 
ia, to which it was united by two bridges, and 
afterward (under Alexander the Great) by a 
mole, which has accumulated to a considerable 
isthmus. The city of Cyzicus stood on the 
southern side of the island, at the northern end 
of the isthmus, on each side of which it had a 
port. Tradition ascribed the foundation of the 
city to the Doliones, a tribe of Thessalian Pelas- 
gians, who had been driven from their homes 
by the JEolians. It was said to have been aft- 
erward colonized by the Milesians. It was one 
of the finest cities of the ancient world for the 
beauty of its situation and the magnificence of 
its buildings : it possessed an extensive com- 
merce, aud was celebrated for the excellence of 
its laws and government. Its staters w T ere 
among the most esteemed gold coins current in 
Greece. It took no conspicuous place in his- 
tory till about twenty-two years after the peace 
of Antaleidas, when it made itself independent 
of Persia. It preserved its freedom under Al- 
exander and his successors, and was in alliance 
w ith the kings of Pergamus, and afterward with 
the Romans. Its celebrated resistance against 
Mithradates, when he besieged it by sea and 
land (B.C. 75), was of great service to the Ro- 
mans, aud obtained for it the rank of a " libera 
ci vitas,'' which it lost agaiu under Tiberius. 
Under Constantino it became the chief city of 
the new province of Hellespontus. It w T as great - 
ly injured by an earthquake in A.D. 443, and. 
finally ruined by its conquest by the Arabians 
in 675. 



D. 

DXje. Vid. Dah^e. 

[Dabar, son of Massugrada, of the family of 
Masinissa, sent by Bocchus to Sulla to negoti- 
ate the peace which ended in the surrender of 
Jugurtha.] 

[Dabroxa (now Blaclcwater), a river of Hi- 
bernia.] 

Dachixabades (AaxivaSudijt;), a general name 
for the southern part of the Indian peninsula, 
derived from the Sanscrit dakshina, the south 
wind, and connected with the modern name 
Deccan. 

Dacia (Dacus), as a Roman province, was 
bounded on the south by the Danube, which 
separated it from Mcesia," on the north by the 
Carpathian Mountains, on the west by the Riv- 
er Tysia (now Theiss), and on the east by the 
River Hierasus (now Pruth), thus comprehend- 
ing the modern 'Transylvania, Wallachia, Molda- 
via, aud part of Hungary. The Daci were of 
the same race and spoke the same language as 
the Getae, and are therefore usually said to be 
of Thraeian origin. They were a brave and 
warlike people. In the reign of Augustus they 
crossed the Danube and plundered the allies of 
Rome, but were defeated and driven back into 
their ow T n country by the generals of Augustus. 
In the reign of Domitian they became so formi 
dable under their king Decebalus, that the Rc- 
maus were obliged to purchase a peaee of them 
239 



DACTYLI. 



DALMATIA. 



5by the payment of tribute. Trajan delivered 
the empire from this disgrace ; he crossed the 
Danube, and after a war of five years (A.D. 101- 
106), conquered the country, made it a Roman 
province, and colonized it with inhabitants from 
all parts of the empire. At a later period Dacia 
was invaded by the Goths ; and as Aurelian con- 
sidered it more prudent to make the Danube 
the boundary of the empire, he resigned Dacia 
to the barbarians, removed the Roman inhabit- 
ants to Mcesia, and gave the name of Dacia (Au- 
reliaui) to that part of the province along the 
Danube where they were settled. 

Dactyli (AuktvXoi), fabulous beings, to whom 
the discovery of iron and the art of working it 
by means of fire were ascribed. Their name 
Dactyls, that is, Fingers, is accounted for in 
various ways : by their number being five or 
ten, or by the fact of their serving Rhea just as 
the fingers serve the hand, or by the story of 
their having lived at the foot (kv SaKrvlotc) of 
Mount Ida in Phrygia as the original seat of the 
Dactyls, whence they are usually called Idaean 
Dactyls. In Phrygia they were connected with 
the worship of Rhea. They are sometimes con- 
founded or identified with the Curetes, Cory- 
bantes, Cabiri, and Telchines. This confusion 
with the Cabiri also accounts for Samothrace 
being in some accounts described as their resi- 
dence. Other accounts transfer them to Mount 
Ida in Crete, of which island they are said to 
have been the original inhabitants. Their num- 
ber appears to have been originally three : Gel- 
mis (the smelter), Damnameneus (the hammer), 
and Acmon (the anvil). Their number was aft- 
erward increased to five, ten (five male and five 
female), fifty-two, and one hundred. 

Dad ast ana (57 AadacTava : now Torbaleh or 
Kestabeg ?), a fortress on the borders of Bithynia 
and Galatia, where the Emperor Jovian died 
suddenly, A.D. 364. 

[Dadioe (AadUai), a tribe of the Persian 
empire, who formed part of the seventh satrapy 
of Darius.] 

D^edala (ra AatSa?ia), a city in Asia Minor, 
upon the G-ulf of Glaucus, on the borders of 
Caria and Lycia. The same name was given 
to a mountain overhanging the town. 

[D.edalion (Aaidahluv), son of Lucifer, and 
father of Chione, who was slain by Diana. 
Daedalion, out of grief at her death, threw him- 
self from Parnassus, but was changed into a 
falcon.] 

Daedalus (AaioaAoc). 1. A mythical person- 
age, under whose name the Greek writers per- 
sonified the earliest development of the arts of 
sculpture and architecture, especially among 
the Athenians and Cretans. The ancient writ- 
ers generally represent Daedalus as an Athenian, 
of the royal race of the Erechthidae. Others 
called him a Cretan, on account of the long time 
he lived in Crete. He is said to have been the 
son of Metion, the son of Eupalamus, the son 
of Erechtheus. Others make him the son of 
Eupalamus or of Palamaon. His mother is 
called Alcippe, or Iphinoe, or Phrasimede. He 
devoted himself to sculpture, and made great 
improvements in the art. He instructed his 
sister's son, Calos, Talus, or Perdix, who soon 
came to surpass him in skill and ingenuity, and j 
Daedalus killed him through envy. Vid Perdix 
240 



j Being condemned to death by the Areopagus 
! for this murder, he went to Crete, where the 
fame of his skill obtained for him the friendship 
of Minos. He made the well-known wooden 
cow for Pasiphae ; and when Pasiphae gave 
birth to the Minotaur, Daedalus constructed the 
labyrinth at Cnosus in which the monster was 
kept. For his part in this affair, Daedalus was 
imprisoned by Minos ; but Pasiphae released 
him, and, as Minos had seized all the ships on 
the coast of Crete, Daedalus procured wings for 
himself and his son Icarus, and fastened them 
on with wax. Daedalus himself flew safe over 
the iEgean, but, as Icarus flew too near the 
sun, the wax by which his wings were fastened 
on was melted, and he dropped down and was 
drowned in that part of the JEgean which was 
called after him the Icarian Sea. Daedalus fled 
to Sicily, where he was protected by Cocalus, 
the king of the Sicani. When Minos heard 
where Daedalus had taken refuge, be sailed with 
a great fleet to Sicily, where he was treacher- 
ously murdered by Cocalus or his daughters. Ac- 
cording to some accounts, Daedalus first alighted 
in his flight from Crete at Cumae in Italy, where 
he erected a temple to Apollo, in which he ded- 
icated the wings with which he had fled from 
Crete. Several other works of art were attrib- 
uted to Daedalus, in Greece, Italy, Libya, and 
the islands of the Mediterranean. They belong 
to the period when art began to be developed. 
The name of Dcedala was given by the Greeks 
to the ancient wooden statues, ornamented with 
gilding and bright colors and real drapery, which 
were the earliest known forms of the images of 
the gods, after the mere blocks of wood or stone, 
which were at first used for symbols of them. — 
2. Of Sicyon, a statuary in bronze, son and dis- 
ciple of Patrocles, flourished B.C. 400. 

Daele (Adai), a great Scythian people, who 
led a nomad life over a great extent of country 
on the east of the Caspian, in Hyrcania (which 
still bears the name of Daghestan), on the banks 
of the Margus, the Oxus, and even the Jaxartes. 
Some of them served as cavalry and horse- 
archers in the armies of Darius Codomannus, 
Alexander, and Antiochus the Great, and they 
also made good foot-soldiers. 

Daimachus (Aatjuaxog), of Plataeae, was sent 
by Seleucus as ambassador to Sandrocottus, 
king of India, about B.C. 312, and wrote a work 
on India, which is lost. 

[Daiphantus (Aafyavroc), a Theban, slain at 
Mantinea; his bravery and skill were indicated 
by the fact that Epaminondas, when mortally 
wounded, named him as the one best qualified 
to succeed to the command.] 

Dalmatia or Delmatia (AaTi/iarla : Aak/iaTTjg, 
more anciently AaA/iarevc : now Dabnata), a 
part of the country along the eastern coast of 
the Adriatic Sea included under the general 
name of lllyricum, was separated from Libur- 
nia on the north by the Titius (now Kerka). and 
from Greek Illyria on the south by the Diilo 
(now Drino), and extended inland to the Bebian 
mountains and the Driuus, thus nearly corre- 
sponding to the modern Dalmatia. The capital 
was Dalminium or Delminium, from which the 
country derived its name. The next most im- 
pertant town was Salona, the residence of Dio- 
cletian. The Dalmatians were a brave and 



DALMATIUS. 



DAMOCRITUS. 



•warlike people, and gave much trouble to the 
Romans. Id B.C, 119 their country was over- 
run by L. Metellus, who assumed, in conse- 
quence, the surname Dalmaticus, but they con- 
tinued independent of tbe Romans. In 39 they 
-were defeated by Asinius Pollio, of whose Dal- 
maticus triumphus Horace speaks (Carm., ii., 1, 
16); but it was not till the year 23 that they 
were finally subdued by Statilius Taurus. They 
took part in the great Panuonian revolt under 
their leader Bato ; but, after a three years' war, 
were again reduced to subjection by Tiberius, 
A.D. 9. . 

Dalmatids. Vid, Delmatius. 

Dalmistium. Vid. Dalmatia. 

Damagetus (Aaudynroe), king of Ialysus in 
Rhodes, married, in obedience to the Delphic ora- 
cle, the daughter of Aristomenes of Messene, and 
from this marriage sprang the family of the Dia- 
goridae, who were celebrated for their victories at 
Olympia. Vid. Aristomenes. 

[Damagon (Ac/xdyuv), a Spartan, who, with Le- 
on and Alcidas, superintended the planting of the 
Lacedaemonian colony Heraclea in Phthiotis, B.C. 
426.] 

Damalis or Bous (Adfialte, rj Bovc), a small 
place in Bithynia, on the shore of the Thracian 
Bosporus, north of Chalcedon ; celebrated by tra- 
dition as the landing-place of Io, the memory of 
whose passage was preserved by a bronze cow 
set up here by the Chalcedonians. 

Damaratus. Vid. Demaratus. 

[Damascenus, Nicolaus. Vid. Nicolaus.] 

Damascius (AafidcKiog), the Syrian, of Damas- 
cus, whence he derived his name, the last of 
the renowned teachers of the Neo-Platonie phi- 
losophy at Athens, was born about A.D. 480. He 
first studied at Alexandrea and afterward at 
Athens, under Marinus and Zenodotus, whom 
he succeeded. When Justinian closed the hea- 
then schools of philosophy at Athens in 529, 
Damascius emigrated to King Chosroes of Per- 
sia. He afterward returned to the west, since 
Chosroes had stipulated in a treaty that the 
heathen adherents of the Platonic Philosophy 
should be tolerated by the Byzantine emperor. 
The only work of Damascius which has been 
printed is entitled " Doubts and Solutions of the 
first Principles,'' edited by Kopp, Francof., 1828, 
Svo. 

Damascus (j? Aafiaonoe : AafiacKTjvog : now Da- 
nicshk, Damascus, Esh-Sham), one of the most 
ancient cities of the world, mentioned as exist- 
ing in the time of Abraham (Gen., xiv., 15), 
stood in the district afterward called Code-Syr- 
ia, upon both banks of the River Chrysorrhoas 
or Bardines (now Burada), the waters of which, 
drawn off by canals and aqueducts, fertilized the 
plain around the city. This plain is open on the 
south and east, and sheltered on the west and 
north by an offshoot of the Antilibanus; its 
fruits were celebrated in ancient, as in modern 
times ; and altogether the situation of the city 
is one of the finest on the globe. In the earli- 
est times, except during the short period for 
which David subjected it to the Hebrew mon- 
archy, Damascus was the seat of an independ- 
ent kingdom, called the kingdom of Syria, which 
was subdued by the Assyrians, and passed suc- 
cessively under the dominion of the Babyloni- 
ans, the Persians, the Greek kings of Syria, and I 



the Romans, the last of whom obtained possession 
of it after the conquest of Tigranes, and assigned 
it to the province of Syria. It flourished great- 
ly under the emperors, and is called by Julian 
(Epist. 24) " the Eye of all the East." Diocle- 
tian established in it a great factory for arms ; 
and hence the origin of the fame of Damascus 
blades. Its position on one of the high roads 
from Lower to Upper Asia gave it a consider- 
able trade. The surrounding district was called 
AauaaKrjvrj. 

Damasippus, L. Junius Brutus. Vid. Brutus, 
No. 10. 

Damasippus Licinius. 1. A Roman senator, 
fought on the side of the Pompeians in Africa, 
and perished B.C. 47. — 2. A contemporary of 
Cicero, who mentions him as a lover of statues, 
and speaks of purchasing a garden from Dama- 
sippus. He is probably the same person as the 
Damasippus ridiculed by Horace. (Sat., ii., 3, 16, 
64.) It appears from Horace that Damasippus 
had become bankrupt, in consequence of which 
he intended to put an end to himself; but he was 
prevented by the Stoic Stertinius, and then turned 
Stoic himself, or at least affected to be one by his 
long beard. The Damasippus mentioned by Juv- 
enal (Sat., viii., 147, 151, 167) is a fictitious name, 
under which the satirist ridiculed some noble 
lover of horses. 

[Damasithymus (Aauaatdv/noc), son of Can- 
daules, prince of Calynda in Caria, followed 
Xerxes to Greece, and perished at the battle of 
Salamis.] 

Damastes (Aafidar7]c), of Sigeum, a Greek his- 
torian, and a contemporary of Herodotus and 
Hellamcus of Lesbos : his works are lost. 

[Damastorides (AafiaaTopidTjc), patronymic 
from Damastor, as Tlepolemus in the Iliad, and 
Agelaus in the Odyssey.] 

[Damasus (Adfiaaoc). 1. A Trojan, slain by 
Polypcetes. — 2. D. Scombrus, a celebrated rheto- 
rician of Tralles in Cilicia.] 
Damia. Vid. Auxesia. 

Damnonii. 1. Or Dumnonii or Dumnunlt, a 
powerful people in the southwest of Britain, in- 
habiting Cornvmll, Devonshire, and the western 
part oi' Somersetshire, from whom was called the 
promontory Damnoxium, also Ocrinum, (now Cape 
Lizard) in Cornwall. — 2. Or Damnii, a people in 
north Britain, inhabiting parts of modern Perth, 
Argyle, Stirling, and Dumbarton-shires. 

Damo (Aafcu), a daughter of Pythagoras and 
Theano, to whom Pythagoras intrusted his writ- 
ings, and forbade her to give them to any one. 
This command she strictly observed, although 
she was in extreme poverty, and received many 
requests to sell them. 

Damocles (AajionTiTjc), a Syracusan, one of the 
companions and flatterers of the elder Dionysius. 
Damocles having extolled the great felicity of 
Dionysius on account of his wealth and power, 
the tyrant invited him to try what his happiness 
really was, and placed him at a magnificent ban- 
quet, in the midst of which Damocles saw a naked 
sword suspended over his head by a single horse- 
hair — a sight which quickly dispelled all his vis- 
ions of happiness. The story is alluded to by 
Horace. (Carm., hi,, 1, 17.) 

[Damocritus (Aa/noKptroc), of Calydon, a gen- 
eral of the iEtolian league, B.C. 200, opposed the 
i Romans and sided with the Macedonians ; he 

241 



DAMON. 



DAPHNE. 



subsequently fell into the hands of the Romans, 
and -was thrown into prison, from "which he es- 
caped by night, but, being pursued, threw him- 
self on his own sword.] 

Damon (Adfiuv). 1. Of Athens, a celebrated j 
musician and sophist. He was a pupil of Lam- } 
prus and Agathocles, and the teacher of Pericles, 
with whom he lived on the most intimate terms. 
He is also said to hare taught Socrates, but this 
statement is more doubtful. In his old age he 
was banished from Athens, probably on account 
of the part he had taken in politics. — 2. A Pytha- 
gorean, and friend of Phixtias (not Pythias). 
When the latter was condemned to die for a plot 
against Dionysius I. of Syracuse, he asked leave 
of the tyrant to depart for the purpose of arrang- 
ing his domestic affairs, promising to find a friend 
who would be pledge for his appearance at the 
time appointed for his punishment. To the sur- 
prise of Dionysius, Damon unhesitatingly offered 
himself to be put to death instead of his friend, 
should he fail to return. Phintias arrived just in 
time to redeem Damon, and Dionysius was so 
struck with this instance of firm friendship on 
both sides, that he pardoned the criminal, and 
entreated to be admitted as a third into their 
bond of brotherhood. 

Damoxexus (Aa/u6$evoc), an Athenian comic 
poet of the new comedy, and perhaps partly of 
the middle. [Some fragments remain, which 
have been collected by Meineke, Comic. Grcec. 
Fragm., vol. ii., p. 1149-53, edit, minor.] 

Dana (Adva), a great city of Cappadocia (Xen., 
Anab., i., 2, § 20), probably the same as the later 
Ttaxa. 

Daxae (Aavdrf) daughter of Acrisius ana 
mother of Perseus. Vid. Acrisius. An Italian 
legend related that Danae came to Italy, built 
the town of Ardea, and married Pilumnus, by 
whom she became the mother of Daunus, the an- 
cestor of Turnus. 

Danai. Vid. Daxaus. 

Daxaides (AavatSeg), the fifty daughters of 
Danaus. Vid. Daxaus. 

Danaxa (rd Adva?,a), a city in the territory of 
the Trocmi, in the northeast of Galatia, notable 
in the history of the Mithradatic War as the 
place where Lucullus resigned the command to 
Pompey. 

Daxapris. Vid. Borysthexes. 

Daxastris. Vid. Ttras. 

Daxaus (Aavaoc), son of Belus and twin- 
brother of JEgyptus. Belus had assigned Libya 
to Danaus, but the latter, fearing his brother 
and his brother's sons, fled with his fifty daugh- 
ters to Argos. Here he was elected king by 
the Argives, in place of G-elanor, the reigning 
monarch. The story of the murder of the fifty 
sons of iEgyptus by the fifty daughters of Da- 
naus (the Danaides) ia given under jEgtptus. 
There was one exception to the murderous 
deed. The life of Lynceus was spared by his 
wife Hypermnestra ; and, according to the com- 
mon tradition, he afterward avenged the death 
of his brothers by killing his father-in-law, Da- 
naus. According to the poets, the Danaides 
were punished in Hades by being compelled 
everlastingly to pour water into a sieve (inane 
iy)npha> dolium /undo pereuntis imo, Hor., Carm., 
iii, 11, 26). From Danaus the Argives were 
{-aUed Danai, which name, like that of the S.r- 
242 



gives, was often applied by the poets to the col- 
lective Greeks. 

[Daxda.ru ( Aavddpioi) and Daxdarid^e, a people 
on the coasts of the Palus Mseotis and the Euxine. 
traces of whose name appear to remain in the 
modern Draxdl] 

Daxubius (now Danube, in German JDonan). 
also Daxuvtus on coins and inscriptions, called 
Ister ("larpoc) by the Greeks, one of the chief 
rivers of Europe, rises in the Black Forest, and. 
after flowing one thousand seven hundred and 
seventy miles, falls into the Black Sea. It is 
mentioned by Hesiod, but the Greeks knew very 
little about it. According to Herodotus, it rises 
at the city Pyrene, among the Celts, and flows 
through the whole of Europe. The Romans first 
obtained some accurate information concerning 
the river at the commencement of the empire. 
Tiberius, in his campaign against the Vindelicians. 
visited the sources of the Danube, which, accord- 
ing to Tacitus, rises in Mouxt Abxoba. The 
Danube formed the northern boundary of the em- 
pire, with the exception of the time that Dacia 
was a Roman province. In the Roman period, 
the upper part of the river, from its source as far 
as Vienna, was called Danubius, while the lower 
part to its entrance in the Black Sea was named 
Ister. 

Daorsi or Daorizi (Aa6pi£,oi), a tribe in Dal- 
matia. 

Daph>\e PelusLe (Adqvai ai He/.pvatai : now 
Safnas), a border fortress of Lower Egypt 
against Arabia and Syria, stood on the right 
hand of the Nile, sixteen Roman miles southwest 
of Pelusium. Many Jews settled here after 
the destruction of Jerusalem by the Babyloni- 
ans. 

Daphxe (Adovy). 1. Daughter of the river- 
god Ladon in Arcadia, by Ge (the earth), or of 
the river-god Peneus in Thessaly. She was- 
extremely beautiful and was loved by Apollo 
and Leucippus, son of CEnomaus, but she re- 
jected both their suits. In order to win her. 
Leucippus disguised himself as a maiden, but 
Apollo's jealousy caused his discovery, and he 
was killed by the companions of Daphne. Apol- 
lo now pursued Daphne, and she was on the 
point of being overtaken by him : she prayed for 
aid, and was metamorphosed into a laurel-tree 
(ddfvn), which became, in consequence, the fa- 
vorite tree of Apollo. — 2. Daughter of Tiresias. 
better known under the name of Manto. Vid. 
aIaxto. 

Daphxe (Aaov?/). 1. (Now Beit-el- Jloi f, c 
Babyla?) a beautiful spot, five miles south or 
Antioch in Syria, to which it formed a sort of 
park or pleasure garden. Here was a grove of 
laurels and cypresses, eighty stadia in circuit, 
watered by fresh springs, and consecrated by 
Seleucus Nicator to Apollo, to whom also a 
magnificent temple was built by Antioehus- 
Epiphanes, and adorned with a splendid statue 
of the god by Bryaxis. To this temple were 
attached periodical games and the privilege o: 
asylum. Daphne was a royal residence of the 
Seleucida? and of the later Roman emperors, 
and a favorite resort of the people of Antioch. 
who, however, carried the pleasures they en- 
joyed here so far beyond the bounds of mod 
eration, that the phrase Baphnici mores passe-i 
into a proverb. It was from this place that A: - 



DAPHNIS 



DARIUS. 



tioch received its distinguishing name, 'A. knl 
Ad<bv7]q. — 2. A place in Upper Galilee, on the 
Lake Semechonitis. 

Daphnis {Ad<f>vic). 1, A Sicilian hero, to 
whom the invention of hucolic poetry is ascribed. 
He was son of Mercury (Hermes) by a nymph. 
His mother placed him when an infant in a 
charming valley in a laurel grove, from which 
he received the name of Daphnis. He was 
brought up by nymphs ; was taught by Pan to 
play on the flute ; he became a shepherd, and 
tended his flocks on Mount iEtna winter and 
summer. A Naiad fell in love with him, and 
made him swear that he would never love any 
other maiden, threatening him with blindness 
if he broke his oath. For a time the handsome 
shepherd resisted the numerous temptations to 
which he was exposed, but at last he forgot 
himself, having been made intoxicated by a 
princess. The Naiad accordingly punished him 
with blindness, or, as others relate, changed him 
into a stone. Previous to this time he had com- 
]x>sed bucolic poetry, and with it delighted Di- 
ana (Artemis) during the chase. After haviug 
become blind, he invoked his father to help 
him. The god accordingly raised him up to 
heaveu, and caused a well to gush forth on the 
spot where this happeued. The well bore the 
name of Daphnis, and at it the Sicilians offered 
an annual sacrifice. — [2. Tyrant of Abydos, one 
of those who were left by Darius in charge of 
the bridge of boats over the Danube, and who 
refused to destroy the bridge as urged by Milti- 
ades.] 

Daphnus (Aaovovr -ovvTog : Aayvovcioc), a 
town of the Locri Opuntii on the coast, in earlier 
times belonging to Phocis. 

Daradax (Aapddaz : now Abu-Ghalgal ?), a 
river of Upper Syria, flowing into the Euphrates, 
thirty parasangs from the River Chalos, and fif- 
teen from Thapsacu.s. 

[Dardanes (Aapdavtis), a people of Media, on 
the Gyndes, mentioned by Herodotus (i., 189), 
otherwise unknown.] 

Dardani (Adpdavoi : Aapdaviurat, Strab.), a 
people in Upper Mcesia, who also occupied part 
of lllyricum, and extended as far as the frontiers 
of Macedonia, 

Dardania (Aaptiavia), a district of the Troad, 
lying along the Hellespont, southwest of Abydos, 
and adjacent on the land side to the territories 
of Ilium and Scepsis. Its people (Adpdavot) ap- 
pear in the Trojan war, and their name is often 
interchanged with that of the Trojans, especially 
by the Roman poets. Vid, Dardanus. 

Dardanus (Adpdavoc). 1. Son of Jupiter (Zeus) 
and Electra. His native place in the various 
traditions is Arcadia, Crete, Troas, or Italy. Dar- 
danus is the mythical ancestor of the Trojans, and 
through them of the Romans. The Greek tradi- 
tions usually make him a king in Arcadia. He 
first emigrated to Samothrace, and afterward 
passed over to Asia, where he received a tract 
of land from King Teucer, on which he built the 
town of Dardania. He married Batea, daughter 
of Teucer, or Arisbe of Crete, by whom he be- 
came the father of Erichthonius. His grandson 
was Tros, who removed to Troy the Palladium, 
which had belonged to his grandfather. Accord- 
ing to the Italian traditions, Dardanus was the 
«on of Corythus, an Etruscan prince of Corythus 



I (now Cortona), or of Jupiter (Zeus) by the wife 
J of Corythus ; and, as in the Greek tradition, he 
| afterward emigrated to Phrygia. — [2. A Stoic 
philosopher, who, with Mnesarchus, stood at 
the head of the Stoic school at Athens; con- 
temporary with the Academic Antiochus of 
Ascalon.] 

Dardanus (// AdpSavog : Aapdavevc), also -um 
and -jum, a Greek city in the Troad on the Hel- 
lespont, near the Promontorium Dardanis or 
Dardanium and the mouth of the River Rhodius, 
twelve Roman miles from Ilium, and nine (or 
seventy stadia) from Abydus. It was built by 
iEolian colonists, at some" distance from the site 
of the ancient city Dardania (Aapdavty), which is 
mentioned by Homer (//., ii., 216) as founded by 
Dardanus before the building of Ilium. The Ro- 
mans, after the, war with Antiochus the Great, 
made Dardanus and Ilium free cities, as an act 
of filial piety. The peace between Sulla and 
Mithradates was made here, B.C. 84. From 
Dardanus arose the name of the Castles of the 
Dardanelles, after which the Hellespont is now- 
called. 

Dares (Adpi]c). 1. A priest of Vulcan (He- 
phaestus) at Troy, mentioned in the Iliad (v., 9), 
to whom was ascribed in antiquity an Iliad, 
which was believed to be more ancient than 
the Homeric poems. This work, which wac 
undoubtedly the composition of a sophist, is 
lost ; but there is extant a Latin work in prose 
in forty-four chapters, on the destruction of Troy, 
bearing the title Daretis Phrygii de Exeidio 
Trojce Historia, and purporting to be a transla- 
tion of the work of Dares by Cornelius Nepos. 
But the Latin work is evidently of much latei' 
origin ; it is the production of a person of little 
education and of bad taste ; and it is supposed 
by some to have been written even as late as 
the twelfth century. It is usually printed with 
Dietys Cretensis: the best edition is by Deder- 
ich, Bonn, 1837, 8vo. — [2. A Trojan, companion 
of iEneas, distinguished for his skill in boxing ; 
vanquished and driven from the field by the aged 
Entellus.] 

Darius (Aapeloc). 1. King of Persia, B.C. 
521-485, was the son of Hystaspes, satrap of 
the province of Persia, and of the royal family 
of the Achsemenidse. He was one of the seven 
Persian chiefs who destroyed the usurper Smer- 
dis. The seven chiefs agreed that the one of 
them whose horse neighed first at an appointed 
time and. place, should become king; and as 
the horse of Darius neighed first, he was de- 
clared king. He married Atossa and Artystone, 
the two daughters of Cyrus, and Parmys, the 
daughter of Cyrus's son Smerdis, and Phaedime, 
the daughter of Otanes, one of the seven chiefs. 
He then began to set in order the affairs of bis 
vast empire, which he divided into twenty sa- 
trapies, assigning to each its amount of tribute. 
Persis proper was exempted from all taxes, ex- 
cept those which it had formerly been used to 
■pa.j. It was in the reign of Darius that the con- 
! sohdation of the empire was effected, for Cyrus 
{ and Cambyses had been engaged in continual 
{ wars. A few years after his accession the 
j Babylonians revolted, but after a siege of twenty 
j months, Babylon was taken by a stratagem of 
{ Zoptrus, about 51-6. The reduction of Babylon 
1 was followed by the invasion of Scvthia (about 
243 * 



DASCOX. 

I 

508). Darius crossed the Danube, aud marched ; 
far into the interior of modern Russia ; but, I 
after losing a large number of men by famine, 
and being unable to meet with the enemy, he 
was obliged to retreat On his return to Asia, 
he sent part of his forces, under Megabazus, to 
subdue Thrace and Macedonia, which thus be- 
came subject to the Persian empire. The most 
important event in the reign of Darius was the 
commencement of the great war between the 
Persians and the Greeks. The history of this 
war belongs to the biographies of other men. 
In 501 the Ionian Greeks revolted ; they were 
assisted by the Athenians, who burned Sardis, 
and thus provoked the hostility of Darius. 
Vid. Aristagoras, Histlels. In 492 Mar- 
donius was sent with a large army to invade 
Greece, but he lost a great part of his fleet 
off Mount Athos, and the Thracians destroyed 
a vast number of his land forces. Vid. Mar- 
doxius. He was, in consequence, recalled, and 
Datis and Artaphernes appointed to the com- 
mand of the invading army. They took Eretria 
in Eubcea, and landed in Attica, but were de- 
feated at Marathon by the Athenians under the 
command of Miltiades. Vid. Miltiades. Da- 
rius now resolved to call out the whole force of 
his empire for the purpose of subduing Greece ; 
but, after three years of preparation, his atten- 
tion was called off by the rebellion of Egypt. 
He died in 485, leaving the execution of his 
plans to his son Xerxes. — IL King of Persia, 
424-405, named Ocmrs ( T G^oc), before his ac- 
cession, and then sumarned Xothus (Nodog), or 
the Bastard, from his being one of the bastard 
sons of Artaxerxes I, Darius obtained the 
crown by putting to death his brother Sogdia- 
xus, who had murdered Xerxes II. He mar- 
ried Parysatis, daughter of Xerxes I, by whom 
he had two sons, Artaxerxes II., who succeeded 
him, and Cyrus the younger. Darius was gov- 
erned by eunuchs, and the weakness of his gov- 
ernment was shown by repeated insurrections 
of his satraps. In 414 the Persians were ex- 
pelled from Egypt by Amyrtceus, who reigned 
there six years, and at whose death (408) Da- 
rius was obliged to recognize his son Pausiris 
as his successor. — III. Last king of Persia, 336- 
331, named Codomaxxus before his accession, 
was the son of Arsames and Sisygambis, and a 
descendant of Darius II. He was raised to the 
throne by Bagoas, after the murder of Aeses. 
The history of his conquest by Alexander the 
Great, and of his death, is given in the life of 
Alexander. 

[Dascox (Auokuv), a Syracusan, founder of 
Camarina.] 

Dascox {Adonuv : AacKuviog), a fortress near 
Syracuse, situated on a bay of the same name. 

[Dascvles (AaoKv/.Tjg), father of Gyges.] 

Dasctlicm (AacKV/uov or -elov : AacKv/.iTTjg : 
now DiasJcili), a town of Bithynia, on the Propon- 
tis, near a lake called Dascylltis. 

Dasea (Aacea, also Aaaeat : AaoEu-rjg), a small 
town in Arcadia, near Megalopolis. 

Dassaretii or Dassarit^e, Dassaretje: (Aaaoa- 
p7}~LOL, AaooaplraL), a people in Greek lllyria,-on 
the borders of Macedonia : their chief town was 
Ltchxidus (Avxvtdog), on a hill, on the northern 
side of the Lake Lychxitis, which was so called 
after the town. 

244 



DACELEA. 

Da-tames (Aaru/irjg), a distinguished Persian 
general, a Cariau by birth, son of Camissares 
by a Scythian mother. He succeeded his father 
as satrap of Cilicia, under Artaxerxes II. (Mne- 
mon), but, in consequence of the machinations of 
his enemies at the Persian court, he threw off 
his allegiance to the king, and made common 
cause with the other satraps who had revolted 
from Persia. He defeated the generals who 
were sent against him, but was assassinated 
by Mithradates, son of Ariobarzanes, about 
B.C. 362. Cornelius Xepos, who has written 
his life, calls him the bravest and most able of 
all barbarian generals, except Hamilcar and 
Hannibal. 

Datis (Adrcg), a Mede, commanded, along with 
Artaphernes, the Persian amiy of Darius, which 
was defeated at Marathon, B.C. 490. 

Datum or Datus (Autov, Aurog : Aarrjvog : 
now Eski-Cavallo), a Thracian town on the Stry- 
monic Gulf, subject to Macedonia, with gold 
mines in Mount Pangaeus in the neighborhood, 
whence came the proverb a " Datum of good 
things." 

Daulis or Daulia (Aav/ug, -idog, Aav/la : Aav- 
Xievg, Aav/uog : now Daidia), an ancient town in 
Phocis, on the road from Cbseronea and Orcho- 
menus to Delphi, situated on a lofty hill : cele- 
brated in mythology as the residence of the 
Thracian king Tereus, and as the scene of the 
tragic story of Philomela and Procxe. Hence 
Daulias (Aav/lac) is the surname both of Procne 
and Philomela. 

Dauxia. Vid. Apulia. 

Dauxus (Aavvog). I. Son of Lycaon, and 
brother of Iapyx and Peucetius. The three 
brothers crossed over from IUyria, and settled 
in Apulia, which was divided into three parts, 
and named after them. The poets sometimes 
gave the name of Daunia to the whole of Apu- 
lia: Horace (Carm., i., 22, 14) uses the adjec- 
tive Daunias (sc. terra). — 2. Son of Pilumnus 
and Danae, wife of VeDilia, and ancestor of Tur- 
nus. 

[Decapolis (AeKuTroAig), in Palestine, east of 
the Jordan, an association composed of the ten 
cities, Philadelphia, Damascus, Raphana, Scytho- 
polis, Gadara, Hippon, Dion, Pella, Galasa, and 
Canatha, which, not being inhabited by Jews, 
formed a confederation for mutual protection 
against the Asraonean princes of Judsea.] 

Decebalus (AenzSalog), a celebrated king of 
the Dacians during the reigns of Domitian and 
Trajan. Por four years (A.D 86-90) he car- 
ried on war against the Romans with such suc- 
cess, that Domitian was at length glad to con- 
clude peace with him by the payment of an an- 
nual tribute. Trajan refused to continue this 
disgraceful payment, and renewed the war. 
He defeated the Dacians, and compelled Dece- 
balus to sue for peace, which was granted (101- 
103). But in 104 the war broke out again ; De- 
cebalus was again defeated, and put an end to 
his life ; and Dacia became a Roman province, 
106. 

Decelea or -ia (AeKE/.eta : AeneAevg : now 
Biala- Castro), a demus of Attica, belonging to 
the tribe Hippothoontis, lay northwest of Athens, 
on the borders of Boeotia, near the sources of 
the Cephisus. In the nineteenth year of the 
Peloponnesian War (B.C. 413), the Peloponne- 



DECENTIUS MAGNUS. 



DEIPHOBUS. 



sians under Ajps seized and fortified Deeelea, and 
thereby annoyed the Athenians in many ways 
during the remainder of the war. 

Decentius Magnus, brother or cousin of Mag- 
nentius, by whom he was created Caesar, A.D. 
351. After the death of Magxentius, he put an 
end to his own life, 353. 

Decetia (now Desize), a city of the ^Edui, in 
Gallia Lugdunensis, on an island in the Liger 
(now Loire). 

Deciates, a Ligurian people on the coast and 
about thesouiv,- of the Drueutia (now Durance). 
Their chief city, Deciatum (Aekct]tov), lay be- 
tween Nicaea and Antipolis. 
Decidws Sax a. Vid. Sax a. 
Decius Mus, P., plebeians. 1. Consul B.C. 
340 with T. Manlius Torquatus in the great 
Latin war. Each of the consuls had a vision 
in the night before fighting with the Latins, an- 
nouncing that the general of one side and the 
army of the other were devoted to death. The 
consuls thereupon agreed that the one whose 
wing first began to waver should devote him- 
self and the army of the enemy to destruction. 
Decius commanded the left wing, which began 
to give way, whereupon he devoted himself and 
the army of the enemy to destruction, accord- 
ing to the formula prescribed by the pontifex 
maximus, then rushed into the thickest of the 
enemy, and was slain, leaving the victory to the 
Romans. — 2. Son of the preceding, four times 
consul, 312, 308, 297, and 295, In his fourth 
consulship he commanded the left wing at the 
battle of Sentinum, where he was opposed to 
the Gauls, and when his troops began to give 
way, he imitated the; example of his father, de- 
voted himself and the enemy to destruction, and 
fell as a sacrifice for his nation. — 3. Son of No. 
2, consul 279, in the war against Pyrrhus. Ac- 
cording to some, he sacrificed himself in battle 
like his father and grandfather, but this is not 
true, for he survived the war with Pyrrhus. 

Decius, a Roman emperor, A.D. 249-251, 
whose full name was C. Messius Quixtus Tra- 
jaxus Decius, was born at Bubalia, in Pannonia. 
He was sent by the Emperor Philippus in 249 
to restore subordination in the army of Mcesia, 
but the troops compelled him to accept the pur- 
ple under threats of death. Decius still assured 
Philippus of -his fidelity ; but the latter not trust- 
ing these professions, hastened to meet his rival 
in the field, was defeated near Verona, and slain. 
The short reign of Decius was chiefly occupied 
in warring against the Goths. He fell in battle 
against the Goths together with his son in 251. 
In his reign the Christians were persecuted with 
great severity. 

Decumates Agri. Vid. Agri Decumates. 
Deiaxira (Aqldveipa), daughter of Althaea by 
either QSneus, or Bacchus, (Dionysus), or Dex- 
amenus, and sister of Meleager. "Achelous and 
Hercules both loved Deianira, and fought for 
the possession of her. Hercules was victorious, 
and she became his wife. She was the unwill- 
ing cause of her husbaud's death by presenting 
him with the poisoned robe which the centaur | 
Nessus gave her. In despair, she put an end to 
her own life. For details, vid. Hercules. 

[Deicoox I l)/iK6o)v), a Trojan hero, friend of 
iEneas, slain by Agamemnon.] 
Deidamia {hrjiddfiEia). 1. Daughter of Ly co- 



medos in the island of Seyms. When Achilles 
was concealed there in maiden's attire, she be- 
came by him the mother of Pyrrhus or Neop- 
tolemus. — 2. Wife of Pirithous, commonly call- 
ed Hippodamia. — [3. Daughter of Bellerophon, 
wife of Euander, and mother of Sarpedon ; she 
is called by Homer {II, vi., 197) Laodamla.J — 
4. Sister of Pyrrhus, married Demetrius Pohor- 
cetes. 

Deioces (Aqiouvs), first king of Media, after 
the Medes had thrown off the supremacy of the 
Assyrians, was the son of Phraortes, and reign- 
ed B.C. 709-656. He built the city of Ecbat- 
ana, which he made the royal residence. His ad- 
ministration of justice was severe, and he kept a 
body of spies and informers throughout the 
whole country. He was succeeded by his son 
Phraortes 

[Deiochus (Avtoxoc), a Greek, slain before 
Troy by Paris.] 

Delox (ATjiuv), son of ^Eolus and Enarete, 
king in Phocis, husband of Diomede, and father 
of Asteropia, ^Enctus, Actor, Phylacus, and 
Cephalus. 

Deioxe (Arjiuv?]), mother of Miletus, who is 
hence called Deionides. (Ov., Met, ix., 442.) 

[Deioxeus (Arjiovevc). 1. Father of Dia, the 
wife of Ixion, by whom he was thrown into a pit 
filled with fire, and there perished. — 2. A son of 
Eurytus of ffiehalia, whom Theseus nfirried to 
Perigune, the daughter of Sinis.] 

[Deiopea, a beautiful nymph, whom Juno 
promised to JEolus if he would aid her in destroy- 
ing the fleet of iEneas.] 

[Deiopites (Arj'ioTctTTjc), a son of Priam, slain 
by Ulysses {II., xi., 420) ; Apollodorus calls him 
A?/i'o7rT?7c.] 

Deiotarus {An'iorapoc). 1. Tetrarch of Gala- 
tia, adhered firmly to the Romans in their wars 
in Asia against Mithradates, and was rewarded 
by the senate with the title of king, and the ad- 
dition of Armenia Minor to his dominions. In 
the civil war he sided with Pompey, and was 
present at the battle of Pharsalia. B.C. 48. In 
47 he applied to Domitius Calvinus, Caesar's le- 
gate in Asia, for aid against Pharnaces, who 
had taken possession of Armenia Minor. When 
Caesar, in the same year, came into Asia from 
Egypt, Deiotarus received him with submission, 
and endeavored to excuse the aid he had given 
to Pompey. Cassar deprived him of part of his 
dominions, but allowed him to retain his regal 
title. Two years afterward (45) his grandson 
Castor accused him of having formed a design 
against Caesar's life, when he received Caesar 
in Galatia. He was defended by Cicero before 
Caesar, in the house of the latter at Rome, in 
the speech {pro Rege Deiotaro) still extant. The 
result of the trial is not known. After Caesar's 
death he obtained from Antony the restitution 
of his dominions by paying Fulvia a large sum 
of money. In 42 he joined the party of Brutus 
and Cassius, and died shortly afterward at a great 
age. — 2. Son and successor of the above. In the 
war between Antony and Octavianus he took part 
with the former, but went over from him to the 
enemy in the battle of Actium, 31. 

Deiphoee {Ar]'i<p6(jrj), the Sibyl at Cuma3,daugh- 
ter of Glaucus. Vid. Sibylla. 

Deiphobus {A^i(po6oc). 1. A son of Priam and 
Hecuba, and, next to Hector, the bravest among 
245 



DEIPHONTES. 



DELPHI. 



the Trojans. He always supported Paris in his 
refusal to deliver up Helen to the Trojans ; and 
he married her after the death of Paris. Ac- 
cordingly, on the fall of Troy, the vengeance of 
the Greeks was chiefly directed against him. 
His house was one of the first committed to 
the flames, and he was slain and fearfully man- 
gled by Menelaus, [the marks of which mutila- 
tion bis shade still bore in the lower world wben 
encountered by iEneas; who, before leaving 
Troy, had erected a cenotaph to his memory 
on Cape Rhceteum. — 2. Son of Hippolytus in 
Amyclee, who purified Hercules of the murder 
of Iphitus.] 

Deiphoxtes (Ar/ioovr?]c), son of Antimachus, 
and husband of Hyrnetho, the daughter of Tem- 
enus the Heraclid, became king of Argos after 
Temenus had been murdered by his own sons. 
Pausanias (ii., 19) gives a different account. 

[Deipyle (A?/i';rv/l?/), daughter of Adrastus, 
king of Argos, wife of Tydeus, and mother of 
Diomedes.] 

[Deipylus (Avittvaoc), a Greek, companion of 
Diomedes in the Trojan war.] 

[Deipyrus (A^trrvpoe), a Greek warrior, slain 
by Helenus before Troy.] 

DiLioi (Arj/uov : now Dhilessi), a town on 
the coast of Bceotia, in the territory of Tanagra, 
near the Attic frontier, named after a temple of 
Apollo, similar to that at Delos. The Athenians 
used it as a fortress in the early part of the Pe- 
loponnesian War, and in B.C. 424 they were de- 
feated here by the Boeotians. 

Delies and Delia ( Ariltoq, A?]/ua), surnames 
of Apollo and Diana (Artemis) respectively, 
from the island of Delos. 

Dellius, Q., a Roman eques, who frequently 
changed sides in the civil wars. In B.C. 44 he 
joined Dolabella in Asia, afterward went over 
to Cassius, and then united himself to M. Antony. 
He deserted to Octavianus shortly before the bat- 
tle of Actium, 31. He appears to have become 
a personal friend of Octavianus and Maecenas, 
and is therefore addressed by Horace in one of 
his Odes (ii., 3). He wrote a history of Antony's 
war against the Parthians, in which he had him- 
self fought. 

Delmatius or Dalmatius. 1. Son of Con- 
stantinus Chlorus and his second wife Theodora. 
From his half-brother, Constantine the Great, he 
received the title of censor : he died before A.D. 
335. — 2. Son of the preceding, was created Caesar 
by Constantine the Great, 335 ; and, upon the di- 
vision of the empire, received Thrace, Macedonia, 
and Achaia as his portion. He was put to death 
in 33*7 on the death of Constantine. 

Delos or Delus (?) Arjlog : A?j?uog : now Delo, 
Deli, Dili, or Sdilli) the smallest of the islands 
called Cyclades, in the iEgean Sea, lay in the 
strait between Rhenea and Myconus. It was 
also called, in earlier times, Asteria, Ortygia, 
and Chlamydia. According to a legend, found- 
ed, perhaps, on some tradition of its late volcanic 
origin, it was called out of the deep by the tri- 
dent of Neptune (Poseidon), but was a floating 
island until Jupiter (Zeus) fastened it by ada- j 
mantine chains to the bottom of the sea, that 
it might be a secure resting-place to Latona 
(Leto) for the birth of Apollo and Diana (Arte- 
mis). Apollo afterward obtained possession of 
Delos by giving Calauria to Neptune Posei- 
246 



j don) in exchange for it ; and it beanie the most 
' holy seat of the worship of Apollo. Such is the 
' mythical story : we learn from history that De- 
los was peopled by the Ionians, for whom it was 
the chief centre of political and religious union 
in the time of Homer : it was also the seat of 
an Amphictyony, comprising the surrounding 
islands. In the time of Pisistratus, Delos be- 
came subject to the Athenians : it was made 
the common treasury of the Greek confederacy 
for carrying on the war with Persia; but the 
transference of the treasury to Athens, and the 
altered character of the league, reduced the isl- 
and to a condition of absolute political depend- 
ence upon Athens. It still possessed, how- 
ever, a very extensive commerce, which wa? 
increased by the downfall of Corinth, when De- 
los became the chief emporium for the trade in 
slaves ; and it was one of the principal seats of 
art in Greece, especially for works in bronze 
of which metal one of the. most esteemed mix- 
tures was called the Delian. An especial sanc- 
tity was attached to Delos from its connectioL 
with the worship of Apollo ; and the peculiar 
character assigned to the island by the tradi- 
tions of its origin was confirmed by the remark- 
able fact that, though of volcanic origin, and in 
the midst of islands very subject to earthquakes. 
Delos enjoyed an almost entire exemption from 
such visitations; so that its being shaken by an 
earthquake was esteemed a marked prodigy. 
The city of Delos stood on the west side of the 
island, at the foot of Mount Cynthus (whence 
the god's surname of Cynthius), near a little 
river called Inopus. It contained a temple of 
Latona (Leto), and the great temple of Apollo. 
The latter was built near the harbor, and pos- 
sessed an oracle. Though enriched with offer- 
ings from all Greece, and defended by no forti- 
fications, it was so protected from plunder by 
the sanctity of the place, that even the Per- 
sians, when sailing against Greece, not only 
passed it by uninjured, but sent rich presents 
to the god. " With this temple were connected 
games, called Delia, which were celebrated 
every four years, and were said to have been 
founded by Theseus. A like origin is ascribed 
to the sacred embassy (tiecopia) which the Athe- 
nians sent to Delos every year. Vid. Diet, 
of Ant., art. Theori. The temple and oracle 
were visited by pilgrims from every quarter, 
even from the regions of Scythia. The great- 
est importance was attached to the preser- 
vation of the sanctity of the island. It was 
twice purified by the Athenians ; once under Pi- 
sistratus, when all tombs within sight of the 
temple were taken away ; and again in B.C. 
426, when all human and animal remains were 
removed entirely from the island, which was 
henceforth forbidden to be polluted by births or 
deaths, or by the presence of dogs : all person; 
about to die or to bring forth children were to 
be removed to the adjacent island of Rhenea. 
Delos continued in a flourishing condition, and 
under the rule of the Athenians, who were con- 
firmed in the possession of it by the Romans, 
until the Mithradatic War, when Menophanes. 
one of the generals of Mithradates, inflicted 
upon it a devastation from which it never again 
recovered. 

Delphi (oi AeXdot : Aelyoe : Delphicus: now 



DELPHI. 



DEMARATUS. 



Xatifi), a small town in Phocis, but one of the 
most celebrated in Greece, on account of its 
oracle of Apollo. It was sixteen stadia in cir- 
cumference, was situated on a steep declivity 
on the southern slope of Mount Parnassus, and 
its site resembled the cavea of a great theatre. 
It was shut in on the north by a barrier of rocky 
mountains, which were cleft in the centre into 
two great cliffs with peaked s umm its, between 
which issued the waters of the Castalian spring. 
It was originally called Pytho (TLvdu), by which 
name it is alone mentioned in Homer. The 
origin of the name of Delphi is uncertain. The 
ancients derived it from an eponymous hero, 
Delphus, a descendant of Deucalion ; but it has 
been conjectured that Delphi is connected with 
o.delphos, " brother," and that it was indebted 
for its name to the twin peaks mentioned above. 
Delphi was colonized at an early period by Doric 
- rttlers from the neighboring town of Lycorea, 
on the heights of Parnassus. The government 
was an oligarchy, and was in the hands of a few 
distinguished families of Doric origin. From 
them were taken the chief magistrates, the 
priests, and a senate consisting of a very few 
members. Delphi was regarded as the central 
point of the whole earth, and was hence called 
the " navel of the earth." It was said that two 
eagles sent forth by Jupiter, one from the east 
and another from the west, met at Delphi at 
the same time. Delphi was the principal seat 
of the worship of Apollo. Besides the great 
temple of Apollo, it contained numerous sauc- 
tuaries, statues, and other works of art. The 
Pythian games were also celebrated here, and 
it was one of the two places of meeting of the 
Amphictyonic council. The temple of Apollo 
was situated at the northwestern extremity of 
the town. The first stone temple was built by 
Trophonius and Aga modes ; and when this was 
burned down B.C. M8, it was rebuilt by the Am- 
phictyons with still greater splendor. The ex- 
pense was defrayed by voluntary subscriptions, 
to which even A ma/rift, king of Egypt, contribu- 
ted. The architect was Spintharus of Corinth ; 
the Alcmaeonida3 contracted to build it, and lib- 
erally substituted Parian marble for the front 
of the building, instead of the common stone 
which they had agreed to employ. The temple 
contained immense treasures ; for not only 
were rich offerings presented to it by kings and 
private persons, who had received favorable re- 
plies from the oracle, but many of the Greek 
states had in the temple separate thesauri, in 
which they deposited, for the sake of security, 
many of their valuable treasures. The wealth 
of the temple attracted Xerxes, who sent part 
of his army into Phocis to obtain possession of 
its treasures, but the Persians were driven back 
by the god him.-elt'. according to the account of 
the Delphians. The Phociaus plundered the 
temple to support them in the war against 
Thebes and the other Greek states (35^-346) ; 
and it was robbed at a later time by Brennus 
and by Sulta. In the centre of the temple there 
was a small opening {xdcfia) in the ground, from 
which, from time to time, an intoxicating vapor 
arose, which was believed to come from the well 
of Cassotis. No traces of this chasm or of the 
mephitic exhalations are now any where ob-j 
servable. Over this chasm there stood a tripod, 



on wdiich the priestess, called Pythia, took her 
seat whenever the oracle was to be consulted. 
The words which she uttered after inhaling the 
vapor were believed to contain the revelations 
of Apollo. They were carefully written down 
by the priests, and afterward communicated in 
hexameter verse to the persons who had come 
to consult the oracle. If the Pythia spoke in 
prose, her words were immediately turned into 
verse by a poet employed for the purpose. The 
oracle is said to have been discovered by its hav- 
ing thrown into convulsions some goats which 
had strayed to the mouth of the cave. For de- 
tails respecting the oracle and its influence in 
Greece, vid. Bid. of Ant, art. Oeaculum. 

[Delphicus, appellation of Apollo, from Dei- 
phi (Ovid., J/< il, 543).] 

Delphines. Vid. Delphinius. 
Delphinium (AeX^tvcov). 1. A temple of Apol- 
lo Delphinius at Athens, said to have been built 
by iEgeus, in which the Ephette sat for trying 
cases of intentional, but justifiable homicide. — 
2. The harbor of Oropus in Attica, on the bor- 
ders of Boeotia, called 6 iepog 2,l/itjv. — 3. A town 
on the eastern coast of the island Chios. 

Delphinius (AeA^moc), a surname of Apollo, 
derived either from his slaying the dragon Del- 
phines (usually called Python), or because in 
the form of a dolphin (del^tg), or riding on a dol- 
phin, he showed the Cretan colonists the way 
to Delphi. 

Delphus (AeZ</>oc). 1. Son of Neptune (Po- 
seidon) and Melantho, to whom the foundation 
of Delphi was ascribed. — 2. Son of Apollo and 
I Celseno, who is also said to have founded Delphi. 
I Delta. Vid. ^Egyptus. 

Demades {Arj[id6rjg, a contraction of Arj/ueddyz), 
an Athenian orator, was of very low origin, but 
rose by his talents to a prominent position at 
Athens. He belonged to the Macedonian party, 
and was a bitter enemy of Demosthenes. He 
was taken prisoner at the battle of Chaeronea, 
B.C. 338, but was dismissed by Philip with dis- 
tinguished marks of honor. After Philip's death 
he was the subservient supporter of Alexander, 
but, notwithstanding, frequently received bribes 
from the opposite party. He was put to death 
by Antipater in 318, because the latter had dis- 
covered a letter of Demades, urging the enemies 
of Antipater to attack him. Demades was a 
man without principle, and lived in a most prof- 
ligate and dissolute manner. But he was a 
brilliant orator. He always spoke extempore, 
and with such irresistible force, that he was a 
perfect match for Demosthenes himself. There 
is extant a large fragment of an oration bearing 
the name of Demades (irepl doSeKaertac), in 
which he defends his conduct during the period 
of Alexander's reign. It is printed in the col- 
lections of the Attic orators, but its genuineness 
is doubtful. Cicero and Quintilian both state 
that Demades left no orations behind him. 

[Demakata, daughter of Hiero, king of Syra- 
cuse, married to Andranodorus, the guardian of 
Hieronymus, on whose assassination she en- 
deavored to persuade her husband to seize on 
the sovereign power: she was afterward put 
to death.] 

Demaratus (Arifidparog, Dor. Aa/idparog). 1. 
King of Sparta, reigned from about B.C. 510 to 
! 491. He was at variance with his unscrupu- 

247 



DEMETiE. 



DEMETER. 



lous colleague Cleonaenes, who at length accus- 
ed him before the Ephors of being an illegiti- 
mate son of Ariston, and obtained his deposition 
by bribing the Delphic oracle, B.C. 491. Derna- 
ratus thereupon repaired to the Persian court, 
where he was kindly received by Darius. He 
accompanied Xerxes in his invasion of Greece, 
and recommended the king not to rely too con- 
fidently upon his countless hosts. His family 
continued long in Asia. — 2. A merchant-noble 
of Corinth, and one of the Bacehiadas. When 
the power of his clan had been overthrown by 
Cypselus, about B.C. 657, he fled from Corinth, 
and settled at Tarquinii in Etruria. where he 
married an Etruscan wife, by whom he had two 
sons, Aruns and Lucumo, afterward L. Tarquin- 
ius Priscus. 

De:oet^£, a people of Britain, in the southwest 
of Wales: their chief towns were Maridunum 
(now Carmarthen) and Luentinum. 

Demeter {kyfiTj-np), the Roman Ceres, one 
of the great divinities of the Greeks, was the 
goddess of the earth, and her name probably sig- 
nified Mother-Earth (yy fiv~VP)- She was the 
protectress of agriculture and of all the fruits 
of the earth. She was the daughter of Cronus 
(Saturn) and Rhea, and sister of Zeus (Jupiter), 
by whom she became the mother of Perseph- 
one (Proserpina). Zeus (Jupiter), without the 
knowledge of Demeter (Ceres), had promised 
Persephone (Proserpina) to Aidoneus (Pluto) ; 
and while the unsuspecting maiden was gather- 
ing flowers in the Nysian plain in Asia, the 
earth suddenly opened, and she was carried off 
by Aidoneus (Pluto). Her mother,, who heard 
cniy^he echo of her voice, immediately set out 
in search of her daughter. For nine days she 
wandered about without obtaining any tidings 
of her, but on the tenth she met Hecate, who 
told her that she had heard the cries of Perseph- 
one (Proserpina), but did not know who had 
carried her off. Both then hastened to Helios 
(the Sun), who revealed to them that it was Ai- 
doneus (Pluto) who had carried off Perseph- 
one (Proserpina) with the consent of Zeus (Ju- 
piter). Thereupon Demeter (Ceres), in her an- 
ger, avoided Olympus, and dwelt upon earth 
among men, conferring blessings wherever she 
was kindly received, and severely punishing 
those who repulsed her. In this manner she 
came to Celeus at Eleusis. Vid. Celetts. As 
the goddess still continued angiy, and did not 
aRow the earth to produce any fruits, Zeus (Ju- 
piter) first sent Iris and then aU the gods to per- 
suade Demeter (Ceres) to return to Olympus. 
But she was deaf to all then* entreaties, and re- 
fused to return to Olympus, and to restore fer- 
tility to the earth, till she had seen her daughter 
again. Zeus (Jupiter) accordingly sent Hermes 
(Mercury) into Erebus to fetch back Persepho- 
ne (Proserpina). Aidoneus (Pluto) consented, 
but gave Persephone (Proserpina) part of a 
pomegranate to eat. Hermes (Mercury) then 
took her to Eleusis to her mother, who received 
her with unbounded joy. At Eleusis both were 
joined by Hecate, who henceforth became the 
attendant of Persephone (Proserpina). Deme- 
ter (Ceres) now returned to Olympus with her 
daughter; but as the latter had eaten in the 
lower world, she was obliged to spend one third 
of the year with Aidoneus (Pluto), but was al- 
248 



lowed to continue with her mother the remain- 
der of the year. The earth now brought forth 
fruit again." Before Demeter (Ceres) left Eleu- 
sis, she instructed Triptoleinus, Diocles, Eumol- 
pus, and Celeus in the mode of her worship and 
in the mysteries. This is the ancient legend as 
preserved in the Homeric hymn, but it is va- 
riously modified in later traditions. In the Latin 
poets the scene of the rape is near Enna in 
Sicily ; and Ascalaphus, who had alone seen 
Persephone (Proserpina) eat any thing in the 
lower world, revealed the fact, and was, in 
consequence, turned into an owl by Demeter 
(Ceres). Vid. Ascalaphus. In the Iliad and 
Odyssey there is no mention of this legend, 
and there appears no connection between Deme- 
ter (Ceres) and Persephone (Proserpina). The 
meaning of the legend is obvious. Persephone 
(Proserpina), who is carried off to the lower 
world, is the seed-corn, which remains concealed 
in the ground part of the year; Persephone 
(Proserpina), who returns to her mother, is the 
corn which rises from the ground and nourishes 
men and animals. Later philosophical writers, 
and perhaps the mysteries also, referred the 
disappearance and return of Persephone (Pro- 
serpina) to the burial of the body of man and 
the immortahty of his soul. The other legends 
about Demeter (Ceres) are of less importance. 
To escape the pursuit of Poseidon (Neptune), 
she changed herself into a niare, but the god 
effected his purpose, and she became the mother 
of the celebrated horse Arion. Vid. Ariox, No. 
2. According to some traditions, she also bore 
to Poseidon (Neptune) a daughter Despcena (*. 
e., Persephone). She feR in love with Iasion, 
and lay with him in a thrice-ploughed field in 
Crete : their offspring was Plutus (Wealth) Vid.. 
L\siox. She punished with fearful hunger Ery- 
sichthon, who had cut down her sacred grove. 
Vid. Ertsichthox. The chief seats of the wor- 
ship of Demeter (Ceres) and Persephone (Pro- 
serpina) were Attica, Arcadia and Sicily. In 
Attica she was worshipped with great splendor. 
The Athenians pretended that agriculture was 
first practiced in their country, and that Trip- 
toleinus of Eleusis, the favorite of Demeter (Ce- 
res), was the first who invented the plough and 
sowed corn. Vid, Triptolemus. Every year 
at Athens the festival of the Eleurinia was cel- 
ebrated in honor of these goddesses. The fes- 
tival of the Thesmophoria was also celebrated 
in her honor as well at Athens as at other parts 
of Greece: it was intended to commemorate 
the introduction of the laws and the regulations 
of civRized life, which were ascribed to Deme- 
ter (Ceres), since agriculture is the basis of 
civilization. Vid. Did. of Ant, arts. Eleusixia, 
Thesmophoria. In works of art Demeter (Ce- 
res) was represented sometimes in a sitting 
attitude, sometimes walking, and sometimes- 
riding in a chariot drawn by horses or dragons, 
but always in full attire. Around her head she 
wore a garland of corn-cars or a simple riband, 
and in her hand she held a sceptre, corn-ears, or 
a poppy, sometimes also a torch and the mystic 
basket." The Romans received from Sicily the 
worship of Demeter (Ceres), to whom they gave 
the name of Ceres. The first temple of Ceres 
at Rome was vowed by the dictator A. Postu- 
mius Albinus, B.C. 496, for the purpose of 



DEMETRIAS. 



DEMETRIUS. 



averting a famine with which Rome was threat- 
ened during a war with the Latins. The Ro- 
mans instituted a festival with games in honor 
of her (vid. Diet, of Aid., s. v., Cerealia). She 
was looked upon by the Romans much in the 
same light as Tellus. Pigs were sacrificed to 
both divinities in the seasons of sowing and in 
harvest time, and also at the burial of the dead. 
Her worship acquired considerable political im- 
portance at Rome. The property of traitors 
against the republic was often made over to her 
temple. The decrees of the senate were de- 
posited in her temple for the inspection of the 
tribunes of the people. If we further consider 
that the aediles had the special superintendence 
of this temple, it is very probable that Ceres, 
whose worship was, like the plebians them- 
selves, introduced into Rome from without, had 
some peculiar relations to the plebeian order. 

Demetrias (ATjfiijTpidc : A7}/u.i]-pievc). 1. A 
town in Magnesia in Thessaly, on the inner- 
most recess of the Pagassean Bay, founded by 
Demetrius Poliorcetes, and peopled by the in- 
habitants of Iojcus aud the surrounding towns : 
it soon became one of the most important towns 
in the north 01 Greece, and is frequently men- 
tioned in the wars between the Macedonians 
and Romans. — 2. A town iu Assyria, not far 
from Arbela. — 8. An Athenian tribe, added to 
the ten old tribes, B.C. 307, and named in honor 
of Demetrius Poliorcetes. 

Demetrius (A?/p/rp(or). 1. A Greek of the 
island of Pharos iu the Adriatic. He was a gen- 
eral of Teuta, the lllyriau queen, and treacher- 
ously surrendered Corey ra to the Romans, who 
rewarded him with a great part of the dominions 
of Teuta, B.C. 22b. Subsequently he ventured 
on many acts of piratical hostility against the 
Romans, thinking that they were too much oc- 
cupied with the Gallic war and the impending 
danger of Haunibal's invasion to take notice of 
him. The Romans, however, immediately sent 
the consul L. ^Emihus Paulus over to Tllyria 
(219), who took Pharos itself, and obliged De- 
metrius to fly for refuge to Philip, king of Mac- 
edonia. At the court of this prince he spent 
the remainder of his life. — 2. Younger son of 
Philip V., king of Macedonia, was sent as a 
hostage to Rome after the battle of Cynosceph- 
alse (198). Five years afterward he was restor- 
ed to his father, who subsequently sent him as 
his ambassador to Rome. But, having incurred 
the jealousy of his father and his brother, Per- 
seus, by the favorable reception he had met 
with from the Romans, he was secretly put to 
death by his father's order. 

I. Kings of Murnlonia. 1. Surnamed Polior- 
cetes (tlotoopicifrite), or the Besieger, son of 
Antigonus, king of Asia, aud Stratonice. At an 
early age he gave proofs of distinguished brav- 
ely. He accompanied his father in his cam- 
paigns agaiust Eumenes (B.C. 317, 316), and a 
few years afterward was left by his father in 
the command of Syria, which he had to defend 
against Ptolemy. In 312 he was defeated by 
Ptolemy near Gaza, but soon after retrieved his 
disaster in part by defeating one of the generals 
of Ptolemy. In 311 a general peace was con- 
cluded among the successors of Alexander, but 
it was only of short duration. In 307 Deme- 
trius was dispatched by his father with a power- 



ful fleet and army to wrest Greece from Cas- 
sander and Ptolemy. He met with great suc- 
cess. At Athens he was received with enthu- 
siasm by the people as their liberator. Deme- 
trius the Phalereau, who had governed the city 
for Cassander, was expelled, and the fort at 
Munyehia taken. Demetrius took up his abode 
for the winter at Athens, where divine honors 
were paid him under the title of " the Preserv- 
er" (oDwr^'p). He was recalled from Athens by 
bis father to take the command of the war iu 
Cyprus against Ptolemy. Here also he was 
successful, and in a great naval battle he anni- 
hilated the fleet of Ptolemy (306). Next year 
(305) he laid siege to Rhodes, because the Rho- 
dians had refused to support him against Ptol- 
emy. It was in consequence of the gigantic 
machines which Demetrius constructed to as- 
sail the walls of Rhodes that he received the 
surname of Poliorcetes. But all his exertions 
were unavailing, and after the siege had lasted 
above a year, he at length concluded a treaty 
with the Rhodians (304). Demetrius then cross- 
ed over to Greece, which had meanwhile been 
almost conquered by Cassander. He soon com- 
pelled Cassander to evacuate all Greece south 
of Thermopylae, and for the next two years con- 
tinued to prosecute the war with success. But 
in 302 he was obliged to return to Asia in order 
to support his father Antigonus. In 301 their 
combined forces were totally defeated by those 
of Lysimachus and Seleucus in the battle of 
Ipsus, and Antigonus himself slain. Demetrius, 
to whose impetuosity the loss of the battle 
would seem to be in great measure owing, fled 
to Ephesus, and from thence set sail for Athens ; 
but the Athenians declined to receive him into 
their city. The jealousy of his enemies soon 
changed the face of his affairs ; and Ptolemy 
haviug entered into a closer union with Lysim- 
achus, Seleucus married Stratonice, daughter 
of Demetrius. By this alliance Demetrius ob- 
tained possession of Cilicia, and he had never 
lost Cyprus, Tyre and Sidon. In 297 he de- 
termined to make an effort to recover his do- 
minions in Greece. He appeared with a fleet 
on the coast of Attica, but was at first unsuc- 
cessful. The death of Cassander, however, in 
the course of the same year, gave a new turn to 
affairs. Demetrius made himself master of 
^Egina, Salamis, and finally of Athens, after a 
long blockade (295). In 294 he marched into 
Peloponnesus against the Spartans, and was on 
the point of taking their city when he was sud- 
denly called away by the state of affairs in Mac- 
edonia. Here the dissensions between Antip- 
ater and Alexander, the two sons of Cassander, 
had led Alexander to call in foreign aid to his 
support : and he sent embassies at once to De- 
metrius and to Pyrrhus. Pyrrhus was the near- 
est at hand, and had already defeated Antipater 
and established Alexander on the throne, when 
Demetrius arrived with his army. He was re- 
ceived with apparent friendliness, but mutual 
jealousies quickly arose. Demetrius caused the 
young king to be assassinated at a banquet, and 
was thereupon acknowledged as king by the 
Macedonian army. Demetrius kept possession 
of Macedonia for seven years (294-287). His 
reign was a series of wars. In 292 he marched 
against the Thebans, who had risen against him. 

249 



DEMETRIUS. 



DEMETRIUS. 



and took their city. In 291 he took advantage 
of the captivity of Lysimachus among the Getae 
to invade Thrace ; but he was recalled by the 
news of a fresh insurrection in Bceotia. He 
repulsed Pyrrhus, who had attempted by invad- 
ing Thessaly to effect a diversion in favor of the 
Boeotians, and again took Thebes after a long 
siege (290). In 289 he carried on war against 
Pyrrhus and the iEtolians, but he concluded 
peace with Pyrrhus that he might march into 
Asia with the view of recovering his father's 
dominions. His adversaries, however, fore- 
stalled him. In 28*7 Ptolemy sent a powerful 
Seet against Greece, while Pyrrhus (notwith- 
standing his recent treaty) on the one side, and 
Lysimachus on the other, simultaneously in- 
vaded Macedonia. Demetrius was deserted by 
his own troops, who proclaimed Pyrrhus king 
of Macedonia. He then crossed over to Asia, 
and, after meeting with alternate success and 
misfortune, was at length obliged to surrender 
himself prisoner to Seleucus (286). That king 
kept him in confinement, but did not treat him 
with harshness. Demetrius died in the third 
year of his imprisonment and the fifty-sixth of 
Ins age (283). He was one of the most remark- 
able characters of his age : in restless activity 
of mind, fertility of resource, and daring prompt- 
itude in the execution of his schemes, he has, 



recovered his kingdom; but having, like his 
father, rendered himself odious to his subjects 
by his vices and cruelties, he was driven out 
of Syria by Tryphon, who set up Antiochus, the 
infant son of Alexander Balas, as a pretender 
against him. Demetrius retired to Babylon, and 
from thence marched against the Parthians, by 
whom he was defeated and taken prisoner, 138. 
He remained as a captive in Parthia ten years, 
but was kindly treated by the Parthian king 
Mithradates (Arsaces VI), who gave him his 
daughter Rhodogune in marriage. Meanwhile 
his brother, Antiochus VII. Sidetes, having over- 
thrown the usurper Tryphon, engaged in war 
with Parthia, in consequence of which Phraates, 
the successor of Mithradates, brought forward 
Demetrius, and sent him into Syria to operate 
a diversion against his brother. In the same 
year Antiochus fell in battle, and Demetrius 
again obtained possession of the Syrian throne. 
128. Having engaged in an expedition against 
Egypt, Ptolemy Physcon set up against him the 
pretender Alexander Zebina, by whom he was 
defeated and compelled to fly. His wife Cleo- 
patra, who could not forgive him his marriage 
with Rhodogune in Parthia, refused to afford 
him refuge at Ptolemais, and he fled to Tyre 
where he was assassinated, 125. — 3. Euc^erits. 
son of Antiochus VIII. Grypus, and grandson of 



perhaps, never been surpassed. His besetting j Demetrius II. During the civil wars that fol- 
sin was his unbounded licentiousness. Besides ' lowed the death of Antiochus Grypus (96), De- 
Lamia and his other mistresses, he was regu- , metrius and his brother Philip for a time held 
larly married to four wives, Phila, Eurydice, j the whole of Syria, But war broke out between 
Deidamia, and Ptolemais, by whom he left four | them ; Demetrius was taken prisoner and sent 
sods. The eldest of these, Antigonus Gonatas, ! to Parthia, where he remained in captivity till 
eventually succeeded him on the throne of Mac- his death. 

tdonia. — 3. Son of Antigonus Gonatas, succeed- j III. Literary. 1. Of Adramyttium, surnamed 
ed his father, and reigned B.C. 239-229. He \ Ixion, a Greek grammarian of the time of Au- 
oarried on war against the iEtolians, and was ' gustus, lived partly at Pergamus and partly at 
opposed to the Achaean League. He was sue- Alexandrea, and wrote commentaries on Homer 



ceeded by Antigonus Doson. 

II. Kings of Syria. 1. Soter (reigned B.C. 
162-150), was the son of Seleucus IV. Philop- 
ater, and grandson of Antiochus the Great. 



and Hesiod and other works. — 2. Magxes, that 
is, of Magnesia, a Greek grammarian, and a 
contemporary of Cicero and Atticus. He wrote 
work on concord {Jlepl djuovotag), and another 



While yet a child, he had been sent to Rome j on poets and other authors who bore the same 



by his father as a hostage, and remained there 
during the whole of the reign of Antiochus IV. 
Epiphanes. After the death of Antiochus, being 
now twenty -three years old, he demanded of the 
senate to be set at liberty ; but, as his request 
was refused by the senate, he fled secretly from 
Rome, by the advice of the historian Polybius, 
and went to Syria. The Syrians declared in 
his favor ; and the young king Antiochus V. 
Lupator, with his tutor Lysias, was seized by 
his own guards and put to death. By valuable 
presents Demetrius obtained from the Romans 
his recognition as king; but, having alienated 
his own subjects by his luxury and intemper- 
ance, they sided with an impostor of the name 
of Balas, who took the title of Alexander. By 
him Demetrius was defeated in battle and slain. 
He left two sons, Demetrius Nicator and Anti- 
ochus Sidetes, both of whom subsequently as- 
cended the throne.— 2. Nicatok, (B.C. 146-142, 
and again 128-125), son of Demetrius Soter. 
He had been sent by his father for safety to 
Cnidus when Alexander Balas invaded Syria, 
and, after the death of his father, he continued 
in exile for some years. With the assistance 
of Ptolemy Philometor he defeated Balas and 
250 



name (Ilepl d/ntovvjuuv ttoltjtuv nal ovyypatyeuv). 
— 3. Phalereus, so called from his birth-place, 
the Attic demos of Phalerus, where he was born 
about B.C. 345. His parents were poor, but by 
his talents and perseverance he rose to the 
highest honors at Athens, and became distin- 
guished both as an orator, a statesman, a phi- 
losopher, and a poet. He was educated, to- 
gether with the poet Menander, in the school 
of Theophrastus. He began his public career 
about 325, and acquired great reputation by his 
eloquence. In 317 the government of Athens 
was intrusted to him by Cassander, and he dis- 
charged the duties of Ins office for ten years 
with such general satisfaction, that the Athe- 
nians conferred upon him the most extraordi- 
nary distinctions, and erected no less than three 
hundred and sixty statues to his honor. But 
during the latter period of his administration he 
seems to have become intoxicated with his good 
fortune, and he abandoned himself to dissipa- 
tion. When Denietrius Poliorcetes approached 
Athens in 307, Demetrius Phalereus was obliged 
to take flight, and his enemies induced the Athe- 
nians to pass sentence of death upon him. He 
went to Ptolemy Lagi at Alexandrea, with whom 



DEMO. 



DEMOCRITUS 



he lived for many years on the best terms ; and j years. He left behind him several orations, and 
it was probably owiDg to the influence of De- ! an extensive history of his own times, 
metrius that the Great Alexandrine library was I Democles an Attic orator, and an 

formed. His successor, Ptolemy Philadelphus, ! opponent of Demochares. 

was hostile towards Demetrius, because he had j [Democoon (Atj/iokouv), a son of Priam by a 
advised his father to appoint another of his sons I female slave ; came from Abydus to assist hi* 
as his successor. He banished Demetrius to father against the Greeks, but was slain by 
Upper Egypt, where he is said to have died from Ulysses.] 

the bite of a snake. Demetrius Phalereus was i Demochates (ArnionpuTric), a Pythagoreau phi- 
the last among the Attic orators worthy of the j losopher, of whose life nothing is known, the 
name ■ but even his orations bore evident marks I author of an extant collection of moral maxim-, 
of the 'decline of oratory, and were characterized i called the golden sentences (yvtiftai x( )V(7a ~ 1 )- 
rather by grace and elegance than by force and j They are printed with Demophilus, No. 3. 
sublimity. His numerous writings, the greater | Democritus (Atjjuokpltoc), a celebrated Greek 
part of which was probably composed in Egypt, j philosopher, was born at Abdera, in Thrace, 
embraced subjects of the most varied kinds ; j about B.C. 460. His father, Hegesistratus— or. 
but none of them has come down to us, for the as others called him, Damasippus or Athenoc- 
work on elocution (nepl tpfirjvecac), extant under ritus — was possessed of so large a property that 
his name, is probably the work of an Alexan- j he was able to entertain Xerxes on his march 
drine Sophist of the name of Demetrius. [Best through Abdera. Democritus spent the inherit- 
edition by Fr. Goeller, Lips., 1837.] — 4. Of Scep- \ ance which his father left him on travels into 
sis a Greek grammarian of the time of Aris- ! distant countries, which he undertook to satis- 
tar'chus, wrote a learned commentary on the ! fy his extraordinary thirst for knowledge. He 
Catalogue iu the second book of the Iliad. — 5. j travelled over a great part of Asia, and spent 
Of Sunium, a Cynic philosopher, lived from the j some time in Egypt. The many anecdotes pre- 
reign of Caligula to that of Domitian, and was j served about Democritus show that he was a 
banished from Rome in consequence of the i man of a most sterling and honorable charae- 
freedom with which he rebuked the powerful. | ter. ■ His diligence was incredible : he lived ex- 

[Demo (Ajj/uo), a daughter of Celeus and Met- 1 clusively for his studies, and his disinterested- 
anira.] ! ness, modesty, and simplicity are attested by 

[Demo (Ay/nuv). I. Author of an Atthis, or I many features which are related of him. Not- 
history of Attica, and probably, also, of a work on j withstanding the great property he had inherit- 
proverbs : his fragments are collected in Siebe- ; ed from his father, he died in poverty, but higk- 
lis, Phanodemi, Demonis, ci'c, Fragmenta, Lips., | ly esteemed by his fellow-citizens. He died in 
1812; and by Midler. Fragm. Hist. Grccc, vol. | 261 at a very advanced age. There is a tradi- 
i., p. 378-83. — 2. Son of Demosthenes's sister, : tion that he deprived himself of his sight, that 
of the demos of Pa?auia in Attica, distinguished I he might be less disturbed in his pursuits ; but 
himself as an orator ; ha belonged, like his j this tradition is one of the inventions of a later 
uncle, to the anti-Mace< Ionian party.] j age, which w 7 as fond of piquant anecdotes. It 

Democedes (A^uo/vvVvr ). a celebrated physi- 1 is more probable that he may have lost his sight 
ciau of Crotona. Ho practiced medicine sue- 1 by too severe application to study. This loss, 
cesetvely at ./Egina, Athens, and Samos. He j however, did not disturb the cheerful disposi- 
was taken prisoner, along with Polycrates, in j tion of his mind, which prompted him to look, 
B.C. 522, and was sent to Susa to the court of | in all circumstances, at the cheerful side of 
Darius. Here he acquired great reputation by J things, which later writers took to mean that 
curing the king's foot, and the breast of the queen j he always laughed at the follies of men. His 
Atossa. Notwithstanding his honors at the Per- j knowledge was most extensive. It embraced 
sian court, he was always desirous of returning j not only the natural sciences, mathematics, 
to his native country. In order to effect this, j mechanics, grammar, music, and philosophy, 
he pretended to enter into the views and inter- j but various other useful arts. His works were 
ests of the Persians, and procured by means of ! composed in the Ionic dialect, though not with- 
Atossa that he should be sent with some nobles ; out some admixture of the local peculiarities of 
to explore the coast of Greece, and ascertain in j Abdera. They are nevertheless much praised 
what parts it might be most successfully at- j by Cicero on account of the liveliness of their 
tacked. When they arrived at Tarentum, the j style, and are in this respect compared even 
king, Aristophilido-. out of kindness to Dem- j with the works of Plato. The fragments of 
ocedes, seized the Persians as spies, which af- 1 them are collected by Mullach, Democriti Ah- 
forded the physician an opportunity of escap- j deritce Operum Fragmenta, Berlin, 1843. Leu- 
ing to Crotona. Hero he settled, and married \ cippus appears to have had most influence upon 
the daughter of the famous wrestler Milo, j the philosophical opinions of Democritus, and 
the Persians having followed him to Crotona, j these two philosophers were the founders of 
and in vain demanded that he should be re- i the theory of atoms. In order to explain the 
stored. ; creation of all existing things, Democritus main- 

Demoohabes (AtifMxdptic), an Athenian, son tained that there was in infinite space an infinite 
of the sister of Demosthenes. He was proba- ; number of atoms or elementaiy particles, homo- 
bly trained by his uncle iu oratory, and inherit- geneous in quality, but heterogeneous in form, 
ed his patriotic sentiments. After the restora- He further taught that these atoms combine 
tion of the Athenian democracy in B.C. 307 by : with one another, and that all things arise from 
Demetrius Poliorcetes, Demochares was at the the infinite variety of the form, order, and posi- 
head of the patriotic party, and took an active 1 tion of the atoms in forming combinations. The 
part in public affairs for the next twenty or thirty , cause of these combinations he called chance 

251 



DEMODOCUS. 



DEMOSTHENES. 



(tvxv), in opposition to the vovq of Anaxagoras ; 
but he did not use the word chance in its vul- 
gar acceptation, but to signify the necessary 
succession of cause and effect. In his ethical 
philosophy Democritus considered the acquisi- 
tion of peace of mind (ev6v/j.La) as the end and 
ultimate object of our actions. 

Demodocus (A.7jfi6doKO(;). 1. The celebrated 
bard at the court of Alcinoiis, who sang of the 
loves of Mars (Ares) and Yenus (Aphrodite), 
•while Ulysses sat at the banquet of Alcinoiis. 
He is also mentioned as the bard who advised 
Agamemnon to guard Clytsemnestra, and to ex- 
pose iEgisthus in a desert island. Later writ- 
ers, who looked upon this mythical minstrel as 
an historical person, related that he composed 
a poem on the destruction of Troy, and on the 
marriage of Vulcan (Hephsestus) and Venus 
(Aphrodite). — [2. A Trojan warrior, who came 
with JSneas to Italy ; he was slain by Halesus. 
— 3. A friend of Socrates, father of Theages, 
mentioned in the Theages of Plato.] 

[Demoleon (^t]/uoMo)v). 1. A Centaur, slain 
by Theseus at the nuptials of Pirithous. — 2. A 
brave Trojan, son of Antenor, slain by Achilles.] 

[Demoleus, a Greek, slain by iEneas on the 
banks of the Simois, and whose coat of mail 
JEneas offered as the second prize at the games 
celebrated by him in Sicily.] 

[Demon (Kr/fiuv). Vid. Demo.] 

Demonax (Ar]fiuva^), of Cyprus, a Cynic phi- 
losopher in the time of Hadrian. We owe our 
knowledge of his character to Lucian, who has 
painted it in the most glowing colors, represent- 
ing him as almost perfectly wise and good. 
Demonax appears to have been free from the 
austerity and moroseness of the sect, though he 
valued their indifference to external things. He 
was nearly one hundred years old at the time 
of his death. 

Demonesi Insuljg {LrifjLovrjcoi), a group of isl- 
ands in the Propontis (now Sea of Marmara), 
belonging to Bithynia ; of these the most im- 
portant were Pityodes and Chalcitis, also call- 
ed Demonesus. 

Demophilus (A^o^tAoc). 1. Son of Ephorus, 
continued his father's history by adding to it the 
history of the Sacred War. — 2. An Athenian 
comic poet of the new comedy, from whose 
'Ovayog Plautus took his Asinaria. — 3. A Pyth- 
agorean philosopher, of whose- life nothing is 
known, wrote a work entitled /3tov -d-epaTreia, 
part of which is extant in the form of a selec- 
tion, entitled yvufiLtia o/noiufiara. Best edition 
by Orelli, in his Opusc. Grate. Vet. Sentent., Lips., 
1819. 

Demophon or Demophoon (A^/zopow or A^o- 
fouv). 1. Son of Celeus and Metanira, whom 
Ceres (Demeter) wished to make immortal. 
For details, vid. Celeus. — 2. Son of Theseus 
and Phcedra, accompanied the Greeks against 
Troy, and there procured the liberation of his 
grandmother iEthra, who lived with Helen as a 
slave. On his return from Troy he gained the 
love of Phyllis, daughter of the Thraeian king 
Sithon, and promised to marry her. Before the 
nuptials were celebrated, he went to Attica to 
settle his affairs, and as he tarried longer than 
Phyllis had expected, she thought that she was 
forgotten, and put an end to her life ; but she 
was metamorphosed into a tree. Demophon 
252 



became king of Athens. He marched out against 
Diomedes, who, on his return from Troy, bad 
landed on the coast of Attica, and was ravaging 
it. He took the Palladium from Diomedes, but 
had the misfortune to kill an Athenian in the 
struggle. For this murder he was summoned 
before the court enl TLaTtladiio — the first time 
that a man was tried by that court. — [3. A com- 
panion of iEneas, slain by Camilla in Italy.] 

Demosthenes {Arifioadevrjc)- 1. Son of Alci- 
sthenes, a celebrated Athenian general in the 
Peloponnesian War. In B.C. 426 he was sent 
with a fleet to ravage the coast of Peloponne- 
sus : he afterward landed at Naupactus, and 
made a descent into ^Etolia ; he was at first 
unsuccessful, and was obliged to retreat ; but 
he subsequently gained a brilliant victory over 
the Ambraciots. In 425, though not in office, 
he sailed with the Athenian fleet, and was al- 
lowed by the Athenian commanders to remain 
with five ships at Pylos, which he fortified in 
order to assail the Lacedemonians in their own 
territories. He defended Pylos against all the 
attempts of the Lacedemonians, till he was re- 
lieved by an Athenian fleet of forty ships. The 
Spartans, who in their siege of the place had 
occupied the neighboring island of Sphacteria, 
were now cut off and blockaded. Later in the 
same year he rendered important assistance to 
Cleon, in making prisoners of the Spartans in 
the island of Sphacteria, though the whole glory 
of the success was given to Cleon. In 413 he 
was sent with a large fleet to Sicily, to assist 
Nicias. Fortune was unfavorable to the Athe- 
nians. Demosthenes now counselled an imme- 
diate departure, but Nicias delayed returning 
till it was too late. The Athenian fleet was de- 
stroyed, and when Demosthenes and Mcias at- 
tempted to retreat by land, they were obliged 
to surrender to the enemy with all their forces. 
Both commanders were put to death by the 
Syracusans. 2. The greatest of Athenian ora- 
tors, was the son of Demosthenes, and was born 
in the Attic demos of Peeania. about B.C. 385. 
At seven years of age he lost his father, who 
left him and his younger sister to the care of 
three guardians, Aphobus and Demophon, two 
relations, and Therippides, an old friend. These 
guardians squandered the greater part of the 
property of Demosthenes, and neglected his ed- 
ucation to a great extent. He nevertheless re- 
ceived instruction from the orator Isseus ; but it 
is exceedingly doubtful whether he was taught 
by Plato and Isocrates, as some of the ancients 
stated. At the age of eighteen Demosthenes 
called upon his guardians to render him an ac- 
count of their administration of his property ; 
but by intrigues they contrived to defer the busi- 
ness for two years. At length, in 364, Demos- 
thenes accused Aphobus before the archon, and 
obtained a verdict in his favor. Aphobus was 
condemned to pay a fine of ten talents. Em- 
boldened by this success, Demosthenes ven- 
tured to come forward as a speaker in the pub- 
lic assembly. His first effort was unsuccessful, 
and he is said to have been received with ridi- 
cule; but he was encouraged to persevere by 
the actor Satyrus, who gave him instruction in 
action and declamation. In becoming an ora- 
tor, Demosthenes had to struggle hard against the 
greatest physical disadvantages. His voice 



DEMOSTHENES. 



DEMOSTHENES. 



was weak and his utterance defective ; he could 
not pronounce the p, and constantly stammered, 
whence he derived the nickname of BdraAog. 
It was only owing to the most unwearied exer- 
tions that he succeeded in overcoming the ob- 
stacles which nature had placed in his way. 
Thus it is said that he spoke with pebbles in 
his mouth, to cure himself of stammering ; that 
he repeated verees of the poets as he ran up 
hill, to strengthen his voice ; that he declaim- 
ed on the sea-shore, to accustom himself to the 
noise and confusion of the popular assembly ; 
that he lived for months in a cave under ground, 
engaged in constantly writing out the history 
of Thucydides, to form a standard for his own 
style. These tales are not worthy of much 
credit ; but they nevertheless attest the com 
mon tradition of antiquity respecting the great 
efforts made by Demosthenes to attain to ex 
cellence as an orator. It was about 355 that 
Demosthenes began to obtain reputation as a 
speaker in the public assembly. It was in this 
year that he delivered the oration against Lep- 
tines, and from this time we have a series of 
his speeches on public affairs. His eloquence 
soon gained him the favor of the people. The 
influence which he acquired he employed for the 
good of his country, and not for his own ag- 
grandizement. He clearly saw that Philip had 
resolved to subjugate Greece, and he therefore 
devoted all his powers to resist the aggressions 
of the Macedonian monarch. For fourteen 
years he continued the struggle against Philip, 
and neither threats nor bribes could turn him 
from his purpose. It is true he failed ; but the 
failure must not be considered his fault. The 
history of his struggle is best given in the life 
of Philip. Vid. Puilipi-us. It is sufficient to 
relate here that it was brought to a close by the 
battle of Chaeronea (338), by which the inde- 
pendence of Greece was crushed. Demosthe- 
nes was present at the battle, and fled like 
thousands of others. His enemies reproached 
him with his flight, and upbraided him as the 
cause of the misfortunes of his country ; but 
the Athenians judged better of his conduct, re- 
quested him to deliver the funeral oration upon 
those who had fallen at Chaeronea, and cele- 
brated the funeral feast in his house. At this 
time many accusations were brought against 
him. Of these one of the most formidable was 
the accusation of Ctesiphon by iEschines, but 
which was in reality directed against Demos- 
thenes himself. ^Eschines accused Ctesiphon 
for proposing that Demosthenes should be re- 
warded for his services with a golden crown in 
the theatre. ^Eschines maintained that the 
proposal was not only made in an illegal form, 
but that the conduct of Demosthenes did not 
give him any claim to such a distinction. The 
trial was delayed for reasons unknown to us till 
330, when Demosthenes delivered his oration 
on the crown (irepl gte^uvov). ^Eschines was 
defeated and withdrew from Athens. Vid. ^Es- 
chines. Meautime important events had taken 
place in Greece. The death of Philip in 336 
roused the hopes of the patriots, and Demosthe- 
nes, although he had lost his daughter only seven 
days before, was the first to proclaim the joyful 
tidings of the kiugs death, and to call upon the 
Greeks to unite their strength against Macedo- 



I nia. But Alexander's energy, and the frightful 
vengeance which he took upon Thebes, compel- 
led Athens to submit and sue for peace. Alex- 
ander demanded the surrender of Demosthenes 
and the other leaders of the popular party, and 
with difficulty allowed them to remain at Athens. 
During the life of Alexander, Athens made no 
open attempt to throw off the Macedonian su- 
premacy. In 325 Harpalus fled from Babylon 
! with the treasure intrusted to his care by Alex- 
| ander, and came to Athens, the protection of 
which he purchased by distributing his gold 
| among the most influential demagogues. The 
| reception of such an open rebel was viewed as 
! an act of hostility toward Macedonia itself ; and 
] accordingly Antipater called upon the Athenians 
to deliver up the rebel and. to try those who had 
accepted his bribes. Demosthenes was one of 
those who were suspected of having received 
money from Harpalus. His guilt is doubtful ; 
but he was condemned, and thrown into prison, 
from which, however, he escaped, apparently 
with the connivance of the Athenian magis- 
trates. He now resided partly at Troezene and 
partly in iEgina, looking daily across the sea 
toward his beloved native land. But his exile 
did not last long. On the death of Alexander 
(323) the Greek states rose in arms against Ma- 
cedonia. Demosthenes was recalled from ex- 
ile ; a trireme was sent to iEgiua to fetch him. 
and his progress to the city was a glorious 
triumph. But in the following year (322) the 
confederate Greeks were defeated by Antipa- 
ter at the battle of Cranon, and were obliged 
to sue for peace. Antipater demanded the sur- 
render of Demosthenes, who thereupon fled to 
the island of Calauria, and took refuge in the 
temple of Neptune (Poseidon). Here he was 
pursued by the emissaries of Antipater ; he 
thereupon took poison, which he had for some 
time carried about his person', and died in the 
temple, 322. There existed sixty-five orations 
of Demosthenes in antiquity ; but of these only 
sixty-one have come down to us, including the 
letter of Philip, which is strangely enough count- 
ed as an oration. Several of the orations, how- 
ever, are spurious, or at least of very doubtful 
authenticity. Besides these orations, there are 
fifty-six Exordia to public orations, and six letters 
which bear the name of Demosthenes, but are 
probably spurious. The oration may be divided 
into the following classes: (L) Seventeen Po- 
litical Orations (Xoyoi av^BovXevrtKot), of which 
the twelve Philippic orations are the most im- 
portant. They bear the following titles : 1. The 
first Philippic, delivered 352. 2-4. The three 
Olynthiae orations, delivered 349. 5. On the 
Peace, 349. 6. The second Philippic, 314. 7. 
On Halonesus, 343, not genuine, probably writ- 
ten by Hegesippus. 8. On the affairs of the 
Chersonesus, 342. 9. The third Philippic, 342. 
10. The fourth Philippic, not genuine, 341. 11 
On the letter of Philip, 340, also spurious. 12 
The letter of Philip.— (II.) Forty-two Judicial 
Orations (?mjoc diKavixoi), of which the most im- 
portant are, Against Midias, written 355, but 
never delivered ; Against Leptines, 355 ; On 
the dishonest conduct of JEschines during his 
embassy to Philip (Ilep^ rr/c TiapaTrpscteiag), 
342; On the Crown, 330.— (III). Two Show 
Speeches {loyoi tiudeiicTiKot), namely the Eri-. 

253 



DEMOSTRATtTS. 



DEUCALIOX. 



rottaar and 'Epunicoc, both of which are spuri- 
ous. The orations of Demosthenes are con- 
tained in the collections of the Attic orators by 
Reiske, Lips., 1770-1775 ; [Demosthenes separ- 
ately, with additions by Sehasffer, Lond., 1822- 
3, 9 vols. Svo]: Bekker, Oxon., 1823; Dobson, 
Lond, 1828 ; Baiter and Sauppe, Turic, 1845. 

[DemosteItus (ATjjuocrparo^), an Athenian or- 
ator and popular leader, at whose proposal Al- 
dbiades, Xieias, and Lamachus were placed at 
the head of the Sicilian expedition.] 

[Destuchts (Atjuovxoc), son of Philetor, slain 
by Achilles before Troy.] 

Densexet-j: or Dexthelet.e (Aevdw/S/rat), a 
Thraeian people on the Hsemus, between the 
Strymon and ^Nessus. 

Dextatcs, M\ Crsius, a favorite hero of the 
Roman republic, was celebrated in later times 
as a noble specimen of old Roman frugality and 
virtue. He was of Sabine origin, and the first 
of his family who held any high offices of state 
| consequentlv a homo navies). He was consul 
B.C. 290 with P. Cornelius Rufinus. The two 
c-onsuls defeated the Samnites, and brought the 
Samnite wars to a close. In the same year 
Dentatus also defeated the Sabines, who appear 
to have supported the Samnites. In 283 he 
fought as praetor against the Senones. In 275 
he was consul a second time, and defeated Pyr- 
rhus near Beneventum and in the Arusinian 
plain so completely that the king was obliged to 
unit Italy. The booty which he gained was im- 
mense, but he would keep nothing for himself. 
In 274 he was consul a third time, and con- 
quered the Lucanians, Samnites, and Bruttians, 
who still continued in arms after the defeat of 
Pyrrhus. Dentatus now retired to his small 
farm in the country of the Sabines, and culti- 
vated the land with his own hands. Once the 
Samnites sent an embassy to him with costly 
presents ; they found him sitting at the hearth 
and roasting turnips. He rejected their pres- 
ents, telling them that he preferred ruling over 
those who possessed gold to possessing it him- 
self. He was censor in 272, and in that year 
executed public works of great importance. " He 
/ommenced the aquasduct which carried the 
water from the River Anio into the city ( Ani - 
ri>sis Yetus) ; and by a canal he carried off the 
water of the Lake Velinus into the River 2*Tar, 
in consequence of which the inhabitants of 
Reate gained a large quantity of excellent land. 

Deo (At?(j), another name for Ceres (Deme- 
ter) : hence her daughter Proserpina (Perseph- 
one) is called by the patronymic Deois and Dk- 

")DTE. 

Deebe (ilsp6>] •Aep&/jri]c, Aepfiaioc), a town in 
Lycaonia, on the frontiers of Isauria. It is first 
mentioned as the residence of the tyrant Antip- 
ater of Derbe, a friend of Cicero, whom Amyn- 
tas put to death. 

Deebicc,£ or Deebices (Aep6tKKai or ±?p6i- 
vff), a Scythian people in Margiana, dwelling on 
the Oxus, near its entrance into the Caspian Sea. ! 
They worshipped the earth as a goddess, neither ! 
sacrificed or ate any female animals, and killed [ 
and ate all their old men above seventy vears 
of age. 

[Debcexxus, an early king of Laurentum, in ; 
Latium ; according to some, the same with La- < 

txus.] 

2-54 



Deecetis, Deeceto (Sepntric, Aepxeru), also 
called Atargatis, a Syrian goddess. She offend- 
ed Venus (Aphrodite), who, in consequence, in- 
spired her with love for a youth, to whom she 
bore a daughter Semirarnis ; but, ashamed of her 
fraility, she killed the youth, exposed her child 
in a desert, and threw herself into a lake near 
Ascalon. Her child was fed by doves, and she 
herself was changed into a fish. The Syrians 
thereupon worshipped her as a goddess. The 
upper part of her statue represented a beautiful 
woman, while the lower part terminated in the 
tail of a fish. She appears to be the same as 
Dagon mentioned in the Old Testament as a 
deity of the Philistines. 

Deectllidas (ilepKv/.Mdag), a Spartan, suc- 
ceeded Thimbron, B.C. 399, in the command of 
the army which was employed in the protection 
of the Asiatic Greeks against Persia. He car- 
ried on the war with success. Tissaphemes 
and Pharnabazus were at length glad to sue for 
peace. In 396 he was superseded by Agesilaus. 

[Deedas (Aepdac). l/ A Macedonian chief- 
tain, who joined with Philip, brother of Perdio- 
cas EL, in rebellion against him. — 2. A prince 
of Elymea in Macedonia in the time of Amyn- 
tas LL ; sided with the Spartans in their war 
with Olynthus, through fear of the growing 
power of that city.] 

DeetOxa (now Tortona), an important town 
in Liguria, and a Roman colony with the soir- 
name Julia, on the road from Genua to Placentia. 

Deetosa (now Tortosa), a town of the Ilerea- 
ones, on the Tberus, in Hispania Tarraconensis, 
and a Roman colony. 

Despcexa (Aecr-ofvu), the mistress, a surname 
of several divinities, as Venus (Aphrodite), Ce- 
res (Demeter), and more especially Proserpina 
(Persephone), who was worshipped under this 
name in Arcadia. 

Deucalion (Aev/caAtuv). 1. Son of Prome- 
theus and Clymene, king of Phthia, in Thessaly, 
When Jupiter (Zeus), after the treatment he 
had received from Lycaon, had resolved to de- 
stroy the degenerate race of men, Deucalion 
and his wife Pyrrha were, on account of their 
piety, the only mortals saved. On the advice 
of his father, Deucalion built a ship, in which 
he and his wife floated in safety during the nine 
days' flood, which destroyed all the other in- 
habitants of HeUas. At last the ship rested on 
Mount Parnassus in Phocis, or, according to- 
other traditions, on Mount Othrys in Thessaly. 
on Mount Athos, or even on iEtna in Sicily, 
When the waters had subsided, Deucalion 
offered up a sacrifice to Jupiter (Zeus) Phyxius 
(<K'^£oc), and he and his wife then consulted the 
sanctuary of Themis how the race of man might 
be restored. The goddess bade them cover* 
their heads and throw the bones of their mother 
behind them. After some doubts and scruples 
respecting the meaning of this command, they 
agreed in interpreting the bones of their mother 
to mean the stones of the earth. They accord- 
ingly threw stones behind them, and from those 
thrown by Deucalion there sprang up men, from 
those thrown by Pyrrha, women. Deuealioti 
then descended from Parnassus, and buili his 
first abode at Opus or at Cynus. Deucalion be- 
came by Pyrrha the father of Hellen, Amphic- 
tyon, Protogenia, and others. — 2. Son of Mmo<? 



DEVA. 



DICJSARCHUS. 



and Pasiphae, father of Idomeneus, was an Ar- 
gonaut, and one of the Calydonian hunters.— 
[3. A Trojan, slain by Achilles.] 

Deva. 1. (Now Chester), the principal town 
of the Cornavii in Britain, on the Seteia, (now 
Dee), and the head-quarters of the Legio XX. 
Victrix.— 2. (Now Dee), an estuary in Scotland, 
on which stood the town Devana, near the mod- 
ern Aberdeen. 

Dexamenus {Ae&pevos), a Centaur, who lived 
in Bura in Achaia. According to others, he 
was King of Olenus, and father of Deiamra, who 
is usually represented as daughter of (Eneus. 

Dexipfus (M^L~-or). 2. Called also Dioxip- 
pus, a physician of Cos, one of the pupils of 
Hippocrates, lived about B.C. 380, and attended 
the children of Hecatomnus, prince of Caria.— 
2. P. Herennius, a Greek rhetorician and his- 
torian, was a native of Attica, and held the 
highest offices at Athens. He distinguished 
himself in fighting against the Goths when they 
Invaded Greece in A.D. 262. He was the au- 
thor of three historical works : 1. A history of 
Macedonia from the time of Alexander. 2. A 
chronological history from the mythical ages 
down to the accession of Claudius Gothicus, 
A.D. 268. 3. An account of the war of the 
Goths or Scythians, in which Dexippus himself 
had fought. The fragments of Dexippus, which 
are considerable, are published by Bekker and 
Niebuhr in the first volume of the Scriptores 
Historian Byzantince, Bonn, 1829, 8vo. — 3. A dis- 
ciple of the philosopher Iamblichus, lived about 
A.D. 350, and wrote a commentary on the Cat- 
egories of Aristotle, of which a Latin transla- 
tion appeared at Paris, 15-19, 8vo, and at Ven- 
ice, 1546, fob, after the work of Porphyry In 
Prcedicam. Arist. 

Dia (Ata), daughter of Deioneus and wife of 
Ixion. By Ixion, or, according to others, by 
Jupiter (Zeus), she became the mother of Pir- 
ithous. 

Dia (Ala). 1. The ancient name of Naxos. — 1 
2. An island near Amorgos. — 3. (Now Stan- 
did), a small island off Crete, opposite the har- 
bor of Cnosus. — 4. An island in the Arabian 
Gulf, on the western coast of Arabia. 

Diablintes. Vid. Aulerci. 

Diacria (rj Aianpia), a mountainous district 
in the northeast of Attica, including the plain 
of Marathon. Vid. Attica. The inhabitants 
of this district (AianpieZc, AidtipLot), formed one 
of the three parties into which the inhabitants 
of Attica were divided in the time of Solon: 
they were the most democratical of the three 
parties. 

DlADUMENIAM > Ot Dl ADUMENUS, SOn of the 

Emperor Macrinus, received the title of Cassar 
when his father was elevated to the purple, A.D. 
217, and was put to death in the following year 
about the same time with Macrinus. 

Di^eus (Aiaioc), of Megalopolis, general of the 
Achaean league B.C. 149 and 147, took an ac- 
tive part in the Avar against the Romans. On 
the death of Critolaus in 146, he succeeded to 
the command of the Achseans, but was defeated 
by Mummius near Corinth, whereupon he put 
an end to his own life, after slaying his wife to 
prevent her falling into the enemy's power. 

Diag5ras (Acayopac). 1. Son of Damagetus, 
of Ialysus in Rhodes, was very celebrated for 



his own victories and those of his sons an d 
grandsons, in the Grecian games. His fame 
was celebrated by Pindar in the seventh Olym- 
pic ode. He was victor in boxing twice in the 
Olympian games, four times in the Isthmian, 
twice in the Nemean, and once at least in the 
Pythian. He had, therefore, the high honor of 
being a TxepiodovUrjg, that is, one who had gained 
crowns at all the four great festivals. When 
an old man, he accompanied his sons, Acusilaii- 
and Damagetus, to Oiympia. The young in- 
having both been victorious, carried their fa- 
ther through the assembly, while the specta- 
tors showered garlands upon him, and congrat- 
ulated him as having reached the summit of hu- 
man happiness. He gained his Olympic vietofj 
B.C. 464. — 2. Surnamed the Atheist ("AOeor). 
a Greek philosopher and poet, was the son of 
Teleclides, and was bom in the island of MeL *s 
one of the Cyclades. He was a disciple of 
Democritus of Abdera, and in his youth he ac- 
quired considerable reputation as a lyric poet. 
He was at Athens as early as B.C. 424, for 
Aristophanes in the Clouds (v. 830), which were 
performed in that year, alludes to him as a well- 
known character. In consequence of his at- 
tacks upon the popular religion, and especially" 
upon the Eleusinian mysteries, he was formally 
accused of impiety B.C. 411, and, fearing the 
results of a trial, fled from Athens. He was 
condemned to death in his absence, and a re- 
ward set upon his head. He first went to Pal- 
lene, and afterward to Corinth, where he died 
One of the works of Diagoras was entitled 
fypvyioi loyoc, in which he probably attack'; ', 
the Phrygian divinities. 

Diana, an ancient Italian divinity, whom the 
Romans identified with the Greek Artemis. 
Her worship is said to have been introduced at 
Rome by Servius Tullius, who dedicated a tem- 
ple to her on the Aventine ; and she appears b > 
have been originally worshipped only by the- 
plebeians. At Rome Diana was the goddess 
of light, and her name contains the same root 
as the word dies. As Dianus (Janus), or the god 
of light, represented the sun, so Diana, the god- 
dess of light, represented the moon. The at- 
tributes of the Greek Artemis were afterward 
ascribed to the Roman Diana. Vid. Artemis. 

Dianium. 1. (Now Gianuti), a small island 
in the Tyrrhenian Sea, opposite the Gulf of 
Cosa. — 2. (Now Denia), called Hemeroscopiox 
CRfXEpoaKovcElov) by Strabo, a town in Hisj^ania 
Tarraconensis, on a promontory of the same 
name (now Cape Martin), founded by the Mas- 
silians. Here stood a celebrated temple of Di- 
ana, from which the town derived its name: 
and here Sertorius kept most of his military 
stores. 

Dicjea (AiKaia), a town in Thrace, on the 
Lake Bistonis. 

DiCjEarchia. Vid. Puteoli. 

DiCjEarcrts (Aina'iapxoc), a celebrated Peri- 
patetic philosopher, geographer, and historian, 
was born at Messaua in Sicily, but passed the 
greater part of his life in Greece Proper, and 
especially in Peloponnesus. He was a disciple 
of Aristotle and a friend of Theophrastus. He 
wrote a vast number of works, of which only 
fragments are extant. His most important- 
work was entitled Bloc r?/r 'E?2d6oc: it con^ 
255 



DICE. 



DIDO. 



tained an aceount of the geography, history, and 
moral and religious condition of Greece. See 
Fuhr, Diccearchi 3fessenii quce supersunt compo- 
sita et illustrata, Darmstadt, 1841. 

Dice (Alkt)), the personification of justice, a 
daughter of Jupiter (Zeus) and Themis, and the 
sister of Eunomia and Eirene. She was con- 
sidered as one of the Horae, and is frequently 
called the attendant or counsellor (irdpedpog or 
tvvefipoc) of Jupiter (Zeus). In the tragedians 
she appears as a divinity who severely punishes 
all wrong, watches over the maintenance of 
justice, and pierces the hearts of the unjust 
with the sword made for her by JEsa. In this 
capacity she is closely connected with the Erin- 
nyes, though her business is not only to punish 
injustice, but also to reward virtue. 

Dictjsus. Vid. Dicte. 

Dictamncm (AUrajuvov), a town on the north- 
ern coast of Crete, with a sanctuary of Dictynna, 
from whom the town itself was also called Dic- 
tynna. 

Dicte (Aiutt) : now Lasthi), a mountain in 
the east of Crete, where Jupiter (Zeus) is said 
to have been brought up. Hence he bore the 
surname Dictceus. The Roman poets frequent- 
ly employ the adjective Dictceus as synonymous 
with Cretan. 

Dictynna ( Alktvvvo), a surname both of Bri- 
tornartis and Diana, which two divinities were 
subsequently identified. The name is connect- 
ed with SIktvov, a hunting-net, and was borne 
by Britomartis and Diana as goddesses of the 
chase. One tradition related that Britomartis 
was so called because, when she had thrown 
herself into the sea to escape the pursuit of 
Minos, she was saved in the nets of fishermen. 

[Dictys (Alktvc). 1. A Tyrrhenian, changed 
by Bacchus (Dionysus) into a dolphin. — 2. A 
Centaur, slain at the nuptials of Pirithoiis. — 3. 
Son of Peristhenes or of Magnes and a Naiad, 
who, with his brother Polydectes, preserved Da- 
aae and her son Perseus in the island Seriphus.] 

Dictys Cretexsis, the reputed author of an 
extant work in Latin on the Trojan war, divided 
into six books, and entitled Ephemeris Belli Tro- 
jani, professing to be a journal of the leading 
events of the w T ar. In the preface to the work 
we are told that it was composed by Dictys of 
Cnosus, who accompanied Idomeueus to the 
Trojan war, and was inscribed in Phoenician 
characters on tablets of lime-wood or paper 
made from the bark. The work was buried in 
the same grave with the author, and remained 
undisturbed till the sepulchre was burst open by 
an earthquake in the reign of Nero, and the 
work was discovered in a tin case. It was car- 
ried to Rome by Eupraxis, whose slaves had 
discovered it, and it was translated into Greek 
by order of Nero. It is from this Greek version 
that the extant Latin work professes to have 
been translated by a Q. Septimius Romanus. 
Although its alleged origin and discovery are 
quite unworthy of credit, it appears neverthe- 
less to be a translation from a Greek work, 
which we know to have been extant under the 
name of Dictys, since it is frequently quoted by 
the Byzantine writers. The work was proba- 
bly written in Greek by Eupraxis in the reign 
of Nero, but at what time the Latin translation 
was executed is quite uncertain. The work 
256 



contains a history of the Trojan war, its causes 
and consequences, from the birth of Paris down 
to the death of Ulysses. The compiler not un- 
frequently differs widely from Homer, adding 
many particulars, and recording many events of 
which we find no trace elsewhere. All miracu- 
lous events and supernatural agency are entirely 
excluded. The compilations ascribed to Dictys 
and Dares (vid, Daees) are of considerable im- 
portance in the history of modern literature, 
since they are the chief fountains from which 
the legends of Greece first flowed into the ro- 
mances of the Middle Ages, and then mingled 
with the popular tales and ballads of England. 
France, and Germany. The best edition of Dic- 
tys is by Dederich, Bonn, 1835. 

Didius. 1. T., prastor in Macedonia B.C. 100. 
where he defeated the Scordiscans, consul 98. 
and subsequently proconsul in Spain, where he 
defeated the Celtiberians. He fell in the Mar- 
sic war, 89. — 2. O, a legate of Caesar, fell in 
battle in Spain fighting against the sons of Pom- 
pey, 46. — 3. M. Didius Salvius Juli anus, bought 
the Roman empire of the praetorian guards, 
when they put up the empire for sale after the 
death of Pertinax, A.D. 193. Flavius Sulpicia- 
nus, praefect of the city, and Didius bid against 
each other, but it was finally knocked down to 
Didius upon his promising a donative to each 
soldier of twenty-five thousand sesterces. Did- 
ius, however, held the empire for only two 
months, from March 28th to June 1st, and was 
murdered by the soldiers when Severus was 
marching against the city. 

Dido (Aidu), also called Elissa, the reputed 
founder of Carthage. She was daughter of the 
Tyrian king Belus or Agenor or Mutgo, and 
sister of Pygmalion, who succeeded to the crown 
after the death of his father. Dido was married 
to her uncle, Acerbas or Sichaeus, a priest of 
Hercules, and a man of immense wealth. He 
was murdered by Pygmalion, who coveted his 
treasures ; but Dido secretly sailed from Tyre 
with the treasures, accompanied by some noble 
Tyrians, who were dissatisfied w T ith Pygmalion's 
rule. She first went to Cyprus, where she car- 
ried off eighty maidens to provide the emigrants 
with wives, and then crossed over to Africa. 
Here she purchased as much land as might be 
covered with the hide of a buS ; but she order- 
ed the hide to be cut up into the thinnest possi- 
ble strips, and with them she surrounded a spot 
on which she built a citadel called Byrsa (from 
fivpoa, i. e., the hide of a bull). Around this fort 
the city of Carthage arose, and soon became a 
powerful and flourishing place. 'The neighbor- 
ing king Hiarbas, jealous of the prosperity of the 
new city, demanded the hand of Dido in mar- 
riage, threatening Carthage with war in case of 
refusal. Dido had vowed eternal fidelity to her 
late husband ; but, seeing that the Carthaginians 
expected her to comply with the demands of 
Hiarbas, she pretended to yield to their wishes, 
and under pretence of soothing the manes of 
Acerbas by expiatory sacrifices, she erected a 
funeral pile, on which she stabbed herself in 
presence of her people. After her death she 
was worshipped by the Carthaginians as a di- 
vinity. Virgil has inserted in his iEneid the 
legend of Dido with various modifications. Ac- 
cording to the common chronology, there was 



DIDYMA. 



DIOCLETIANUS, VALERIUS. 



an interval of more than three hundred years 
between the capture of Troy (B.C. 1184) and 
the foundation of Carthage (B.C. 853) ; but Vir- 
gil nevertheless makes Dido a contemporary of 
iEneas, with whom she falls in love on his arri- 
val in Africa. When JEne&a hastened to seek 
the new home which the gods had promised him, 
Dido, in despair, destroyed herself on a funeral 
pile. 

DlDYMA. Vid, BrAN'CHTD^E. 

Didyme. Vid. jEoum Ixsulje. 
Didyml'3 (Ativpoc), a celebrated Alexandrine 
a contemporary of Julius Ccesar 
a follower of the school of 



mmarian, 
Augustus, was 



\ristarchus, and received the surname ^aA/eev- 
repog on account of his indefatigable and un- 
wearied application to study. He is said to 
have written four thousand works, the most im- 
portant of which were commentaries on Homer. 
The Greater part of the extant Scholia minora on 
Homer was at one time considered the work of 
Didymus, but is really taken from the commen- 
raries of Didymus and of other grammarians. 
Diespiter. Vid. Jupiter. 
Digentia (now Licenza), a small stream in 
Latium, beautifully cool and clear, which flows 
into the Anio near the modern Vicovaro. It 
flowed through the Sabine farm of Horace. 
Near its source, which was also called Digentia 
\fons etiam rivo dare nomen idoneus y Hor., Ep. } 
i., 16, 12), stood the house of Horace (vicinus 
tectojugis aqiuc fons, Hor., Sat, ii., 6, 2). 
Dimallum, a town in Greek Dlyria. 
Dinarchus (Aeivapxos), the last and least im- 
portant of the ten Attic orators, was born at 
Corinth about B.C. 361. He was brought up at 
Athens, and studied under Theophrastus. As 
Lie was a foreigner, he could not come forward 
himself as an orator, and was therefore obliged 
to content himself with writing orations for 
others. He belonged to the friends of Phocion j 
aud the Macedonian party. When Demetrius j 
Poliorcetes advanced against Athens in 307, Di- 1 
narehus fled to Chalcis in Eubcea, and was not 
allowed to return to Athens till 292, where he 
died at an advanced age. Only three of his 
speeches have come down to us : they all refer 
to the question about Harpalus. They are 
printed in the collections of the Attic orators, 
[aud separately by Maetzucr, Berlin, 18-12, Svo.] 

DlNDYMENE. Vid, DlNDYMUS. 

Dixdymus or Dixdyma, -orum (Aivdvpoc : Til 
Aivdvfia). 1. A mountain in Phrygia, on the 
frontiers of Galatia. near the town Pessinus, 
sacred to Cybele, the mother of the gods, who 
is hence called Dindvmene. — 2. A mountain in 
Mysia, near Cyzicus, also sacred to Cybele. 

[Dixias (Am-/ or), a Creek historian of uncer- 
tain date, who wrote a work on Argolis ('Apyo- 
alku) : a few fragments are collected by Miiller, 
Fragm. Hist. Grccc, vol. in., p. 24-26.] 

Dixocrates (AtLioi<puT)]c), a distinguished 
Macedonian architect in the time of Alexander 
the Great. He was the architect of the new 
temple of Diana (Artemis) at Ephesus, which 
was built after the destruction of the former 
Temple by Herostratus. He was employed by 
Alexander, whom he accompanied into Egypt, 
in the building of Alexandrea. He formed a 
design for cutting Mount Athos into a statue of 
Alexander ; but the king forbade the execution 
17 



of the project. The right hand of the figure 
was to have held a city, and in the left there 
would have been a basin, in which the water of 
all the mountain streams was to pour, and 
thence into the sea. He commmenced the erec- 
tion of a temple to Arsinoe, the wife of Ptolemy 
II, of which the roof was to be arched with 
loadstones, so that her statue, made of iron, might 
appear to float in the air, but he died before 
completing the work. 

[Dixomache (Aetvofidxv), daughter of Mega- 
cles, granddaughter of Clisthenes, and mother of 
Alcibiades.] 

Dixomachus (Aeivofiaxoc), a philosopher, who 
agreed with Calliphox in considering the chief 
good to consist in the union of virtue with bod- 
ily pleasure. 

Dixomexes (Aeivojihijc). 1. A statuary, whose 
statues of Io and Callisto stood in the Acropolis 
at Athens in the time of Pausanias : he flour- 
ished B.C. 400.— [2. Father of Hiero, Gelon, and 
Thrasybulus, born at iEtna, a city of Sicily. — 

3. One of the guards of Hieronymus of Syracuse, 
whom he aided iu assassinating ; he w as after- 
ward elected one of the generals of the Syracu- 
saus.] 

Dixox (Aeivuv, Atvuv), father of the historian 
Clitarchus, wrote himself a history of Persia, 
[to which ISTepos refers as the most trustworthy 
authority on the subject: the fragments of his 
work are collected by Miiller, Fragm, Hist, Grcee., 
vol. ii., p. 88-95.] 

Dio. Vid. Diox. 

Diooesarea (AiOKaiodpeta : now Sefarich), 
more anciently Sepphoris (LsTrtyopic), in Gali- 
lee, was a small place until Herodes Antipas 
made it the capital of Galilee, under the name 
of Diocsesarea. It was destroyed in the fourth 
century by Gallus, on account of an insurrection 
which had broken out there. 

Dioclea or Doclea (Ao/e/Ua), a place iu Dal- 
matian near Salona, the birth-place of Diocletian. 

Diocles (AlokIijc). 1. A brave Athenian, who 
lived in exile at Megara. Once in a battle he 
protected with his shield a youth whom he loved, 
but he lost his own life in consequence. The 
Megarians rewarded him with the honors of a 
hero, and instituted the festival of the Dioclea, 
which they celebrated in the spring of every 
year. — 2. A Syracusan, the leader of the popu- 
lar party in opposition to Hermocrates. In B.C. 
412 he was appointed with several others to 
draw up a new code of laws. This code, which 
was almost exclusively the work of Diocles, 
became very celebrated, and was adopted by 
many other Sicilian cities. — 3. Of Carystus in 
Eubcea, a celebrated Greek physician, lived in 
the fourth century B.C. He wrote several med- 
ical works, of which only some fragments re- 
main ; [edited by Fraenkel, Berlin 1840, 8vo. — 

4. Of Preparethus, the earliest Greek historian 
who wrote about the foundation of Rome, and 
whom Q. Fabius Pietor is said to have followed 
in a great many points.] 

Diocletiaxopolis. Vid. Celetrum. 

Diocletiaxus, Valerius, Roman emperor 
A.D. 284-305, was born near Salona, in Dalma- 
tia, in 245, of most obscure parentage. From 
his mother, Doclea, or Dioclea, who received 
her name from the village where she dwelt, he 
inherited the appellation of Bodes or Diodes, 
257 



DIODORUS. 



DIOGEXES. 



which, after his assumption of the purple, was j writing a treatise on the problem, he died in 
expanded into Diocletianus, and attached as a despair. According to another account, he de- 
:ognomen to the high patrician name of Yale- ; rived his surname from his teacher Apollonius 
rius. Having entered the army, he served with ' Cronus. He belonged to the Megaric school 
high reputation under Probus and Aurelian, fol- : of philosophy, of which he was the head. He 
lowed Carus to the Persian war, and, after the was celebrated for his great dialectic skill, for 
fate of Xurnerianus became known at Chalcedon. which he is called 6 6io7.ektlk6c, or diaieicrtKij- 
was proclaimed emperor by the troops, 2S4. He j raro^. — 2. Sicuxus, of Agyrium in Sicily, was a 
slew with his own hands Arrius Aper, who was \ contemporary of Julius Caesar and Augustus, 
arraigned of the murder of Xurnerianus, in or- In order to collect materials for his history, he 
Jer, according to some authorities, that he might travelled over a great part of Europe and Asia, 
fulfil a prophecy delivered to him in early youth and lived a long time at Rome. He spent alto- 
by a Gaulish Druidess, that he should mount a gether thirty years upon his work. It was en- 
throne as soon as he had slain the wild boar titled Bi6/.codrjK7} IcrropiKTj, TJie Historical Libra- 
{Aper). Xext year (2S5) Diocletian carried on ry, and was a universal history, embracing the 
war against Carinus, on whose death he became period from the earliest mythical ages down lo 
undisputed master of the empire. But as the the beginning of Caesar's Gallic wars. It was 
attacks of the barbarians became daily more for- : divided into three great sections, and into forty 
midable, he resolved to associate with himself books. The first section, which consisted of 
a colleague in the empire, and accordingly se- the first six books, contained the history of the 
lected for that purpose Maxirnianus, who was in- ; mythical times previous to the Trojan war. 
vested with the title of Augustus in 2S6. i The second section, which consisted of eleven 
Maxiinian had the care of the "Western Empire, I books, contained the history from the Trojan 
and Diocletian that of the Eastern. But as the war down to the death of Alexander the Great, 
dangers which threatened the Roman dominions \ The third section, which contained the remain- 
from the attacks of the Persians in the East, and ing twenty-three books, treated of the history 
the German and other barbarians in the "West, from the death of Alexander down to the begin- 
became still more imminent, Diocletian made a ning of Caesar's Gallic wars. Of this work only 
still further division of the empire. In 292, Con- the following portions are extant entire : the 
stantius Chlorus and Galerius were proclaimed first five books, which contain the early history 
Caesars, and the government of the Roman of the Eastern nations, the Egyptians, xEthio- 
world was divided between the two Augusti pians, and Greeks ; and from book eleven to 
and the two Caesars. Diocletian had the gov- book twenty, containing the history from the 
omment of the East, with Xicornedia as his resi- i second Persian war, B.C. 480, down to 802. 
dence ; Maximian, Italy and Africa, with Milan ; Of the remaining portion there are extant a 
as his residence ; Constantius, Britain, Gaul and number of fragments and the Exeerpta, which 
Spain, with Treves as his residence ; Gale- , are preserved partly in Photius, and partly iu 
rius. niyricum, and the whole line of the Dan- the Eclogae made at the command of Constan- 
ube, with Sirmium as his residence. The wars tine Porphyrogenitus. The work of Diodorus 
in the reign of Diocletian are related in the fives is constructed upon the plan of annals, and the 
of his colleagues, since Diocletian rarely com- 1 events of each year are placed one after the 
manded the armies in person. It is sufficient other, without any internal connection. In com- 
to state here that Britain, which had maintained piling his work Diodorus exercised no judgment 
its independence for some years under Caeae- or criticism. He simply collected what he found 
sirs and Allectus, was restored to the empire in his different authorities, and thus jumbled toj 
(296) ; that the Persians were defeated and gether history, mythus, and fiction : he fre- 
obliged to sue for peace (298) ; and that the ' quently misunderstood authorities, and not sel- 
Marcomniani and other barbarians in the north dom contradicts in one passage what he has 
were also driven back from the Roman domin- ; stated in another. But, nevertheless, the eom- 
ions. But after an anxious reign of twenty-one pilation is of great importance to us, on account 
years Diocletian longed for repose. Accord- j of the great mass of materials which are there 
ingly, on the first of May, 305, he abdicated at ' collected from a number of writers whose works 
Xicornedia, and compelled his reluctant col- ; have perished. The best editions are by Wea- 
league Maximian to do the same at Milan. Dio- seling, AmstercL, 1746, 2 vols. foL, reprinted at 
oletian retired to his native Dalmatia, and passed Bipont, 1793, &c, 11 vols. 8vo; and by Din- 
the remaining eight years of his life near Salona : dorf, Lips., 1S28, 6 vols. 8vo. — 3. Of Sinope, an 
in philosophic retirement, devoted to rural pleas- : Athenian comic poet of the middle comedy, 
ures and the cultivation of his garden. He died flourished 353. — i. Of Tyre, a peripatetic phi- 
313. One of the most memorable events in the ! losopher, a disciple and follower of Critolaiis. 
reign of Diocletian was his fierce persecution of whom he succeeded as the head of the Peripa- 
the Christians (303) to which he was instigated 1 tetic school at Athens. He flourished B.C. 110. 
by his colleague Galerius. Diodotts (Aiodoroc), a Stoic philosopher and 

DiODoars (Aiodupoe). 1. Surnamed Croxus, : a teacher of Cicero, in whose house he lived for 
of Iasus in Caria, lived at Alexandrea in the i many years at Rome. In his later years, 
reign of Ptolemy Soter, who is said to have j Diodorus became blind : he died in Cicero's 
given him the surname of Cronus on account j house, B.C. 59, and left to his friend a property 
of his inability to solve at once some dialectic ; of about one hundred thousand sesterces, 
problem proposed by Stilpo, when the two phi- ; Diogexes (Aioyh-rjc). 1. Of Apolloxia iu 
losophers were dining with the king. Diodorus | Crete, an eminent natural philosopher, lived in 
is said to have taken that disgrace so much to j the fifth century B.C., and was a pupil of An 
heart, that, after his return from the repast, and ! aximenes. He wrote a work in the Ionic dia- 
258 



DIOGENES. 



DIOMEDES. 



leet, entitled Ilepl Qvoeuc, On Nature, in which 
he appears to have treated of physical science 
in the largest sense of the words. — 2. The Baby- 
lonian, a Stoic philosopher, was a native of 
Seleucia in Babylonia, was educated at Athens 
under Chrysippus, and succeeded Zeno of Tar- 
sus as the head of the Stoic school at Athens. 
He was one of Ihe three ambassadors sent by 
the Atheniaus to Rome in B.C. loo. Vid, Car- 
nkades, Ceitolals. He died at the age of 
eighty-eight. — S. The Cynic philosopher, was 
born at Sinope, in Pontus, about B.C. 412. His 
father was a banker named Icesias or Icetas, 
who was convicted of some swindling transac- 
tion, in consequence of which Diogenes quitted 
Sinope and went to Athens. His youth is said 
to have been spent iu dissolute extravagance ; 
but at Athens his attention was arrested by the 
character of Antisthenes, who at first drove him 
away. Diogenes, however, could not be pre- 
vented from attending him even by blows, but 
rold him that he would find no stick hard enough 
to keep him away. Antisthenes at last relented, 
and his pupil soon plunged into the most frantic 
excesses of austerity and moroseness. In sum- 
mer he used to roll in hot sand, and in winter 
to embrace statues covered with snow ; he wore 
coarse clothing, lived on the plainest food, slept 
in porticoes or iu the street, and finally, accord- 
iug to the common story, took up his residence 
iu a tub belonging to the Metroum, or temple 
of the Mother of the Gods. The truth of this 
latter tale has, however, been reasonably dis- 
puted. In spite of his strange eccentricities, 
Diogenes appears to have been much respected 
at Athens, and to have been privileged to re- 
buke any thing of which he disapproved. He 
seems to have ridiculed and despised all intel- 
lectual pursuits which did not directly and ob- 
viously t.eud to some immediate practical good. 
He abused literary men for reading about the 
evils of Ulysses, and ueglecting their own ; mu- 
.>iciaus for stringing the lyre harmoniously while 
they left their minds discordant ; men of science 
for troubling themselves about the moon and 
stars, while they neglected what lay immedi- 
ately before them ; orators for learning to say 
what Was right, but not to practice it. On a 
voyage to ^Egina he was taken prisoner by pi- 
rates, and carried to Crete to be sold as a slave. 
Here, when he was asked what business he 
understood, he answered, " How to command 
men." He was purchased by Xeniades of Cor- 
inth, over whom he acquired such influence 
that he soon received from him his freedom, 
was iutrusted with the eare of his children, and 
passed his old age in his house. During his 
residence at Corinth his celebrated interview 
with Alexander the Great is said to have taken 
place. The conversation between them began 
by the king's saying, " I am Alexander the 
Great f to which the philosopher replied, " And 
i am Diogenes the Cynic." Alexander then 
asked whether he coidd oblige him in any way, 
and received no answer except, " Yes, you can 
stand out of the sunshine." We are further 
told that Alexander admired Diogenes so much 
that he said, " If I were not Alexander, I should 
wish to be Diogenes:' Diogenes died at Cor- 
inth at the age of nearly ninety, B.C. 323. — 4 
Laertks of Laerte in Cilieia, of whose life we 



have no particulars, probably lived in the second 
century after Christ. He wrote the Lives of 
the Philosophers in teu books : the work is en- 
titled Ttepl iJlcjv, doy/LidTov, nal drto^Oey/xdrav tQv 
iv (j)i?„oooti>ia evdoKi/i7]odvT(ov. According to some 
allusions which occur in it, he wrote it for a 
lady of rank, who occupied herself with phi- 
losophy, and who, according to some, was Ar- 
ria, the friend of Galen. In this work Diogenes 
divides the philosophy of the Greeks into the 
Ionic — which commences with Anaximander 
and ends with Clitomachus, Chrysippus, and 
Theophrastus — and the Italian, which was 
founded by Pythagoras, and ends with Epicu- 
rus. He reckons the Socratic school, with its 
various ramifications, as a part of the Ionic phi- 
losophy, of which he treats in the first seven 
books. The Eleatics, with Heraclitus and the 
Skeptics, are included in the Italian philosophy, 
which occupies the eighth and ninth books. Epi- 
curus and his philosophy are treated of in the 
tenth book with particular minuteness, which 
has led some writers to the belief that Diogenes 
himself was an Epicurean. The work is of 
great value to us, as Diogenes made use of a 
, great number of writers on the history of phi- 
j losophy, whose works are now lost ; but it is 
j put together without plan, criticism, or connec- 
tion, and the author had evidently no concep- 
tion of the real value and dignity of philosophy. 
The best editions are by Meibom, Amsterd., 
1692, 2 vols. 4to, and Hubner [and Jacobitz, 
with the commentary of Casaubon], Lips., 4 
vols. 8vo, 1828-1833.— 5. CEnomaus, a tragic 
poet, who began to exhibit at Athens B.C. 404. 

Diogenianus (Aioyeveiavoc), of Heraclea on 
the Pontus, a distinguished grammarian in the 
reign of Hadrian, wrote a Greek Lexicon, from 
which the Lexicon of Hesychius seems to have 
been almost entirely taken. A portion of it is 
still extant, containing a collection of proverbs 
first printed by Schottus, with the proverbs of 
Zenobius and Suidas, Antv., 1612, 4to, and sub- 
sequently in other editions of the Parcemiographi 
Grceci. 

Diomea (rd Aio/ueia : Acofteievc, Ato/xevc), a 
demus in Attica belonging to the tribe ^Ege'is, 
with a temple of Hercules ; the Diomean gate in 
Athens led to this demus. Vid. p. 122, b. 

Diomede^e Insula, five small islands in the 
Adriatic Sea, north of the promontory Garganum 
in Apulia, named after Diomedes. Vid. Dio- 
medes. The largest of these, called Diomedea 
Insula or Trimerus (now Tremiti), was the place 
where Julia, the grand-daughter of Augustus, 
died. 

Diomedes (Atopjdrjc). 1. Son of Tydeus and 
Deipyle, whence he is constantly called Tydldes 
(Tvdstdyc), succeeded Adrastus as king of Ar- 
gos. — Homeric Story. Tydeus fell in the expedi- 
tion against Thebes, while his son Diomedes 
was yet a boy ; but Diomedes was afterward 
! one of the Epigoni who took Thebes. He went 
' to Troy with eighty ships, and was, next to 
Achilles, the bravest hero in the Greek army. 
He enjoyed the especial protection of Minerva 
(Athena) ; he fought against the most distin- 
guished of the Trojans, such as Hector and 
./Eneas, and even with the gods who espoused 
the cause of the Trojans. He thus wounded 
both. Venus (Aphrodite) and Mars (Ares). — Later 
259 



DIOMEDES. 



DIOX CA8STUS. 



Stories. Diomedes and Ulysses carried off the - 
palladiura from the city of Troy, since it was j 
believed that Troy could not be taken so long ; 
as the palladium was within its walls. Diome- 
des carried the palladium with him to Argos ; ! 
but, according to others, it was taken from him j 
by Demophon in Attica, where he landed one 
night on his return from Troy, without knowing 
where he was. Vid. Dehophox. Another tra- j 
dition stated that Diomedes restored the pal-| 
ladium to yEneas. On his arrival in Argos 
Diomedes found his wife ^Egialea living in adul- 1 
tery with Hippolytus. or, according to others, 
with Cometes or Cyllabarus. This misfortune 
befell him through the anger of Yenus (Aphro- 
dite), whom he had wounded before Troy. He 
therefore quitted Argos, either of his own ac- 
cord, or he was expelled by the adulterers, and 
went to jEtolia. He subsequently attempted to 
return to Argos, but on his way home a storm 
threw him on the coast of Daunia in Italy, where 
he was kindly received by Daunus, the king of 
the country. Diomedes assisted Daunus in his 
war against the Messapians, married Euippe, 
the daughter of Daunus, and settled in Daunia, 
where he died at an advanced age. He was j 
buried in one of the islands off Cape Garganum, j 
which were called after him the Diomedean j 
Islands. His companions were inconsolable at 
his loss, and were metamorphosed into birds 
(Aves Diomedea), which, mindful of their origin, 
used to fly joyfully toward the Greek ships, but I 
to avoid those of the Romans. According to 
others, Diomedes returned to Argos, or disap- 
peared in one of the Diomedean islands, or in j 
the country of the Heneti. A number of towns 
In the eastern part of Italy, such as Beneventum, J 
Argos Hippion (afterward Argyripa or Arpi), ' 
Venusia, Canusium, Venafrum, Brundisium, &c, 
were believed to have been founded by Diome- j 
des. A plain of Apulia, near Salapia and Canu- • 
shun, was called Diomedei Campi after him. He 1 
was worshipped as a divine being, especially in 
Italy, where statues of him existed at Argyripa, ] 
Metapontum, Thurii. and other places. — 2. Son ' 
of Mars (Ares) and Gyrene, king of the Bistones 
in Thrace, killed by Hercules on account of his 
mares, which he fed with human flesh. 

Diomedes, a Latin grammarian, probably lived 
in the fourth or fifth century after Christ," and is 
the author of an extant work, De Oratione et 
Partibus Orationis et Yario Gene-re Metrorum 
libri III., printed in the Grammaticce Latinee 
Auctores Antiqid of Putschius, 4to, Hanov., 1605 ; 
[and in the Scriptures rei nietricae of Gaisford, 
Oxford, 1837, Svo ; but only the 3d book.] 

Diomedox (Aio/xeduv), an Athenian command- 
er during the Peloponnesian war. He was one 
of the commanders at the battle of Arginusse| 
(B.C. 406), and was put to death, with five of his 
colleagues, on his return to Athens. 

Diox (Aluv), a Syracusan, son of Hipparinus, 
and a relation of Dionysius. His sister Aris- 
tomache was the second wife of the elder Di- 
onysius; and Dion himself was married to 
Arete, the daughter of Dionysius by Aristom- 
aehe. Dion was treated by Dionysius with the 
greatest distinction, and was employed by him 
in many services of trust and confidence". Of 
this close connection and favor with the tyrant 
he seems to have availed himself to amass great ' 
260 



wealth. He made no opposition to the succes- 
sion of the younger Dionysius to his father^ 
power, but he became an object of suspicion tc 
the youthful tyrant, to whom he also made him- 
self personally disagreeable by the austerity of 
his manners. Dion appears to have been nat- 
urally a man of a proud and stem character, and 
having become an ardent disciple of Plato when 
that philosopher visited Syracuse in the reign 
of the elder Dionysius, he carried to excess the 
austerity of a philosopher, and viewed with un- 
disguised contempt the debaucheries and dis- 
solute pleasures of his nephew. From these he 
endeavored to withdraw him by persuading him 
to invite Plato a second time to Syracuse ; but 
the philosopher, though received at first with 
the utmost distinction, failed in obtaining a per- 
manent hold on the mind of Dionysius ; and the 
intrigues of the opposite party, headed by Phi- 
listus, were successful in procuring the banish- 
ment of Dion. Dion retired to Athens, where 
he lived in habitual intercourse with Plato and 
his disciples ; but Plato having failed in pro- 
curing his recall (for which purpose he had a 
third time visited Syracuse), and Dionysius hav- 
ing confiscated his property, and compelled his 
wife to marry another person, he determined 
on attempting the expulsion of the tyrant by 
force. He sailed from Zacynthus with only a 
small force, and obtained possession of Syracuse 
without opposition during the absence of Dio- 
nysius in Italy. Dionysius returned shortly aft- 
erward, but found himself obliged to quit Syra- 
cuse and sail away to Italy, leaving Dion un- 
disputed master of the city, B.C. 356. His 
despotic conduct, however, soon caused great 
discontent, and the people complained with jus- 
tice that they had only exchanged one tyrant 
for another. He caused his chief opponent. 
Heraelides, to be put to death, and confiscated 
the property of his adversaries. Callippus, an 
Athenian, who had accompanied him from 
Greece, formed a conspiracy against him, and 
caused him to be assassinated in his own house. 
353. 

Diox Cassius, the historian, was the son of 
a Roman senator, Cassius Apronianus, and was 
born A.D. 155, at iNicaea in Bithynia. He also 
bore the surname Cocceianus, which he derived 
from the orator Dion Chrysostomus Cocceianus. 
his maternal grandfather. He was educated 
with great care ; he accompanied his father to 
Cilicia, of which he had the administration: 
and after his father's death he went to Rome, 
about 180. He was straightway made a sena- 
tor, and frequently pleaded in the courts of jus- 
tice. He was aedile and quaestor under Corn- 
modus, and praetor under Septimius Severus. 
194. He accompanied Caraealla on his journey 
to the East ; he was appointed by Macrinus to 
the government of Pergamus and Smyrna. 218 ; 
was consul about 220 ; proconsul of Africa 224. 
under Alexander Severus, by whom he was 
sent as legate to Dalmatia in 226, and to Pan- 
nonia in 227. In the latter province he restored 
strict discipline among the troops, which ex- 
cited the discontent of the praetorians at Rome, 
who demanded his life of Alexander Severus. 
But the emperor protected him and raised him 
to his second consulship, 229. Dion, however, 
retired to Campania, and shortly afterward ob- 



DION CHRYSOSTOMUS. 



DIONYSIUS. 



tained permission of the emperor to return to 
his native town Nicaea, were he passed the re- 
mainder of his life and died. Dion wrote several 
historical works, but the most important was a 
History of Rome (Tu^aiKt) foropia), in eighty 
books, from (fee landing of iEneas in Italy to 
A.D. 229, the year in which Dion returned to 
Nicaea. Unfortunately, only a comparatively 
small portion of this work has come down to 
us entire. Of tlx- first thirty-four books we pos- 
sess only fragments; but since Zonaras, in his 
Annals, chiefly followed Dion Cassius, we may 
regard the Annals of Zonaras as to some extent 
an epitome of Dion Cassius. Of the thirty-fifth 
book we possess a considerable fragment, and 
from the thirty-sixth book to the fifty-fourth the 
work is extant complete, and embraces the his- 
tory from the ware of Lueullus and Cn. Pom- 
pey against Mithradates, down to the death of 
Agrippa, B.C. 10. Of the remaining books we 
have only the epitomes made by Xiphilinus and 
others. Dion Cassius treated the history of the 
republic with brevity, but gave a more minute 
account of those events, of which he had been 
himself an eye-witness. He consulted original 
authorities, and displayed great judgment and 
discrimination in the use of them. He had ac- 
quired a thorough knowledge of his subject, and 
his notions of the ancient Roman institutions 
were far more correct than those of his prede- 
cessors, such as Dionysius of Halicarnassus. 
The best editions are by Reimarus, Hamb., 
1750-52, 2 vols, fol, and by Sturz, Lips., 1824. 
9 vols. 8vo. 

Dion Chrtsost5» 8, that is, the. golden- 
mouthed, a surname given To him on account 
of his eloquence. He also bore the surname 
Cocceianus, w T hich he derived from the Emperor 
Cocceius Nerva. with whom he was very in- 
timate. He was born at Prusa, in Bithynia, 
about the middle of the first century of our era. 
He received a careful education, increased his 
knowledge by travelling in different countries, 
aud came to Rome in the time of Vespasian, 
but, having incurred the suspicions of Domitian, 
was obliged to leave the city. On the advice 
of the Delphic oracle, he put on a beggar's dress, 
and in this condition visited Thrace, Mysia, 
Scythia, and the country of the Getae. After 
the murder of Domitian," A.D. 96, Dion used his 
influence with the army stationed on the fron- 
tier in favor of liis friend Nerva, and seems to 
have returned to Rome immediately after his ac- 
cession. Trajan also cntertaiued the highest 
esteem for Dion, and showed him the most 
marked favor. Dion died at Rome about A.D. 
117. Dion Chrysnstom is the most eminent of 
the Greek rhetoricians and sophists in the time 
of the Roman empire. There are extant eighty 
of his orations ; hut they are more like essays 
on j^olitical, moral, and philosophical subjects 
than real orations, of which they have only the 
form. We find among them '/.oyot irepl f3aai?i- 
ft'af or a6} o/. waikiKoi, four orations addressed 
to Trajan on the virtues of a sovereign; A^oye- 
vrjg ij Kepi Tipuviufioc, on the troubles to which 
men expose themselves by deserting the path 
of nature, and on the difficulties which a sover- 
eign has to encounter ; essays on slavery and 
freedom ; on the means of attaining eminence 
as an orator ; political discourses addressed to 



various towns ; on subjects of ethics and prac- 
tical philosophy ; and, lastly, orations on myth- 
ical subjects and show~-speeches. All these 
orations are written in pure Attic Greek, and, 
although tainted with the rhetorical embellish- 
ments of the age, are distinguished by then- re 
fined and elegant style. The best editions are 
by Reiske, Lips., 1784, 2 vols., and by Emperius. 
Bruns., 1844. 

Dion^ea. Vid. Dioxk. 

Dioxe (Akjvtj), daughter of Oceauus and Te- 
thys, or of Ccelus (Uranus) and Terra (Ge), or 
of JEther and Terra (Ge). She was beloved by 
Jupiter (Zeus), by whom she became the moth- 
er of Aphrodite (Venus). She received her 
daughter in Olympus when she was wounded 
by Diomedes. Venus (Aphrodite) is hence call- 
ed Dion^ea, and this epithet is frequently ap- 
plied to any thing sacred to Venus (Aphrodite). 
Hence we find Dionceam antrum (Hor., Garni., ii., 
1, 39), and Dioncms Omar (Virg., Eel., ix., 47), 
because Caesar claimed descent from Venus, who 
is sometimes also called Dione. 

Dionysius (Awvvatoc). I. Historical. 1. The 
Elder, tyrant of Syracuse, son of Hermocrates, 
born B.C. 430. He was born in a private but 
not low station, and began life as a clerk in a 
public office. He was one of the partisans of 
Hermocrates, the leader of the aristocratical par- 
ty, and was severely wounded in the attempt 
which Hermocrates made to effect by force 
his restoration from exile. He subsequently 
served in the great war against the Carthaginians, 
who had invaded Sicily under Hannibal, the son 
of Gisco, and successively reduced and destroyed 
Seliuus, Himera, and Agrigentum. These dis- 
asters, aud especially the failure of the Syra- 
cusan general, Daphnaeus, to relieve Agrigen- 
tum, had created a general spirit of discontent 
and alai-m, of which Dionysius skillfully availed 
himself. He succeeded in procuring a decree 
for deposing the existing generals, and appoint- 
ing others in their stead, among whom was 
Dionysius himself, B.C. 406. His efforts were 
from this time directed toward supplanting his 
new colleagues and obtaining the sole direction 
of affairs. These efforts were crowned with 
success. In the following year (405), the other 
generals were deposed, and Dionysius, though 
only twenty-five years of age, was appointed 
sole general, Avith full powers. From this pe- 
riod we may date the commencement of his 
reign, or tyranny, which continued without in- 
terruption for thirty-eight years. His first step 
was to procure the appointment of a body guard, 
wdiich he speedily increased to the number of 
one thousand men ; at the same time, he in- 
duced the Syraeusans to double the pay of all 
the troops, and took every means to ingratiate 
himself with the mercenaries. By his marriage 
with the daughter of Hermocrates, he secured 
to himself the support of all the remaining par- 
tisans of that leader. He converted the island 
of Ortygia into a strong fortress, in which he 
took up his own residence. After concluding 
a peace with Carthage, and putting down a 
formidable insurrection in Syracuse, he began 
to direct his arms against the other cities of 
Sicily. Naxos, Catana, and Leontini success- 
ively fell into his power, either by force or 
treachery. For several vears after this he 
261 



DI02TYSTUS. 



DIOXYSHJS. 



made preparations for renewing the war with philosophy, entertaining the poet Philoxenus at 
Carthage. In 397 he declared war against Car- ' his table, and inviting Plato to Syracuse. He. 
thage. At first he met with great success, but in however, soon after sent the latter away from 
395 his fleet was totally defeated, and he was Sicily in disgrace ; and though the story of his 
obliged to shut himself up within the walls of having caused him to be sold as a slave, as well 
Syracuse, where he was besieged by the Car- ! as that of his having sent Philoxenus to the 
thaginians both by sea and land. A pestilence ! stone quarries for ridicuhng his bad verses, are 
shortly after broke out in the Carthaginian camp, 1 probably gross exaggerations, they may well 
and greatly reduced the enemy, whereupon Di- j have been so far founded in fact that his in- 
onysius suddenly attacked the* enemy both by J tercourse with these persons was interrupted 
sea and land, defeated the army, and biu'ned \ by some sudden burst of capricious violence. — 
great part of their fleet. The "Carthaginians : 2. The Younger, son of the preceding, succeed- 
were now obliged to withdraw. In 393 they re- j ed his father as tyrant of Syracuse, B.C. 367. 
newed the war with no better success, and He was at this time under thirty years of age ; 
in 392 they concluded a peace with Dionysius. ; he had been brought up at his father's court in 
This treaty left Dionysius at leisure to continue j idleness and luxury, and studiously precluded 
the ambitious projects in which he had previous- ! from taking any part in public affairs. The as- 
ly engaged against the Greek cities in Italy, j cendeney which Dion, and, through his means. 
He formed an alliance with the Lucanians, and i Plato, obtained for a time over his mind, was 
crossed over into Italy. He subdued Caulonia, j undermined by flatterers and the companions of 
Hipponium and Rhegium, 387. He was in his pleasures. Yet his court was at this time a 
close alliance with the Locrians ; and his power- j great place of resort for philosophers and men 
ml fleets gave him the command both of the j of letters : besides Plato, whom he induced by 
Tyrrhenian and Adriatic Seas. He was now at i the most urgent entreaties to pay him a second 
the summit of his greatness, and during the I visit, Aristippus of Cyrene, Eudoxus of Cnidus. 
twenty years that elapsed from this period to j Speusippus, and others, are stated to have spent 
his death, he possessed an amount of power j some time with him at Syracuse ; and he culti- 
and influence far exceeding those enjoyed by J vated a friendly intercourse with Arehytas and 
any other Greek before the time of Alexander. I the Pythagoreans of Magna Graecia. Dion, wh< ) 
During this time he was twice engaged again j had been banished by Dionysius, returned to 
in war with Cartilage, namely, in 383, when a j Sicily in 357, at the head of a small force, with 
treaty was concluded, by which the River Haly- j the avowed object of dethroning Dionysius. 
cus was fixed as the boundary of the two pow- j The latter was absent from Syracuse at the 
ers ; and again in 368, in the middle of which j time that Dion landed in Sicily ; but he instant- 
war Dionysius died at Syracuse, 367. His last ly returned to Syracuse, where the citadel still 
illness is said to have been brought on by ex- j held out for him! But, finding it impossible to 
cessive feasting ; but, according to some ac- j retain his power, he sailed away to Italy with 
counts, his death was hastened by his medical i his most valuable property, and thus lost the 
attendants, in order to secure the succession for i sovereignty after a reign of twelve years, 356. 
his son. After the death of his first wife, Dio- ' He now repaired to Locri, the native city of his 
nysius had married almost exactly at the same j mother, Doris, where he was received in the 
time — some said even on the same day — Doris, j most friendly manner ; but he made himself 
a Locrian of distinguished birth, and Aristoni- tyrant of the city, and is said to have treated 
ache, a Syracusau, the daughter of ins supporter the inhabitants with the utmost cruelty. Aftei' 
Hipparinus, and the sister of Dion. By Doris remaining at Locri ten years, he availed him- 
he had three children, of which the eldest was | self of the internal dissensions at Syracuse to 
the successor, Dionysius. The character of I recover possession of his power in that city. 
Dionysius has been drawn iu the blackest colors j 346. The L o crias took advantage of his ab- 
by many ancient writers ; he appears, indeed, to i senee to revolt against him, and wreaked their 
have become a sort of type of a tyrant, in its j vengeance in the most cruel manner on his wife 
worst sense. In his latter years he became ex- and daughters. He continued to reign in Syra- 
tremely suspicious, and apprehensive of treach- j cuse for the next three years, till Timoleon 
ery even from his nearest friends, and is said to j came to Sicily to deliver the Greek cities of the 
iiave adopted the most excessive precautions island from the tyrants. As he was unable to 
to guard against it. Many of these stories have, ! resist Timoleon, he surrendered the citadel into 
however, an air of great exaggeration. (Cic, ' the hands of the latter on condition of being al- 
v., 20.) He built the terrible prison call- j lowed to depart in safety to Corinth, 343. Here 
ed Lautumise, which was cut out of the solid he spent the remainder of his life in a private 
rack in the part of Syracuse named Epipolce. condition, and is said to have frequented low com- 
Vid. Diet, of Ant., art. Lagtocle. Dionysius \ pany, and sunk gradually into a very degraded 
was fond of literature and the arts. He adorn- and abject state. According to some writers, 
ed Syracuse with splendid temples and other he was reduced to support himself by keeping a 
public edifices, so as to render it unquestiona- j school ; others sav that he became one of the at- 
bly the greatest of all Greek cities. He was , tendants on the rites of Cybele, a set of mendi- 
himself a poet, and repeatedly contended for cant priests of the lowest class.— 3. Tyrant of 
vol- prize of tragedy at Athens. Here he sev- Heraclea on the Euxine, son of Clearchus, suc- 
eval times obtained the second and third prizes ; eeeded his brother Timotbeus in the tyranny 
and, finally, just before his death, bore away about B.C. 338. He is said to have been the 
the first prize at the Lenaja, with a play called mildest and justest of all the tyrants that had ever 
"The Ransom of Hector." He sought "the so- lived. He married Amastris, niece of Darius, 
ciety of men distinguished in literature and Iu 306 he assumed the title of king, and died 
262 



DIONYSIUS. 



DIONYSIUS. 



•shortly afterward at the age of 55. He is said 
to have been choked by his own fat. 

II. Literary. 1. Surnamed Akeopagita, be- 
cause he was one of the council of the Areopa- 
gus, was converted by St. Paul's preaching at 
Athens. There are extant several works under 
his name, which, however, could scarcely have 
been written before the fifth century of our era. 

2. Cato. Vid. Cato. — 3. Surnanied Chalcus 

(6 XaA/covc), an Attic poet and orator, who de- 
rived his surname from his having advised the 
Athenians to coin brass money for the purpose 
of facilitating traffic. Of his oratory we know 
nothing; but his poems, chiefly elegies, are 
often referred to aud quoted. He was one of 
the leaders <tf* the colony to Thurii in Italy, B.C. 
444. 4. Of Haucarnassus, a celebrated rhet- 
orician, came to Rome about B.C. 29, for the 
purpose of making himself acquainted with the 
Latin language and literature. He lived at 
Rome on terms of friendship with many dis- 
tinguished men, such as Q. JElius Tubero, and 
the rhetorician Caecilius; and he remained in 
the city for twenty-two years, till his death, 
B.C. 7. His principal work, which he composed 
at Rome at the later period of his life, was a his- 
tory of Rome in twenty-two books, entitled Tw- 
Lia'iKy 'Apxaio?.oylu. It contained the history of 
Rome from the mythical times down to B.C. 
264, in which year the history of Polybius be- 
gins with the Punic wars. The first nine books 
alone are complete ; of the tenth and eleventh j 
we have the greater part; and of the remain- 
ing nine we possess nothing but fragments and j 
extracts. Diouysius treated the early history j 
of Rome with great minuteness. The eleven i 
books extant do not carry the history beyond 
B.C. 4-41, so that the eleventh book breaks off 
very soon after the decemviral legislation. 
This peculiar miuuteness in the early history, 
however, was, in a great measure, the conse- 
quence of the object he had proposed to him- 
self, and which, as he himself states, was to re- 
move the erroneous notions which the Greeks 
entertained with regard to Rome's greatness. 
Dionysius had no clear notions about the early 
constitution of Rome, and was led astray by the 
nature of the institutions which he saw in his 
own day, and thus makes innumerable mis- 
takes in treating of the history of the constitu- 
tion. He introduces numerous speeches in his 
work, which, though written with artistic skill, 
nevertheless show that Dionysius was a rhet- I 
orician, not an historian, aud still less a states- 
man. _ Diouysius also wrote various rhetorical ! 
and critical works, which abound with the most j 
exquisite remarks and criticisms on the works 
of the classical writers of Greece. They show 
that he was a greater critic thau historian. The 
following are the extant works of this class : 
1. Ttxvn faTopiufi, addressed to one Echecrates, 
part of which is certainly spurious. 2. Ileoi j 
Gvvdia&Qc di'ofidruv, treats of oratorical power, 
and on the combination of words according to I 
the different styles of oratory. 3. TQv dpxaluv 
icptatQ, contains characteristics of poets, from 
Homer down to Euripides, of some historians, 
such as Herodotus, Thucydides, Philistus, Xen- 
ophon, and Theopompus, and, lastly, of some 
philosophers aud orators. 4. Tlepl tuv dpxaiuv 
6qr6puv iKofiviyiaTtfffjtoi, contains criticisms on 



the most eminent Greek orators, of which we 
now^ possess only the first three sections, on 
Lysias, Isocrates, and Isaeus. The other three 
sections treated of Demosthenes, Hyperides, 
and ^Eschines ; but they are lost, with the ex- 
ception of the first part of the fourth section, 
which treated of the oratorical power of Demos- 
thenes. 5. 'EmcToXy vrpdg 'A/ipaiov, a letter to 
his friend Ammaeus, in which he shows that 
most of the orations of Demosthenes had been 
delivered before Aristole wrote his Rhetoric, 
and consequently that Demosthenes had de- 
rived no instruction from Aristotle. 6. 'Ettic- 
Tofo) irpdg Tvalov JloftTtTjiov, was written by Di- 
onysius with a view of justifying the unfavora- 
ble opinion which he had expressed upon Plato, 
and which Pompey had censured. 7. Ilcpi tov 
QovKvdldov x a P aKr VP°Q K( ti tuv "kotirdv tov avy- 
ypa(j)£ug Uhu/idruv, was written by Dionysius at 
the request of his friend Tubero, for the purpose 
of explaining more minutely what he had writ- 
ten on Thucydides. As Dionysius in this work 
looks at the great historian from his rhetorical 
point of view, his judgment is often unjust and 
incorrect. S. YLepc tup tov Qovuvdtdov idiofid- 
tcov, addressed to Ammasus. 9. Aelvapxog, a 
very valuable treatise on the life and orations of 
Dinarchus. The best editions of the complete 
works of Dionysius are by Sylburg, FrankL 
1586, 2 vols, fob, reprinted at Leipzig, 1691 ; 
by Hudson, Oxon., 1704, 2 vols. fol. ; and bv 
Reiske, Lips., 1774, 6 vols. 8vo.— 5. Of Hera- 
clea, son of Theophantus, was a pupil of Zeno, 
and adopted the tenets of the Stoics ; but, in 
consequence of a most painful complaint, he 
abandoned the Stoic philosophy, and joined the 
Eleatics, whose doctrine, that ?]Sov?j and the 
absence of pain was the highest good, had more 
charms for him than the austere ethics of the 
Stoa. This renunciation of his former creed 
drew upon him the nickname of fieTadifxevor^ 
i. <?., the renegade. He died in his eightieth 
year of voluntary starvation. He wrote several 
works, all of which are lost. Cicero censures 
him for having mixed up verses with his prose, 
and for his want of elegance and refinement. — 
6. Of Magxesia, a distinguished rhetorician, 
taught in Asia between B.C. 79 and 77, when 
Cicero visited the East. — 7. Of Miletus, one 
of the earliest Greek historians, and a contem- 
porary of Hecatasus, wrote a history of Persia. — 
8. of Mytilexe, surnamed Scytobrachion, taught 
at Alexandrea in the first century B.C. He 
wrote a prose work on the Argonauts, which 
was consulted by Diodorus Siculus. — 9. Sur- 
named Periegetes, from his being the author 
of a TTEpLTiyrjaLQ Trig yqg, which is still extant ; 
probably lived about A.D. 300. The work con- 
tains a description of the whole earth, in hex- 
ameter verse, and is written in a terse and ele- 
gant style. It enjoyed great popularity in an- 
cient times. Two translations or paraphrases 
of it were made by Romans, one by Rufus Fes- 
tus Avienus {vid. Avienus), and the other by 
the grammarian Priscian. Vid. Priscianus. 
The best edition of the original is by Bernhardy. 
Lips., 1828. — 10. Of SixorE, an Athenian comic 
poet of the middle comedy. — 11. Surnamed 
Thrax, from his father being a Thracian, was 
himself a native either of Alexandrea or By- 
zantium. He is also called a Rhodian, because 
263 



DIONYSODORUS. 



DIONYSUS. 



at one time he resided at Rhodes, and gave in- ; Various other nymphs are also said to have 
structions there. He also taught at Rome, about reared him. When he had grown up, Juno 
B.C. 80. He was a very celebrated grammarian ; (Hera) drove him mad, in which state he wan- 
but the only one of his works which has come i dered about through various parts of the earth, 
down to us is a small treatise entitled rexvr] | He first went to Egypt, where he was hospita- 
ypaii/uariKij, which became the basis of all subse- : bly received by King Proteus. He thence prc- 
quent grammars, and was a standard book in ! ceeded through Syria, where he flayed Damas- 
grammar schools for many centuries. ; cus alive for opposing the introduction of the 

III. Artists. 1. Of Argos, a statuary, flour- j vine. He then traversed all Asia, teaching the 
ished B.C. 476. — 2. Of Colophon, a painter, con- ; inhabitants of the different countries of Asia the 
temporary with Polygnotus of Thasos, whose j cultivation of the vine, and introducing among 
works he imitated in every other respect except j them the elements of civilization. The most 
in grandeur. Aristotle (Poet^ 2) says that Po- j famous part of his wanderings in Asia is his 
lygnotus painted the likenesses of men better ! expedition to India, which is said to have lasted 
than the originals, Pauson made them worse, and j several years. On his return to Europe he 
Dionysius just like them (6/iocovg). It seems \ passed through Thrace, but was *lll received 
from this that the pictures of Dionysius were de- 1 by Lycurgus, king of the Edones, and leaped 
ncient in the ideal. [ into the sea to seek refuge with Thetis, whom 

[Dioxysodo-RUs (AtowGodupoc), a Boeotian, who ; he afterward rewarded for her kind reception 
is mentioned by Diodorus Siculus as the author j with a golden urn, a present of Vulcan (He- 
of a history of Greece which came down to the phsestus). All the host of Bacchantic women 
time of Philip of Macedon.] j and Satyrs who had accompanied him were 

Dioxysop5lis (Alovvgov rro/ug), a town in | taken prisoners by Lycurgus, but the women 
Phrygia, belonging to the conventus juridicus of \ were soon set free again. The country of the 
Apamea, founded by Attalus and Eumenes. ; Edones thereupon ceased to bear fruit, and Ly- 

Dioxysds (Aiovvaog or Aluvvgoc;), the youth- ■ curgus became mad and killed his own son, 
ful, beautiful, but effeminate god of wine. He i whom he mistook for a vine. After this his 
is also called, both by Greeks and Romans, Bac- ; madness ceased, but the country still remained 
chus (Bdnxoc), that is, the noisy or riotous god, barren, and Bacchus (Dionysus) declared that 
which was originally a mere epithet or surname I it would remain so till Lycurgus died. The 
of Dionysus, and does not occur till after the j Edones, in despair, took their king and put him 
time of Herodotus. According to the common ; in chains, and Bacchus (Dionysus) had him 
tradition, Dionysus (Bacchus) was the son of ! torn to pieces by horses. He then returned to 
Jupiter (Zeus) and Semele, the daughter of I Thebes, where he compelled the women to quit 
Cadmus of Thebes, though other traditions their houses, and to celebrate Bacchic festivals 
give him a different parentage and a different j on Mount Cithseron, or Parnassus. Pentheus. 
birth-place. It was generally believed that j who then ruled at Thebes, endeavored to check 
when Semele was pregnant, she was persuaded i the riotous proceedings, and went out to the 
by Juno (Hera), who appeared to her in disguise, j mountains to seek the Bacchic women ; but his 
to request the father of the gods to appear to own mother, Agave, in her Bacchic fury, mis- 
her in the same glory and majesty in which he took him for an animal, and tore him to pieces, 
was accustomed to approach his own wife Juno ; Bacchus (Dionysus) next went to Argos, where 
(Hera). Jupiter (Zeus) unwillingly complied, ' the people first refused to acknowledge him, 
and appeared to her in thunder and lightning. ! but, after punishing the women with phrensy, 
Semele was terrified and overpowered by the ! he was recognized as a god, and temples were 
sight, and being seized by the flames, she gave ; erected to him. His last feat was performed 
premature birth to a child Jupiter (Zeus) j on a voyage from Icaria to Naxos. He hired a 
saved the child from the flames, sowed him up i ship which belonged to Tyrrhenian,pirates ; but 
in his thigh, and thus preserved him till he came \ the men, instead of landing at Naxos, steered t : - 
to maturity. Various epithets which are given j ward Asia to sell him there as a slave. There- 
to the god refer to that occurrence, such as ; upon the god changed the masts and oars into 
Tvpr/evjjg, jurjpop'patiT/c, jirjporpa^rjg, and ignigena' j serpents, and himself into a lion ; ivy grew 
After the birth of Bacchus (Dionysus), Jupiter j around the vessel, and the sound of flutes was 
(Zeus) intrusted him to Mercury (Hermes), or, \ heard on every side; the sailors were seized 
according to others, to Proserpina (Persephone) with madness, leaped into the sea, and were 
or Rhea, who took the child to Ino and Athamas ■ metamorphosed into dolphins. After he had 
at Orchomenos, and persuaded them to bring I thus gradually established his divine nature 
him up as a girl. Juno (Hera) was now urged | throughout the world, he took his mother out of 
on by her jealousy to throw Ino and Athamas ; Hades, called her Thy one, and rose with her 
into a state of madness. Jupiter (Zeus), in into Olympus. Various mythological beings are 
order to save his child, changed him into a ram, described as the offspring of Dionysus (Bac- 
and carried him to the nymphs of Mount Nysa, , chus) ; but among the women, both mortal and 
who brought him up iu a cave, and were after- j immortal, who won his love, none is more fa- 
ward rewarded by Jupiter (Zeus), by being j mous in ancient history than Ariadne. Vid. Aki- 
placed as Hyades among the stars." Mount j adne. The extraordinary mixture of traditions 
Xysa. from which the god was believed to have respecting the history of Dionysus (Bacchus) 
derived his name, was placed in Thrace ; but seems evidently to have arisen from the tradi- 
mountaius of the same name are found in dif- tions of different times and countries, referring 
ferent parts of the ancient world where he was to analagous divinities, and transferred to the 
worshipped, and where he was believed to j Greek Dionysus. The worship of Dionysus 
have introduced the cultivation of the vine. | (Bacchus) was no part of the original religion 



DIONYSUS. 



DIOPHANTUS. 



of Greece, and his mystic worship is compara- 
tively of late origin. In Homer he does not 
appear as one of the great divinities, and the 
story of his birth by Jupiter (Zeus) and the Bac- 
chic orgies are not alluded to in any way ; Dio- 
nysus (Bacchus) is there simply described as 
the god who teaches man the preparation of 
wine, whence he is called the "drunken god" 
(fiaivofit »d the 6ober king Lycurgus will 
not, for tlus reason, tolerate him in his king- 
dom. (Horn, vi., 132; Od., xviii., 406; 
comp. xi id.) As the cultivation of the vine 
spread iu Greece, the worship of Dionysus (Bac- 
chus) likewise spread further; the mystic wor- 
ship was developed by the Orphici, though it 
probably originated in the transfer of Phrygian 
and Lydian modes of worship to that of Diony- 
sus (Bacchus). After the tune of Alexander's 
expedition to India, the celebration of the Bac- 
chic festivals assumed more and more their wild 
and dissolute character. As far as the nature 
and origin of the god Dionysus (Bacchus) are con- 
cerned, he appears in all traditions as the rep- 
resentative of the productive, overflowing, and 
intoxicating power of nature, which carries man 
away from his usual quiet and sober mode of 
living. Wine is the most natural and appropri- 
ate symbol of that power, and it is therefore 
called " the fruit of Dionysus." Dionysus (Bac- 
chus) is, therefore, the god of wine, the inventor 
and teacher of its cultivation, the giver of joy, 
and the disperser of grief and sorrow. As the 
god of wine, he is also both an inspired and an 
inspiring god, that is, a god who has the power 
of revealing _ the future to man by oracles. 
Thus it is said that he had as great a share in 
the Delphic oracle as Apollo, and he himself 
had an oracle in Thrace. Now, as prophetic 
power is ahvays combined with the healing art, 
Dionysus^ (Bacchus) is, like Apollo, called larpog, 
or vyianjc, and is hence invoked as a tied? aurrip 
against raging diseases. The notion of his being 
the cultivator and protector of the vine was 
easily extended to that of his being the pro- 
tector of trees in general, which is alluded to 
in various epithets and surnames given him by 
the poets of antiquity, and he thus comes into 
close connection with Ceres (Demeter). This 
character is still further developed in the notion 
of his beiug the promoter of civilization, a law- 
giver, and a lover of peace. As the Greek dra- 
ma had grown out of the dithyrambic choruses 
at the festivals of Dionvsus (Bacchus), he was 
also regarded as the god of tragic art, and as 
the protector of theatres. The orgiastic wor- 
ship of Dionysus (Bacchus) seems to have been 
first established m Thrace, and to have thence 
spread southward to Mount Helicon and Par- 
nassus, to Thebes, Xaxos.and throughout Greece, 
Sicily, and Italy, though some writers derived ; 
it from Egypt. Respecting his festivals and 
the mode of their celebration, and especially the ! 
Introduction and suppression of his wc-rship at 
Rome, vld Diet of Ant., art. Dioxysia. In the ! 
earliest tunes the Graces or Charities were the i 
companions of Dionysus (Bacchus). This cir- 
cumstance points out the great change which ! 
took place in the course of time in the mode of \ 
his worship, for afterward we find him aceoin- j 
panied in his expeditions and travels by Bac- 1 
ehautic women, called Lena?, Maenades, Thvf-j 



; ades, Mimallones, Clodones, Bassarae or Bass 
rides, all of whom are represented in works c 
j art as raging with madness or enthusiasm, i 
vehement motions, their heads thrown back 
j ward, with dishevelled hair, and carrying in 
their hands thyrsus-staffs (entwined with ivy, 
I and headed with pine-cones), cymbals, swords, 
| or serpents. Sileni, Pans, satyrs, centaurs, and 
; other beings of a like kind, are also the constant 
I companions of the god. The temples and stat- 
j ues of Dionysus (Bacchus) were very numerous 
| ia the ancient world. The animal most com- 
j monly sacrificed to him was the ram. Among 
J the things sacred te him, we may notice the 
vine, ivy, laurel, and asphodel ; the dolphin, 
serpent, tiger, lynx, panther, and ass ; but he 
hated the sight of an owl. In later works of 
art he appears in four different forms : 1. As au 
infant handed over by Mercury (Hermes) to his 
nurses, or fondled and played with by satyrs 
and Bacchse. 2. As a manly god with a beard, 
commonly called the Indian Bacchus. He there 
appears in the character of a wise and dignified 
Oriental monarch ; his beard is long and soft, 
and his Lydian robes ((Saacupa) are long and 
richly folded. 3. The youthful or so-called 
Theban Bacchus was carried to ideal beauty by 
Praxiteles. The form of his body is manly and 
with strong outlines, but still approaches to the 
female form by its softness and roundness. 
The expression of the countenance is languid, 
and shows a kind of dreamy longing ; the head, 
with a diadem, or a wreath of vine or ivy, leans 
somewhat on one side ; his attitude is easy, 
like that of a man who is absorbed in sweet 
thoughts, or slightly intoxicated. He is often 
seen leaning on his companions, or riding on a 
panther, ass, tiger, or lion. The finest stat ue 
of this kind is in the villa Ludovisi. 4. Bacchus 
with horns, either those of a ram or of a bull 
This representation occurs chiefly on coins, but 
never in statues. 

Diophaxes (Aioouvjjc). I. QfMytileneya - 
tinguished Greek rhetorician, came to Rome, 
where he instructed Tiberius Gracchus, and be- 
came his intimate friend. After the murder of 
Gracchus, Diophanes was also put to death. — 
2. Of Xicsea, in Bithynia, in the first century B.C.. 
abriged the agricultural work of Cassius Diony- 
sius for the use of King Deiotarus. 

Diopiiaxxus (Aiofavroc). 1. An Attic orator 
and contemporary of Demosthenes, with whom 
he opposed the Macedonian party. — 2. Of Alex- 
andrea, the only Greek writer on Algebra. His 
period is unknown ; but he probably ought not 
to be placed before the end of the fifth century 
of our era. He wrote Arithmetica in thirteen 
books, of which only six are extant, and one 
book, De Multangulis Numeris, on polygonal 
numbers. These books contain a system of 
reasoning on numbers by the aid of general 
symbols, and with some use of symbols of opera- 
tion ; so that, though the demonstrations are 
very much conducted in words at length, and 
arranged so as to remind us of Euclid, there is 
no question that the work is algebraical ; not a 
treatise on algebra, but an algebraical treatise 
on the relations of integer numbers, and on the 
solution of equations of more than one variabl : 
in integers. Editions by Baehet de Meziriao. 
Paris, 1621, and by Fermat, Toulouse, 1670, foL 
2*56" 



DIOPLTHES 



DIOSCURI. 



DiopIthes (Aio-eidvc). 1. A half-fanatic, 
half-impostor, who made at Athens an appar- 
ently thriving trade of oracles : he was much 
satirized by the comic poets. — 2. An Athenian 
o-eneral, father of the poet Menander, "was sent 
out to the Thraeian Chersonesus about B.C. 
344* at the head of a body of Athenian settlers 
or K/.Tipovxoi. ha the Chersonese he became 
involved in disputes with the Cardians, who were 
supported by Philip. The latter sent a letter 
of remonstrance to Athens, and Diopithes was 
arraigned by the Macedonian party, but was 
defended by Demosthenes in the oration, still 
extant, on the Chersonese, B.C. 341, in conse- 
quence of which he was permitted to retain his 
command. 

[Diores (At6pnc), son of Amarynceus, leader 
of the Epei before Troy : slain by Pirus. — 2. 
Father of Automedon, who was the arrnor- 
bearer of Achilles. — 3. Son of Priam, brother 
of Amycus, slain with his brother in Italy by 
Turnus. — i. A Trojan, companion of JEneas, 
gained one of the prizes in the funeral games 
in honor of Anchises.] 

Dioscoridis Insula (AiooKopidov v//aog : now 
Socotra), an island off the southern coast of 
Arabia, near the Promontory Syagrus. The 
island itself was marshy and unproductive, but 
it was a great commercial emporium ; and the 
northern part of the island was inhabited by 
Arabian, Egyptian, and Greek merchants. 

DioscorIdes (AtooKopidnc). 1. A disciple of 
Isoerates, and a Greek grammarian, wrote upon 
Homer. — 2. The author of 39 epigrams in the 
Greek Anthology, seems to have lived in Egypt 
about the time of Ptolemy Euergetes. — 3. Pe- 
dacius or Pedanius, of Anazarba in Cilicia, a 
Greek physician, probably lived in the second 
century of the Christian era. He has left be- 
hind him a Treatise on Materia Medica (Hepl 
T?,tjc 'larpuir/c), in five books, a work of great 
labor and research, and which for many ages 
was received as a standard production. It con- 
sists of a description of all the articles then 
used in medicine, with an account of their sup- 
posed virtues. The other works extant under 
the name of Dioscorides are probably spurious. 
The best edition is by Sprengel, Lips., 1829, 
1830, 2 vols. 8vo. — i. Surnamed Phacas on ac- 
count of the moles or freckles on his face, prob- 
ably lived in the first century B.C. 

Dioscuri (Aioc novpoi), that is, sons of Jupiter 
(Zeus), the well-known heroes Castor (Kuarup) 
and Pollux or Polydeuces (Ho?.v6evK7jg). The 
two brothers were sometimes called Castores 
by the Romans. According to Homer, they 
were the sons of Leda and Tyndareus, king of 
Laeedaemon, and consequently brothers of Helen. 
Hence they are often called by the patronymic 
Tii.'daridce. Castor was famous for his skill 
in taming and managing horses, and Pollux 
for his skill in boxing. Both had disappeared 
from the earth before the Greeks went against 
Troy. Although they were buried, says Ho- 
mer, yet they came to life every other day, 
and they enjoyed honors like those of the gods. 
According to other traditions, both were the 
sons of Jupiter (Zeus) and Leda, and were born 
at the same time with their sister Helen out of 
an egg. Vid. Leda. According to others, again, 
Pollux and Helen only were children of Jupiter 
266 



(Zeus), and Castor was the son of Tyndareus. 
Hence Pollux was immortal, while Castor vras 
subject to old age and death like every other 
mortal. They were born, according to different 
traditions, at different places, such as Amy- 
cke, Mount Taygetus, the island of Pephnos, or 
Thalamae. The fabulous life of the Dioscuri is 
marked by three great events. 1. Hieir expe- 
dition against Athens. Theseus had carried off 
their sister Helen from Sparta, and kept her 
in confinement at Aphidnae, under the superin- 
tendence of his mother iEthra. While Thes- 
eus was absent from Attica, the Dioscuri march- 
ed into Attica, and ravaged the country round 
the city. Academus revealed to them that 
Helen was kept at Aphidna; ; the Dioscuri took 
the place by assault, carried away their sister 
Helen, and made iEthra their prisoner. 2. 
Their part in the expeditim of the Argonauts, as 
they had before taken part in the Calydonian 
hunt. During the voyage of the Argonauts, it 
once happened that when the heroes were de- 
tained by a vehement storm, and Orpheus prayed 
to the Samothracian gods, the storm suddenly 
subsided, and stars appeared on the heads 
of the Dioscuri. On their arrival in the coun- 
try of the Bebryces, Pollux fought against 
Amycus, the gigantic son of Neptune (Posei- 
don), and conquered ihm. During the Argo- 
nautic expedition they founded the town of 
Dioscurias. 3. Tlieir battle vMh the sons of 
Aphareus. Once the Dioscuri, in conjunction 
with Idas and Lynceus, the sons of Aphareus, 
had carried away a herd of oxen from Arcadia. 
Idas appropriated the herd to himself, and drove 
it to his home in Messene. The Dioscuri then 
invaded Messene, drove away the cattle of 
which they had been deprived, and much more 
in addition. Hence arose a war between the 
Dioscuri and the sons of Aphareus, which was 
carried on in Messene or Laconia. Castor, the 
mortal, fell by the hands of Idas, but Pollux 
slew Lynceus, and Jupiter (Zeus) killed Idas 
by a flash of lightning. Pollux then returned 
to his brother, whom he found breathing his 
last, and he prayed to Jupiter (Zeus) to be per- 
mitted to die with him. Jupiter (Zeus) gave 
him the option either to five as his immortal 
son in Olympus, or to share his brother's fate, 
and to five alternately one day under the earth, 
and the other in the heavenly abodes of the 
gods. According to a different form of the 
story, Jupiter (Zeus) rewarded the attachment 
of the two brothers by placing them among the 
stars as Gemini. These heroic youths received 
divine honors at Sparta. Their worship spread 
from Peloponnesus over Greece, Sicily, and Italy. 
Then* principal characteristic was that of 
■&eol curr/psc, that is, mighty helpers of man. 
whence they were sometimes called dvaner or 
avanrec. They were worshipped more espe- 
cially as the protectors of travellers by sea, for 
Neptune (Poseidon) had rewarded their brotherly 
love by giving them power over winds ana 
waves, that they might assist, the shipwrecked 
(fratres Helence, lucida sidera, Hot., Carm.. i. 
3). Whenever they appeared they were seen 
riding on magnificent white steeds. They were 
regarded as presidents of the public games 
They were further believed to have invented 
the war-dance and warlike music, and poets 



DIOSCURIAS. 



DODOXA 



and bards were favored by them. Owing to ' mentioned together, flourished about B.C. 560 
their warlike character, it was customary at ' They were natives of Crete, whence they went 
Sparta for the two kings, whenever they went to Sicyon, which was for a long time the chief 
to war. to be accompanied by symbolic repre- seat of Grecian art. Their disciples were Tec- 
sentatious of the Dioscuri (do/cava). Respecting j taaus and Angelion, Learchus of Rhegium, Dory- 
their fet-tivals, vid. Did. of Ant, arts. Anaceia, j clidas and his brother Medou, Dontas, and Thc- 
Dioscubia. Their usual representation in works j ocles, who were all four Lacedaemonians. Di 
of art is thut of two youthful horsemen with j poenus and Scyllis are sometimes called sons ol 
egg-shftped helmets, crowned with stars, and j Daedalus, by which we are only to understano 
with spears in their hands. At Rome, the wor- 1 that they belonged to the Daedalian style of art. 
ship of the Dioscuri was introduced at an early j Vid. Daedalus. 

time. They were believed to have assisted \ Dm.*, a name of the Furiae. Vid. Eumenidk-. 
the Romans against the Latins in the battle of I Dirce {AipKn), daughter of Helios and wif- 
Lake Regillus ; and the dictator, A. Postumius ; of Lycus. Her story is related under Amphion 
Albinus, during the battle vowed a temple to j [Dire or Dere (Aeipr/). Vid. Berenice, No. 4.] 
them. It was erected in the Forum, on the j Dirphys (Aipyvc), a mountain in Euboea. 
spot where they had been seen after the battle, j Dis, contracted from Dives, a name some- 
opposite the temple of Vesta. It was conse- j times given to Pluto, and hence also to the low- 
crated on the 15th of July, the anniversary of ! er world. 

the battle of Regillus. The equites regarded! Dium (Alov : Alevc, Aiacr?jc). 1. An important 
the Dioscuri as their patrons. From the year town in Macedonia, on the Thermaic Gulf, so 
B.C. 305, the equites went every year, on the • called after a temple of Jupiter (Zeus). Heiv 
ioth of July, in a magnificent procession on were placed the equestrian statues by Lysippus 
horseback, from the temple of Mars through of the Macedonians who had fallen at the battl-- 
the main streets of the city, across the Forum, ] of the Granlcus. — 2. A town in Chalcidice in 
and by the ancient temple of the Dioscuri. j Macedonia, on the Stryrnonic Gulf. — 3. A towi 

Dioscurias (Aiocnovpidc : AiocKovptevc : now in Euboea, not far from the promontory Cenaeum 
Iskuria or Isgaar), an important town in Col- Divico, the leader of the Helvetians in the 
chis, on the River Anthemus, northwest of the ! war against L. Cassius in B.C. 107, was at the 
Phasis, founded by the Milesians, was a great head of the embassy sent to Julius Caesar, near- 
emporium for all the surrounding people : under ly fifty years later, B.C. 58, when he was pre- 
the Romans it was called Sebastopolis. j paring to attack the Helvetians. 

Dios-Hieron*(A£oo 'lepov : ALogLepirrjg). a small Divitiacus, an .^Eduan noble and brother of 
town on the coast of Ionia, between Lebedus I Dumnorix, was a warm adherent of the Romans 
and Colophon. ' and of Caesar, who, in consideration of his en- 

Diospolis (Aiuctto/ac : Aloctto/uttjc). 1. D. ! treaties, pardoned the treason of Dumnorix in 
Magna, the later name of Thebes in Egypt. B.C. 58. In the same year he took the most 
Vid. Theb^:. — 2. D. Parva, called by Pliny Jo- ! prominent part among the Gallic chiefs in re- 
vis Oppidum, the capital of the Nomos Diospo- j questing Caesar's aid against Ariovistus ; he 
lites in Upper Egypt. — 3. A town in Lower ! had some time before gone even to Rome to ask 
Egypt, in the Delta, near Mendes, in the midst ( the senate for their interference, but without 
of marshes. — 4. (Now Ludd, Lydd), the name 1 success. During this visit he was the guest oi 
given by the Greek and Roman writers to the j Cicero. 

Lydda of the Scriptures. — 5. A town in Poutus, \ Divodurum (now Met?.,) subsequently Medio- 
originally called Cabira. , matrici, and still later Metis or Mettis, the capi- 

Diovis, an ancient Italian (Umbrian) name of ! tal of the Mediomatrici in Gallia Belgica. 
Jupiter. Divona. Vid. Cadurci. 

Diphilus (A'iqi Zoo), one of the principal Athe- : Diyllus (Atv?J.or), an Athenian, who wrote a 
man comic poets of the new comedy, and a eon- • history of Greece and Sicily in twenty-six oi 
temporary of Menander and Philemon, was a twenty-seven books, from the seizure of the 
native of Sinope. He is said to have exhibited I Delphic temple by Philomelus. The exact pe- 
one hundred plays. Though, in point of time, \ riod at which he flourished can not be ascertain- 
Diphilus belonged to the new comedy, his poetry j ed, but he belongs to the age of the Ptolemies, 
seems to have had more of the character of the \ Doberus (A66ijpog), a town in Paeonia in Ma- 
middle. This is shown, among other indica- ! cedonia, east of the River Echedorus. 
tions, by the frequency with which he chose! Docimia or Docimeum (Aokl/lilu, Aoki/lcslov : Ao- 
mythological subjects for his plays, and by his 1 Kifievg, AoKi/invog), a town in Phrygia, not fai 
bringing on the stage the poets Archilochus, ! from Synnada : in its neighborhood were cele- 
Hipponax, and Sappho. The Roman comic \ brated marble quarries. 

poets borrowed largely from Diphilus. The j Dodona (AoduvT]), the most ancient oracle in 
Carina of Plautus is a translation of his YLlrjpov- Greece, was situated in Epirus, and probably at 
fievoi. His Iwa-oOv/janovTec was translated by the southeastern extremity of the Lake of Joan- 
Plautus in the lost play of the Commorient*, and I nina, near Kastritza. It was founded by Pe- 
was partly followed by Terence in his Adelphi. \ lasgians, and was dedicated to Jupiter (Zeus). 
The Mmbmi of Plautus is also a translation of J The responses of the oracle were given from 
a play of Diphilus, but the title of the Greek : lofty oaks or beech trees, probably from a grove 
play is not known. [The fragments of Diphilus j consisting of these trees. The will of the god 
are edited by Meineke, Fragm. Comic Grcec, I was declared by the wind rustling through the 
vol. ii., p. 1066-96, edit, minor.] I trees ; and, in order to render the sounds more 

Dipcenls and Scyllis (Atirotvoc nai ! distinct, brazen vessels were suspended on the 

very aucieut Greek statuaries, who are always branches of the trees, which, being set in motion 

267 



DOLABELLA. CORNELIUS. 



DOMITIAXUS. 



by the wind, came in contact with one another. 
These sounds were in early times interpreted 
"by men, but afterward, when the worship of 
Dione became connected with that of Jupiter 
(Zeus), by two or three aged women, who were 
called tte/.eluSec or rrf/aiat, because pigeons 
were said to hare brought the command to found 
the oracle. There were, however, also priests, 
called Selli or Helli, who had the management 
of the temple. The oracle of Dodona had less 
influence in historical times than in the heroic 
age. It was chiefly consulted by the neighbor- 
ing tribes, the .zEtolians, Acarnanians, and Epi- 
rots, and by those who would not go to Delphi 
on account of its partiality for the Dorians. In 
B.C. 219, the temple was destroyed by the JEto- 
lians, and the sacred oaks cut down. But the 
town continued to exist, and we hear of a bishop 
of Dodona in the council of Ephesus. 

Dolabella, Corxelius. 1. P., consul B.C. 
2 S3, conquered the Senones. — 2. C>\, curule 
:edile 165, in which year he and his colleague, 
Sextus Julius Caesar, had the Heeyra of Terence 
performed at the festival of the Megalesia. In 
159 he was consul. — 3. C>"., a partisan of Sulla, 
by whom he was made consul, 81. He after- 
ward received Macedonia for his province. In 
77 he was accused by the young Julius Caesar 
of having been guilty of extortion in his prov- 
ince, but he was acquitted. — 4 Cx., praetor ur- 
banus SI, when the cause of P. Quintius was 
tried : Cicero charges him with having acted on 
that occasion unjustly. The year after he had 
Cilicia for his province ; C. Malleolus was his 
quaestor, and the notorious Yerres his legate. 
Dolabella not only tolerated the extortions and 
robberies committed by them, but shared in 
their booty. On his return to Rome, Dolabella 
was accused by M yErmlius Scaurus of extor- 
tion in his province, and on that occasion Yerres 
deserted his accomplice and furnished the accus- 
er with all the necessary information. Dola- 
'Della was condemned, and went into exile. — 
5. P., the son-in-law of Cicero, whose daughter 
Tullia he married after divorcing his wife Fabia, 
51. He was one of the most profligate men of 
his age, and his conduct caused Cicero great 
uneasiness. On the breaking out of the civil 
war he joined Caesar, and fought on his side at 
thebattle of Pharsalia (48), in Africa (46), and 
in Spain (45). Caesar raised him to the consul- 
ship in 44, notwithstanding the opposition of 
Antony. After the murder of Caesar, he forth- 
with joined the assassins of his benefactor ; but 
~hen Autony gave him the province of Syria, 
with the command against the Parthians, all his 
republican enthusiasm disappeared at once. On 
his way to his province he plundered the cities 
of Greece and Asia Minor, and at Smyrna he 
murdered Trebonius, who had been appointed 
by the senate proconsul of Asia, When his 
proceedings became known at Rome, he was 
declared a public enemy ; and Cassius, who had 
received Syria from the senate, marched against 
him. Dolabella threw himself into Laodicea, 
which was besieged by Cassius, who at length 
suceeeded in taking it." Dolabella, in order not 
to fall into the hands of his enemies, ordered 
one of his soldiers to kill him, 43. 

Douche (Ao/uxr/). 1. The ancient name of 
the island Icarus.— 2. A town in Thessalv. on th*> 
263 



: western slope of Olympus. — 3. A town in Com- 
! magene, between Zeugma and G-ermanicia. also 
| called Dolichene. celebrated for the worship of 
: Jupiter. — 4. Or Duhchium. Yid. Echixades. 

Dolichiste (Ao/.ixiottj : dow KaJcava), an isl- 
J and off the coast of Lycia, opposite the prom- 
i ontory Chiniaera. 

Dolioxes (Ao/.lovec), a Pelasgic people in 
j Mysia, who dwelt between the rivers iEsepus 
I and Rhyndacus, and in the neighborhood of Cyz- 
i icus, which was called after them Dolionis. 

Dolox (Ao/.cov), a Trojan, sent by night to spy 
the Grecian camp, was taken prisoner by Uh s- 
ses and Diomedes, compelled to give intelli- 
' gence respecting the Trojans, and then slain by 
Diomedes. The tenth book of the Iliad was 
therefore called Ao/.uvelo, or Ao/.ovo<f)ovia. 

Doloxci (Ao/.oyKot), a Thracian people in the 
Thracian Chersonesus. Yid, Miltiades. 

Dolopes (A6/oTec), a powerful people in 
Thessalv, dwelt on the Enipeus, and fought be- 
fore Troy. (Horn., R, ix., 484.) At a later 
time they dwelt at the foot of Mount Pindus ; 
and their country, called Dolopia (Ao/.orrta), 
j was reckoned part of Epirus. 

Domitia. 1. Sister of Cn. Domitius Aheno- 
i barbus (vid. Ahexobarbus, lso. 10), and conse- 
: quently an aunt of the Emperor Isero. She was 
! the wife of Crispus Passienus, and was mur- 
j dered in her old age by ]S"ero, who wished to get 
! possession of her property. — 2. Lepida, sister of 
| the preceding, wife of M. Valerias Messala Bar- 
l batus, and mother of Messalina, was put to 
! death by Claudius at the instigation of Agrip- 
I pina. — 3. Loxgixa. daughter of Domitius Cor- 
I bulo, was first married to L. Lamia JSmilianus, 
j and afterward to the Emperor Domitian. In 
! consequence of her adulterous intercourse with 
| Paris, an actor, Domitian repudiated her, but 
was afterward reconciled to her. She was 
! privy to Domitian 's murder. 

DomMa Gexs, plebeian, was divided into the 
J two illustrious families of Ahexobaebus and 
; Calvixus. 

Domitiaxus, or, with his full name, T. Flavius 
; Domttiaxus Augustus, Roman emperor A.D. 
j 81-96, was the younger son of Yespasian, and 
i was b'orn at Rome A.D. 51. "When Yespasian 
i was proclaimed emperor by the legions in the 
, East (69), Domitian, who was then at Rome, 
narrowly escaped being murdered by Yitellius, 
' and concealed himself until the victory of his 
father's party was decided. After the fall of 
' Yitellius, Domitian was proclaimed Caesar, and 
obtained the government of the city till the re- 
, turn of his father. In this short time he gave 
full proofs of his sanguinary and licentious tem- 
per. Yespasian intrusted Domitian with no 
public affairs, and during the ten years of his 
reign (69-79), Domitian lived as a private per- 
son on an estate near the Alban Mount, sur- 
rounded by a number of courtesans, and devot- 
ing a great part of his time to the composition 
of poetry and the recitation of his productions. 
During "the reign of his brother Titus (79-81); 
he was also not allowed to take any part in pub- 
he affairs. On the death of Titus (81), which 
was in all probability the work of Domitian. he 
was proclaimed emperor by the soldiers. Dur- 
ing the first few years of his reign he kept a 
strict superintendence over the governors of 



DOMITIUS AFER. 



DORIS. 



provinces, enacted several useful laws, endeav- 
ored to correct the licentious conduct of the 
higher classes; and though he indulged him- 
self in strange passions, his government was 
much better than had been expected. But his 
conduct was soon changed for the worse. His 
wars were mostly unfortunate; and his want 
of success both wounded his vanity and excited 
his fears, aud thus led him to delight in the mis- 
fortune- and sufferings of others. In 83 he un- 
dertook an expedition against the Chatti, which 
was attended with no result, though on his re- 
turn to Rome in the following year he celebra- 
ted a triumph, and assumed the name of Ger- 
manicuft Iu 85, Agricola, whose success and 
merits excited his jealousy, was recalled to 
Rome. Vid. Agricola. From 86 to 90 he had 
to carry on war with Decebalus and the Daci- 
ans, who defeated the Romau armies, and at 
length compelled Domitian to purchase peace 
on very humiliating terms. Vid. Decebalus. 
It was after the Dacian war especially that he 
gave full sway to his cruelty and tyranny. No 
man of distinction was safe unless he would 
degrade himself to flatter the tyrant. The silent 
fear which prevailed in Rome and Italy during 
the latter years of Domitian's reign are briefly 
but energetically described by Tacitus in the 
introduction to his Life of Agricola, and his vices 
and tyranny are exposed in the strongest colors 
by the withering satire of Juvenal. All the 
philosophers who lived at Rome were expelled. 
Christian writers attribute to him a persecution 
of the Christians likewise, but there is some 
doubt upon the matter ; and the belief seems 
to have arisen from the strictness with which 
he exacted the tribute from the Jews, and which 
may have caused much suffering to the Chris- 
tians also. Many conspiracies had been formed 
against his life, but had been discovered. At 
length three officers of his court, Parthenius, 
Sigerius, and Entellus, whom Domitian intended 
to put to death, assisted by Domitia, the empe- 
ror's wife, had him murdered by Stephanus, a 
freedman, on the ISth of September, 96. 
Domitius Afer. Vid. Afer. 

DOMITIUS CORBULO. Vid. CORBULO. 

Domitius Marsus. Vid. Marsus. 

Domitius Ulpianus. Vid. Ulpianus. 

Domna, Julia, of Emesa, was born of humble 
parents, and married the Emperor Septimius 
Severus when he was in a private station. She 
was beautiful and profligate, but, at the same 
time, gifted with strong powers of mind, and 
fond of literature and of the society of literary 
men. She had great influence over her hus- 
band, and after his death was intrusted by her 
son Caracalla with the administration of the 
most important affairs of state. After the mur- 
der of Caracalla. she was at first kindly treated 
by Macrinus ; but, having incurred the suspi- 
cions of Macrinus, and being commanded to 
quit Autioch, she put an end to her own life by 
voluntary starvation, A.D. 217. 

Donatus. 1. A celebrated grammarian, who 
taught at Rome in the middle of the fourth cen- 
tury, and was the preceptor of Saint Jerome. 
His most famous work is a system of Latin 
Grammar, which has formed the ground-work 
of most elementary treatises upon the same sub- 
ject, from his own time to the present day. It 



has been usually published in the form of twc 
separate tracts: 1. Ars s. Editio Prima, de Ute- 
ris, syllabis, pedibus, et tonis ; 2. Editio Secunda, 
de octo partibus orationis ; to which are com- 
monly annexed De barbarismo, De solcccismo, Dc 
ceteris vitiis ; De metaplasmo, De schematibus ; 
De tropis ; but in the recent edition of Linde- 
mann (in Corpus Gramm. Latin., Lips., 1831) 
these are all combined under one general title, 
Donati Ars Grammatica tribus libriscomprehensa. 
We also possess introductions (enarrationcs) and 
scholia, by Donatus, to five out of the six plays 
of Terence, those to the Heautontimorumenos 
having been lost. They are attached to all com- 
plete editions of Terence.— 2. Tiberius Clau- 
dius, the author of a life of Virgil in twenty -five 
chapters, prefixed to many editions of Virgil. 
Nothing is known with regard to this Donatus ; 
but it has been conjectured that some gramma- 
rian, who flourished about the commencement 
of the fifth century, may have drawn up a bi- 
ography which formed the ground-work of the 
piece we now possess. 

Donusa or Donusia (AovovGta : Aovovccoc : 
now Stenosa), one of the smaller Sporades in 
the iEgean Sea, south of Naxos, subject to the 
Rhodians in early times. It produced green 
marble, whence Virgil (JEn., hi., 125) calls the 
island viridis. Under the Roman emperors it 
was used as a place of banishment, 

Dora, Dorus, Dorum (to, Aupa, Atipoc : Aw- 
ptrr/c), called Dor in the Old Testament, the 
most southerly town of Phoenicia on the coast, 
on a kind of peninsula at the foot of Mount 
Carmel. It was an ancient town, formerly the 
residence of a Canaanitish king, and afterward 
belonged to the tribe of Manasseh. Under the 
Seleucidas it was a strong fortress, and was in- 
cluded in Ccele-Syria. It subsequently fell into 
decay, but was restored and again made a forti- 
fied place by the Roman general Gabinius. 

Dorieus (Aupuvg). 1. Eldest son of Anaxau- 
drides, king of Sparta, by his first wife, was, 
however, born after the son of the second mar- 
riage, Cleomenes, and therefore excluded from 
the immediate succession. Vid. Anaxandrides. 
On the accession of Cleomenes to the throne, 
Dorieus left Sparta to establish for himself a 
kingdom elsewhere. He led his colony first to 
Libya ; but, driven away thence, he passed over 
to Eryx in Sicily, where he fell in a battle with 
the Egestasans and Carthaginians, about B.C. 
508. — 2. Son of Diagoras of Rhodes (vid. Diag- 
oras), was celebrated for his victories in all the 
great Grecian games. He settled in Thurii. 
and from this place, after the defeat of the Athe- 
nians at Syracuse, he led thirty galleys to the 
aid of the Spartan cause in Greece, B.C. 412. 
He continued to take an active part in the war 
till 407, when he was captured by the Athe- 
nians ; but the people, in admiration of his ath- 
letic size and noble beauty, dismissed him with - 
out so much as exacting a ransom. He is said 
at a later time to have been put to death by the 
Spartans. 

Doris (Aupic). I. Daughter of Oceanus and 
Tethys, wife of her brother Nereus, and mother 
of the Nereides. The Latin poets sometimes 
use the name of this divinity for the sea itself, 
(Virg., Eclog., x., 5). — 2. One of the Nereides, 
daughter of the preceding. — [3. Born at Locri. 

269 



DORIS. 



DRAGON. 



daughter of Xenetus, wife of Dionysius the elder, 1 Doeso, C. Fabius, greatly distinguished him- 
and°mother of the younger Dionysius of Syra- 1 self when the Capitol was besieged by the Gauls 

B.C. 890. The Fabian gens was accustomed 
to celebrate a sacrifice at a fixed time on the 
Quirinal Hill, and accordingly, at the appointed 
time, C. Dorso, who was then a young man, de- 
scended from the Capitol, carrying the sacred 
things in his hands, passed in safety through 
the enemy's posts, and, after performing the 
sacrifice, returned in safety to the Capitol. 

Doe us (Aupog), the mythical ancestor of the 
Dorians, is described either as the son of Hellen 
by the nymph Orse'is, and a brother of Xuthus, 
and uEolus, or as a son of Apollo and Phthia. 
! and a brother of Laodocus and Polypcetes. 

[Doryclus (AopvKlog). 1. An illegitimate 
son of Priam, slain by the Telamonian Ajax. — 2. 
Brother of Pheneus, king of Thrace, husband 
of Beroe, who is mentioned bv Virgil (JEn., 5, 
620.)] 

Doryljeum (Aopv?i,aiov : AopvXaevg : mm Elsli- 



cuse.] 

Doris (Atopic;). 1. A small and mountainous 
country in Greece, formerly called Deyopis (Apv- 
oittg), was bounded by Thessaly on the north, 
by JEtolia on the west, by Locris on the south, 
■\nd by Phocis on the east. It contained four 
towns, Bourn, Citinium, Erineus, and Pindus, 
which formed the Dorian tetrapolis. These 
towns never attained any consequence, and in 
the time of the Romans were in ruins ; but the 
country is of importance as the home of the 
Dorians (Auptsic : Dores), one of the great Hel- 
lenic races, who claimed descent from the myth- 
ical Dorus. Vid. Dor us. The Dorians, how- 
ever, had not always dwelt in this land. He- 
rodotus relates (i., 56) that they first inhabited 
Phthiotis in the time of Deucalion ; that next, 
inder Dorus, they inhabited Histiaeotis, at the 
loot of Ossa and Olympus ; that, expelled from 



thence by the Cadmeans, they settled on Mount j Shekr), a town in Phrygia Epictetus, on th 

River Thymbris, with warm baths which ar 
used at the present day ; important under th 
Their fifth and last migration was to Pelopon- J Romans as the place from which the roads d; 



Pindus ; and that they subsequently took up 
their abode in Dryopis, afterward called Doris. 



nesus, which they conquered, according to tra 
dition, eighty years after the Trojan war. It 
was related that JEgimius, the king of the Do- 
rians, had been driven from his dominions by 
the Lapithas, but was reinstated by Hercules ; 
that the children of Hercules hence took refuge 
n this land when they had been expelled from 
Peloponnesus ; and that it was to restore them 
to their rights that the Dorians invaded Pelo- 
ponnesus. Accordingly, the conquest of Pelo- 
ponnesus by the Dorians is usually called the 
Return of the Heraclidae. Vid. Heeaclid^e. 
The Dorians were divided into three tribes : the 
Hylleis ('T?J.elc), Pamphyli (Ildu(pv?.oi), and Dy- 
manes (Av/liuvsc). The first derived their name 
from Hyllus, son of Hercules, the two last from 
Pamphylus and Dymas, sons of ^Egimius. The 
Dorians were the ruling class throughout Pelo- 
ponnesus : the old inhabitants were reduced to 
slavery, or became subjects- of the Dorians un- 
der the name of Periceci (UepioiKoi). Vid. Diet. 
o/" Antiq., art Periceci. — 2. A district in Asia 
Minor, consisting of the Dorian settlements on 
the coast of Caria and the neighboring islands. 
Six of these towns formed a league, called the 
Dorian hexapolis, consisting of Lindus, Italysus, 
and Camirus in the island of Rhodes, the island 
Cos, and Cnidus and Haliearnassus on the main 
land. There were also other Dorian settlements 
in the neighborhood, but they were never ad- 
mitted to the league. The members of the 
hexapolis were accustomed to celebrate a fes- 
: ival with games on the Triopian promontory 
near Cnidus, in honor of the Triopian Apollo ; 
the prizes in those games were brazen tripods, 
which the victors had to dedicate in the temple 
>f Apollo ; and Haliearnassus was struck out 
of the league because one of her citizens ear- 
ned the tripod to his own house instead of leav- 
ing it in the temple. The hexapolis thu 
came a pentapolis. 

Doriscus (AopioKog), a town in Thrace at the 
mouth of the Hebrus, in the midst of an exten- 
sive plain of the same name, where Xerxes re- 
viewed his vast forces. 

[Dorsexnus. Vid. Dossexxus. 
270 



verged to Pessinus, Iconium, and Apamea. 

Dosiadas (Auotddac), of Rhodes, the author 
of two poems in the Greek Anthology, the versus 
i of which are so arranged that each poem pre- 
I sents the profile of an altar. 

[Dositheus (Auaideoc), a Greek historian, of 
whom four works are mentioned, Ilkealku. Ar- 
diatcd, 'lra?UKu, HeloTztSai.'] 

Dositheus (AuaWeoc), surnanied Magister, a 
Greek grammarian, taught at Rome about A.D: 
207. He has left behind him a work entitled 
'Epfi?]vevfxaTa, of which the first and second 
books contain a Greek grammar written in Latin, 
and Greek-Latin and Latin-Greek glossaries. 
The third book, which is the most important 
contains translations from Latin authors into 
Greek, and vice versa, and has been published 
separately by Bocking, Bonn, 1832. 

Dossenxus Fabius or Dorsexxus, an ancient 
Latin comic dramatist, censured by Horace (Ep.. 
ii., 1, 173) on account of the exaggerated buf- 
foonery of his characters. It appears that the 
name Dossenus (like that of Macclms) was ap- 
propriated to one of the standard characters in 
the Atellane farces. Hence some have sup- 
posed that Dossennus in Horace is not the name 
of a real person. 

Dotium (Aunov : Aunevg), a town and plain 
in Thessaly, south of Mount Ossa, on the Lake 
Boebeis. 

[Doxo (Aur6), one of the Xereids (11., 18, 48).] 
[Dotus (Aurog), a leader of the Paphlago- 
nians in the army of Xerxes, Herodi] 

Drabescus (Apu6rj(7Kog, also Apd6iaKog : now 
Drama), a town in the district of Edonis iij 
Macedonia, on the Strymon. 

Dracaxon (Apdnavov), a town and promon- 
tory in the island Icaria. 

[Dr actus ( Apdatog), a leader of the Epeans 
be- 1 (early inhabitants of Elis) before Troy.] 

Dracox (Apdnuv), the author of the first writ- 
; ten code of laws at Athens, which were called 
i -&ecfioL, as distinguished from the voftoi of Solon. 
I In this code he affixed the penalty of death to 
! almost all crimes — to petty thefts, for instance, 
as well as to sacrilege and murder — which gave 



DRANCES. 



DHUSUS. 



occasion to the remark that his laws were writ- 
ten, not in ink, but in blood. We are told that 
he himself defended this extreme harshness by 
saying that small offences deserved death, and 
that he knew no severer punishment for great 
ones. His legislation is placed in B.C. 621. 
After the legislation of Solon (594), most of the 
laws of Drawn fell into disuse; but some of 
them were still in force at the end of the Pelo- 
ponnesian war, as, for instance, the law which 
permitted the injured husband to slay the adul- 
terer, if taken in the act. We are told that 
Drac'on died at ^Egina, being smothered by the 
number of lints and cloaks showered upon him as 
a popular mark of honor in the theatre. 

[Drancks. an Italian, favorite of Latinus, a 
persevering opponent of the plans of Turnus.] 

Drangiana (Apayyiav?} : now Sedjestdn), a 
part of Ariana, was bounded by Gedrosia, par- 
mania, Arachosia, and Aria. It sometimes 
formed a separate satrapy, but was more usu- 
ally united to the satrapies either of Arachosia, 
or of Gedrosia, or of Aria. The chief product 
of the country was tin : the chief river was the 
Erymanthus or Erymandrus (now Hilmend or 
Hindmend). In the north of the country dwelt 
the Drang^e (Apdyyat), a warlike people, from 
whom the province derived its name : their 
capital was Prophthasia. The Zaraugae, Sa- 
rangae, or Daranda?, who are also mentioned as 
inhabitants of the country, are probably only 
other forms of the name Drauga?. The Ariaspae 
inhabited the southern part of the province. Vid. 
Ariaspje. 

Draudacum (now Dardasso), a fortress of the 
Penestae in Greek Illyria. 

Dravus (now Dravc), a tributary of the Dan- 
ube, rises in the Noric Alps near Aguntum, flows 
through Noricum and Pannonia, and, after re- 
ceiving the Murius (now Muhr), falls into the 
Danube east of Mursa (now EssecTc). 

Drecaxoi (Apenavov), a promontory on the 
western side of the island Cos. 

Drepanics, Latinus Paoatus, a friend of 
Ausonius, and a correspondent of Symmachus, 
delivered a panegyric on the Emperor Theodo- 
sius, A.D^391, after the victory of the latter 
over Maximus. This panegyric, which is ex- 
tant, is the eleventh in the collection of the. 
Panegyrici Vcteres. 

Drepanum (Apexavov : Aperravevc), that is, a 
sickle. 1. Also Drepana (to, ApeTrava), more 
rarely Drepanv: (now Trapani), a sea-port town 
in the northwestern corner of Sicily, so called 
because the land on which it was built was in 
the form of a siekle. It was founded by the 
Carthaginian ! I imilcar at the commencement of 
the first Punic War, and was one of the chief 
naval stations of the Carthaginians. Under the 
Romans it was an important commercial town, 
it was here that Auchises died, according to 
Virgil — 2. A promontory iu Achaia. Vid. Rhtum. 
— 3. The ancient name of Corcyra. — 4. Also 
Drepanf, a town in Bithynia, on the Sinus As- 
taeenua, the birth-place of Helena, mother of 
Constantine the Great, in whose honor it was 
caUed Helenopolis, and made an important 
place. In its neighborhood were warm medi- 
cinal baths, which Constantine the Great fre- 
quently used in the latter part of his life. 

Drepsa (Apttpa, also "Adpaiba, Adpaiba, Apdiba- 



tea : now Andcrab or Inderal), a town in the 
northeast of Bactriaua, on the frontiers of Sog- 
j diana. 

Dril.e (ApVAai), a brave people in Pontus, on 
the frontiers of Colchis, near Trapezus. 

Drilo, a river iu Illyricum, flows into the 
Adriatic near Lissus. 

Dromicii^tes (Apo/j,ixatri]£), a king of the 
Getae, who took Lysimachus prisoner. Vid. 
Lysimachus. 

Dromos^Achilleus. Vid. Achilleus Dromos. 

Druextia (now Durance), a large and rapid 
river in Gallia Narbonensis, rises iu the Alps, 
and flows into the Rhone near Avenio (now 
Avignon). 

Drxjxa (now Drome), a small river in Gallia 
]S T arbonensis, rises iu the Alps, and flows into the 
Rhone south of Valencia (now Valence). 

Drusilla. 1. LrviA, mother of the Emperor 
Tiberius and wife of Augustus. Vid. Livia. — 
2. Daughter of Germanicus and Agrippina, mar- 
ried first to L. Cassius Longinus, and afterward 
to M. iEmilius Lepidus ; but she lived in inces- 
tuous intercourse with her brother Caligula, 
whose passion for her exceeded all bounds. On 
her death in A.D. 38, he commanded that she 
should be worshipped, by the name Panthea, 
with the same honors as Venus. — 3. Daughter 
of Herodes Agrippa I., king of the Jews, mar- 
ried first Azizus, king of Emesa, whom she di- 
vorced, and secondly Felix, the procurator of 
Judaea. She was present with her husband when 
St. Paul preached before Felix in A.D. 60. 

Drusus, the name of a distinguished family 
of the Livia gens. It is said that one of the 
Livii acquired the cognomen Drusus for him- 
self and his descendants by having slain in 
close combat one Drausus, a Gallic chieftain ;. 
but this statement deserves little credit. — 1. M. 
Livius Drusus, tribune of the plebs with C. 
Gracchus, B.C. 122. He was a staunch ad- 
herent of the aristocracy, and after putting his 
veto upon the laws j^roposed by Gracchus, he- 
brought forward almost the veiy same meas- 
ures, in order to gain popularity for the senate, 
and to impress the people with the belief that 
the optimates were their best friends. The suc- 
cess of this system earned for him the designa- 
tion jxttromts senatus. Drusus was consul 112,. 
obtained Macedonia as his j)rovince, and con- 
quered the Scordisci. — 2. M. Livius Drusus, son 
of No. 1, an eloquent orator, and a man of great 
energy and ability. He was tribune of the 
plebs 91, iu the consulship of L. Mareius Philip- 
pus and Sex. Julius Caesar. Although, like his. 
father, he belonged to the aristocratical party, 
he meditated the most extensive and organic 
changes in the Roman state. To conciliate the 
people he renewed several of the measures of 
the Gracchi. He proposed and carried laws for 
the distribution of corn or for its sale at a low 
price, and for the assignation of public land. 
He also gained the support of the Latiui and 
the Socii by promising to secure for them the 
Roman citizenship. Thus strengthened, he pro- 
posed to transfer the judicia from the equites to 
the senate ; but, as a compensation to the former 
order, he further proposed that the senate, now 
reduced below the regular number of three hund- 
red, should be re-enforced by the introduction 
of an equal number of new members selected 
271 



DRrsrs. 



DRYOPE. 



from the equites. This measure proved un- 
satisfactory to both parties. The Roman pop- 
ulace also were opposed to the Roman fran- 
chise being given to the Latins and the Soeii. 
The senate, perceiving the dissatisfaction of all 
parties, voted that all the laws of Drusus, be- 
ing earned against the auspices, were null and 
void from the beginning. Drusus now began 
to organize a formidable conspiracy against the 
government ; but one evening, as he was enter- 
ing the hall of his own house, he was stabbed, 
and died a few hours afterward. The assassin 
was never discovered, and no attempts were 
made to discover him. Caepio and Philippus 
were both suspected of having suborned the 
crime ; but Cicero attributes it to Q. Yarius. 
The death of Drusus destroyed the hopes of the 
Soeii, and was thus immediately followed by the 
Social "War. — 3. Lrvirs Drusus Claudiaxus, 
father of Livia, who was the mother of the Em- j 
peror Tiberius. He was one of the gens Clau- 1 
dia, and was adopted by a Livius Drusus. It 
was through this adoption that the Drusi be- 
came connected with the imperial family. The j 
lather of Livia, after the death of Caesar, es- 
poused the cause of Brutus and Cassius, and, 
after the battle of Philippi (-42), being proscribed j 
by the conquerors, he killed himself in his tent ! 
— 4. Xero Claudius Drusus, commonly called 
by the moderns Drusus Senior, to distinguish j 
him from Kb. o, was the son of Tib. Claudius 
Nero and Livia, and younger brother of the t 
Emperor Tiberius. He was born in the house 
of Augustus three months after the marriage 
of Livia and Augustus, 38. Drusus, as he grew 
im was more liked by the people than was his ; 
brother. His manners were affable, and his 
conduct without reproach. He married Anto- 
nia, the daughter of the triumvir, and his fideli- 
fcy to his wife was a theme of admfration in a 
profligate age. He was greatly trusted by Au- } 
gustus, who employed him in important offices. 
He carried on the war against the Germans, 
and penetrated far into the interior of the coun- 
try. In 12 he drove the Sicambri and their 
allies out of GauL crossed the Rhine, then fol- ! 
lowed the course of the river down to the ocean, 
an<i subdued the Frisians. It was apparently ] 
during this campaign that Drusus dug a canal 
i Fossa Drusiana) froni the Rhine, near Arnheim, 
to the Yssel, near Doesberg ; and he made use j 
of this canal to sail from the Rhine into the 
eean. In his second campaign (11), Drusus 
subdued the Usipetes, invaded the country of 
the Sicambri, and passed on through the terri- 
tory of the Cherusci as far as the Tisurgis (now 
in so-). On his return he was attacked by the 
united forces of the Germans, and defeated 
them with great slaughter. In his third cam- 
paign (10) he conquered the Chatti and other 
German tribes, and then returned to Rome, 
where he was made consul for the following 
year. In his fourth campaign (9), which he 
earned on as consul, he advanced as far as the 
Albis (now Elbe), sweeping every thing before 
him. It io said that he had resolved to cross 
the Elbe, but was deterred by the apparition of 
a woman of dimensions greater than human, who 
said to him in the Latin tongue. " Whither goest 
thou, insatiable Drusus ! The Fates forbid^thee 
to advance. Awav ! The end of thv deeds and 



thy life is nigh." On the return of the armv 
to the Rhine, Drusus died in consequence of "a 
fracture of his leg. which happened through a 
fall from his horse. Upon receiving tidings of 
the dangerous illness of Drusus, Tiberius im- 
mediately crossed the Alps, and, after travelling 
with extraordinary speed, arrived in time to 
close the eyes of his brother. Tiberius brought 
the body to Italy : it was burned in the field of 
Mars, and the ashes deposited in the tomb of 
Augustus. — 5. Drusus C-esar, commonly called 
by modern writers Drusus Junior, was the son 
of the Emperor Tiberius by his first wife. Yip- 
sania. He married Livia, the sister of Ger- 
manieus. After the death of Augustus, AD. 
14, he was sent into Pannonia to quell the mu- 
tiny of the legions. In 15 he was consul, and 
in 16 he was sent into Hlyrieum: he succeeded 
in fomenting dissension among the Germanic 
tribes, and destroyed the power of Maroboduus. 
In 21 he was consul a second time ; and in 22 
he received the tribunicia potesias, by which he- 
was pointed out as the intended successor to the 
empire. But Sejanus, the favorite of Tiberius, 
aspired to the empire. He seduced Livia, the 
wife of Drusus, and persuaded her to become 
the murderer of her husband. A poison was 
administered to Drusus, which terminated his 
life by a lingering disease, that was supposed 
at the time to be the consequence of intempe: 
ance, AJD. 23. — 6. Drusus, second son of Ger- 
manieus and Agrippina. After the death of 
Drusus, the son of Tiberius (vid. Xo. 5), Drusus 
and his elder brother Xero became the heirs 
to the imperial throne. Sejanus therefore re- 
solved to get rid of them both. He first engaged 
Drusus in the plots against his elder brother, 
which ended in the banishment and death of that 
prince. Yid. Xero. The turn of Drusus came 
next. He was accused in 30, and condemned t 
death as an enemy of the state. Tiberius kept 
him imprisoned for three years, and then starved 
him to death, 33. 

Dryades. Yid, Xympile. 

Dryas (Apvac). 1. Son of the Thraeian king 
Lycurgus, who is hence called Dryaxtides. — 
[2. One of the Lapithae, friend of Pirithous (R.. 
vL, 130). — 3. Son of the Thraeian Mng Lycur- 
gus, slain by his own father in a fit of phreusy 
brought upon him by Bacchus.] 

DEi'iLEA or Deymus (Apvfiaia, Apv/uoc : Api- 
fiievc : now Baba ?), a town in Phocis, a little 
south of the Cephisus, was destroyed by 
Xerxes. 

[Drymo, a nymph, a companion of Cyrene.] 
Drymus (Ipvuoc). 1. Yid. Drym^e. — 2. A 

strong place in Attica, on the frontiers of Bce- 

otia. 

Drymussa (Apvfiovaca : Apv/iovacraioc), an isl- 
and in the Hermaean Gulf, off the coast of Ionia, 
opposite Clazomenae ; given by the Romans to 

Clazomenae. 

Dryope (Api-o-^), daughter of King Dryops. 
and the playmate of the Hamadryades on Mount 
CEta. She" was beloved by Apollo, who. to gain 
possession of her, metamorphosed himself int- 
a tortoise. Dryope took the creature into her 
lap. whereupon "the god changed himself into a 
serpent The nymphs fled away in affright, 
and thus Apollo remained alone with Dryop-:- 
Soon after she married Andraeinon. but became 



DRYOPES. 



DURIUS. 



by Apollo, the mother of Amphissus, who built 
the town of (Eta, and a temple to Apollo. Dry- 
ope was afterward carried off by the Hamadry- 
ades, and became a nymph. 

Dryotes (ApvoKeg), a Pelasgic people, de- 
scended from a mythical ancestor Dryops, dwelt 
first in Thtssaly, from the Spereheus to Parnas- 
. sus, and afterward in Doris, which was called 
from them Dryopis (Apvomg). Driven out of 
Doris by the Dorians, they migrated to other 
countries, and settled in Peloponnesus, Eubcea, 
and Asia Miuor. 

Dryops (Apuo4>). 1« S° n of the river-god Sper- 
cheus and the Danaid Polydora, or of Lycaon 
and Dia, the daughter of Lycaon, the mythical 
ancestor of the Dryopes.— [2. An illegitimate 
son of Priam, slain by Achilles. — 3. A compan- 
ion of JEneas. slain by Clausus.] 

Drtos Cepiial.k (Apvde Keya/Mt), a narrow 
pass of Mount Citlueron, between Athens and 
Platasae. 

Dubk (now Doubs), a river in Gaul, rises in 
Mount Jurassus (now Jura), flows past Vesontio 
(now Besanroic), and falls into the Arar (now 
Saonc) near Cabillouum (now Chalons). 

Dubris Portus (now Dover), a sea-port town 
of the Cantii. in Britain : here was a fortress 
erected by the Romans against the Saxon pi- 
rates. 

DucaSj Michael, a Byzantine historian, held 
a high office under Coustautiue XIII., the last 
emperor of Constantinople. After the capture 
of Constantinople A.D. 1453, he fled to Lesbos. 
His history extends from the death of John VI. 
Palasologus, 1355, t<> the capture of Lesbos by 
the Turks, 1462. The work is written in bar- 
barous Greek, but gives a clear and impartial 
account of events. The best edition is bv Bek- 
ker, Bonn, 1834. 

Ducetius (Aovturiog), a chief of the Sicelians 
or Sieeli, the native tribes in the interior of 
Sicily, carried on a formidable war in the mid- 
dle of the fifth century B.C. against the Greeks 
in the island. Having been at last defeated in 
a great battle by the Syracusans, he repaired to 
Syracuse as a suppliant, and placed himself at 
then* mercy. The Syracusans spared his life, 
but sent him into au honorable exile at Corinth. 
He returned soon afterward to Sicily, and found- 
ed the city of Calacte. He died about B.C. 440. 

Duilius. 1. M., tribune of the plebs B.C. 
471. He was one of the chief leaders of the 
plebeians, and it was on his advice that the 
plebeians migrated from the Aventine to the 
Mons Sacer, just before the overthrow of the 
decemvirs. He w as then elected tribune of the 
plebs a second time, 449. — 2. K., one of the de- 
cemvirs, 450, on whose overthrow he went into 
voluntary exile. — 8. C, consul 260, with Cn. 
Cornelius Scipio Asina, in the first Punic "War. 
In this year the Romans built their first fleet, 
usiug for their model a Carthaginian vessel 
which had been thrown on the coast of Italy. 
The command of this fleet was given to Scipio, 
who was defeated by the Carthaginians off Li- 
para. Thereupon Duilius was intrusted with 
the command, and as he perceived the disad- 
vantages under which the clumsy ships of the 
Romans were laboring, he devised the well- 
known grappling irons, by means of which the 
enemy's ships might be drawn toward his, and 
18 



the sea-fight thus changed into a land-fight. By 
this means he gained a brilliant victory over the 
Carthaginian fleet near Mylae, and then prose 
cuted the war in Sicily with success, relieving 
Egesta, and taking Macella by assault. On his 
return to Rome, Duilius celebrated a splendid 
triumph, for it was the first naval victory that 
the Romans had ever gained, and the memory 
of it was perpetuated by a column which was 
erected in the forum, and adorned with the 
beaks of the conquered ships (Columna JRostrata). 
It is generally believed that the original inscrip- 
tion which adorned the basis of the column is 
still extant. It was dug out of the ground in 
the sixteenth _ century, in a mutilated condition, 
and it has since often been printed with at- 
tempts at restoration. There are, however, in 
that inscription some orthographical peculiari- 
ties, which suggest that the present inscription 
is a later restoration "of the original one. Du- 
ilius was further rewarded for this victory by 
being permitted, whenever he returned home 
from a banquet at night, to be accompanied by 
a torch and a flute-player. 

Dulgibixi, a people in Germany, dwelt south- 
east of the Angrivarii, on the western bank of 
the Weser. 

DULICHIUM. Vid. ECHINADES. 

Dumnorix, a chieftain of the .^Edui, conspired 
against the Romans B.C. 58, but was then par- 
doned by Cassar in consequence of the entreaties 
of his brother Divitiacus. When Caesar was 
going to Britain in 54, he suspected Dumnorix 
too much to leave him behind in Gaul, and he 
insisted, therefore, on his accompanying him. 
Dumnorix, upon this, fled from the Roman camp 
with the iEduan cavalry, but was overtaken and 
slain. 

DUNIUM. Vid. DUROTRIGES. 

Dura (tu Aovpa : Aovpr/vog). 1. A town in 
Mesopotamia, on the Euphrates, not far from 
Circesium, founded by the Macedonians, and 
hence surnamed Nicanoris ; also called Europus 
(EvpuTTos) by the Greeks. In the time of Julian 
it was deserted. — 2. (Now Dor), a town in As- 
syria, on the Tigris. 

Duranius (now Dordogne), a river m Aqui- 
tania, which falls into the Garumna. 

Duria (now Dora Baited), a river which rises 
in the south of the Alps, flows through the coun- 
try of the Salassi, bringing gold dust with it, and 
falls into the Po. 

Duris (Aovpic), oMJamos, the historian, was 
a descendant of Alcibiades, and lived in the 
reign of Ptolemy Philadelphus. He obtained 
the tyranny of his native island, though it is 
unkown by what means. He wrote a con- 
siderable number of works, of which the most- 
important was a history of Greece, from B.C. 
370 to 281. He does not appear to have en- 
joyed any very great reputation as an historian 
among the ancients. His fragments have been 
collected by Hulleman, Duridis Samii qitce su- 
persunt, Traject. ad Rhen., 1841 ; [and by Mul- 
ler, Hist. Grcec. Fragm., vol. ii., p. 466-488.] 

Durius (Aovpiog, Aupiog : now Duero,Douro), 
one of the chief rivers of Spain, rises among the 
Pelendones. at the foot of Mount Idubeda, near 
Numantia, and flows into the Atlantic ; it was 
auriferous, and is navigable a long way from its 
mouth. 

273 



DUROBRIY^E. 



ECBATAXA. 



Dcbobrit^e (now Rochester), a town of the 
Cantii in Britain. 

Dcrocasis (now Dreux), a town of the Car- 
Hates in Gallia Lugdunensis. 

Durocatelauxi. Yid. Catalauxi. 

Durocortorcm (now Rheims), the capital of 
the Remi in Gallia Belgica, and subsequently 
called Remi, was a populous and powerful town. 

Duroxia, a town in Samnium in Italy, west 
of the Caudine passes. 

Durotriges, a people in Britain, in Dorset- 
shire, and the west of Somersetshire : their 
chief town was Dunium (now Dorchester). 

DraovERXor or Darverxoi (now Canter- 
bury), a town of the Cantii in Britain, after- 
ward called Cantuaria. 

Dtardaxes or OZdaxes (now Brahmaputra), 
a river in India, falls into the Ganges on the 
eastern side. 

Dy^ias (Avfiac). 1. Son of iEgimius. from 
whom the Dymanes, one of the three tribes of 
the Dorians, were believed to have derived their 
name. — [2. Father of Asius and of Hecuba, the 
wife of Priam, lived in Phrygia, on the Sanga- 
rius : Hecuba is hence called Dymantis 'proles 
(Ovid. Her., xi. 762) and Dymantis (lb., xiii., 
620). — 3. A Phaeacian, whose daughter was an 
attendant of Xausicaa. — 4 A Trojan, who fought 
by the side of ./Eneas on the night of the capture 
of Troy ; he was killed by his own friends in 
mistake for a Greek whose armor he had put 
on.] 

Dy.m£ or Dym.e (Avjirj, Avfiai : Avjialo^, Dy- 
niaeus. : ruins near Karavostasi), a town in the 
west of Achaia, near the coast ; one of the 
twelve Achaean towns ; it founded, along with 
Patrae, the second Achaean league ; and was at 
a later time colonized by the Romans. 

Dyras (Avpac), a small river in Phthiotis in 
Thessaly, falls into the Sinus Maliacus. 

Dyekhachium (Avp'pdxtov : Avfipdxioc. Avfipa- 
XV v oc, Dyrrachlnus : now Durazzo), formerly 
called Epidamxus ('E-'idaiivoc : 'ETriddfivioc), a 
town in Greek Rlyria, on a peninsula in the 
Adriatic Sea. It was founded by the Corcy- 
xaeans, and received the name Epidamnus ; but 
since the Romans considered this name a bad 
omen, as reniinding them of damnum, they 
changed it into Dp'rhaehium when they be- 
came masters of the country. Under the Ro- 
mans it became an important place ; it was the 
usual place of landing f<jj persons who crossed 
over from Brundisium. Commerce and trade 
were carried on here with great activity, whence 
it is called Taberna Adrice by Catullus (xxxvi, 
15) ; and here commenced the great Egnatia 
Via leading to the East. In the civil war it was 
the head-quarters of Pompey, who kept all his 
military stores here. In AJ). 345 it was de- 
stroyed by an earthquake. 

Dysorum (to Avcopov), a mountain in Mace- 
donia with gold mines, between Chalcidice and 
Odomantice. 

Dyspoxticm (Avottovtlov : AvcTiOVTioc), an an- 
cient town of Pisatis in Elis, north of the Al- 
pheus, was destroyed by the Eleans, whereupon 
its inhabitants removed to Epidamnus and Apol- 
lonia. 



[Eblana ('EC/.aia), a city of the Eblani in 
274 



Hibernia, on the eastern coast, probably answer ; 
ing to the modern Dublin.'] 

EbSra. 1. Or Ebura Cerealis, a small town 
in Hispania Baetica, perhaps in the neighbor- 
hood of the modern Sta Cruz. — 2. Suraameu 
Liberalitas Julia (now Evora), a Roman mu- 
nicipium in Lusitania. — 3. Or Ebtjra (now S. 
Lucar dc Barrameda), a town in Hispania Baeti- 
ca, near the mouth of the Baetis. — 4. A fortress 
of the Edetani in Hispania Tarraconensis. 

Eboracum or Eburacoi (now York), a town 
of the Brigantes in Britain, was made a Roman 
station by Agricola, and soon became the chief 
Roman settlement in the whole island. It was 
both a municipiurn and a colony. It was the 
head-quarters of the sixth legion, and the resi- 
dence of the Roman emperors when they visited 
Britain. Here the emperors Septimius "Severus 
and Constantius Chlorus died. Part of the an- 
cient Roman walls still exist at York ; and 
many Roman remains have been found in the 
modern city. 

Eborolacuai (now Evreule, on the river Si- 
oide), a town in Aquitania, 

Ebroduxoi (now Embrun), a town in Gallia 
Xarbonensis, in the Cottian Alps. 

Est d.e or Hebud^: (now Hebrides), islands in 
the Western Ocean off Britain. They were 
five in number according to Ptolemy, two called 
Ebudae, Maleus, Epidium, and Ricina. 

Eburomagus or Hebromagus (near Bmm ( 
Yillerazons), a town in Gallia Xarbonensis. 

EburGxes, a German people who crossed the 
Rhine and settled in Gallia Belgica, between 
the Rhine and the Mosa (now JIaas), in a marshy 
and woody district. They were dependants 
(dientes) of the Treviri, and were in Caesar's 
time under the rule of Ambiorix and Cativoi- 
cus. Then' insurrection against the Romans. 
B.C. 54, was severely punished by Caesar, and 
from this time they disappear from liistory. 

Eburoyices. Yid. Aulerci. 

Ebusus or Ebusus (now Iviza), the largest oi 
the Pityusae Insulae, off the eastern coast of 
Spain, reckoned by some writers among the 
Baleares. It was celebrated for its excellent 
figs. Its capital also called Ebusus, was a 
civitas fcederata, possessed an excellent harbor, 
was well built, and carried on a considerable 
trade. 

Ecba.ta.xa (to. 'ExCdrava, Ion. and Poet. "A; - 
Bdrava : now Hamadan), a great city, most 
pleasantly situated, near the foot of Mount 
Orontes, in the north of Great Media, was the 
capital of the Median kingdom, and afterward 
the summer residence of the Persian and Par- 
thian kings. Its foundation was more ancient 
than any historical record: Herodotus ascribe- 
it to Deioees, and Diodorus to Semiramis. It 
had a circuit of two hundred and forty stadia, 
and was surrounded by seven walls, each over- 
topping the one before it, and crowned with 
battlements of different colors : these walls no 
longer existed in the time of Polybius. The 
citadel, of great strength, was used as the roya! 
treasury. Below it stood a magnificent pakce, 
the tiles of which were silver, and the capital;, 
entablatures, and wainscotings of silver and 
gold ; treasures which the Seleucidae coinod ic:. 
money, to the amount of four thousand talent-. 
The circuit of this place was seven stadia. 



ECDIPPA. 



ECPHAMTDES. 



[EcDiprA ('EftSt-Tra), in the Old Testament 
Achsib, a city of Palestine, on the coast, between 
Tyre and Ptolemais.] 

Ecetra (Ecetrauus), an ancient town of the 
Volsei, and, according to Dionysius, the capital 
of this people, was destroyed .by the Romans at 
an early period. 

[Echeci.ks ('EA'f *///£■)• 1- Son of Actor, and 
husband of Polymela. — 2. Of Ephesus, a Cynic 
philosopher, pupil of Theombrotus.] 

[Echecli's ('E^f/cAoc). 1. Son of Agenor, 
slain by Acliilles. — 2. Another Trojan, men- 
tioned in the Iliad, slain by Patroclus.] 

[Echecrates ('E^eA-oar?^). 1. Father of Eeti- 
on, grandfather of Cypselus, tyrant of Corinth. — 
2. A philosopher, one of the latest of the Pytha- 
gorean school, a pupil of Arehytas at Tarentum. 
When the Pythagoreans were persecuted in 
Magna Groecia, he went to Rhegium, and thence 
to Phlius. This is the same as the one men- 
tioned in the Phasdon of Plato : by some writers 
lie is called a teacher of Plato.] 

[Echecratides ( , Ex£Kparid / ng). 1. Father of 
Orestes, king in Thessaly. — 2. A Sophist, a 
friend of Phocion. — 3. Of Methymna in Lesbos, 
a peripatetic philosopher, pupil of Aristotle.] 

Echedorus ('Extdupoc, in Herod., E^eiOwpoc), 
a small river in Macedonia, rises in Crestonia, 
flows through Mygdonia, and falls into the Ther- 
maic Gulf. 

Echelid.e ('E^'f / tdai : 'Ejc/i ISijc), an Attic 
demus east of Munychia, called after a hero 
Echelus. 

[Eciiemox ('E^jy/iwr), a sou of Priam, slain by 
Diomedes.] 

Echemls ("Ext iwr), son of Aeropus and grand- 
son of Cepheus. succeeded Lycurgus as king of 
Arcadia. In his reigu the Dorians invaded Pe- 
loponnesus, and Eehemua slew, in single com- 
bat, Hyllus, the son of Hercules. In conse- 
quence of this battle, which was fought at the 
isthmus, the Heracli(kv were obliged to promise 
not to repeat their attempt upon Peloponnesus 
for fifty years. 

[Echexeus ('Ex'tvrjog Od.), the oldest of the 
Phasacian nobles at the court of Alcinous.] 

[Echepolus ('EA'i-cjXof). 1. A Trojan, son 
of Thaiysius, slain by Antilochus. — 2. Son of 
Anchises, dwelt in Sicyon ; in order to avoid 
going against Troy with the Greeks, he sent to 
Agamemnon the beautiful mare yEthe.] 

Echestratus ('Ex^rparog), king of Sparta, 
son of Agis I., and father of Labotas or Leobotes. 

Echetla ('E^f'TAG), a town in Sicily, west of 
Syracuse, in the mountains. 

Echetus ('E^'cror), a cruel king of Epirus. 
His daughter, Metope or Amphissa, who had 
yielded to her lover ^Echmodicus, was blinded 
by her father, and .Echmodicus was cruelly mu- 
tilated. 

Echidxa ("E^oVa), daughter of Tartarus and 
Terra (Ge), or of Chrysaor and Callirrhoe, or 
of Peiras and Styx. The upper part of her body 
was that of a beautiful maiden with black eyes, 
while the lower part was that of a serpent, of 
a vast size. She was a horrible and blood- 
thirsty monster. She became by Typhou the 
mother of the Chimajra, of the many-headed 
dog Orthus, of the hiiudred-headed dragon who 
guarded the apples of the Hesperides, of the 
Colchian dragon, of tho sphinx, of Cerberus 



(hence called Echidneus canis), of Scylla, of 
Gorgon, of the Lernaaan Hydra (Echidna Ler- 
ncea), of the eagle which consumed the liver of 
Prometheus, and of the Nemean lion. She was 
killed in her sleep by Argus Panoptes. Accord- 
ing to Hesiod, she lived with Typhon in a 
cave in the country of the Arimi, but anoth- 
er tradition transported her to Scythia, where 
she became by Hercules the mother of Aga- 
thyrsus, Gelonus, and Scythes. (Herod., iv., 
8-10.) 

Echinades ('Exivddeg or 'E x lvaL : now Cur- 
zolari), a group of small islands at the mouth 
of the Achelous, belonging to Acarnania, said 
to have been formed by the alluvial deposits of 
the Achelous. The legend related that they 
were originally nymphs, who dwelt on the main 
land at the mouth of the Achelous, and that, on 
one occasion, having forgotten to present any 
offerings to the god Achelous when they sac- 
rificed to the other gods, the river-god, in wrath, 
tore them away from the main land with the 
ground on which they were sacrificing, carried 
them out to sea, and formed them into islands. 
The Echinades appear to have derived their 
name from their resemblance to the Echinus 
or sea-urchin. The largest of these islands 
was named Dclichium (Aov?dxi.ov). It is men- 
tioned by Homer, and from it Meges, son of 
Phyleus, went to the Trojan war. At the pres- 
ent day it is united to the main land. 

[Echinus ('Exlvog : now Achina), a town and 
promontory in Phthiotis in Thessaly.] 

Echiox ('Extw). 1. One of the five surviving 
Sparti who had grown up from the dragon's 
teeth which Cadmus had sown. He married 
Agave, by whom he became the father of Pen- 
theus : he assisted Cadmus in the building of 
Thebes. — 2. Son of Mercury (Hermes) and An- 
tianlra, twin-brother of Erytus or Eurytus, with 
whom he took part in the Calydonian hunt and 
in the expedition of the Argonauts. — .3. A cel- 
ebrated Grecian painter, nourished B.C. 352. 
One of his most noted pictures was Semiramis 
passing from the state of a handmaid to that of 
a queen ; in this picture the modesty of the new 
bride was admirably depicted. The picture in 
the Vatican, known as " the Aldobrandini Mar- 
riage," is supposed by some to be a copy from 
the " Bride" of Echion. 

Echo ('H^cj), an Oreade, who, according to 
the legend related by Ovid, used to keep Juno 
engaged by incessantly talking to her while Ju- 
piter was sporting with the nymphs. Juno, 
however, found out the trick that was played 
upon her, and punished Echo by changing her 
into an echo, that is, a being with no control 
over its tongue, which is neither able to speak 
before any body else has spoken, nor to be silent 
when some body else has spoken. Echo in this 
state fell desperately in love with Narcissus; 
but as her love was not returned, she pined 
away in grief, so that, in the end, there remain- 
ed nothing of her but her voice. (Ov., Met n 
iii., 356-401.) 

[Eonomus Moxs ('Ekvo(ioc. /,6<j>oc), a mountain 
near Gela, in Sicily, where Phalaris had a castle, 
in which was kept the celebrated brazen bull.] 

Ecphaxtioes ('EKtyavTidqc), one of the earliest 
poets of the old Attic comedy, nourished about 
B.C. 460, a little before Cratinus. The mean- 
275 



ECPHANTUS. 



ELAGABALUS. 



ing of the surname of KaTtvtac, which was given 
to him by his rivals, seems to imply a mixture 
of subtilty and obscurity. He ridiculed the 
rudeness of the old Megaric comedy, and was 
himself ridiculed on the same ground by Cra- 
tinus and Aristophanes. [The few fragments 
of his plays remaining are given in Meineke, 
Fragm. Comic Grcec, vol. i., p. 6-7, edit, minor.] 

[Ecphantus ("EKpavroc), of Thasos, was at the 
head of the party which, in the twenty-third year 
of the Peloponnesian war, aided Thrasybulus in 
gaining Thasos and certain cities of Thrace.] 

Edessa or Antiochta Callirrhoe ("ESeaaa, 
'AvTioxeia V £Kt Ka/JafifioTj, or 'A. fj.t^o6up6apog : 
in the Old Testament, Ur : now &rfah), a very 
ancient city in the north of Mesopotamia, the 
capital of Osroene, and the seat of an independ- 
ent kingdom from B.C. 137 to A.D. 216. Vid. 
Abgarus. It stood on the River Scirtus or Bar- 
desanes, which often inundated and damaged 
the city. It was here that Caracalla was mur- 
dered. Having suffered by an earthquake in 
the reign of Justin I., the city was rebuilt and 
named Justinopolis. The Edessa of Strabo is 
evidently a different place, namely, the city 
usually called Bambyce or Hierapolis. 

Edetani or Sedetani, a people in Hispania 
Tarraconensis, east of the Celtiberi. Their 
chief towns were Valencia, Saguntuk, C^esar- 
augusta, and Edeta, also called Liria (now 
'Lyrid). 

Edoni or Edones ('Rdcovot y R6covec), a Thra- 
cian people, between the Nestus and the Stry- 
mon. They were celebrated for their orgiastic 
worship of Bacchus ; whence Edonis in the 
Latin poets signifies a female Bacchante, and 
Horace says (Carm., ii., 7, 26), Nbtt ego sanius 
hacchabor Edonis. The poets frequently use 
Edoni as synonymous with Thracians. 

Eetiox {'Hst'iov). 1. King of the Hypo-Pla- 
cian Thebe in Cilicia, and father of Andromache, 
the wife of Hector. He and seven of his sons 
were slain by Achilles when the latter took 
Thebe. — [2. King of Imbros, guest-friend of 
Lyeaon, whom Achilles had taken prisoner and 
sold; Eetion ransomed him and sent him to 
Arisbe. — 3. Father of Cypselus, the tvrant of 
Corinth.] 

Egelasta, a town of the Celtiberi in Hispania 
Tarraconensis. 

Egeria. Vid. ^Egeria. 
Egesta. Vid. Segesta. 

Egnatia (now Torre d'Anazzo), a town in 
Apulia, on the coast, called Gnatia by Horace 
(Sat., i., 5, 97), who speaks of it as Lymphis 
(i. e., Nymphis), iratis exstructa, probably on ac- 
count of its bad or deficient supply of water. 
It was celebrated for its miraculous stone or 
altar, which of itself set on fire frankincense 
and wood; a prodigy which afforded amuse- 
ment to Horace and his friends, who looked 
upon it as a mere trick. Egnatia owed its chief 
importance to being situated on the great high 
road from Rome to Brundisium. This road 
reached the sea at Egnatia, and from this town 
to Brundisium it bore the name of the Via 
Egnatia. The continuation of this road on the 
other side of the Adriatic from Dyrrhachium to 
Byzantium also bore the name of the Via Egna- 
tia. It was the great military road between 
Italy and the east. Commencing at Dyrrha- 
276 



chium, it passed by Lychnidus, Heraclea, Lyn 
cestis, Edessa, Thessalonica, Amphipolis' Phi 
lippi, and, traversing the whole of Thrace, final 
ly reached Byzantium. 

Egnatii, a family of Samnite origin, some oi 
whom settled at Teanum. 1. Gellius Egnati 
us, leader of the Samnites in the third Samnite 
war, fell in battle against the Romans B.C. 295. 
— 2. Marius Egnatius, one of the leaders of 
the Italian allies in the Social War, was killed 
in battle, 89. — 3. M. Egnatius Rufus, sedile 20 
and praetor 19, was executed in the following 
year in consequence of his having formed a 
conspiracy against the life of Augustus. — 4. P. 
Egnatius Celer. Vid. Barea. 

Eion ('Hiwv : 'Kiovevc : now Contessa or Rev- 
dina), a town in Thrace, at the mouth of the 
Strymon, twenty-five stadia from Amphipolis, 
of which it was the harbor. Brasidas, after 
obtaining possession of Amphipolis, attempted 
to seize Eion also, but was prevented by the ar- 
rival of Thueydides with an Athenian fleet B.C. 
424. 

Eiones ('Hiovec), a town in Argolis, with a 
harbor, subject to Mycenae in the time of Homer, 
but not mentioned in later times. 

[Eioneus ('Kiovevc). 1. A Greek, slain by 
Hector before Troy. — 2. A Thracian, father of 
Rhesus. — 3. Son of Magnes, one of the suitors 
of Hippodamia.] 

El^ea ('E/Lcua : now Kazlu), an ancient city 
on the coast of iEolis in Asia Minor, said to 
have been founded by Mnestheus, stood twelve 
stadia south of the mouth of the Caicus, and one 
hundred and twenty stadia (or sixteen Romai; 
miles) from Pergamus, to which city, in the time 
of the Pergamene kingdom, it served for a har- 
bor (k-ntvEiov). It was destroyed by an earth- 
quake in B.C. 90. The gulf on which it stood, 
which forms a part of the great Gulf of Adra- 
myttium, was named after it Sinus Elaiticus 
('E/MiriKog k6?,ttoc, now Gulf of Chandeli). 

El^eus ('EXatovc, -ovvroe : 'E?Mtovatoc). 1 
Or Eleus ('EAeofr : now Critia), a town on the 
southeast point of the Thracian Chersonese, 
with a harbor and a heroum of Protesilaus. — 
2. (Now Mesolonghi), a town of ^Etolia, south 
of Pleuron. — 3. A town in Argolis. — 4. A de- 
mus in Attica, belonging to the tribe Hippotho- 
ontis. 

Elagabalus, Roman emperor A.D. 21S-222, 
son of Julia Soemias and Varius Marcellus, was 
born at Ernesa about 205, and was originally call 
ed Varius Avitus Bassianus. While almost a 
child, he became, along with his first cousin 
Alexander Severus, priest of Elagabalus, the 
Syro-Phcenician Sun-god, to whose worship :i 
temple was dedicated in his native city. It was 
from this circumstance that he obtained the 
name Elagabalus, by which he is usually known 
He owed his elevation to the purple to the in- 
trigues of his grandmother Julia Msesa, who 
circulated the report that Elagabalus was the 
offspring of a secret commerce between Soemias 
and Caracalla, and induced the troops in Syria 
to salute him as their sovereign by the title of 
M. Aurelius Antoninus, the 16th of May, 218. 
Macrinus forthwith marched against Elagaba- 
lus, but was defeated «ear Antioch, June 8th. 
and was shortly afterward put to death. Ela 
s^abalus was now acknowledged as emperor 



ELAN A. 



ELEUSIS. 



by the senate, and in the following year came 
to Rome. The reign of this prince, who per- 
ished at the age of eighteen, after having oc- 
cupied the throne nearly four years, was char- 
acterized throughout by an accumulation of the 
most fantastic folly and superstition, together 
with impuritv bo bestial that the particulars 
almost trausceud the limits of credibility. In 
221 he adopted his first cousin Alexander Se- 
verus, and proclaimed him Caesar. Having be- 
come jealous of Alexander, he attempted to put 
him to death, but was himself slain, along with 
his mother Stemias, by the soldiers, with whom 
Alexander was a great favorite. 
Elana. Vid. ./Elana. 

Elara ('EAapa), daughter of Orchomenus or 
Minyas, bore to Jupiter (Zeus) the giant Tityus. 
Jupiter (Zeus), from fear of Juno (Hera), con- 
cealed her under the earth. 

[Elasus ("EXaaoc), a Trojan, slain by Patro- 
clus.J 

Elatea ('EXdreta : 'E?iarevc). 1. (Ruins near 
Elephtha), a town in Phocis, and the most im- 
portant place in the country next to Delphi, was 
situated near the Cephisus in a fertile valley, 
which was au important pass from Thessaly to 
Bceotia. Elatea was thus frequently exposed 
to hostile attacks. It is said to have been 
founded by Elatus, son of Areas. — 2. A town in 
Pelasgiotis in Thessaly, near Gonni. — 3. Or 
Elatrea, a town in Epirus, near the sources 
of the Cocytus. 

Elatus ("EAaroc). 1. Son of Areas and Le- 
anira, king of Arcadia, husband of Laodice, and 
father of Stymphalus, iEpytus, Cyllen, and Pe- 
reus. He resided on Mount Cyllene, and went 
from thence to Phocis, where he fouuded the 
town of Elatea. — 2. A prince of the Lapithae at 
Larissa in Thessaly, husband of Hippea, and 
father of Cameus and Polyphemus. He is 
sometimes confounded with the Arcadian Ela- 
tus. — [3. An ally of the Trojans, slain by Aga- 
memnon. — 1. One of the suitors of Penelope, 
mentioned in the Odyssey.] 

Elaver, (now Allicr), subsequently Elaris or 
Elauris, a river in Aquitania, a tributary of the 
Liger. 

Elbo ('E/,66), an island on the coast of the 
Delta in Egypt, in the midst of the marshes be- 
tween the Phatnitic and the Tanitic mouths of 
the Nile, was the retreat of the blind Pharaoh 
Anysis from the ^Ethiopian Sabaco, and after- 
ward of Amyrt;eus from the Persians. 

Elea. Vid. Veua. 

Electra fHA&trpa), i. ft, the bright or brill- 
iant one. L Daughter of Oceanus "and Tethys, 
wife of Thaumas. and mother of Iris and the 
Harpies, Aello and Ocypete. — 2. Daughter of 
Atlas and Pleione, one of the seven Pleiades, 
;md by Jupiter ( Zeus) mother of Iasion and Dar- 
danus. According to an Italian tradition, she 
was the wife of the Italian king Cory thus, by 
whom she had a son Iasion ; whereas by Jupi- 
ter (Zeus) she was the mother of Dardanus. It 
was through her means, according to another 
tradition, that (fee Palladium came to Troy ; and 
when she saw the city of her son Dardanus 
perishing in flames, she tore out her hair for 
grief, and was placed among the stars as a 
comet. According to others, Electra and her 
six sisters were placed among the stars as the 



seven Pleiades, and lost their brilliancy on see- 
ing the destruction of Ilium. — 3. Sister of Cad- 
mus, from whom the Electrian gate at Thebes 
was said to have received its name. — i. Daugh- 
ter of Agamemnon and Clytaemnestra, also call 
ed Laodice, sister of Iphigenia and Orestes. 
After the murder of her father by her mother, 
she saved the life of her young brother Orestes 
by sending him, under the protection of a slave, 
to King Strophius at Phanote in Phocis, who had 
the boy educated together with his own son 
Pylades. When Orestes had grown up to man- 
hood, Electra excited him to avenge the death 
| of Agamemnon, and assisted him in slaving 
their mother, Clytaemnestra. Vid. Orestes. 
After the death of the latter, Orestes gave her 
in marriage to his friend Pylades. The history 
and character of Electra form the subject of the 
" Choephori" of ^Eschylus, the " Electra" of 
Euripides, and the " Electra" of Sophocles. 

Electrides Insul/e. Vid. Eridanus. 

Electryon ('H?.ektpvg)v), son of Perseus and 
Andromeda, king of Mycenae, husband of Anaxo, 
and father of Alcmene, the wife of Amphitryon. 
For details, vid. Amphitryon. 

Electryone ('H?.eiiTpv6vi]). 1. Daughter of 
Helios and Rhodos. — 2. A patronymic from 
Electiyon, given to his daughter Alcmene. 

Eleon ('ETieuv), a town in Bceotia, near Ta- 
nagra. 

Eleos ("EAeoc), the personification of pity or 
mercy, worshipped by the Athenians alone. 

Elephantine or Elephantis ('EAe^avrtv?/, 
'E?.e(pavTLg : now Jezirah-el-Zahir or Jezirah-c!- 
Assouan), an island in the Nile, with a city of 
the same name, opposite to Syene, and seven 
stadia below the Little Cataract, was the fron- 
tier station of Egypt toward ^Ethiopia, and was 
strongly garrisoned under the Persians and the 
Romans. The island was extremely fertile, the 
vine and the fig-tree never shedding their 
leaves : it had also great quarries. Among the 
most remarkable objects in it were the temple 
of Cnuphis and a Nilometer ; and it is still cel- 
ebrated for the ruins of its rock-hewn temples. 

Elephantis, a Greek poetess under the early 
Roman emperors, wrote certain amatory works 
(molles Elephantidos libelli\ which are referred 
to by Martial and Suetonius. 

Elephenor ('EXefrjvcop), son of Chalcodon 
and of Imenarete or Melanippe, and jDrince of 
the Abantes in Eubcea, whom he led against 
Troy. He was one of the suitors of Helen : he 
was killed before Troy by Agenor. 

Eleusis ('Ehevms, later 'Kkevaiv : 'E?\.evoivtoc : 
now Leosina or Lessina). 1. A town and demus 
of Attica, belonging to the tribe Hippothoontis, 
was situated northwest of Athens, on the coast, 
near the frontiers of Megara. It possessed a 
magnificent temple of Ceres (Demeter), and it 
gave its name to the great festival and myste- 
ries of the Eleusinia, which were celebrated in 
honor of Ceres (Demeter), and Proserpina (Per- 
sephone). The Eleusinia were originally a fes- 
tival peculiar to Eleusis, which was an inde- 
pendent state ; but after the Eleusiniaus had 
been conquered by the Athenians in the reign 
of Erechtheus, according to tradition, the Eleu- 
sinia became a festival common to both cities, 
though the superintendence of the festival re 
mained with the descendants of Eumolpus, the. 

277 



ELEl'TIIER^l. 



ELYM0S. 



king of Eleusis. For an account of the festival, ^eiared sacred, and its inhabitants possessed 
vid. Diet, of Antlq.. art. Elecsinia. — [2. A place priestly privileges. Being exempt from war and 



■n Egypt, not far from Alexandrea, on the Lake 
Mareotis; it was so called from Eleusis : 
Attica.] 



the dangers of invasion, the Eleans became 
; prosperous and wealthy ; their towns were un- 
! walled, and their country was richly cultivated. 

Eleuther^e ('E'Aevdepat : 'E/.evdepevc), a town ■ The prosperity of their country was ruined by 



of Boeotia, originally 
cv 



in Attica, on the frontier 
belonged to the Bceotian confeder 
ward voluntarily united itself to Attica 

Eleutherius ('E/.evdepioc), a surname of Ju 
piter (Zeus) as the Deliverer. 



'E/.« 



urfc Eleutheria. 

Eleltherxa ('E/>evdepva : 
town in the interior of Crete. 

Eleutherus ('E/.evdepoc : now Kahr-el-Kebir, 
i. e., Great River), a river forming the boundary 
between Syria and Phcenice, rose in Mount Bar- 
gylus, the northern prolongation of Lebanon, 
and fell into the sea between Antaradus and 
Tripolis. 



the Peloponnesian war ; the Athenians were 
and after- j the first to disregard the sanctity of the country- : 
' and from that time it frequently had to take part 
in the other contests of the Greeks. The town 
of Elis was situated on the Peneus, and was 
built at the time of the Persian war by the in- 
habitants of eight villages, who united together, 
and thus formed one town. It originally had 
no walls, being sacred like the rest of the coun- 
try, but subsequently it was fortified. The in- 
habitants of Elis formed a close alliance with 
the Spartans, and by their means destroyed the 
rival city of Pisa, and became the ruling city in 
the country, B.C. 5*72. In the Peloponnesiat; 



Vid. Diet, of Ant 
idepvaloc), i 



Elicius, a surname of Jupiter at Rome, where j war they quarrelled with the Spartans because 
King Xuma dedicated to Jupiter Elicius an altar i the latter had espoused the cause of Leprseum, 
on the Aventine. The origin of the name is re- which had revolted from Elis. The Eleans re- 
ferred to the Etruscans, who by certain prayers | taliated upon the Spartans by excluding them 



and sacrifices called forth (eliciebant or evoca 
font) lightning, or invited Jupiter to send light- 1 
ning. The object of calling down lightning was, 
according to Livy's explanation, to elicit prodi- 
gies (ad prodigia elicienda, Liv., L, 20). 
Elimbekrum. Vid. Auscl 
Elimea, -ia, or Elimeotis ('E/J./xeta, 'ETUfria, ! 



from the Olympic games. 
Eliso. Vid. Aliso. 
Elissa. Vid. Dino. 

Ellopia ('E/J.o-'ia). 1. A district in the north 
of Euboea, near the promontory Censeum, with 
a town of the same name, which disappeared at 
an early period : the whole island of Eubcea is 
'E'/.iuiuTLc), a district of Macedonia, on the fron- j sometimes called Ellopia. — 2. An ancient name 
tiers of Epirus and Thessaly, originally belonged ; of the district about Dodona in Epirus. 
id Illyria, and was bounded by the Canibunian : [Ellops ('E'A/.oip), son of Ion or Tithonus. 
Mountains on the south and the Tyrnphasan j from whom Ellopia was fabled to have derived 
"Mountains on the west. Its inhabitants, the I its name.] 



Eum.ei ('E/.ci/j.iu>7ai), were Epirots. 

Eos ( T HZif, Dor. 'A/.ic, 'H/.e/a 
'A/.ioc, whence Alii in Plautus), a countiy on 
rh(j western coast of Peloponnesus, bounded by 
A.chaia on the north, Arcadia on the cast, Mes- 



Eloxe ('Hauvti), a town of the Perrhaibi in 
"H/.eZoc. Dor. I Thessaly, afterward called Limone (Aeijuuvrj). 

Elpenor CE'Arrr/vup), one of the companions 
of Ulysses, who were metamorphosed by Circe 
into swine, and afterward back into men. In- 



terna on the south, and the Ionian Sea on the | toxicated with wine, Elpenor one day fell asleep 
west. The country was fertile, watered by the on the roof of Circe's residence, and in his at- 



have j tempt to rise he fell down and broke his neck. 
When Ulysses was in the lower world, he me: 
the shade of Elpenor, who implored him to bun. 
his body. After his return to the upper world, 
Ulysses complied with this request of his friend. 

Elpixice ('E/.-rriviKv), daughter of Miltiades. 
and sister of Cimon, married Callias. Vid. Cal- 
lias. 

Elusates, a people in Aquitania, in the in- 
terior of the country. Their chief town was 
Elusa (near Euse or Eause). It was the birth- 



Alpuei s and its tributaries, and is said to 
been the only country in Greece which produ- 
ced flax. The Pexeus is the only other river 
n Elis of any importance. Elis was divided 
into three parts : 1. Elis Proper, or Hollow 
Elis (?) Koi/.rj r H/.tc), the northern part, watered 
by the Peneus, of which the capital was also 
called Elis. — 2. Pisatis (# B.iadric), the middle 
portion, of which the capital was Pisa. — 3. Tri- 
phylia (// Tpi<pv//ia), the southern portion, of 
which Pylos was the capital, lay between the 

Alpheus and the Xeda. In the horoic times we j place of Rufinus, the minister of Arcadius. 
find the kingdom of Xestor and the Pelldae in Elymjei, Ely ml Vid. Elymais. 
the south of Elis, while the north of the coun- Elymais, a district of Susiana, extending froL: 
try was inhabited by the Epeans ('ETTeiol), with j the River Eulaeus on the west to the Oroatis on 
whom some JEtolian tribes were mingled. On j the east, derived its name from the Elymaei o r 
the conquest of Peloponnesus by the Heraclidse, ; Elymi {'EXvfialot, y E?,vfioi), a warlike and pred- 
the iEtolian chief Oxylus received Elis as his atory people, who are also found in the mount - 
share of the conquest ; and it was the union of ains of Great Media : in the Persian armies they 
his iEtolian aud Dorian followers with the Epe- served as archers. These Elymaei were prol- 
ans which formed the subsequent population of | ably among the most ancient inhabitants of th» 
the country, under the general name of Eleans. j countiy north of the head of the Persian Gulf : 
Elis owed, its importance in Greece to the wor- j in the bid Testament Susiana is called Elam. 
ship of Jupiter (Zeus) at Olympia near Pisa, in j Elymi. Vid. Elyatus, Elymais. 
honor of whom a splendid festival was held Elymus ('Elviioc), a Trojan, natural son or 
every four years. Vid. Olympia. In conse- Anchises and brother of Eryx. Previous to the 



quence of this festival being 
whole of Greece, the countrv 
278 



conse- 
common to the 
of Elis was de 



emigration of ^Eneas. Elymus and ^Egestus had 
fled from Troy to Sieilv, and had settled on the 



ELY R US. 



EMPORLE 



•banks of the River Criinisus. When afterward 
JSneas also arrived there, he built for them the 
towns of Mgmta and Elyme. The Trojans who 
settled in that part of Sicily called themselves 
Elynii, after Elymus. 

Elyris ('E/ipof), a town in the west of 
Crete, south of Cydouia. 

Elysh:m ('H?.volop xediov, later simply 'H./,v- 
clov\ the Elysian fields. In Homer (Od., iv., 
563) Elysium forms no part of the realms of 
the dead ; he places it on the west of the earth, 
near Ocean, and describes it as a happy land, 
where there is neither snow, nor cold, nor rain, 
and always fanned by the delightful breezes of 
Zephyrus. Hither favored heroes, like Mene- 
lauS) pass without dying, and live happy under 
the rule of Rhadamanthys. The Elysium of 
Hesiod and Findar are in the Isles of the Bless- 
ed (uanupov v/jooi), which they place in the 
Ocean. From these legends arose the fabulous 
island of Atlantis. The Elysium of Virgil is 
part of the lower world, and the residence of 
the shades of the Blessed. 

Emathia (H/xaO'ia : 'H/uadtEvc.), a distinct of 
Macedonia, between the Haliacmon and the 
Axius, formerly part of Paeonia, and the original 
seat of the Macedonian monarchy. The poets 
frequently give the name of Emathia to the 
whole of Macedonia, and sometimes even to the 
neighboring Thessaly. 

Ematiiides, the nine daughters of Pierus, king 
of Emathia. 

Emathiox (11/j.afttuv). 1. Son of Tithonus and 
Aurora (Eos), brother of Memnon, was slain by 
Hercules. — [2. An old man, slain by Chromis 
ict the nuptials of Perseus. — 3. A Trojan, slain 
by Liges in Italy, j 

EmbolIma ('Eubu/.tua), a city of the Paropa- 
misadai in Northern India, near the fortress of 
Aornos, sixteen days' march from the Indus 
(Q. Curt). 

[Emerita. Vid. Augusta Emerita.] 

E.mesa or Emjs- \ ( Etitoa, v Efuoca : 'E/xearj- 
vo§ : now Sums or tfoms), a city of Syria, on 
the eastern bank of the Oroutes, in the prov- 
ince of Apamene, but afterward the capital of 
Phcenicc Libauesia, was in Strabo's time the 
residence of independent Arabian princes ; but 
under Caracalla it was made a colony with the 
Jus Italicum. It is a remarkable place in the 
history of the Roman empire, being the native 
city of Julia Domna, the wife of Septimius Se- 
w i us, of Elagabalus, who exchanged the high 
]>rk-sthood of the celebrated temple of the Sun 
in this city for the imperial purple, and of the 
Emperor Alexander Severus ; and also the scene 
of the decisive battle between Aurelian and 
Zeuobia, A.D. "273. 

[Emmaus ('Efi/movs : now Amwas, near Lat- 
rou). a town of Palestine, on the road from Je- 
rusalem to Joppa, about ten miles from Lydda : 
under the Romans it was called Nicopolis.] 

Emmenid.e CE/nuei'tSai), a princely family at 
Agrigentum, which traced their origin to the 
mythical hero Polynices. Among its members 
we know Emmenides (from whom the family 
derived its name), the father of JEnesidamus, 
whose sons, Theron and Xenocrates, are cele- 
brated by Pindar as victors at the great games 
-of Greece. 

Emodi Moxtes. or Emodus, or -es, or -ox (ra 



'HfiuSd. upr/, rb 'H/iodov opoc, or 6 'H/jwdoc : now 
Himalaya Mountains), a range of mountains 
north of India, forming the prolongation east- 
ward of the Paropamisus. 

Empedocles ('Eft7re6oK?J^), of Agrigentum in 
Sicily, flourished about B.C. 444 Although he 
was descended from an ancient and wealthy 
family, he joined the revolution in which Thras- 
ydaeus, the son and successor of Theron, was 
expelled. His zeal in the establishment of po- 
litical equality is said to have been manifested 
by his magnanimous support of the poor, by his 
severity in persecuting the overbearing conduct 
of the aristocrats, and in his declining the sov- 
ereignty which^ was offered to him. His bril- 
liant oratory, his penetrating knowledge of na- 
ture, and the reputation of his marvellous pow- 
ers, which he had acquired by curing diseases, 
by his successful exertions in removing marshy 
districts and in averting epidemics and obnox- 
ious winds, spread a lustre around his name. 
He was called a magician {yorjc), and he appears 
to have attributed to himself miraculous powers. 
He travelled in Greece and Italy, and made 
some stay at Athens. His death is said to have 
been marvellous, like his life. One tradition 
represented him as having been removed from 
the earth like a divine being, and another re- 
lated that he threw himself into the flames of 
Mount iEtna, that by his sudden disappearance 
he might be believed to be a god ; but it was add- 
ed that the volcano threw up one of his sandals, 
and thus revealed the manner of his death. The 
rhetorician Gorgias was a disciple of Emped- 
ocles. The works of Empedocles were all in 
verse. The two most important were a didac- 
tic poem on nature (Jlepl Qvceuc), of which con- 
siderable fragments are extant, and a poem 
entitled Kadapjuoi, which seems to have recom- 
mended good moral conduct as the means of 
averting epidemics and other evils. Lucretius, 
the greatest of all didactic poets, speaks of Em- 
pedocles with enthusiasm, and evidently makes 
him his model. Empedocles was acquainted 
with the theories of the Eleatics and the Pytha- 
goreans ; but he did not adopt the fundamental 
principles of either school, although he agreed 
with the latter in his belief in the migration of 
souls, and in a few other points. With the 
Eleatics he agreed in thinking that it was im- 
possible to conceive any thing arising out of 
nothing. Aristotle with justice mentions him 
among the Ionic physiologists, and places him 
in very close relation to -the atomistic philoso- 
phers and to Anaxagoras. Empedocles first 
established the number of four elements, which 
he called the roots of things. 

[Emporia, also EmpSrium ('Efnropela 'E/j.- 
TTopiQ, ; 'EuTropiov), the southern and most fruit- 
ful part of Byzacium.] 

Emporia or Emporium ^EiircopiaL, 'E/nropeZov , 
'E/iiropiov : 'EfircopiTTjc : now Ampurias), a town 
of the Indigetes in Hispania Tarraconensis, near 
the Pyrenees, was situated on the River Clodi- 
anus, which formed the harbor of the town. It 
was founded by the Phocseans from Massilia, 
and was divided into two parts, at one time sep- 
arated from each other by a wall ; the part near 
the coast being inhabited by the Greeks, and 
the part toward the interior by the Indigetes, 
It was subsequent! v colonized by Julius Caesar. 

279 



EPULUM. 



EXXIUS. 



Its harbor was much frequented : here Scipio I nos : it possessed a celebrated temple of the 
Africanus first landed when he came to Spain great mother of the gods. 

in the second Punic war. ' [Eniopeus ('Hviottevc), son of Thebaeus, char- 

Empulum (dow Ampigtione f), a small town in ioteer of Hector, slain by Diomedes.] 
Latium, near Tibur. Enipeus ('Evnrevg). 1. A river in Thessaly, 

Empusa ('Efi-ovaa), a monstrous spectre, rises in mount Othrys, receives the Apidanus 
which was believed to devour human beings, near Pharsalus, and flows into the Peneus. 
It could assume different forms, and was sent I Xeptune (Poseidon) assumed the form of the 
by Hecate to frighten travellers. It was be- god of this river in order to obtain possession 
lieved usually to appear with one leg of brass j of Tyro, who was in love with Enipeus. She 
and the other of an ass, whence it was called j became by Xeptune (Poseidon) the mother of 
ovoaae/ug or ovokuatj. The Lamiae and Mormo- \ Pelias and Xeleus. Ovid relates (Met^ vi. 
lyceia, who assumed the form of handsome { 116) that Xeptune (Poseidon), having assumed 
women for the purpose of attracting young men, : the form of Enipeus, became by Iphimedia the 
and then sucked their blood lite vampires and | father of Otus and Ephialtes. — 2. A small river 
ate their fiesh, were reckoned among the Em- ; in Pisatis- (Elis), flows into the Alpheus near its 
pusae. i mouth. — 3. A small river in Macedonia, which 

[E>\esimus ('Evaiotjuog), a son of Hippocoon, j rises in Olympus, 
slain by the Calydonian boar.] [Exipo {'Evl-u), a female slave, mother of 

Exaeephorus (Evapf/popoc), son of Hippo- j the poet Arehilochus.] 
ooon, a passionate suitor of Helen when she was ; [Exispe ('Evcc-tj), an ancient place in Arcadia 
yet quite young. Tyndareus, therefore, intrust- j (U^ 2, 608) ; entirely destroyed in the time of 
ed the maiden to the care of Theseus. Enare- j Strabo.] 

phorus had a heroum at Sparta. Enna or Hknxa ("Ewa : 'Err clog : now Cos- 

Exceladcs ('EyK&adoc), son of Tartarus and \ tro Giovanni), an ancient and fortified town of 
Terra (G-e), and one of the hundred-armed giants i the Siculi in Sicily, on the road from Catana to 
who made war upon the gods. He was killed, j Agrigentum, said to be the centre of the island 
according to some, by a flash of lightning, by : (d/xpa/.dg 2 ikeuclc). It was surrounded by fertile 
Jupiter (Zeus), who buried him under Mount plains, which bore large crops of wheat ; it was 
JEtna ; according to others, Minerva (Athena) ; one of the chief seats of the worship of Ceres 
killed him with her chariot, or threw upon him : (Derneter), and possessed a celebrated temple of 
the island of Sicily. j this goddess. According to later tradition, it 

Excheles ('Ey^e/.eZr, also 'Ey^eA&u 'Eyre- was in a flowery meadow in the neighborhood 
/.col), an Illyrian tribe. ! of Enna that Pluto carried off Proserpine (Per- 

[Excolpius, a Latin historian, in the early sephone), and the cave was shown through 
part of the third century A.D. : he wrote a life ^hieh the god passed as he carried off his prize, 
of Alexander Severus.] " J Its importance gradually declined from the time 

Exdcexs ("Evdotog), an Athenian statuary, is of the second Punic war, when it was severely 
oailed a disciple of Daedalus, whom he is said j punished by the Romans, because it had at- 
to have accompanied on his flight from Crete. ; tempted to revolt to the Carthaginians. 
This statement must be taken to express, not ! Ennius, Q., the Roman poet, was born at Ra- 
the time at which he lived, but the style of art : in Calabria, B.C. 239. He was a Greek by 
which he practiced. It is probable that he lived birth, but a subject of Rome, and served in the 
in the time of Pisistratus and his sons, about \ Roman armies. In 204, Cato, who was then 
B.C. 560. | quaestor, found Ennius in Sardinia, and brought 

Exdymiox ('Evdvpluv), a youth distinguished him in his train to Rome. In 189 Ennius ac- 
by bis beauty, and renowned in ancient story , companied M. Fulvius Xobilior during the AZto- 
for his perpetual sleep. Some traditions about ban campaign, and shared his triumph. Through 
Endymion refer us to Elis, and others to Caria, the son of Xobilior, Ennius, when far advanced 
and others, again, are a combination of the two. ■ in bfe, obtained the rights of a Roman citizen. 
According to one set of legends, he was a son : He dwelt in a humble house on the Aventine. 
of Aethlius and Calyce, or of Jupiter (Zeus) and \ and maintained himself by acting as a preceptor 
Calyce, and succeeded Aethlius in the kingdom : to the youths of the Roman nobles. He lived 
of Elis. Others related that he had come'from on terms of the closest intimacy with the elder 
Elis to Mount Latmus in Caria, whence he is ; Scipio Africanus. He died 169, at the age of 
called the Latmian (Latmius). As he slept on seventy. He was buried in the sepulchre of the 
Latmus, his surprising beauty warmed the cold Scipios, and his bust was allowed a place among 
heart of Selene (the moon), who came down to the effigies of that noble house. Ennius was 
him, kissed him, and lay by his side. His eter- ; regarded by the Romans as the father of their 
nal sleep on Latmus is assigned to different poetry (alter Homerus, Hor., Epist, ii., 1, 50). 
causes; but it was generally believed that Se- j Cicero calls him Summus po'ita nosier ; andVir- 
lene had sent him to sleep," that she migh£ be gil was not ashamed to borrow many of bis 
able to kiss him without his knowledge. By thoughts, and not a few of his expressions. All 
Selene he had fifty daughters. There is a beau- the works of Ennius are lost with the exception 
tiful statue of a sleeping Endvmion in the Brit- of a few fragments. His most important work 
.sh Museum. -svas an epic poem, in dactylic hexameters, en- 

Exgyum ("Eyvov 'Eyyviov : 'Ey; vivog, En- 1 titled Annalium Libri XVIII., being a history 
guinus : now Gangi), a town in the interior of : of Rome, commencing with the loves of Mars 
Sicily, near the sources of the Monalus, was and Rhea, and reaching down to his own times, 
originally a town of the Siculi, but it is said to The beautiful history of the kings iu Livy may 
Lave been colonized bv the Cretans under Mi- have been taken from Ennius. 2fo great space 
280 



ENNOMUS. 



EPAMINONDAS. 



however, was allotted to the earliest records j 
for the coutcst with Hannibal, which was de- j 
scribed with great minuteness, commenced with 
the seventh book, the first Punic war being pass- 
ed over altogether. He wrote numerous trage- 
dies, which appear to have been all translations 
or adaptations from the Greek, the metres _ of 
the originals being in most cases closely imi- 
tated. He wrote also a few comedies, and sev- 
eral other works, such as Satirce, composed in 
a great variety of metres, from which circum- 
stance they probably received their name; a 
didactic poem, entitled Epicharmus ; a pane- 
gyric on Scipio ; Epigrams, (fee: The best col- 
fection of the fragments of Ennius is by Hie- 
ronymus Columna, Neapol., 4to, 1590, reprint- 
ed with considerable additions by Hesselius, 
Amstel., 4to, 1707. 

[Ennomus ("Evvofioc). 1. A seer of Mysia, an 
ally of the Trojans, slain by Achilles. — 2. A Tro- 
jan, slain by Ulysses.] 

En'5pe ('Evott?]), a town in Messenia, mention- 
ed by Homer, supposed to be the same as GtER- 

£NIA. 

[Enops ( T Hvoi/'). 1. A herdsman, father, by a 
uymph, of Satnius. — 2. A Greek, father of Cly- 
tomedes.] 

Extella ("Evre?J,a : Entellinus, Entellensis : 
now Entella), an aueient town of the Sicani in 
the interior of the island, on the western side, 
said to have been founded by Entellus, one of the 
companions of the Trojan JEgestus. It was sub- 
sequently seized aud peopled by the Campanian 
mercenaries of Dionysius. 

[Entellus, a Trojan or Sicilian hero, famed 
lor his skill in athletic exercises ; a companion 
of jEgestus (Virgil's Acestes), and, though ad- 
vanced in years, encountered and vanquished the 
Trojan Dares.] 

Enyalius ( r Ei'vd/.ior), the Warlike, frequent- 
ly occurs in the Iliad (never in the Odyssey) as 
an epithet of Mars (Ares). At a later time 
Enyalius and Mars (Ares) were distinguished 
as two different gods of war ; Enyalius was 
looked upon as a son of Mars (Arcs) and Enyo, 
or of Saturn (Cronos) and Khea. The name is 
evidently derived from Enyo. 

Enyo ('Evvu>), the goddess of war, who de- 
lights in bloodshed and the destruction of towns, 
and accompanies Mars (Ares) in battles. Re- 
specting the Roman goddess of war, vid, Bel- 
:.ona. 

Eordjja ('Eopdaia, also 'Eopd'ca), a district 
and town in the northwest of Macedonia, inhabit- 
ed by the Eordi ( 'Eopdo'i, also 'Eopdaloi.) 

Eos ('Hwfj Att. 'Ewe), in Latin Aurora, the 
goddess of the morning red, daughter of Hy- 
perion and Thia or Euryphassa ; or of Pallas, 
according to Ovid At the close of every night 
she rose from the couch of her spouse Tithonus, 
and on a chariot drawn by the swift horses Lam- 
pus and Pbaethou she ascended up to heaven 
from the River Oceanus, to announce the com- 
ing light of the sun to the gods as well as to 
mortals. In the Homeric poems Eos not only 
announces the coining Sun, but accompanies 
him throughout the day, and her career is not 
complete till the evening ; hence she came to 
be regarded as the goddess of the daylight, and 
was completely identified by the tragic writers 
with Hemera. She carried off several youths 



j distinguished for their beauty, such as Orion, 
! Cephalus, aud Tithonus, whence she is called by 
j Ovid Tithouia conjux. She bore Memnon to Ti- 
j thonus. Vid. Memxon. By Astraeus she be- 
came the mother of Zephyrus, Boreas, Not us, 
Heosphorus and other stars. 

Epaminondas ( , ETzafieiv6v6ag, 'Ena/nivuvdag), 
the Theban general and statesman, son of Po- 
lymnis, was born and reared in poverty, though 
his blood was noble. His close and enduring 
friendship with Pelopidas is said to have orig- 
inated in the campaign in which they served to- 
gether on the Spartan side against Mantinea, 
where Pelopidas having fallen in a battle, ap- 
parently dead, Epaminondas protected his bodv 
at the imminent risk of his own life, B.C. 885. 
After the Spartans had been expelled from 
Thebes, 37 9, Epaminondas took an active part 
in public affairs. In 371 he was one of the 
Theban commanders at the battle of Leuetra. 
so fatal to the Lacedaemonians, in which the 
success of Thebes is said to have been owing 
mainly to the tactics of Epaminondas. He it 
was w T ho most strongly urged the giving battle, 
while he employed all the means in his power 
to raise the courage of his countrymen, not ex- 
cluding even omens and oracles, for which, 
when unfavorable, he had but recently express- 
ed his contempt. In 369 he was one of the 
generals in the first invasion of Peloponnesus 
by the Thebans ; and before leaving Pelopon- 
nesus he restored the Messenians to their coun- 
try and established a new city, named Messene. 
On their return home Epaminondas and Pelop- 
idas were impeached by their enemies, on a 
capital charge of having retained their com- 
mand beyond the legal term. The fact itself 
was true enough; but they were both honora- 
bly acquitted, Epaminondas having expressed 
his willingness to die if the Thebans would re- 
cord that he had been put to death because he- 
had humbled Sparta and taught his countrymen 
to face and to conquer her armies. In 368 he 
again led a Theban army into the Peloponne- 
sus, but did not advance "far, and on his return 
was repulsed by Chabrias in an attack which he 
made on Corinth. In the same year we find 
him serving, but not as general, in the Theban 
army which was sent into Thessaly to rescue 
Pelopidas from Alexander of Pherce, and which 
was saved from utter destruction only by the 
ability of Epaminondas. In 367 he was sent at 
the head of another force to release Pelopidas, 
and accomplished his object without even strik- 
ing a blow, and by the mere prestige of his 
name. In 366 he invaded the Peloponnesus 
for the third time, and in 362 for the fourth 
time. In the latter year he gained a brilliant 
victory over the Lacedaemonians at Mantinea. 
but in the full career of victory he received a 
mortal wound. He was told that his death 
would follow directly on the javelin being ex- 
tracted from the wound ; and he would not al- 
low this to be done till he had been assured that 
his shield was safe, and that the victory was 
with his countrymen. It was a disputed point 
by whose hand he fell : among others, the honor 
was assigned to Gryllus, the son of Xenophon. 
Epaminondas was one of the greatest men of 
Greece. He raised Thebes to the supremacy 
of Greece, which she lost almost as soon as he 
281 



EPAPHRODLTUS. 



EPHORUS. 



died. Both in public and in private life he was 
distinguished by integrity and uprightness, and 
he carried into daily practice the lessons of phi- 
losophy, of which he was an ardent student. 

ErAPHEODiTrs ('ETrafipodiroc). 1. A freed- 
man and favorite of the Emperor Nero. He as- 
sisted Nero in killing himself, and he was after- 
ward put to death by Doniitian. The philoso- 
pher Epietetus was his freedman. — 2. 31. Met- 
hod Epaphroditus, of Chasronea, a Greek gram- 
marian, the slave and afterward the freedman 
of Modestus, the prasfect of Egypt, He subse- 
quently went to Rome, where he resided in the 
reign of Nero and down to the time of Nerva. 
He was the author of several grammatical works 
and commentaries. 

Epaphus ("E-aoog), son of Jupiter (Zeus) and 
Io, born on the River Nile, after the long wan- 
derings of his mother. He was concealed by 
the Curetes, at the request of Juno (Hera), but 
was discovered by Io in Syria. He subsequent- 
ly became king of Egypt, married Memphis, a 
daughter of Nilus, or -according to others, Cas- 
siopea, and built the city of Memphis. He had 
a daughter Libya, from whom Libya (Africa) re- 
ceived its name. 

Epei. Vid. Elis. 

Epetioi ('E-nenov : ruins near Strohiecz), a 
town of the Lissii in Dalmatia, with a good har- 
bor. 

Epeus ('E~ei6c). 1. Son of Endymiou, king 
in Elis, from whom the Epei are said to have 
derived their name. — Son of Panopeus, went with 
thirty ships from the Cyclades to Troy. He built 
the wooden horse with the assistance of Minerva 
(Athena). 

Ephesus ('Eoeaoc: 'Eqsgloc : ruins near Aya- 
saluTc, i. e., "kyioc Qeoloyoc, the title of St. John), 
the chief of the twelve Ionian cities on the coast 
of Asia Minor, was said to have beea founded 
by Carians and Leleges, and to have been taken 
possession of by Androclus, the son of Codrus, 
at the time of the great Ionian migration. It 
stood a little south of the River Cayster, near 
its mouth, where a marshy plain, extending 
south from the river, is bounded by two hills, 
Prion or Lepre on the east, and Coressus on 
the south. The city was built originally on 
Mount Coressus, but, in the time of Crcesus, the 
people transferred their habitations to the valley, 
whence Lysimachus, the general of Alexan- 
der, compelled them again to remove to Mount 
Prion. On the northern side of the city was 
a lake, communicating with the Cayster. and 
forming the inner harbor, now a marsh ; the 
outer harbor {rcdvopu.oc) was formed by the 
mouth of the river. In the plain, east of the 
lake, and northeast of the city, beyond its walls, 
stood the celebrated temple of Diana (Artemis), 
which was built in the sixth century B.C., by 
an architect named Chersiphron, and, after be- 
ing burned down by Herostratus in the night 
on which Alexander the Great was born (Octo- 
ber 13-14, B.C. 356), was restored by the joint 
efforts of all the Ionian states, and was regard- 
ed as one of the wonders of the world : nothing 
now remains of the temple except some traces 
of its foundations. The temple was also cele- 
brated as an asylum till Augustus deprived it 
of that privilege. The other buildings at Ephe- 
sus. of which there are anv ruins, are" the ao-ora 
282 



theatre, odeum, stadium, gymnasium, and baths, 
temples of Jupiter (Zeus) Olympius and of Julius 
Caesar, and a large building near the inner har- 
i bor : the foundations of the walls may also 
i be traced. With the rest of Ionia, Ephesus 
! fell under the power successively of Crcesus, the 
; Persians, the Macedonians, and the Romans. 
| It was always very flourishing, and became 
' even more so as the other Ionian cities decay - 
; ed. It was greatly favored by its Greek rulers, 
< especially by Lysimachus, who, in honor of his 
second wife, gave it her name, Arsinoe, which. 
: however, it did not long retain. Attalus H. 
' Philadelphus constructed docks for it, and im- 
; proved its harbors. Under the Romans it was 
the capital of the province of Asia, and by far 
i the greatest city of Asia Minor. It is conspicu- 
I ous in the early history of the Christian Church. 
J both St. Paul and St. John having labored in it. 
I and addressed epistles to the Church of Ephe- 
sus ; and at one time its bishop possessed the 
j rank and power of a patriarch over the churches 
j in the province of Asia. Its position, and the 
excellence of its harbors, made it the chief em- 
J porium for the trade of all Asia within the 
: Taurus ; and its downfall was chiefly owing to 
I the destruction of its harbors by the deposits of 
; the Cayster. In the earliest times Ephesus was 
called by various names, Alope, Ortygia, Morges. 
Smyrna Tracheia, Samornia, and Ptelea. 

Ephialtes ('EpiaAr^c). 1. One of the Aloida\ 
Vid. Aloeus. — 2. A Malian, who in B.C. 480, 
when Leonidas was defending the pass of 
Thermopylae, guided a body of Persians over 
the mountain path, and thus enabled them to 
fall on the rear of the Greeks. — 3. An Athenian 
statesman, was a friend and partisan of Peri- 
cles, whom he assisted in carrying his political 
measures. He is mentioned in particular as 
chiefly instrumental in that abridgment of the 
power of the Areopagus which inflicted such 
a blow on the oligarchical party, and against 
which the JEumenides of JSschylus was directed. 
His services to the democratic cause excited the 
rancorous enmity of some of the oligarchs, and 
led to his assassination during the night, proba- 
bly in 456. — [4. An Athenian orator, an oppo- 
nent of the Macedonians ; Alexander demanded 
his surrender to him after the destruction of 
Thebes.] 

Ephippus CEol~ttoc). 1. An Athenian poet, 
of the middle comedy. [A few fragments only 
remain, which are given by Meineke in his 
Fragm. Comic. Grcec, vol. ii., p. 65*7-66.] — 2. Of 
Olvnthus, a Greek historian of Alexander the 
Great. 

Ephohus ("Eoopoc), of Cyme in -^olis, a cele- 
brated Greek historian, was a contemporary of 
Philip and Alexander, and flourished about B. 
C. 340. He studied rhetoric under Isocrates. 
of whose pupils he and Theopompus were con- 
sidered the most distinguished. On the advice 
of Theopompus he wrote A History ('laroptat) 
in thirty books, which began with the return of 
the Heraclidse, and came down to the siege of 
Perinthus in 341. It treated of the history oi 
the barbarians as well as of the Greeks, and was 
thus the first attempt at writing a universal his- 
tory that was ever made in Greece. Ti em- 
braced a period of seven hundred and fifty years 
and each of the thirty books contained a com 



EPHYDATIA. 



EPICURUS. 



pact portion of the history, which funned a com- 
plete -whole by itself. Ephorus did not live to 
complete the work, and it was mushed by his j 
son Demophilus. Diyllus began his history at 
the point at which the work of Ephorus left off. 
Ephorus also wrote ft few other works of less 
importance, of which the titles only are pre- 
served by the grammarians. Of the history 
likewise we have nothing but fragments. It 
was written in a clear and polished style, but 
was at the same time deficient in power and 
energy. Ephorus appears to have been faithful 
and impartial in the narration of events ; but he 
did not always follow the best authorities, and 
in the latter part of his work he frequently dif- 
fered from Herodotus, Thucydides, and Xeno- 
phon, on points on which they are entitled to 
credit. Diodorus Siculus made great use of the 
work of Ephorus. The fragments of his work 
have been published by Marx, Carlsruhe, 1815, 
and in Midler's Fragni. Historieor. Grcec, vol. 
i., Paris, 1841. 

[Ephydatia ('E^uoVma), a fountaiu-nymph, 
who carried off Hylas, the favorite of Hercules.] 

Ephyea ('Eovpa). 1. The ancient name of 
Corinth. Vid. Corinthus. — 2. An ancient town 
of the Pelasgi, near the River Selleis, in Elis. — 
3. A town in Thessaly, afterward called Cra- 
>'on. — 4. A towu in Epirus, afterward called 
Cichyrus. — 5. A small town in the district of 
Agrasa, in iEtolia. 

[Ephyea ('EQvpa), a female companion of Cy- 
rene, the mother of Aristams.] 

Epicaste ('E-cKiiar)/). commonly called Jo- 
caste. 

Epicephesia ('E-u:)](j)>]Gia : 'ETTiMtfa/Gioc), a 
demus in Attica, bclouging to the tribe (Eneis. 

[Epichaeis ('E-ixap/r), a freedwomau of bad 
repute, implicated in the conspiracy of Piso 
against the life of Nero, A.D. 65: she was put 
to the severest torture iu order to compel her 
to disclose what she knew of the conspiracy, 
but to no purpose : notliiug could extort any 
confession from her, and she finally escaped 
further torture by strangling herself.] 

Epicharmus ftHirixapfios), the chief comic 
poet among the Dorians, was born in the island 
of Cos about B.C. 540. His father, Elothales, 
was a physician, of the race of the Asclepiads. 
At the age of three mouths, Epicharmus was 
carried to Megara, in Sicily ; thence he remov- 
ed to Syracuse when Megara was destroyed 
by Gelon (484 or 483). Here he spent the re- i 
mainder of his life, which was pi-olouged 
throughout the reigu of Hierou, at whose court 
Epicharmus associated with the other great 
writers of the time, and among them, with 
^Eschylus. He died at the age of ninety (450), 
or, according to Lucian, ninety-seven (443). 
Epicharmus was a Pythagorean philosopher, 
and spent the earlier part of his life in the 
study of philosophy, both physical and meta- 
physical. He is said to have followed for 
some time his father's profession of medicine ; 
and it appears that he did not commence writ- 
ing comedies till his removal to Syracuse. 
Comedy had for some time existed at Megara 
in Sicily, which was a colony from Megara on 
the Isthmus, the latter of which towns disputed 
with the Athenians the invention of comedy. 
Sut the comedy at the Sicilian Megara before 



j Epicharmus seems to have been little nioiv 
j thau a low buffoonery. It was he, togethei 
j with Phormis, who gave it a new form, and in- 
troduced a regular plot. The number of his 
cojnedies is differently stated at fifty-two, or at 
thirty-five. There are still extant thirty-five 
titles. The majority of them are on mytholog 
ical subjects, that "is, travesties of the heroic 
myths, and these plays no doubt very much 
resembled the satyric dramas of the Athenians. 
But besides mythology, Epicharmus wrote on 
other subjects, political, moral, relating to man 
ners and customs, &c. The style of his plays 
appears to have been a curious mixture of the 
broad buffoonery which distinguished the old 
Megarian comedy, and of the sententious wis- 
dom of the Pythagorean philosopher. His lan- 
guage was remarkably elegant : he was celebra- 
ted for his choice of epithets : his plays abound- 
ed, as the extant fragments prove, with philo- 
sophical and moral maxims. He was imitated 
by Crates, and also by Plautus, as we learn 
from the line of Horace (Epist., ii., 1, 58), 

" Plautus ad exemplar Siculi properare Epicharmi.'" 
■ 

The parasite, who forms so conspicuous a char- 
acter in the plays of the new comedy, is firs- 
found in Epicharmus. 

EncNEMiDii Locri. Vid. Locris. 
Epicrates ('Ettuc pdrrjr). 1. An Athenian 
took part in the overthrow of the thirty tyrants ; 
but afterward, when sent on an embassy to the 
Persian king Artaxerxes, he was accused of 
corruption in receiving money from Artaxerxes. 
He appears to have been acquitted this time ; 
but he was tried on a later occasion, on another 
charge of corruption, and only escaped death 
by a voluntary exile. He was ridiculed by the 
comic poets for his large beard, and for this 
reason was called caneadopor. — 2. Of Ambracia 
an Athenian poet of the middle comedy. 

Epictetus CE~[uTT]Tor), of Hierapolis in 
Phrygia, a celebrated Stoic philosopher, was a 
freedmau of Epaphroditus, who was himself a 
freedman of Nero. Vid. Epaphroditus. He 
lived and taught first at Rome, and, after the 
expulsion of the philosophers by Domitian, at 
Nicopolis in Epirus. Although he was favored 
by Hadrian, he does not appear to have return- 
ed to Rome ; for the discourses which Arrian 
took down in writing were delivered by Epicte- 
tus when an old man at Mcopolis. Only a few 
circumstances of his life are recorded, such as 
his lameness, which is spoken of in different 
ways, his poverty, and his few wants. Epicte- 
tus did not leave any works behind him, and 
the short manual {Enchiridion), which bears his 
name, was compiled from his discourses by his 
faithful pupil Arrian. Arrian also wrote the 
philosophical lectures of his master in eight 
books, from which, though four are lost, we are 
enabled to gain a complete idea of the way in 
which Epictetus conceived and taught the Stoic- 
philosophy. Vid. Arriaxus. Being deeply im- 
pressed with his vocation as a teacher, he aim- 
ed in his discourses at nothing else but winning 
the minds of his hearers to that which was 
good, aud no one was able to resist the impres- 
sion which they produced. 

Epictetus Phrygia. Vid. Phrygia. 
! Epicurus ('EttIkovpoc). a celebrated Greek 
283 



EPICURUS. 



EPIDAURUS. 



philosopher, and the founder of a philosophical 
school called, after him, the Epicurean. He ; 
was a son of Neocles and Charestrata, and was 
born B.C. 342, in the island of Samos, where 
his father had settled as one of the Athenian j 
cleruchi ; but he belonged to the Attic demos 
of Gargettus, and hence is sometimes called 
the Gargettiau. (Cic, ad Fcon., xv., 16.) At 
the age of eighteen Epicurus came to Athens, | 
and there probably studied under Xenocrates. ! 
who was then at the head of the academy. ' 
After a short stay at Athens he went to Colo- 
phon, and subsequently resided at Mytilene and 
Lampsacus, in which places he was engaged 
for five years in teaching philosophy. In 306, 
when he had attained the age of thirty-five, he 1 
again came to Athens, where he purchased for 
eighty minse a garden — the famous Ky^oi 'Etvi- ! 
Kovpov — in which he established his philosoph- \ 
ical school. Here he spent the remainder of j 
his life, surrounded by numerous friends and 
pupils. His mode of living was simple, tern- \ 
perate and cheerful ; and the aspersions of j 
comic poets and of later philosophers, who were 
opposed to his philosoph}* and describe him as 
a person devoted to sensual pleasures, do not 
seem entitled to the least credit. He took no 
part in public affairs. He died in 270, at the 
age of seventy-two, after a long and painful ill- 
ness, which he endured with truly philosophic- 
al patience and courage. Epicurus is said to 
have written three hundred volumes. Of these 
the most important was one On Nature (He pi 
Qv&eag), in thirty-seven books. All his works 
are lost; but some fragments of the work on 
Nature were found among rolls at Hercula- 
neum, and were published by Orelli, Lips., 1818. 
In his philosophical system, Epicurus prided 
himself in being independent of all his prede- 
cessors ; but he was in reality indebted both to 
Democritus and the Cyrenaics. Epicurus made 
ethics the most essential part of his philosoph- 
ical system, since he regarded human happi- 
ness as the ultimate end of all philosophy. His 
ethical theory was based upon the dogma of 
the Cyrenaics, that pleasure constitutes the 
highest happiness, aud must consequently be 
the end of all human exertions. Epicurus, i 
however, developed and ennobled this theory 
in a manner which constitutes the real merit ; 
of his philosophy, and which gained for him so 
inany friends and admirers both in antiquity 
and in modern times. Pleasure with him was 
not a mere momentary and transitory sensa- 
tion, but he conceived it as something lasting 
and imperishable, consisting in pure and noble 
mental enjoyments, that is, in urapatia and 
■1-ov'ia, or the freedom from pain and from all 
influences which disturb the peace of our mind, 
and thereby our happiness, which is the result 
of it. The summvm bonum, according to him, 
consisted in this peace of mind ; and this was 
based upon opovyaic, which he described as the 
beginning of every thing good, as the origin of 
all virtues, aud which he himself therefore oc- 
:asionally treated as the highest good itself. 
In the physical part of his philosophy, he fol- 
lowed the atomistic doctrines of Democritus 
and Diagoras. His views are well known from 
Lucretius's poem Be Rerum Natura. We ob- 
tain our knowledge and form our conceptions 
284 



of things, according to him, through eldu/.a. i. e„ 
images of things which are reflected from them, 
and pass through our senses into our minds. 
Such a theory is destructive of all absolute 
truth, and a mere momentary impression upon 
our senses of feelings is substituted for it. The 
deficiencies of his system are most striking in 
his views concerning the gods, which drew 
upon him the charge of atheism. His gods, 
like every thing else, consisted of atoms, and 
our notions of them are based upon the eidula 
which are reflected from them and pass into 
our minds. They were and always had been 
in the enjoyment of perfect happiness, which 
had not been disturbed by the laborious business 
of creating the world ; and as the government 
of the world would interfere with their happi- 
ness, he conceived them as exercising no in- 
fluence whatever upon the world or man. The 
pupils of Epicurus were very numerous, and 
were attached to their master in a manner 
which has rarely been equalled either in an- 
cient or modern times. But notwithstanding 
the extraordinary devotion of his pupils, there 
is no philosopher in antiquit} T who has been so 
violently attacked as Epicurus. This has been 
owing partly to a superficial knowledge of his 
philosophy, and partly to the conduct of men 
who called themselves Epicureans, and who, 
taking advantage of the facility with which his 
ethical theory was made the hand-maid of a 
sensual life, gave themselves up to the enjoy- 
ment of sensual pleasures. 

Epicvdes ('~EniKvdr]c), a Syraeusan by origin, 
but born and educated at Carthage. He served, 
together with his elder brother Hippocrates, 
with much distinction in the army of Hannibal, 
both in Spain and Italy ; and when, after the 
battle of Cannae (B.C. 216), Hieronymus of 
Syracuse sent to make overtures to Hannibal, 
that general selected the two brothers as his 
envoys to Syracuse. They soon induced the 
young king to desert the Roman alliance. Upon 
the murder of Hieronymus shortly after, they 
were the leaders of the Carthaginian party at 
Syracuse, and eventually became masters of 
the city, which they defended against Marcel- 
lus. Epicydes fled to Agrigentum when he 
saw that the fall of Syracuse was inevitable. 

Epidammjs. Vid, Dterhachioi. 

Epidaub/cs CEnidavpog : '~E7vidavpiog). l.(Now 
Epidauro), a town in Argolis, on the Saronic 
Gulf, formed with its territory EpiDAuniA( r E7r:- 
davpia), a district independent of Argos, and 
was not included in Argolis till the time of the 
Romans. It was originally inhabited by Ioni- 
ans and Carians, whence it was called Epieorvs, 
but it was subdued by the Dorians under Dei- 
phontes, who thus became the mling race. 
Epidaurus was the chief seat of the worship of 
JEsculapius, and was to this circumstance in- 
debted for its importance. The temple of this 
god, which w T as one of the most magnificent in 
Greece, was situated about five miles south- 
west of Epidaurus. A few ruins of it are still 
extant. The worship of iEsculapius was in- 
troduced into Rome from Epidaurus. Vid. 
culapits. — 2. Surnamed LimepvA (;/ Aifiypd : 
now 3fo?icmbasia or Old Malvasia), a town in 
Laconia, on the eastern coast, said to have 
been founded by Epidaurus in Argolis, posses? 



EPIDELIUM. 



EPIRUS. 



a good harbor.— 3. (Now Old Ragma), a I 
town in Dalmatia. ( , ! 

EmdAxjcm ('BtraAjvUflvl a town in Xaconia, I 
n the eastern coast, south of Epidaurus Limera, | 
with a temple of Apollo and an image of the 
god, Whick, «Wfi thrown into the sea at Delos, 
is said to have come to land at this place. 

[Epidii (^Erriitoi), a people in ancient Britain, 
dwelt on Epidium, the long peninsula on the 
western coast (now CanUjre), whose southern 
point forms the Epidium Promontorium ('Errt- 
Siov, "Aicpov, now Mull of Cantyre.] 

EriGENEs ('E^iytvrjg). 1. An Athenian poet 
of the middle comedy, flourished about B.C. 880. 
— 2. Of Sicyon. who has been confounded by 
some with his namesake the comic poet, pre- 
ceded Thespis, and is said to have been the 
most ancient writer of tragedy. It is probable 
that Epigenes was the first to introduce into the 
old dithyrambie and satyrical rpayudia other 
subjects than the original one of the fortunes of 
Bacchus (Dionysus). — 3. Of Byzantium, a Greek 
astronomer, mentioned by Seneca, Pliny, and 
Censorinus. He professed to have studied in 
Chaldea, but his date is uncertain. 

[Epigeus ('ETzeiyevr), of Budeum in Thessaly, 
followed Achilles to the Trojan war, and was 
slain by Hector.] 

Epigoni ('Emyovoi), that is, "the Descend- 
ants," the name in ancient mythology of the 
sons of the seven heroes who perished before 
Thebes. Vid. Adrastus. Ten years after their 
death, the descendants of the seven heroes 
marched against Thebes to avenge their fathers. 
The names of the Epigoni are not the same in 
all accounts ; but the common lists contain 
Alcmseon, vEgialeus, Diomedes, Promachus, 
Sthenelus, Thersander, and Euryalus. Alcmseon 
undertook the command, in accordance with an 
oracle, and collected a considerable body of 
Argives. The Thebans marched out against 
the enemy, under the command f>f Laodamas, 
after whose death they fled into the city. 
On the part of the Epigoni, iEgialeus had 
fallen. The seer Tiresias, knowing that the city 
was doomed to fall, persuaded the inhabitants 
to quit it, and take their wives and children 
with them. The Epigoni thereupon took pos- 
session of Thebes, and razed it to the ground. 
They sent a portion of the booty and Manto, 
the daughter of Tiresias, to Delphi, and then 
returned to Peloponnesus. The war of the 
Epigoni was made the subject of epic and tragic 
poems. 

EpimenIdks ('E-ifievidTjc). 1. A celebrated 
poet and prophet of Crete, whose history is to 
a great extent mythical. He was reckoned 
among the Curetes. and is said to have been the 
son of a nymph. He was a native of Phsestus 
in Crete, and appears to have spent the greatest 
part of his life at Cnosus, whence he is some- 
times called a Cnosian. There is a legend that, 
when a boy, he was sent out by his father in 
search of a sheep, and that, seeking shelter from 
the heat of the mid-day sun, he went into a 
oavo, and there fell into a deep sleep, which 
lasted fifty-seveu years. On waking and re- 
turning home, he found, to his great amazement, 
that his younger brother had in the mean time 
grown an old maa He is further said to have 
attained the age of 154, 15*7, or even of 229 vears. 



His visit to Athens, however, is an historical 
fact, and determines his date. The Athenians, 
who were visited by a plague in consequence of 
the crime of Cylon (vtd. Cylon), consulted the 
Delphic oracle about the means of their delivery. 
The god commanded them to get their city puri- 
fied, and the Athenians invited Epimenides to 
come and undertake the purification. Epimen- 
ides accordingly came to Athens, about 596, and 
performed the desired task by certain mysterious 
rites and sacrifices, in consequence of which the 
plague ceased. Epimenides was reckoned by 
some among the seven wise men of Greece ; but 
all that tradition has handed down about him 
suggests a very different character from that of 
the seven ; he must rather be ranked in the class 
of priestly bards and sages who are generally 
comprised under the name of the Orphici. Many 
works, both in prose and verse, were attributed 
to him by the ancients, and the Apostle Paul has 
preserved (Titus, i., 12) a celebrated verse of his 
against the Cretans. 

Epimetheus. Vtd. Prometheus and Pan- 
dora. 

Epiphanes, a surname of Antiochus IV. and 
Antiochus XL, kings of Syria. 

Epiphania or -ea ('ETuQdveia). 1. In Syria 
(in the Old Testament, Hamath : now Hamah). 
in the district of Cassiotis, on the left bank of 
the Orontes, an early colony of the Phoenicians ; 
may be presumed, from its later name, to have 
been restored or improved by Antiochus Epiph- 
anes. — 2. In Asia Minor (now Urzin), on the 
southeastern border of Cilicia, close to the Pyhe 
Amanides, was formerly called CEniandus, and 
probably owed its new name to Antiochus 
Epiphanes. Pompey repeopled this city with 
some of the pirates whom he had conquered. 
There were some other Asiatic cities of the 
name. 

Epiphanies ('ETrupdvioc), one of the Greek 
fathers, was born near Eleutheropolis, in Pales- 
tine, about A.D. 320, of Jewish parents. He 
went to Egypt when young, and there appears 
to have been tainted with Gnostic errors, but 
afterward fell into the hands of some monks, 
and by them was made a strong advocate for 
the monastic life. He returned to Palestine, 
and lived there for some time as a monk, having 
founded a monastery near his native place. In 
A.D. 867 he was chosen bishop of Constantia, 
the metropolis of Cyprus, formerly called Sala- 
mis. His writings show him to have been a 
man of great reading, for he was acquainted 
with Hebrew, Syriac, Greek, Egyptian, and 
Latin. But he was entirely without critical or 
logical power ; of real piety, but also of a very 
bigoted and dogmatical turn of mind. He dis- 
tinguished himself by his opposition to heresy, 
and especially to Origen's errors. He died 402. 
His most important work is entitled Panarium, 
being a discourse against heresies. The best edi- 
tion of his works is by Petavius, Paris, 1622, and 
Lips., 1682, with a commentary by Valesius. 

Epipol^e. Vid, Syracuse. 

Epirus ("Htt eipog : 'HTreipurrjc, fern. 'HTzeip'Z- 
rtc : now Albania), that is, " the main land," a 
country in the northwest of Greece, so called to 
distinguish it from Corcyra and the other isl- 
ands off the coast. Homer gives the name of 
Epirus to the whole of the western coast of 
285 



EPIRUS NOVA. 



ERASISTRATUS. 



Greece, thus including Acarnania in it. Epirus \ colonized by the Romans, B.C. 100, on the com- 
mas bounded by Illyria and Macedonia on the j mand of the Sibylline books, to serve as a bul- 
uorth, by Thessaly on the east, by Acarnania ' wark against the neighboring Alpine tribes, 
and the Ambraeian Gulf on the south, and by j Epoeedoeix, a chieftain of the J2dui, was one 
the Ionian Sea on the west. The principal : of the commanders of the jEduan cavalry which 
mountains were the Acroceraunii, forming the | was sent to Caesars aid against Vercingetorix in 
northwestern boundary ; besides which there | B.C. 52, but he himself revolted soon afterward 
were the mountains Tomarus in the east, and ! and joined the enemy. 

Crania in the south. The chief rivers were the ! [Eptjlo, a Rutulian hero in the iEneid, slain by 
Celydnus, Thyamis, Acheron, and Arachthus. i Achates.] 

The inhabitants of Epirus were numerous, but i [Epyaxa ('E-v<l$a), queen of Cilicia, wife of 
were not ol pure Hellenic blood. The original j King Syennesis, brought large sums of money to 
population appears to have been Pelasgic ; and Cyrus to aid him in paying his troops.] 
the ancient oracle of Dodona in the country was J Epytus, a Trojan, father of Periphas, who was 
dways regarded as of Pelasgic origin. These ; a companion of lulus, and is called by the 
Pelasgians were subsequently mingled with Ely- j patronymic Epytides. 

: ians who at various times invaded Epirus and j Equestee (Ttt-ttjoc), a surname of several di- 
-^ttled in the country. Epirus contained four- j vinities, but especially of Neptune (Poseidon), 
"een different tribes. Of these the most im- j who had created the horse, and in whose honor 
portant were the Chaoxes, Thespeoti, and j horse-races were held. 

Molossi, who gave their names to the three I Equus Tuticus or ^Equum Tuticum, a small 
principal divisions of the country, Chaoxia, [ town of the Hirpini in Samnium, twenty -one miles 
Thespeotia, and Molossis. The different tribes ' from Beneventum. The Scholiast on Horace 
were originally governed by their own princes. ! (Sat., i., 5, 87) supposes, but without sufficient 
The Molossian princes, who traced their de- 1 reasons, that it is the town, quod verm dicere non 
-cent from Pyrrhus (Neoptolemus), son of Achii- est. 

les, subsequently acquired the sovereignty over | Eb,e ( J Epac : now SighajiTc ?), a small but 
-he whole country, and took the title of kings of I strong sea-port town on the coast of Ionia, north 
Epirus. The first who bore this title was | of Teos. 

Alexander, who invaded Italy to assist the Ta- j Eeana, a town in Mount Amanus, the chief 
•entines against the Lueanians and Bruttii, and ! seat of the Eleutherocilices in the time of Cicero, 
perished at the battle of Pandosia, B.C. 326. < Eeaxxoboas ('EpavvoBoac : now G-unduk), a 
The most celebrated of the later kings was Pye- | river of India, one of the chief tributaries of the 
shus, who carried on war with the Romans. \ Ganges, into which it fell at Palimbothra. 
About B.C. 200 the Epirots established a repub- ! Eeasinides (EpaGtVLdrjc), one of the Athenian 
He : and the Romans, after the conquest of Phil- i commanders at the battle of the Arginuste. He 
ip, 197, guaranteed its independence. But in ' was among the six commanders who returned to 
•consequence of the support which the Epirots j Athens after the victory, and were put to death, 
afforded to Antiochus and Perseus, JEmilius ; B.C. 406. 

Paulus received orders from the senate to punish } EeasIxus ('E,paclvog). 1. (Now Kephalari). 
them with the utmost severity. He destroyed j the chief river in Argolis, rises in the Lake Stym- 
seventy of their towns, and sold one hundred ; phalus, then disappears under the earth, rises 
;'.nd fifty thousand of the inhabitants for slaves, j again out of the mountain Chaon, and, after re- 
in the time of Augustus the country had not yet [ ceiving the River Phrixus, flows through the 
recovered from the effects of this devastation. ' Lerneean marsh into the Argolic Gulf. — 2. A 

Epieus Nova. Vid. Illteicoi. I small river near Brauron in Attica. 

[Episthexes ('ETTcadivric ), of Amphipolis, j Eeasisteatus ^EpaGLcrparoc). 1. A celebra- 
oramander of the Greek peltastte in the army j ted physician and anatomist, was born at Iulis in 
of the younger Cyrus at the battle of Cunaxa.] j the island of Ceos. He was a pupil of Chrysip- 

[Epistoe ('EttIgtup), a Trojan, slain by Patro- j pus of Cnidos, of Metrodorus, and apparently of 
.lus arrayed in the armor of Achilles.] " j Theophrastus. He flourished from B.C. 300 to 

[Episteophus ('ErriGTpomor). 1. Son of Iphi- J 260. He lived for some time at the court of 
tus, leader of the Phocians in the Trojan war. — \ Seleucus Nicator, king of Syria, where he ac- 
2. Of Alybe, an ally of the Trojans. — 3. Son of J quired great reputation by discovering that the 
Euenus, king of Lyrnessus.] ; illness of Antiochus, the king's eldest son, wa.~ 

Epoxa (from epus, that is, equus), a Roman owing to his love for his mother-iu-law, Strato- 
goddess, the protectress of horses. Images of j nice, the young and beautiful daughter of De- 
iier, either statues or paintings, were frequently I metrius Poliorcetes, whom Seleucus had lately 
seen in the niches of stables. j married. Erasistratus afterward lived at Alex- 

Eponxs ('E-zu-evr). 1. Son of Neptune (Po- j andrea, which was at that time beginning to be 
seidon) and Canace, came from Thessaly to | a celebrated medical school. He gave up prac- 
Sicyon, of which place he became king. He car- ! tice in his old age, that he might pursue his au- 
led away from Thebes the beautiful Antiope, j atomical studies without interruption. He pros- 
Jaughter of Nycteus, who therefore made war ecuted his experiments in this branch of inedi- 
upon Epopeus. The two kings died of the i cal science with great success, and with such 
wounds which they received in the war. — 2. One ! ardor that he is said to have dissected criminals 
of the Tyrrhenian pirates, who attempted to I alive. He had numerous pupils and followers. 
;-arry off Bacchus (Dionysus), but were changed | and a medical school bearing his name continual 
by the god into dolphins. I to Exist at Smyrna, in Ionia, about the beginning 

Epoeedia (now Ivrea), a town in Gallia Cisal- j of the Christian era.— 2. One of the thirty ty- 
pina. on the Duria in the territory of the Salassi, ' rants in Athens.] 



ERATID^E. 



ERICHTHONIUS. 



EratId.e ('Epa-idai), an illustrious family of j 
Jalysus in Rhodes, to which Damagetus and his | 
son Diagoras belonged. I 

Erato ('Eparu). I. Wife of Areas, and moth- 
er of Elatus and Aphidas. Vid. Arcas.— 2. One 
of the Muses. Vid. Mus^e. 

Eratosthknes ('EpctToodevw), of Gyrene, was 
born B.C. 8l«. He first studied in his native 
city and then at Athens. He was taught by 
Ariston of Chios, the philosopher ; Lysamas of 
Cyrene, the grammarian ; and Callimachus, the 
poet. He left Athens at the invitation of Ptole- 
my Evergetes, who placed him over the library 
at" Alexandres Here he continued till the reign 
of Ptolemy Epiphanes. He died at the age of 
eighty, about B.C. 196, of voluntary starvation, 
having lost his sight, and being tired of life. 
He was a man of very extensive learning, and 
wrote on almost all the branches of knowledge 
then cultivated— astronomy, geometry, geogra- 
phy, philosophy, history, and grammar. He is 
supposed to have constructed the large armillce 
or fixed circular instruments which were long 
in use at Alexandrea. His works have perish- 
ed, with the exception of some fragments. His 
most celebrated work was a systematic treatise 
»n geography, entiled TeuypatyiKu, in three 
books. "The first book, which formed a sort of 
introduction, contained a critical review of the 
labors of his predecessors from the earliest to 
his own times, and investigations concerning 
the form and nature of the earth, which, accord- 
ing to him, was an immovable globe. The sec- 
eond book contained what is now called mathe- 
matical geography. He was the first person 
who attempted to measure the magnitude of the 
earth, in which attempt he brought forward and 
used the method which is employed to the pres- 
ent day. The third book contained political 
geography, and gave descriptions of the various 
countries, derived from the works of earlier trav- 
ellers and geographers. In order to be able to 
determine the accurate site of each place, he 
drew a line parallel with the equator, running 
from the pillars of Hercules to the extreme east 
of Asia, and dividing the whole of the inhabited 
earth into two halves. Connected with this 
work was a new map of the earth, in which 
towns, mountains, rivers, lakes, and climates 
were marked according to his own improved 
measurements. This important work of Era- 
tosthenes forms an epoch in the history of an- 
oient geography. Strabo, as well as other wri- 
ters, made great use of it. Eratosthenes also 
wrote two poems on astronomical subjects : one 
entitled 'Epfiyc or KaraarcpLCfioi, which treat- 
ed of the constellations; and another entitled 
'Hpiyov?) ; but the poem KaraGTepicuoi, which 
is still extant under his name, is not the work 
of Eratosthenes. He wrote several historical 
works, the most important of which was a chro- 
nological w y ork entitled Xpovoypa<j>ia, in which 
he endeavored to fix the dates of all the import- 
ant events in literary as well as political his- 
tory. The most celebrated of his grammatical 
works was On the Old Attic Comedy (Hspl tijc 
Apxalar KuuuSiag). The best collection of his 
fragments is by Beruhardy, Eratosthenica, Be- 
rol., 1822. 

Erbessus (EpCrjGGor), a town in Sicily, north- 
east of Agrigentum, near the sources of the 



Acragas, which must not be confounded with 
the town Herbessus, near Syracuse. 

Ercta {EipKTTj or EipKral), a fortress in Sic: 
ly, on a hill, with a harbor near Panormus. 

Erebus ("Epefioc), son of Chaos, begot ^Ether 
and Hemera (Day) by Nyx (Night), his sister. 
The name signifies darkness, and is therefore 
applied to the dark and gloomy space un- 
der the earth, through which the shades pass 
into Hades. 

Erechtheum. Vid. Erichthomls. 

Erechtheus. Vid. Erichthonius. 

[Erembi ('Epefx&oL), a people mentioned in the 
Odyssey (iv., 84) in connection with the Sidoni- 
ans and ^Ethiopians ; according to Strabo, a 
Troglodytic people in Arabia.] 

Eresus or Eressus ("Epeaor, "Epecooc ; T... '- 
awe), a town on the western coast of the island 
of Lesbos, the birth-place of Theophrastus and 
Phanias, and, according to some, of Sappho. 

[Eretmeus ('EpeT/tievc, i. c., " rower"), a Phse- 
acian engaged in the games celebrated during 
the stay of Ulysses in Phaeacia.] 

Eretria ^Eptrpia : 'Eperpisvg : now Polu-.o- 
Castro), an ancient and important town in Eu- 
bcea. on the Euripus, with a celebrated harbor 
Porthmos (now Porto Bufalo), was founded by 
the Athenians, but had a mixed population, 
among which was a considerable number of 
Dorians. Its commerce and navy raised it in 
early times to importance ; it contended with 
Chalcis for the supremacy of Eubcea; it ruled 
over several of the neighboring islands, and 
planted colonies in Macedonia and Italy. It 
was destroyed by the Persians, B.C. 490, and 
most of its inhabitants were carried away into 
slavery. Those who were left behind built, at. 
a little distance from the old city, the town of 
New Eretria, which, however, never became a 
place of importance. — 2. A town in Phthiotis, in 
Thessaly, near Pharsalus. 

[Eretum ("HpijTov, now Crestone?), an ancient 
city of the Sabines on the Tiber, which, under 
the Roman rule, sank into comparative insig- 
nificance : in Strabo's time it was little more 
than a village.] 

[Ereuthalion ('Epevda/uuv), leader of the 
Arcadians against the Pylians, fought in the 
armor of Areithous ; he w r as slain by Nestor.] 

Erginus ('Epylvoc), son of Clymenus, king of 
Orchomenos. After Clymenus had been killed 
at Thebes, Erginus, who succeeded him, march- 
ed against Thebes, and compelled them to pa;, 
him an annual tribute of one hundred oxen.. 
The Thebans were released from the pay men 1 
of this tribute by Hercules, who killed Erginus. 

[Eriboza ('EptSoia, poet. 'YLep'&oLa). 1. Sec- 
ond wife of Aloeus, consequently step-mother 
of the Alo'idas : when these had confined Mar- 
in chains, Eribcea disclosed to Mercury the plaec 
where he was imprisoned. — 2. Wife of Tela- 
mon, mother of Ajax ; is sometimes called Per- 
iboea.] 

Erichthonius ('EpLxdovios) or Erechtheus 
('EpexOevg). In the ancient myths these two 
names indicate the same person ; but later 
writers mention two heroes, one of whom is 
usually called Erichthonius or Erechtheus I., 
and the other Erechtheus II. Homer knows 
j only one Erechtheus, as an autochthon and king 
j of Athens ; and the first writer who distinguish 

287 



ERICHTHONIUS. 



ERIS. 



■es two personages is Plato. 1. Erichthonius 
or Erechtheus I, son of Yulcau (Hephaestus) 
and Atthis, the daughter of Cranaus. Minerva 
(Athena) reared the child without the knowl- 
edge of the other gods, and intrusted him to 
Agraulos, Pandrosos, and Herse, concealed in 
a chest. They were forbidden to open the 
chest, but they disobeyed the command. Upon 
opening the chest they saw the child in the form 
of a serpent, or entwined by a serpent, where- 
upon they were seized with madness, and threw 
themselves down the rock of the Acropolis, or, 
according to others, into the sea. "When Erich- 
thonius had grown up, he expelled Amphictyon, 
and became king of Athens. His wife Pasithea 
bore him a son, Pandion. He is said to have 
introduced the worship of Minerva (Athena), to 
have instituted the festival of the Panathenaea, 
i\ud to have built a temple of Minerva (Athena) 
on the Acropolis. When Minerva (Athena) and 
Neptune (Poseidon) disputed about the posses- 
sion of Attica, Erichthonius declared in favor 
of Minerva (Athena). He was, further, the first 
who used a chariot with four horses, for which 
2'eason he was placed among the stars as auriga. 
He was buried in the temple of Minerva (Athe- 
na), and was worshipped as a god after his death. 
His famous temple, the Erechtheum, stood on 
the Acropolis, and contained three separate tem- 
ples : one of Minerva (Athena) Polias, or the 
protectress of the state ; the Erechtheum proper, 
or sanctuary of Erechtheus ; and the Pandrosi- 
urn, or sanctuary of Pandrosos. — 2. Erechtheus 
II., grandson of the former, son of Pandion by 
Zeuxippe, and brother of Butes, Procne, and 
Philomela. After his father's death, he suc- 
ceeded him as king of Athens, and was regard- 
ed in later times as one of the Attic eponymi. 
He was married to Praxithea, by whom he be- 
came the father of Cecrops, Pandoros, Metion, 
Orneus, Procris, Creusa, Chthonia, and Orithyia. 
In the war between the Eleusinians and Athe- 
nians, Eumolpus, the son of Neptune (Posei- 
don), was slain ; whereupon Neptune (Poseidon) 
demanded the sacrifice of one of the daughters 
of Erechtheus. When one was drawn by lot, 
her three sisters resolved to die with her ; and 
Erechtheus himself was killed by Jupiter (Zeus) 
with a flash of lightning at the request of Nep- 
tune (Poseidon). 

Erichthonius, son of Dardanus and Batea, 
husband of Astyoche or Callirrhoe, and father 
of Tros or Assaraeus. He was the wealthiest 
of all mortals ; three thousand mares grazed in 
his fields, which were so beautiful that Boreas 
fell in love with them. He is mentioned, also, 
among the kings of Crete. 

EricinIum, a town in Thessaly, near Gom- 
phi. 

Eridanus ('Hptdavog), a river god, a son of 
Oceanus and Tethys, and father of Zeuxippe. 
He is called the king of rivers, and on his banks 
amber was found. In Homer the name does 
not occur, and the first writer who mentions it 
is Hesiod. The position which the ancient po- 
ets assign to the River Eridanus differed at 
different times. f In later times the Eridanus 
was supposed to be the same as the Padus, 
because amber was found at its mouth. Hence 
the Electrides Insula, or " Amber Islands," are 
placed at the mouth of the Po, and here Phae- 



thou was supposed to have fallen whe^. struck 
| by the lightning of Jupiter (Zeus). The Latin 
1 poets frequently give the name of Eridanus to 
i the Po. Yid. Padus. 

Erigon ('Epr/uv), a tributary of the Axius in 
j Macedonia, the Agrianus of Herodotus. Vid. 

Axtus. 

Erigoxe ('HpiyovTj). 1. Daughter of Icarius. 
beloved by Bacchus. For the legend respect- 
ing her, vid. Icarius. — 2. Daughter of iEgisthus 
and Clytaemnestra, and mother of Penthilus by 
Orestes. Another legend relates that Orestes 
wanted to kill her with her mother, but that Di- 
ana (Artemis) removed her to Attica, and there 
I made her her priestess. Others state that Erig- 
! one put an end to herself when she heard that 
Orestes was acquitted by the Areopagus. 

ErIneus ('Epiveoc or 'Epiveov : 'Epivevc, 'Eptv- 
eaTTjc). 1. A small but ancient town in Doris, 
belonging to the Tetrapolis. Yid. Doris. — 2. 
A town in Phthiotis in Thessaly. 

Erixxa (Hpivva), a Greek poetess, a con- 
temporary and friend of Sappho (about B.C. 
612), who died at the age of nineteen, but left 
behind her poems which were thought worthy 
to rank with those of Homer. Her poems were 
of the epic class : the chief of them was entitled 
"H/.aKdrr/, the Distaff: it consisted of three hun- 
dred lines, of which only four are extant. It 
was written in a dialect which was a mixture 
of the Doric and xEolic, and which was spoken 
at Rhodes, where, or in the adjacent island of 
Telos, Erinna was born. She is also called a 
Lesbian and a Mytilenaean, on account of her 
residence in Lesbos with Sappho. There are 
several epigrams upon Erinna, in which her 
praise is celebrated, and her untimely death is 
lamented. Three epigrams in the Greek An- 
thology are ascribed to her, of which the first 
has the genuine air of antiquity ; but the other 
two, addressed to Baucis, seem to be a later 
fabrication. Eusebius mentions another Erin- 
na, a Greek poetess, contemporary with De- 
mosthenes and Philip of Macedon, B.C. 352 ; 
but this statement ought probably to be rejected. 

Erinyes. Yid. Eumenides. 

[Eriopis ('EpitiTTic). 1. Wife of Oileus, moth- 
er of Ajax the Locrian. — 2. Daughter of Jason 
and Medea.] 

Eriphus ("Epiooc), an Athenian poet of the 
middle comedy. 

Eriphyle ('Epi<pv/.ij), daughter of Talaus and 
Lysimache, and wife of Amphiaraus, whom she 
betrayed for the sake of the necklace of Harmo- 
nia. For details, vid. Amphiaraus, Alcm^on, 
Harmoxia. 

Eris ("Epic), the goddess of discord. Homer 
describes her as the friend and sister of Mars 
(Ares), and as delighting with him in the tumult 
of war and the havoc and anguish of the battle- 
field. According to Hesiod she was a daughter 
of Night, and the poet describes her as the 
J mother of a variety of allegorical beings, which 
! are the causes or representatives of man's mis- 
■ fortunes. It was Eris who threw the apple into 
the assembly of the gods, the cause of so much 
suffering and war. Yid. Paris. Virgil intro- 
duces Discordia as a being similar to the Ho- 
meric Eris ; for Discordia appears in company 
with Mars, Bellona, and the Furies, and Virgil 
is evidentlv imitating Homer. 



ERITHUS. 



ERYTHINI. 



[ErLhus, a friend of Pliiueus, slain by Per- 
seus.] 

Eriza (ru 'Eptfa : 'Epi&vor), a city of Caria, 
on the borders of Lycia and Phrygia, on the 
River Chaiis (or rather Caiis). The surrounding 
district was called Asia Erizena. 

Eros (Epof), iu Latin Amor or Cupido, the 
god of Love. In order to understand the an- 
cients properly, we must distinguish three gods 
of this name : 1. The Eros of the ancient cos- 
mogonies ; 2. The Eros of the philosophers and 
mysteries, who bears great resemblance to the 
first ; and, 3. The Eros whom we meet with 
in the epigrammatic and erotic poets. Homer 
does not mention Eros, and Hesiod, the earliest 
author who speaks of him, describes him as the 
cosmogonic Eros. First, says Hesiod, there 
was Chaos, then came Ge, Tartarus, and Eros, 
the fairest among the gods, who rules over the 
minds and the council of gods and men. By 
the philosophers and in the mysteries Eros was 
regarded as one of the fundamental causes in 
the formatiou of the world, inasmuch as he was 
the unitiug power of love, which brought order 
and harmony among the conflicting elements 
of which Chaos consisted. The Orphic poets 
described him as the son of Cronus (Saturn), 
or as the first of the gods who sprang from the 
world's egg ; and in Plato's Symposium he is 
likewise called the oldest of the gods. The 
Eros of later poets, who gave rise to that notion 
of the god which is most familiar to us, is one 
of the youngest of all the gods. The parentage 
of this Eros is very differently described. He 
is usually represented as a son of Aphrodite 
(Venus), ^but his father is either Ares (Mars), 
Zeus (Jupiter), or Hermes (Mercury). He was 
at first represented as a handsome youth ; but 
shortly after the time of Alexander the Great 
the epigrammatists and erotic poets represent- 
ed him as a wanton boy, of whom a thousand 
tricks and cruel sports were related, and from 
whom neither gods nor men were safe. In this 
stage Eros had nothing to do with uniting the 
discordant elements of the universe, or with 
the higher sympathy of love which binds human 
kind together ; but he is purely the god of sen- 
sual love, who bears sway over the "inhabitants 
of Olympus as well as over men and all living 
creatures. His arms consist of arrows, which 
he carries in a golden quiver, and of torches 
which no one can touch with impunity. His 
arrows are of different power : some are golden, 
and kindle love in the heart they wound ; others 
are blunt and heavy with lead, and produce 
aversion to a lover. Eros is further represent- 
ed with golden wings, and as fluttering about 
like a bird. His eyes are sometimes covered, 
so that he acts blindly. He is the usual com- 
panion of his mother Aphrodite (Venus), and 
poets and artists represent him, moreover, as 
accompanied by such allegorical beings as Po- 
thos, Himeros, Tyche, Peitho, the Charites or 
Muses. Antkros, which literally means re- 
turn-love, is usually represented as the god who 
punishes those who do not return the love of 
others ; thus he is the avenging Eros, or a dens 
idtor (Ov., Met, xiii., 750). But in some ac- 
counts he is described as a god opposed to Eros 
and struggling against him. The number of 
Erotes (Amores and Cupidines) is playfully ex- 



tended ad libitum by later poets, and these 
Erotes are described either as sons of Aphro- 
dite (Venus) or of nymphs. Among the places 
distinguished for the worship of Eros, Thespise 
in Beeotia stands foremost : there a quinquen- 
nial festival, the Erotidia or Erotia, was cele- 
brated in his honor. In ancient works of art, 
Eros is represented either as a full-grown youth 
of the most perfect beauty, or as a wanton and 
sportive boy. Respecting the connection be- 
tween Eros and Psyche, vid. Psyche. 

[Eros ("Epug). 1. A slave of Marc Antony, 
who, when Antony, having determined to de- 
stroy himself, handed him his sword for that 
purpose, plunged it into his own breast. — 2. A 
comic actor, was at first hissed from the stage ; 
but afterward, under the instruction of Roseius, 
became one of the most celebrated actors of 
Rome.] 

Erotiaxus (Epu-iavoc), a Greek grammarian 
or physician in the reign of Nero, wrote a work 
still extant, entitled Tuv Trap 1 'Irr^OKparec Aetjeov 
Lvvayoyrj, Vocwn, quce apud Hippocratem sunt, 
Collectio, which is dedicated to Andromaehus. 
the archiater of the emperor. The best edition 
is by Franz, Lips., 1780. 

Erubrus (now Ruber), a small tributary of the 
Moselle, near Treves. 

[ErycIna, surname of Venus (Aphrodite). 
Vid. Eryx.] 

[Erymaxthe ('Epv/idvdi]), wife of Berosus, and 
mother of Sabba, one of the Sibyls.] 

Erymaxthtjs ('Epvfiavdoc). 1. A lofty mount- 
ain in Arcadia, on the frontiers of Achaia and 
Elis, celebrated in mythology as the haunt of 
the savage Erymanthian boar destroyed by Her- 
cules. Vid. Hercules. The Areadian nymph 
Callisto, who was changed into a she-bear, is 
called Erymanthis ursye, and her son Areas Ery- 
manthidis ursce custos. Vid. Arctos. — 2. [(Now 
Dogana, or, according to Leake, Dhiriiitzana),~\ 
a river in Arcadia, which rises in the above- 
mentioned mountain, and falls into the Alpheus. 

Erymantiius or Etymandrus ('Epvjiavdoc, 
'ErvfiavSpoc, Arrian : now Helmuncl), a consid- 
erable river in the Persian province of Aracho- 
sia, rising in Mount Paropamisus, and flowing 
southwest and west iuto the lake called Aria 
(now Zarah). According to other accounts, it 
lost itself in the sand, or flowed on through 
Gedrosia into the Indian Ocean. 

[Erymas (Epvfiac). 1. A Trojan, slain by 
Idomeneus. — 2. Another Trojan, slain by Pa- 
troclus. — 8. A companion of ./Eneas, slain by 
Turnus.] 

Erysichthon ('Epvoixdui'), that is, "the Tear- 
er up of the Earth." 1. Son of Triopas, cut 
down trees in a grove sacred to Ceres (Deme- 
ter), for which he was punished by the goddess 
with fearful hunger. — 2. Son of Ceerops and 
Agraulos, died without issue in his father's life- 
time on his return from Delos, whence he brought 
to Athens the ancient image of Ilithyia. 

[Erythia ('EpvOsia), daughter of Geryones, 
after whom the island Erythea or Erythia. near 
Gades was said to have been named. Vid, 
Gades.] 

Erythini ('EpvOivot), a city on the coast of 
Paphlagonia, between Cromna and Amastris 
A range of cliffs neai* it was called by the same 
name. 

289 



KKYTHKJ2. 



ETEOXEUS. 



EBVi'Kii-E ('Epudpai : 'EpvOpalog). 1. (Ruins j very satisfaetoiy reason has been given; the H t - 
near Pigadia), an ancient town in Bceotia, not j brew name signifies the sedgy sea. 
far from Plataeae and Hysia, and celebrated as I [Erythras ('Epvdpag), an ancient king (Stra 
the mother city of Erythrae in Asia Minor. — ; bo in one place calls him a Persian, in another a 
% A town of the Locri Ozolae, but belonging to ! son of Perseus), after whom the Erythraean Sea 
the -/Etolians, east of Xaupactus. — 3. (Ruins at was said to have been named.] 
Ritri), one of the twelve Ionian cities of Asia I [Eryx ("Epi'f), son of Xeptune (Apollod.), or 
Minor, stood at the bottom of a large bay, on the ; of Butes and Venus, consequently half brother 
west side of the peninsula which lies opposite | of JSneas ; king of the Elymi in Sicily ; founded 
to Chios. Tradition ascribed its foundation to ■ the city Eryx (q. v.), and built a temple in honor 
a mixed colony of Cretans, Lycians, Carians, j of his mother. He was a famous boxer, and 
and Pamphylians, under Erythros, the son of ; challenged Hercules, but was slain by him] 
RJiadamanthys ; and the leader of the Ionians, j Eryx (*Epi>£). 1. Also Erycus Moxs (now 
who afterward took possession of it, was said : S. Givlia.no), a steep and isolated mountain ia 
to have been Cnopus, the son of Codrus, after I the northwest of Sicily, near Drepanum. On 
whom the city was also called Cnopopolis • the summit of this mountain stood an ancient 
(Kvottov-o/.ic). The little river Aleos (or, j and celebrated temple of Venus (Aphrodite) ; 
rather, Axus, as it appeai-s on coins), flowed j said to have been built by Eryx, king of the 
past the city, and the neighboring sea-port towns | Elymi, or, according to Virgil, by JSueas, but 
of Cyssus or Casystes, and Phoenieus, formed ' more probably by the Phoenicians, who intrc- 
its harbors. Erythrae contained a temple of j duced the worship of Venus (Aphrodite) into 
Hercules and Minerva (Athena) Polias, remark- j Sicily. Vid. Aphrodite. From this temple the 
able for its antiquity ; and on the coast, near the j goddess bore the surname Erycixa, under which 
city, was a rock called Xigruni Promontorium ! name her worship was introduced at Rome about 
{iicpa fuKaiva), from which excellent mill-stones I the beginning of the second Punic war. At 
were hewa j present there is standing on the summit of the 

Erythr^euyi Mare (,7 'EpvBpd dd'/.acca, also j mountain the remains of a castle, originally 
rarely 'Epvdpalor Trovroc), was the name applied \ built by the Saracens. — 2. The town of this name 
originally to the whole expanse of sea between ; was on the western slope of the mountain. It 
Arabia and Africa on the west, and India on the j was destroyed by the Carthaginians in the time 
east, including its two great gulfs (the Red Sea , : of Pyrrhus ; was subsequently rebuilt ; but wa=- 
and Persian Gulf). In this sense it is used by j again destroyed by the Carthaginians in the 
Herodotus, who also distinguishes the Red Sea \ first Punic war, and its inhabitants removed t<> 
by the name of 'ApdSioc ko'/.-oc. Vid. Arabiccs ! Drepanum. 

Sinus. Supposing the shores of Africa and Esdraela ('Eadpaij/.d) and Esdraelon or Es- 
Arabia to trend more and more away from each ; drelox or -oil {'Ec6pr,/.uv or -d)fi), the Greek 
other the further south you go, he appears to ! names for the city and valley of Jezreel in Pal- 
have called the head of the sea between them j estine. 
6 'Apd6ios k67 ~oc. and the rest of that sea, as j EsquilLe. Vid. Roma. 

far south as it extended, and also eastward to i Essul a people in Gaul, west of the Sequana, 
the shores of India, q 'Epvdpfj -&d7.aGca, and also j probably the same as the people elsewhere call- 
lj 'Norir/ xrd/.aoGa ; though there are, again, some ! ed Esubii and Sesuvil 

indications of a distinction between these two j Estioxes, a people in Puetia Secunda or Vin- 
terms, the latter being applied to the whole ex- i delicia, whose capital was Campodunum (now 
panse of ocean south of the former ; in one pas- ; Eanpten), on the Uler. 

sage, however, they are most expressly identi- j [Etearchus ('Ereap^oc). 1. An ancient king 
fied (iL, 158). Afterward, when the true form j of Crete, father of Phronima, and, through her. 
of these seas came to be better known, through ' grandfather of Battus, according to the legend of 
the progress of maritime discovery under the ' the Cyreneans. — 2. A kin^ of the Ammoniac? . 
Ptolemies, their parts were distinguished by ! Both mentioned by Herodotus, 
different names, the main body of the sea be- j Eteocles ('EreoK/.fjc). 1. Son of Andreus and 
ing called Indieus Oceanus, the Red Sea Arab- \ Evippe, or of Cephisus ; said to have been the 
icus Sinus, the Persian Gulf Persicus Sinus, ; first who offered sacrifices to the Charites at 
and the name Erythranun Mare being confined Orchomenos in Bceotia. — 2. A son of CEdipus 
by some geographers to the gulf between the ; and Jocaste. After his fathers flight from 
Straits of Rab-el-Mandeb and the Indian Ocean, j Thebes, he and his brother Polynices undertook 
but far more generally used as identical with j the government of Thebes by turns ; but dis- 
Arabicus Sinus, or the corresponding genuine j putes having arisen between them, Polynices 
Latin term, Mare Rubruni (Red Sea). Still, \ fled to Adrastus, who then brought about the 
however, even long after the commencement \ expedition of the Seven against Thebes, lid. 
of our era, the name Erythraeum Mare was j Adrastus. "When many of the heroes had fall- 
sometimes used in its ancient sense, as in the ; en, Eteocles and Polynices resolved upon de- 
HepL7r?.ovc 7,7c 'Epvdpdc ■3a?,docnc, ascribed to ' ciding the contest by single combat, and both the 
Arriaabut really the work of a' later period. ; brothers felL 

which is a description of the coast from Myos S Eteoclus ('ErtoxXoc), a son of Iphis, was, ae- 
Hermos on the Red Sea to the shores of India, j cording to some traditions, one of the seven he- 
The origin of the name is doubtful, and was dis- \ roes who went with Adrastus against Thebes, 
puted by the ancients : it is generally supposed j He had to make the attack upon the Xe'itifm 
that the Greek 'Epvdpu -&d7.acaa is a significant j gate, where he was opposed by Megareus. 
name, identical in meaning with the Latin and j [Eteonecs ('Ereuvevg), son of Boethu.-.. ai- 
Englieh names of the Red S*a ; but whv red D" ; tendant of Menelaus.] 
290 



ETEOKIOUS. 

[Eteonicus ('Ereuvtunc), a Laeedjemonian, 
harmost in Thasow, was driven out B.C. 410 ; I 
in 389 he was harmost in iEgina.] 

Etkonvs ('Erewvoc), a town in Bceotia, be- 
longing to the district Parasopia, mentioned by 
Homer, subsequently called Scarphe. 

Etksi.e ('Err/otai, sc. ave/ioi), the fitesian 
Winds, derived from Iro?, "'year," signified any 
periodical imnds, but the word was used more 
particularly by the Greeks to indicate the north- 
erly winds, which blew in the ^Egean for forty 
days from the rising of the dog star. 

[Ethkmon. a friend of Phineus, from Naba- 
tc-ea in Arabia, slain by Perseus.] 

Ens or EtIa (Hr/r, "lireia : "Htloc, 'Rtuoc), 
a town in the south of Laconia, near Base, said 
to have been founded by JSneas, and named 
after his daughter Etias. Its inhabitants were 
transplanted at an early time to Bcess, and the 
place disappeared. 

Etoviksa, a town of the Edetani, in Hispania 
Tarraconensis. 

Etruria or Toboia, called by the Greeks 
Ttrbhknxa or TXRSENIA (Tvfyhjvta, Tvpcyvta), 
a country in central Italy. The inhabitants 
were called by the Romans Etrusct or Tusci, 
by the Greeks Tyruhexi or Tyrskni (Tvfifavot, 
Tvpoijvoi), and by themselves Rasena. Etruria 
was bounded on the north and northwest by the 
Apennines and the River Macro, which divided 
it from Liguria, on the west by the Tyrrhene 
Sea or Mare Inferum, on the east and south by 
the River Tiber, vrbieh separated it from Ura- 
bria and Latiuin, thus comprehending almost 
the whole of modem Tuscany, the Duchy of 
Lucca, and the Tran- tiberine portion of the Ro- 
man states. It was intersected by numerous 
mountains, offshoot i of the Apennines, consist- 
ing of long ranges of hills in the north, but in 
the south lying in detached masses, and of 
smaller size. Tkc land was celebrated iu an- 
tiquity for its fertility, and yielded rich harvests 
of corn, wine, oil. and flax. The upper part of 
the country was the most healthy, namely, the 
part at the foot of the Apennines, near the 
sources of the Tiber and the Arnus, in the 
neighborhood of Arretium, Cortona, and Peru- 
gia. The lower part of the country on the 
coast was marshy and unhealthy, like the Ma- 
remnia at the present day. The early history 
of the population of Etruria has given rise to 
much discussion in modern times. It is admit- 
ted on all bauds that the people known to the 
Romans under the name of Etruscans were not 
the original inhabitants of the country, but a 
mixed race. The- most ancient inhabitants ap- 
pear to have been Ligurians in the north and 
Siculians in the south, both of whom were sub- 
sequently expelled from the country by the Uni- 
brians. So far most accounts agree ; but from 
this point there is great difference of opinion. 
The ancients generally believed that a colony 
of Lydians, led by Tyrsenus, son of the king of 
Lydia, settled in the country, to which they 
gave the name of their leader ; and it has been 
maintained by some modern writers that the 
Oriental character of many of the Etruscan in- 
stitutions is in favor of this account of their ori- 
gin. Bui most modern critics adopt an entire- 
ly different opinion. They believe that a Pe- 
lasgic race, called Tvrrbeni, subdued the Um- 



ETRURIA. 

biians, and settled in the country, and that 
these Tyrrhenc-Pelasgians were in their turn 
conquered by a powerful Roetian race, called 
Rasena, who descended from the Alps and the 
valley of the Po. Hence it was from the union 
of the Tyrrhcnc-Pelasgians and the Rasena that 
the Etruscan nation was formed. It is impos- 
sible, however, to come to any definite conclu- 
sion respecting the real origin of the Etrus- 
cans, since we are entirely ignorant of the 
language which they spoke : and the language 
of a people is the only means by which we can 
pronounce with certainty respecting their ori- 
gin. But, whatever may have been the origin 
of the Etruscans, we know that they were a 
very powerful nation when Rome was still in 
its infancy, and that they had at an early period 
extended their dominion over the greater part 
of Italy, from the Alps and the plains of Lom- 
bardy on the one hand, to Vesuvius and the 
Gulf" of Sarento on the other. These domin- 
ions may be divided into three great districts : 
Circumpadane Etruria in the north, Etruria 
Proper in the centre, and Campanian Etruria 
in the south. In each of these districts there 
were twelve principal cities or states, which 
formed a confederacy for mutual protection. 
Through the attacks of the Gauls in the north, 
and of the Sabines, Samnites, and Greeks in the 
south, the Etruscans became confined within 
the limits of Etruria Proper, and continued long 
to flourish in this country, after they had disap- 
peared from the rest of Italy. Of the twelve 
cities which formed the confederacy in Etruria 
Proper, no list is given by the ancients. They 
were most probably Cortona, Arretium, Cel- 
sius!, Perusia, Volaterr^e, Vetulonia, Rusel- 
lje, Volsinii, Tarquinii, Valerii, Veii, C^ere, 
more anciently called Agylla. Each state was 
independent of all the others. The government 
was a close aristocracy, and was strictly con- 
fined to the family of the Lucumones, who 
united in their own persons the ecclesiastical 
as well as the civil functions. The people were 
not only rigidly excluded from all share in the 
government, but appear to have been in a state 
of vassalage or serfdom. From the noble and 
priestly families of the Lucumones a supreme 
magistrate was chosen, who appears to have 
been sometimes elected for life, and to have 
borne the title of king ; but his power was much 
fettered by the noble families. At a later time 
the kingly dignity was abolished, and the gov- 
ernment intrusted to a senate. A meeting of 
the confederacy of the twelve states was held 
annually in the spring, at the temple of Vol- 
tumna, near Volsinii. The Etruscans were a 
highly-civilized people, and from them the Ro- 
mans borrowed many of their religious and po- 
litical institutions. *The three last kings of 
Rome were undoubtedly Etruscans, and they 
left in the city enduring traces of Etruscan 
power and greatness. The Etruscans paid the 
greatest attention to religion, and their relig- 
ious system was closely interwoven with all 
public and private affairs. The principal deities 
were divided into two classes. The highest 
class were the " Shrouded Gods," who did not 
reveal themselves to man, and to whom all the 
other gods were subject The second class 
consisted of the twelve great gods, six male 
291 



EUJ3MON. 



EUCLIDES. 



and six female, called by the Romans Dii Con- ' the Euboean Sea, called the Euripus in its nar 
sentes. Thev formed the council of Tina or j rowest part. Euboea is about ninety rnilea in 
Tin ia, the Human Jupiter, and the two other length : its extreme breadth is thirty miles, but 
most powerful gods of the twelve were Cupra, in the narrowest part it is only four miles across, 
corresponding to Juno, and Menrva or Menerva, Throughout the length of the island runs a lofty 
oorresponding to the Roman Minerva. Besides range of mountains, which rise in one part as 
these two classes of gods, there was a great high as seven thousand two hundred and sixty- 
number of other gods, penates and lares, to • six feet above the sea. It contains, neverthe- 
whoni worship was paid. The mode in which less, many fertile plains, and was celebrated in 
the gods were worshipped was prescribed in ; antiquity for the excellence of its pasturage and 
certain sacred books, said to have been written corn-fields. According to the ancients, it was 
by Tages. These books contained the " Etrus- j once united to Boeotia, from which it was sep- 
can Disciplina/' and gave minute directions re- arated by an earthquake. In Homer the inhab- 
specting the whole of the ceremonial worship, itants are called Abantes, and are represented 
They were studied in the schools of the Lucu- 1 as taking part in the expedition against Troy, 
rnones, to which the Romans also were accus- ; In the north of Euboea dewelt the Histisei, from 
tomed to send some of their noblest youths for j whom that part of the island was called His- 
instruction, since it was from the Etruscans ; tiaea ; below these were the Ellopii, who gave 
that the Romans borrowed most of their arts ! the name of Ellopia to the district, extending 
of divination. In architecture, statuary, and j as far as iEgse and Cerinthus ; and in the south 
painting, the Etruscans attained a great emi- j were the Dry opes. The centre of the island 
nence. They were acquainted with the use of ■ was inhabited chiefly by Ionians. It was in this 
the arch at an early period, and they employed part of Euboea that the Athenians planted the 
it in constructing the great cloacae at Rome. [ colonies of Chalcis and Eretria, which were 
Their bronze candelabra were celebrated at the two most important cities in the island. 
Athens even in the times of Pericles ; and the ' After the Persian wars Euboea became subject 
beauty of their bronze statues is still attested to the Athenians, who attached much import- 
by the She Wolf of the Capitol and the Orator ; anee ; to its possession: and, consequently, Per- 
ot" the Florence Gallery. The beautiful vases, ■ icles made great exertions to subdue it, when 
which have been discovered in such numbers ] it revolted in B.C. 445. Under the Romans 
in Etruscan tombs, can not be cited as proofs I Euboea formed part of the province of Achaia. 
of the excellence of Etruscan workmanship, j Since Cumaj in Italy was a colony from Chal- 
since it is now admitted by the most eompe- j cis in Euboea, the adjective Euboiciis is used by 
tent judges that these vases were either made ; the poets in reference to the former city. Thus 
in Greece, or by Greek artists settled in Italy. Virgil (uEn^ vi, 2) speaks of Euboicis Cumarum 
Of the private life of the Etruscans we have a j oris. — 2. A town in the interior of Sicily, found- 
lively picture from the paintings discovered in j ed by Chalcis in Euboea, but destroyed at an 
their tombs ; but into this subject our limits i early period. 

forbid us to enter. The later history of Etruria ! EVbulides (EiCov/udix), of Miletus, a phi- 
is a struggle against the rising power of Rome, i losopher of the Megaric school. He was a con- 
to which It was finally compelled to yield. Aft- j temporary of Aristotle, against whom he wrote 
-er the capture of Yeii by the dictator Carnillus, ; with great bitterness ; and he is stated to have 
B.C. 396, the Romans obtained possession of \ given Demosthenes instruction in dialectics, 
the eastern part of Etruria, and the Ciminian j He is said to have invented the forms of sev- 
forest, instead of the Tiber, now became the j eral of the most celebrated false and captious 
boundary of the two people. The defeat of the ! syllogisms. 

Etruscans by Q. Fabius Maximus in 310 was j Eubulus (Ev6ov/.oc). 1. An Athenian, of the 
a great blow to then- power. They still en- j demus Anaphlystus, a distinguished orator and 
deavored to maintain their independence, with ; statesman, was one of the most formidable op- 
the assistance of the Samnites and the Gauls ; j ponents of Demosthenes. It was with him that 
but after their decisive defeat by Cornelius Dol- J JEsehines served as secretary in the earlier part 
abella in 283, they became the subjects of Rome, of his life. — 2. An Athenian, son of Euphranor. 
In 91 they received the Roman franchise. The ! of the Cettian demus, a distinguished poet of 
numerous military colonies established in Etru- the middle comedy, flourished B.C. 376. He 
lia by Sulla and' Augustus destroyed to a great wrote one hundred and four plays, of which 
extent the national character of the people, and ! there are extant more than fifty titles. His 
the country thus became in course of time com- j plays were chiefly on mythological subjects, 
pietely Romanized. i Several of them contained parodies of passages 

[Eu„£mox (Eiaijuuv). 1. One of the sons of j from the tragic poets, and especially from Eu- 
Lyeaon, slain by the lightning of Jupiter (Zeus). J ripides. [The fragments of Eubulus have been 
—2. Father of Eurvpylus. whence the latter is ! collected and edited by Meineke, Fragm. Comic. 
called by Homer Eueemonides (Ei'c/«oi7(5;;c).] j G-rcec, vol. i., p. 594-629, edit, minor.] 

[Euagrus, one of the Lapithae, slain by the ! [Ecchexor (Evxijvup), a son of the Corinthian 
<: entaur Rhcetus at the nuptials of Pirithous.] I seer Polyidus, with whom he went to the Trojan 

[Eubius, a writer, author of erotic stories, ! war, although his father had foretold that he 
mentioned by Ovid in his Tristia.] i would thereby lose his life ; he was slain hjy 

Euboea (EvOoia : EvBouvc, EvGoevc, fern. Ev- J Paris.] 
(joic). 1. (Xow Xec/ropont), the largest island j Euclides (EvK/.etdnc). 1. The celebrated 
of the iEgean Sea, lying along the coasts of j mathematician, who has almost given his owr 
Attica. Boeotia, and the southern part of Thes- '■ name to the science of geometry, in every coun- 
salv. from which countries it is separated bv try in which his writings are studied : but Wc 
292 



EUCRATES. 



EUELTHON. 



know next to nothing of his private history, j Eudemos (Evdyfioc). 1. Of Cyprus, a Peripa- 
The place of his birth is uncertain. He lived j tctic philosopher, to whom Aristotle dedicated 
at Alexandrea in the time of the first Ptolemy, the dudogue Evdn/uoc ?/ nepl ipvx>/e, which is lost. 
B.C. 323-283, and was the founder of the Alex- —2. Of Rhodes, also a Peripatetic philosopher, 
andrean mathematical school. He was of the and one of the most importaut of Aristotle's 
Platonic sect, and well read in its doctrines, disciples. He edited many of Aristotle's writ- 
It was his answer to Ptolemy, who asked if ings ; and one of them even bears the name of 
geometry could not be made easier, that there Eudemus, namely, the 'H6lku Evdrj^eia, which 
was no royal road. Of the numerous works at- work was in all probability a recension of Aris- 
tributed to Euclid, the following are still extant: totlcs lectures edited by Eudemus. Vid. p. 
1. ^Tocxela, the Elements, in thirteen books, 102, a. — 3. The physician of Livilla, the wife of 
with a fourteenth and fifteenth added by Hyp- Drusus Caesar, who assisted her and Sejanus in 
sicles. 2. Aedoptva, the Data, containing one poisoning her husband, A.D. 23. 
hundred propositions, with a preface by Marinus Eudocia (Evdoula). I. Originally called Athe- 
of Naples. 8. Elcayuy?) 'Apfiovitc?/, a Treatise on nais, daughter of the sophist Leontius, was dis- 
Music; and, 4. Kararo/xT) Kavovoc, the. Division of tinguished for her beauty and attainments. She 
the Scale: one of these w T orks, most likely the married the Emperor Theodosius II., A.D. 421 ; 
former, must be rejected. 5. $aiv6/ieva, the and on her marriage she embraced Christianity, 
Appearances (of the heavens). 6. 'Otttiku, on and received at her baptism the name of Eudo- 
Optics ; and, 7. KaroKTpcKd, on Catoptrics. The cia. She died at Jerusalem, A.D. 460. She 
only complete edition of all the reputed works wrote several works ; and to her is ascribed by 
of Euclid is that published at Oxford, 1703, folio, some the extant poem Homero-Ce atones, which 
by David Gregory, with the title Evuletdov ru is composed of verses from Homer, and relates 
ou&peva. The Elements and the Data were the history of the fall and of the redemption of 
published in Greek, Latin, and French, in 3 man by Jesus Christ ; but its genuineness is 
vols. 4to, Paris, 1814-16-18, by Peyrard. The very doubtful. — 2. Of Macrembolis, wife of the 
most convenient edition for scholars of the Emperors Constantino XI. Ducas and Romanus 
Greek text of the Elements is the one by Au- IV. Diogenes (A.D. 1059-1071), wrote a dic- 
gust, Berol., 1826, 8vo. — 2. Of Megara, was one tionary of history and mythology, which she 
of the chief of the disciples of Socrates, but be- called 'lovia, Violariwn, or Bed of Violets. It 
fore becoming such lie had studied the doc- was printed for the first time by Villoison, in his 
trines, and especially the dialectics, of the Ele- Anecdota Gro&ca, Venice, 1781. The sources 
atics. Socrates on one occasion reproved him from which the work was compiled are nearly 
for his fondness for subtle and captious dis- the same as those used by Suidas. 
putes. On the death of Socrates (B.C. 899), j [Eudorus (Evdupoc), son of Mercury and Poly- 
Euclides took refuge in Megara and there es- j rnela, reared by Ins grandfather Phylas ; was 
tablished a school which distinguished itself j one of the leaders of the Myrmidons Tinder 



chiefly by the cultivation of dialectics. The 
doctrines of the Eleatics formed the basis of 
his philosophical system. With these he blend- 
ed the ethical and dialectical principles of So- 
crates. He was the author of six dialogues, 
none of which, however, have come down to 
us. He has frequently been erroneously con- 
founded with the mathematician of the same 
name. The school which he founded was call- 
ed sometimes the Megaric, sometimes the Dia- 
lectic or Eristic. 

[Eecrates (Evi<pdrnc). 1. An Athenian dem- 
agogue, who, after the death of Pericles, exer- 
cised for a time a considerable influence. — 2. 
Brother of Nicias, the general, refused to be- 
come one of the thirty tyrants, and was put to 
death by them.] 

Eccratides (EvKpa-id)]c), king of Bactria 
was 



Achilles.] 

Eudoses, a people in Germany, near the Va- 
rini, probably in the modern Mecklenburg. 

Eudoxus (Evdotjoc.) 1. Of Cnidus, son of 
iEschines, a celebrated astronomer, geometer, 
physician, and legislator, lived about B.C. 366. 
He was a pupil of Archytas and Plato, and also 
went to Egypt, where he studied some time 
with the priests. He afterward returned to 
Athens, but it would appear that he must have 
spent some time in his native place, for Strabo 
says that the observatory of Eudoxus at Cnidus 
was existing in his time. He died at the age 
of fifty-three. He is said to have been the first 
who taught in Greece the motions of the plan- 
ets ; and he is also stated to have made sep- 
arate spheres for the stars, sun, moon, and 
planets. He wrote various works on astronomy 



from about B.C. 1 si to 161, was one of the j and geometry, which are lost ; but the substance 
most powerful of the Bactrian kings, and made of his Qatvofieva is preserved by Aratus, who 



a;reat conquests in the north of India. 

Euctemox, the astronomer. Vid. Meton. 
Eudamidas (EMau'idac). 1. I., King of Sparta, 



reigned from B.C. 330 to about 300 
the younger son of Archidanius III 



turned into verse the prose work by Eudoxus 
i with that title. — 2. An Athenian comic poet of 
! the new comedy, was by birth a Sicilian and 



He was j the son of Agathocles.- 
and sue- rapher, who went from 



Of Cyzicus, a geog- 
his native place to 



ceeded his brother Agis III. — 2. II., King of | Egypt, and was employed by Ptolemy Evergetes 
Sparta, waa son of Archidamus IV, whom he and his wife Cleopatra in voyages to India ; but 
succeeded, sad father of Agis IV. — [3. A Spar- i afterward, being robbed of all his property by 
tan general, brother of Phoebidas, sent at the j Ptolemy Lathyrus, he sailed away down the 



head of two thousand men to aid the Chaleidi 
ans, B.C. 888 : in consequence of his brother's 
delay in bringing him re-enforcements, he did 
not effect much : he was slain in the course of 
the war.] 



Red Sea, and at last arrived at Gades. He aft- 
erward made attempts to circumnavigate Africa 
in the opposite direction, but without success. 
He lived about B.C. 130. 

Eueltiion (EveWuv), a king of Salamis in 
293 



EUGAMON. 



EUMENES. 



Cyprus, under whom the Persians reduced this 
island.] 

Eugamox (Evydficjv), one of the Cyclic poets, 
was a native of Cyrene, and lived about B.C. 
568. His poem (Ti)?,eyovta) was a continuation 
of the Odyssey, and formed the conclusion of 
the Epic cycle. It concluded with the death of 
Ulysses. 

Eugaxei, a people who formerly inhabited 
Venetia on the Adriatic Sea, and were driven 
toward the Alps and the Lacus Benacus by the 
Heneti or Veneti. According to some tradi- 
tions, they founded Patavium and Terona, in 
the neighborhood of which were the Euganei 
Colles. They possessed numerous flocks of 
sheep, the wool of which was celebrated (Juv., 
viii., 15.) 

Euheherus (Evf/fiepog), probably a native of 
Messene in Sicily, lived at the court of Cas- 
sander in Macedonia about B.C. 316. Cassan- 
der furnished him with the means to undertake 
a voyage of discovery. He is said to have sail- 
ed down the Red Sea and round the southern 
coasts of Asia, until he came to an island called 
Panchaa. After his return he wrote a work en- 
titled 'lepa 'Xvaypaip/j, or a Sacred History, in 
uine books. He gave this title to his work be- 
cause ho pretended to have his information from 
! Avaypaoai, or inscriptions in temples, which 
he had discovered in his travels, especially in 
the island of Panchaja. Euhenierus had been 
trained in the school of the Cyrenaics, who were 
notorious for their skepticism in matters con- 
nected with the popular religion ; and the ob- 
ject of his work was to exclude every thing 
supernatural from the popular religion, and to 
dress up the myths as to many plain histories. 
In his work the several gods were represented 
as having originally been men who had distin- 
guished themselves either as warriors or bene- 
factors of mankind, and who after their death 
were worshipped as gods by the grateful people. 
Jupiter (Zeus), for example, wa3 a king of 
Crete, who had been a great conqueror; and 
he asserted that he had seen in the temple of 
Jupiter (Zeus) Triphylius a column with an in- 
scription detailing all the exploits of the kings 
Ccelus (Uranus), Saturn (Cronus), and Jupiter 
(Zeus). The book was written in an attractive 
style, and became very popular, and many of 
the subsequent historians, such as Diodorus, 
adopted his mode of dealing with myths. The 
great popularity of the work is attested by the 
circumstance that Ennius made a Latin trans- 
lation of it. But the pious believers, on the 
other hand, called Euhemerus an atheist The 
Christian writers often refer to him to prove 
that the pagan mythology was nothing but a 
heap of fables invented by men. 

Eui^eus (Ei- /Mlog : Old Testament, Ulai : now 
Karooii), a river in Susiana, on the borders of 
Elymais, rising in Great Media, flowing south 
through Mesobatene, passing east of Susa, and, 
After uniting with the Pasitigris, falling into the 
head of the Persian Gulf. Some of the ancient 
geographers make the Eulseus fall into the Cho- 
aspes, and others identify the two rivers. 

Euirjsus (Evfiaio?), the faithful swineherd of 
Ulysses, was a son of Ctesius, king of the isl- 
and of Syric ; he had been carried away from 
Ms father's hou3e bv a Phoenician slave, and 
294 



I Phcenieiau sailors sold him to Laertes, the father 
of Ulysses. 

[Eumedes (Evfiridiis). 1. A herald of the Tro- 
jans, father of Dolon. — 2. Grandson of the pre- 
ceding, accompanied iEneas to Italy, and was 
slain by Turnus.] 

Eumelus (Evfi7]/>a£). 1. Son of Admetus and 
Alcestis, went with eleven ships from Pherae to 
Troy. He was distinguished for his excellent 
horses, which had once been under the care of 
Apollo, and with which Eumelus would have 
gained the prize at the funeral games of Patro- 
clus if his chariot had not been broken. His 
wife was Ipthima, daughter of Icarius. — % of 
Corinth, one of the Bacchiada?, an ancient Epic 
poet, belonged, according to some, to the Epic- 
cycle. His name is significant, referring to his 
skill in poetry. He flourished about B.C. "760. 
His principal poem seems to have been his Co- 
rinthian. History. 

Ecmexes (Evp-ivnc). 1. Of Cardia, served as 
private secretary to Philip and Alexander, whom 
he accompanied throughout his expedition in 
Asia, and who treated him with marked con- 
fidence and distinction. After the death of 
Alexander (B.C. 323), Eumenes obtained the 
government of Cappadocia, Paphlagonia. and 
Pontus, which provinces had never yet been 
conquered by the Macedonians. Eumenes en- 
tered into a close alliance with Perdiceas, who 
subdued these provinces for him. "When Per- 
diceas marched into Egypt against Ptolemy, he 
committed to Eumenes the conduct of the war 
against Antipater and Craterus in Asia Minor, 
Eumenes met with great success ; he defeated 
Xeoptolemus, who had revolted from Perdiceas ; 
and subsequently he again defeated the com 
bined armies of Craterus and Neoptolemus ; 
Craterus himself fell, and STeoptolemus was 
slain by Eumenes with his own hand, after a 
deadly struggle in the presence of the two 
armies. Meantime the death of Perdiceas in 
Egypt changed the aspect of affairs. Antigonus 
now employed the whole force of the Macedo- 
nian army to crush Eumenes. The struggle 
was carried on for some years (320-316). It 
was conducted by Eumenes with consummate 
skill, and, notwithstanding the numerical in- 
feriority of his forces, he maintained his ground 
against his enemies till he was surrendei-ed by 
the Argyraspids to Autigonu3, by whom he was 
put to death, 316. He was forty -five years old 
at the time of his death. Of his ability, both as 
a general and a statesman, no doubt can be en- 
tertained ; and it is probable that he would have 
attained a far more important position among 
the successors of Alexander, had it not been for 
the accidental disadvantage of his birth. But 
as a Greek of Cardia, and not a native Macedo- 
nian, he was constantly looked upon with dis- 
like both by his opponents and companions in 
arms. — 2. I., King of Pergamus, reigned B.C 
263-241, and was the successor of his uncle 
Philetaeru3. He obtained a victory near Sardis 
over Antiochus Soter, and thus established his 
dominion over the provinces in the neighbor 
hood of his capital. — 3. II., King of Pergamus. 
reigned B.C. 197-159, and was the son and 
successor of Attalus I. He inherited from his 
predecessor the friendship and alliance of the 
Romans, which he took the utmost pains to 



EUMENIA. 



EUNJGUS. 



cultivate. He supported the Romans in their 
war against Antiochus ; and, after the conquest 
of the latter (190), he received from the senate 
Mysia, Lydia, both Phrygias, and Lycaonia, as 
well as Lysimachia, and the Thracian Cherso- 
nese. By this means he was at once raised 
from a state of comparative insignificance to be 
the sovereigu of a powerful monarchy. Subse- 
quently he was involved in war with Pharnaces, 
king of Pontus, and Prusiaa, king of Bithynia, 
but both wars were brought to a close by the 
interposition of the Romans. At a later period 
Cumenes was regarded with suspicion by the 
Roman senate, because he was suspected of 
having corresponded secretly with Perseus, king 
of Macedonia, during the war of the latter with 
the Romans. Eumenes assiduously cultivated 
all the arts of peace ; Pergamus became under 
his rule a great and flourishing city, which he I 
adorned with splendid buildings, and in which 
he founded that celebrated library which rose 
to be a rival even to that of Alexandrea. 

Edmenia (Eifieveia or Ev/uevta : now Ishekli), 
a city of Great Phrygia, on the rivers Glaucus 
:ind Cludrus, north of the Mseauder, named by 
Attalus IL after his brother aud predecessor 
Eumenes II. There are indications which 
•seem to connect the time of its foundation with 
that of the destruction of Corinth. 

Eumknidks (Ev(ievi6eg), also called Erinyes, 
not Erinnyes ('Epivvrr, 'Eptvvc), and by the Ro- 
mans Future or Diu.e, tine Avenging Deities, 
were originally only a personification of curses 
pronounced upon a criminal. The name Erinys 
is the more ancient oue; its etymology is un- 
certain, but the Greeks derived it from kpuvu or 
Ipeovuu, I hunt up or persecute, or from the Ar- 
cadian hpivvu, I am angry ; so that the Erinyes 
were either the angry goddesses, or the god- 
desses who hunt up or search after the criminal. 
The name Eumeniaes, which signifies ' ; the well- 
meaning" or "soothed godd esses/' is a mere 
euphemism, because people dreaded to call 
these fearful goddesses by their real name. It 
was said to have been first given them after the 
acquittal of Orestes by the Areopagus, when 
the anger of the Erinyes had become soothed, 
ft was by a similar euphemism that at Athens 
tie Erinyes were called ae/tval deal, or the re- 
spected goddesses. Homer sometimes men- 
tions an Erinys, but more frequently Erinyes iu 
the pluraL He represents them as inhabitants 
of Erebos, where they remain quiet until some 
curse pronounced upon a criminal calls them 
Into activity. The crimes which they punish 
are disobedience toward parents, violation of 
the respect duo to old age, perjury, murder, 
violation of the law of hospitality, and improper 
conduct toward suppliants. They took away 
from men all peace of mind, and led them into 
misery and misfortune Hesiod says that they 
were the daughters of Terra (Ge)" and sprung 
from the drops of blood that fell upou her from 
the body of Ocelus (Uranus). ^Eschylus calls 
them the daughters of Night, and Sophocles 
of Darkness and Terra (Ge). In the Greek 
tragedians neither the names nor the number 
of the Erinyes are mentioned. .Eschylus de- 
scribes them as divinities more ancient than 
the Olympian gods, dwelling in the deep dark- j 
Rf.;^. of Tartarus, dreaded by gods and raen;i 



with bodies all black, serpents twined in their 
hair, and blood dripping from their eyes. Eu- 
ripides and other later poets describe them as 
winged. With later writers their number is 
usually limited to three, and their names are 
Tisifhone, Alecto, and Megjeka. They grad- 
ually assumed the character of goddesses who 
punished men after death, and they seldom ap- 
peared upon earth. The sacrifices offered to 
them consisted of black sheep and nephala, i. c, 
a drink of honey mixed with water. They were 
worshipped at Athens, where they had a sanc- 
tuary and a grotto near the Areopagus : their 
statues, however, had nothing formidable, and 
a festival Eurnenidea was there celebrated in 
then- honor. Another sanctuary, with a grove 
which no one was allowed to enter, existed at 
Colonus. 

EuMENius, a Roman rhetorician of Augusto- 
dunum (now Autuii) in Gaul, held a high office 
under Constantius Chlorus. He is the author 
of four orations in the " Panegyrici Veteres," 
namely, 1. Oratio pro instaurandis scholis, a 
lecture delivered on the re-establishment by 
Constantius Chlorus of the school at Autun, 
A.D. 296 or 297. 2. Panegyricus Constantio 
Ccesari dictus, delivered 296 or 29V. 3. Pane 
gyricus Constantino Augusto dictus, delivered 
310. 4. Gratiarum actio Constantino Augusto 
Fiaviensium nomine, delivered 311. 

Eumolpus (Evjuo?,iroc), that is, " the good sing- 
er," a Thracian bard, usually represented as a 
son of Neptune (Poseidon) and Chione, the 
daughter of Boreas. As soon as he was born, 
he was thrown into the sea by his mother, who 
was anxious to conceal her shame, but was 
preserved by his father Neptune (Poseidon), 
who had him educated in -^Ethiopia by his 
daughter Benthesicyma. When he had grown 
up, he married a daughter of Benthesicyma; 
but as he made an attempt upon the chastity 
of his wife's sister, he was expelled, together 
with his son Ismarus. They went to the 
Thracian king Tegyrius, who gave his daugh- 
ter in marriage to Ismarus ; but as Eumolpus 
drew T upon himself the suspicion of Tegyrius, 
he was again obliged to take to flight, and came 
to Eleusis in .Attica, where he formed a friend- 
ship with the Eleusinians. After the death of 
hi3 son Ismarus, he returned to Thrace at the 
request of Tegyrius. The Eleusinians, who 
were involved in a war with Athens, called Eu- 
molpus to their assistance. Eumolpus came 
with a numerous band of Thracians, but he was 
slain by Ereehtheus. Eumolpus was regarded 
as the founder of the Eleusinian mysteries, and 
as the first priest of Ceres (Demeter) and Bac- 
chus (Dionysus). He was succeeded in the 
priestly office by his son Ceryx (who was, ac- 
cording to some accounts, the son of Mercury 
(Hermes), and his family, the Eumolpidce, con- 
tinued till the latest times the priests of Ceres 
(Demeter) at Eleusis. The legends connected 
Eumolpus with Hercules, whom he is said to 
have instructed in music, or initiated into the 
mysteries. There were bo many different tra- 
ditions about Eumolpus that some of the an- 
cients supposed that there were two or three; 
persons of that name. 

[EuN-aus, son of Clytiu3, a Trojan, slain by 
Camilla in Italv.] 

295 



EUNAPIUS. 



EUPHRANOR. 



Eunapius (Evvutuoc), a Greek sophist, was , seidou) by Europe, the daughter of Tityus, or by 
born at Sardis A.D. 34V, and lived and taught ! 11 
at Athens as late as the reign of Theodosius 
II. He wrote, 1. Lives of Sophists (Btot <piAo- 



co<puv Hal ao(ptaruv,) still extant, containing 
twenty-three biographies of sophists, most of 
whom were contemporaries of Eunapius, or had 
lived shortly before him. Though these biog- 
raphies are extremely brief, and the style is 
intolerably inflated, yet they sup]3ly us with im- 
portant information respecting a period on 
which we have no other information. Eunapi- 
us was an enthusiastic admirer of the philos- 
ophy of the New Platonists, and a bitter enemy 
of Christianity. Edited by Boissonade, Am- 
sterdam, 1822. 2. A continuation of the his- 
tory of Dexippus (Mera As^tiVnov xP 0VlK V Igto- 
ota), in fourteen books, began with A.D. 210, 
and went down to 404. Of this work we have 
only extracts, which are j>ublished along with 
Dexippus. Vid. Dexippus. 



Mecionice or Oris, a daughter of Orion or Eu- 
rotas. According to one account he was an 
inhabitant of Panopeus on the Cephisus in Pho- 
cis, and according to another of Hyria in Boeo- 
tia, and afterward lived at Taenarus. He was 
married to Laonome, the sister of Hercules ; 
he was one of the Calydonian hunters, and the 
helmsman of the vessel of the Argonauts, and, 
by a power which his father had granted to him, 
he could walk on the sea just as on firm ground. 
He is mentioned also as the ancestor of Brutu?, 
the founder of Cyrene. — [2. Son of Trcezenus, 
an ally of the Trojans, leader of the Cicones. — 
3. An Athenian, sent by the Athenian com- 
manders at Syracuse to negotiate alliance with 
Camarina.] 

Euphorbus (Evoopdoc). 1. Son of Panthou?. 
one of the bravest of the Trojans, was slain by 
Menelaus, who subsequently dedicated the 
| shield of Euphorbus in the temple of Juno 



Euneus (Evi> ijoc or Evvevc), a son of Jason j (Hera), near Mycenae. Pythagoras asserted 
aud Hypsipyle in Lemnos, supplied the Greeks ! that he had once been the Trojan Euphorbus, 
with wine during their war against Troy. He { and in proof of his assertion took down at first 



J sight the shield of Euphorbus from the temple 
j of Juno (Hera) (clipeo Trojana refixo tempora tes- 
Iparta, is j tatus, Hor., Carm., i., 28, 11). — 2. Physician of 
Juba II, king of Mauretania, about the end of 
the first century B.C., and brother to Antonius 
Musa, the physician to Augustus. 

Euphorion (~Ev<j)op'iov). 1. Father of the poet 
iEschylus. — 2. Son of JEschylus, and himself 
a tragic poet. — 3. Of Chalcis in Euboea, an 
eminent grammarian and poet, son of Polymne- 



purchased Lycaon of Patroclus for a silver ui'n 
Eunomia. Vid. Hor.e 
Eunomus (Evvo/ioc). 1. Iving of Sp 
described by some as the father of Lycurgus 
and Polydectes. Herodotus, on the contrary, 
places him in his list after Polydectes. In all 
probability, the name was invented with refer- 
ence to the Lycurgean Evvo t uca, and Eunomus, 
if not wholly rejected, must be identified with 
Polydectes. — [2. An Athenian naval command- 
er, sent out in command of thirteen ships in } tus, was bom about B.C. 2/4. He became the 
B.C. 388 to act against the Lacedaemonians.] j librarian of Antiochus the Great, 221, and died 
Eunus (Evvovg), a Sicilian slave, and a native j in Syria, either at Apamea or at Antioch. The 
of Apamea in Syria, was the leader of the Sicil- following were the most important of the poems 
ian slaves in the servile war. He first attract- of Euphorion in heroic verse : 1. 'Hciodoc, prob- 



ed attention by pretending to the gift of proph 
ecy, and by interpreting dreams ; to the effect 
of which he added by appearing to breathe 
flames from his mouth and other similar jug- 
gleries. He was proclaimed king, and soon 



ably an agricultural poem. 2. MoypoTria, so call- 
ed from an old name in Attica, the legends of 
which country seem to have been the chief 
subject of the poem. 3. Xf/lmcteo, a poem writ- 
ten against certain j)ersons, who had defrauded 



collected formidable forces, with which he de- j Euphorion of money which he had intrusted to 
featcd several Roman armies. The insurrec- j their care. It probably derived its title from 



tion now became so formidable, that for three 
successive years (B.C. 134-132) three consuls 
were sent against the insurgents, and it was 
not till the third year (132) that the revolt was 
finally put down by the consul Rupilius. Eu- 
nus was taken prisoner, and died in prison at 
Morgantia, of the disease called morbus pedicu- 
laris. 

EuPALIUM Or EUPOLIUM (Ei'TTU/UOV, Evtt6?uov : 

Evnalievg), a town of the Locri Ozolae, north of 
Naupactus, subsequently included in yEtolia 
Epictetus. 

Eupator (EvTTuTiop), a surname assumed by 
many of the kings in Asia after the time of Al- 
exander the Great. Vid. Antiochus, Mithra- 
dates. 

Eupatorium or Eupatoria (EvxaTopiov, Ev- 
Taropia), a town in the Chersonesus Taurica, 
founded by Mithradates Eupator, aud named 
after him. 

Euphaes (Evfdijs), king of the Messenians, 
fell in battle against the Spartans in the first 
Messenian war. He was succeeded by Aris- 
todemus. 

Eophemus {Eixpij/iog). 1. Son of Neptune (Po- 
296 



each of its books consisting of 1000 verses-, 
He also wrote epigrams, which were imitated 
by many of the Latin poets, and also by the 
Emperor Tiberius, with whom he was a great 
favorite. Euphorion likewise wrote many his- 
torical and grammatical works. All his works 
are lost, but the fragments are collected by 
Meineke, in his Analecta Alexandrine/,, BeroL, 
1843. 

Euphranor (Eixppdvop). 1. A distinguished 
statuary and painter, was a native of the Co- 
rinthian isthmus, but practiced his art at Athens. 
He flourished about B.C. 336. His most cele- 
brated statue was a Paris, which expressed 
alike the judge of the goddesses, the lover of 
Helen, and the slayer of Achilles ; the very 
beautiful sitting figure of Paris, in marble, in 
the Museo Pio-Clementino is, no doubt, a copy 
of this work. His best paintings were preserv- 
ed in a porch in the Ceramicus at Athens. On 
the one side were the twelve gods, and on the 
opposite wall, Theseus, with Democracy and 
Demos. Euphranor also wrote works on pro- 
portion and on colors (de Symmetric/, et Colori- 
bus), the two points in which his own excel- 



EUPHRATES, 



EURIPIDES. 



lenee seems chiefly to have consisted. Pliny 
says that he was the first who properly ex- 
pressed the dignity of heroes by the proportions 
he gave to their statues. He made the bodies 
somewhat more slender, and the heads and 
limbs larger.— [2. Admiral of the Rhodian fleet, 
aided Caesar in defeating the Egyptian fleet in 
the Alexandrine war : he perished some time 
after in a naval combat.] 

Euphrates (E%arj7f), an eminent Stoic 
philosopher, was a native of Tyre, or, according 
to others, of Byzantium. He was an intimate 
friend of the younger Pliny. In his old age he 
became tired of life, and asked and obtained 
from Hadrian permission to put an end to him- 
self by poison. 

Euphrates {Evfypdrijc : in the Old Testament, 
Phrat : now El Feat), a great river of western 
Asia, forming the boundary of Upper and Lower 
Asia, consists, in its upper course, of two 
branches, both of which rise in the mountains 
of Armenia. The northern branch (now Kara- 
Sou), which is the true Euphrates, rises in the 
mountain above Erzeroum (the Mount Abus or 
Capotes of the ancients), and flows west and 
southwest to a little above latitude 39° and east 
of longitude 89°, where it breaks through the 
chain of the Anti-Taurus, and, after receiving 
the southern branch (now Mourad-Chai), or, as 
the ancients called it, the Arsantas, it breaks 
through the main chain of the Taurus between 
Melitene and Samosata, and then flows iu a gen- 
eral southern direction till it reaches latitude 
36°, whence it flows in a general southeast di- 
rection till it approaches the Tigris opposite to 
Seleucia, where the distance between the two 
rivers was reckoned at only two hundred stadia. 
Then it flows through the Plain of Babylonia, at 
first receding further from the Tigris, and after- 
ward approaching it again, till it joins it about 
sixty miles above the mouth of the Persian Gulf, 
having already had its waters much diminished 
by numerous canals, which irrigated the country 
in ancient times, but the neglect of which at 
present has converted much of the once fertile 
district watered by the Euphrates into a marshy 
desert. The whole length of the Euphrates is 
betweeu five hundred and six hundred miles. 
In its upper course, before reaching the Taurus, 
its northern branch and a part of the united 
stream divided Armenia Major from Colchis 
and Armenia Minor, and it3 lower course di- 
vided Mesopotamia from Syria. Its chief trib- 
utary, besides the Arsanias, was the Aborrhas. 

Euphrox (Evop(ov). [1. A native of Sicyon, 
who, in the time of Epaminondas, made himself 
master of that city by the aid of the lower or- 
ders: being driven out by the opposite party, he 
betook himself to Thebes, and was there mur- 
dered by lus opponents, who had followed him 
thither.] — 2. An Athenian poet of the new r com- 
edy, whose plavs, however, partook largely of 
the character of the middle comedy. [His frag- 
ments are collected in Meineke, Fragm. Comic. 
G-rac, vol. ii., p. 11 28-88, edit, minor.] 

Euphrosvnk, one of the Charities or Graces. 
Vid. Char is. 

[Eupitiiks (Kv-flO/jc), father of Antinous, who 
was one of the suitors of Penelope ; attempting 
to avenge the death of his son, he was slain by 
Laertes.] 



Eurous (EiiTzolic), son of Sosipolis, an Athe- 
nian poet of the old comedy, and one of the three 
who are distinguished by Horace in his well- 
known hue, "Eupolis, atque Cratinus, Aristo- 
phanesque poetas," above all the . . . " alii quo- 
rum comcedia prisca virorum est." He w r as 
born about B.C. 446, and is said to have exhib- 
ited his first drama in his seventeenth year, 429. 
two years before Aristophanes. The date of 
his death is uncertain. The common story was, 
that Alcibiades, when sailing to Sicily, (415), 
threw Eupolis into the sea, in revenge for an 
attack which he had made upon him in his Barr- 
rai ; but this can not be true, as we know that 
Eupolis produced plays after the Sicilian expe- 
dition. He probably died in 411. The chief 
characteristic of the poetry of Eupolis seems to 
have been the liveliness of his fancy, and the 
power which he possessed of imparting its im- 
ages to the audience. Iu elegance he is said 
to have even surpassed Aristophanes, while in 
bitter jesting and personal abuse he emulated 
Cratinus. Among the objects of lus satire was 
Socrates, on whom he made a bitter, though less 
elaborate attack than that in the Clouds of Aris- 
tophanes. The dead were not exempt from his 
abuse, for there are still extant some lines of 
his in which Cimon is most iinmercifufly treat- 
ed. A close relation subsisted between Eupolis 
and Aristophanes, not only as rivals, but as im- 
itators of each other. Cratinus attacked Aris- 
tophanes for borrowing from Eupolis, and Eu- 
polis in his BuTzrai made the same charge, es- 
pecially with reference to the Knights. The 
Scholiasts specify the last Parabasis of the 
Knights as borrowed from Eupolis. On the 
other hand, Aristophanes, in the second (ov 
third) edition of the Clouds, retorts upon Eupo- 
lis the charge of imitating the Knights in his 
Marieas, and taunts him with the further indig- 
nity of jesting on his rival's baldness. [The 
fragments of his plays have been edited by Run- 
kel, JPfoerecraiis et Eupolidis Fragm., Lips.,1829 ; 
and by Meineke, Comic. Graze. Fragm., vol. L 
p. 158-228, edit, minor.] 

Eupompus (Evirownoc), of Sicyon, a distin- 
guished Greek painter, was the contemporary 
of Zeuxis, Parrhasius, and Timanthes, and the 
instructor of Pamphilus, the master of Apelles. 
The fame of Eupompus led to the creation of a 
third school of Greek art, the Sicyonian, at the 
head of which he was placed. 

Euripides (EvptnidTjc). 1. The distinguished 
tragic poet, was the son of Mncsarchus and 
Clito, and is said to have been born at Salami?. 
B.C. 480, on the very day that the Greeks de- 
feated the Persians off that island, whither his 
parents had fled from Athens on the invasion of 
Xerxes. Some writers relate that his parents 
Were in mean circumstances, and his mother is 
represented by Aristophanes as a herb-seiler, 
and not a very honest one either; but much 
weight can not be accorded to these statements. 
It is more probable that his family was respect- 
able. We are told that the poet, when a boy, 
was cup-bearer to a chorus of noble Athenians 
at the Thargelian festival, au office for which 
nobility of blood was requisite. We know also 
that he was taught rhetoric by Prodicus, who 
was certainly not moderate in his terms for in- 
struction, and who was in the habit of seekine 
2<*7 



EURIPIDES. 



Ids pupils among youths of high rank. It is said 
that the future distinction of Euripides was pre- 
dicted by an oracle, promising that he should be 
crowned with "sacred garlands," in conse- 
quence of which his father had him trained to 
gymnastic exercises ; and we learn that, while 
yet a boy, he won the prize at the Eleusinian 
and Thesean contests, and offered himself, when 
seventeen years old, as a candidate at the Olym- 
pic games, but was not admitted because of 
Kome doubt about his age. But he soon aban- 
doned gymnastic pursuits, and studied the art 
of painting, not, as we learn, without success. 
To philosophy and literature he devoted him- 
self with much interest and energy, studying 
physics under Anaxagoras, and rhetoric, as we 
have already seen, under Prodicus. He lived 
on intimate terms with Socrates, and traces of 
the teaching of Anaxagoras have been remarked 
in many passages of his plays. He is said to 
have written a tragedy at the age of eighteen ; 
but the first play, which is exhibited in his 
own name, was the Peliades, when he was twen- 
ty-five years of age (B.C. 455). In 441 he gain- 
ed for the first time the first prize, and he con- 
tinued to exhibit plays until 408, the date of the 
Orestes. Soon after this he left Athens for the 
court of Archelaiis, king of Macedonia, his rea- 
sons for which step can only be matter of con- 
jecture. Traditionary scandal has ascribed it 
to his disgust at the intrigue of his wife with 
Cephisophon, and the ridicule which was show- 
tired upon him in consequence by the comic 
poets. But the whole story has been refuted 
by modern writers. Other causes more proba- 
bly led him to accept an invitation from Arche- 
laiis, at whose court the highest honors awaited 
him. The attacks of Aristophanes and others 
had probably not been without their effect ; and 
he must have been aware that his philosophical 
tenets were regarded with considerable suspi- 
cion. He died in Macedonia in 406, at the age 
of seventy-five. Most testimonies agree in stat- 
ing that he was torn in pieces by the king's 
dogs, which, according to some, were set upon 
him through envy by Arrhidams and Crateuas, 
two rival poets. The regret of Sophocles for 
his death is said to have been so great, that at 
the representation of his next play he made his 
actors appear uncrowned. The accounts which 
we find in some writers of the profligacy of Eu- 
ripides are mere idle scandal, and scarcely 
worthy of serious refutation. Nor does there 
appear to be any better foundation for that other 
charge which has been brought against him, of 
hatred to the female sex. This is said to have 
been occasioned by the infidelity of his wife ; 
but, as has been already remarked, this tale does 
.uot deserve credit. He was a man of a serious 
.And austere temper ; and it was in consequence 
of this that the charge probably originated. It 
is certain that the poet who drew such charac- 
ters as Antigone, Iphigenia, and, above all, Al- 
cestis, was not blind to the gentleness, the 
strong affection, the self-abandoning devoted- 
ness of women. With respect to the world and 
the Deity, he seems to have adopted the doc- 
trines^ of Anaxagoras, not unmixed, apparent- 
ly, with pantheistic views. Vid. Anaxagokas. 
To class him with atheists, as some have done, 
i? undoubtedly unjust. At. the same time, it 
298 



i must be confessed that we look in vain in hk 
plays for the high faith of iEschylus ; nor can 
we fail to admit that the pupil of Anaxagoras 
could not sympathize with the popular religious 
system around him, nor throw himself cordially, 
into it. He frequently altered in the most arbi- 
trary manner the ancient legends. Thus, in 
the Orestes, Menelaiis comes before us as a sel- 
fish coward, and Helen as a worthless wanton ; 
in the Helena, the notion of Stesichorus is adopt- 
ed, that the heroine was never carried to Troy 
at all, and that it was a mere eldoXov of her for 
which the Greeks and Trojans fought ; Androm- 
ache, the widow of Hector and slave of Neop- 
tolemus, seems almost to forget the past in her 
quarrel with Hermione and the perils of her 
present situation ; and Electra, married by the 
policy of iEgisthus to a peasant, scolds her hus- 
band for inviting guests to dine without regard 
to the ill-prepared state of the larder. In short, 
with Euripides tragedy is brought down into 
the sphere of every-day life ; men are repre- 
sented, according to the remark of Aristotle, not 
as they ought to be, but as they are ; under the 
names of the ancient heroes, the characters of 
his own time are set before us ; it is not Medea, 
or Iphigenia, or Alcestis that is speaking, but 
abstractedly a mother, a daughter, or a wife. 
All this, indeed, gave fuller scope, perhaps, for 
the exhibition of passion and for those scenes 
of tenderness and pathos in which Euripides 
especialy excelled ; and it will serve also to 
account, in great measure, for the preference 
given to his plays by the practical Socrates, 
who is said to have never entered the theatre- 
unless when they were acted, as well as for the 
admiration felt for him by Menander and Phile- 
mon, and other poets of the new comedy. The 
most serious defects in his tragedies, artistically 
speaking, are, his constant employment of the 
" Deus ex machina ;" the disconnection of the 
choral odes from the subject of the play ; the 
extremely awkward and formal character of his 
prologues ; and the frequent introduction of 
frigid yv&fiai and of philosophical disquisitions, 
making Medea talk like a sophist, and Hecuba 
like a free-thinker, and aiming rather at nubtil- 
ty than simplicity. On the same principles on 
which he brought his subjects and characters 
to the level of common life, he adopted also in 
his style the every-day mode of speaking. Ac- 
cording to some accounts, he wrote, in all, sev- 
enty-five plays ; according to others, ninety-two. 
Of these, eighteen are extant, if we omit the 
Rhesus, which is probably spurious. A list is 
subjoined of the extant plays of Euripides, with 
their dates, ascertained or probable : Alcestis, 
B.C. 438. This play was brought out as the 
last of a tetralogy, and stood, therefore, in the 
place of a satyric drama, to which indeed it 
bears, in some parts, great similarity, partic- 
ularly in the representation of Hercules in his 
cups. Medea, 431. Hippolytus Coronifer, 428, 
gained the first prize. Hecuba, exhibited before 
423. Heraclidce, about 421. Supplices, about 
421. Ion, of uncertain date. Herctdes Fur ens, 
of uncertain date. Andromache, about 420-417 
Troades, 415. Electra, about 415-413. Helena, 
412. Iphigenia among the Tanri, of uncertain 
date. Orestes, 408. Phcenisstr, of uncertain 
date. Bacchce : this play was apparently writ- 



EURIPUS. 



EURYOLES. 



tor representation iu Macedonia, and there- 
for, .: u very late period of the life of Euripi- 
des. Ipkigenia at Aalis: this play, together 
with the Bacchat and the Alcmaon, was brought 
out at Athens, after the poet's death, by the 
younger Euripides. Cyclops, of uncertain date : 
it is interesting as the only extant specimen of 
the Greek satyrie drama. Besides the plays, 
there are extant tivc letters, purporting to have 
been written by Euripides, but they are spuri- 
ous. Editions: By Musgrave, Oxford, 1778; 
by Beck, Leipzig, 1778-88; by Matthia?, Leip- 
zig, 1813-29 ; and a variorum edition, Glasgow, 
1821, 9 vols. 8vo. Of separate plays there have 
been many editions, e, g., by Porson, Elmsley, 
Valckenaer, Monk, Pflugk, and Hermann. — 2 
The youngest of the three sons of the above. 
After the death of his father he brought out 
three of bis plays at the great Dionysia, viz., the 
Alcmaoii (no longer extant), the Iphigenia at 
Aulis, and the Bacchic. 

EurIpus (Ei'()LTTOr) any part of the sea where 
the ebb and flow of the tide were remarkably 
violent, is the name especially of the narrow 
strait which separates Euboea from Bceotia, iu 
which the ancients asserted that the sea ebbed 
and flowed seven times in the day. The extra- 
ordinary tides of the Euripus have been noticed 
by modern observers ; the water sometimes runs 
as much as eight miles an hour. At Chalcis there 
was a bridge over the Euripus, uniting Euboea 
with the main land. 

Euromus (Evpufior : now Jaklys), a small town 
of Caria, at the foot of Mount Grion (a ridge par- 
allel to Mount Latmus). iuthc eonventus juridieus 
of Alabanda. It lay eight English miles north- 
west of My lasa. 

Europa (Erpw-;/), according to the Iliad (xiv„ 
321) a daughter of Phoenix, but according to the 
common tradition a daughter of the Phceniciau 
king Agenor. Her surpassing beauty charmed 
Jupiter (Zeus), who assumed the form of a bull 
and mingled with the herd as Europa and her 
maidens were sporting on the sea-shore. Encour- 
aged by the tameness of the animal, Europa ven- 
tured to mount his back ; whereupon Jupiter 
(Zeus) rushed into the sea and swam w"ith her in 
safety to Crete. Here she became by Jupiter 
(Zeus) the mother of Minos, Radamanthys, and 
Sarpedon. She afterward married Asterion, 
king of Crete, who brought up the children whom 
she had had by the king of the gods. 

Europa (Ei'pw-?/), one of the three divisions 
of the ancient world. The name is not found in 
the Iliad and Odyssey, and first occurs in the 
Homeric hymn to Apollo (251), but even there it 
does not indicate the continent, but simply the 
jtnain land of Hellas proper, in opposition to' Pelo- 
ponnesus and the neighboring islands. Herod- 
otus is the first writer who uses it in the sense 
■of one of the divisions of the world. The origin 
of the name is doubtful ; but the most prob- 
able of the numerous conjectures is that which 
supposes that the Asiatic Greeks called it Euro- 
pa (from ivpvc, " broad,'" and the root o~, " to 
see"), from the wide extent of its coast. Most 
of the ancients supposed the name to be de- 
rived from Europa, the daughter of Agenor. 
The boundaries of Europe on the east differed 
at various periods. In earlier times the River 
Phasis was usually supposed to be its boundary. 



, and sometimes even the Araxes and the Cas 
I pian Sea : but at a later period the River Tanais 
and the Palus Maeotis were usually regarded as 
j the boundaries between Asia and Europe. The 
north of Europe was little known to the ancients, 
but it was generally believed, at least in later 
times, that it was bounded on the north by the 
Ocean. 

Europus. Vid. Titaresius. 

Europus (Ei''p«7roc). 1. A city of Caria, aft- 
erward named Idrias. — 2. (Now Ycrabolus, or 
Kidat-el-JSfejin ?), a city iu the district of Cyr- 
rhestice in Syria, on the western bank of the 
Euplmites, a few miles south of Zeugma ; called 
after the town of the same name in Macedonia. — 
3. Europus was the earlier name of Dura Nica- 
noris in Mesopotamia ; and, 4. It was also given 
by Seleucus Nicator to Rhagte in Media. Vid. 
Arsacta. 

Eurotas (Eopurac). 1. (Now Basilipotamo). 
the chief river in Laconia, but not navigable, rises 
in Mount Boreum in Arcadia, then disappears un- 
der the earth, rises again near Sciritis, and flows 
southward, passing Sparta on the east, through a 
narrow and fruitful vallev. into the Laeoniai 
Gulf.— 2. Vid. Titaresius. 

[Eurotas (Evpurac), son of Myles, grandsor 
of Lelex (according to Apollodorus, son of Le 
lex), father of Sparta, who married Lacedaemon : 
is said to have led, by means of a canal, the wa- 
ters that had stagnated in Laconia into the sea, 
and to have called the stream that was thus 
formed the Eurotas.] 

[Euryaoes {Eipvudtjgj, one of the suitors of 
Penelope, slain by Telemachus.] 

[Eu it yale (Eipvu?<Tj). 1. One of the Gor- 
gons. — 2. Daughter of Minos tr Minyas, mother 
of Orion by Neptune (Poseidon) — 3. A queen of 
the Amazons, who aided rEetes against the Argo- 
naut,- 1 .] 

Edrvalus (Evpva'/.oc). 1. Son of Mecisteus, 
one of the Argonaute, and of the Epigoni, ac- 
companied Diomedes to Troy, where he sle>r 
several Trojans. — 2. One of the suitors of Hip 
podamia. — [3. A young Phasacian hero, victor 
in wrestling ; he presented Ulysses with a beau 
tiful sword. — 4. Son of Opheltes, a companion of 
./Eneas, famed for his strong friendship for Ni- 

SU8.] 

Eur y an assa . Vid. Pelops. 
Eurybates (EvpvOd-Jic). 1. Called EriboUs 
by Latin writers, son of Teleon, and one of the 
Argonauts. — 2. The herald of Ulysses, whom he 
followed to Troy. 

Eurybatus (EvpcGaroc), an Ephesiau whom 
Croasus sent with a large sum of money to the 
Peloponnesus to hire mercenaries for him in hi? 
war with Cyrus. He, however, went over to Cy 
rus, and betrayed the whole matter to him. In 
consequence of this treachery, his name passed 

I into a proverb among the Greeks. 

! Eurybia (EvpvCla), daughter of Pontus and 

! Terra (Ge), mother by Crius of A6tra3us, Pallas, 

: and Perses. 

EURYBIAUES. Vid. TlIEilLSTOCLES. 

; Euryclea (EvptiK?.eia), daughter of Ops, was 
; purchased by Laertes and brought up Telema- 
; chus. When Ulysses returned home, she recog- 
i nized him by a scar, and afterward faithfully as 
| sisted him against the suitors. 

[Eurycles (EvpvK?7jr\ 1. A ventriloquist and 
299 



EURYCRATES. 



EURYSACES. 



Jiviner at Athens (tyyacTp'ifivdoc).—2. A Spar- 
tan architect who constructed a celebrated bath 
at Corinth.] 

[Eurycrates (EvpvKpaTTjc). 1. Son of King 
Polydorus, king of Sparta, the twelfth of the 
Agid line : his son and successor was Anaxan- 
der ; his grandson was — 2. Eurycrates II, call- 
ed also Eurycratidas, reigned during the earlier 
and disastrous part of the war with Tegea.] 

[Eurydamas (Evpyddjuas). 1. Son of Irus and 
Demonassa, one of the Argonauts ; according 
to Apollonius Rhodius he was a son of Ctime- 
uus. — 2. A Trojan skilled in the interpretation 
of dreams, whose two sons, Abas and Polyidus, 
were slain before Troy by Diomedes. — 8. One 
of the suitors of Penelope, slain by Ulysses.] 

Eurydice (Evpvdlnrj). 1. Wife of Orpheus. 
Fid. Orpheus. — 2. An Illyrian princess, wife of 
Amyntas II., king of Macedonia, and mother of 
the famous Philip. — 3. An Illyrian, wife of Philip 
of Macedon, and mother of Cynane or Cynna. 
— 4. Daughter of Amyntas, son of Perdiccas 
III., king of Macedonia, and Cynane, daughter 
of Philip. After the death of her mother in 
Asia (via. Cynane), Perdiccas gave her in mar- 
riage to the king Arrhidaeus. She was a woman 
of a masculine spirit, and entirely ruled her 
weak husband. On her return to Europe with 
her husband, she became involved in war with 
Polysperchon and Olympias, but she was de- 
feated in battle, taken prisoner, and compelled 
by Olympias to put an end to her life, B.C. 317. 
— 5. Daughter of Antipater, and wife of Ptole- 
my the son of Lagus. She was the mother of 
three sons, viz., Ptolemy Ceraunus, Meleager, 
and a third (who^e name is not mentioned) ; 
and of two daughters, Ptolemais, afterward 
married to Demetrius Poliorcetes, and Lysan- 
dra, the wife of Agathocles, son of Lysimachus. 
— 6. An Athenian, of a family descended from 
the great Miltiades. She was first married to 
Ophelias, the conqueror of Cyrene, and after 
his death returned to Athens, where she mar- 
ried Demetrius Poliorcetes, on occasion of his 
first visit to that city. 

Eurylochus (EvpvAoxoc). 1. Companion of 
Ulysses in his wanderings, was the only one 
that escaped from the house of Circe, when his 
Mends were metamorphosed into swine. An- 
other personage of the same name is mention- 
ed among the. sons of iEgyptus. — 2. A Spartan 
commander in the Peloponnesian war, B.C. 
426, defeated and slain by Demosthenes at 01- 
pee. — [3. Of Lusiae in Arcadia, an officer in the 
Greek army of Cyrus the younger ; on one oc- 
casion protected Xenophon, whose shield-bearer 
had deserted him. — 4. A Macedonian, son of 
Arseas, detected a conspiracy against Alexan- 
Jer the Great.] 

Eurymedon (Evpvfieduv). 1. One of the Ca- 
biri, son of Vulcan (Hephaestus) and Cabiro, and 
brother of Alcon. — 2. An attendant of Nestor. 
— 3. Son of Ptolemaeus, and charioteer of Aga- 
memnon. — 4. Son of Thucles, an Athenian gen- 
eral in the Peloponnesian war. He was one of 
the commanders in the expedition to Corcyra, 
B.C. 428, and also in the expedition to Sicily, 
425. In 414 he was appointed, in conjunction 
with Demosthenes, to the command of the sec- 
ond Syracusan armament, and fell in the first 
of the two sea-fights in the harbor of Syracuse 
300 



Eurymedon (Evpvfieduv : now Kapri-Sv), a 
small river in Pamphylia, navigable as far up as 
the city of Aspendus, through which it flowed • 
celebrated for the victory which Cimon gained 
over the Persians on its banks (B.C. 469). 

[Eurymedusa (Evpv/iedovoa), a female slave 
of the Phaeacian king Alcinous, attendant upon 
Nausicaa.] 

Eurymen^e (Evpvpievat), a town in Magnesia 
in Thessaly, east of Ossa. 

Eurynome (Evpvvofirf). 1. Daughter of Oce- 
anus. When Vulcan (Hephaestus) was expell- 
ed by Juno (Hera) from Olympus, Eurynome 
and Thetis received him in the bosom of the 
sea. Before the time of Saturn (Cronos) and 
Rhea, Eurynome and Ophion had ruled in Olym- 
pus over the Titans. — 2. A surname of Diana 
(Artemis) at Phigalea in Arcadia, where she 
was represented half woman and half fish. — [8. 
An old and faithful female attendant in the 
house of Ulysses, mentioned in the Odyssey.] 

[Eurynomus (Evpvvofio*;). 1. A centaur slain 
by Dryas at the nuptials of Pirithous. — 2. Son 
of the Ithacan JEgyptius, one of the suitors of 
Penelope.] 

[Euryphaessa (EvpvfydcGoa), sister and wife 
of Hyperion ; by him mother of Helios, Selene, 
and Eos (Aurora).] 

Eurypiion (Evpv<btiv), a celebrated physician 
of Cnidos in Caria, was a contemporary of Hip- 
pocrates, but older. He is quoted by Galen, 
who says that he was considered to be the au- 
thor of the ancient medical work entitled Kvt- 
diai TvQ/zat, and also that some persons at- 
tributed to him several works included in the 
Hippocratic Collection. 

Eurypon, otherwise called Eurytion (Evpv- 
tcQv, Evpvrtcov), a grandson of Procles, was the 
third king of that house at Sparta, and thence- 
forward gave it the name of Eurypontidae. 

Eurypylus (E vpviTv Aoc). 1. Son of Eusemon 
and Ops, appears in different traditions as king 
either of Ormenion, or Hyria, or Cyrene. la 
the Iliad he is represented as having come from 
Ormenion to Troy with forty ships. He slew 
many Trojans, and when wouuded by Paris he 
was nursed and cured by Patroclus. Among 
the heroes of Hyria, he is mentioned as a son 
of Neptune (Poseidon) and Celaeno, who went 
to Libya, where he ruled in the country after- 
ward called Cyrene, and there became connect- 
ed with the Argonauts. He married Sterope, 
the daughter of Helios, by whom he became the 
father of Lycaon and Leucippus. — 2. Son of 
Neptune (Poseidon) and Astypalaea, king of Cos. 
was killed by Hercules, who, on his return from 
Troy, landed in Cos, and, being taken for a pirate, 
was attacked by its inhabitants. According to 
another tradition, Hercules attacked the island 
of Cos in order to obtain possession of Chal- 
eiope, the daughter of Eurypylus, whom he 
loved. — 3. Son of Telephus and Astyoche, king 
of Mysia or Cilicia, was induced by the presents 
which Priam sent to his mother or wife to as- 
sist the Trojans against the Greeks. Eurypylus 
killed Machaon, but was himself slain by Nc- 
optolemus. 

Eurysaces (EvpvGuKiic), son of the Telamoni- 
an Ajax and Tecmessa, named after the " broad 
shield" of his father. An Athenian tradition re- 
lated that Eurysaces and his brother Fhilseus 



EURYSTHENES. 



EUSEBIUS. 



Sfaad "iveu up to the Athenians the island of Sal- 
ami^ which they had inherited from their grand- 
father, and that the two brothers received in re- 
turn the Attic franchise. Eurysaces was hon- 
ored like his father, at Athens, with an altar 
EuRYs i aiNKS (E vpvoOtvTig) and Procles (lipo- 
the twin sons of Aristodenius, were born, 
according to the common account before, but 
according to tt» S^'" iae Spartan story after 
their fathers return to Peloponnesus and occu-, 
pation of his allotment of Lacoma. He died 
immediately after the birth of his children, and 
had not even time to decide which of the two 
should succeed him. The mother professed to 
be unable to name the elder, and the Lacedae- 
monians applied to Delphi, and were instructed 
ro make them both kings, but give the greater 
honor to the elder. The difficulty thus remain- 
ing was at last removed at the suggestion of 
Pauites, a Messenian, by watching which of 
the children was first washed and fed by the 
mother ; and the first rank was accordingly 
given to Eurystheues and retained by his de- 
scendants. From these two brothers the two 
royal families in Sparta Avere descended, and 
were called respectively the Eurysthenidce and 
Proclidce. The former were also called the 
Agidce from Agis, son of Eurysthenes ; and the 
latter Eurypont'ukc from Eurypon, grandson of 
Procles. 

Eurystheus. Vid. Hercules. 

[Eurytion (Evpvrluv). 1. Sou of Irus and 
Demonassa, and grandson of Actor, oue of the 
Argonauts. — 2. Oue of the centaurs, escaped from 
the fight with Hercules, but was afterward slain 
by that hero. — 3. Sou of Lycaon, brother of Pan- 
darus, a celebrated archer ; accompanied iEueas 
<>n his voyage to Italy.] 

Eurytus (Eupvroc). 1. Son of Melaneus and 
Stratonicc, was king of (Eehalia, probably the 
Thessalian town of this name. He was a skill- 
ful archer and married to Antioche, by whom 
he became the father of Iole, Iphitus, Molion 
or Deion, Clytius, and Toxeus. He was proud 
of his skill in using the bow, and is said to have 
instructed even Hercules in his art. He offer- 
ed his daughter Iole as a prize to him who should 
conquer him and his sons in shooting with the 
bow. Hercules won the prize, but Eurytus and 
his sons, with the exception of Iphitus, refused 
to give up Iole, because they feared lest Her- 
cules should kill the children he might have by 
her. Hercules accordingly marched against 
(Eehalia with an army, took the place, and killed 
Eurytus and his sons. According to Homer, on 
the other hand, Eurytus was killed by Apollo, 
whom he presumed to rival in using the bow. 
{Od, viii., 226.)— 2. Son of Actor and Molione 
of Elis. Vid. Mouonks. — 3. Son of Mercury 
(Hei'mes) and Autiauira, and brother of Echion, 
was one of the Argonauts. — 4. An eminent Py- 
thagorean philosopher, a disciple of Philolaus. 

Eusebius (Et'crt-fiiOf), surnamed Pamphili to 
commemorate his devoted friendship for Pam- 
philus, bishop of Ciesarea. Eusebius was born 
in Palestine about A.D 204, was made bishop 
of Caesarea 815, and died about 340. He had a 
strong leaning toward the Arians, though he 
signed the creed of the Council of Nicaea. He 
was a man of great learning. His most im- 
portant works are, 1. The Chronicon (xpovtuu. 



-aL'Toda-l/r iaroplac), a work of great value to 
j us in the study of ancient history. It is in two 
; books. The first, entitled xP ovo yP a< }>' La > contains 
a sketch of the history of several ancient na- 
tions, as the Chaldaums, Assyrians, Medes, Per- 
sians, Lydians, Hebrews, and Egyptians. It is 
chiefly taken from the work ot Airicanus. (vid. 
Africaxus), and gives lists of kings and other 
magistrates, with short accounts of remarkable 
events from the creation to the time of Euse- 
bius. The second book consists of synchrono- 
logical tables, with similar catalogues of rulers 
and striking occurrences from the time of Abra- 
ham to the celebration of Constantino's Vicen- 
nalia at Nicomedia, A.D. 327, and at Rome, A. 
D. 328. The Greek text of the Chronicon is 
lost, but there is extant part of a Latin transla- 
tion of it by Jerome, published by Scaliger, Ley- 
den, 1606, of which another enlarged edition ap- 
peared at Amsterdam, 1658. There is also ex- 
tant an Armenian translation, which was dis- 
covered at Constantinople, and published by 
Mai and Zohrab at Milan, 1818, and by Aucher, 
Venice, 1818. — 2. The Prceparatio Evangelica 
(evayyeXinjig aTTodeltjeog rroTrapamevr}) in fifteen 
books, is a collection of various facts and quota- 
tions from old writers, by which it was supposed 
that the mind would be prepared to receive the 
evidences of Christianity. This book is almost 
as important to us in the study of ancient phi- 
losophy as the Chronicon is with reference to 
history, since in it are preserved specimens 
from the writings of almost every philosopher 
of any note whose works are not now extant. 
Edited by R. Stephens, Paris, 1544, and again 
in 1628, and by F. Viger, Cologne, 1688 : [more 
recently by Heinichen, Lips., 1842, 2 vols. 8vo.] 
— 3. The Bemonstratio Evangelica (evayyeALni, 
unodet^cc), in twenty books, of which ten are ex- 
tant, is a collection of evidences, chiefly from 
the Old Testament, addressed principally to the 
Jews. This is the completion of the preceding 
work, giving the arguments which the Pr&para- 
tio was intended to make the mind ready to 
receive. Edited with the Prceparatio in the edi- 
tions both of R. Stephens and Viger. — 4. The 
Ecclesiastical History (hnKArjaiacTiKii laropia), in 
ten books, containing the history of Christianity 
from the birth of Christ to the Death of Licinius, 
A.D. 324. Edited with the other Ecclesiastical 
historians by Reading, Cambridge, 1*720, and 
separately by Burton, Oxford, 1838, [and by 
Heinichen, Lips., 1827, 3 vols. 8vo.J — 5. Dt 
Martyribus Palcestince, being an account of the 
persecutions of Diocletian and Maximin from 
A.D. 303 to 310. It is in one book, and gener- 
ally found as an appendix to the eighth of the 
Ecclesiastical History. — 6. Against Hierocles. 
Hierocles had advised Diocletian to begin his 
persecution, and had written two books, called 
Aoyot <piAaA7]delc, comparing our Lord's mira- 
J cles to those of Apollonius of Tyana. In an- 
swering this work, Eusebius reviews the life of 
! Apollonius by Philostratus. — 7. Against Marcel- 
1 lus, bishop of Ancyra, in two books. — 8. Be Ec- 
; clesiastica Theologia, a continuation of the form- 
\ er work. — 9. Be Vita Constantini, four books, a 
panegyric rather than a biography. It has gen- 
erally been published with the Ecclesiastical 
[ History, but edited separately by Heinichen, 
1830. — 10. Onomasticon de Zocis Hebraicis. a 
301 



EUSTATHIUS. 



EYAGORAS. 



description of the towns and places mentioned in 
Holy Scripture, arranged in alphabetical order. 
It was translated into Latin by Jerome. 

Eustathius (EvcTudios.) 1. Of Cappadocia, 
a Neo-Platonic philosopher, was a pupil of Iam- 
blichus and JEdesius. In A.D. 358 he was sent 
by Constantius as ambassador to King Sapor, 
and remained in Persia, where he was treated 
with the greatest honor. — 2. Or Eumathius, 
probably lived as late as the twelfth century of 
our era. He wrote a Greek romance in eleven 
books, still extant, containing an account of the 
loves of Hysminias and Hysmine. The tale is 
wearisome and improbable, and shows no power 
of invention on the part of its author. Edited 
by Gaulmin, Paris, 16 17, and by Teucher, Lips., 
1792. — 3. Archbishop of Thessalonica, was a na- 
tive of Constantinople, and lived during the lat- 
ter half of the twelfth century. He was a man 
of great learning, and wrote numerous works, 
the most important of which is his commentary 
on the Iliad and Odyssey (IlapacSo?^ elg rijv 
'0/j.rjpov 'I?udda nal 'Odvaceiav), or rather his 
collection of extracts from earlier commentators 
on those two poems. This vast compilation 
was made from the numerous and extensive 
works of the Alexandrian grammarians and 
critics ; and as nearly all the works from which 
Eustathius made his extracts are lost, his com- 
mentary is of incalculable value to us. Edi- 
tions: At Rome, 1542-1550, 4 vols, fob; at 
Basle, 1559-60; at Leipzig, 1825-26, contain- 
ing the commentary on the Odyssey, and at 
Leipzig, 1827-29, the commentary on the Iliad, 
in all 7 vols. 4to. There is also extant by Eu- 
stathius a commentary on Dionysius Periegetes, 
which is published with most editions of Dionys- 
ius. Eustathius likewise wrote a commentary on 
Pindar, which seems to be lost. — t. Usually call- 
ed Eustathius Romanus, a celebrated Grseco- 
Ilornan jurist, filled various high offices at Con- 
stantinople from A.D. 960 to 1000. 

Edstkatius (Evcrpdriog), one of the latest 
commentators on Aristotle, lived about the be- 
ginning of the twelfth century after Christ, un- 
der the Emperor Alexius Comnenus, as metro- 
politan of Nicaia. Of his writings only two are 
extant, and these in a very fragmentary state : 
viz*, 1. A Commentary on the second book of 
the Aualytica. 2. A Commentary on the Ethica 
Nicomachea. 

Euterpe. Vid. Musje. 

[ Euthy crates (Evdvnpdrrjc), a Greek statuary, 
probably about B.C. 300 ; a son and the most 
distinguished pupil of Lysippus.] 

Edthydemus (Ei)6v6r]uog). A sophist* was born 
at Chios, and migrated, with his brother Diony- 
Kodorus, to Thurii in Italy. Being exiled thence, 
they came to Athens, where they resided many 
years. The pretensions of Euthydemus and 
his brother are exposed by Plato in the dia- 
logue which bears the name of the former. — 2. 
King of Bactria, was a native of Magnesia. We 
know nothing of the circumstances attending his 
elevation to the sovereignty of Bactria. He ex- 
tended his power over the neighboring provinces, 
bo as to become the founder of the greatness 
of the Baetrian monarchy. His dominions were 
invaded about B.C. 212, by Antiochus the Great, 
with whom he eventually concluded a treatv of 
peace. 

302 



j Eutkymus (Evdvfios), a hero of Locri in Italy r 
son of Astycles or of the river-god Caecinus. 
He was famous for his strength and skill in box- 
ing, and delivered the town of Temesa from the 
evil spirit Polites, to whom a fair maiden was 
sacrificed every year. Euthymus himself dis- 
appeared at an advanced age in the River Cte- 
cinus. 

Eutocius {Evroniog), of Ascalon, the com- 
mentator on Apollonius of Peiga and on Archi- 
medes, lived about A.D. 560. His commentar- 
ies are printed in the editions of AroLioxrus and 
Archimedes. 

Eutrapelus, P. Yolumnius, a Roman knight r 
obtained the surname of Eutrapelus (Eirpdrve- 
7,og) on account of his liveliness and wit. He 
was an intimate friend of Antony, and a com- 
panion of his pleasures and debauches. Cytbe- 
ris, the mistress of Antony, was originally the 
freedwoman and mistress of Volumnius Eutrap- 
elus, whence we find her called Volumnin. 
and was surrendered to Antony by his friend. 
Eutrapelus is mentioned by Horace (MpigL L 
18, 31). 

Eutresii (Eirpt/crtoi), the inhabitants of a dis- 
trict in Arcadia, north of Megalopolis. 

Eutresis (Evrpi]Gic), a small town in Bceotiu,. 
between Thespiffi and Plataeae, with a temple and 
oracle of Apollo, who hence had the surname Ert- 
tresites. 

EuTRorius. 1. A eunuch, the favorite of Ar- 
cadius, became the virtual governor of the East 
on the death of Rufinus, A.D. 395. He was 
consul in 399, but in that year was deprived 
of his power by the intrigues of the Empress 
Eudoxia and Gainas the Goth ; he was first 
banished to Cyprus, was shortly afterward re- 
called, and put to death at Chalcedon. fhe 
poet Claudian wrote an invective against E\:- 
tropius. — 2. A Roman historian, held the offic 
of a secretary under Constantine the Great, 
was patronized by Julian the Apostate, whom 
he accompanied in the Persian expedition, and 
was alive in the reign of Yalentinian and Valecs. 
He is the author of a brief compendium of Ro- 
man history in ten books, from the foundation 
of the city to the accession of Yalens, A.D. 364, 
to whom it is inscribed. In drawing up this 
abridgment Eutropius appears to have consulted 
the best authorities, and to have executed his 
task in general with care. The style is in per- 
fect good taste and keeping with the nature of 
the undertaking, being plain, precise, and simple. 
The best editions are by Tzschucke, Lips.. 17v.' : . 
and by Grosse, Hal., 1813. 

Eutychides (Evtvx'i&w), of Sicyon, a statu- 
ary, and a disciple of Lvsippus, flourished B.C. 
300. 

Euxixus Poxtus. Vid, PoJTrcs Euxi.m s. 

Evadxe {Evddvi]). 1. Daughter of jS"eptun<- 
(Poseidon) and Pitane, who was brought up by 
the Arcadian king iEpy tus, and became by Apo-i- 
lo the mother of Iamus. — 2. Daughter of Iphis 
(hence called Iphias) or Philax, and wife of Oa- 
paneus. For details, vid. CapaneuS. 

Evagoras (Evayopag), king of Salamis in Cy- 
prus. He was sprung from a family which 
claimed descent from Teucer, the reputed found- 
er of Salamis ; and his ancestors appear to have 
been, during a long period, the hereditary 
| of that city under the supremacy of Persia 



EYAGRIUS. 



FABIA GENS. 



They had. however, been expelled by a Phoeni- 
cian" exile, who obtained the sovereignty for 
himself, and transmitted it to lus descendants. 
Evagoras succeeded in recovering his hereditary 
kingdom, and putting the reigning tyrant to 
death, about B.C. 410. His rule was distin- 
guished for its mildness and equity, and he 
greatly increased the power of Salamis, special- 
ly by the formation of a powerful fleet. , He 
gave a friendly reception to Conon, when the 
latter took refuge at Salamis after the defeat of 
the Athenians at ,'Egospotami, 405 ; and it was 
at his intercession that the King of Persia allow- j 
ed Conon the support of the Phoenician fleet. [ 
But his growing power excited the jealousy of J 
the Persian court, and at length war was de- j 
elared against him by Artaxcrxes. Evagoras 
received the assistance of an Athenian fleet uu- 
der Chabrias, and at first met with great suc- 
cess ; but the fortune of war afterward turned 
against him, and he was glad to conclude a 
peace with Persia, by which he resigned his con- 
quests in Cyprus, but was allowed to retain 
possession of Salamis, with the title of king. 
This war was brought to a close in .385. Evag- 
oras was assassinated in 374, together with his 
eldest son Puytagoras. He was succeeded by 
his 6on Nicocles. There is still extaut au ora- 
tion of Isoerates in praise of Evagoras, addressed 
to his son Nicocles. 

Evagrius (Evdyptor), of Bpiphania in Syria, 
born about A.D. 530, was by profession a li scho- 
lasticus" (advocate or pleader), and probably 
practiced at Antioeh. He wrote An Ecclesiasti- 
cal History, still extant, which extends from A. 
D. 431 to 594. It is published with the other 
ecclesiastical historians by Rcadiug, CamK 
1720. 

Evanber (Evardpoi). 1. Son of Mercury 
(Hermes) by an Arcadian nymph, called Themis 
or Nicostrata, and in Roman traditions Car- 
menta or Tiburtis. About sixty years before 
the Trojan war, Evander is said to have led a 
Pelasgian colony from Pallantium in Arcadia \ 
into Italy, and there to have built a town, Pal- 
lantium, on the Tiber, at the foot of the Pala- 
tine Hill, which town was subsequently incorpo- 
rated with Rome. Evander taught his neigh- 
bors milder laws ami the arts of peace and of 
social life, and especially the art of writing, with 
which he himself had been made acquainted by 
Hercules, and music •. he also introduced among 
them the worship of the Lyca?an Pan, of Ceres 
(Demeter), Neptune (Poseidon), and Hercules. 
Yirgil (J@ri. } viii.. 51) represents Evander as still 
alive at the time when /Eneas arrived in Italy, 
and as forming an alliance with him against the 
Latins. Evander was worshipped at Pallantium 
in Arcadia as a hero. At Rome he had an altar 
at the foot of the Aventine. — 2. A Phociau, was 
the pupil and successor of Lacydes as the head of 
rbe Academic School at Athens, about B.C. 215. j 

[Evangelic (Efaiyj c /or). 1. A Greek comic ( 
poet of the new comedy, a fragment of one of 
whose plays is preserved by Athenaeus ; edited 
by Meineke, ftagm. Comic. Grate, vol. ii., p. ! 
1173, edit, minor. — 'J. A slave of Pericles, who j 
distinguished himself by his abilities ; he is said j 
to have written a work on the science of war I 
(Ta/cTi/ctt), which was highly prized by Philo- j 
poeraea] 



Even us (Ev//i>oc). 1. Sou of Mars (Ares) and 
Demonice, and father of Marpessa. For de 
tails, vid, Marfessa. — U. Two elegiac poets of 
Paros. One of these poets, though it is uncer 
tain whether the elder or the younger, was a 
contemporary of Socrates, whom he is said to 
have instructed in poetry ; and Plato in several 
passages refers to Evenus, somewhat ironically, 
as at once a sophist or philosopher and a poet. 
There arc sixteen epigrams in the Creek An- 
thology bearing the name of Evenus, but it i? 
difficult to determine which of them should be 
assigned to the elder and which to the vounger 
Evenus. 

Evenus (Evtjvoc ; now Ma 'ha ri). 1. Formerly 
called Lycormas, rises in Mount (Eta, and flow? 
with a rapid stream through /Etolia into the 
sea, one hundred and twenty stadia west of An- 
tirrhium. — 2. (Now Sandarli), a river of Mysia r 
rising in Mount Temnus, flowing south through 
iEolis, and falling into the Sinus Elaiticus near 
Pitaue. The city of Adramyttium, which stood 
nearly due Avest of its sources, was supplied with 
water from it by an aqueduct. 

Eveegetes (Evepymjc), the " Benefactor/' s. 
title of honor, frequently conferred by the Greek 
states upon thoso from whom they had received 
benefits. It was assumed by many of the Greek 
kings in Egypt and elsewhere. Vid. Ptolem.-eus. 

Evil's (Evioc), an epithet of Bacchus, given; 
him from the cheering and animating cry eva, 
evol (Lai cvoe), in the festivals of the god. 

ExADirs ('E$ao*ioc), one of the Lapithse. fought 
at the nuptials of Pirithous. 

ExsurERAvrlus, Julius, a Roman historian, 
who lived perhaps about the fifth or sixth cen- 
tury of our era. He is the author of a short 
tract entitled De Merit, Lcpidi, ac Sertorii belli* 
civilibus, which many suppose to have been 
abridged from the Histories of Sallust It 
appended to several editions of Sallust. 

EzroxGEBER, Vid. Berenice, No. 1. 



Fabaris or Farfarus (now Far/a), a small' 
river in Italy, in the Sabine territory, between 
Reatc and Cures. 

Fabatus, L. Roscius, one of Ctcsar's lieuten- 
ants in the Gallic war, and prjetor in B.C. 4V*.. 
He espoused Pompey's party, and was twice- 
sent with proposals of accommodation to Cff^ar 
He was killed in the battle, at Mutiua, B.C. 43. 

Fabatus Calpurnius, a Roman knight, ac- 
cused in A.D. 64, but escaped punishment. He- 
was grandfather to Calpurnia, wife of the young- 
er Pliuy, many of whose letters are addressed to- 
him. 

Fabeeius. 1 . A debtor of M. Cicero. — 2. One 
of the private secretaries of C. Julius Ccesar. 

Fabia, two daughters of M. Fabius Ambi- 
tus. The elder was married to Ser. Sulpiciue, 
a patrician, and one of the military tribune.* 
B.C. 370, and the younger to the plebeian C. L.1- 
ciniua Stolo. 

Fabia Gexs, one of the most ancient patn- 
eian gentes at Rome, which traced its origin to 
Hercules and the Arcadian Evander. The Fabii 
occupy a prominent part iu history soon after 
the commencement of the republic ; and three 
brothers belonging to the gens are said to have 
303 



FABIANUS. 



FALERNUS AGER. 



been invested with seven successive consul- 
ships, from B.C. 485 to 479. The house de- 
rived its greatest lustre from the patriotic cour- 
age and tragic fate of the three hundred and six 
Fabh in the battle on the Cremera, B.C. 477. 
Vid. Vibulanus. The principal families of this 
gens bore the names of Ambustus, Buteo, Dor- 
so, Labeo, Maximus, Pictor, and Vibulanus. 

Fabianus, Papirius, a Roman rhetorician and 
philosopher in the time of Tiberius and Calig- 
ula. He wrote works on philosophy and physics, 
•which are referred to by Seneca and Pliny. 

Fabrateria (Fabraternus : now Falvaterra), a 
town in Latium, on the right bank of the Trerus, 
originally belonged to the Volscians, but was 
subsequently colonized by the Romans. 
. Fabricii belonged originally to the Hernician 
town of Aletrium, where some of this name 
lived as late as the time of Cicero. 1. C. Fa- 
bbicius Luscinus, was probably the first of his 
family who quitted Aletrium and settled at Rome. 
He was one of the most popular heroes in the 
Roman annals, and, like Cincinnatus and Curius, is 
the representative of the purity and honesty of 
the good old times. In his first consulship, B.C. 
282, he defeated the Lucanians, Bruttians, and 
Samnites, gained a rich booty, and brought into 
the treasury more than four hundred tal- 
ents. Fabricius probably served as legate in 
the unfortunate campaign against Pyrrhus in 
280, and at its close he was one of the Roman 
ambassadors sent to Pyrrhus at Tarentum to 
negotiate a ransom or exchange of prisoners. 
The conduct of Fabricius on this occasion form- 
ed one of the most celebrated stories in Roman 
history, and was embellished in every possible 
way by subsequent writers. So much, how- 
ever, seems certain, that Pyrrhus used every 
effort to gain the favor of Fabricius ; that he 
offered him the most splendid presents, and en- 
deavored to persuade him to enter into his serv- 
ice, and accompany him to Greece ; but that 
the sturdy Roman was proof against all his se- 
ductions, and rejected all his offers. On the 
renewal of the war in the following year (279), 
Fabricius again served as legate, and shared in 
the defeat at the battle of Asculum. In 278 
Fabricius was consul a second time, and had 
the conduct of the war against Pyrrhus. The 
king was anxious for peace ; and the generosity 
with Avhich Fabricius sent back to Pyrrhus the 
traitor who had offered to poison him, afforded 
an opportunity for opening negotiations, which 
resulted in the evacuation of Italy by Pyrrhus. 
Fabricius then subdued the allies of the king in 
the south of Italy. He was censor in 275, and 
distinguished himself by the severity with which 
he attempted to repress the growing taste for 
luxury. His censorship is particularly cele- 
brated_ from his expelling from the senate P. 
Cornelius Rufinus on account of his possessing 
ten pounds' weight of silver plate. The love 
of luxury and the degeneracy of morals which 
had already commenced, brought out still more 
prominently the simplicity of life and the integ- 
rity of character which distinguished Fabricius 
as well as his contemporary Curius Dentatus ; 
and ancient writers love to tell of the frugal 
way in which they lived on their hereditary 
farms, and how they refused the rich presents 
which the Samnite ambassadors offered them. 
304 



j Fabricius died as poor as he had lived ; he left 
no dowry for his daughters, which the senate, 
however, furnished ; and, in order to pay the 
greatest possible respect to his memory, the 
state interred him within the ponaaerium, al- 
though this was forbidden by the Twelve Ta- 
bles. — 2. L. Fabricius, curator viaruni in B.C. 
62, built a new bridge of stone, which con- 
nected the city with the island in the Tiber, and 
which was, after him, called pons Fabricius. 
The name of its author is still seen on the rem- 
nants of the bridge, which now bears the name 
of ponte quattro capi. — 3. Q. Fabricius, tribune 
of the plebs 57, proposed, as early as the month 
of January of that year, that Cicero should be 
recalled from exile ; but this attempt was frus- 
trated by P. Clodius by armed force. 

Fadus, Cuspius, appointed by the Emperor 
Claudius procurator of Judaea in A.D. 44. He 
was succeeded by Tiberius Alexander. 

F^esuLjE (Feesulanus : now Fiesole), a city of 
Etruria, situated on a hill three miles northeast 
of Florence, was probably not one of the twelve 
cities of the League. Sulla sent to it a military 
colony ; and it was the head-quarters of Cati- 
line's army. There are still to be seen the re- 
mains of its ancient walls, of a theatre, &c. 

FalacrIne or Falacrinum, a Sabine town at 
the foot of the Apennines* on the Via Salaria, 
between Asculum and Reate, the birth-place of 
the Emperor Vespasian. 

Falerii or Falerium, a town in Etruria, sit- 
uated on a steep and lofty height near Mount 
Soracte, was an ancient Pelasgic town, and is 
said to have been founded by Halesus, who set- 
tled with a body of colonists from Argos. Its 
inhabitants were called Falisci, and were re- 
garded by many as of the same race as the 
JSqui, whence we find them often called JSqui 
Falisci. Falerii afterward became one of the 
twelve Etruscan cities ; but its inhabitants con- 
tinued to differ from the rest of the Etruscans 
both in their language and customs in the time 
of Augustus. After a long struggle with Rome, 
the Faliscans yielded to Camillus, B.C. 394. 
They subsequently joined their neighbors sev- 
eral times in warring against Rome, but were 
finally subdued. At the close of the first Punic- 
war, 241, they again revolted. The Romans 
now destroyed Falerii, and compelled the Fa- 
liscans to build a new town in the plain. The 
ruins of the new city are to be seen at Falleri, 
while the remains of the more ancient one are 
at Civita Castellana. The ancient town of Fa- 
lerii was afterward colonized by the Romans 
under the name of " Colonia Etruscorum Fa- 
lisca," or " Colonia Junonia Faliscorum," but 
it never became again a place of importance. 
The ancient town was celebrated for its worship 
of Juno Curitis or Quiritis, and it was in honor 
of her that the Romans founded the colony. 
Minerva and Janus were also worshipped in the 
town. Falerii had extensive linen manufactories, 
and its white cows were prized at Rome as vic- 
tims for sacrifice. 

Falernus Agee, a district in the north of 
Campania, extending from the Massic hills to 
the River Vulturnus. It produced some of the 
finest wine in Italy, which was reckoned only 
second to the wine of Setia. Its choicest va- 
riety was called Fauiitianum, It became fit. for 



FALBSIA TORTUS. 



FAVONIUS. 



^drinking iii ten years, and might be used when 
.twenty years old. 

Falesia Passes, a harbor in Etruria, south of 
Populonium, opposite the island Ilva. 

Falisci. Vid. Falebh. 

Faliscus, GratIus, a contemporary of Ovid, 
and the author of a poem upon the chase, en- 
titled (Jyn>>cf<tl<-t>w Liber, in live hundred and 
forty hexameter lines. Tainted in Burmann's 
and Wernsdorf's Poet. LatMin.; [and with 
Olympius Nemeskuaus, by Stern, Hake, J 832, 
*vo.] 

Fanma. 1 . A woman of Minturna;, who hos- 
pitably entertained Marius when he came to 
Minturase in his flight, B.C. 88, though he had 
formerly pronounced her guilty of adultery. — 2. 
The second wife of Helvidius Priseus. 

Fannius. 1. 0., tribune of the plebs, B.C. 
] £7, — 2. L., deserted from the Roman army iu 
84, with L. Magius, and went over to Mithra- 
dates, whom they persuaded to enter iuto nego- 
tiations with Sertorius iu Spain. Fannius after- 
ward conmiauded a detachment of the army of 
Mithradates against Lucullus. — 3. C, one of the 
persons who signed the accusation brought 
against P. Clodius iu 61. In 59 he was men- 
tioned by L. Vettius as an accomplice in the al- 
leged conspiracy against Pompey. — 4 C, tribune 
<>f the plebs 59, opposed the lex agraria of 
EJffiear. He belonged to Pompcy's party, and in 
•19 went as prastor to Sicily. — 5. C., a contem- 
porary of the younger Pliny, the author of a 
work, very popular at the time, on the deaths of 
persons executed or exiled by Nero. 

Fannius C>epio. Vid. Cspxo. 

Fannius Strabo. Vid Strabo. 

Fannius Quadb&tus. Vid. Quadratus. 

Fanum Fortun.k (now Fano), an important 
town in Umbria, at the mouth of the Metaurus, 
with a celebrated temple of Fortuua, whence the 
xwu derived its nanx-. Augustus sent to it a 
■colony of veterans, and it was then called * Co- 
ionia Julia Fanestrk'" Here was a triumphal 
arch in honor of Augustus. 

Farfarus. Vid. Fahabis. 

Fascinus, an early Latin divinity, und iden- 
tical with Mutiuus or Tutinus. He was wor- 
shipped as the protector from sorcery, witch- 
craft, and evil daemons ; and represented in the 
form of a phallus, the genuine Latin for which 
is f ascinam, as this symbol was beheved to be 
most efficacious in averting all evil influences. 

Paula or Fauna, according to some, a concu- 
bine of Hercules iu Italy; according to others, 
the wife or sister of Fauuus. Vid. Faunus. 

Faunus, son of Pious, grandson of Saturnus, 
aod father of Latinus, was the third in the series 
of the kings of the Laurentes. Faunus acts a 
very prominent part in the mythical history of 
Latium, and was in later times worshipped in 
two distinct capacities : first, as the god of fields 
and shepherds, because ho had promoted agri- 
culture aud the breeding of cattle; and sec- 
ondly as an oracular divinity, because he was 
one of the great founders of the religion of the 
country. The festival of the Faunalia, cele- 
brated on the fifth of December by the country 
people, had reference to him as the god of ag- 
riculture and cattle. As a prophetic god, he 
was beheved to reveal the future to man, partly 
m dreams, and partlv bv voices of unknown or- 
20 



igin, in certain sacred groves, one near Tibur,, 
around the well Albunea, and another od the 
Avcntine, near Rome. What Faunus was to 
the male sex, his wife Faula or Fauna was to 
the female. At Rome there was a round tem- 
ple of Faunus, surrounded with columns, on 
Mount Oaelius ; and another was built to him, 
in B.C. 196, on the island in the Tiber, where, 
sacrifices were offered to him on the ides of Feb- 
ruary. As the god manifested himself in various 
ways, the idea arose of a plurality of Fauns 
(Fauni), who are described as half men, half 
goats, and with horns. Faunus gradually came 
to be identified with the Arcadian Pan, and the 
Fauni with the Greek Satyrs. 

Fausta. 1. Cornelia, daughter of the dic- 
tator Sulla,^id twin sister of Faustus Sulla, 
was bom about B.C. 88. She was first married 
to C. Memmius, and afterward to Milo. She 
was infamous for her adulteries, and the histo- 
rian Sallust is said to have been one of her par- 
amours, and to have received a severe flogging 
from Milo when he was detected on one occasion 
in the house of the latter. Villius was another 
of her paramours, whence Horace calls him 
" SuUa3 gener" (Sat., i., 2, 64).— 2. Flavia Max- 
imiana, daughter of Maximianus, and wife of 
Constantine the Great, to whom she bore Con- 
stantinus, Constantius, aad Constans. 

Faustina. 1. Annia Galeria, commonly dis 
tinguished as Faustina Senior, the wife of An- 
toninus Pius, died in the third year of his reign, 
A.D. 141. Notwithstanding the profligacy of 
her life, her husband loaded her with honors, 
both before and after her decease. It was in 
honor of her that Antoninus established a hospi- 
tal for the education and support of young fe- 
males, who were called after her puellce alimen- 
tation Faustinianm. — 2. Annia, or Faustina Ju- 
nior, daughter of the elder Faustina, was mar- 
ried to M. Aurelius in A.D. 145 or 146, and she 
died iu a village on the skirts of Mount Taurus 
in 175, having accompanied the emperor to Syr- 
ia. Her profligacy was so open and infamous, 
that the good nature or blindness of her hus- 
band, who cherished her fondly while alive, and 
loaded her with honors after her death, appears 
truly marvellous. — 3. Annia, grand-daughter or 
great-grand-daughter of M. Aurelius, the third 
of the numerous wives of Elagabalus. 

Faustulus. Vid. Romulus. 

Faventia (Faventinus : now Faenze), a town 
in Gallia Cisalpina, on the River Anemo and on 
the Via .iEmilia, celebrated for its linen manu 
factories. 

Favonii Portus (now Porto Fdvone), a harbor 
on the coast of Corsica. 

Favonius, M., an imitator of Catg Uticensis, 
whose character and conduct he copied so ser- 
vilely as to receive the nickname of Cato's ape- 
He was always a warm supporter of the party 
of the optimates, and actively opposed all the 
measures of the first triumvirate. On the break- 
ing out of the civil war in B.C. 49, he joined 
Pompey, notwithstanding his personal aversion 
to the iatter, and opposed all proposals of rec- 
onciliation between Ceesar and Pompey. He 
served in the campaign against Caasar in Greece 
in 48, and after the defeat of his party at Phar- 
salus he accompanied Pompey in his flight, and 
showed him the greatest kindness and atten 
305 



FAVORLNUS. 



FESTUS. 



tion. Upon Pompey's death, he returned to Italy, 
and was pardoned by Caesar. He took no 
part in the conspiracy against Caesar's life, but 
after the murder of the latter he espoused the 
side of Brutus and Cassius. He was taken pris- 
oner in the battle of Philippi in 42, and was put 
to death by Octavianus. 

Favorixus, a philosopher and sophist in the 
reign of Hadrian, was a native of Aries in Caul. 
He resided at different periods of his life in 
Rome, Greece, and Asia Minor, and obtained 
high distinctions. He was intimate with some 
of his most distinguished contemporaries, among 
others with Plutarch, who dedicated to him his 
treatise on the principle of cold, and with He- 
rodes Atticus, to whom he bequeathed his li- 
brary and house at Rome. He wrote several 
works on various subjects, but none of them are 
extant. 

Febris, the goddess, or, rather, the averter of 
fever. She had three sanctuaries at Rome, in 
which amulets were dedicated which people had 
worn during a fever. 

Februus, an ancient Italiati divinity, to whom ; 
the month of February was sacred, for in the 
latter half of that month general purifications i 
and lustrations were celebrated. The name is J 
connected with februare (to purify), and februce 
(purifications). Februus was also regarded as a 
god of the lower world, and the festival of the 
dead (Feralia) was celebrated in February. 

Felicitas, the personification of happiness, to 
whom a temple was erected by Lucullus in B.C. 
7 5, which was burned down in the reign of 
Claudius. Felicitas is frequently seen on Ro- 
man medals in the form of a matron, with the 
staff of Mercury {caduceus) and a cornucopia. 

Felix, Axtoxius, procurator of Judasa in the 
reigns of Claudius and Nero, was a brother of 
the freedman Pallas, and was himself a freed- 
man of the Emperor Claudius. Hence he is 
also called Claudius Felix. In his private and 
his public character alike Felix was unscrupu- 
lous and profligate. Having fallen in love with 
Drusilla, daughter of Agrippa L, and wife of 
Azizus, king of Emesa, he induced her to leave 
her husband ; and she was still living with him 
in 60, when St. Paul preached before him " of ) 
righteousness, temperance, and judgment to 
come." His government, though cruel and op- j 
pressive, was strong ; he suppressed all distur- 
bances r and cleared the country of robbers. He 
was recalled in 62, and succeeded by Porcius 
Festus ; and the Jews having lodged accusations I 
against him at Rome, he was saved from condign j 
punishment only by the influence of his brother I 
Pallas with Nero. 

Fellx, M. Mixucius, a Roman lawyer, .who 
flourished about AD. 230, wrote a dialogue en- 
titled Octavius, which occupies a conspicuous 
place among the early Apologies for Christian- 
ity. Edited by Gronovius, Lugd. Bat, 1707 ; by 
Ernesti, ibid., 1773 ; and by Muralto, Turic, 
1836. 

Felsixa. Vid. Boxoxia. 

Feltria (Feltrinus : now Feltre), a town in 
Raetia, a little north of the River Plavis. 

Fexestella, a Roman historian, who lived in j 
the time of Augustus, and died A.D. 21, in the j 
seventieth year of his age. His work, entitled ! 
Annales, extended to at least twenty-two books. \ 
306 



| The few fragments preserved relate to events 
subsequent to the Carthaginian wars ; and we 
' know that it embraced the greater part of Cic- 
j ero's career. A treatise De Sacerdotiis et Mo- 
gistratibus Romanorum Libri II, ascribed to 
Fenestella, is a modern forgery. [The genuine 
fragments are published in Popma's Fragmertta 
Historicorum Vet. Lot,, Amst., 1692, and in Hav- 
ercamp's and Frotscher s editions of Sallust] 

Fenni, a savage people living by the chase, 
whom Tacitus {Germ n 46) reckons among the 
Germans. They appear to have dwelt in the 
further part of Eastern Prussia, and to have been 
the same as the modern Finns. 

Ferextixum (Ferentinas, Ferentlnus). L (Now 
Ferento), a town of Etruria, south of Yolsinii, the 
birth-place of the Emperor Otho. It is called 
both a colonia and a municipium. There are 
still remains of its walls, of a theatre, and of se- 
pulchres at Ferento. — 2. (Now Ferentino), an 
ancient town of the Hernici in Latium, southwest 
of Anagnia, colonized by the Romans in the sec- 
ond Punic war. There are still remains of its 
ancient walls. In its neighborhood was the 
source of the sacred brook Ferextixa, at which 
the Latins used to hold their meetings. 

Ferextcm. Vid. Forextum. 

Feretrius, a surname of Jupiter, derived 
from ferire, to strike ; for persons who took an 
oath called upon Jupiter to strike them if they 
swore falsely, as they struck the victim which 
they sacrificed to him. Others derived it from 
ferre, because he was the giver of peace, or be- 
cause people dedicated (ferebant) to him spolia 
opima. 

Feroxia, an ancient Italian divinity, who ori- 
ginally belonged to the Sabines and Faliseans, 
and was introduced by them among the Ro- 
mans. It is difficult to form a definite notion 
of the nature of this goddess. Some consider 
her to have been the goddess of liberty ; others 
look upon her as the goddess of commerce and 
traffic, and others, again, regard her as a goddess 
of the earth or the lower world. Her chief 
sanctuaries were at Terracina, and near Mount 
Soracte. 

Ferox, Urseius, a Roman jurist, who proba- 
bly flourished between the time of Tiberius and 
Vespasian. 

Ferratus Mons (now Jcbel-Jurjurali), one of 
the principal mountain-chains in the Lesser 
Atlas system, in North Africa, on the borders 
of Mauretania Cassariensis and Mauretania Si- 
tifensis. 

Fescennicm or Fescennia (Fescenninus), a 
town of the Falisci in Etruria, and consequently, 
like Falerii, of Pelasgic origin. Vid. Faleeii. 
From this town the Romans are said to have 
derived the Fescennine songs. The site of 
the town is uncertain ; it may perhaps be placed 
at S. Silvesto. Many writers place it at C'iinto 
Cartellana, but this was the site of Falerii. 

Festus, Sext. Pompeius, a Roman gramma- 
rian, probably lived in the fourth century of our 
era. His name is attached to a dictionary or 
glossary of Latin words and phrases, divided 
into twenty books, and commonly called Sexti 
Pompeii Festi de Verborum Significatione. Ifcwa? 
abridged by Festus from a work with the same 
title by M. Verrius Flaccus, a celebrated gram- 
marian in the reign of Augustus. Festus made 



FESTUS, PORCIUS. 



FIRMICUS MATERNUS, JULIUS. 



a few alterations and criticisms of bis own, 
and inserted numerous extracts from other 
writings of Vcrrius, but altogether omitted 
those words which had fallen into disuse, in- 
tending to make these the subject of a separate 
volume. Toward the end of the eighth century, 
Paul, son of Waruefrid, better known as Paulus 
Diaconus, from having officiated as a deacon of 
the church at AquuYia, abridged the abridgment 
of Festus. The original work of Verrius Flac- 
cus has perished with the exception of one or 
two iucousiderable fragments. Of the abstract 
by Festus, MM imperfect MS. only has come 
down to us. The numerous blanks in this MS. 
have been ingeniously rilled up by Scaliger and 
Ursinus, partly from conjecture and partly from 
the corresponding paragraphs of Paulus, whose 
performance appears in a complete form in 
many MSS. The best edition of Festus is by 
K. 0. Midler, Lips., 1849, in which the text 
of Festus is placed face to face with the cor- 
responding text of Paulus, so as to admit of 
easy comparison. The work is one of great 
value, containing a rich treasure of learning 
upon many points connected with antiquities, 
mythology," and grammar. 

Festus, Porcius, succeeded Antonius Felix 
as procurator of Judaea in A.D. 62, and died not 
long after his appointment. It was he who bore 
testimony to the innocence of St. Paul, when 
he defended himself before him in the same yeai\ 

Fibrexus. Vid. AttPETOM. 

Ficana (Ficanensis), one of the ancient Latin 
(owns destroyed by Ancus Mareius. 

Ficulka (Fieuleas, -atis, Ficolensis), an an- 
cient town of the Sabine?, east of Fidenae, said 
to have been fouuded by the Aborigines, but 
early sunk into decay. 

FidenjE, sometimes Fjdena (Fidenas, -atis : 
(now Castel Qiubibo). an ancient town iu the 
land of the Sabines, forty stadia (five miles) 
northeast of Rome, situated on a steep hill, be- 
tween the Tiber and the Anio. It is said to 
have been founded by Alba Longa, and also to 
have been conquered and colonized by Romu- 
Jus ; but the population appears to have been 
partly Etruscan, and it was probably colonized 
by the Etruscan Veii, with which city we find 
it in close alliance. It frequently revolted and 
was frequently taken by the Romans. Its last 
revolt was in B.C. 488, and in the following 
year it was destroyed by the Romans. Subse- 
quently the town was rebuilt ; but it is not 
mentioned again till the reign of Tiberius, 
when, in consequence of the fall of a temporary 
wooden theatre in the town, twenty thousand, 
or, according to some accounts, fifty thousand 
persons lost their lives. 

Fidextia (Fideutlnus : now Borgo S. Domino), 
a town in Cisalpine Gaul, on the Via ^Emilia, 
between Parma and Placentia, memorable for 
the victory which Sulla's generals gained over 
Carbo, B.C. 82. 

Fides, the personification of fidelity or faith- 
fulness. Nuina is said to have built a temple 
to Fides publica on the Capitol, and another 
was built there in the consulship of M. JSmilius 
Scaurus, B.C. 115. She was represented as a 
matron wearing a wreath of olive or laurel 
leaves, aud carrying in her hand corn ears, or a 
basket with fruit 



Fidius, an ancient form of filius, occurs in 
the connection of Dius Fidius or Mcdius Fidiut, 
that is, me Dius (Aide) filius, or the son of Jupi- 
j ter, that is, Hercules. Hence the expression 
mcdius fidius is equivalent to me Hercules, scil. 
\juvet. Sometimes Fidius is used alone. Some 
j of the ancients connected fidius with fides. 
| Figulus, C. Marcius. 1. Consul B.C. 162, 
and again consul 156, when he carried on war 
| with the Dalmataj in Ulyricum. — 2. Consul 64. 
j suppported Cicero in his consulship. 
J Figulus, P. Nigidius, a Pythagorean philos- 
j opher of high reputation, who flourished about 
j B.C. 60. Mathematical and physical investiga- 
j tions appear to have occupied a large share of 
! his attention ; and such was his fame as an as- 
trologer, that it was generally believed, in later 
times at least, that he had predicted the future 
greatness of Octavianus on hearing the an- 
nouncement of his birth. He, moreover, pos- 
sessed considerable influence in political af- 
fairs ; was one of the senators selected by Cic- 
j ero to take down the depositions of the wit- 
nesses who gave evidence with regard to Cati- 
J line's conspiracy, B.C. 63 ; was praetor 59 ; 
took an, active part in the civil war on the side 
of Pompey ; was compelled by Caesar to live 
abroad, and died in exile 44. 

Fimbria, C. Flavius. 1. A homo novus, who 
rose to the highest honors through his own 
merits and talents. Cicero praises him both 
as a jurist and an orator. He was consul B.C. 
104, and was subsequently accused of extortion 
in his province, but was acquitted. — 2. Probably 
son of the preceding, was one of the most vio- 
lent partisans of Marius aud Cinna during the 
civil war with Sulla. In B.C. 86 he was sent 
into Asia as legate of Valerius Flaccus, and 
took advantage of the unpopularity of his com- 
mander with the soldiers to excite a mutiny 
against him. Flaccus was killed at Chalcedou, 
and was succeeded in the command by Fimbria, 
who carried on the war with success against 
the generals of Mithradates. In 84 Sulla cross- 
ed over from Greece into Asia, and, after con- 
cluding peace with Mithradates, marched against 
Fimbria. The latter was deserted by his troops, 
and put an end to his life. 

Fines, the name of a great number of places, 
either on the borders of Roman provinces or 
of different tribes. These places are usually 
found only in the Itineraries, and are not of" 
sufficient importance to be enumerated here. 

Firmanus Tarutius, a mathematician and 
astrologer, contemporary with M. Varro and 
Cicero. At Varro's request Firmanus took the 
horoscope of Romulus, and from the circum- 
stances of the life and death of the founder de- 
termined the era of Rome. 

Firmianus Symposius, C,«lius, of uncertain 
age and country, the author of one hundred in- 
sipid riddles, each comprised in three hexame- 
ter lines, collected, as we are told in the pro- 
j logue, for the purpose of promoting the festivi- 
j ties of the Saturnalia. Printed in the Poet. Lat. 
Min. of Wensdorf, vol. vi. 

1 Firmicus Maternus, Julius, or perhaps Vil- 
1 lius, the author of a work entitled Matkeseos 
Libri VIII., which is a formal introduction to 
judicial astrology, according to the discipline 
j of the Egyptians and Babylonians. The writer 
307 



F1RMUM. 



FLACCUS. 



lived in the time of Constautiue the Great, and 
had during a portion of his life practiced as a 
forensic pleader. There is also ascribed to this 
Firmicus Maternus a work in favor of Christian- 
ity, entitled De Errore Profanarum Religionum 
cut, Coiistantium ct Constantem. This work was, 
however, probably written by a different per- 
son of the same name, since the author of the 
work on astrology was a pagan. 

Firmum (Fh-manus : now Fermo), a town in 
Picenum, three miles from the coast, and south 
of the River Tinna, colonized by the Romans 
at the beginning of the first Punic war. On the 
coast whs its strongly fortified harbor, Castel- 

LUM FlRMAXUM 01' FlRltAXORUM: (now PoHo di 

Fermo.) 

Firmus, M., a native of Seleucia, the friend 
and ally of Zeuobia, seized upon Alexandrea, 
and proclaimed himself emperor, but was de- 
feated and slain by Aurelian, A.D. 273. 

Flaccus, CALrunxius, a rhetorician in the 
reign of Hadrian, whose fifty-one declamations 
are frequently printed with those of Quintiliun. 

Flaccus, Fulvius. 1. M., consul with App. 
Claudius Caudex, BC. 264, in which year the 
first Punic war broke out. — 2. Q., son of No. 
1, consul 237, fought against the Ligurians in 
Italy. In 224 he was consul a second time, 
and conquered the Gauls and Insubrians in the 
north of Italy. In 215 he was praetor, after 
having been twice consul ; and in the following 
year (214) he was re-elected prsetor. In 213 
he was consul for the third time, and carried 
on the war in Campania against the Carthagin- 
ians. He and his colleague, Appius Claudius 
Pulcher, took Hanno's camp b} r storm, and then 
laid siege to Capua, which they took in the fol- 
lowing year (212). In 209 he was consul for 
the fourth time, and continued the war against 
the Carthaginians in the south of Italy. — 3. C>\, 
brother of No. 2, was praetor 212, and had Apu- 
lia for his province : he was defeated by Han- 
nibal near Herdonea. In consequence of his 
cowardice in this battle he was accused before 
the people, and went into voluntary exile before 
the trial. — 4. Q., son of No. 2, was praetor 182, 
and carried on war in Spain against the Celti- 
berians, whom he defeated in several battles. 
He was consul 179 with his brother L. Manlius 
Acidinus Fulvianus, who had been adopted by 
Manlius Acidinus. In his consulship he de- 
feated the Ligurians. In 174 he was censor 
with A. Postumius Albinus. Shortly afterward 
he became deranged, and hung himself in his 
bed-chamber. — 5. M., nephew of No. 4, and a 
friend of the Gracchi, was consul 125, when he 
subdued the Transalpine Ligurians. He was 
one of the triumvirs for carrying into execution 
the agrarian law of Tiberius Gracchus, and was 
slain together with C. Gracchus in 121. He 
was a man of bold and determined character, 
and was more ready to have recourse to vio- 
lence and open force than C. Gracchus. — 6. Q.., 
praetor in Sardinia 187, and consul 180. — 7. 
Ser. ; consul 135, subdued the Vardaeans in Ulyr- 
icuni. 

Flaccus, Graxius, a contemporary of Julius 
Caesar, wrote a book, De Jure Papiriano, which 
was a collection of the laws of the ancient kings 
of Rome, made by Papirius. Vid. Papirius. 

Flaccus. Horatius. Vid. Horatius 
308 



[ Flaccus, Hordeoxius, consular legate of tfp- 
j per Germany at Nero's death, A.D. 68. He was 
I secretly attached to the cause of Vespasian, for 
| which reason he made no effectual attempt bo 
' put down the insurrection of Civilis. Vid. Cm 
lis. His troops, who were in favor of Yitelli 
us, compelled him to give up the command to 
Vocula, and shortly afterward put him to death. 

Flaccus, C. JSTorbaxus, a general of Octavi- 
} anus and Antony in the campaign against Bru- 
j tus and Cassius, B.C. 42. He was consul in 38. 
i Flaccus, Persius. Vid. Persius. 

Flaccus Siculus, an agrimensor by profes- 
sion, probably lived about the reign of Nerva. 
He wrote a treatise entitled De Conditionibm 
Agrorum, of which the commencement is pre- 
served in the collection of Agrimensores. Vid. 
Froxtixus. 

Flaccus, Valerius. 1. L., eurule aedile B.C. 
201, praetor 200, and consul 195, with M. Porci- 
us Cato. In his consulship, and in the follow- 
ing year, he carried on war, with great success, 
against the Gauls in the north of Italy. In 184 
he was the colleague of M. Cato in the censor- 
ship, and in the same year was made princeps 
senatus. He died 180. — 2. L., consul 131, with 
P. Licinius Crassus. — 3. L., consul 100, with 
C. Marius, when he took an active part in put- 
ting down the insurrection of Saturninus. In 
97 he was censor with M. Antonius, the orator. 
In 86 he was chosen consul in place of Marius. 
who had died in his seventh consulship, and 
was sent by Cinna into Asia to oppose Sulla, 
and to bring the war against Mithradates to a 
close. The avarice and severity of Flaccus 
made him unpopular with the soldiers, who at 
length rose in mutiny at the instigation of Fim- 
bria. Flaccus was then put to death by order 
of Fimbria. Vid. Fimbria. — 4. L., the interrex. 
who proposed that Sulla should be made dicta- 
tor, 82, and who was afterward made by Sulla 
his magister equitum. — 5. C, praetor 98, consul 
93, and afterward proconsul in Spain. — 6. L„ 
praetor 63, and afterward propraetor in Asia, 
where he was succeeded by Q. Cicero. In 59 
he was accused by D. Laelius of extortion in 
Asia ; but, though undoubtedly guilty, he was 
defended by Cicero (in the oration pro Flacco, 
which is still extant) and Q. Hortensius, and 
was acquitted.— 7. C, a poet, was a native of 
Padua, and lived in the time of Vespasian. He 
is the author of the Argonautica, an unfinished 
heroic poem in eight books, on the Argonautic 
expedition, in which he follows the general plan 
and arrangement of Apollonius Rhodius. The 
eighth book terminates abruptly at the point 
where Medea is urging Jason to make her the 
companion of his homeward journey. Flaccus 
is only a second-rate poet. His diction is pure ; 
his general style is free from affectation ; his 
versification is polished and harmonious; his 
descriptions are lively and vigorous ; but he dis- 
plays no originality, nor any of the higher attri 
bute3 of genius. Editions by Burmannus, Leid.. 
1724; by Harles, Altenb., 1781 ; and by Wag- 
ner, Gotting., 1805. 

Flaccus, Verrius, a freedman by birth, and a 
distinguished grammarian in the reign of Au 
gustus. who intrusted him with the education 
of his grandsons Caius and Lucius Caesar. He 
died at an advanced age, in the reign of Tibe 



FLAMININUS, QUINTIUS. 



FLORA. 



rius. At the lower eud of the market-place at 
Prseneste was a statue of Verrius Flaccus, front- 
ing the Hemicyclium, on the inuer curve of 
•which were set up marble tablets, inscribed 
with the Fasti Vcrriani. These Fasti were a 
calendar of the days and vacations of public 
business — die* fasti, nefasti, and intercisi — of 
religious festivals, triumphs, <fec, especially in- 
cluding such m wars peculiar to the family of 
the Caesars. In 1770 the foundations of the 
Hemicyclium si I 'i a 'iieste were discovered, and 
among* the ruins were found fragments of the 
Fasti Verriaui. They are given at the end of 
Wolfs edition of Suetonius, Lips., 1802. Flac- 
cus wrote numerous works on philology, history, 
and archaeology. Of these the most celebrated 
was his work Dc Verkorvm Significatione, which 
was abridged by Festus. Vid. Festus. 

Flamininus, Quintius. 1. T., a distinguish- 
ed general, was consul B.C. 198, and had the 
conduct of the war against Philip of Macedonia, 
which he carried on with ability and success. 
He pretended to have come to Greece to liberate 
the country from the Macedonian yoke, and thus 
induced the Achaean league, and many of the 
other Greek states, to give him their support. 
The war was brought to a close in 197, by the 
defeat of Philip by Flamininus, at the battle of 
Cynoscephalae in Thessaly ; and peace was 
shortly afterward concluded with Philip. Fla- 
mininus continued in Greece for the next three 
years, in order to settle the affairs of the coun- 
try. At the celebration of the Isthmian games 
at Corinth iu 190, he caused a herald to pro- 
claim, in the name of the Roman senate, the 
freedom and independence of Greece. In 195 
he made war against Na'bis, tyrant of Sparta, 
whom he soon compelled to submit to the Ro- 
mans ; and in 194 he returned to Rome, having 
won the affections of the Greeks by his prudent 
and conciliating conduct. In 192 he was again 
sent to Greece as ambassador, and remained 
there till 190, exercising a sort of protectorate 
over the country. In 188 he was sent as am- 
bassador to Prusias of Bithyuia, iu order to de- 
mand the surrender of Hannibal. He died 
about 174. — 2. L., brother of the preceding, was 
curule ;edile 200, prajtor 199, and afterward 
served uuder his brother as legate in the war 
against Macedonia. He Aras consul in 192. and 
received Gaul as his province, where he behav- 
ed with the greatest barbarity. On one occa- 
sion he killed a chief of the Boil who had taken 
refuge in his camp, iu order to afford amusement 
to a profligate favorite. For this and similar 
acts of cruelty he was expelled from the senate 
in 184 by M. Cat", who was then censor. He 
died in 170. — T, consul 150, with M'. Acilius 
Balbus.— 4. T., a usul 123, with Q. Metellus 
Balearicus. Cicero says that he spoke Latin 
with elegance, but that he was an illiterate man. 

FlamLnii's. 1. C, was tribune of the plebs 
B.C. 232, in which year, notwithstanding the 
violent oppo-iti- n of the senate, he earried an 
agrarian law. ordaining that the Ager Gallicus 
Picenus, which bad recently been conquered, 
should be distributed among the plebeians. In 
227, in which year tour praetors were appointed 
for the lii r-t turn, be was one of them, and re- 
ceived Sicily for his province, where he earned 
the good will of the provincials by his integrity 



aud justice. In 223 he was consul, and march- 
ed against the Insubrian Gauls. As the senate 
were anxious to deprive Flarainius of his office, 
they declared that the consular election was 
not valid on account of some fault in the auspi- 
ces, aud sent a letter to the consuls, with orders 
to return to Rome. But as all preparations had 
been made for a battle against the Insubrians, 
the letter was left unopened until the battle 
was gained. In 220 he was censor, and exe- 
cuted two great works, which bore his name, 
viz., the Circus Flaminius and the Via Flaminia. 
In 217 he was consul a second time, and march- 
ed against Hannibal, but was defeated by the 
latter at the fatal battle of the Trasimeue Lake, 
ou the twenty-third of June, in which he perish- 
ed with the greater part of his army. — 2. C, son 
of No. 1, was quaestor of Scipio African us iu 
Spain, 210; curule aedile 196, when he distrib- 
uted among the people a large quantity of grain 
at a low price, which was furnished him by the 
Sicilians as a mark of gratitude toward his fa- 
ther and himself ; was praetor 193, and obtained 
Hispania Citerior as his province, where he 
carried on the war with success; and was con- 
sul 185, when he defeated the Ligurians. 

Flaxaticus or Flaxoxicus Sinus (now Gulf 
of Quamaro), a bay of the Adriatic Sea, on the 
coast of Liburnia, named after the people Fla- 
nates and their town Flaxoxa (now Fiauona). 

Flavia, a surname given to several towns in 
the Roman empire in honor of the Flavian 
family. 

Flavia gexs, celebrated as the house to which, 
the Emperor Vespasian belonged. During tlu- 
later period of the Roman empire, the name 
Flavius descended from one emperor to anoth- 
er, Constantius, the father of Constantine the 
Great, being the first iu the series. 

Flavia Domitilla, first wife of Vespasian. 

Flavius, Cn., the son of a freedman, became 
secretary to Appius Claudius Caecus, and, in con- 
sequence of this connection, attained distin- 
guished honors in the commonwealth. He is 
celebrated in the annals of Roman law for hav- 
ing been the first to divulge certain technicali- 
ties of procedure, which previously had been 
kept secret as the exclusive patrimony of the 
pontiffs aud the patricians. He was elected 
curule aedile B.C. 303, in spite of his ignomini- 
ous birth. 

Flavius Fimbria. Vid. Fimbria. 

Flavius Josephus. Vid. Josephus. 

Flavius Vopiscus. Vid. Vopiscus. 

Flavus, L. Cesetius, tribune of the plebs 
B.C. 44, was deposed from his office by C. Ju- 
lius Caesar, because, in concert with C. Epidius 
Marullus, one of his colleagues in the tribunate, 
he had removed the crowns from the 6tatues 
of the dictator, and imprisoned a person who 
had saluted Caesar as " king." 

Flavus or Flavius, Subrius, tribune in the 
Praatorian guards, was the most active agent in 
the conspiracy against Nero, A.D. 66, which, 
from its most distinguished member, was called 
Piso's conspiracy. 

Flevo. Vid. Rhexus. 

Flevum, a fortress in Germany at the mouth 
of the Amisia (now Ems). 

Flevum, Flevo. Vid, Rhexus. 
Flora, the Roman goddess of flowers and 
309 



FLORENTLA 



FORTUNA. 



spring. The writers, whose object was to bring 
the Roman religion into contempt, relate that 
Flora was a courtesan, who had accumulated a 
large property, and bequeathed it to the Roman 
people, in return for which she was honored 
with the annual festival of the Floralia, But 
her worship was established at Rome in the 
very earliest times, for a temple is said to have 
been vowed to her by King Tatius, and Numa 
appointed a flamen to her. The resemblance 
between the names of Flora and Chloris led the 
later Romans to indentify the two divinities. 
Her temple at Rome was situated near the 
Circus Maximus, and her festival was celebra- 



Foznicularius Campus, i. e., the Fennel 
Fields, a plain covered with Fennel, near Tar 
raco, in Spain. 

Foxteius M., governed as propraetor Nar- 
bonnesse Gaul, between B.C. 7 6-7 3, and was 
accused of extortion in his province by M. Pke- 
torius in 69. He was defended by Cicero in an 
oration (pro M. Fonteio), part of which is extant. 
Foxteius Capito. Vid. Capito. 
Foxtus, a Roman divinity, son of Janus, had 
an altar on the Janiculus, which derived its 
name from his father, and on which Numa was 
believed to be buried. The name of this di- 
vinity is connected with fons, a fountain ; and 



ted from the 28th of April till the 1st of May, he was the personification of the flowing waters, 
with extravagant merriment and lasciviousness. | On the 18th of October the Romans celebrated 
Vid. Diet of Ant, art. FloPvALia. | the festival of the fountains called Fontinalia. 

Florextia (Florentinus). 1. (Now Firenze, j at which the fountains were adorned with gar- 
Florence), a town in Etruria, on the Arnus, was \ lands. 

a Roman colony, and was probably founded by \ Forextum or Ferentum (Forentanus : now 
th© Romans during their wars with the Liguri- i Forenza), a town in Apulia, surrounded by fer- 



ans. In the time of Sulla it was a flourishing 
municipium, but its greatness as a city dates 
from the Middle Ages. — 2. (Now Fiorenzicola), a 
town in Cisalpine Gaul, on the ^Emilia Via. be- 
tween Placentia and Parma. 

Florextixus, a jurist, one of the council of 
the Emperor Severus Alexander, wrote Institu- 

tiones in twelve books., which are quoted in the \ Ga'e'ta), a town in Latium, on the Appia Via, in 
Corpus Juris. j the innermost corner of the beautiful Sinus 

Fxoriaxts, M. Axxius, the brother, by a dif- \ Caietanus (now Gulf of Ga'eta). It was a very 
ferent father, of the Emperor Tacitus, upon j ancient town, founded by the Pelasgic Tyrrhe- 
whose decease he was proclaimed emperor at j nians ; and it appears to have been one of the 
Rome, A.D. 276. He was murdered by his head-quarters of the Tyrrhenian pirates, whence 



tile fields and in a low situation, according to 
Horace (arvum pingue kumilis Forenti, Carm.. 
iii., 4, 16). Livy (ix., 20) describes it as a for- 
tified place, which was taken by C. Junius Bu- 
bulcus, B.C. 317. The modern town lies on a 
hilL 

Formi.e (Formianus : ruins near Mola di 



own troops at Tarsus; after a reign of about 
two months, while on his march against Probus, 
who had been proclaimed emperor by the le- 
gions in Syria. 

Floeus, Axxjeus. 1. L., a Roman historian, 
lived under Trajan and Hadrian, and wrote a 
summary of Roman history, divided into four 
books, extending from the foundation of the 
city to the establishment of the empire under 
Augustus, entitled Rerum Romanarum Lihri IV, 
or Epitome Gestis Romanorum. This com- 
pendium presents within a very moderate com- 
pass a striking view of the leading events com- 
prehended by the above limits. It is written 
in a declamatory style, and the sentiments fre- 
quently assume the form of tumid conceits ex- 
pressed in violent metaphors. The best edi- 
tions are by Duker, Lugd. Bat, 1722. 1744, re- 
printed Lips., 1832 ; by Titze, Prag., 1819 ; and 



later poets supposed the city of Lamus, inhab- 
ited by the Lasstrygones, of which Homer speaks 
(Od,, x, 81), to be the same as Formiae. For- 
mise became a municipium and received the 
Roman franchise at an early period. The beau- 
ty of the surrounding country induced many of 
j the Roman nobles to build villas at this spot : 
of these the best known is the Formianum of 
Cicero, in the neighborhood of which he wa* 
killed. The remains of Cicero's villa are still 
to be seen at the Villa Marsana, near Castigli- 
one. The hills of Formiao produced good wine 
(Hor, Carm., \., 20). 

Formio (now Formione, Rusano), a email riv- 
er, forming the northern boundary of Istria. 

Fornax, a Roman goddess, said to have been 
worshipped that she might ripen the corn, and 
prevent its being burned in baking in the oven 
(fornax). Her festival, the Fornacalia, was an- 



by Seebode, Lips., 1821. — 2, A Roman po'et in j nouneed by the curio maximus 



the time of Hadrian. 

Florus, Gessius, a native of Clazomeua?, suc- 
ceeded Albinus as procurator of Judaea, A.D. 64- 



Fortuxa (Tvp/), the goddess of fortune, was 
worshipped both in Greece and Italy. Hesiod 
describes her as a daughter of Oceanus ; Pindar 



65. His cruel and oppressive government was J in one place calls her a daughter of Jupiter 
the main cause of the rebellion of the Jews. He j (Zeus) the Liberator, and in another place one 
is sometimes called Festus and Cestius Florus. j of the Mceros or Fates. She was represented 
Florus, Julius, addressed by Horace in two ! with different attributes. "With a rudder, she 



epistles (i., 3 ; ii., 2), was attached to the suite 
of Claudius Tiberius Nero when the latter was 
dispatched by Augustus to place Tigranes upon 
the throne of Armenia. He was both a poet 
and an orator. 

Foca or Phocas. a Latin grammarian, author 
of a dull, foolish life of Virgil in hexameter 



was conceived as the divinity guiding and con- 
ducting the affairs of the world ; with a ball, 
she represents the varying unsteadiness of for- 
tune ; with Plutos or the horn of Amalthea, 
she was the symbol of the plentiful gifts of for- 
tune, She was worshipped in most cities in 
Greece. Her statue at Smyrna held with one 



verse, of which one hundred and nineteen lines 1 hand a globe on her head, and in the other car- 
are preserved. Printed in the Anthol. Lot of I ried the horn of Amalthea. Fortuna was still 



Burmann and Wernsdorf. 
310 



more worshipped by the Romans than by the 



FORTUNATE. 



FORUM. 



Greeks. Her worship is traced to the reigus of 
Ancus Marcius and Servius Tullius, and the latter 
is said to have built two temples to her, the one 
in the forum boarium, and the other on the banks 
of the Tiber. The Romans mention her with a 
variety of surnames and epithets, as publico, pri- 
vate, muliebris (said to have originated at the 
time when Coriolanus was prevented by the en- 
treaties of the women from destroying Rome), 
regina, conservatrix, primigenia, virihs, &c. 
Fortuna Virginensis was worshipped by newly- 
married women, who dedicated their maiden 
garments and girdle in her temple Fortuna \ i- 
rilis was worshipped by women, who prayed to 
her that she might preserve their charms, and 
+hus enable them to please their husbands. Her 
surnames, in general, express either particular 
kinds of good fortune, or the persons or classes 
of persons to whom she granted it. Her worship 
was of great importance also at Antium and Prae- 
ueste, where her sortes or oracles were very cel- 
ebrated. 

Fortunate or -orum Ixsul.e (at, ruv jianapuv 
vr/aoi. i. e., the Islands of the Blessed). The 
early Greeks, as we learn from Homer, placed 
the Elysian fields, into which favored heroes 
passed without dying, at the extremity of the 
earth, near the River Oceanus. Vid. Elysium. 
In poems later than Homer, an island is clearly 
spoken of as their abode ; and though its position 



forum boarium, olitoriv.m, suarium, piscarium, 
<fec. The principal fora at Rome were, 1. Fo- 
rum Roman cm, also called simply the Forum, 
and at a later time distinguished by the epithets 
veins or magnum. It is usually described as 
lying between the Capitoline and Palatine hills ; 
but, to speak more correctly, it lay between the 
Capitoline and the Veliau ridge, which was a 
hill opposite the Palatine. It ran lengthwise 
from the foot of the Capitol or the arch of Sep- 
timius Severus in the direction of the arch oi 
Titus ; but it did not extend so far as the latter, 
and came to an end at the commencement of 
the ascent to the Vehan ridge, where was the 
temple of Antoninus and Faustina. Its shape 
was that of an irregular quadrangle, of which 
the two longer sides were not parallel, but were 
much wider near the Capitol than at the other 
end. Its length was six hundred and thirty 
French feet, and its breadth varied from one 
hundred and ninety to one hundred feet, an ex- 
tent undoubtedly small for the greatness of 
Rome ; but it must be recollected that the lim- 
its of the forum were fixed in the early days 
of Rome, and never underwent any alteration. 
The origin of the forum is ascribed to Romulus 
and Tatius, who are said to have filled up the 
swamp or marsh which occupied its site, and to 
have set it apart as a place for the administra- 
j tion of justice and for holding the assemblies of 
was of course indefinite, both the poets, and the I the people. The forum, in its widest sense, in- 
geo<*raphers who followed them, placed it beyond eluded the forum properly so called, and the 
the & Pillars of Hereules. Hence when, just after | Comitium. The Comitium occupied the nar- 
the time of the Marian civil wars, certain islands ! row or upper end of the forum, and was the 
were discovered in the ocean, off the western ! place where the patricians met in their comitia 
coast of Africa, the name of Fortunatai Insula? j j curiata : the forum, in its narrower sense, was 
was applied to them. As to the names of | originally only a market-place, and was not used 
the individual islands, and the exact identifi- j for any political purpose. At a later time, the 
cation of them by their modern names, there forum, in its narrower sense, was the place of 



are difficulties ; but it may be safely said, gen- 
erally, that the FortunataB Insula? of Pliny, Pto- 
lemy, and others are the Canary Islands, and 
probably the Madeira group; the latter being, 
perhaps, those called by Pliny (after Juba) Pur- 
purariae. 

Fortuxatianus, Annus, a Latin grammarian, 
author of a treatise (Ars) upon prosody, and the 
metres of Horace, printed in the collection of 
Putschius. 

Fortuxatiants, Curius or Chtrics, a Roman 
lawyer, flourished about A.D. 450. He is the 
author of a compendium of technical rhetoric, in 
three books, under the title Curii Fortunatiani 
Consulti Artis lihetoricce Scholicos Libri ires, 
which at one period was held in high esteem as a 



meeting for the plebeians in their comitia tri- 
buta, and was separated from the comitium by 
the Rostra or platform, from which the orators 
addressed the people. The most important of 
the public buildings which surrounded the forum 
in early times was the Curia Hostilia, the place 
of meeting of the senate, which was said to have 
been erected by Tullus Hostilius. It stood on 
the northern side of the Comitium. In the time 
of Tarquin the forum was surrounded by a range 
of shops, probably of a mean character, but they 
gradually underwent a change, and were event- 
ually occupied by bankers and money-changers. 
The shops on the northern side underwent this 
change first, whence they were called Nova or 
Argentarice Tabernce; while the shops on the 



manual. Printed in the Rhetores Laiini Antiqui southern side, though they subsequently^ ex 



of Pithou, Paris, 1599 

[Foruli (now Rocca di Cerno), a village of 
the Sabiues, at tfce point of passage over the Ap- 
ennines.] 

Forum, ac opeu space of ground, in which 
the people met for the transaction of any kind 
of business. At Rome the number of fora in- 
creased with the growth of the city. They 
were level pieces of grouud of an oblong form, 
and were surrouuded by buildings, both private 
and public. They were divided into two class- 
es: fora eivilia, in which justice was adminis- 
tered and public business transacted, and fora 



perienced the same change, were distinguished 
by the name of Vcteres Tabernce. As Rome 
grew in greatness, the forum was adorned with 
statues of celebrated men, with temples and 
basilicas, and with other public buildings. The 
site of the ancient forum is occupied by the 
Campo Vaccino. — 2. Forum Julium or Forum 
Cesaris, was built by Julius Caesar because 
the old forum was found too small for the trans- 
action of public business. It wa3 close by the 
old forum, behind the church of St. Martina, 
Caesar built here a magnificent temple of Venus 
Genitrix. — 3. Forum Augusti, built by Augus- 



venalia, in which provisions and other things ! tus because the two existing fora were not 
were sold, and which were distinguished as the ! found sufficient for the great increase of buai 

311 



FORUM. 



FREGEXJE. 



ness which had taken place. It stood behind 
the Forum Julium, and its entrance at the other 
end was by an arch, now called Arco ek Panto ni. 
Augustus adorned it with a temple of Mare Ul- 
tor, and with the statues of the most distinguished 
men of the republic. This forum was used for 
causes publico: and sortitiones judicum. — 4. Forum 
Xerv.e or Forum Traxsitorium, was a small 
forum lying between the Temple of Peace and 
the fora of Julius Caesar and Augustus. The 
Temple of Peace was built by Vespasian ; and 
as there were private buildings between it and 
the fora of Caesar and Augustus, Domitian re- 
solved to pull down those buildings, and thus 
form a fourth forum, which was not. however, 
Intended, like the other three, for the transaction 
of public business, but simply to serve as a 
passage from the Temple of Peace to the fora 
• >f Caesar and Augustus : hence its name Trans- 
'toriurn. The plan was carried into execution 
by Xerva, whence the forum is also called by 
the name of this emperor. — 5. Forum Trajaxi, 
built by the Emperor Trajan, who employed the 
architect Apollodorus for the purpose, "it lay 
between the forum of Augustus and the Campus 
Martius. It was the most splendid of all the 
fora, and considerable remains of it are still 
extant Here were the Basilica Ulpia and 
Bibliotheca Ulpia, the celebrated Columna Tra- 
jani, an equestrian statue and a triumphal arch 
of Trajan, and a temple of Trajan built by Ha- 
drian. 

Forum, the name of several towns in various 
parts of the Roman empire, which were origin- 
ally simply markets or places for the adminis- 
tration of justice. I. Aliexi (now Fcrrara?), 
in Cisalpine Gaul. — 2. Appii (ruins near S. Do- 
nate), in Latium, on the Appia Via, in the midst 
of the Pomptine marshes, forty-three miles 
southeast of Rome, founded by the censor Ap- 
pius Claudius when he made the Appia Via. 
Here the Christians from Rome met the Apos- 
tle Paul (Acts, xxviiL, 15). — 3. Amelii or Ame- 
lium (now Montalto), in Etruria, on the Aurelia 
Via.— -4. Cassii, in Etruria on the Cassia Via, 
near \ iterbo. — 5. Clodii (now Orhdo), in Etru- 
ria. — 6. CorxeiIi (now Imola), in Gallia Cispa- 
dana, on the -iEmilla Via. between Bononia and 
Faventia, a colony founded by Cornelius Sulla. 
— 7. Flamixii, in Umbria, on the Flaminia Via. 
— S. Fulvii, surnamed Valextixum (now Va- 
lenza), in Liguria, on the Po, on the road from 
Dertona to Asta. — 9. Gallorum (now Castel 
Franco), in Gallia Cisalpina, on the ^Emilia Via, 
between Mutina and Bononia, memorable for 
the two battles fought between Antonius and the 
consuls Pansa and Hirtius. — 10. Hadriaxi (now 
Voorburg), in the island of the Batavi, in Gallia 
Belgica. where several Roman remains have 
been found. — 11, JulIi or JoiuM (Forojuliensis : 
now Frejus), a Roman colony founded by Julius 
Caesar, B.C. 44, in Gallia Xarbonensis/ on the 
River Argenteus and on the coast, six hundred 
stadia northeast of Massilia. It possessed a 
good harbor, and was the usual station of a part 
of the Roman fleet It was the birth-place of 
Agricola. At Frejus are the remains of a Ro- 
man aqueduct circus, arch, Ac. — 12. Julii or 
JuuiuM (now Friaid). a fortified town and a Ro- 
man colony in the country of the Carni, north- 
oast of Aquileia: in the Middle Ages it became 
312 



a place of importance. — 13. Julium. Vid Illl 
tl rgis. — 14. Livii (now Forli), in Cisalpine Gaul f 

iu the territory of the Boii, on the -Emilia Via 
southwest of Ravenna : here the Gothic king 
Athaulf married Galla Placidia. — 15. Porlui 
(now Forlimpopoli), in Gallia Cisalpina, east of 
| Xo. 14, and on the same road. — 16. Popiiii (now 
' Folia), in Lucania, east of Paestum, on the Tana- 
; ger and on the Popilia Via. On the wall of ia 
| inn at Polla was discovered an inscription re- 
specting the praetor Popilius. — IT. Segusiaxoruk 
; (now Feurs), in GaUia Lugdunensis, on the Liger 
j and west of Lugdunum, a town of the Segusiani. 
| and a Roman colony with the surname Julia Fe- 
lix — 18. Semproxii (Forosemproniensis : now 
Fossombrone), a municipium in Umbria, on the 
Flaminia Via. — 19. Vocontii (now Vidauba-.. 
east of Canet), a town of the Salves in Gallia 
Narbonensis. 

Fosi, a people of Germany, the neighbors and 
allies of the Cherusci, in whose fate they shared. 
Vid Cherusci. It is supposed that their name 
is retained in the River Fuse in Brunswick. 

Fossa or Fossae, a canal. 1. Clodia, a canal 
between the mouth of the Po and Altinum, in 
the north of Italy ; there was a town of the samv 
name upon it. — 2. Cluilia or Cluill^e, a trench 
; about five miles from Rome, said to have been 
| the ditch with which the Alban king Cluilius 
' protected his camp when he marched against 
j Rome in the reign of Tullus Hostilius. — 3. C02.- 
| buloxIs, a canal in the island of the Batavi, 
j connecting the Maas and the Rhine, dug by 
J command of Corbulo in the reign of Claudius. 
— 4. Drusiax^e or Drusix-e, a canal which Dru 
I sus caused his soldiers to dig in B.C. 11, unit- 
\ ing the Rhine with the Vssel. It probably com- 
; menced near Arnheim on the Rhine, and fell 
I into the Vssel near Doesberg. — 5. Mariana c i 
; MasiAhjb, a canal dug by command of Marine 
i during his war with the Cimbri, in order to eon- 
! nect the Rhone with the Mediterranean, and thu> 
j make an easier passage for vessels into the 
Rhone, because the mouths of the river were fre- 
quently choked up with sand. The canal com- 
menced near Arelate, but, in consequence of the 
frequent changes in the course of the Rhone, it i- 
impossible now to trace the course of the canal. 
— [6. Philistixa, also called Fossiones Philisti-x 
(now Fo Grande), a very considerable canal, hav- 
ing seven arms or cuts, commonly known by the 
name of Septem Maria, undertaken by the Etru- 
rians to drain the marshy lands about Hadria.j 
— 7. Xerxis. Vid. Athos. 

Franci, i. e., " the Free men," a confederacy oC 
German tribes, formed on the Lower Rhine L 
the place of the ancient league of the Cheruse:, 
and consisting of the Sigambri, the chief tribe, 
the Chamavi, Ampsivarii, Bructeri, Chatti, <tc, 
They are first mentioned about A.D. 240. After 
carrying on frequent Avars with the Romans, 
they at length settled permanently in Gaul, of 
which thev became the rulers under their great 
king Clovis, A.D. 496. 

Feegell-e (Fregellanus : now Ceprano), an 
ancient and important town of the Volsci, on 
the Liris in Latium, conquered by the Romans, 
and colonized B.C. 328. It took part with the 
allies in the Social war, and was destroyed by 
Opimius. 

Fregex-e, sometimes called Fregelle (now 



FRENTANI. 



FULGENTIUS. 



Torre Maccarest), a town of Etruria, on the coast, 
between Alsium uud tlie Tiber, on a low, swampy 
shore, colonized by the Romans B*C. 245. 

Frkntani, a Sainnite people, inhabiting a fer- 
tile and well-watered territory on the coast of 
the Adriatic, from the River Sagrus on the north 
(and subsequently almost as far north as from 
the Aternus) to the River Frento on the south, 
from the latter of which rivers they derived 
their name. They were bounded by the Mar- 
rucini on the north, by the Peligni and by Sam- 
nium on the west, and by Apulia on the south. 
They submitted to the Romans in B.C. 304, and 
concluded a peace with the republic. 

Frento (now Fortore), a river in Italy, form- 
ing the boundary between the Frentani and Apu- 
lia, rises in the Apennines and falls into the 
Adriatic Sea. 

Friniates, a people in Liguria, probably the 
same as the Briniates, who, after being subdued 
by the Romans, were transplanted to Samnium. 

Frisiaboxes, probably a tribe of the Frisii, in- 
habiting the islands at the mouth of the Rhine. 

Frisii, a people in the northwest of Ger- 
many, inhabited the coast from the eastern 
mouth of the Rhine to the Amisia (now Ems), 
and were bounded on the south by the Bruc- 
teri, consequently in the modern Friesland, Gr'6- 
ningen, &c. Tacitus divided them into Majores 
and Minores, the former probably in the east, 
and the latter in the west of the country. The 
Frisii were on friendly terms with the Romans 
from the time of the first campaign of Drusus 
till A.D. 28, when the oppressions of the Ro- 
man officers drove them to revolt. In the fifth 
century we find them joining the Saxons and 
Angli in their invasion of Britain. 

Frontinus, Sex. Jriirs, was praetor A.D. 70, 
;md in 75 succeeded Cerealis as governor of 
Britain, where he distinguished himself by the 
conquest of the Silures, and maintained the Ro- 
man power unbroken until superseded by Agric- 
ola in 78. In 97 Frontinus was nominated 
curator aquarwn. He died about 106. Two 
works undoubtedly by this author are still ex- 
tant : 1. Strategematicon Libri IV, a sort of 
treatise on the art of war, developed in a col- 
lection of the sayings and doings of the most 
renowned leaders of antiquity. 2. De Aquccdw- 
tibus Urbis Ronw Libri II, which forms a valu- 
able contribution to the history of architecture. 
The best editions of the Straiegematica are by 
Oudendorp, Lugd. Bat., 1779, and by Schwebel, 
Lips., 1772 ; of the De Aqvxeductibus by Polenus, 
Patav., 1722. In the collection of the Agri- 
■tnensores, or Rei Agraricc. Auctores (ed. Goesius, 
Amst, 1674; ed. Laehmann, Berlin, 1848), are 
preserved some treatises usually ascribed to 
Sex. Julius Frontinus. The collection consists 
of fragments eonuected with the art of measur- 
ing land aud ascertaining boundaries. It was 
put together without skill, pages of different 
works being mixed up together, and the writ- 
ings of one author beiug sometimes attributed 
to another. 

Froxto, M. Cornelius, was born at Cirta in 
Numidia, in the reign of Domitiau, and came to 
Rome in the reign of Hadrian, where he attain- 
ed great celebrity as a pleader and a teacher of 
rhetoric. He was intrusted with the education 
of the future emperors M. Aurelius and L. Ve- 



rus, and was rewarded with wealth and honors 
He was raised to the consulship in 143. So 
great was his fame as a speaker that a sect of 
rhetoricians arose who were denominated Fron- 
toiiiani. Following the example of their found- 
er, they avoided the exaggeration of the Greek 
sophistical school, and bestowed especial care 
on the purity of their language and the simplicity 
of their style. Fronto lived till the reign of 
M. Aurelius. The latest of his epistles belongs 
to the year 166. Up to a recent period no work 
of Fronto was known to be in existence, with 
the exception of a corrupt and worthless tract, 
entitled De Differcntiis Vocabulorum, and a few 
fragments preserved by the grammarians. But 
about the year 1814 Angelo Mai discovered oo 
a palimpsest in the Ambrosian library at Milan a 
considerable number of letters which had pass- 
ed between Fronto, Antoninus Pius, M. Aure- 
lius, L. Verus, and various friends, together with 
some short essays. These were published by 
Mai at Milan in 1815, and in an improved form 
by Niebuhr, Buttmann, and Heindorf, Berlin, 
1816. Subsequently Mai discovered, on a pa- 
limpsest in the Vatican library at Rome, upward 
of one hundred new letters ; and he published 
these at Rome in 1823, together with those 
which had been previously discovered. 

Fronto, Papieius, a jurist, who probably lived 
about the time of Antoninus Pius, or rather 
earlier. 

Frusino (Frusiuas, -atis: now Frosinonc), & 
town of the Hernici in Latiurn, in the valley of 
the River Cosas, and subsequently a Romaa 
colony. It was celebrated for its prodigies, 
which occurred here almost more frequently 
than at auy other place. 

Fucextis, Fucentia. Vid. Alba, iSb. 4. 

FoofeiUS Lacus (now Logo di Celano or Cap- 
istrano), a large lake in the centre of Italy and ta 
the country of the Marsi, about thirty miles in 
circumference, into which all the mountain 
streams of the Apennines flow. As the water 
of this lake had no visible outlet, and frequently 
inundated the surrounding country, the Emperor 
Claudius constructed an emissarium or artificial 
channel for carrying off the waters of the lake 
into the River Liris. This emissarium is still 
nearly perfect : it is almost three miles in length. 
It appears that the actual drainage was relin- 
quished soon after the death of Claudius, for it 
was reopened by Hadrian. 

Fufius Calenus. Vid. Calenus. 

Fufidius, a jurist, who probably lived between 
the time of Vespasian and Hadrian. 

Fulgentius, Fabius Planciades, a Latin 
grammarian of uncertain date, probably not ear- 
lier than the sixth century after Christ, appear* 
to have been of African origin. He is the au- 
thor of, 1. Mythologiarum Libri III. ad CoXum 
Prcsbyterv.m, a collection of the most remark- 
able tales connected with the history and ex- 
ploits of gods and heroes. 2. Fxpositio Senno- 
nvm Antiquorvm con Tcsth/ioniis ad Ckalcidi- 
cura GrariVinoilcum, a glossary of obsolete word* 
and phrases : of very little value. 3. Liber de 
Exposition? Virgi/iance Continentice ed Chalcidi- 
cum G-rammaticum, a title which means an ex- 
planation of what is contained in Virgil, that is 
j to say, of the esoteric truths allegorically con- 
■ veyed in the Virgilian poems. The best edition 

313 



FULGINIA. 



GABINIUS. 



o£. these works is in the Myllwtjr&phi Latiui of 
Muncker,. Auct., 1681, and of Van Stavereu, 
Lagd Bat,, 1742. 

Fulginia, Fulginium (Fulginas, -atis : now 
Foligno), a town in the interior of Umbria. on 
the Via Flaminia, was a municipium. 

Fulvia. 1. The mistress of Q. Curius, one 
of Catiline's conspirators, divulged the plot to 
Cicero. — 2. A daughter of M. Fulvius Bambalio 
of Tusculum, thrice married, first to the cele- 
brated P. Clodius, by whom she had a daughter, 
Clodia, afterward the wife of Octavianus ; sec- 
ondly to C. Scribonius Curio, and thirdly to 
M. Antony, by whom she had two sons. She 
was a bold and ambitious woman. In the pro- 
scription of B.C. 43 she acted with the greatest 
arrogance and brutality : she gazed with delight 
upon the head of Cicero, the victim of her hus 
band. Her turbulent and ambitious spirit ex- 
cited a new war in Italy in 41. Jealous of the 
power of Octavianus, and anxious to withdraw 
Antony from the East, she induced L. Antonius, 
the brother of her husband, to take up arms 
against Octavianus. But Lucius was unable to 
resist Octavianus, and threw himself into Peru- 
sia, which he was obliged to surrender in the 
following year (40). Fulvia fled to Greece and 
died at Sicyon in the course of the same year. 

Fulvia Gens, a plebeian, but one of the most 
illustrious Roman gentes. It originally came 
from Tusculum. The principal families in the 
gens are those of Cextumalus, Flaccus, jSTobil- 
ioe, and Pjetinus. 

Fundanius. 1. C father of Fundania, the 
wife of M. Terentius Varro, is one of the speak- 
ers in Varro's dialogue, Be Re Rustica. — 2. M., 
defended by Cicero, B.C. 65 ; but the scanty 
fragments of Cicero's speech do not enable us 
;o understand the nature of the charge. — 3. A 
writer of comedies praised bv Horace (Sat,, i., 
10, 41, 42). 

Fundi (Fundanus : now Fondi), an ancient 
town in Latium, on the Appia Via, at the head 
of a narrow bay of the sea, rimning a consider- 
able way into the laud, called the Lacus Fun- 
danus. Fundi was a municipium, and was sub- 
sequently colonized by the veterans of Augus- 
tus. The surrounding country produced good 
wine. There are still remains at Fondi of the 
walls of the ancient town. 

Furcul^e CaudiNjE. Vid, Caudium. 

Fueia Gens, an ancient patrician gens, prob- 
ably came from Tusculum. The most cele- 
brated famiHes of the gens bore the names of 
Camillus Medullixus, Pacilus, and Philus. 
For others of less note, vid, Bibaculus. CRAS- 
HES, PURPUREO. 

FurLe. Vid. ECMENIDES. 

Furina, an ancient Roman divinity, who had 
a sacred grove at Rome. Her worship seems 
to have become extinct at an early time. An 
annual festival (Furinalia or Fitrinalesferice) had 
been celebrated in honor of her, and a flamen 
(flamm Furinalis) conducted her worship. She 
had also a temple in the neighborhood of Satri- 
eum. 

Fu&kius, C, a friend and correspondent of 
Cicero, was tribune of the plebs B.C. 50 ; sided 
with Coosar in the civil war ; and after Caesar's 
death was a stanch adherent of Antony. After 
the battle of Aetium. 31, he was reconciled to 
314 



(Augustus through the mediation of his son, was 
I appointed consul in 29, and was prefect of Hither 
Spain in 21. ♦ 

Fuscus. 1. Arellius, a rhetorician at Rome 
in the latter years of Augustus, instructed in 
rhetoric the poet Ovid. He declaimed more fre- 
quently in Greek than in Latin, and his style of 
declamation is described by Seneca as more 
brilliant than solid, antithetical rather than elo- 
quent. His rival in teaching and declaiming 
was Porcius Latro. Vid. Latro. — 2. Aristius. 
a friend of the poet Horace, who addressed to 
him an ode (Carm,, i, 22) and an epistle (Ep., L 
10), and who also introduces him elsewhere 
(Sat, i, 9, 61 ; 10, 83).— 3. Cornelius, one of 
the most active adherents of Vespasian in his 
contest for the empire, A.D. 69. In the reign 
of Domitian he was sent against the Dacians, 
by whom he was defeated. Martial wrote an 
epitaph on Fuscus (Ep., vi, 76), in which he re- 
fers to the Dacian campaign. 

G. 

Gab^e (TdGai). ] . (Now Barabgherd ?), a for- 
tress and royal residence in the interior of Per- 
sis, southeast of Pasargada3, near the borders 
of Carmania. — 2, Or Gabaza, or Cazaba, a for- 
tress in Sogdiana, on the confines of the Massa- 
getae. 

Gabala (Td6a'Aa), a sea-port town of Syria 
Seleucis, south of Laodicea, whence good sto- 
rax was obtained. 

Gabali, a people in Gallia Aquitanica, whose 
country possessed silver mines and good pas- 
turage. Their chief town was Anderitum (now 
Antericux). 

Ga.bia.na or -ene (Tadiavij, Ta6i7]vrj), a fertile 
district in the Persian province of Susiana, west 
of Mount Zagros. 

Gabii (Gabinus : ruins near Castiglione), a 
town in Latium, on the Lacus Gabinus (now 
Lago di Gavi), between Rome and Prseneste, 
was in early times one of the most powerful 
Latin cities ; a colony from Alba Longa ; and 
the place, according to tradition, where Romulus 
was brought up. It was taken by Tarquinius 
Superbus by stratagem, and it was in ruins in 
the time of Augustus ( Gabiis desertior vicus, Hot., 
Ep., i., 11, 7). The ductus Gabinus, a peculiar 
mode of wearing the toga at Rome, appears to 
have been derived from this town. In the 
neighborhood of Gabii are the immense stone 
quarries from which a part of Rome was built. 

Gabinius, A., dissipated his fortune in youth 
by his profligate mode of life. He was tribune 
of the plebs B.C. 66, when he proposed and car- 
ried a law conferring upon Pompey the com 
maud of the war against the pirates. He was 
praetor in 61, and consul 58 with L. Piso. 
Both consuls supported Clodius in his measures 
against Cicero, which resulted in the banish- 
ment of the orator. In 57 Gabinius went to 
Syria as proconsul. His first attention was di 
rected to the affairs of Judea. He restored 
Hyrcanus to the high-priesthood, of which he 
had been dispossessed by Alexander, the son of 
Aristobulus. He next marched into Egypt, and 
restored Ptolemy Auletes to the throne. The 
restoration of Ptolemy had been forbidden by a 
decree of the senate, and by the Sibylline books ; 



GADARA. 



GJ3TULIA. 



but Gabiuius had beeu promised by the king a 
sum of teu thousand talents for this service, and 
accordingly set at naught both the senate and 
the Sibyl. His government of the province 
was marked in other respects by the most 
shameful venality and oppression. He returned 
to Rome in 51. He was accused of majestas or 
high treason, oq account of his restoration of 
Ptolemy Auletcs, in defiance of the Sibyl and 
the authority of the seuate. He was acquitted 
on this charge ; but he was forthwith accused 
of repctundce, for the illegal receipt of ten thou- 
sand talents from Ptolemy. He was defended 
by Cicero, who had been persuaded by Pompey, 
much against his will, to undertake the defence. 
Gabinius, however, was condemned on this 
charge, and went, into exile. He was recalled 
from exile by Caesar in 49, and in the following 
year (48) was sent into Dlyricum by Cajsar with 
some newly-levied troops, in order to re-enforce 
Q. Cornifieius. He died in ITlyricum about the 
end of 48, or the beginning of the following 
year. 

Gadara (Tddapa : Yadaptjvuc : now Um-Keis), 
a large fortified city of Palestine, one of the ten 
which formed the Decapolis in Perasa, stood a 
little south of the Hieromax (now Yarmuk), an 
eastern tributary of the Jordan. The surround- 
ing district, southeast of the Lake of Tiberias, 
was called Gadaris, and was very fertile. Ga- 
dara was probably favored by the Greek kings 
of Syria, as it is sometimes called Antiochia 
and Seleucia ; it was restored by Pompey : 
Augustus preseuted it to King Herod, after 
whose death it was assigned to the province of 
Syria. It was made the seat of a Christian bish- 
opric. There were celebrated baths in its neigh- 
borhood, at Amatha. 

Gades (to. Tddeipa : Taneipsvc, Gaditauus : 
now Cadiz), a very aneieut town in Hispania 
Bajtica, west of the Pillars of Hercules, found- 
ed by the Phoenicians and one of the chief seats 
of their commerce in the west of Europe, was 
situated on a small island of the same name 
(now Isle ck Leon), separated from the main 
land by a narrow channel, which in its narrowest 
part was only the breadth of a stadium, and 
over which a bridge was built. Herodotus says 
(iv., 8) that the island of Erythia was close to 
Gadeira ; whence most later writers supposed 
the island of Gades to be the same as the myth- 
ical island of Erythia, from which Hercules car- 
vied off the oxeu of Geryon. A new town was 
built by Cornelius Balbus, a native of Gades, 
and the circumference of the old and new towns 
together was only twenty stadia. There were, 
however, many of the citizens dwelling on the 
main land opposite the island, as well as on a 
smaller island (8, Sebastian or Trocadero) in 
the immediate neighborhood of the larger one. 
After the first Punic war Gades came into the 
hands of the Carthaginians ; and in the second 
Punic war it surrendered of its own accord to 
the Romans. Its inhabitants received the Ro- 
man franchise from Julius Caosar. It became a 
municipium, and was called Augusta urbs Julia 
Gaditana. Gades w T as from the earliest to the 
latest times an important commercial town. 
Its inhabitants were wealthy, luxurious, and 
licentious ; and their lascivious dances were 
celebrated at Rome. (Juv.. xi., 162.) Gades 



! possessed celebrated temples of Saturn (Cronus) 
j and Hercules. Its drinking water was as bat! 
| m antiquity as it is in the present day. Gades 
gave its name to the Fretum Gaditanum, the 
straits at the entrance of the Mediterranean, be- 
tween Europe and Africa (now Straits of Gib- 
raltar.) 

Gjea. or Ge (Tala or T/)), the personification 
of the earth. Homer describes her as a divine 
being, to whom black sheep were sacrificed, and 
who was invoked by persons taking oaths ; and 
he calls her the mother of Ereehtheus and Tity- 
us. In Hesiod she is the first being that sprang 
from Chaos, and gave birth to Uranus (Ceelus) 
and Pontus. By Uranus (Ceelus) she became 
the mother of Oceanus, Coeus, Crius, Hyperion, 
Iapetus, Thia, Rheia, Themis, Mnemosyne. 
Phoebe, Tethys, Saturn (Cronos), the Cyclopes. 
Brontes, Steropes, Arges, Cottus, Briareus, and 
Gy ges. These children were hated by their fa- 
ther, and Ge (Terra) therefore concealed them 
in the bosom of the earth ; but she made a large 
iron sickle, gave it to her sons, and requested 
them to take vengeance upon their father. 
Cronos (Saturn) undertook the task, and mu- 
tilated Uranus (Ceelus). The drops of blood 
which fell from him upon the earth (Ge) be- 
came the seeds of the Erinnyes, the Gigantes. 
! and the Melian nymphs. Subsequently Ge (Ter- 
j ra) became, by Pontus, the mother of Nereus. 
Thaumas, Phorcys, Ceto, and Eurybia. Ge 
(Terra) belonged to the deities of the nether 
world (deol xduiuoi) and hence she is frequent- 
ly mentioned where they are invoked. The 
surnames and epithets given to her have more 
or less reference to her character as the all- 
producing and all-nourishing mother (mater om- 
niparens et alma). Her worship appears to have 
been universal among the Greeks, and she had 
temples or altars in almost all the cities of 
Greece. At Rome the earth was worshipped 
under the name of Tellus (w T hieh is only a 
variation of Terra). She was regarded by the 
Romans also as one of the deities of the nether 
world (Infer i), and is mentioned in connection 
with Dis and the Manes. A temple was built to 
her by the consul P. Sempronius Sophus, in B. 
C. 304. Her festival was celebrated on the 
15th of April, and was called Fordicidia or Hor- 
dicidia. The sacrifice, consisting of cows, was of- 
fered up in the Capitol in the presence of the 
Vestals. 

GjEson, GuEsus, or Gessus (Tatcov ) a river 
of Ionia in Asia Minor, falling into the Gulf of 
Maeander near the promontory of Mycale. 

G.etulia (Tat~ov?iia), the interior of Northern 
Africa, south of Mauretania, Nuniidia, and the 
region bordering on the Syrtes, reaching to the 
Atlantic Ocean on the west, and of very in- 
definite extent toward the east and the south. The 
people included under the name Gaetuli (Tai- 
rov/.oi), in its widest sense, were the inhabit- 
ants of the region between the countries just 
mentioned and the Great Desert, and also in 
the Oases of the latter, and nearly as far south 
as the River Niger. They were a great nomad 
race, including several tribes, the chief of whom 
were the Autololes and Pharusii on the western 
t coast, the Daras, or Gsetuli-Daras, in the steppes 
i of the Great Atlas, and the Melanogaetuli, a 
' black race resulting from the intermixture of 

315 



GAINAS. 



GALBA. 



the Gaetuli with their southern neighbors, the 
iNigrita?. The pure Gcetulians were not an 
JEthiopic (i. c, negro), but a Libyan race, and 
were most probably of Asiatic origin. They are 
supposed to have been the ancestors of the 
Berbers. 

Gainas. Vid. Arcadius. 

Gaius or Caius, a celebrated Koman jurist, 
wrote under Antoninus Pius and M. Aurelius. 
His works were very numerous, and great use 
was made of them in the compilation of the 
Digest. One of his most celebrated works was 
an elementary treatise on Roman law, entitled 
ftistitutiones, in four books. This work was for 
a long time the ordinary text book used by those 
who were commencing the study of the Roman 
law ; but it went out of use after the compila- 
tion of the Institutiones of Justinian, and was 
finally lost. This long lost work was discov- 
ered by Niebuhr in 1816 in the library of the 
Chapter at Verona. The MS. containing Gaius 
was a palimpsest one. The original writing of 
Gaius had on some pages been washed out, and 
an others scratched out, and the whole was re- 
written with the Letters of St. Jerome. The 
task of deciphering the original MS. was a very 
difficult one and some parts were completely 
destroyed. It was first published by Goschen 
in 1821 : a second edition appeared in 1824, and 
a. third in 1842. 

Gag.e (Ydyat), a town on the coast of Lycia, 
east of Myra, whence was obtained the mineral 
called Gagates lapis, that is^, or, as it is still 
called in German, gagat. 

Galanthis. Vid. 'Galinthias. 

Galatea (TaldTeia), daughter of iNereus and 
Doris. For details, vid. Acis. 

Galatia (Talaria : Ta?MT?jc : in the eastern 
part of modern Anadoli and the western part of 
Rumili), a country of Asia Minor, composed of 
parts of Phrygia and Cappadocia, and bounded 
on the west, south, and southeast by those coun- 
tries, and on the northeast, north, and northwest 
by Pontus, Paphlagonia, and Bithynia. It de- 
rived its name from its inhabitants, who were 
Gauls that had invaded and settled in Asia 
Minor at various periods during the third cen- 
tury B.C. First, a portion of the army which 
Brennus led against Greece, separated from the 
main body, and marched into Thrace, and, hav- 
ing pressed forward as far as the shores of the 
Propontis, some of them crossed the Hellespont 
on their own account, while others, who had 
reached Byzantium, were invited to pass the 
Bosporus by Nicomedes I., king of Bithynia, 
who required their aid against his brother Zi- 
pcetus (B.C. 279.) They speedily overran all 
Asia Minor within the Taurus, and exacted 
tribute from its various princes, and served as 
mercenaries not only in the armies of these 
princes, but also of the kings of Syria and 
^gypt '■> aQ d, according to one account, a body 
of them found their way to Babylon. During 
their ascendency, other bodies of Gauls follow- 
ed them into Asia. Their progress was at 
length checked by the arms of the kings of 
Pergamus : Eumenes fought against them with 
various fortune ; but Attalus I. gained a com- 
plete victory over them (B.C. 230), and com- 
pelled them to settle down within the limits of 
the country thenceforth called Galatia, and also, 



on aceount of the mixture of Greeks with the 
Celtic inhabitants, which speedily took place. 
Graeco-Galatia and Gallograecia. The people of 
Galatia adopted to a great extent Greek habits 
and manners and religious observances, but pre- 
served their own language, which is spoken of aa 
resembling that of the Treviri. They retained, 
also, their political divisions and forms of gov- 
ernment. They consisted of three great tribes, 
the Tolistobogi, the Trocmi, and the Tectosages, 
each subdivided into four parts, called by the 
Greeks TErpapx'iai. At the head of each of these 
twelve tetrarchies was a chief, or tetrarch, 
who appointed the chief magistrate (Ji/ca<rr^) T 
and the commander of the army (arparo^Mt)., 
and two lieutenant generals (vTrocrrparo^v/MKec). 
The twelve tetrarchs together had the general 
government of the country, but their power was 
checked by an assistant senate of three hund- 
red, who met in a place called Drynaemetum (or 
probably, Drysenetum, i. e., the oak-grove), and 
had jurisdiction in all capital cases. This form 
of government had a natural tendency to mon- 
archy, according as either of the twelve te- 
trarchs became more powerful than the rest., 
especially under the protection of the Romans, 
to whom Galatia became virtually subject as 
the result of the campaign which the consul Cn. 
Manlius undertook against the Gauls, to punish 
them for the assistance they had given to An- 
tiochus the Great (B.C. 189). At length one 
of the tetrarchs, Deiotarus, was rewarded for 
his services to the Romans in the Mithradatic 
war by the title of king, together with a grant 
of Pontus and Armenia Minor ; and after the 
death of his successor Amyntas, Galatia was 
made by Augustus a Roman province (B.C. 25). 
It was soon after enlarged by the addition 
of Paphlagonia. Under Constantine it was 
restricted to its old limits, and under Valens 
it was divided into two provinces, Galatia Prima 
and Galatia Secunda. The country was beau- 
tiful and fertile, being watered by the rivers 
Halys and Sangarius. Its only important cities 
were, in the southwest, Pessinus, the capital 
of the Tolistobogi ; in the centre, Ancyra, the 
capital of the Tectosages ; and in the north- 
east, Tavium, the capital of the Trocmi. From 
the Epistle of St. Paul to the Galatians, we learn 
not only that many Christian churches had been 
formed in Galatia during the apostolic age, but 
also that those churches consisted, in great part, 
of Jewish converts. 

Galaxius (Ta?M^ioc), a small river in Bceotia, 
on which stood a temple of Apollo Galaxios : it 
derived its name from its milky color, which was 
owing to the chalky nature of the soil through 
which it flowed. 

Galba, Sulpicius, patricians. 1. P., consul 
B.C. 211, received Macedonia as his province, 
where he remained as proconsul till 204, and 
carried on the war against Philip. In 200 he 
was consul a second time, and again obtained 
Macedonia as his province ; but he was unable 
to accomplish any thing of importance against 
Philip, and was succeeded in the command in 
the following year by Yillius Tappulus. He was 
one of the ten commissioners sent to Greece in 
196, after the defeat of Philip by Flaminius, aud 
was one of the ambassadors sent to Antiochu- 
in 193. — 2. Ser., was praetor 151, and received 



GALBA, SER. SULPICIUS. 



GALEt'S. 



Spain as his province. His name is infamous 
on account of Lis treacherous and atrocious mur- 
kier of the Lusitanians, with their wives and 
children, who had surrendered to him on the 
promise of receiving grants of land. Viriathus 
was one of the few Lusitanians who escaped 
from the bloody scene. Vid. Viriathus. On 
his return to Rome in 149, he was brought to 
trial on account of his horrible massacre of the 
Lusitanians. His conduct was denounced in 
the strongest terms by Cato, who was then 
. ighty-five years old, but he was nevertheless 
acquitted. He was consul 144. Cicero praises 
his oratory in the highest terms.— 3. See., great- 
grandfather of the Emperor Galba, served un- 
der Cajsar in the Gallic war, and was praetor in 
54. After Caesar's death he served against An- 
tony in the war of Mutina. — 4. C., father of the 
Emperor Galba, was consul in A.D. 22. 

Galba, Ser. Sulfictus, Roman emperor from 
June, A.D. 68, to January, A.D. 69. He was 
born near Terracina, on the 24th of December, 
B.C. 3. Both Augustus and Tiberius are said 
to have told him that one day he would be at 
the head of the Romau world, from which we 
must infer that lie was a young man of more 
than ordinary talents. From his parents he in- 
herited great wealth. He was invested with 
the curule offices before attaining the legitimate 
age. He was praetor A.D. 20, and consul 33. 
After his consulship he had the government of 
Gaul, 39, where he carried on a successful war 
against the Germans, and restored discipline 
among the troops. On the death of Caligula 
many of his friends urged him to seize the em- 
pire, but he preferred living in a private station. 
Claudius intrusted him, in 45, with the admin- 
istration of Africa, which he governed with 
wisdom and integrity. In the reign of Nero he 
lived for several years in retirement, through 
fear of becoming the victim of the tyrant's sus- 
picion ; but in 61 Nero gave him the govern- 
ment of Hispania Tarraconensis, where he re- 
mained for eight years. In 68 Vindex rebelled 
in Gaul. About the same time Galba was in- 
formed that Nero had sent secret orders for his 
assassination. He therefore resolved at once 
to follow the example of Yindex ; but he did 
not assume the imperial title, and professed to 
act only as the legate of the Roman senate and 
people. Shortly afterward Nero was murdered ; 
and Galba thereupon proceeded to Rome, where 
he was acknowledged as emperor. But his 
severity and avarice soon made him unpopular 
with his new subject*, and especially with the 
soldiers. His powers had also become enfee- 
bled by age, and lie was completely under the 
sway of favorites, who perpetrated many enor- 
mities in his name. Perceiving the weakness of 
his government, he adopted Piso Licinianus, 
a noble young Roman, as his successor. But 
this only hastened his ruin. Otho, who had 
hoped to be adopted by Galba, formed a con- 
spiracy among the soldiers, who rose in rebel- 
lion six days after the adoption of Tiso. Galba 
was murdered, aud Otho was proclaimed em- 
peror. 

Galenus. Claudius, commonly called Galen, 
a very celebrated physician, whose works have 
had a longer and more extensive influence on 
the different branches of medical science than 



those of anj' other individual either in ancien 
or modern times. He was born at Pergamun 
in A.D. 130. His father Nicon, who was Vi 
architect and geometrician, carefully superin- 
tended his education. In his seventeenth year 
(146), his father, who had hitherto destined 
him to be a philosopher, altered his intentions, 
and, in consequence of a, dream, chose for him 
the profession of medicine. He at first studied 
medicine in his native city. In his twentieth 
year (149) he lost his father, aud about the 
same time lie went to Smyrna for the purpose 
of studying under Pelops the physician, and 
Albinus the Platonic philosopher. He after- 
ward studied at Corinth and Alexandrea. He 
returned to Pcrgamum in his twenty-ninth year 
(158), and was immediately appointed physician 
to the school of gladiators, an office which he 
rilled with great reputation and success. In 
164 he quitted his native country on account 
of some popular commotions, and went to Rom^ 
for the first time. Here he stayed about four 
years, and gained great reputation from his skill 
in anatomy and medicine. He returned to Per 
gamum in 168, but had scarcely settled there 
when he received a summons from the emper- 
ors M. Aurelius and L. Verus to attend them at 
Aquileia in Venetia. From Aquileia Galen fol- 
lowed M. Aurelius to Rome in 170. When the 
emperor again set out to conduct the war on 
the Danube, Galen with difficulty obtained per- 
mission to be left behind at Rome, alleging that 
such was the will of ./Esculapius. Before leav- 
ing the city the emperor committed to the med- 
ical care of Galen his son Commodus, who wa* 
then nine, years of age. Galen stayed at Rome 
some years, during which time he employed 
himself in lecturing, writing, and practicing 
with great success. He subsequently returned 
to Pergamum, but whether he again visited 
Rome is uncertain. He is said to have died in 
the year 200, at the age of seventy, in the reign 
of Septimius Severus ; but it is not improbable 
that he lived some years longer. Galen wrote 
a great number of works on medical and philo- 
sophical subjects. The works still extant under 
the name of Galen consist of eighty-three 
treatises acknowledged to be genuine ; nine- 
teen whose genuineness has been doubted ; 
forty-five undoubtedly spurious ; nineteen frag- 
ments ; and fifteen commentaries on different 
works of Hippocrates. Galen attached himself 
exclusively to none of the medical sects into 
which the profession was divided, but chose 
from the tenets of each what he believed to be 
good and true, and called those persons slave? 
who designated themselves as followers of 
Hippocrates, Praxagoras, or any other man. 
The best edition of his works is by Kuhn, Lips.. 
1821-1833, 20 vols. 8vo. 

Galepsus (TaArppoc : Talrjipioc), a twn in 
Macedonia, on the Toronaic Gulf. 

Galerius Maximianus. Vid. Maximianus. 

Galerius Trachalus. Vid. Trachalus. 

Galesus (now Galcso), a river in the south 
of Italy, flows into the Gulf of Tarentunx 
through the meadows where the sheep fed 
whose wool was so celebrated in antiquity 
(dulce pellitis ovibv.s Galcesi flv.mcn, Hor., Ga.rm., 
ii., 6, 10). 

Galeus (Td?,£or), that is, i; the lizard," son 
317 



GMALMAi 



GALLIA. 



of Apollo and Themisto, the daughter of the J 
Hyperborean king Zabius. In pursuance of an , 
oracle of the Dodonean Zeus, Galeus emigrated j 
to Sicily, where he built a sanctuary to his | 
father Apollo. The Galeot^e, a family of Sicil- i 
ian soothsayers, derived their origin from him. j 
The principal seat of the Galeotae was the town 
of Hybla, which was hence called Gai.eotis ; 
or Galeatis. 

Galil^ea (Ta/u'Aala), at the birth of Christ, 
was the northernmost of the three divisions of I 
Palestine west of the Jordan. It lay between 
the Jordan and the Mediterranean on the east , 
and west, and the mountains of Hermon and | 
Carmel on the north and south. It was divided ■ 
into Upper or I^orth Galilee, and Lower or South | 
Galilee. It was very fertile and densely peo- j 
pled ; but its inhabitants were a mixed race of i 
Jews, Syrians, Phoenicians, Greeks, and others, j 
and were therefore despised by the Jews of 
Judaea. Vxd. Pal-estixa. 

Galixthtas or Galanthis (Ov., Met, ix., 306), j 
•.laughter of Prcetus of Thebes and a friend of ] 
Alcmene. When Alcmene was on the point i 
of giving birth to Hercules, and the Mcerae and j 
llithyiae, at the request of Juno (Hera), were j 
endeavoring to delay the birth, Galinthias sud- 1 
denly rushed in with the false report that Ale- 1 
niene had given birth to a son. The hostile 
goddesses were so surprised at this information j 
that they dropped their arms. Thus the charm I 
was broken, and Alcmene was enabled to give j 
birth to Hercules. The deluded goddesses j 
avenged the deception practiced upon them by j 
metamorphosing Galinthias into a weasel or cat I 
{ -/a,}.?]). Hecate, however, took pity upon her, 
and made her her attendant, and Hercules after- 
ward erected a sanctuary to her. At Thebes it 
was customary at the festival of Hercules first to 
offer sacrifices to Galinthias. 

Galea. 1. Wife of Constantius, son of the 
Emperor Constantius Chlorus. She was the 
mother of Gallus Caesar lid, Gallus. — 2. 
Daughter of the Emperor Yalentinian L, and 
second wife of Theodosius the Great. — 3. Gal- 
la Placidia, or simply Placidia, daughter of 
Theodosius the Great by 2*b. 2. She fell into 
fhe hands of Alarie when he took Rome, A.D. 
410 ; and Ataulphus, the Gothic king, married 
her in 414. After the death of Ataulphus she 
svas restored to Honorius ; and in 417 she was 
married to Constantius, to whom she bore the 
Emperor Yalentinian III. Daring the minority 
of the latter she governed the Western empire. 
She died about 450. 

Galljecia, the country of the Gall.eci (Ka/- 
AfftKot), in the north of Spain, between the As- 
tures and the Durius, was in earlier times in- i 
eluded in Lusitania. Galleacia was sometimes j 
osed in a wider sense to include the country of j 
the Astures and the CantabrL It produced tin, | 
^old, and a precious stone called gemma GiOlo- 
tca, Its inhabitants were some of the most un- j 
civilized in Spain. They were defeated with 
great slaughter by D. Brutus, consul B.C. 138, ! 
^•ho obtained in consequence the surname of 
1 ; allaecus. 

Gallia (// KhItim), Tclarta), was used before j 
the time of Julius Caesar to indicate all the 
land inhabited by the Galli or Celtae, and con- ! 
sequentlv included not onlv the later Gaul and ' 
318 



the north of Italy, but a part of Spain, the 
greater part of Germany, the British isles, and 
other countries. The early history of the Celtic 
race, and their various settlements in different 
parts of Europe, are related under Celt^e. ]. 
Gallia, also called Gallia Traxsalpixv or 
Gallia Ulterior, to distinguish it from Gallia 
Cisalpina, or the north of Italy. Gallia Beac- 
cata and Gallia Comata are also used in con- 
tradistinction to Gallia Togata or the north of 
Italy, but these names are not identical with, 
the whole of Gallia Transalpina. Gallia Brae- 
cata was the part of the country first subdued 
by the Romans, the later Provincia, and wa3 so 
called because the inhabitants wore bracccs Or 
trowsers. Gallia Comata was the remainder of 
the country, excluding Gallia Braccata, and 
derived its name from the inhabitants wearing 
their hair long. The Romans were acquainted 
with only a small portion of Transalpine Gaul 
till the time of Caesar. In the time of Augus- 
tus it was bounded on the south by the Pyre- 
nees and the Mediterranean ; on the east by 
the River Yarns and the Alps, which separated 
it from Italy, and by the River Rhine, which 
separated it from Germany ; on the north by 
the German Ocean and the English Channel ; 
and on the west by the Atlantic ; thus includ- 
ing not only the whole of France and Belgium, 
but a part of Holland, a great part of Switzer- 
land, and all the provinces of Germany west of 
the Rhine. The greater part of this country- 
is a plain, well watered by numerous rivers. 
The principal mountains were Moxs Cebexx* 
or Gebenna iu the south ; the lofty range of 
Moxs Jura in the east, separating the Sequani. 
and the Helvetii ; Mons Yosegus or Yogk- 
sus, a continuation of the Jura. The chief 
forest was the Silva Aeduexxa, extending from 
the Rhine and the Treviri as far as the Scheldt . 
The principal rivers were, in the east and north, 
the Rhexus (now Rhine), with its tributaries 
the Mosa (now Maas) and Mosella (now Mo- 
selle) ; the Sequaxa (now Seine), with its tribu- 
tary the Matroxa : in the centre the Ligeris 
(now Loire) ; in the west, the Garumxa (now 
Garonne) ; and in the south the Rhodaxus (now 
Rhone). The country was celebrated for it* 
fertility in ancient times, and possessed a nu- 
merous and warlike population. The Greeks, 
at a very early period, became acquainted with 
the southern coast of Gaul, where they founded, 
in B.C. 600, the important town of Massilia. 
which in its turn founded several colonies, and 
exercised a kind of supremacy over the neigh- 
boring districts. The Romans did not attempt 
to make any conquests in Transalpine Gaul till 
they had finally conquered not only Africa, but 
Greece and a great part of Western Asia. In 
B.C. 125 the consul M. Fulvius Flaceus com- 
menced the subjugation of the Salluvii in the 
south of Gaul. In the next three years (12-1- 
122) the Salluvii were completely subdued by 
Sextius Calvinus, and the colony of Aqua 1 . Sfex- 
tiae (now Aix) was founded in their country . 
Iu 121 the Allobroges were defeated by thu 
proconsul Domitius Ahenobarbus ; and in the 
same year Q. Fabius Maximus gained a great 
victory over the united forces of the Allobroge- 
and ArvernL at the confluence of the Isara ami 
the Rhone. The south of Gaul was now made 



GALLIA. 



GALLIENUS. 



a Roman province ; and in 118 was founded 
the colony of Narbo Martius (now Narbonne,) 
which was the chief town of the province. In 
Caesar's Commentaries the Roman province is 
called amply J'rovincia, in contradistinction to 
the rest of the country : hence comes the mod- 
ern name of Province. The rest of the country 
was subdued by Caesar after a struggle of sev- 
eral years (58-50.) At this time Gaul was di- 
vided into three parts, Aquitania, Celtica, and 
Belgica, according to the three different races 
by which it was inhabited. The Aquitaui dwelt 
in the southwest, between the Pyrenees and the 
Garumna j the Celta.% or Galli proper, in the 
centre and west, between the Garumna and the 
Sequana and the Matrona ; and the Belgae in the 
northeast, between the two last-mentioned riv- 
ers and the Rhine. The different tribes inhab- 
iting Aquitania and Belgica are given else- 
where. Vid. Aquitania, Belgjs. The most 
important tribes of the Celtae or Galli were, 
1. Between the Sequana and the Liger : the Ar- 
morici, the name of all the tribes dwelling on 
the coast between the mouths of these two riv- 
ers ; the Aulerci, dwelling inland close to the 
Armorici ; the Namxetes, Axoecavi or Andes, 
on the banks of the Liger; east of them the 
Uarxutes ; and on the Sequana, the Parish, 
Senones, and Tricasses. — 2. Between the Liger 
and the Garumna : on the coast the Pictones 
and Santoxes ; inland the Turoxes, probably 
on both sides of the Liger, the Bituriges Cubi, 
Lbmovicks, Petrocorii, and Cadurci ; east of 
these, in the mountains of Cebeuna, the power- 
ful Arverxi (in the modern Auvergne) ; and 
south of them the Rutexi. — :"!. On the Rhone 
and in the surrounding country : between the 
Rhone and the Pyrenees, the Volc.e ; between 
the Rhone and the Alps, the Salves or Sallu- 
vii ; north of them the Cavaues ; between the 
Rhone, the Isara, and the Alps, the Allobro- 
ges ; and further north the .Eduj, Sequaxi, and 
Helvetii, three of the most powerful people in 
all Gaul. Augustus divided Gaul iuto four 
provinces : 1. Gallia Narbo nensis, the same as 
the old Provincia. 2. G. Aquitanica, which ex- 
tended from the Pyrenees to the Liger. 3. C. 
Lugdunensis, the country between the Liger, 
the Sequana and the Arar, so called from the 
colony of Lugdunum (now Lyon), founded by 
Munatius Plancus. 4. G. Belgica, the eountry 
between the Sequana, the Arar, and the Rhine. 
Shortly afterward the portion of Belgica bord- 
ering on the Rhine, and inhabited by Ger- 
man tribes, was subdivided into two new prov- 
inces, called Germania Prima and Secunda, or 
Germania Superior and Inferior. At a later 
time the provinces of Gaul were still further 
subdivided, till at length, under the Emperor 
Gratian, they reached the number of seventeen. 
Gallia Sfarbouensis belonged to the senate, and 
was governed by a proconsul ; the other prov- 
inces belonged to the emperor, aud were gov- 
erned by imperial legati. After the time of 
Claudius, when a formidable insurrection of the 
Gauls was suppressed, the country became 
more and more Romanized. The Latin lan- 
guage gradually became the language of the in- 
habitants, and Roman civilization took deep 
root in all parts of the country. The rhetori- 
cians and poets of Gaul occupy a distinguished 



place in the later history of Roman literature 
and Burdigala, Narbo, Lugdunum, and othe. 
towns, possessed schools, in which literature 
and philosophy were cultivated with success. 
On the dissolution of the Roman empire, Gaul, 
i like the other Roman provinces, was overrun 
| by barbarians, and the greater part of it finally 
' became subject to the Franci or Franks, under 
j their king Clovis, about A.D. 496.-2. Gallia 
' Cisalpixa, also called G. Citerior and G. To- 
I gata, a Roman province in the north of Italy, 
j was bounded on the west by Liguria and GaV 
I lia Jfarbonensis (from which it was separated 
I by the Alps), on the north by Puetia aud Nori- 
cum, on the east by the Adriatic and Venetia 
(from which it was separated by the Athesis). 
and on the south by Etruria and Umbria (from 
which it was separated by the River Rubico) 
It was divided by the Po iuto Gallia Traxspa- 
daxa, also called Italia Traxspadana, in the 
north, and Gallia Cispadaxa in the south. 
The greater part of the country is a vast plain, 
drained by the Padus (now Po) and its afflu- 
ents, and has always been one of the most fer- 
tile countries of Europe. It was originally in- 
habited by Ligurians, Umbrians, Etruscans, and 
other races ; but its fertility attracted the Gauls, 
who at different periods crossed the Alps, and 
settled in the country, after expelling the orig- 
inal inhabitants. We have mention of five 
distinct immigrations of Gauls into the north 
of Italy. The first was in the reign of Tarquiu- 
ius Priscus, and is said to have been led by 
Bellovesus, who settled with his followers in 
the country of the Insubres, and built Milan,. 
The second consisted of the Cenomani, who- 
| settled in the neighborhood of Brixia and Ve- 
i rona. The third of the Salluvii, who pressed, 
j forward as far as the Ticinus. The fourth of 
j the Boii and Lingones, -who crossed the Po, and 
took possession of the country as far as the Ap- 
ennines, driving out the Etruscans and Um- 
brians. The fifth immigration was the most 
important, consisting of the warlike race of the 
Senones, who invaded Italy in immense num- 
bers, under the command of Brennus, and took 
Rome in B.C. 390. Part of them subsequently 
recrossed the Alps and returned home ; but a 
great number of them remained in the north of 
Italy, and were for more than a century a 
source of terror to the Romans. After the first 
Punic war the Romans resolved to make a 
vigorous effort to subdue their dangerous neigh- 
bors. In the course of four years (225-222) the 
whole country was conquered, and upon the 
conclusion of the war (222) was reduced to the 
form of a Roman province. The inhabitants, 
however, did not bear the yoke patiently, and it 
was not till after the final defeat of the Boii, in 
191, that the country became submissive to the 
Romans. The most important tribes were : In 
Gallia Transpadana, in the direction of west to 
east, the Taurixi, Salassi, Libici, Ixsubres, Ce- 
xomaxi : in G. Cispadana, in the same direction, 
the Boii, Lixgoxes, Sexoxes. 

Galliexus, with his full name, P. Licixrus 
Valeriaxus Egxatius Galliexus, Roman em- 
peror A.D. 260-268. He succeeded his father 
Valerian when the latter was taken prisoner 
by the Persians in 260, but he had previously 
reigned in conjunction with his father from 
319 



GALLINARIA. 



GALLUS 



his accession in 253. Gallienus was indolent. 
•profligate, and indifferent to the public welfare, 
and his reign was one of the most ignoble and 
disastrous in the history of Rome. The barba- 
nans ravaged the fairest portion of the empire, 
and the inhabitants were swept away by one of 
the most frightful plagues recorded in history. 
This pestilence followed a long-protracted fam- 
ine. When it was at its greatest height, five 
thousand sick arc said to have perished daily 
Rome ; and. after the scourge had passed 
away, it was found that the inhabitants of Alex- 
Andrea were dimini s hed by nearly two thirds. 
The complete dissolution of the empire was avert- 

• i mainly by a series of internal rebellions. In 
•-very district able officers sprang up. who as- 
serted and strove to maintain the dignity of inde- 
pendent princes. The armies levied by these 
usurpers, who are commonly distinguished as Tlxe 
Thirty Tyrants, in many cases arrested the pro- 
gress of the invaders, and restored order in the 
provinces which they governed. Gallienus was 
at length slain by his own soldiers in 26S, while 
besieging Milan, in which the usurper Aureolus 
had taken refuge. 

GallixaeL\. 1. (Xow Galinara), an island off 
the e#ast of Liguria, celebrated for its number 
of hens ; whence its name. — 2. Silva, a forest of 
pine-trees near Curna? in Campania. 

Gallio, Junius. 1. A Roman rhetorician, 
and a friend of M. Annajus Seneca, the rhetori- 
cian, whose son he adopted. He was put to 
death bv ftfero. In earlv life he had been a 
friend of Ovid (Ex Poiit., iv, 11.)— 2. Son of 
the rhetorician M. Annaeus Seneca, and an elder 
brother of the philosopher Seneca, was adopted 
by ISo. 1. 

Gallius. Q., was a candidate for the praetor- 
ship in B.C. 64, and was accused of ambitus or 
bribery by M. Calidius. He was defended on 
that occasion by Cicero in an oration of which 
a few fragments have come down to us. He 
was praetor urbanus B.C. 63, and presided at 
The trial of C. Cornelius. He left two sons, 
Q. Gallius, who was praetor in 43, and was put 
to death by the triumvirs ; and M. Gallius. 
who is mentioned as one of Antonvs partisans, 
in 43. 

GallogkjexIa. Vid. Galatla. 

Galloxius, a public crier at Rome, probably 

• ■onteniporary with the younger Scipio, whose 
wealth and gluttony passed into the proverb " to 
live like GaUonius." He was satirized bv Hor- 
ace (Sat, iL 2, 46). 

Gallus, Julius. L A jurist, eonteniporary 
%vith Cicero and Varro, though probably rather 

• lies than either. He was the author of a trea- 
tise. De Verborinn, qv.ee ad Jus Civile pertinent, 
Sianijicatione, which is frequently cited by the 
grammarians. — 2. An intimate friend of the ge- 
ographer Strabo. was praefect of Egypt in the 
?vign of Augustus. In B.C. 24 he invaded Ara- 
bia, and after his army had suffered dreadfully 
from the heat and want of water, he was obliged 
to retreat with great loss. 

Gallus, L. Axicirs. praetor B.C. 16S, con- 
ducted the war against Gentius, king of the IUy- 
rians. whom he compelled to submit to the Ro- 
mans. 

Gallus, C. Aqlillius, a distinguished Ro- 
man jurist was a pupil of Q. Mucins Scsevola. 
320 



and the instructor of Serv. Sulpicius. He -was 
j praetor along with Cicero B.C. 66. He is oftec 
| cited by the jurists in the Digest, but there is 
! no direct extract from his own works in the 

: Digest. 

Gallus Saloxixus, L. Asixius, son of C. 

: Asinius Pollio, was consul B.C. 8. He was 
hated by Tiberius because he had married Vip- 

, sania, the former wile of Tiberius. In A.D. 30. 

; Tiberius got the senate to sentence him to death, 
and kept him imprisoned for three years on the 
most scanty supply of food. He died in prison 
of starvation, but whether his death was com- 
pulsory or voluntary is unknown. Gallus wrote 
a work, entitled De Comparatione patris ac Cic- 
eronis, which was unfavorable to the latter, and 

( against which the Emperor Claudius wrote his 
defence of Cicero. 

Gallus, L. Caxixius, was tribune of the plebs 

I B.C. 56, when he supported the views of Pom- 

i pey. During the civil war he appears to have 

■ remained neutral He died in 44. 

Gallus, Czstius, governor of Syria (legatm 

! A.D. 64, 65), under whom the Jews broke out 

' into the rebellion which ended in the destruction 

: of their city and temple by Titus. 

Gallus, Coxstaxtius, son of Julius Constan 
tius and Galla. grandson of Constantine Chlo 
rus. nephew of Constantine the Great, and elder 
brother, by a different mother, of Julian the Apos- 
tate. In A.D. 351 he was named Caesar by 

\ Constantius II., and was left in the command of 

\ the East, where he conducted himself with the 
greatest haughtiness and cruelty. In 354 he 

{ went to the West to meet Constantius at Milan. 

| but was arrested at Petovio in Pannonia, and 

! sent to Pola in Istria, where he was beheaded 
in a prison. 

Gallus, C. Coexelius, was born at Forum 
; Julii (now Irejus) in Gaul, of poor parents, 
' about B.C. 66. He went to Italy at an early 
j age, and began liis career as a poet when he 
! was about twenty. He had already attained 
: considerable distinction at the time of Caesar's 
j death, 44 ; and upon the arrival of Octavianus 
' in Italy after that event, Gallus embraced bi3 
j party, and soon acquired great influence with 
i him. In 41 he was one of the triumviri ap- 
pointed by Octavianus to distribute lands in the 
north of Italy among his veterans, and on that 
occasion he afforded protection to the inhabit- 
ants of Mantua and to Virgil He afterward 
accompanied Octavianus to the battle of Actium, 
31, and commanded a detachment of the army. 
After the battle, Gallus was sent with the army 
to Egypt, in pursuit of Antony ; and when Egypt 
was made a Roman province, Octavianus ap- 
pointed Gallus the first prefect of the province. 
He remained in Egypt for nearly four years ; 
but he incurred at length the enmity of Octavi- 
anus, though the exact nature of his offence is 
uncertain. According to some accounts, he 
spoke of the emperor in an offensive and in- 
sulting manner ; he erected numerous statue* 
of himself in Egypt, and had his own exploits 
inscribed on the pyramids. The senate de- 
prived him of his estates, and sent him into ex- 
ile : whereupon he put an end to his life by 
throwing himself upon his own sword, B.C. 
26. The intimate friendship existing between 
Gallus and the most emineut men of the time. 



GALLUS. 



GANYMEDES. 



as Asinius Pollio, Virgil, Varus, aud Ovid, and 
the high praise they bestow upon him prove 
that he was a man of great intellectual powers 
and acquirements. Ovid (Trist., iv., 10, 5) as- 
signs to him the first place among the Koman 
elegiac poets ; and we know that he wrote a 
collection of elegies in four books, the principal 
subject of which was his love of Lycoris. But 
all his productions have perished; for the four 
epigrams in the Latin Anthology attributed to 
Gallus could not have been written by a contem- 
porary of Augustus. Gallus translated into Latin 
the poems of Euphorion of Chalcis, but this trans- 
lation is also lost. Some critics attribute to him 
the poem Ciris, usually printed among the works 
of Virgil, but the arguments do not appear satis- 
factory. 

Gallus, Sulpicics, a distinguished orator, was 
praetor B.C. 160, and consul 166, when he fought 
against the Ligurians. In 168 he served as tri- 
bune of the soldiers under ^Emilius Paulus in 
Macedonia, and during this campaign predicted 
an eclipse of the moon. 

, Gallus, Teeboniaxus, Roman emperor A.D. 
•251-254. His full name was C. Vibius Tee- 
hoxiaxus Gallus. He served under Decius in 
the campaigns against the Goths, 251, and he 
is said to have contributed by his treachery to 
rhe disastrous issue of the battle, which proved 
fatal to Decius and his son Herennius. Gallus 
was thereupon elected emperor, and Hostilia- 
nus, the surviving son of Decius, was nominated 
his colleague. He purchased a peace of the 
Goths by allowing them to retain their plunder, 
and promising them a fixed annual tribute. In 
253 the Goths again invaded the Roman do- 
minions, but they were driven back by yEmili- 
anus, whose troops proclaimed him emperor in 
Mcesia. -/Emitianpg thereupon marched into 
Italy; and Gallus was put to death by his own 
soldiers, together with his sou Volusianus, be- 
fore any collision had taken place between the 
opposing armies. The name of Gallus is asso- 
ciated with nothing but cowardice and dishonor. 
In addition to the misery produced by the in- 
roads of the barbarians during this reign, a dead- 
ly pestilence broke out 252, and continued its 
ravages over every part of the empire for fifteen 
years. 

Gallus. 1. A river hi Bitbynia, rising near 
Modra, on the borders of Phrygia, and falling 
into the Sangarius near Leucae (now Lefkeh). — 
2, A river in Galatia, which also fell into the 
Sangarius near Pessinus. From it the priests 
of Cybele arc said to have obtained their name 
of GaUi. 

Gamelii (yaiuf/joi -ftto'i), that is, the divinities 
protecting and presiding over marriage. These 
divinities are usually regarded as the protectors 
of marriage. Respecting the festival of the Ga- 
nielia, vid. Dirt, of Aiitiq., s. v. 

Gandarjj (Tavddpai ), an Indian people in the 
Paropamisus, on the northwest of the Punjab, 
between the rivers Indus and Suastus. Under 
Xerxes they were subjects of the Persian em- 
pire. Their country was called Gandarltis (Tav- 
Japlrtc). 

Gaxdarid.e or Gandaeit-e (Yavdaptdai, Tav- 
dapZ-cu), an Indian people, in the middle of the 
Punjab, between the rivers Acesines (now Che- 
nab) and Hydraotes (now Ravee), whose king, 
21 



at the time of Alexander's invasion, was a coils 
in and namesake of the celebrated Porus 
Whether they were different from .the Ganda 
EjE is uncertain. Sanscrit writers mention the 
Ghanddra in the centre of the Punjab. 

Gangaeidjj (Tayyapidai), an Indian people 
about the mouths of the Ganges. 

Gaxges {Ydyynr : now Ganges or Ganga), the 
greatest river of India, which it divided into the 
two parts named by the ancients India intra 
Gangem (now Hindustan) and India extra Gan- 
gem (now Burmah, Cochin China, Siam, and the 
Malay Peninsula). It rises in the highest part 
of the Emodi Montes (now Himalaya) and flows 
in a general southeastern direction till it falls 
by several mouths into the head of the Gange 
ticus Sinus (now Bay of Bengal). Like the 
Nile, it overflows its banks periodically, and 
these inundations render its valley the most 
fertile part of India. The knowledge of the an- 
cients respecting it was very imperfect, and they 
give very various accounts of its source, its 
size, and the number of its mouths. The 
breadth which Diodorus Siculus assigns to it in 
the lower part of its course, thirty-two stadia, 
or about three miles, is perfectly correct. The 
following rivers are mentioned as its tributaries : 
Cainas, Jomanes or Diamunas, Sarabus, Con- 
dochates, G£danes, Cosoagus or Cossoanus, 
Erannoboas, Sonus or Soas, Sittocestis, Soloma- 
tis, Sambus, Magon, Agoranis, Omalis, Comme- 
nases, Cacuthis, Andomatis, Amystis, Oxymagis, 
and Errhenysis. The name is also applied to a 
city in the interior of India, on the Ganges, where: 
it makes its great bend to the eastward, perhaps 
Allahabad. 

Gangea (Tdyypa : now Kankari), a city of 
Paphlagonia, near the confines of Galatia, was 
originally a fortress ; in the time of King Deio- 
tarus, a royal residence ; and under the later 
emperors, the capital of Paphlagonia. 

Gangs (Tdvog), a fortress in Thrace, on the Fro- 
pontis. 

Ganymedes (Tavvuqdnc), sou of Tros and Cal- 
lirrhoe, and brother of Plus and Assaracus, was 
the mc^t beautiful of all mortals, and was eai-- 
ried off by the gods that he might fill the cup of 
Jupiter (Zeus), and live among the eternal gods. 
This is the Homeric account ; but other tradi- 
tions give different details. Some call him son 
of Laomedon, others son of Plus, and others, 
again, of Erichthonius or Assaracus. The man- 
ner in which he was carried away from the 
earth is likewise differently described ; for 
while Homer mentions the gods in general, later- 
writers state that Jupiter (Zeus) himself carried 
him off, either in his natural shape, or in the 
form of an eagle, or by means of his eagle- 
There is, further, no agreement as to the place 
where the event occurred ; though later writers 
usually represent him as carried off from Mount 
Ida (captus ab Ida, Hor., Carm., iv., 4). The 
early legend simply states that Ganymedes was. 
carried off that he might be the cup-bearer of 
Jupiter (Zeus), in which office he was conceived 
to have succeeded Hebe ; but later writers de- 
scribe him as the beloved and favorite of Jupi- 
ter (Zeus), without allusion to his office. Jupi- 
ter (Zeus) compensated the father for his loss 
by a pair of divine, horses. Astronomers have 
placed Ganvmedes among the stars under the 
321 



GARAMA. 



GE. 



name of Aquarius. The Romans called him by 
a corrupt form of his name, Catamltus. 

Garaha. Vid. Garamantes. 

Garamantes (TapapavTec), the southernmost 
people known to the ancients in Northern Afri- 
ca, dwelt far south of the Great Syrtis, in the 
region called Phazania (now Fezzan), where 
they had a capital city, Garama (Ydpafia: now 
Mourzouk, latitude 25° 53' north, longitude 14° 
10' east). They are mentioned by Herodotus 
as a weak, unwarlike people ; he places them 
nineteen days' journey from ^Ethiopia and the 
shores of the Indian Ocean, fifteen days' journey 
from Ammonium, and thirty days' journey 
from Egypt. The Romans obtained fresh knowl- 
edge of them by the expedition of Cornelius 
Balbus into their country in B.C. 43. 

[Garamas (Yapdjuag), son of Apollo and Aca- 
caUis (daughter of Minos), from whom the Ga- 
ramantes were fabled to have derived their 
name.] 

Gaeganus Mons (now Monte Gargano), a 
mountain and promontory in Apulia, on which 
were oak forests {qxicrceta Gargani, Hor., Garm., 
S„ 9, 1). 

[Gargaphia (Yapyatpia), a fountain in a valley 
near Plataeaa in Bceotia ; in the second Persian 
war Mardonius caused its waters to be poisoned 
in order to destroy the Greeks who had encamp- 
ed in its vicinity.] 

Gargara, -ox or -us Ydpyaoa, ov, oc : Yapya- 
pevg). 1. (Now Kaz-Dagh), the southern sum- 
mit of Mount Ida, in the Troad. — 2. A city at 
the foot of Mount Ida, on the shore of the Gulf 
of Adramy ttium, between Assus and Antandrus ; 
said to have been founded originally on the sum- 
mit of the mountain by the Leleges ; afterward 
colonized from Miletus ; and removed to the low- 
er site on account of the inclemency of its situa- 
tion on the mountain. Its neighborhood was rich 
in corn. 

Gargettus (TapyrjTToc : Yapy?i~Tioq) a demus 
in Attica, belonging to the tribe iEgeis, on the 
northwestern slope of Mount Hymettus; the 
birth-place of the philosopher Epicurus. 

Garites, a people in Aquitania, neighbors of 
the Ausci, in the modern Gourde de Gauve. 

Garoceli, a people iu Gallia Narbonensis, near 
Mount Cenis, in the neighborhood of St. Jean de 
Maurienne. 

Garsauria or -Itis (Yapcaovpca or -Ztitg) f a 
praefectura in Cappadocia, on the borders of Ly- 
caonia and Tyanitis. Its chief town was called 
Yapcdovpa. 

Garuli, a people of Liguria in the Apennines. 

Garumna (now Garonne), one of the chief 
rivers of Gaul, rises in the Pyrenees, flows 
northwest through Aquitania, and becomes a bay 
of the sea below Burdigala (now Bordeaux). 

Garumni, a people in Aquitania, on the Ga- 
rumna, 

Gathe.e (YaBiaL), a town in Arcadia, on the 
Gatheatas, a river which flows into Alpheus, 
west-southwest of Megalopolis. 

[Gauda, a Numidian, son of Mastauabal, half 
brother to Jugurtha, had been named by his un 
ele Micipsa as heir to the kingdom should Ad- 
herbal, Hiempsal, and Jugurtha die without j 
issue.] 

[Gaudos. Vid. Gaulos] 
Gaugamela (-a TavydfiTjl.c : now Karmelis). a ! 
322 



village in the district of Aturia in Assyria, the 
scene of the last and decisive battle between Alex- 
ander and Darius Codomannus, B.C. 331, common 
ly called the battle of Arbela. 

Gaulanitis (Yavha- or -ovlrig : now Jaulan), 
a district in the north of Palestine, on the east- 
ern side of the Lake of Tiberias, as far south as 
the River Hieromax, named from the town of 
Golan (Tav?Mva). 

Gaulos {Yavlog : TavAi-qc: now Gozzo). 1. 
An island in the Sicilian Sea, near Melite (now 
Malta). — [2. Or Gaudos, an island opposite Hie- 
rapytna in Crete, supposed by some to be the 
island of Calypso.] 

Gaureleon, Gaurion. Vid. Andeos. 

Gaurus Mons, Gauranus or -ni M. (now 
Monte Gauro), a volcanic range of mountains in 
Campania, between Cumae and Neapolis, in the 
neighborhood of Puteoli, which produced good 
wine, and was memorable for the defeat of the 
Samnites by M. Valerius Corvus, B.C. 343. 

[Gavius, P., a citizen of Cosa, arrested by Vet- 
res, and crucified at the city of Messana in Sicily, 
although this punishment was permitted only m 
the case of slaves ; the account of his death is one 
of the most eloquent passages in the Verrine ora- 
tions of Cicero.] 

Gaza (Yd^a). 1. (Now Ghuzzeh), the last city 
on the southwestern frontier of Palestine, and 
the key of the country on the side of Egypt, 
stood on an eminence about two miles from the 
sea, and was, from the very earliest times of 
which we have any record, very strongly forti- 
fied. It was one of the five cities of the Philis- 
tines ; and, though taken from them more than 
once by the Jews, was each time recovered. 
It was taken by Cyrus the Great, and remained 
in the hands of the Persians till the time of Al- 
exander, who only gained possession of it after 
an obstinate defence of several months. In 
B.C. 315 it fell into the power of Ptolemy, the 
son of Lagus, as the result of his victory over 
Demetrius before the city, and was destroyed 
by him. But it again recovered, and was pos- 
sessed alternately by the kings of Syria and 
Egypt, during their prolonged wars, and after- 
ward by the Asmonasan princes of Judaea, one 
of whom, Alexander Jannaeus, again destroy ed 
it, B.C. 96. It was rebuilt by Gabinius ; given 
by Augustus to Herod the Great ; and, after 
Herod's death, united to the Roman province of 
Syria. In A.D. 65 it was again destroyed iu 
an insurrection of its Jewish inhabitants ; but 
it recovered once more, and remained a flourish- 
ing city till it fell into the hands of the Arabs in 
A.D. 634. In addition to its importance as a 
military post, it possessed an extensive com- 
merce, carried on through its port, Majuma or 
Constantly. — 2. (Now Ghaz), a city in the Per- 
sian province of Sogdiana, between Alexandrea 
and Cyropolis ; one of the seven cities which re- 
belled against Alexander in B.C. 328. 

Gazaca (Ydfcua : now Tabreez), a city in the 
north of Media Atropatene, equidistant from Ar- 
taxata and Ecbatana, was a summer residence of 
the kings of Media. 

Gaziura (Yatfovpa), a city in Pontus Galati- 
cus, on the River Iris, below Amasia, was the 
ancient residence of the kings of Pontus ; but hx 
Strabo's time it had fallen to decav. 

[Ge (Yy) Vid Gma.] 



GEBALENE. 



GELONI. 



Gkbalene (Tt6a?,T}v7/), the district of Arabia 
Petraea around the city of Petra. 

Gebenna Mons. Vid. Cebenna. 

Gedrosia (Vipoma and Tadpucca : south- 
eastern part of Bdoochistan), the furthest ]:>rov- 
ince of the Persian empire on the southeast, and 
one of the subdivisions of Ariana, was bounded 
on the west by Carmaiiia, on the north by Dran- 
giana and Araehosia, on the east by India (or, 
as the country about the lower course of the 
Indus was called, Iudo-Scythia), and on the 
south by the Mare Erytbraeum, or Indian Ocean. 
It is formed by a succession of sandy steppes, 
rising from the sea-coast toward the table-land 
of Ariana, and produced little besides aromatic 
shrubs. The slip of laud between the coast and 
the lowest mountain range is watered by sev- 
eral rivers, the chief of which was called Arabis 
(now Doosee ?) ; but even this district is for the 
most part only a series of salt marshes. Ge- 
drosia is known in history chiefly through the 
distress suffered for want of water, in passing 
through it, by the armies of Cyrus and of Alex- 
ander. The inhabitants were divided by the 
Greek writers into two races, the Ichthyophagi 
on the sea-coast, and the Gedrosi in the interior. 
The latter were a wild nomade people, whom 
even Alexander was only able to reduce to a 
temporary subjection. The whole country was 
divided into eight districts. Its chief cities were 
Rhambacia and Pura. or Parsis. 

Geg'ania Gens, traced its origin to the myth- 
ical Gyas, one of the companions of yEneas. It 
was one of the most distinguished Alban houses, 
transplanted to Rome on the destruction of 
Alba by Tullus Hostilius, and enrolled among 
the Roman patricians. There appears to have 
been only one family in this gens, that of Maee- 
rinus, many members of which rilled the highest 
offices iu the state in the early times of the re- 
public. 

Gela {tj Tela, Ion. Vt/.r/ : Te/.uoc, Gelensis : 
ruins at Terra Xuova\ a city on the southern 
coast of Sicily, on a liver of the same name 
(now Flume di Terra Xuova), fouuded by Rhodi- 
ans from Lindos, and by Cretans, B.C. 690. It 
soon obtained great power and wealth ; and in 
582 it founded Agrigentum, which, however, be- 
came more powerful than the mother city. Like 
the other cities of Sicily, it was subject to ty- 
rants, of whom the most important were Hip- 
pocrates, Gelon, and Hieron. Gelon trans- 
ported half of its inhabitants to Syracuse; the 
place gradually fell into decay, and in the time 
of Augustus was no longer inhabited. The poet 
jEsehylus died here. North of Gela were the 
celebrated Cain^ii Geldi, which produced rich 
crops of wheat. 

Gkl.e. Vid. Cadubil 

Gelanor (Te/.uvup), king of Argos, was ex- 
pelled by Danaus. 

[Gelbis (now Kyll), a small river of Gallia 
Belgica, which empties into the Mosella (now 
Moselle).] 

Gelduba (now Gelb, below Cologne), a forti- 
fied place of the Ubii, on the Rhine, in Lower 
Germany. 

Gellia Gens, plebeian, was of Samnite origin, 
and afterward settled at Rome. There were 
two generals of this name in the Samnite wars, 
Gellius Statins in the second Samnite war. who 



was defeated and taken prisoner B.C. 305, and 
j Gellius Egnatius in the third Samnite war. 
j Vid. Eon virus. The chief family of the Gellii 
at Rome bore the name of Pcblicola. 
J Gellius. 1. Cx., a contemporary of the 
Gracchi, the author of a history of Rome from 
; the earliest epoch down to B.C. 145 at least, 
j The work is lost, but it is frequently quoted by 
! later writers. — 2. Aulus, a Latin grammarian 
of good family, was probably a native of Home. 
! He studied rhetoric under T. Castricius and 
i Sulpicius Apollinaris, philosophy under Calvisius- 
| Taurus and Peregrinus Proteus, and enjoyed 
' also the friendship and instructions of Favori- 
' nus, Herodes Atticus, and Cornelius Fronto. 
While yet a youth, he was appointed by the prae- 
tor to act as umpire in civil causes. The pre- 
cise date of his birth and death is unknown ; but 
he must have lived under Hadrian, Antoninus 
Pius, and Marcus Aurelius, AD. 117-180. He 
wrote a work entitled Noctes Attica;, because it 
was composed in a country house near Athens 
during the long nights of wiater. It is a sort 
of miscellany, containing numerous extracts from 
Greek and Roman writers, on a variety of topics 
connected with history, antiquities, philosophy^ 
and philology, interspersed with original remarks, 
the whole thrown together into twenty books,, 
without any attempt at order or arrangement,. 
The eighth book is entirely lost with the ex- 
ception of the index. The best editions are by 
Jac. Gronovius, Lugd. Bat, 1706 (reprinted by 
Conradi, Lips., 1762), and by Lion, Gotting., 1824, 
— 3. Publictus, a jurist, one of the disciples of 
Servius Sulpicius. 

Gelon (TeXuv). 1. Son of Dinomenes, tyrant 
of Gela, and afterward of Syracuse, was de- 
scended from one of the most illustrious fami- 
lies in Gela, He held the chief command of 
the cavalry in the service of Hippocrates, tyrant 
of Gela, shortly after whose death he obtained 
the supreme power, B.C. 491. In 485 he avail- 
ed himself of the internal dissensions of Syra- 
cuse to make himself master of this city also- 
From this time he neglected Gela, and bent all 
his efforts to the aggrandizement of Syracuse, 
to which place he removed many of the inhab- 
itants of the other cities of Sicily. In 480 he 
gained a brilliant victory at Himera over the 
Carthaginians, who had invaded Sicily with an 
army, amounting, it is said, to the incredible 
number of three hundred thousand men. Scarce- 
ly any of this vast host survived to carry the 
news to Carthage. The victory is said to have 
been gained on the very same day as that of 
Salamis. He died in 478 of a dropsy, after 
reigning seven years at Syracuse. He was suc- 
ceeded by his brother Hieron. He is repre- 
sented as a man of singular leniency aud moder- 
ation, and as seeking in every way to promote 
the welfare of his subjects ; and his name even* 
appears to have become almost proverbial as an 
instance of a good monarch. A splendid tomb 
was erected to him by the Syracusans at the 
public expense, and heroic honors were decreed 
to his memory. — 2. Son of Hieron IF., king of 
Syracuse, who died before his father, at the age 
of more than fifty years. He received the title 
of king in the lifetime of his father. 

Gelom (Te?Mvoi), a Scythian people, who 
dwelt in Sarmatia Asiat.ica. to the east of the 
323 



GENSERIC. 

better known as a surname of Venus, to whom 
Caesar dedicated a temple at Rome as the 
mother of the J ulia Gens. 

Genius, a protecting spirit, analogous to the 



GELOXUS. 

4 

/River Tana'is (now Don). They were said to 
have been of Greek origin, and to have migrated 
from the shores of the Euxine ; but they inter- 
mixed with the Scythians so as to lose all traces ; 

of their Hellenic race. Their chief city was | guardian angels invoked by the Church of Rome, 
called Gelonus (Te/.uvoc). j The belief in such spirits existed both in Greece 

[Geloxts (Te/.uvor). 1. Son of Hercules, j and at Rome. The Greeks called them dalfioveg, 
and brother of Agathyrsus, said to have given [ Daemons, and appear to have believed in them 
name to the Geloni — 2. (1] TeAuvuc). Vid. Ge- j from the earliest times, though Homer does not 
lost.] mention them Hesiod says that the Daemons 

Gemixits (Tsfilvoc), an astronomer, was a na- 1 were thirty thousand in number, and that they 
tive of Rhodes, and flourished about B.C. 11. He j dwelled on earth unseen by mortals, as the min- 
is the author of an extant work, entitled Eica- j isters of Jupiter (Zeus), and as the guardians of 
j coy}} sis 7< £ Qaivofieva, which is a descriptive J men and of justice. He further conceives them 
treatise on elementary astronomy, with a great j to be the souls of righteous men who lived iii 
deal of historical allusion. It is* printed in the 1 the Golden Age of the world. The Greek phi- 
Uro.nologlon of Petavius, Paris, 1630, and in losophers took up this idea, and developed a 
Halmas edition of Ptolemy, Paris, 1819. { complete theory of daemons. Thus we read in 

GEiiixrs, See villus. 1. P., twice consul j Plato that daemons are assigned to men at the 
with C. Aurelius Cotta in the first Punic war, | moment of their birth, that they accompany 
namely, in B.C. 252 and 248. In both years he | men through life, and after death conduct their 
carried on war against the Carthaginians. — 2. i souls to Hades. Pindar, in several passages. 
Cx„ son of No. 1, was consul 21*7 with C. Fla- 
minius. in the second Punic war, and ravaged the 
coast of Africa. He fell in the battle of Cannae, 
216. — 3. M., also surnamed Pcxex, consul 202 
with Tib. Claudius Xero, obtained Etruria for his 
province. He is mentioned on several occasions 
subsequently. 

GemoxLe (scalae) or Gemoxii (gradus), a 
flight of steps cut out of the Aventine, down 
which the bodies of the criminals strangled in the 
prisons were dragged, and afterward thrown into 
the Tiber. 

GexXbum or Cexabum (now Orleans), a town 
90 G allia Lugdunensis, on the northern bank of 
the Ligeris, was the chief town of the Carnutes ; 

was plundered and burnt by Caesar, but sub- 
sequently rebuilt, In later times it was called 
■Civitas Aurelianorum or Aurelianensis Urbs, 
whence its modern name. 

Gexauxe a people in Vindelicia, the inhab- 
itants of the Alpine valley, now called Valle di 
Nan, were subdued bv Drusus. (Hor., Carm n 
iv., 14, 10). 

Gexesius, Josephus, lived about AD. 940, 
and wrote in four books a history of the Byzan- 
tine emperors, from AD. 813 to 886, consequent- 
ly of the reigns of Leo V., Michael IL, Theoph- j itself was called lectus genialis, 
ilus, Michael III., and Basil L Edited by Lach- occasions, also 
manu, Bonn, IS 34. genius, and to 

Gexet^eus (rei rjTalog). a surname of Jupiter 
(Zeus.) from Cape Genetus on the Euxine, 
where he was worshipped as ev^elvoc, i. e., " the 
hospitable." 

Gexettllis (Tevetv/Juc), the protectress of 
births, occurs both as a surname of Venus 
(Aphrodite), and as a distinct divinity and a 
companion of Venus (Aphrodite). "We also find 
the plural TtvErv/./.tdec or Tei'vatdeg. as a class 



speaks of yEvW/Aoc datfiuv, that is, the spirit 
watching over the fate of man from the hour 
of his birth. The daemons are further described 
as the ministers and companions of the gods, 
who carry the prayers of men to the gods, and 
the gifts of the gods to men, and accordingly 
float in immense numbers in the space between 
heaven and earth. There was also a distinct 
class of daemons, who were exclusively the min- 
isters of the gods. The Romans seem to have 
received their notions respecting the genii from 
the Etruscans, though the name Genius itself 
is Latin (it is connected with gi-gn-o, gen-ui, 
and equivalent in meaning to generator or fa- 
ther). The genii of the Romans are the powers 
which produce life (dii genitalcs), and accom- 
pany man through it as his second or spiritual 
self. They were further not confined to man. 
but every living being, animal as well as man. 
and every place, had its genius. Every human 
being at his birth obtained (sortitur) a genius, 
whom he worshipped as sanctus ct saiictissimu* 
deus, especially on his birth-day, with libations 
of wine, incense, and garlands of flowers. Tht 
bridal bed was sacred to the genius, on account 
of his connection with generation, and the bed 

On other merry- 
sacrifices were offered to the 
indttlge in merriment was not 
unfrequently expressed by genio indulgere, geni- 
um. curare or placare. The whole body of the 
Reman people had its own genius, who is often 
seen represented on coins of Hadrian and Trajan. 
He was worshipped on sad as well as joyous 
occasions ; thus sacrifices were offered to him 
at the beginning of the second year of the 
war with Hannibal The genii are usually rep- 
resented in works of art as winged beings. The 



of divinities presiding over generation and birth, ' genius of a place appears in the form of a ser 
and as companions of Venus (Aphrodite) Colias. : pent eating fruit placed before him. 

Gexeva or Gexava (Genevensis : now Gene- j Gexseeic, king of the Vandals, and the most 
va.) the last town of the Allobroges, on the fron- . terrible of all the barbarian invaders of the em- 
tiers of the Helvetii, was situated on the south- ! pire. In AD. 429 he crossed over from Spain 
era bank of the Rhone, at the spot where the J to Africa, and ravaged the country with frighr- 
river flowed out of the Lacus Lemannus. There ! ful severity. Hippo was taken by him in 431 
was a bridge here over the Rhone. : but Carthage did not fall into his hands till 439. 

Gexiteix, that is, " the mother," is used bv ' Having thus become master of the whole of th 
Ovid {Met., xiv., 536) as a surname of Cybele. in northwest of Africa, he attacked Italy feelf 
the place of mater, or magna, mater; but it is ' In 455 he took Rome and plundered it for four 
324 



GENTIUS. 



<; OMAN LA. 



teen days, and in the same year he destroyed 
Capua, Nola, and Neapolis. 'Twice the empire! 
endeavored to revenge itself, and twice it fail- 
ed: the first was the attempt of the Western 
emperor Majorian (457), whose fleet was de- 
stroyed in the Bay of Carthagena. The second 
was the expedition sent by the Eastern emperor 
Leo (468), which was also baffled by the burn- 
ing of the fleet off Bona. Genseric died in 477, 
at a great age. He was an Arian ; and iu the 
cruelties exercised under his orders against his 
Catholic subjects he exhibited the first instance 
of persecution carried on upon a large scale by 
one body of Christians against another. 

Gentius, son of Pleuratus, a king of the IHyr- 
ians. As early as B.C. 180 he had given of- 
fence to the Romans on account of the pira- 
cies of his subjects ; and in 168 he entered into 
an alliance with Perseus, king of Macedonia. 
In the following year the prastor L. Anicius 
Gallus was sent against him. The war was 
finished within thirty days. Gentius was de- 
feated in battle, and then surrendered himself 
to Anicius, who carried him to Rome to adorn 
his triumph. He was afterward kept as a pris- 
oner at Spoletium. 

Genua (Genua*, -atis, Genuensis : now Ge- 
noa), an important commercial town in Liguria, 
situated at the extremity of the Ligurian Gulf 
(now Gulf 'of Genoa), was in the possession of 
the Romans at the beginning of the second 
Punic war, but toward the end of the war was 
held for some time by the Carthaginian Mago. 
It was a Roman municipium, but it did not be- 
come of political importance till the Middle 
Ages, when it was commonly called Janua. 

Genucia Gens, patrician, of which the prin- 
cipal families bore the names of Avextixexsis 
and Augurinus. 

Genusus (now Itkumi), a river in Greek lllyr- 
ia, north of the Apsus. 

Gephyr.ei (Veipvpaioi), an Athenian family, to 
which Harmodius and Aristogiton belonged. 
They said that they came origin ally from Ere- 
tria in Eubcea. Herodotus believed them to be 
of Phoenician descent, to have followed Cad- 
mus into Bceotia, and from thence to have emi- 
grated to Athens. They dwelt on the banks 
of the Cephisus. which separated the territory 
of Athens from that of Eleusis, and their name 
was said to have been derived from the bridge 
(yl^upa) which was built over the river at this 
point Such a notion, however, is quite unten- 
able, since "bridge" appears to have been a 
comparatively recent meaning of yeovpa. We 
find that there were temples at Athens belong- 
ing peculiarly to the Gephyriei. to the exclusion 
of the rest of the Athenians, especially one to 
Ceres (Demeter) Achaa, whose worship they 
seem to have brought: with them from Bceotia. 

Gepid-e, a Gothic people, who came from 
Scandinavia, and first settled in the country be- 
tween the Oder and the Vistula, from which 
they expelled the Burgundiones. Subsequent- 
ly the } r joined the numerous hosts of Attila; 
and after his death they settled in Dacia, on the 
banks of the Danube. " As they were dangerous 
aeighbors to the Eastern empire. Justinian in- 
voked the aid of the Langobardi or Lombards, 
who conquered the Gepidce and destroyed their 
kingdom. 



©fca or Gits \JPitp : now Ghir or Mansolig), a 
I river of Gsetuliu in Africa, south of Mauretania 
Cajsariensis, flowing southeast from the south- 
ern slope of Mount Atlas till it is lost in the 
desert. It first became known to the Romans 
through the expedition of Suetonius Paulinu9 in 
the reign of Nero. 

Ger^estus ( TepaioToc : Tepatonoc : now Cape 
Mandili), a promontory and harbor at the south- 
ern extremity of Eubcea, with a celebrated tem- 
ple of Neptune (Poseidon), in whose honor the 
festival of the Gcrrestia {Tcpa'tana) was here 
celebrated. 

Geranea (?) Tepuveia), a range of mountains, 
beginning at the southwestern slope of Cithoe- 
ron, and running along the western coast of 
Megaris till it terminated in the promontory 
Olmife in the Corinthian territory ; but the 
name is sometimes confined to the mountain iu 
the Corinthian territory. 

Gerenia (repr/vla), an ancient town in Mes- 
senia, the birth-place of Nestor, who is hence 
called Gerenian (TepqvLoc). It was regarded by 
some as the same place as the Homeric Enope. 

Gergis, or Gergitha, or -es, or -us {Tepyu^ 
Tepytda, or -er, or -Of : Tepyidwt;), a town in the 
Troad, north of the Scamauder, inhabited by 
Teucrians. Attains removed the inhabitants 
to the sources of the Caicus, where mention is 
made of a place called Gergetha or Gergithiou in. 
the territory of Cyme. 

Gergovia. 1. A fortified town of the Arverni 
in Gaul, situated on a high and inaccessible bill, 
west or southwest of the Elaver (now AUler).. 
Its site is uncertain ; but it was probably in the 
neighborhood of the modern Clermont. — 2. A 
town of the Boii iu Gaul, of uncertain site. 

Germa (Tippy), the name of three cities in. 
Asia Minor. 1. (Ruins at Germaslu) in Mysia 
Minor, near Cyzicus. — 2. (Now Yermatepe) in 
Mysia, between Pergamus and Thyatira. — g. 
(Now Yerma) in Galatia, between Pessinus and 
Ancyra ; a colonia. 

Germania, was bounded by the Rhine on the 
west, by the Vistula and the Carpathian Mount- 
ains on the east, by the Danube on the south, 
and by the German Ocean and the Baltic on the 
north. It thus included much more than mod- 
ern Germany on the north and east, but much 
less in the west and south. The north and 
northeast of Gallia Belgica were likewise call- 
ed Germania Prima, and Sccunda under the Ro- 
man emperors (vid. p. 319, a) ; and it was in 
contradistinction to these provinces that Ger- 
mania proper was also called Germania Magna. 
or G. Transrhenana, or G. Barbara. It was 
not till Caesar's campaigns in Gaul (B.C. 58-50) 
that the Romans obtained any accurate knowl- 
edge of the country. The Roman writers rep- 
resent Germany as a dismal land, covered for the 
most part with forests and swamps, producing 
little corn, and subject to intense frosts and al- 
most eternal winter. Although these accounts 
are probably exaggerated, yet there can be no- 
doubt, that, before the immense w T oods were 
cleared and the morasses drained, the climate of 
Germany was much colder than it is at present. 
The north of Germany is a vast plain, but in the 
south there are many mountains, which were 
covered in antiquity with vast forests, and thus- 
were frequently called Silvce. Of these the most 
325 



GEBMANIA. 



GBRMANIA. 



important was the Hercynia Silva. The chief ; guished warrior as their leader, upon whom the 
rivers were the Rhesus (now Rhine), Danubjus prerogatives of the king devolved. The religion 
(now Danube), Vistula, Amisia (now Ems), Vi- j of the Germans is known to us only from the 
surgis (now Weser), Albis (now Elbe), Viadus j Greek and Roman writers, who have confused 
(now Oder). The inhabitants were called Ger- the subject by seeking to identify the gods of 
mam by the Romans. Tacitus says {Germ., 2) the Germans with their own divinities. "We 
that Germani was the name of the Tungri, who ' know that they worshipped the sun, the moon, 
were the first German people that crossed the j and the stars. They are also said to have paid 
Rhine. It would seem that this name properly • especial honor to Mercury, who was probably 
belonged only to those tribes who were settled [the German Wodan or Odin. Then- other chief 
in Gaul ; and as these were the first German J divinities were Isis (probably Freia, the wife of 
tribes with which the Romans came into con- Odin) ; Mars (Tyr or Zio, the German god of 



tact, they extended the name to the whole na 
tion. The etymology of the name is uncertain. 
Some modern writers derive it from the German 
ger, gwer, Heer, Wehr, so that the word would 
be equivalent to Wehrman, Wehrmanner, that is, 
warriors. The Germans themselves do not ap- 
pear to have used any one name to indicate the 



whole nation ; for there is no reason to believe, ! many for their prophetic powers, 
as some have done, that the name Teutones (i. e., j mani first appear in history in tb 
Teuten, Deutsche) was the general name of the j of the Cimbri and Teutones (B.C. 113), the lat- 



war) ; the mother of the gods, called Nerthus 
(less correctly Herth us or Hertiia) ; and Jupiter 
(Thar, or the god of Thunder). The worship 
of the gods was simple. They had both priests 
and priestesses to attend to their service; and 
some of the priestesses, such as Teleda among 
the Bructeri, were celebrated throughout Ger- 

The Ger- 
carnpaigns 



nation in the time of the Romans. The Ger- 
mans regarded themselves as indigenous in the 
country ; but there can be no doubt that they 
were a branch of the great Indo-Germanie race, 
who, along with the Celts, migrated into Eu- 
rope from the Caucasus and the countries around 
the Black and Caspian Seas at a period long 



ter of whom were undoubtedly a Germanic 
people. Vid. Teutones. About fifty years aft- 
erward, Ariovistus, a German chief, crossed the 
Rhine, with a vast host of Germans, and sub- 
dued a great part of Gaul ; but he was defeated 
by Caesar with great slaughter (58), and driven 
bevond the Rhine. Caesar twice crossed this 



anterior to historical records. They are de- river (55, 53), but made no permanent conquest 
scribed as a people of high stature and of great i on the eastern bank. In the reign of Augustus, 
bodily strength, with fair complexions, blue | his step-son, Drusus, carried on war in Ger- 
eyes, and yellow or red hair. Notwithstanding I many with great success for four years (12-9). 
the severity of their climate, thev wore little I and penetrated as far as the Elbe. On his death 



clothing, and their children went entirely naked. 
They had scarcely any defensive armor : their i 
chief offensive weapon was the framea, a long ! 
-spear with a narrow iron point, which they either 
darted from a distance or pushed in close com- 

made 



A 



(9), his brother Tiberius succeeded to the com- 
mand ; and under him the country between the 
Rhine and the Visurgis (now Weser) was en- 
tirely subjugated, and bid fair to become a Ro- 
man province. But in A.D. 9, the impolitic 
and tyrannical conduct of the Roman governor. 
Quintilius Varus, provoked a general insurrec- 
tion of the various German tribes, headed by 
Arminius, the Cheruscan. Varus and his le- 
gions were defeated and destroyed, and the Ro- 
mans lost all their conquests east of the Rhine. 
Vid. Varus. The defeat of Varus was avenged 
by the successful campaigns of Germanicus, who 
would probably have recovered the Roman do- 
minions east of the river, had not the jealousy 
of Tiberius recalled him to Rome, A.D. 16. 
From this time the Romans abandoned all fur- 
ther attempts to conquer Germany ; but, in con- 
chastity was without reproach. They aecom- j sequence, of the civil dissensions which broke 
panied their husbands to battle, and cheered out in Germany soon after the departure of Ti- 
them on by their presence, and frequently by berius, they were enabled to obtain peaceable 
their example as well. Both sexes were equally | possession of a large portion of the southwest 
distinguished for their unconquerable love of j of Germany, between the Rhine and the Dan- 
liberty ; and the women frequently destroyed j ube, to which they gave the name of the Agri 
both themselves and their cluldren rather than j DECUiiATES. Vid. p. 33, b. On the death of 



•bat. Their houses were only low huts 
of rough timber, and thatched with straw 
.number of these were of course often built near 
each other ; but they could not be said to have 
•any towns properly so called. Many of their 
tribes were nomad, and every year changed 
their place of abode. The men found their chief 
delight in the perils and excitement of war. In 
peace they passed their fives in listless indo- 
lence, only varied by deep gaming and excess- 
ive drinking. Their chief drink was beer, and 
their carouses frequently ended in bloody brawls. 
The women were held in high honor. Their 



fall into the power of their husbands." conquer- 
ors. In each tribe we find the people divided 
into four classes : the nobles ; the freemen ; the 
freedmen or vassals ; and the slaves. All ques- 
tions relating to peace and war, and the general 
.interests of the tribe, were decided in the pop- 



Hero, several of the tribes in "Western Germany 
joined the Batavi in their insurrection against 
the Romans (A.D. 69-11). Domitian and Tra- 
jan had to repel the attacks of some German 
tiibes ; but in the reign of Antoninus Pius, the 
Mareomanni, joined by various other tribes. 



ular assembly, in which each freeman had a right : made a more formidable attack upon the Ro- 
to take part. In these assemblies a king was { man dominions, aud threatened the empire with 
elected from among the nobles ; but his power destruction. From this time the Romans were 
was very limited, and he only acted as the su- ' often called upon to defend the left bank of the 
preme magistrate in time of peace ; for when j Rhine against their dangerous neighbors, espe 



& war broke out. the people 
326 



elected a distin- 1 ciallv against the two powerful confederacies 



GERMANICUS. 



GEE YON. 



oi the Alemauni and Erauks (vid. Alemanni, 
Franci) ; and in the fourth and fifth centuries 
the Germans obtained possession of some of 
the fairest provinces of the empire. The Ger- 
mans are divided by Tacitus into three great 
tribes: 1. Ingccvoncs, on the Ocean. 2. Henni- 
ones, inhabiting the central parts. 3. Ista-vones, 
in the remainder of Germany, consequently in 
the eastern anil southern parts. These three 
names were said to be derived from the three 
sons of Mannus, the son of Tuisco. Pliny makes 
rive divisions : 1. Vi/idili, including Burgundi- 
ones, Varini, Carini, and Guttones. 2. Ingce- 
includiug Cimbri, Teutones, and Chauci. 
3. ktiLVoncs, including the midland Cimbri. 4. 
Her miones, including the Suevi, Hermunduri, 
Chatti, and Cherusci. 5. Peiicini and JBastamce, 
bordering on the Daciaus. But whether we 
adopt the division of Tacitus or Pliny, we ought 
to add the inhabitants of the Scandinavian pen- 
insula, the Hilleviones, divided into the Sinoues 
;ind Sitones. It is difficult to fix with accuracy 
the position of the various tribes, as they fre- 
quently migrated from one spot to auother. An 
account of each is given under the name of the 
tribe Vid. Chauci, Cherusci, Cimbri, Suevi, 

Germanicus Cesar, son of Nero Claudius 
Drusus and Antouia, the daughter of the trium- 
vir Antony, was born B.C. 15. He was adopt- 
ed by his uncle Tiberius in the lifetime of Au- 
gustus, and was raised at an early age to the 
honors of the state He assisted Tiberius in 
the war against the Paunonians and Dalmatians 
(A.D. 7-10), and also fought along with Tiberius 
agaiust the Germans in the two following years 
(11, 12). He had the command of the legions 
in Germany when the alarming mutiny broke out 
urnong the troops in Germany and Illyricum, 
upon the death of Augustus (14). Germau- 
icus was a favorite with the soldiers, and they 
offered to place him at the head of the em- 
pire ; but he rejected their proposal, and ex- 
erted all his influence t<> quell the mutiuy, and 
reconcile them to their new sovereign. After 
restoring order among the troops, he crossed 
the Rhine, and laid waste the country of the 
Marsi with fire and sword. In the following 
year (15) he again crossed the Rhine, and 
marched into the interior of the country. He 
penetrated as far as the Saltus Teutoburgiensis, 
north of the Lippo, in which forest the army of 
Quintilius Varus had been destroyed bj^the 
Germans. Here his troops gathered up the 
bones of their ill-fated comrades, and paid the 
last honors to their memory. But meantime 
Arminius had collected a formidable army with 
which he attacked the Romans ; and it was not 
without considerable loss that Germanicus made 
good his retreat to the Rhine. It was in this 
campaign that Thnsnelda, the wife of Arminius, 
fell into the hand.-, of Germanicus. Vid. Ar- 
minius. Next year (16) Germanicus placed his 
troops on board a fleet of one thousand vessels, 
and sailed through the canal of his father, Dru- 
sus {vid. p. 272. a), and the Zuydersee to the 
ocean, aud from thence to the" mouth of the 
Amisia (now E,ns), where he landed his forces. 
After crossing the E\ < and the Weser, he fought 
two battles with Arminius, in both of which the 
Germans were completely defeated. The Ger- 



mans could no longer offer him any effectual re* 
sistance, and Germanicus needed only another 
year to reduce completely the whole country be- 
j tween the Rhine and the Elbe. But the jeal- 
rousy of Tiberius saved Germany. Upon pre- 
tence of the dangerous state of affairs in the 
East, the emperor recalled Germanicus to Rome, 
which he entered in Triumph on the 26th of May, 
A.D. 17. In the same year all the eastern prov- 
inces were assigned to Germanicus; but Ti- 
berius placed Cn. Piso in command of Syria, 
with secret instructions to check and thwart 
Germanicus. Piso soon showed his hostility to 
Germanicus ; and his wife, Plancina, in like 
manner, did every thing in her power to annoy 
Agrippina, the wife of Germanicus. In 18, Ger- 
manicus proceeded to Armenia, where he placed 
Zeno on the throne, and in the following year 
(19) he visited Egypt, and on his return he was 
seized with a dangerous hTness, of which he 
died. He believed that he had been poisoned 
by Piso, and shortly before he died he summon- 
ed his friends, and called upon them to avenge 
his murder. He was deeply and sincerely la- 
mented by the Roman people ; and Tiberius was 
obliged to sacrifice Piso to the public indigna- 
tion. Vid. Piso. By Agrippina he had .nine 
children, of whom six survived him. Of these 
the most notorious were the Emperor Caligula, 
and Agrippina, the mother of Nero. Germani- 
cus was an author of some repute. He wrote 
several poetical works. We stiU possess the 
remains of his Latin translation of the Phcen&rn- 
ena of Aratus. The latest edition of this work 
is by Orelli, at the end of his Phcedrus, Zurich. 
1 1831. 

Germanicia or Cesarea Germanica (Tep/ia- 
| vincia Kacaupeia Tep/xaviKTj), a town in the Syr- 
I ian provinces of Commagene, near the borders 
| of Cappadocia : the birth-place of the heretic 
Nestorius. 

Gerra (TZppa : near El-Katif), one of the 
j chief cities of Arabia and India, stood on the 
northeastern coast of Arabia, and a great empo- 
rium for the trade of Arabia Felix, two hundred 
stadia, (twenty geographical miles) from the 
shore of the Sinus Gerrseus or Gerraicus (now 
Elviali Bay ?\ a bay on the western side of the 
Persian Gulf, tw T o thousand four hundred stadia 
(two hundred and forty geographical miles=4° 
of lat.) from the mouth of the Tigris. The city 
was five Roman miles in circuit. The inhabit- 
ants, called Gerrsei (TefifiaZot), were said to have 
been originally Chaldaeans, who were driven out 
of Babylon. There was a small place of the 
same name on the northeastern frontier of 
Egypt, between Pelusium and Mount Casius, 
fifty stadia or eight Roman miles from the for- 
mer. 

Gerriius (Tcppog), a river of Scythia, flowing 
through a country of the same name, was a 
branch of the Borysthenes, and flowed into the 
Hapacyris, dividing the country of the Nomad 
Scythians from that of the Royal Scythians. 

Gerunda (now Gerona), a town of the Ause- 
tani in Hispania Tarraconensis, on the road from 
Tarraco to Narbo in Gaul. 

[Gerunium, is named by Livy, in his account 
of the second Punic war, as an ancient decayed 
city of the Samnites.] 

Geryox or Geryonks (Tiipvovqc), son of Chrv- 
327 



GESORIACUM. 



GLABRIO. 



saor and Callirrhoe, a monster with three heads, 
or, according to others, with three bodies united 
together, was a king in Spain, and possessed 
magnificent oxen, which Hercules carried away. 
For details, vid. Hercules. 

GesoriXcum (now Boulogne), a port of the 
jMorini in Gallia Belgica. at which persons usu- 
ally embarked to cross over to Britain : it was 
subsequently called Boxoxla, whence its mod- 
ern name. 

Gessius Flobus. Vid. Florus. 

Geta, Septimius, brother of Caracalla, by 
whom he was assassinated, A.D. 212. For de- 
tails, vid. Caracalla. 

Get^e, a Thracian people, called Daci by the 
Romans. Herodotus and Thucydides place them 
south of the Ister (now Danube), near its mouths, 
but in the time of Alexander the Great they 
dwelt beyond this river and north of the TriballL 
They were driven by the Sarmatians further 
west toward Germany. For their later history, 
rid. Dacia. 

Gigaxtes (Ttyai'-rer), the giants. According 
to Homer, they were a gigantic and savage 
race of men, dwelling in the distant west, in the 
island of Thrinacia, and were destroyed on ac- 
count of their insolence toward the gods. He- 
siod considers them as divine beings, who sprang 
from the blood that fell from Ccelus (Uranus) 
upon the earth, so that Terra (Ge) (the earth) 
was their mother. Neither Homer nor Hesiod 
knows any thing about their contest with the 
gods. Later poets and mythographers frequent- 
ly confound them with the Titans, and repre- 
sent them as enemies of Jupiter (Zeus) and the 
gods, whose abode on Olympus they attempt 
to take by storm. Their battle with the gods 
seems to be only an imitation of the revolt of 
the Titans against Uranus. Terra (Ge), it is 
said, indignant at the fate of her former chil- 
dren, the Titans, gave birth to the Gigantes, 
who were beings of a monstrous size, with fear- 
ful countenances and the tails of dragons. They 
were born, according to some, in the Phlegrtean 
plains in Sicily, Campania, or Arcadia, and, ac- 
cording to others, in the Thracian Pallene. In 
their native land they made an attack upon 
heaven, being armed with huge rocks and trunks 
of trees. The gods were told that they could 
not conquer the giants without the assistance 
of a mortal, whereupon they summoned Hercu- 
les to their aid. The giants Alcyoneus and 
Porphyrion distinguished themselves above their 
brethren. Alcyoneus was immortal so long as 
he fought in his native land ; but Hercules drag- 
ged him away to a foreign land, and thus killed 
him. Porphyrion was killed by the lightning 
of Jupiter (Zeus) and the arrows of Hercules. 
The other giants, whose number is said to have 
been twenty-four, were then killed one after 
another by the gods aud Hercules, and some 
of them were buried by their conquerors under 
(volcanic) islands. It is worthy of remark, that 
most writers place the giants in volcanic dis- 
tricts ; and it is probable that the story of their 
contest with the gods took its origin from vol- 
oanic convulsions. 

Gigonus (Tiym-oc: Tiyuvcog), a town and 
promontory of Macedonia, on the Thermaic Gulf. 

[Gilboa Moxs, a sterile range of hills to the 
south and southeast of Tabor, boundino; the 
328 



vallev of the Jordan on the west for 



many 



miles.] 

Gildo or. Gilbox, a Moorish chieftain, gov- 
erned Africa for some years as a subject of the 
Western empire ; but in A.D. 39*7 he trans- 
ferred his allegiance to the Eastern empire, and 
the Emperor Arcadius accepted him as a sub- 
ject. Stilicho, guardian of Honorius, sent an 
army against him. Gildo was defeated ; and. 
being taken prisoner, he put an end to his own 
life by hanging himself (398). The history of 
this war forms the subject of one of Claudian's 
poems (Be Bello Gildonico). 

[Giligamb.e (Ti?,r/du6ai or TiTuydfipm, Hdt.), 
an African people in Marrnarica and Cyrenaica.] 

[Gixdaxes (Ttvdavec), a people dwelling in 
the inland parts of the Syrtica Regio in Africa.] 

Gindarus (Ttvdapoc; : now Gindaries), a very 
strong fortress in the district of Cyrrhestice in 
Syria, northeast of Antioeh. 

[Gir. Vid. Ger.] 

Girba, a city on the island of Meniux (now 
Jerbah), at the southern extremity of the Lesser 
Syrtis, in northern Africa: celebrated for it* 
manufactures of purple. 

Gisco or Gisgo (Ttonov or TtoKiov). 1. Son 
of Hamilcar, who was defeated and killed in the 
battle of Himera, B.C. 480. In consequence of 
this calamity, Gisgo was banished from Car- 
thage. He died at Selinus in Sicily. — 2. Son of 
Hanno, was in exile when the Carthaginian^ 
were defeated at the River Crimisus by Timo- 
leon, 339. He was then recalled from exile, and 
sent to oppose Timoleon, but was unable to ac- 
complish any thing of importance. — 3. Com- 
mander of the Carthaginian garrison at Lily- 
basuni at the end of the first Punic war. After 
the conclusion of peace, 241, he was deputed 
by the government to treat witli the mercena- 
ries who had risen in revolt, but he was seized by 
them and put to death. 

Gitiadas (Tiriddar), a Lacedaemonian archi- 
tect, statuary, and poet. He completed the 
temple of Minerva (Athena) Poliouchos at 
Sparta, and ornamented it with works in bronze, 
from which it was called the Brazen House, and 
hence the goddess received the surname of 
Xa?-;uoLKog. He composed a hymn to the god- 
dess, besides other poems. He flourished about 
B.C. 516, and is the last Spartan artist of any 
distinction. 

Glabrio, Acilius, plebeians. 1. G, quaestor 
B.C. ^3, and tribune of the plebs 197. He 
acted as interpreter to the Athenian embassy 
in loo, when the three philosophers, Carneades, 
Diogenes, and Critolaus, came as envoys to 
Rome. He wrote in Greek a history of Rome 
from the earliest period to his own times. It 
was translated into Latin by one Claudius, and 
his version is cited by Livy, under the titles of 
Annoles Adliani (xxv., 39) and Libri Aciliani 
(xxxv.. 14).— 2. M'., tribune of the plebs 201. 
praetor 196. and consul 191. In his consulship 
j he defeated Antiochus at Thermopyla?, and sub- 
! sequently the ^Etolians likewise. — 3. M'., mar 
| ried a daughter of M. JSmilius Scaurus, consul 
I 115, whom Sulla, in 82, compelled him to dt- 
! vorce. Glabrio was prffitor urbanus in 7 0, when 
j he presided at the impeachment of Verres. He 
! was consul in 67, and in the following year pro- 
■ consul of Cilicia. He succeeded L. Luculms in 



GLANIS. 



GLESSARIA 



the command of the war against Mithradates, 
but remained inactive in Bithynia. He was 
superseded by Cn. Pompey.— 4. M'., son of No. 
3, was born in the house of Cn. Pompey, B.C. 
81, who married his mother after her compul- 
sory divorce from the elder Glabrio. ^Emilia 
died in giving birth to him. In the civil war, 
Glabrio WU one of Caesar's lieutenants ; com- 
manded the Wtwa of Oricum in Epirus in 48, 
and was stationed in Sicily in 46. He was twice 
defended SB capital charges by Cicero, and ac- 
quitted. 

Glanis, more usually written Clanis. 

Glanum Livii (ruins near St. Remy), a town 
»f the Salyes in Gallia Narbonensis. 

Glaphyra. Vid, Arciielaus, No. 6. 

Glauce (T/.avKj/). 1. One of the Nereides, 
1,he name Glauee befog only a personification 
of the color of the sea. — 2. Daughter of Creon 
of Corinth, also called Creusa, For details, vid. 
Creon. 

[Glauce (TXavKt/), a harbor of Ionia, on the 
Promontory Mycale, opposite Samos.] 

Glaucia, C. Servilius, praetor B.C. 100, the 
chief supporter of Saturninus, with whom he was 
put to death in this year. Vid. Saturninus. 

Glaucias (TXavKiac). 1. King of the Tau- 
lantians, one of the Illyrian tribes, fought against 
Alexander the Great, B.C. 335. In 316 he af- 
forded an asylum to the infant Pyrrhus, and re- 
fused to surrender him to Cassander. In 307 
he invaded Epirus, and placed Pyrrhus, then 
twelve years old, upon the throne. — 2. A Greek 
physician, who probably lived in the third or 
second century B.C. — 3. A statuary of ^Egina, 
who made the bronze chariot and statue of Ge- 
lou, flourished B.C. 488. 

[GLAUciprus (T?.avKiTTTior), an Athenian rhet- 
orician, son of the celebrated orator Hyperldes : 
he wrote several orations, but they have entirely 
perished] 

Glaucon (TXavKuv). 1. Son of Critias, broth- 
er of Callaeschrus, and father of Charmides and 
of Plato's mother, Perictione. — 2. Brother of 
Plato, who makes him one of the speakers in 
:.he Republic. 

Glaucus (TlavKog). 1. Grandson of iEolus, 
son of Sisyphus and Merope, and father of Bel- 
lerophontes. He lived at Potnke, despised the 
power of Venus (Aphrodite), and did not allow 
his mares to breed, that they might be the 
stronger for the horse-race. According to oth- 
ers, he fed them with human flesh. This ex- 
cited the anger of Venus (Aphrodite), who de- 
stroyed him. Accordiug to some accounts, his 
horses became frightened and threw him out 
of his chariot, a* he was contending in the fu- 
neral games celebrated by Acastus in honor of 
his father Pelias. According to others, his 
horses tore him to pieees, having drunk from 
the waters of a sacred well in Boeotia, in conse- 
quence of which they were seized with mad- 
aess. Glaucus of Potnia; (T?MVKog Uotvuvc) 
was the title of one of the lost tragedies of 
JEsehylus. — 2. Son of Hippolochus, and grand- 
son of Bellerophoutes, was a Lyciau prince, and 
assisted Priam in the Trojan war. He was 
connected with Diomedes by ties of hospitality ; 
and when they recognized one another in the 
battle, they abstained from fighting, and ex- 
changed arms with one another. Glaucus was ' 



slain by Ajax. — 3. Son of the Messenian king 
uEpytus, whom he succeeded on the throne. — 
4. One of the sous of the Cretan king Minos by 
Pasiphae or Crete. When a boy, he fell into- 
a cask full of honey, and was smothered. Mi- 
nos searched for his son in vain, and was at 
length informed by Apollo or the Curetes that 
the person who should devise the most appro- 
priate comparison between a cow, which could 
assume three different colors, and any other 
object, would find the boy. The soothsayer 
Polyidus of Argos solved the problem by liken- 
ing the cow to a mulberry, which is at first 
white, then red, and in the end black. By his 
prophetic powers he then discovered the boy. 
Minos now required Polyidus to restore bis son 
to life ; but as he could not accomplish this, 
Minos ordered him to be entombed alive with 
the body of Glaucus. When Polyidus was thtw 
shut up in the vault, he saw a serpent approach- 
ing the dead body, and killed the reptile. Pres- 
ently another serpent came, and placed a herb 
upon the dead serpent, which was thereby re- 
stored to life. Thereupon Polyidus covered 
the body of Glaucus with the same herb, and 
the boy at once rose into life again. The story 
of Glaucus and Polyidus was a favorite subject 
with the ancient poets and authors. — 5. Of An • 
thedon in Boeotia, a fisherman, who became im- 
mortal by eating a part of the divine herb which 
Saturn (Cronos) had sown. His parentage m 
differently stated : some called his father Co- 
peus, others Poly bus, the husband of Eubcea, 
and others, again, Anthedon or Neptune (Po- 
seidon). He was further said to have been i\ 
clever diver, to have built the ship Argo. and 
to have accompanied the iYrgonauts as their 
steersman. In the sea-fight of Jason against 
the Tyrrhenians, Glaucus alone remained un- 
hurt ; he sank to the bottom of the sea, where 
he was visible to none save Jason. From this 
moment he became a marine deity, and was of 
service to the Argonauts. The story of hi* 
sinking or leaping into the sea was variously 
modified in the different traditions. There was 
a belief in Greece that once in eveiy year Glau- 
cus visited all the coasts and islands, aecora- 
panied by marine monsters, and gave his proph- 
ecies. Fishermen and sailors paid particular 
reverence to him, and watched his oracles,, 
which were believed to be very trustworthy. 
He is said to have even instructed Apollo in 
the prophetic art. Some writers stated the? 
he dwelt in Delos, where he prophesied in con- 
junction with the nymphs ; but the place of hi* 
abode varied in different traditions. The sto- 
ries about his various loves were favorite sub- 
jects with the ancient poets. — 6. Of Chiot-, a 
statuary in metal, distinguished as the inventor 
of the art of soldering metals (i;u/,h]cic), flour- 
ished B.C. 490. His most noted work was an 
iron base (v-oKpr/TTjpidtov), which, with the sil- 
ver bowl it supported, was presented te- the 
temple at Delphi by Alyattes, king of Lydia. 

Glaucus (TXaviwg). 1. A small river of Phry- 
gia, falling into the Meeander near Eumenia. — 
2. A small river of Lyeia, on the borders of Ca- 
ria, flowing into the Sinus Glaucus (now Gudf 
of Makri). 

Glaucus Sinus. Vid. preceding, No. 2 
! Glessaria (now Amclond), an island off the 
329 



GLISAS. 



GORDIUS. 



coast of the Frisii, so called from " glessum" or 
amber which was found there : its proper name 
was Austeravia. 

Glisas (T/uGag : T/.iadvrtoc), an ancient town 
in Boeotia, on Mount Hypaton. It was in ruins 
in the time of Pausanias. 

Glycas, Michael, a Byzantine historian, the 
author of a work entitled Annals (j3i6?.og %pov- 
iKTj), containing the history of the world from 
the creation to the death of Alexis I. Comne- 
nus, AD. 1118. Edited by Bekker, Bonn, 1836. 

Glyceea (T?,vnspa), "the sweet one," a fa- 
vorite name of hetairce. The most celebrated 
hetaira? of this name are, 1. The daughter of 
Thalassis, and the mistress of Harpalus. — 2. Of 
Sicyon, and the mistress of Pausias. — 3. A fa- 
vorite of Horace. 

Glyceejus, became emperor of the West A.D. 
473, after the death of Olybrius, by the assist- 
ance of Gundobald the Burgundian. But the 
Byzantine court did not acknowledge Glycerins, 
and proclaimed Julius Kepos emperor, by whom 
Glycerius was dethroned (474), and compelled 
to become a priest. He was appointed bishop 
of Salona iu Dalmatia. 

Glycon (VAvkov) an Athenian sculptor, 
known to us by the magnificent colossal marble 
statue of Hercules, commonly called the " Far- 
nese Hercules." It was found in the baths of 
Caracalla, and, after adorning the Farnese pal- 
ace for some time, was removed to the royal 
museum at Naples. It represents the hero rest- 
ing on his club after one of his labors. The 
swollen muscles admirably express repose after 
severe exertion. Glycon probably lived under 
the early Roman emperors. 

[Glycys Portus (F^iMcDf iLfirjv, '• the sweet 
harbor' ), a harbor with a town Glycys at the 
mouth of the Acheron in Epirus.] 

[Gxatia, a shortened form of Egnatia. Vid. 
Egnatta.] 

Gxipho, M. Axtoxius, a Roman rhetorician, 
vvas born B.C. 114, in Gaul, but studied at Alex- 
andrea. He afterward established a school at 
Rome, which was attended by many dis- 
tinguished men, and among others by Cicero, when 
he was praetor. 

Gnosus, Gxossus. Vid, Cxosus. 

Gobryas (Tu6pvar) y a noble Persian, one of 
the seven conspirators against Smerdis the Ma- 
gian. He accompanied Darius into Scythia. 
He was doubly related to Darius by marriage ; 
Darius married the daughter of Gobryas, and 
Oobryas married the sister of Darius. 

[Gogana (Tuyava, now Kongun or Cogvn), a 
place in the Persian district Persis.] 

Golgi (Yolyoi : ToAytoc), a town in Cyprus, 
of uncertain site, was a Sieyonian colony, and 
one of the chief seats of the "worship of Aphro- 
dite (Venus). 

Gomphi (Touqol : TotKpevc), a town in Hes- 
tiaeotis in Thessaly, was a strong fortress on 
the confines of Epirus, and commanded the 
chief pass between Thessaly and Epirus: it 
was taken and destroyed by Caesar (B.C. 48), 
but was afterward rebuilt. 

Goxxi, Goxxus (Tovvoi, Tovvog : Tovvioc), a 
strongly fortified town of the Perrhajbi in Thes- 
saly, on the River Peneus, and at the entrance 
of the Vale of Tempe, was, from its position, of 
great military- importance : but it is not men- 
330 



tioned after the time of the wars between the 
Macedonians and Romans. 

Gordiaxus, M. Axtoxius, the name of three 
Roman emperors, father, son, and grandson. 
1. Surnamed Africaxus, son of Metius Marul- 
lus and Ulpia Gordiana, possessed a princely 
fortune, and was distinguished alike by moral 
and intellectual excellence. In his first" consul- 
ship, A.D. 213, he was the colleague of Cara- 
calla ; in his second, of Alexander Severus ; 
and soon afterward was nominated proconsul 
of Africa. After governing Africa for several 
years with justice and integrity, a rebellion 
broke out in the province in consequence of the 
tyranny of the procurator of Maximums. The 
ring-leaders of the conspiracy compelled Gor- 
dian, who was now in his eightieth year, to as- 
sume the imperial title. He entered on his new 
duties at Carthage in the month of February, 
associated his son with him in the empire, and 
dispatched letters to Rome announcing his 
elevation. Gordianus and his son were at once 
proclaimed Augusti by the senate, and prepar- 
ations were made in Italy to resist Maximinus. 
But meantime a certain Capellianus, procurator 
of Numidia, refused to acknowledge the author- 
ity of the Gordiani, and marched against them. 
The younger Gordianus was defeated by him. 
and slain in the battle; and his aged father 
thereupon put an end to his own life, after 
reigning less than two months. — 2. Son of thi 
preceding and of Fabia Orestilla, was born A.D. 
192, was associated with his father in the pur- 
ple, and fell in battle, as recorded above. — 3. 
Grandson of the elder Gordianus, either by a 
daughter or by the younger Gordianus. The 
soldiers proclaimed him emperor in July, A.D. 
238, after the murder of Balbinus and Pupienus. 
although he was a mere boy, probably not more 
than twelve years old. He reigned six years, 
from 238 to 244. In 241 he married the 
daughter of Misitheus, and in the same year 
set out for the east to carry on the war against 
the Persians. "With the assistance of Misithe- 
us, he defeated the Persians in 242. Misitheus 
died in the following year; and PhiUppus. 
whom Gordian had taken into his confidence, 
excited discontent among the soldiers, who at 
length rose in open mutiny, and assassinated 
Gordian in Mesopotamia, 244. He was suc- 
ceeded by PHiLrppus. 

Gordium (Topdiov, Topdiov Ku/z^j, the ancient 
capital of Phrygia, the royal residence of the 
kings of the dynasty of Gordius, and the scene 
of Alexander's celebrated exploit of " cutting 
the Gordian knot," Vid. Gordius. It was sit- 
uated in the west of that part of Phrygia which 
was afterward called Galatia, north of Pessinus, 
on the northern bank of the Sangarius. In the 
reign of Augustus it received the name of Juli- 
opolis ^lov7uov~oAig\ 

Gordius (Topdioc), an ancient king of Phryg- 
ia, and father of Midas, was originally a poor 
peasant. Internal disturbances having broken 
out in Phrygia, an oracle informed the inhabit 
ants that a wagon would bring them a king, 
who should at the same time put an end to the 
disturbances. When the people were deliber 
ating on these points, Gordius, with his wife 
and son, suddenly appeared riding in his wag 
on in the assembly of the people, who at on<x 



GORDIUTICHOS. 



GORTYN, GORTYNA. 



acknowledged him as king. Gordius, out of 
gratitude, dedicated his chariot to Jupiter 
(Zeus) in the acropolis of Gordium. The pole* 
was fastened to the yoke by a knot of bark; 
and an oracle declared that whatsoever should 
untie the koot should reign over all Asia. Al- 
exander, on his arrival at Gordium, cut the knot 
with his sword and applied the oracle to him- 
seffi 

GordiOthuos (Voptiiov razor) a town m Ca- 
ria, near the borders of Phrygia, between Anti- 
ochia ad Majandrum and Tab*. 

GORDY^EI. Vid- CORUYENE. 

GocDTiEi Months (ra Topdcaia bpq : now 
Mountains of Kurdistan), the name given by 
Strabo to the northern part of the broad belt ot 
mountains which separates the Tigris Valley 
from the great table-land of Iran, and which 
divided Mesopotamia and Assyria from Arme- 
nia and Media. They are connected with the 
mountains of Armenia at Ararat, whence they 
run southeast between the Arsissa _ Palus (now 
Lake Van) and the sources of the Tigris and its 
upper confluents as far as the confines of Media, 
where the chain turns more to the south and was 
ealled Zagros. 

Gordyene or Corduene (Yop6v)/v?j f Kopdov- 
j/vfj), a mountainous district in the south of 
Armenia Major, between the Arsissa Palus 
(now Lake Van) and the Gordy^ei Montes. 
After the Mithradatic war, it was assigned by 
Pompey to Tigranes, with whom its possession 
had been disputed by the Parthian king Phraates. 
Trajan added it to the Roman empire ; and it 
formed afterward a constant object of contention 
between the Romans and the Parthian and Per- 
sian kings, but was for the most part virtually 
independent. Its warlike inhabitants, called 
Top6valoi or Cordueni, were no doubt the same 
people as the Caroichi of the earlier Greek geo- 
graphers, and the Kurds of modern times. 

Gorge (ropy?;), daughter of GSneus aud Al- 
thea. She and her sister Deiauira alone retained 
their original forms, when their other sisters 
were metamorphosed by Diana (Artemis) into 
birds. 

Gorgias (Topyiaf). 1. Of Lcontini, in Sicily, 
a celebrated rhetorician and orator, sophist and 
philosopher, was born about B.C 480, and is 
said to have lived one hundred and five years, 
or even one hundred and nine years. Of his 
early life Ave have no particulars ; but when he 
was of advanced age (B.C. 427) he was sent 
by his fellow-citizens as ambassador to Athens, 
for the purpose of soliciting its protection 
against Syracuse. He seems to have returned 
to Leontini only for a short time, and to have 
spent the remaining years of his vigorous old 
age in the towns of Greece Proper, especially at 
Athens and th<^ Thessalian Larissa, enjoying 
honor every where as an orator and teacher of 
rhetoric. The common statement that Pericles 
and the historian Thucydides were among his 
disciples can not be true, as he did not go to 
Athens till after the death of Pericles; but Al 
eibiades, Alcidamas, jEsehines, and Antisthe- 
nes are called either pupils or imitators of 
Gorgias, and his oratory must have had great 
influence upon the rhetorician Isocrates. The 
high estimation in which he was held at Athens 
appears from the way in which he is introduced 



in the dialogue of Plato, which bears his name. 
The eloquence of Gorgias was chiefly calcula- 
ted to tickle the ear by antitheses, alliterations, 
the symmetry of its parts, and similar artifices. 
Two declamations have come down to us under 
the name of Gorgias, viz., the Apology of Pala- 
medes, and the Encomium on Helena, the gen- 
uineness of which is doubtful. Besides his 
orations, which were mostly what the Greeks 
called Epideictic or speeches for display, such as 
his oration addressed to the assembled Greeks 
at Olympia, Gorgias also wrote loci communes, 
probably as rhetorical exercises ; a work on 
dissimilar and homogeneous words, and another 
on rhetoric. The works of Gorgias did not 
even contain the elements of a scientific theory 
of oratory any more than his oral instructions. 
He confined himself to teaching his pupils a 
variety of rhetorical artifices, and made them 
learn by heart certain formulas relative to them. 
— 2. Of Athens, gave instruction in rhetoric to 
young M. Cicero when he was at Athens. He 
wrote a rhetorical work, a Latin abridgment of 
which, by Rutilius Lupus is still extant, under the 
title JDc Ficjuris Sententiarum et Elocutionis. 

Gorgo and Gorgoxes (Topyu and Topyovec). 
Homer mentions only one Gorgo, who appears 
j in the Odyssey (xi., 633) as one of the frightful 
I phantoms in Hades : in the Hiad the aegis of 
! Athena (Minerva) contains the head of Gorgo, 
| the terror of her enemies. Hesiod mentions 
j three Gorgones, Sthexo, Euryale, and Medusa, 
j daughters of Phorcys and Ceto, whence they 
are sometimes called Phorcydes. Hesiod 
! placed them in the far west in the Ocean, in 
i the neighborhood of Night and the Hesperides ; 
! but later traditions transferred them to Libya, 
j They were frightful beings ; instead of hair, 
! their heads were covered with hissing ser- 
J pents ; and they had wings, brazen claws, and 
I enormous teeth. Medusa, who alone of her 
sisters was mortal, was, according to some 
legends, at first a beautiful maiden, but her 
hair was changed into serpents by Athena 
(Minerva) in consequence of her having be- 
come by Poseidon the mother of Chrysaor and 
Pegasus in one of Athena's (Minerva's) tem- 
ples. Her head now became so fearful that 
every one who looked at it was changed into 
stone. Hence the great difficulty which Perseus 
had in killing her. Vid. Perseus. Athena (Mi- 
nerva) afterward placed the head in the centre 
of her shield or breast-plate. 

[Gorgus (Topyog). 1. Son of Chersis, a king 
of Salamis in Cyprus : he joined Xerxes in has 
invasion of Greece. — 2. Son of Cypselus, founder 
of Ambracia.] 

[Gorgythion (Topyvdiov), son of Priam and 
Castianira, was slain by Teucer.] 

GORTYN, GORTYNA (T6pTVV, TopTVVa: TopTV- 

vioc). 1. (Ruins near Hagios Dlieka, six miles 
from the foot of Mount Ida), one of the most 
ancient cities in Crete, on the River Lethseus, 
ninety stadia from its harbor Leben, and one 
hundred and thirty stadia from its other harbor 
Metalia. It was one of the chief seats of the 
worship of Europa, whence it was called Hel- 
lotis ; and it was subsequently peopled by Min- 
yans and Tyrrhene-Pelasgians, whence it also 
bore the name of Larissa. It was the second 
city in Crete, being only inferior to Cnosus ; 

331 



GORTYNIA. 



GRACCHUS, SEMPRONIUS. 



and on the decline of the latter place under tne 
Romans, it became the metropolis of the island. 
— 2. Also Gortts (ruins near Atzikolo), a town 
n Arcadia, on the River Gortyniue, a tributary of 
the Alpheus. 

Gortynia (Toprwla), a town in Emathia in 
Macedonia, of uncertain site. 

Gotarzes. Vid. Arsaces, No. 20, 21. 

Gothi, Gothoxes, Guttoxes, a powerful 
German people, who played an important part 
in the overthrow of the Roman empire. They 
originally dwelt on the Prussian coast of the 
Baltic, at the mouth of the Vistula, where they 
are placed by Tacitus ; but they afterward mi- 
grated south, and at the beginning of the third 
century they appear on the coasts of the Black 
Sea. where Caracalla encountered them on his 
march to the East, In the reign of the Em- 
peror Philippus (A.D. 244-249), they obtained 
possession of a great part of the Roman prov- 
ince of Dacia ; and in consequence of their set- 
tling in the countries formerly inhabited by the 
Getse and Scythians, they are frequently called 
both Getas and Scythians by later writers. Eroro. 
the time of Philippus the attacks of the Goths 
against the Roman empire became more fre- 
quent and more destructive. In A.D. 272 the 
Emperor Aurelian surrendered to them the 
whole of Dacia. It is about this time that we 
find them separated into two great divisions, 
the Ostrogoths or Eastern Goths, and the Vis- 
igoths or "Western Goths. The Ostrogoths set- 
tled in Mcesia and Pannonia, while the Visi- 
goths remained north of the Danube. The 
Visigoths, under their king Alaric, invaded 
Italy, and took and plundered Rome (410). A 
few years afterward they settled permanently 
in the southwest of Gaul, and established a 
kingdom, of which Tolosa was the capital. 
From thence they invaded Spain, where they 
also founded a kingdom, which lasted for more 
than two centuries, till it was overthrown by 
the Arabs. The Ostrogoths meantime had ex- 
tended their dominions almost up to the gates 
of Constantinople ; and the Emperor Zeno was 
glad to get rid of them by giving them permis- 
sion to invade and conquer Italy. Under their 
king Theodoric the Great they obtained posses- 
sion of the whole of Italy* (493). Theodoric 
took the title of King of Italy, and an Ostro- 
gothic dynasty- reigned in the country till it was 
destroyed by Narses, the general of Justinian, 
A.D. 553. The Ostrogoths embraced Christian- 
ity at an early period ; and it was for their use 
that Ulphilas translated the sacred Scriptures 
into Gothic, about the middle of the fourth cen- 
tury. 

Gothixi, a Celtic people in the southeast of 
Germany, subject to the Quadi. 

Gracchaxus, M. Jrxius, assumed his cogno- ■ 
men on account of his friendship with C. Grac- 
"hus. He wrote a work, De Potestatibus, which 
^ave an account of the Roman constitution and 
.magistracies from the time of the kings. It | 
was addressed to T. Pomponius Attieus, the 
father of Cicero's friend. This work, which 
appears to have been one of great value, is lost, 
but some parts of it are cited by Joannes Lydus. 
lid. Lydus. 

Gracchus. Semproxius. plebeians. 1. Tibe- ; 
:iu *. a distinguished general in the second ; 
33° 



Punic war. In B.C. 216 he was magister 
equitum to the dictator M. Junius Pera; in 215 
dbnsul for the first time; and in 213 consul for 
the second time. In 212 he fell in battle against 
Mago, at Campi Veteres, in Lucania. His body 
was sent to Hannibal, who honored it with a 
magnificent burial. — 2. Tiberius, was tribune 
of the plebs in 187 ; and although personally 
hostile to P. Scipio Africanus, he defended him 
against the attacks of the other tribunes, for 
which he received the thanks of the aristocrat - 
ical party. Soon after this occurrence Grac- 
chus was rewarded with the hand of Cornelia, 
the youngest daughter of P. Scipio Africanus. 
In 181 he was prastor, and received Hispania 
Citerior as his province, where he carried on 
the war with great success against the Celtibe- 
rians. After defeating them in battle, he gained 
their confidence by his justice and kindness. 
He returned to Rome in 17 8 ; and was consul 
177, when he was sent against the Sardinians, 
who revolted. He reduced them to complete 
submission in 176, and returned to Rome in 
175. He brought with him so large a number 
of captives that they were sold for a mere trifle, 
which gave rise to the proverb Sardi vcnalcs. 
In 169 he was censor with C. Claudius Puleher, 
and was consul a second time in 163. He had 
twelve children by Cornelia, all of whom died at 
an early age except the two tribunes, Tiberius- 
and Caius, and a daughter, Cornelia, who was 
married to P. Scipio Africanus the younger. — g. 
Tiberius, elder son of No. 2, lost his "father at an 
early age. He was educated, together with hi* 
brother Caius, by his illustrious mother Cornelia, 
who made it the object of her life to render her 
sons worthy of their father and of her own an- 
cestors. She was assisted in the education of 
her children by eminent Greeks, who exercised 
great influence upon the minds of the two broth- 
ers, and among whom we have especial men- 
tion of Diophanes of Mytilene, Menelaus of 
Marathon, and Blossius of Curnae. Tiberius 
was nine years older than his brother Caius ; 
and although they grew up under the same in- 
fluence, and their characters resembled each 
other in the main outlines, yet they differed 
from each other in several important particu- 
lars. Tiberius was inferior to his brother in 
talent, but surpassed him in the amiable traits 
of his gentle nature: the simplicity of his de- 
meanor, and his calm dignity, won for him the 
hearts of the people. His eloquence, too, form- 
ed a strong contrast with the passionate and 
impetuous harangues of Caius ; for it was tem- 
perate, graceful, persuasive, and, proceeding m 
it did from the fullness of his own heart, it 
found a ready entrance into the hearts of his 
hearers. Tiberius served in Africa under P. 
Scipio Africanus the younger, who had married 
his sister, and was present at the destruction 
of Carthage (146). In 137 he was quaestor, and 
in that capacity he accompanied the consul, 
Hostilius Mancinus. to Hispania Citerior, where 
he gained both the affection of the Roman sol- 
diers, and the esteem and confidence of the vic- 
torious enemy. The distressed condition of the 
Roman people had deeply excited the sympa- 
thies of Tiberius. As he travelled through 
Etruria on his journey to Spain, he observed 
with grief and indignation the deserted state of 



GRACCHUS, SEMPRONIUS. 



GRACCHUS, SEMPRONIUS. 



that fertile country ; thousands of foreign slaves 
in chaius wore employed in cultivating the land 
and tending the flocks upon the immense estates 
of the wealthy, while the poorer classes of Ro- 
man citizens, Who were thus thrown out of cm- 
plo\Tnent, had scarcely their daily bread or a 
clod of eartu to call their own. He resolved to 
use everv effort to remedy this state of things, 
by endeavoring to create an industrious middle 
class of agriculturists, and to put a check upon 
the unbounded avarice of the ruling party, 
whose covctousuess, combined with the disas- 
ters of the second Punic war, had completely 
destroyed the middle class of small land-owners. 
With this view, he offered himself as a candi- 
date for the tribuneship, and obtained it for the 
year 133. The agrarian law of Licioius, winch 
enacted that no one should possess more than 
five hundred jugera of public land, had never 
been repealed, but had for a long series of years 
been totally disregarded. The first measure, 
therefore, of Tiberius was to propose a. bill to 
the people, renewing and enforcing the Licinian 
law, but with the modification that besides the 
five hundred jugera allowed by that law, any 
one might possess two hundred and fifty jugera 
of the public land for each of his sons. This 
clause, however, seems to have been limited to 
two, so that a father of two sons might occupy 
one thousand jugera of public land. The sur- 
plus was to be taken from them and distributed 
in small farms among the poor citizens. The 
business of men curing aud distributing the land 
was to be intrusted to triumvirs, who were to 
be elected as a permanent magistracy. The 
measure encountered the most vehement oppo- 
sition from the senate and the aristocracy, and 
they got one of the tribunes, M. Octavius, to put 
his interccssio or veto upon the bill. When 
neither persuasion- nor Areata would induce 
Octavius to withdraw hi- opposition, the peo- 
ple, upon the proposition of Tiberius, deposed 
Octavius from hi- efiiee. The law was then 
passed ; and the triumvirs appointed to carry it 
into execution were Tib. Gracchus, App. Clau- 
dius, his father-in-law, and his brother C. Grac- 
chus, who was then little more than twenty 
years old, and was serviug in the camp of P. 
Scipio at Numautia. About this time Attalus 
died, bequeathing his kingdom and his property 
to the Roman people. Gracchus thereupon pro- 
posed that this property should be distributed 
among the people. t< > enable the poor, who were 
to receive lauds, to purehase the necessary im- 
plements, cattle, and the like. When the time 
•came for the election of the tribunes for the fol- 
lowing year. Tiberius again offered himself as 
a candidate. The senate declared that it was 
illegal for any oue to hold this office for two 
consecutive years ; but Tiberius paid no atten- 
tion to the objection While the tribes were 
voting, a band of senators, headed by P. Scipio 
Xasioa, rushed from the senate house into the 
forum and attacked the. people. Tiberius was 
killed as he was attempting to escape. He was 
probably about thirty-five years of age at the 
time of his death. Whatever were the errors 
of Tiberius in legislation, his motives were 
pure ; and he died the death of a martyr in the 
protection of the poor and oppressed. " All the 
odium that has for many centuries been thrown 



upon Tiberius and his brother Caius arose iron; 
party prejudice, and more especially from a mis 
understanding of the nature of a Roman agra 
rian law, which did not deal with private prop- 
erty, but only with the public land of the state. 
Vid. Did. of A /it., art. Ageakle Leges. — 4. C. 
brother of ao. 3, was in Spain at the time of 
his brother's murder, as has been already stated. 
He returned to Rome in the following year 
(132), but kept aloof from public affairs for some 
years. In 126 he was quaestor, and went to 
Sardinia, under the consul L. Aurelius Orestes, 
and there gained the approbation of his superiors 
and the attachment of the soldiers. The senate- 
attempted to keep him in Sardinia, dreading his 
popularity in Rome ; but after he had remained 
there two years, he left the province without 
leave, and returned to the city in 124. Urged 
on by the popular wish, and by the desire of 
avenging the cause of his murdered brother, he 
became a candidate for the tribuneship of the 
plebs, and was elected for the year 123. His 
reforms were far more extensive than his broth 
er's, and such was his influence with the peo- 
ple that he carried all he proposed ; and the 
senate w T ere deprived of some of their most im- 
portant privileges. His first measure was the 
renewal of the agrarian law of his brother. He 
next carried several laws for the amelioration 
of the. condition of the poor, enacting that the 
soldiers should be equipped at the expense of 
the republic ; that no person under the age of 
seventeen should be drafted for the army ; and 
that every month corn should be sold at a low 
fixed price to the poor. In order to weaken the 
power of the senate, he enacted, that the judice? 
in the judicia publica, who had hitherto been 
elected from the senate, should in future be 
chosen from the equites ; and that in every 
year, before the consuls were elected, the sen- 
ate should determine the two provinces which 
the consuls should have. No branch of the pub- 
lic administration appears to have escaped his 
notice. He gave a regular organization to the 
province of Asia, which had for many year3 
been left unsettled. In order to facilitate inter 
course between the several parts of Italy, and 
at the same time to give employment to the 
poor, he made new roads in all directions, re- 
paired the old ones, and set up mile-stones along 
them. Caius was elected tribune again for the 
following year, 122. The senate, finding it im- 
possible to resist the measures of Caius, re- 
solved, if possible, to destroy his influence with 
the people, that they might retain the govern 
ment in their own hands. For this purpose they 
persuaded M. Livius Drusus, one of the col- 
leagues of Caius, to propose measures still more 
popular than those of Caius. The people al 
lowed themselves to be duped by the treacher- 
ous agent of the senate, and the popularity of 
Caius gradually waned. During his absence in 
Africa, whither he had gone as one of the trium 
virs to establish a colony at Carthage, in accord- 
ance with one of his own laws, his party had 
been considerably weakened by the influence of 
Drusus and the aristocracy, and many of his 
friends had deserted his cause. He failed in 
obtaining the tribuneship for the following year 
(121); and when his year of office expired, his 
enemies began to repeal several of his enact- 
333 



GRADIVUS. 



GRiECIA MAGNA. 



meats. Caius appeared in tlie forum to oppose 
these proceedings. One of the attendants of 
the consul Opimius was slain by the friends of 
Caius. Opimius gladly availed himself of this 
pretext to persuade the senate to confer upon 
him unlimited power to act as he thought best 
for the good of the republic. Fulvius Flaccus, 
rind the other friends of Caius, called upon him 
to repel force by force ; but he refused to arm, 
•ind while his friends fought in his defence, he 
fled to the grove of the Furies, where he fell by 
-he hands of his slave, whom he had command- 
ed to put him to death. The bodies of the slain, 
vhose number is said to have amounted to three 
Thousand, were thrown into the Tiber, their prop- 
erty was confiscated, and their houses demolish- 
ed. All the other friends of Gracchus who fell 
into the hands of their enemies were thrown into 
prison, and there strangled. 

Gradivcs, i. e., the marching (probably from 
aradior), a surname of Mars, who is hence call- 
ed gradivus pater and rex gradiiws. Mars Gra- 
divus had a temple outside the porta Capena 
on the Appian road, and it is said that King 
Numa appointed twelve Salii as priests of this 
god. 

Gr.ejs (Tpaicu), that is, " the old women," 
(laughters of Phorcys and Ceto, were three in 
number, Pephredo, JEnyo, and JDino, and were 
also called Phorcydes. They had gray hair from 
their birth ; and had only one tooth and one 
eye in common, which they borrowed from 
each other when they wanted them. They 
were, perhaps, marine deities, like the other 
children of Phorcys. 

Gr^ecia or Hellas (// 'E?Jmc), a country in 
Europe, the inhabitants of which were called 
Gr^eci or Hellenes ^Y,7,'/.i]vec). Among the 
Greeks Hellas did not signify any particular 
country, bounded by certain geographical limits, 
but was used in general to signify the abode of 
the Hellenes, wherever they might happen to be 
settled. Thus the Greek colonies of Cyrene in 
Africa, of Syracuse in Sicily, of Tarentum in 
I taly, and of Smyrna in Asia, are said to be in 
Hellas. In the most ancient times Hellas was 
a small district of Phthiotis iu Thessaly, in 
which was situated a town of the same name. 
As the inhabitants of this district, the Hellenes, 
gradually spread over the surrounding country, 
their name was adopted by other tribes, who 
became assimilated in language, manners, and 
customs to the original Hellenes, till at length 
rhc whole of the north of Greece, from the Ce- 
•aunian and Cambunian Mountains to the Co- 
rinthian isthmus, was designated by the name 
of Hellas.* Peloponnesus was generally spoken 
of during the flourishing times of Greek inde- 
pendence as distinct from Hellas proper; but 
subsequently Peloponnesus and the Greek isl- 
ands were also included under the general name 
•^•f Hellas, in opposition to the land of the bar- 
barians. Still later, even Macedonia, and the 
southern part of Illyria, were sometimes reck- 
oned part of Hellas. The Romans called the 
'and of the Hellenes Grcecia, whence we have, 
derived the name of Greece. They probably 

* Epirus is, for the sake of convenience, usually in- 
cluded in Hellas by modern geographers, but was ex- 
cluded by the Greeks themselves, a* the Epirotsvrere not 
regarded a? genuine Hellenes. 
334 



gave this name to the country from their first 
becoming acquainted with the tribe of the Grceci, 
who were said to be descended from Greecus. 
a son of Thessalus, and who appear at an early 
period to have dwelt on the western coast of 
Epirus. Hellas or Greece proper, including Pelo- 
ponnesus, lies between the thirty-sixth and forty- 
sixth degrees of north latitude, and between 
the twenty-first and twenty-sixth degrees of 
east longitude. Its greatest length from Mount 
Olympus to Cape Teenarus i3 about two hund- 
red and fifty English miles ; its greatest breadth 
from the western coast of Acarnania to Marathon 
in Attica is about one hundred and eighty miles. 
Its area is somewhat less than that of Portugal. 
On the north it was separated by the Cambu- 
nian and Ceraunian Mountains from Macedonia 
and Hlpia ; and on the other three sides it is 
bounded by the sea, namely, by the Ionian Sea 
on the west, and by the ^Egean on the east and 
south. It is one of the most mountainous coun- 
tries of Europe, and possesses few extensive 
plains and few continuous valleys. The inhab- 
itants were thus separated from one another by 
barriers which it was not easy to surmount, and 
were naturally led to form separate political 
communities. At a later time the north of 
Greece was generally divided into ten districts : 
Epirus, Thessalia, Acarnania, JEtolia, Doris, 
Locris, Phocis, Bozotia, Attica, and Megaris. 
The south of Greece or Peloponnesus was usual- 
ly divided into t en districts likewise : Corinth - 
ia, SiCYONiA, Phliasia, Achaia, Elis, MeSsenia 
Laconica, Ctnuria, Argolis, and Arcadia. An 
account of the geography, early inhabitants, and 
history of each of these districts is given in 
separate articles. It is only necessary to re- 
mark here that, before the Hellenes had spread 
over the country, it was inhabited by various 
tribes, whom the Greeks call by the general 
name of barbarians. Of these the most cele- 
brated were the Pelasgians, who had settled in 
most parts of Greece, and from whom a con- 
siderable part of the Greek population was un- 
doubtedly descended. These Pelasgians were 
a branch of the great Indo-Germanic race, and 
spoke a language akin to that of the Hellenes, 
whence the amalgamation of the two races was 
rendered much easier. Vid, Pelasgi. The 
Hellenes traced their origin to a mythical an- 
cestor Hellen, from whose sons and grandson,- 
they were divided into the four great tribes of 
Dorians, yEolians, Achceans, and Ionians. Vi& 
Hellen. 

Gr^ecia Magna or G. Major (/} uzyd'h) 'E'/- 
Adc), a name given to the districts iu the south 
of Italy, inhabited by the Greeks. This name 
was never used simply to indicate the south of 
Italy ; it was always confined to the Gre^k 
cities and their territories, and did not include 
the surrounding districts, inhabited by the Ital- 
ian tribes. It appears to have been applied 
chiefly to the cities on the Tarentine Gulf Tji i 
entum, Sybaris, Croton. Caulonia, Siris (Hern 
clea,) Metapontum, Locri, and Rhegium ; bat 
it also included the Greek cities on the western 
coast, such as Cumse and iSfoapolis. Strabo ex- 
tends the appellation even to the Greek cities 
of Sicily. — The origin of the name is doubtful : 
whether it was given to the Greek cities by tfre 
Italian tribes from their admiring the magnifi- 



GRAMPIUS MONS. 



GREGORIUS 



cence of these cities, or whether it was assumed 
by the inhabitants themselves out of vanity and 
ostentation, to show their superiority to the 
mother country. 

GrampIls Moxs (Grampian Hills), a range of 
mountains in Britannia Barbara or Caledonia, 
separating the Highlands and Lowlands of Scot- 
land. Agrioola penetrated as far as these moun- 
tains, and defeated Galgacus at their foot. 

GranIcls (TpuvtKog : now Koja-Ckai), a river 
of Mysia Minor, rising in Mount Cotylus, the 
northern summit of Ida, flowing northeast 
through the plain of Adrastea, and falling into 
the Propontis (now Sea of Marmara) east of 
Priapus: memorable as the scene of the first 
of the three great victories by which Alexander 
the Great overthrew the Persian empire (B.C. 
334), and, in a less degree, for a victory gained 
upon its banks bv Lucullus over Mithradates, 
B.C. 78. 

Grams (Tpdiu : now Khisht), a river of Per- 
ns, with a royal palace on its banks. It fell into 
the Persian Gulf near Taoce. 

Granius, a clerk employed by the auction- 
eers at Rome to collect the money at sales, lived 
about B.C. 110. Although his occupation was 
humble, his wit and caustic humor rendered him 
famous among his contemporaries, and have trans- 
mitted his name to posterity. 

Grantja (Tpavova : now Graan), a river in the 
land of the Quadi and the southeast of Germany, 
and a tributary of the Danube, on the banks of 
which Marcus Aurelius wrote the first book of 
his Meditations. 

GratLe. Vid. Charites. 

Gratianopolis. Vid. Cularo. 

Gratianus. 1. Emperor of the Western Em- 
pire, A.D. 361-383, 6on of Valentinian L, was 
raised by his father to the rank of Augustus in 
367, when he was only eight years old. On the 
death of Valentiuian in 375, Gratian did not suc- 
ceed to the sole sovereignty, as Valentinian II., 
the half-brother of Augustus, was proclaimed 
Augustus by the troops. By the death of his 
uncle, Valens (378), the Eastern empire devolved 
upon him ; but the danger to which the East 
was exposed from the Goths led Gratian to send 
for Theodosius, and appoint him emperor of the 
East (379). Gratian was fond of quiet and re- 
pose, and was greatly under the influence of ec- 
clesiastics, especially of Ambrose of Milan. He 
became unpopular with the army. Maximus 
was declared emperor in Britain, and crossed 
over to Gaul, where he defeated Gratian, who 
was overtaken and slain in his flight after the 
battle. — 2. A usurper, who assumed the purple 
in Britain, and ww murdered by his troops about 
four months after his elevation (407). He was 
succeeded bv Constantiue. Vid, Co\st\xtinus 
No. 3. 

Gratiarum Colli* (Xapiruv ?.6ooc, Herod., iv., 
175 : now Hills of Tarhounah),a range of wooded 
hills running parallel to the coast of Northern 
Africa, between the Syrtes, and containing the 
source of the Cinyps and the other small rivers 
of that coast. 

Gratius Flint a Vtd. Faliscus. 

Gratus, Valerius, procurator of Juda;a from 
A.D. 15 to 27, and the immediate predecessor of 
Pontius Pilate. 

Gravisc.*. an ancient city of Etruria, subject 



to Tarquiuii, was colonized by the Romans B.C 
183, and received new colonists under Augustus 
It was situated in the Maremma, and its air was 
unhealthy (intempestee Graviscce, Virg., uEn., x^ 
184); whence the ancients ridiculously derived 
its name from acr gravis. Its ruins are on the 
right bank of the River Marta, about two miles 
from the sea, where are the remains of a magni- 
ficent arch. 

Gregoras, Nicephorus, one of the most im- 
portant Byzantine historians, was born about 
A.D. 1295, and died about 1359. His principal 
work is entitled Historia Byzantina. It is in 
thirty-eight books, of which only twenty-four 
have been printed. It begins with the capture 
of Constantinople by the Latins in 1204, and 
goes down to 1359 ; the twenty-four printed 
books contain the period from 1204 to 1351 
Edited by Schopen, Bonn, 1829. 

Gregorius (Yp-nyopio^). 1. Surnamed Nazi- 
anzexus, and usually called Gregory Naziax- 
zex, was born in a village near Nazianzus, in 
Cappadocia, about A.D. 829. His father took 
the greatest pains with his education, and he 
afterward prosecuted his studies at Athens, 
where he earned the greatest reputation for his 
knowledge of rhetoric, philosophy, and mathe- 
matics. Among his fellow-students was Julian, 
the future emperor, and Basil, with the latter of 
whom he formed a most intimate friendship. 
Gregory appears to have remained at Athens 
about six years (850-356), and then returned 
home. Having received ordination, he contin- 
ued to reside at Nazianzus, where he dischargect 
his duties as a presbyter, and assisted his aged 
father, who was bishop of the town. In 372 he 
was associated with his father in the bishopric • 
but after the death of the latter in 874, he re- 
fused to continue bishop of Nazianzus, as he 
was averse from public life, and fond of solitary 
meditation. After living some years in retire- 
ment he was summoned to Constantinople in- 
37 9, in order to defend the orthodox faith against 
the Arians and other heretics. In 380 he was 
made bishop of Constantinople by the Emperor 
Theodosius ; but he resigned the office in the 
following year (381), and withdrew altogether 
from public life. He lived in solitude at his 
paternal estate at Nazianzus, and there he died 
in 389 or 390. His extant works are, 1. Ora- 
tions or Sermons ; 2. Letters ; 3. Poems. His 
discourses, though sometimes really eloquent, 
are generally nothing more than favorable spe- 
cimens of the rhetoric of the schools. He is 
more earnest than Chrysostom, but not 60 orna- 
mental. He is more artificial but also more 
attractive than Basil. Edited by Morell, Paris, 
2 vols, fol., 1609-1611, reprinted 1630. Of the 
Benedictine edition, only the first volume, con- 
taining the discourses, was published, Paris, 
1778. — 2. Nyssenus, bishop of Nyssa in Cappa- 
docia, was the younger brother of Basil, and 
was born at Caesarea, in Cappadocia, about 331. 
He was made bishop of Nyssa about 372, and, 
like his brother Basil and their friend Gregory 
Nazianzen, was one of the pillars of orthodoxy. 
He died soon after 394. Like his brother, he 
was an eminent rhetorician, but his oratory often 
offends by its extravagance. His works arc* 
edited by Morell and Gretser, 2 vols, fol., Paris-, 
1615-1618. — 3. Surnamed Thaumaturgus, from 
33.5 



GRUDIL 



GYTHEUM. 



«his miracles, was born at Neocsesarea, in Cap- 
padocia, of heathen parents. He was converted 
to Christianity by Origen about 234, and subse- 
quently became the bishop of his native town. 
He died soon after 265. His works are not 
numerous. The best edition is the one pub- 
lished at Paris, 1622. 

Grudii, a people in Gallia Belgica, subject to 
the Nervii, north of the Scheldt. 

Grumentum (Grumentlnus : now II Palazzo,) 
j& town in the interior of Lucania, on the road 
from Beneventum to Heraclea, frequently men- 
tioned in the second Punic war. 

Gryllus (TpvXloc), elder son of Xenophon, 
fell at the battle of Mantinea, B.C. 362, after he 
had, according to some accounts, given Epami- 
uoudas his mortal wound. 

[Gryneus. 1. A Centaur, who slew Broteas 
and Oreon, and was himself slain by Exadius at 
the nuptials of Pirithous. — 2. Appellation of 
Apollo. Vid. GrtnIa.] 

GrynIa or -ium (Tpvveia, Tpvviov), a very an- 
cient fortified city on the coast of the Sinus 
Elaitieus, in the south of Mysia, between Elsea 
and Myrina, seventy stadia from the former and 
forty frozn the latter : celebrated for its temple 
and oracle of Apollo, who is hence called Gry- 
nasus Apollo (Virg., JEn. y iv., 345). It possess- 
ed also a good harbor. Parmenion, the general 
of Alexander, destroyed the city and sold the 
inhabitants as slaves. It was never again re- 
stored. 

Gryps or Gryphus (Tpvij>), a griffin, a fabu- 
lous animal, dwelling in the Rhipaean Mountains, 
between the Hyperboreans and the one-eyed 
Arimaspians, and guarding the gold of the north. 
The Arimaspians mounted on horseback, and 
attempted to steal the gold, and hence arose the 
hostility between the horse and the griffin. 
The body of the griffin was that of a lion, while 
the head and wings were those of an eagle. It 
is probable that the origin of the belief in griffins 
must be looked for in the East, where it seems 
to have been very ancient. They are also men- 
tioned among the fabulous animals which guard- 
ed the gold of India. 

Gugeb.ni or Guberni, a people of Germany, 
probably of the same race as the Sygambri, 
crossed the Rhine, and settled on its left bank, 
between the Ubii and Batavi. 

Gulussa, a Numidian, second son of Masinis- 
ea, and brother to Micipsa and Mastanabal. On 
the death of Masinissa in B.C. 149, he succeed- 
ed, along with his brothers, to the dominions of 
their father. He left a son named Massiva. 

[Guneus (Tovvevc), one of the Greek leaders 
■before Troy, who commanded the Perrhsebians 
from Thessaly.] 

Guneus (Tovpaloc. Tafipoiac), a river of In- 
dia, flowing through the country of the Gursei 
(in the northwest of the Punjab) into the 
Cophen, 

GuTTONEfe. Vid, Goxnr. 

Gyarus or Gyara {rj Tvapog, ra Tvapa : Tva- 
pevg : now Chiura or Jura), one of the Cyclades, 
a small island southwest of Andros, poor and 
unproductive, and inhabited only by fishermen. 
Under the Roman emperors it was a place of 
banishment (Aude aliquid brevibus Gyaris et car- 
•cere dignum, Juv., i., 73). 

[:Gyas. 1. A Trojan, companion of JEneas. 
336 



distinguished himself at the funeral games cel- 
ebrated in honor of Auchises. — 2. A Rutulian 
son of Melampus, slain by JSneas in Italy.] 

Gyes or Gyges (Tvng, Tvyng), son of Uranus 
(Heaven) and Ge (Earth), one of the giants with 
one hundred hands, who made war upon the 
gods. 

Gyg^eus Lacus {fj Tvyatrj Xifivn : now Lake of 
Marmora), a small lake in Lydia, between the 
rivers Hermus and Hyllus, north of Sardis, the 
necropolis of which city was on its banks. It 
was afterward called Coloe. 

Gyges (Tvync). 1. The first king of Lydia of 
the dynasty of the Mermnadee, dethroned Can- 
daules, and succeeded to the kingdom, as re- 
lated under Candaules. He reigned B.C. 716- 
678. He sent magnificent presents to Delphi, 
and carried on various wars with the cities of 
Asia Minor, such as Miletus, Smyrna, Colophon, 
and Magnesia. " The riches of Gyges" became 
a proverb. — [2. A companion of ^Eneas, slain by 
Turnus in Italy.] 

Gylippus (Tv'Mttttoc), a Spartan, son of Clean- 
dridas, was sent as the Spartan commander to 
Syracuse, to oppose the Athenians, B.C. 414. 
Under his command the Syracusans annihilated 
the great Athenian armament, and took Demos- 
thenes and Nicias prisoners, 413. In 404 he 
was commissioned by Lysander, after the cap- 
ture of Athens, to carry home the treasure ; but, 
by opening the seams of the sacks underneath, 
he abstracted a considerable portion. The theft 
was discovered, and Gylippus went at once into 
exile. The syllable Tv?„- in the name of Gylip- 
pus is probably identical with the Latin Gilvm. 

GymnesLe. Vid. Baleares. 

Gynjecopolis (TvvaiKonoXir, or VwatKuv tto- 
/Uf), a city in the Delta of Egypt, on the western 
bank of the Canopic branch of the Nile, between 
Hermopolis and Momemphis. It was the cap- 
ital of the Nomos Gynaecopolites. 

Gyndes (Tvvdrjg), a river of Assyria, rising in 
the country of the Matieni (in the mountains of 
Kurdistan), and flowing into the Tigris, cele- 
brated through the story that Cyrus the Great 
drew off its waters by three hundred and sixty 
channels. (Herod., i., 189). It is very difficult 
to identify this river : perhaps it is the same as 
the Delas or Silla (now Diala), which falls into 
the Tigris just above Ctesiphon and Seleucia. 
It is also doubtful whether the Sindes or Taci- 
tus {Ann., xi., 10) is the same river. 

[Gyr^e (Tvpal ire-pat), certain rocks in the 
Icarian Sea, or, as others suppose, in the Mgp- 
an. mentioned in the Odyssey.] 

Gyrton, Gyrtona (Tvpruv, Tvpr6v7j : Tvpru- 
vioc : ruins near 2htari), an ancient town in 
Pelasgiotis in Thessaly, on the Peneus. 

Gytheum, Gythium (to Tvdetov, Tvdiov : IV 
Oedrvg : now Palceopolis near Marathonisi), an 
ancient town on the coast of Laconia, founded 
by the Achasans, lay near the head of the Laco- 
nian Bay, southwest of the mouth of the River 
Eurotas. It served as the harbor of Sparta, and 
was important in a military point of view. In 
the Persian war the Lacedaemonian fleet was 
stationed at Gytheum, and here the Athenians 
under Tolmides burned the Lacedaemonian arse- 
nal, B.C. 455. After the battle of Leuctra (370) 
it was taken by Eparninondas. In 195 it was 
taken by Flamininus, and made independent of 



GYZANTES. 

Nabis, tyrant of Sparta, whereupon it joined the 
Achaean league. 

Gyzantes (riJfavrpf ), a people in the western 
part of Libya (Northern Africa), whose countiy 
was rich in houey and wax. They seem to have 
dwelt in Byzacium. 

H. 

Hades or Pluto ('Aidrjc, Uaovtov, or poeti- 
cally 'Aidm; 'Aituvevc, TlZovrevc) the God of the 
Nether World. Plato observes that people 
preferred calling him Pluto (the giver of wealth) 
to pronouncing the dreaded Dame of Hades or 
Aides. Hence we find that in ordinary life 
and in the mysteries the name Pluto became 
generally established, while the poets preferred 
the ancient name Aides or the form Pluteus. 
The Roman poets use the names Dis, Orcus, 
and Tartarus, as synonymous with Pluto, for 
the god of the Nether World. Hades was son 
of Saturn (Cronus) and Rhea, and brother of Ju- 
piter (Zeus) and Neptune (Poseidon). His wife 
was Persephone or Proserpina, the daughter of 
Ceres (Demeter), whom he carried off from the 
upper world, as is related elsewhere. Vid. p. 
248, a. In the division of the world among 
the three brothers, Hades (Pluto) obtained the 
I Nether World, the abode of the shades, over 
( which he ruled. Hence he is called the infer- 
: nal Jupiter (Zeus) (Zn)f Karaxdovtog), or the 
king of the shades (avaE kvepav). He possessed 
| a helmet which rendered the wearer invisible, 
and later traditions stated that this helmet was 
given him as a present by the Cyclopes after 
their delivery from Tartarus. Ancient story 
mentions both gods and men who were hon- 
ored by Hades (Pluto) with the temporary use 
of this helmet. His character is described as 
i fierce and inexorable, whence of all the gods 
I he was most hated by mortals. He kept the 
gates of the lower world closed (and is there- 
| fore called TLv'/Mprrjc), that no shades might be 
able to escape or return to the region of light. 
When mortals invoked him, they struck the 
earth with their hands; the sacrifices which 
were offered to him and Persephone (Proser- 
pina) consisted of black sheep ; and the person 
! who offered the sacrifice had to turn away his 
face. The ensign of his power was a staff, with 
which, like Hermes (Mercury), he drove the 
shades into the lower world. There he sat 
» upon a throne with his consort Persephone (Pro- 
serpina). Like the other gods, he was not a 
faithful husband; the Furies are called his 
daughters ; the nymph Mintho, whom he loved, 
was metamorphosed by Persephone (Proser- 
pina) into a plant called mint ; and the nymph 
Leuce, with whom he was likewise in love, was 
changed by him after her death into a white 
poplar, and transferred to Elysium. Being the 
king of the lower world, Pluto is the giver of 
all the blessings that come from the earth: he 
is the possessor and giver of all the metals con- 
tained in the earth, and hence his name Pluto. 
He bears several surnames referring to his ul- 
timately assembling all mortals in his kingdom, 
and bringing them to rest and peace ; such as 
Polydegmon, Polydectes, Clymenus, <fcc. He was 
worshipped throughout Greece and Italy. We 
possess few representations of this divinity, but 
22 



HADRIANUS. 

in those which still exist, he resembles his brother 
Jupiter (Zeus) and Neptune (Poseidon), except 
that his hair falls down his forehead, and that his 
appearance is dark and gloomy. His ordinary 
attributes are the key of Hades and Cerberus. 
In Homer Aides is invariably the name of the 
god ; but in later times it was transferred to his 
house, his abode or kingdom, so that it became a 
name for the nether world. 

Hadranum. Vid. Adranum. 

Hadria. Vid. Adria. 

Hadrian opolis ( kSpiavoTcolis : 'A6pcavo?roM- 
7//c : now Adrianople), a town in Thrace, on the 
right bank of the Hebrus, in an extensive plain, 
founded by the Emperor Hadrian. It was strong- 
ly fortified ; possessed an extensive commerce ; 
and in the Middle Ages was the most important 
town in the country after Constantinople. 

Hadrianothera or -je ('AdpLavovd?/pa), a city 
in Mysia, between Pergamus and Miletopolis, 
founded by the Emperor Hadrian. 

Hadrianus, P. JElius, usually called Hadri- 
an, Roman emperor A.D. 117-138, was born at 
Rome, A.D. 76. He lost his father at the age 
of ten, and was brought up by his kinsman Ulpi- 
us Trajanus (afterward emperor) and by Ceelius 
Attianus. From an early age he studied with 
zeal the Greek language and literature. At 
the age of fifteen he went to Spain, where he 
entered upon his military career; and he sub- 
sequently served as military tribune in Lower 
Mcesia. After the elevation of Trajan to the 
throne (98), he married Julia Sabina, a grand- 
daughter of Trajan's sister Marciana. This 
marriage was brought about through the influ- 
ence of Plotina, the wife of Trajan ; and from 
this time Hadrian rose rapidly in the emper- 
or's favor. He was raised successively to the 
quaestorship (101), proetorship (107), and consul- 
ship (109). He accompanied Trajan in most 
of his expeditions, and distinguished himself 
in the second war against the Dacians, 104- 
106 ; was made governor of Pannonia in 108 ; 
and subsequently fought under Trajan against 
the Parthians. When Trajan's serious illness 
obliged him to leave the East, he placed Ha- 
drian at the head of the army. Trajan died at 
Cilicia on his journey to Rome (117). Hadrian, 
who pretended that he had been adopted by 
Trajan, was proclaimed emperor by the legions 
in Syria, and the senate ratified the election. 
Hadrian's first care was to make peace with the 
Parthians, which he obtained by relinquishing 
the conquests of Trajan east of the Euphrates. 
He returned to Rome in 118; but almost im- 
mediately afterward set out for Moesia, in con- 
sequence of the invasion of this province by the 
Sarmatians. After making peace with the Sar- 
matians, and suppressing a formidable conspir- 
acy which had been formed against his life by 
some of the most distinguished Roman nobles, 
all of whom he put to death, he returned to 
Rome in the course of the same year. He 
sought to gain the good will of the senate by 
gladiatorial exhibitions and liberal largesses, 
and he also cancelled all arrears of taxes due 
to the state for the last fifteen years. The re- 
mainder of Hadrian's reign was disturbed by 
few wars. He spent the greater part of his 
reign in travelling through the various provinces 
of the empire, in order that he might inspect 
337 



HADRIAXl'S. 



HALES. 



personally the state of affairs in the provinces, in verse, all of which are lost, with the exception 
and apply the necessary remedies wherever j of a few epigrams in the Greek and Latin An- 
mismanagement was discovered. He com- thclogies. 

menced these travels in 119. visiting first Gaul, Hadriants. the rhetoiician. Yld. Adriants. 
Germany, and Britain, in the latter of which Hadrume toi or Adrumetcm ('Adpi/nij : now 
countries he caused a wall to be built from the Hammeim), a flourishing city founded by the 
Solway to the mouth of the River Tyne. He Phoenicians in northern Africa, on the eastern 
afterward visited Spain, Africa, and the East, coast of Byzacena, of which district it was the 
and took up his residence at Athens for three capital under the Romans. Trajan made it a 
years (123-126). Athens was his favorite city, colony; and it was afterward called Justinian- 
and he conferred upon its inhabitants many opolis. 

privileges. The most important war during his [H^edllia (Moxs), a mountain of Italy, near 
reign was that against the Jews, which broke Horace's Sabine farm, infested by wolves, [H» 
out in 131. The Jews had revolted in conse- dilice lupos, Hor., Carm., L, 17, 9.)] 
quence of the establishment of a colony, under Hemon (Al/twv). 1. Son of Pelasgus and 
the name of ^Elia Capitolina, on the site of Je- father of Thessalus, from whom the ancient 
rusalem, and of their having been forbidden to name of Thessaly, H.emoxia or JEmoxia, was 
practice the rite of circumcision. The war was believed to be derived. The Roman poets fre- 
carried on by the Jews as a national struggle ; quently use the adjective H&monius as equiva- 
with the most desperate fury, and was not lent to Thessalian. — 2. Son of Lycaon, and the 
brought to an end till 136, after the country had reputed founder of Haemonia in Arcadia. — S. 
been nearly reduced to a wilderness. During • Son of Creon of Thebes, was destroyed, aceord- 
the last few years of Hadrian's life, his health ing to some accounts, by the sphinx ; but, accord- 
failed. He became suspicious and cruel, and ing to other traditions, he was in love with 
put to death several persons of distinction. As Antigone, and killed himself on hearing that she 
he had no children, he adopted L. .iElius Verus, • was condemned by his father to be entombed 
and gave him the title of Caesar in 136. Verus alive. 

died on the first of January, 138, whereupon ; ELkmqkia (Xiuorca). Vid. Hjsiox, No. 1. 
Hadrian adopted Antoninus, afterward sur- \ HLemts (A/uoc), son of Boreas and Orithyia. 
named Pius, and conferred upon him likewise husband of Rhodope, and father of Hebrus. As- 
% the title of Caesar. In July in the same year, he and his wife presumed to assume the names 
Hadrian himself died, in his sixty-second year, of Jupiter (Zeus) and Juno (Hera), both were 
and was succeeded by Antoxenxs. The reign metamorphosed into mountains, 
of Hadrian may be regarded as one of the hap- i ELsmts (6 Al/zoc, to Aijiuv : now Balkan), a 
piest periods in Roman history. His policy was lofty range of mountains, separating Thrace and 
to preserve peace with foreign nations, and not 1 Moesia, extended from Mount Scomius, or, accord- 
to extend the boundaries of the empire, but to ing to Herodotus, from Mount Rhodope on the 
secure the old provinces, and promote their wel- west to the Black Sea on the east. The name is 
fare. He paid particular attention to the ad- probably connected with the Sanscrit hi mo 
ministration of justice in the provinces as well (whence comes the word Himalaya), the Greek 
as in Italy. His reign forms an epoch in the %ztpxjn>, and the Latin hiems ; and the mountains 
history of Roman jurisprudence. It was at were so called on account of their cold and snowy 
Hadrian's command that the jurist Silvius Ju- climate. The height of these mountains was 
lianu3 drew up the edictum perpetuum, which greatly exaggerated by the ancients: the mean 
formed a fixed code of laws. Some of the laws height does not exceed three thousand or four 
promulgated by Hadrian are of a truly humane . thousand feet above the sea. There are several 
character, and aimed at improving the public passes over them ; but the one most used in an- 
morality of the time. The various cities which tiquity was in the western part of the range, 
he visited received marks of his favor or liber- called a Succi " or " Succorum angustiae," also 
ality; in many places he built aqueducts, and "Porta Trajani'' (now Ssula Derbend), between 
in others harbors or other public buildings, Philippopolis and Serdica. The later province 
either for use or ornament. But what has ren- of " Haemimontus " in Thrace derived its name 
dered his name more illustrious than any thing from this mountain. 

else are the numerous and magnificent architect- Hagxus ('AjTofc, -ovvrog ■ 'X^-vovciog : near 
ural works which he planned and commenced Markopulo), a demus in Atlica. west of P«eania, 
during his travels, especially at Athens, in the belonging to the tribe Acamantis. 
southwestern part of which he built an entirely Halje ('X/.ai, 'X/.ai, 'A/at : 'AAam'c). 1. H. 
new city, Adrianopolis. We can not here enter Araphexides ('Apapyjvldeg), a demus in Attica, 
into an account of the numerous buildings he belonging to the tribe J2geis, was situated on the 
erected ; it is sufficient to direct attention to his eastern coast of Attica, and served as the harbor 
villa at Tibur, which has been a real mine of of Brauron : it possessed a temple of Diana (Arte- 
treasures of art, and his mausoleum at Rome, mis). — 2. H. jExoxides (Ai^tovldeg), a demus in 
which forms the groundwork of the present Attica, belonging to the tribe Cecropis, situated 
Castle of St. Angelo. Hadrian was a patron of on the western coast. — 3. A town, formerly of 
learning and literature as well as of the arts, the Opuntii Locri, afterward of Bceotia, situated 
and he cultivated the society of poets, scholars, on the Opuntian Gulf, 
rhetoricians, and philosophers. He founded at [Halcyoxe. Vid Alcyone.] 
Rome a scientific institution under the name of Hales ( A?.7;r). 1. A river of Ionia in Asia 
Athenaeum, which continued to flourish for a Minor, near Colophon, celebrated for the cold 
long time after him. He was himself an author, I ness of its water. — 2. A river in the island of 
and wrote numerous works, both in prose and Cos. 
338 



HALESA, 



HALONESUS. 



Halesa ("AUiaa : Halesiuus! now Torre di 
Pittineo), a town on the northern coast of Sicily, 
on the River Halesus (now Pittineo), was founded 
by the Greek mercenaries of Archomdes, a chief 
of the Siculi, and was originally called Archom- 
dion. It became a place of considerable import- 
ance, and was in later times a municipium, ex- 
empt from taxes. 

Halesus, a chief of the Auruncans and Oscans, 
the son of a soothsayer, and an ally of Turnus, 
was slain by Pallas. He came to Italy from Ar- 
gos in Greece, whence he is called Agamminonius, 
Atrides, or A rgolicus. He is said to have founded 
the town of Falerii. 

Halex. Vid. Alf.x. 

Haliacmon ('AAuucfiuv : now Vistriza Jndje- 
kara), an important river in Macedonia, rises in 
the Tympha?an Mountains, flows first southeast 
through Elimaea, then northeast, forming the 
boundary between Eordaea and Pieria, and falls 
into the Thermaic Gulf in Bottiseis. Caesar (B. 
(J. hi., 36) incorrectly makes it the boundary be- 
tween Macedonia and Thessaly. 

Haliartus {'A/uaproc : 'A?Adprwr : now Mo.zi), 
an ancient town in Boeotia, on the south of the 
Lake Copais. It was destroyed by Xerxes in 
his invasion of Greece (B.C. 480), but was rebuilt, 
and appears as an important place in the Pelo- 
ponnesian war. Under its walls Lysander lost 
his life (895). It was destroyed by the Romans 
(171), because it supported Perseus, king of 
Macedonia, and its territory was given to the 
Athenians. 

Halias CA/uuc : 'A/uevr : now Haliza), a dis- 
trict on the coast of Argolis, between Asiue and 
Hermione, so called because fishing was the chief 
occupation of its inhabitants. Their town was 
called HalLe (A'/.uu) or HalLes (A?uelg). 

Halicarnassus ( A/ inapvacaoc, Ion. 'A/.map- 
vfjcaoc : 'A/.iKapvavceur, Halicarnassensis, Hali- 
carnassius : ruins at Bvdrwn), a celebrated city 
of Asia Minor, stood in the southwestern part of 
Caria, on the northern coast of the Sinus Cer- 
amieus, opposite to the island of Cos. It was 
said to have been founded by Dorians from 
Trcezene, and was at first called Zephyra. It 
was one of the six cities that originally formed 
the Dorian Hexapolis, but it was early excluded 
from the confederacy, as a punishment for the 
violation, by one of it3 citizens, of a law con- 
nected with the common worship of the Tri- 
opian Apollo. (Herod., i., 144.) With the rest 
of the coast of Asia Minor, it fell under the do- 
minion of the Persians, at an early period of 
whose rule Lygdamis made himself tyrant of 
the city, aud fouuded a dynasty which lasted 
for some generations. His daughter Artemi- 
sia assisted Xerxes in his expedition against 
Greece. Vid. Annuel A, No. 1. Her grandson, 
Lygdamis, was overthrown by a revolution, in 
Avhich Herodotus is said to have takeu part. 
Vid. Herodotus. In the Pcloponnesian war, we 
find Halicarnassus. with the other Dorian cities 
of Caria, on the side of the Athenians ; but we 
do not know what was its form of government, 
until the re-establishment, by Hecatomxus, of a 
dynasty ruling over all Caria, with its capital 
first at Mylasa, and afterward at Halicarnassus, 
and virtually independent of Persia; before 
B.C. 380. It seems not unlikely that both this 
aDd the older dynasty of tyrants of Halicarnas- 



sus were a race of native Carian princes, whose 
ascendency at Halicarnassus may be accounted 
for by the prevalence of the Carian element in 
its population at an early period. Hecatomnus 
left three sons and two daughters, who all suc- 
ceeded to his throne in the following order : Mau- 
solus, Artemisia, Idrieus, Ada, Pixodarus, and 
Ada again. In B.C. 334, Alexauder took the city, 
after an obstinate defence by the Persian general 
Memnon, and destroyed it. From this blow it 
never recovered, although it continued to be cel- 
ebrated for the Mausoleum, a magnificent edifice 
which Artemisia II. built as a tomb for Mauso- 
lus, and which was adorned with the works of 
the most eminent Greek sculptors of the age, 
Fragments of these sculptures, which were dis- 
covered built into the walls of the citadel of 
Bud-rum, are now in the British Museum. With 
the rest of Caria, Halicarnassus was assigned by 
the Romans, after their victory over Antiochus 
the Great, to the government of Rhodes, and was 
afterward united to the province of Asia, The 
city was very strongly fortified, and had a fine 
harbor, which was protected by the island of Ar- 
connesus: its citadel was called Salmacis (2a?„- 
ytza/ac), from the name of a spring which rose from 
the hill on which it stood. Halicarnassus was 
the birth-place of the historians Herodotus and 
Dioysius. 

Halicyj; ('A/unvat : Halicyensis : now Sal- 
cmi ?), a town in the northwest of Sicily, between 
Eutella aud Lilybaaum, was long in the possession 
of the Carthaginians, and in Cicero's time was a 
municipium, exempt from taxes. 

Halimus ('A?ufj.ov^, -ovvroc : r A/U ( tfou<7£Oc) a de- 
mus of Attica, belonging to the tribe Leontis, on 
the western coast, a little south of Athens. 

Halipedon VA/.l~£6ov), a plain near the Pi- 
raeus, probably between the Piraeus and the 
Academy. 

Halirrhothius (A/ufifjodioc), son of Neptune 
(Poseidon) and Euryte, attempted to violate 
Alcippe, daughter of Mars (Ares) and Agraulos, 
but was slain by Mars (Ares). Mars (Ares) 
was brought to trial by Neptune (Poseidon) for 
this murder, on the hill at Athens, which was 
hence called Areopagus, or the Hill of Ares 
(Mars.) 

[Halitherses (' ' A?u6tpai]c). 1. A son of Mas- 
tor of Ithaca, celebrated as a hero and diviner. — 
2. A son of Ancaeus and Samia, the daughter of 
the River Maeander.] 

[Halius (' A'/uoc), second son of Alcinous, dis- 
tinguished himself in dancing, as described in the 
eighth book of the Odyssey.] 

Haxiusa ('A?uovca ? now Karavi), an island in 
the Argolic Gulf. 

Hallzones ('A/.L^uvec and -oi), a people of 
Bithynia, with a capital city Alybe ('A?Mi]), 
mentioned by Homer as allies of the Trojans. 

Halmydessus. Vid. Salmydessus. 

Halmyris ('A?*uvpic, sc. lUfivrf), a bay of the 
sea in Mcesia, formed by the southern mouth of 
the Danube, with a town of the same name upon 
it. 

Halonesus ( 'A/.6vr]coc, ' A/Mvvqcog : 'A'Aovt r 
clo£, 'A/ ovijuir?]^ : now Khiliodromia), an island 
of the JEgean Sea, off the coast of Thessaly, and 
east of Sciathos and Peparethos, with a town of 
the same name upon it The possession of this 
inland occasioned great disputes between Philip 
339 



HALOSYDXE. 



HAMILCAR. 



&ad the Athenians : there is a speech on this 
subject among the extant orations of Demos- 
thenes, but it -was probably written by Hege- 
gippus. 

Halosydxe ('AAoavSvr]), " the Sea-born,'' a sur- 
name of Amphitrite and Thetis . 
Haluntium. Vid. Aluntcum. 
Halus. Vid. Alus. 

Halycus ("A?,vKog : now Platani), a river in 
the south of Sicily, which flows into the sea near 
Heraclea Minoa. 

Halts ("A/ttr : now Kizil-Irmal', i. e., the lied 
River), the greatest river of Asia Minor, rises in 
that part of the Anti-Taurus range called Parya- 
dres, on the borders of Armenia Minor and Pon- 
tus, and, after flowing west by south through 
Oappadoeia, turns to the north and flows through 
Oalatia to the borders of Paphlagonia, where it 
take3 a northeastern direction, dividing Paphla- 
gonia from Pontus, and at last falls into the 
Euxine (now Black Sea) between Sinope and 
Amisus. In early times it was a most important 
boundary, ethnographical as well as political. 
It divided the Indo-European races which peo- 
pled the western part of Asia Minor from the 
Semitic (Syro- Arabian) races of the rest of south- 
western Asia, and it separated the Lydian empire 
from the Medo-Persian, until, by marching over 
it to meet Cyrus, Croesus began the contest which 
at once ended in the overthrow of the former 
and the extension of the latter to the JEgean 
Sea. 

Hamadryades. Vid. jSi ympile. 

Hamaxitus ('A/j-aZtroc), a small town on the 
coast of the Troad, near the Promontory Lec- 
tum ; said to have been the first settlement of 
the Teucrian immigrants from Crete. The sur- 
rounding district was called ' A/iai-iTta. Lysi- 
machus removed the inhabitants to Alexandrea 
Troas. 

Hamaxobh ('AjialjoBioi), a people in European 
Sarmatia, in the neighborhood of the Palus Mao- 
ris, were a nomad race, as their name signifies. 

Hamilcar ('A/ufA/cag). The two last syllables 
of this name are the same as Melcarth, the tu- 
telary deity of the Tyrians, called by the Greeks 
Hercules, and the name probably signifies " the 
gift of Melcarth." 1. Son of Hanno, or Mago, 
commander of the great Carthaginian expedi- 
tion to Sicily, B.C. 480, which was defeated 
and almost destroyed by Gelon at Him era. Vid. 
Gelox. Hamilcar fell in the battle. — 2. Sur- 
named Rkodanus, was sent by the Carthagini- 
ans to Alexander after the fall of Tyre, B.C. 
332. On his return home he was put to death 
by the Carthaginians for having betrayed their 
interests. — 3. Carthaginian governor in Sicily at 
the time that Agathocles was rising into power. 
At^ first he supported the party at Syracuse, 
which had driven Agathocles into exile, but he 
afterward espoused the cause of Agathocles, 
who was thus enabled to make himself master 
of Syracuse, 817.— 4. Son of Gisco, succeeded 
the preceding as Carthaginian commander in 
Sicily, 311. He carried on war against Agath- 
ocles, whom he defeated with great slaughter, 
and then obtained possession of the greater 
part of Sicily ; but he was taken prisoner while 
besieging Syracuse, and was put to death by 
Agathocles. — 5. A Carthaginian general in the 
<Srst Punic war, must be carefullv distinguished 
340 



from the great Hamilcar Barca [No. 6.] In 
the third year of the war (262) he succeeded 
Hanno in the command in Sicily, and carried 
on the operations by land with success. He 
made himself master of Enna and Camarina, 
and fortified Drepanum. In 257 he commanded 
the Carthaginian fleet on the northern coast of 
Sicily, and fought a naval action with the Ro- 
man consul C. Atilius Regulus. In the follow- 
ing year (256), he and Hanno commanded the 
great Carthaginian fleet, which was defeated 
by the two consuls M. Atibus Regulus and L. 
Manlius Vulso, off Ecnomus, on the southern 
coast of Sicily. He was afterward one of the 
commanders of the land forces in Africa op- 
posed to Regulus. — 6. Surnamed Barca, an 
epithet supposed to be related to the Hebrew 
Barak, and to signify " lightning." It was 
merely a personal appellation, and is not to be 
regarded as a family name, though, from the 
great distinction that he obtained, we often find 
the name of Barcine applied either to his family 
j or his party in the state. He was appointed to 
the command of the Carthaginian forces in Sic- 
ily in the eighteenth year of the first Punic 
war, 247. At this time the Romans were 
masters of the whole of Sicily, with the excep- 
tion of Drepanum and Lilybseum, both of which 
were blockaded by them on the land side. 
Hamilcar established himself, with his whole 
army, on a mountain named Hercte (now Monte 
Pellegrino), in the midst of the enemy's country, 
and in the immediate neighborhood of Panor- 
mus, one of their most important cities. Here 
| he succeeded in maintaining his ground, to the 
I astonishment alike of friends and foes, for 
J nearly three years. In 244 he abruptly quitted 
j Hercte, and took up a still stronger position on 
I Mount Eryx, after seizing the town of that 
j name. Here he also maintained himself, in 
I spite of all the efforts of the Romans to dislodge 
j him. After the great naval defeat of the Car- 
i thaginians by Lutatius Catulus (241), Hamilcar, 
' who was still at Eryx, was intrusted by the 
| Carthaginian government with the conclusion 
I of the peace with the Romans. On his return 
; home, he had to carry on war in Africa with 
j the Carthaginian mei'cenaries, whom he sue- 
| ceeded in subduing after an arduous struggle 
of three years (240-238). Hamilcar now form- 
ed the project of establishing in Spain a new 
empire, which should not only be a source of 
strength and wealth to Carthage, but should be 
the point from whence he might at a subse- 
quent period renew hostilities against Rome. 
He crossed over into Spain soon after the term- 
ination of the war with the mercenaries ; but 
we know nothing of his operations in the coun- 
try, save that he obtained possession of a con- 
siderable portion of Spain, partly by force of 
arms, and partly by negotiation. After remain- 
ing in Spain nearly nine years, he fell in battle 
(229) against the Vettones. He was succeeded 
in the command by his son-in-law Hasdrubal. 
He left three sons, the celebrated Hannibal 
Hasdrubal, and Mago. — 7. Son of Gisco, Car- 
thaginian governor of Melite (now Malta), 
which surrendered to the Romans, 218. — 8 
Son of Bomilcar, one of the generals in Spain, 
215, with Hasdrubal and Mago, the two sons 
of Barca. The three generals were defeated 



HANNIBAL. 



HANNIBAL. 



by the two Scipios while besieging Ilhturgi.— 9. 
A Carthaginian, who excited a general revolt of 
the Gauls in Upper Italy about 200, and took 
the Roman colony of Placentia. On the defeat 
of the Gauls by the consul Cethegus in 197, he 
was taken prisoner. . 

Hannibal ('kvvc6a^. The name signifies 
"the grace or favor of Baal f the final syllable 
bal, of such common occurrence in Punic names, 
always having reference to this tutelary deity 
of the Phoenicians. 1. Son of Gisco, and grand- 
son of Hamilcar [No. lj. In 409 he was sent 
to Sicily, at the head of a Carthaginian army, 
to assist the Segestans against the Selinuntmes. 
He took Selinus, and subsequently Himera also. 
In 406 be again commanded a Carthaginian 
army in Sicily along with Himilco, but died of a 
pestilence while besiegiug Agrigentum.— 2. Son 
of Gisco, was the Carthaginian commander at 
Agrigentum when it was besieged by the 
Romans, 262. After standing a siege of seven 
months, he broke through the enemy's lines, 
leaving the town to its fate. After this he car- 
ried on the contest by sea, and for the next year 
or two ravaged the coast of Italy ; but in 260 
he was defeated by the consul Duilius. In 259 
he was sent to the defence of Sardinia. Here 
he was again unfortunate, and was seized by his 
own mutinous troops and put to death. — 3. Son 
of Hamilcar (perhaps Hamilcar, No. 5), suc- 
ceeded in carrying succors of men and provi- 
sions to Lilybaeum when it was besieged by the 
Romans, 250. — 1. A general in the war of the 
Carthaginians against the mercenaries (240-238), 
was taken prisoner by the insurgents, and cruci- 
fied.— 5. Son of Hamilcar Barca, and one of the 
most illustrious generals of antiquity, was born 
B.C. 247. He was only nine years old when his 
father took him with him into Spain, and it was 
on this occasion that Hamilcar made him swear 
upon the altar eternal hostility to Rome. Child 
as he then was, Hannibal never forgot his vow, 
and his whole life was one continual struggle 
against the power and domination of Rome. 
He was early trained in arms under the eye 
of his father, and was present with him in 
the battle in which Hamilcar perished (229). 
Though only eighteen years old at this time, 
he had already displayed so much courage and 
capacity for war, that he was intrusted by 
Haedrubal (the son-in-law and successor of Ham- 
ilcar) with the chief command of most of the 
military enterprises planned by that general. 
He secured to himself the devoted attachment 
of the army under his command ; and, accord- 
ingly, on the assassiuatiou of Hasdrubal (221), 
the soldiers unanimously proclaimed their youth 



which he took after a desperate resistance 
which lasted nearly eight months. Saguutum 
lay south of the Iberus, and was therefore not 
included under the protection of the treaty 
which had been made between Hasdrubal and 
the Romans ; but as it had concluded an alli- 
ance with the Romans, the latter regarded its 
attack as a violation of the treaty between the 
two nations. On the fall of Saguntum, the Ro- 
mans demanded the surrender of Hannibal •.. 
and when this demand was refused, war was 
declared, and thus began the long and arduous 
struggle called the second Punic war. In the 
spring of 218 Hannibal quitted his winter-quar- 
ters at New Carthage and commenced his march 
for Italy. He crossed the Pyrenees, and march- 
ed along the southern coast of Gaul. The Ro- 
mans sent the consul P. Scipio to oppose him in 
Gaul ; but when Scipio arrived in Gaul, he found 
that Hannibal had already reached the Rhone, 
and that it was impossible to overtake him. 
After Hannibal had crossed the Rhone, he con- 
tinued his march up the left bank of the river a3 
far as its confluence with the Isere. Here he 



and commenced his 
He probably crossed 



struck away to the right, 
passage across the Alps. 

the Alps by the pass of the Little St. Bernard, 
called in antiquity the Graian Alps. His army 
suffered much from the attacks of the Gaulish 
mountaineers, and from the natural difficulties 
of the road, which were enhanced by the late- 
ness of the season (the beginning of October, at 
which time the snows have already commenced 
in the high Alps). So heavy were his losses, 
that when he at length emerged from the valley 
of Aosta into the plains of the Po, he had with 
him no more than twenty thousand foot and six 
thousand horse. During Hannibal's march ovet 
the Alps, P. Scipio had sent on his own army 
into Spain, under the command of his brother 
Cneius, and had himself returned to Italy. He 
forthwith hastened into Cisalpine Gaul, took the 
command of the praetor's army, which he found 
there, and led it against Hannibal. In the first 
action, which took place near the Tieinus, the 
cavalry and light-armed troops of the two armies 
were alone engaged ; the Romans were com- 
pletely routed, and Scipio himself severely 
wounded. Scipio then crossed the Po and 
withdrew to the hills on the left bank of the 
Trebia, where he was soon after joined by the 
other consul, Ti. Sempronius Longus. Here a 
second and more decisive battle was fought. 
The Romans were completely defeated, with 
heavy loss, and the remains of their army took 
refuge within the walls of Placentia. This battle 
was fought toward the end of 218. Hannibal 



ful leader commander-in-chief, which the gov- j was now joined by all the Gaulish tribes, and ho 



ernment at Carthage forthwith ratified. Han 
uibal was at this time in the twenty-sixth 
year of his age. There can be no doubt that 
he already looked forward to the iuvasion and 
conquest of Italy as the goal of his ambition ; 
but it was necessary for him first to complete 
the work which had been so ably begun by his 
two predecessors, and to establish the Cartha- 
ginian power as firmly as possible in Spain. 
In two campaigns he subdued all the country- 
south of the Iberus, with the exception of the 
wealthy town of Saguntum. In the spring of 
219 he proceeded to lay siege to Saguntum, 



was able to take up his winter-quarters in se- 
curity. Early in 217 he descended by the val- 
ley of the Macra into the marshes on the banks 
of the Arno. In struggling through these marshes 
great numbers of his horses and beasts of bur- 
den perished, and he himself lost the sight of 
one eye by a violent attack of ophthalmia. The 
consul Flaminius hastened to meet him, and a 
battle was fought on the Lake Trasimenus, ha 
which the Roman army was destroyed ; thou- 
sands fell by the sword, among whom was the 
consul himself ; thousands more perished in the 
lake, and no less than fifteen thousand prisoners 
341 



HANNIBAL. 



HANNIBAL. 



fell into the hands of Hannibal. Hannibal now 
marched through the Apennines into Picenum, 
and thence into Apulia, where he spent a great 
part of the summer. The Romans had col- 
lected a fresh army, and placed it under the 
command of the dictator Fabius Maximus, who 
had prudently avoided a general action, and only 
attempted to harass and annoy the Carthaginian I 
arm}-. Meanwhile the Romans had made great ', 
preparations for the campaign of the following 
year (216). The two new consuls. L. iEmilius j 
Paulus and C. Terentius Yarro, marched into ; 
Apulia at the head of an army of little less than ' 
ninety thousand men. To this mighty host Han- j 
nibal gave battle in the plains on the" right bank ; 
of the Aufidus, just below the town of Canna?. 
The Roman army was again annihilated : be- 
tween forty and fifty thousand men are said to \ 
have fallen in the field, among whom was the 
consul iEmilius Paulus, both the consuls of the ; 
preceding year, above eighty senators, and a 
multitude of the wealthy knights who composed j 
the Roman cavalry. The other consul, Varro, 
escaped with a few horsemen to Yenusia, and a 
small band of resolute men forced their way j 
from the Roman camp to Canusium ; all the j 
rest were killed, dispersed, or taken prisoners. j 
This victory was followed by the revolt from 1 
Rome of most of the nations in the south of ! 
Italy. Hannibal established his army in winter- 
quarters in Capua, which had espoused his | 
side. Capua was celebrated for its wealth and i 
luxury, and the enervating effect which these i 
produced upon the army of Hannibal became a 
favorite theme of rhetorical exaggeration in 
later ages. The futility of such declamations j 
is sufficiently shown by the simple fact that the 
superiority of that army in the field remained 
as decided as ever. Still it may be truly said 
that the winter spent at Capua, 216-215, was in I 
.great measure the turning point of Hannibal's j 
fortune, and from this time the war assumed j 
an altered character. The experiment of what j 
he could effect with his single army had now i 
been fully tried, and. notwithstanding all his j 
victories, it had decidedly failed ; for Rome was ! 
still unsubdued, and still provided with the ; 
means of maintaining a protracted contest, j 
From this time the Romans in great measure ; 
changed their plan of operations, and, instead I 
of opposing to Hannibal one great army in the ; 
field, they hemmed in his movements on all i 
sides, and kept up an army in every province j 
of Italy, to thwart the operations of his lieuten- i 
ants, and check the rising disposition to revolt. 
It is impossible here to follow the complicated \ 
movements of the subsequent campaign, dur- 
ing which Hannibal himself frequently traversed 
Italy in all directions. In 215 Hannibal entered 
into negotiations with Philip, king of Macedo- j 
nia, and Hieronymus of Syracuse, and thus 
sowed the seeds of two fresh wars. From 214 ' 
to 212 the Romans were busily engaged with 
the siege of Syracuse, which was at length 1 
taken by Marcellus in the latter of these years, j 
In 212 Hannibal obtained possession of Taren- ! 
turn ; but in the following year he lost the i 
important city of Capua, which was recovered 
by the Romans after a long siege. In 209 the 
Romans also recovered Tarentum. Hannibal's 
forces gradually became more and more weak- 
342 



ened ; and his only object now was to maintain 
his ground in the south until his brother Has 
drubal should appear in the north of Italy, an 
event to which he had long looked forward with 
anxious expectation. In 207 Hasdrubal at length 
crossed the Alps, and descended into Italy ; 
but he was defeated and slain on the Metaurus. 
Yid. Hasdbxbal, No. 3. The defeat and death 
of Hasdrubal was decisive of the fate of the 
war in Italy. From this time Hannibal aban- 
doned all thoughts of offensive operations, and 
collected together his forces within the penin- 
sula of Bruttium. In the fastnesses of that 
wild and mountainous region he maintained his 
ground good for nearly four years (207-203). 
He crossed over to Africa toward the end of 
203 in order to oppose P. Scipio. In the follow- 
ing year (202) the decisive battle was fought 
near Zama. Hannibal was completely defeated 
with great loss. All hopes of resistance were 
now at an end, and he was one of the first to 
urge the necessity of an immediate peace. The 
treaty between Rome and Carthage was not 
finally concluded until the next year (201). By 
this treaty Hannibal saw the object of his whole 
fife frustrated, and Carthage effectually humbled 
before her imperious rivaL But his enmity to 
Rome was unabated ; and, though now more 
than forty-five years old, he set himself to 
work to prepare the means for renewing thc 
contest at no distant period. He introduced 
the most beneficial reforms into the state, and 
restored the ruined finances ; but, having pro- 
voked the enmity of a powerful party at Car- 
thage, they denounced him to the Romans as 
urging on Antiochus III., king of Syria, to take 
up arms against Rome. Hannibal was obliged 
to flee from Carthage, and took refuge at the 
court of Antiochus, who was at this time (193) 
on the eve of a war with Rome. Hannibal hi 
vain urged the necessity of carrying the war at 
once into Italy, instead of awaiting the Romans 
in Greece. On the defeat of Antiochus (190), 
the surrender of Hannibal was one of the condi- 
tions of the peace granted to the king. Han- 
nibal, however, foresaw his danger, and took 
refuge at the court of Prusias, king of Bithy- 
nia. Here he found for some years a secure 
asylum ; but the Romans could not be at ease 
so long as he lived, and T. Quintius Flamininus 
was at length dispatched to the court of Pru- 
sias to demand the surrender of the fugitive. 
The Bithynian king was unable to resist ; and 
Hannibal, perceiving that flight was impossible, 
took poison, to avoid falling into the hands of 
his enemies, about the year 183. Of Hannibal^ 
abilities as a general it is unnecessary to speak : 
all the great masters of the art of war, from 
Scipio to the Emperor Napoleon, have concur- 
red in their homage to his genius. But in com- 
paring Hannibal with any other of the great 
leaders of antiquity, we must ever bear in mind 
the peculiar circumstances in which he was 
placed. Feebly and grudgingly supported by 
the government at home, he stood alone, at the 
head of an army composed of mercenaries of 
many nations. Yet not only did he retain the 
attachment of these men, unshaken by any 
change of fortune, for a period of more than 
fifteen years, but he trained up army after army . 
and, long after the veterans that had followed 



HANNIBALLIANUS. 



HARMODIUS. 



iiim over the Alps had dwindled into an inconsid- 
erable remnant, his new levies were still as in- 
vincible as their predecessors. 

Hansib alu anus. 1. Son of Constantius Chlo- 
rus and his second wife Theodora, and half- 
. brother of Constantino the Great. He was put 
to death in 837 on the death of Constantme.— 
2. Sou of the elder, brother of the younger Del- 
matius, was also put to death on the death of 
Coustantine. 

Hannibalw Castra. Vid. Castra, No. 2. 

Hanno ("Avvuv), one of the most common 
names at Carthage. Only the most important 
Dersons of the name can be mentioned. 1. One 
of the Carthaginian generals who fought against 
Agathocles in Africa, B.C. 310.— 2. Commander 
of the Carthaginian garrison at Messana at the 
beginning of the first Punic war, 294. In con- 
sequence of his surrendering the citadel of this 
eity to the Romans, he was crucified on his re- 
turn home. — 3. Son of Hannibal, was sent to 
Sicily by the Carthaginians with a large force 
immediately after the capture of Messana, 264, 
where he carried on the war against the Roman 
consul Appius Claudius. In 262 he again com- 
manded in Sicily, but failed in relieving Agri- 
gentum, where Hannibal was kept besieged by 
the Romans. Vid. Hannibal, No. 2. In 256 
he commanded the Carthaginian fleet, along 
with Hamilcar, at the great battle of Ecnomus. — 
4. Commander of the Carthaginian fleet, which 
was defeated by Lutatius Catulus off the Aga- 
tes, 241. On his return home he was crucified. 
— 5. Surnamed the Great, apparently for his 
successes in Africa. We do not, however, know 
against what nations of Africa his arms were 
directed, nor what was the occasion of the war. 
He was one of the commanders in the war 
against the mercenaries in Africa after the end 
of the first Punic war (240-238). From this 
time forward he appears to have taken no active 
part in any of the foreign wars or enterprises 
of Carthage. But his influence iu her councils 
at home was great ; he was leader of the aris- 
tocratic party, and, as such, the chief adversary 
of Hamilcar Barca and his family. On all occa- 
sions, from the landing of Barca in Spain till 
the return of Hannibal from Italy, a period of 
above thirty-five years, Hanno is represented 
as thwarting the measures of that able and pow- 
erful family, and taking the lead iu opposition 
to the war with Rome, the great object to which 
all their efforts were directed. He survived the 
battle of Zama, 202. — G. A Carthaginian officer 
left in Spain by Hannibal when that general 
crossed the Pyrenees, 218. He was shortly 
afterward defeated by Cn. Scipio. and taken 
prisoner. — 7. Sou of Bomilear, one of the most 
distinguished of Hannibal's officers. He com- 
manded the right wing at the battle of Cannse 
(216), and is frequently mentioned during the 
succeeding years of the war. In 203 he took 
the command of the Carthaginian forces in 
Africa, which he held till the arrival of Hanni- 
bal. — 8. A Carthaginian general, who carried on 
the war in Sicily after the fall of Syracuse, 211. 
He left Sicily in the following year, when Agri- 
gentum was betrayed to the Romans. — 9. The 
last commander of the Carthaginian garrison at 
Capua wheu it was besieged by the Romans 
(212-111). — K>. A Carthaginian navigator, un- 



der whose name we possess a Periplus (Tzept- 
7r?,ovg), which was originally written in the 
Punic language, and afterward translated into 
Creek. The author had held the office of suf- 
fetes, or supreme magistrate at Carthage, and 
he is said by Pliny to have undertaken the voy- 
age when Carthage was in a most flourishing 
condition. Hence it has been conjectured that 
he was the same as the Hanno, the father or 
son of Hamilcar, who was killed at Himera, 
B.C. 480 ; but this is quite uncertain. Iu the 
Periplus itself Hanno says that he was sent out 
by his countrymen to undertake a voyage be- 
yond the Pillars of Hercules, and to found Liby- 
phcenician towns, and that he sailed with a body 
of colonists to the number of thirty thousand. 
On his return from his voyage, he dedicated an 
account of it, inscribed on a tablet, in the tem- 
ple of Saturn (Cronos). It is therefore presum- 
ed that our periplus is a Greek version of the 
contents of that Punic tablet. Edited by Fal- 
coner, Lond., 1797, with an English translation. 

Harma (to "Ap/ua : 'Ap/xarevc). 1. A small 
place in Boeotia, near Tanagra, said to have been 
so called from the karma or chariot of Adrastus, 
which broke down here, or from the chariot of 
Amphiaraus, who was here swallowed up by the 
earth along with his chariot. — 2. A small place 
in Attica, near Phyle. 

Harmatus ('Ap/iarovc), a city and promontory 
on the coast of JEolis in Asia Minor, on the 
northern side of the Sinus Elaiticus. 

Harmodius and Aristogiton ('Appodioc, 'Api- 
aroyecTuv), Athenians, of the blood of the Ge- 
phtr-iEi, were the murderers of Hipparchus, 
brother of the tyrant Hippias, in B.C. 514. Aris- 
togiton was strongly attached to the young and 
beautiful Harmodius, who returned his affection 
with equal warmth. Hipparchus endeavored to 
withdraw the youth's love to himself, and, fail- 
ing in this, resolved to avenge the slight by put- 
ting upon him a public insult. Accordingly, he 
took care that the sister of Harmodius should 
be summoned to bear one of the sacred baskets 
in some religious procession, and when she pre- 
sented herself for the purpose, he caused her 
to be dismissed and declared unworthy of the 
honor. This fresh insult determined the two 
friends to slay both Hipparchus and his brother 
Hippias as well. They communicated their plot 
to a few friends, and selected for their enter- 
prise the day of the festival of the great Pan- 
athenjea, the only day on which they could ap- 
pear in arms without exciting suspicion. When 
the appointed time arrived, the two chief con- 
spirators observed one of their accompbees in 
conversation with Hippias. Believing, there- 
fore, that they were betrayed, they slew Hip- 
parchus. Harmodius was immediately cut down 
by the guards. Aristogiton at first escaped, but. 
was afterward taken, and was put to the tor- 
ture ; but he died without revealing the names 
of any of the conspirators. Four years after 
this Hippias was expelled, and thenceforth Har- 
modius and Aristogiton obtained among the 
Athenians of all succeeding generations the 
character of patriots, deliverers, and martyrs 
— names often abused, indeed, but seldom more 

j grossly thau in the present case. Their deed 
of murderous vengeance formed a favorite sub 

' ject of drinking sons;?. To be born of their 
343 



HARMONIA. 



HARPYLI^E. 



blood was esteemed the highest of honors, and 
their descendants enjoyed an immunity from 

E,ublic burdens. Their statues, made of bronze 
y Antenor, were set up in the Agora. When 
Xerxes took the city, he carried these statues 
away, and new ones, the work of Critias, were 
«rected in 477. The original statues were after- 
ward sent back to Athens by Alexander the 
Great, 

Haemonia ('Apftov'ia), daughter of Mars (Ares) 
and Venus (Aphrodite), or, according to others, 
of Jupiter (Zeus) and Electra, the daughter of 
Atlas, in Samothrace. When Minerva (Athena) 
assigned to Cadmus the government of Thebes, 
Jupiter (Zeus) gave him Harmonia for his wife, 
and all the gods of Olympus were present at the 
marriage. On the wedding-day Cadmus receiv- 
ed a present of a peplus, which afterward be- 
came fatal to all who possessed it. Harmonia 
accompanied Cadmus when he was obliged to 
quit Thebes, and shared his fate. Vid. Cadmus. 
Polyniees, who inherited the fatal necklace, gave 
it to Eriphyle, that she might persuade her hus- 
band, Amphiaraus, to undertake the expedition 
against Thebes. Through Alcmseon, the son of 
Eriphyle, the necklace came into the hands of 
Arsinoe, next into those of the sons of Phegeus, 
Pronous and Agenor, and lastly into those of the 
sons of Alcmseon, Amphoterus and Acarnan, who 
dedicated it in the temple of Minerva (Athena) 
Pronoea at Delphi. 

Haepagia or -ium ('Aprrayela or -dyiov), a 
small town in Mysia, between Cyzicus and Pria- 
pus, the scene of the rape of Ganyrnedes, accord- 
ing to some legends. 

Haepagus i^Apnayog). 1. A noble Median, 
whose preservation of the infant Cyrus, with the 
events consequent upon it, are related under 
Cyrus. He became one of the generals of Cyrus, 
and conquered the Greek cities of Asia Minor. — 
2. A Persian general, under Darius I., took His- 
tiaeus prisoner. 

[Harpalion ('ApTraAiuv), a Paphlagonian, son 
of Pylaemenes, and guest-friend of Paris : he was 
slain by Meriones in the Trojan war.] 

Harp alus ("ApiraXoc), 1. A Macedonian of 
noble birth, accompanied Alexander the Great 
to Asia as superintendent of the treasury. 
After the conquest of Darius, he was left by 
Alexander in charge of the royal treasury, and 
with the administration of the wealthy satrapy 
of Babylon. Here, during Alexanders absence 
in India, he gave himself up to the most extrav- 
agant luxury and profusion, and squandered the 
treasures intrusted to him. When he heard that 
Alexander, contrary to his expectations, was re- 
turning from India, he fled from Babylon with 
about five thousand talents and a body of six 
thousand mercenaries, and crossed over to Greece, 
B.C. 324. He took refuge at Athens, where he 
employed his treasures to gain over the orators, 
and induce the people to support him against 
Alexander and his vicegerent, Antipater. Among 
those whom he thus corrupted are said to have 
been Demades, Charicles, the son- in-law of Pho- 
cion, and even Demosthenes himself. Vid. De- 
mosthenes. But he failed in his general object, 
for Antipater having demanded his surrender 
from the Athenians, it was resolved to place 
him in confinement until the Macedonians should 
Bend for him. He succeeded in making his es- 
344 



j cape from prison, and fled to Crete, where bn- 

j was assassinated soon after his arrival by Thim- 

j bron, one of his own officers. — 2. A Greek as- 
tronomer, introduced some improvements into 
the cycle of Cleostratus. Harpalus lived be- 
fore Meton. 

Harpalyce ('Ap7ra2,vK?i). 1. Daughter of Har- 
palycus, king in Thrace. As she lost her mother 
in infancy, she was brought up by her father 
with the milk of cows and mares, and was 
trained in all manly exercises. After the death 
of her father, she lived in the forests as a robber, 
being so swift in running that horses were un- 
able to overtake her. At length she was caught 
in a snare by shepherds, who killed her. — 2. 
Daughter of Cly menus and Epicaste, was se- 
duced by her own father. To revenge herself. 

j she slew her younger brother, and served him 

; up as food before her father. The gods changed 

I her into a bird. 

[Harpalycus ('ApTruTiVKoc). 1. Vid. Harpal- 
yce, No. 1. — 2. A Trojan warrior, companion of 
./Eneas, slain by Camilla. 

Haepasa ("ApTraaa : now Arepas), a city ol 

j Caria, on the River Haepasus. 

Haepasus ("Ap^auoc). 1. (now Arpa-Sv), a 

j river of Caria, flowing north into the Mseander. 
into which it falls opposite to Nysa. — 2. (now 
Harpa-Su), a river of Armenia Major, flowing 
south into the Araxes. Xenophon, who crossed 
it with the ten thousand Greeks, states its width 
as four plethra (about four hundred feet). 

Haepina or Haepixna ("AoTrtva, "Apxivva), a 
town in Elis Pisatis, near Olympia, said to have 
been called after a daughter of Asopus. 
[Haepoceates. Vid. Hoeus. 
Haepoceation, Valerius, a Greek gramma- 
rian of Alexandrea, of uncertain date, the author 
of an extant dictionary to the works of the ten 
Attic orators, entitled Uept rQv tetjeuv ~uv dene, 
p'rjropuv, or Aetjuidv rdv Sena p'-qropuv. It eon- 
tains not only explanations of legal and political 
terms, but also accounts of persons and thing3 
mentioned in the Attic orators, and is a work of 
great value. The best editions are the one pub- 
lished at Leipzig, 1824, and the one bv Bekker, 
Berlin, 1833. 

Haepyle ("ApTrvtai), the Harpies, that is. the 
Robbers or Spoilers, are in Homer nothing but 
personified storm-winds, who are said to carry 
off any one who had suddenly disappeared from 
the earth. Thus they carried off the daughters 
of King Pandareus, and gave them as servants 
to the Erynnyes. Hesiod describes them as 
daughters of Thaumas by the Oceanid Electra, 
fair-locked and winged maidens, who surpassed 
winds and birds in the rapidity of their flight. 
But even in iEschylus they appear as ugly crea- 
tures with wings; and later writers represent 

j them as most disgusting monsters, being birds 
with the heads of maidens, with long claws, and 
with faces pale with hunger. They were sent 
by the gods to torment the blind Phineus, and 
whenever a meal was placed before him, they 
darted down from the air and carried it off; 
later writers add, that they either devoured the 
food themselves, or rendered it unfit to be eaten. 
Phineus was delivered from them by Zetes and 
Calais, sons of Boreas, and two of the Argonauts. 
Vid. p. 91, a. Hesiod mentions two Harpies, 

\ Ocypete and Aello : later writers three ; bu ( 



HARUDES. 



HECATJ5US. 



their names are not the same iu all accounts. 
Besides the two already mentioned, we find Ael- 
lopos, Nicothoe, Ocythoe, Ocypode, Celaeuo, 
Aeholoe. Virgil places them in the islands 
called Strophades, in the Ionian Sea (uEn., iii-, 
210), where they took up their abode after they 
had been driven away from Phineus. In the 
femous Harpy monument recently brought from 
Lyeia to England, the Harpies are represented 
in the act of carrying off the daughters of Pan- 
dareus. . . 

Hart) des, a people in the army of Anovistus 
(B.C. 58), supposed to be the same as the Cha- 
rades mentioned by Ptolemy, and placed by 
him in the Chersouesus Cimbrica. 

Hasdrubal {' XadpovOac), a Carthaginian name, 
probably signifies one whose help is Baal. 1. 
Son of Hanuo, a Carthaginian general in the 
first Punic war. He was one of the two gen- 
erals defeated by Regulus B.C. 256. In 254 he 
was sent iuto Sicily with a large army, and re- 
mained in the island four years. In 250 he 
was totally defeated by Metellus, and was put 
to death on his return to Carthage. — 2. A Car- 
thaginian, son in-luw of Harnilcar Barca, on 
whose death, iu 229, he succeeded to the com- 
mand in Spain. He ably carried out the plans 
of his father-in-law for extending the Cartha- 
ginian dominions in Spain, and intrusted the 
conduct of most of his military enterprises to 
the young Hannibal. He founded New Car- 
thage, and concluded with the Romans the cel- 
ebrated treaty which fixed the Iberus a3 the 
boundary between the Carthaginian and Roman 
dominions. He was assassinated by a slave, 
whose master he had put to death (221), and 
was succeeded in the command by Hannibal. 
— 3. Son of Hamilear Barca, aud brother of Han- 
nibal. "When Hauuibal set out for Italy (218), 
Hasdrubal was left in the command in Spain, 
and there fought for some years against the 
two Scipios. In 207 he crossed the Alps and 
marched into Italy, iu order to assist Hannibal ; 
but he was defeated on the Metaurus by the 
consuls C. Claudius Nero and M. Livius Salina- 
tor, his army was destroyed, and he himself fell 
in the battle. His head was cut off and thrown 
into Hannibal's camp. — 4. One of Hannibal's 
chief officers, commanded the left wing of the 
Carthaginian army at the battle of Cannee (216). 
— 5. Surnamed the Bald (Calvus), commander 
of the Carthaginian expedition to Sardinia in 
the second Punic war, 215. He was defeated 
by the Roman praetor T. Manlius, taken prison- 
er, and carried to Rome. — 6. Son of Cisco, one 
of the Carthaginian generals in Spain during 
the second Punic war. He fought in Spain 
from 214 to 206. After he and Mago had been 
defeated by Scipie in the latter of these years, 
he crossed over to Africa, where he succeeded 
in obtaining the alliance of Syphax by giving 
him his daughter Sophoni*ba in marriage. In 
conjunction with Syphax. Hasdrubal carried on 
war against Masinissa, but he was defeated by 
Scipio, who landed iu Africa in 204. He was 
condemned to death for his ill success by the 
Carthaginiau government, but he still continued 
in arms against the Romans. On the arrival 
of Hannibal from Italy his sentence was revers- 
ed ; but the popular feeling against him had not 
subsided, and, in order to escape death from his 



enemies, he put an end to his life by poison. — 
: 7. Commander of the Carthaginian fleet in Afri- 
; ea in 203, must be distinguished from the pre- 
| ceding. — 8. Surnamed the Kid (Hccdus), one of 
the leaders of the party at Carthage favorable 
to peace toward the end of the second Punic 
war. — 9. General of the Carthaginians in the 
third Punic war. When the city was taken he 
surrendered to Scipio, who spared his life. After 
adorning Scipio's triumph, he spent the rest of 
his life in Italy. 

Haterius, Q., a seuator and rhetorician in thr 
age of Augustus and Tiberius, died A.D. 26, i* 
the eighty-ninth year of his age. 

Hebe ('H657), called Juventas by the Romans 
the goddess of youth, was a daughter of Jupiter 
(Zeus) and Juno (Hera). She waited upon the 
gods, and filled their cups with nectar beforw 
Ganymedes obtained this office ; and 6he is fur- 
ther represented as assisting her mother Jun« 
(Hera) in putting the horses to her chariot, and 
in bathing and dressing her brother Mars (Ares). 
She married Hercules after he was received 
among the gods, and bore to him two sons, Al- 
exiares and Anticetus. Later traditions repre- 
sent her as a divinity who had it in her power 
to make aged persons young again. At Rome; 
there were several temples of Juventas. She 
is even said to have had a chapel on the Capi 
tol before the temple of Jupiter was built there. 

Hebromagus. Vid. Eburomagus. 

Hebron ('ESpuv, Xe6p6v 'E6p6viO(; : now El- 
Khulil), a city in the south of Judaea, as old a* 
the times of the patriarchs, and the first capital 
of the kingdom of David, who reigned ther>.* 
seven and a half years as king of Judah only. 

Hebeus ("ESpof : now Maritza), the principal 
river in Thrace, rises in the mountains of Sco- 
mius and Rhodope, flows first southeast and 
then southwest, becomes navigable for smaller 
vessels at Philippopolis, and for larger ones at 
Hadriaoopoli8, and falls into the iEgean Sea 
near iEnos, after forming by another branch m 
estuary called Stentoris Lacus. The Hebrus 
was celebrated in Greek legends. On its banks 
Orpheus was torn to pieces by the Thracian 
women; and it is frequently mentioned in con- 
nection with the worship of Bacchus (Dionysus.) 

Hecaeege ('E/caep/;/). 1. Daughter of Boreas, 
and one of the Hyperborean maidens, who were 
believed to have introduced the worship of 
Diana (Artemis) into Delos. — 2. A surname ot' 
Diana (Artemis), signifying the goddess who 
hits at a distance. 

Hecale ('EkuAt?), r. poor old woman, who hos- 
pitably received Theseus when he had goue 
out for the purpose of killing the Marathociau 
bulL She vowed to offer to Jupiter (Zeus) u 
sacrifice for the safe return of the hero ; but ai 
she died before his return, Theseus ordaineci 
that the inhabitants of the Attic tetrapolis should 
offer a sacrifice to her and Jnpiter (Zeus) Hec- 
alus, or Hecalc-ius. 

[Hecamkde ('EicauTjdi}), daughter of Arsinous, 
taken prisoner by Achilles, when he captured 
the island of Tenedos : she became the slave 
of Nestor.] 

Hecat.eus ('EKa-aios). 1. Of Miletus, one of 
the earliest and most distinguished Creek his- 
torians and geographers. He was the son of 
Hegcsander, and belonged to a very ancient and 
345 



HECATE. 



HECTOR. 



illustrious family. We have only a few partic- 
ulars of his life. In B.C. 500 he endeavored to 
dissuade his countrymen from revolting from 
the Persians; and when this advice was disre- 
garded, he gave them some sensible counsel re- 
specting the conduct of the war, which was also 
neglected. Previous to this, Heeatseus had vis- 
ited Egypt and many other countries. He sur- 
vived the Persian wars, and appears to have 
died about 4*6. He wrote two works: 1. Ile- 
ptodog yrjg, or Hspiriyrjoic, divided into two parts, 
one of which contained a description of Europe, 
and the other of Asia, Egypt, and Libya. Both 
parts were subdivided into smaller sections, 
which are sometimes quoted under their re- 
spective names, such as Hellespontus, <fce. 2. 
TsveaTtoyiai or 'laroptai, in four books, contained 
an account of the poetical fables and traditions 
of the Greeks. His work on geography was 
the more important, as it embodied the results 
of his numerous travels. He also corrected 
and improved the map of the earth drawn up 
by Anaximander. Herodotus knew the works 
of Hecatseus well, and frequently controverts 
his opinions. Heeateeus wrote in the Ionic dia- 
lect in a pure and simple style. The fragments 
of his works are collected by Klausen, Hecatcei 
Milesii Fragmenta, Berlin, 1831, and by C. and 
Th. Miiller, Frag. Hist Grac, Paris, 1841.— 
2. Of Abdera, a contemporary of Alexander the 
Great and Ptolemy, the son of Lagus, appears 
to have accompanied the former on his Asiatic 
expedition. He was a pupil of the skeptic 
Pyrrho, and is himself called a philosopher, 
critic, and grammarian. In the reign of the 
lirst Ptolemy he travelled up the Nile as far as 
Thebes. He was the author of several works, 
of which the most important were, 1. A Histo- 
ry of Egypt. 2. A work on the Plyperboreans. 
•3. A history of the Jews, frequently referred to 
by Josephus and other ancient writers. This 
work was declared spurious by Origen : modern 
critics are divided in their opinions. 

Hecate ('E/car??), a mysterious divinity, com- 
monly represented as a daughter of Persaeus or 
Perses and Asteria, and hence called Perseis. 
She is also described as a daughter of Jupiter 
(Zeus) and Ceres (Demeter), or of Jupiter (Zeus) 
and Phersea or Juno (Hera), or of Latona (Leto) 
or Tartarus. Homer does not mention her. 
According to the most genuine traditions, she 
appears to have been an ancient Thracian di- 
vinity, and a Titan, who ruled in heaven, on 
the earth, and in the sea, bestowing on mortals 
wealth, victory, wisdom, good luck to sailors 
and hunters, and prosperity to youth and to the 
flocks of cattle. She was the only one among 
the Titans who retained this power under the 
rule of Jupiter (Zeus), and she was honored by 
all the immortal gods. The extensive power 
possessed by Hecate was probably the reason 
that she was subsequently identified with sev- 
eral other divinities, and at length became a 
mystic goddess, to whom mysteries were cele- 
brated in Samothrace and in JSgina. In the 
Homeric hymn to Ceres (Demeter) she is rep- 
resented as taking an active part in the search 
after Proserpina (Persephone), and when the 
latter was found, as remaining with her as her 
attendant and companion. Vid. p. 248, a. She 
thus became a deitv of the lower world, and is 
346 



described in this capacity as a mighty and for- 
midable divinity. In consequence of her bein^ 
identified with other divinities, she is said to 
have been Selene or Luna in heaven, Artemis 
or Diana in earth, and Persephone or Proser- 
pina in the lower world. Being thus, as it were, 
a three-fold goddess, she is described with three 
bodies or three heads, the one of a horse, the 
second of a dog, and the third of a lion. Hence 
her epithets Tergemina, Triformis, Triceps, &c. 
From her being an infernal divinity, she came 
to be regarded as a spectral being, who sent at 
night all kinds of demons and terrible phantoms 
from the lower world, who taught sorcery and 
witchcraft, and dwelt at places where two roads 
crossed, on tombs, and near the blood of mur- 
dered persons. She herself wandered about 
with the souls of the dead, and her approach 
was announced by the whining and howling of 
dogs. At Athens there were very many small 
statues or symbolical representations of Hecate 
(indraia), placed before or in houses, and on 
spots where two roads crossed : it would seem 
that people consulted such Hecateea as oracles. 
At the close of every month dishes with food 
were set out for her and other averters of evil 
at the points where two roads crossed ; and this 
food was consumed by poor people. The sac- 
rifices offered to her consisted of dogs, honey, 
and black female lambs. 

Hecatomnus ('Etcarofivug), king or dynast of 
Caria in the reign of Artaxerxes III. He left 
three sons, Maussolus, Idrieu3, and Pixedarus, 
all of whom, in their turn, succeeded him in the 
sovereignty ; and two daughters, Artemisia and 
Ada. 

[Hecatompolis ('EKaTOjj.TTOAig, i. e., having 
otic hundred cities), appellation of the island 
Crete, from the one hundred cities it was said 
to have had in ancient times.] 

Hecatompylos ( ( EKa~6fi7rv?ioc, i. e., having 
one hundred gates). 1. An epithet of Thebes in 
Egypt. Vid. Theb^e. — 2. A city in the middle 
of Parthia, twelve hundred and sixty stadia or 
one hundred and thirty-three Roman miles from 
the Caspian Pylas ; enlarged by Seleucus, and 
afterward used by the Parthian kings as a royal 
residence. 

Hecaton ('Ekutuv), a Stoic philosopher, a na- 
tive of Rhodes, studied under Panaetius, and 
wrote numerous works, all of which are lost 

Hecatoxnesi ('~Ekqt6vv71goi : now Mosko-nisi), 
a group of small islands, between Lesbos and 
the coast of iEolis, on the southern side of the 
mouth of the Gulf of Adramyttium. The name, 
one hundred islands, was indefinite ; the real 
number was reckoned by some at twenty, by 
others at forty. Strabo derives the name, not 
from knaTov, one hundred, but from "EtcaTog, a 
surname of Apollo. 

Hector ("EicTop), the chief hero of the Tro- 
jans in their war with the Greeks, was the 
eldest son of Priam and Hecuba, the husband 
of Andromache, and father of Scarnandrius. He 
fought with the bravest of the Greeks, and at 
length slew Patroclus, the friend of Achilles. 
The death of his friend roused Achilles to the 
fight. The other Trojans fled before him into 
the city. Hector alone remained without the 
walls, though his parents implored him to re- 
turn ; but when he saw Achilles his heart fail- 



HECUBA 



HEGIAS. 



ed him, aud he took to flight. Thrice did he 
race round the city, pursued by the swift-foot- 
ed Achilles, and then fell pierced by Achilles's 
spear. Achilles tied Hector's body to his char- 
iot, and thus dragged him into the camp of the 
Greeks ; but later traditions relate that he first j 
dragged the body thrice around the walls of 
Ilium. At the command of Jupiter (Zeus), 
Achilles surrendered the body to the prayers of 
Priam, who buried it at Troy with great pomp. 
Hector is one of the noblest conceptions of the 
Iliad. He is the great bulwark of Troy, and 
even Achilles trembles when he approaches 
him. He has a presentiment of the fall of his 
country, but he perseveres in his heroic resist- 
ance, preferring death to slavery aud disgrace. 
Besides these virtues of a warrior, he is distin- 
guished also by those of a man : his heart is 
open to the gentle feelings of a son, a husband, 
and a father. 

Hecuba ('EkuOt'/), daughter of Dymas in 
Phrygia, or of Cisseus, king of Thrace. She 
was the wife of Priam, king of Troy, to whom 
she bore Hector, Paris, Deiphobus, Helenus, 
Cassandra, and many other children. On the 
capture of Troy, she was carried away as a 
slave by the Greeks. According to the tragedy 
of Euripides, which bears her name, she was 
carried by the Greeks to Chersonesus, and 
there saw her daughter Polyxena sacrificed. 
On the same day the -waves of the sea washed 
on the coast the body of her last son Polydorus, 
who had been murdered by Pobyniestor, king of 
the Thracian Chersonesus, to whose care he 
had been intrusted by Priam. Hecuba there- j 
upon killed the children of Polymestor, and tore ; 
out the eyes of their father. Agamemnon par- 1 
doned her the crime, and Polymestor prophesied I 
that she should bo metamorphosed into a she- j 
dog, and should leap into the sea at a place called j 
Oynossema. It was added that the inhabitants 
of Thrace endeavored to stone her, but that she 
was metamorphosed into a dog, and in this form 
howled through the country for a long time. 
According to other accounts she was given as j 
a slave to Ulysses, and in despair leaped into | 
the Hellespont ; or, being anxious to die, she 
uttered such invectives against the Greeks, that I 
the warriors put her to death, aud called the I 
place where she was buried Cynossema, with | 
reference to her impudent invectives. 

Hedylius Mons ('HduAe lov), a range of mount- \ 
a ins in Bceotia, west of the Cephisus. 

Hedvlus ("H6v'/.o, \ son of Melicertus, was a ; 
native of Samos or of Athens, and an epigram- j 
made poet. Eleven t) f his epigrams are in the 
Greek Anthology. He was a contemporary 
and rival of Callimachus, and lived, therefore, ' 
about the middle of the third century B.C. 

[Hedymeles, a celebrated performer on the! 
lyre in the time of Domitian (Juv, vi., 382).] 

[Hegelochus (Hyr/.oxoc). 1. An Athenian 
officer, sent to protect Mantinea from the threat- 
ened attack of Epatuinoudas, B.C. 362. — 2. One : 
of Alexanders office!-, who accompanied him i 
into Asia, and perished at the battle of Arbela.] i 
Hegemon ('Hyqfiur), of Thasos, a poet of the j 
old comedy at Athens, but more celebrated for I 
his parodies, of which kind of poetry he was the I 
inventor. He was nicknamed <&aic7j, on account [ 
of his fondness for that kind of pulse. He lived 



in the time of the Peloponuesian war ; and bis 
parody of the Gigantomachia was the piece to 
which the Athenians were listening when the 
news was brought to them in the theatre of the 
destruction of the expedition to Sicily. 

Hegemone ('Hyrjfiovri), the leader or ruler, is 
the name of one of the Athenian Charites or 
Graces. Hegemone was also a surname of 
Diana (Artemis) at Sparta and in Arcadia. 

[Hegesandridas ('Hyjioavdpidac), a Spartai: 
naval commander during the Peloponnesiar- 
war, defeated the Athenian fleet off Oropue. 
but did not follow up his victory by attacking 
Athens.] 

Hegesianax ( r lb/7jatuvai:), an historian of 
Alexandrea, is said to have been the real author 
of the work called Troico, which went under the 
name of Cephalon or Cephalion. He appear? 
to be the same as the Hegesianax who was 
sent by Antiochus the Great as one of his en- 
voys to the Romans in B.C. 196 and 193. 

Hegesias ^Hyrjctag). 1. Of Magnesia, a rhet- 
orician and historian, lived about B.C. 290, and 
wrote the history of Alexander the Great. He 
was regarded by some as the founder of that 
degenerate style of composition which bore the 
name of the Asiatic. His own style was desti- 
tute of all vigor aud dignity, and was marked 
chiefly by childish conceits and minute pretti- 
nesses. — 2. Of Salamis, supposed by some to 
have been the author of the Cyprian poem, 
which, on better authority, is ascribed to Sta- 
sinus. — 3. A Cyrenaic philosopher, who lived at 
Alexandrea in the time of the Ptolemies, per- 
haps about B.C. 260. He wrote a work con- 
taining such gloomy descriptions of human mis- 
ery that it drove many persons to commit sui- 
cide; hence he was surnamed Peisithanatos 
(Ueiaiddvaror). He was, in consequence, for- 
bidden to teach by Ptolemy. 

Hegesias ('Hyr/ccac) and Hegias ('Hyiac ), two 
Greek statuaries, whom many scholars identify 
with one another. They lived at the period im- 
mediately preceding that of Phidias. The chief" 
work of Hegesias was the statues of Castor and 
Pollux, which are supposed to be the same as 
those which now stand on the stairs leading to 
the Capitol. 

Hegesinus ('Hyjioivovg), of Pergarnum, the 
successor of Evander and the immediate prede- 
cessor of Carneades in the chair of the Acade- 
my, flourished about B.C. 185. 

Hegesippus ('HyqacTTTror). 1. An Athenian 
orator, and a contemporary of Demosthenes, to 
whose political party he belonged. The gram- 
marians ascribe to him the oration on Halone 
sus, which has come down to us under the name 
of Demosthenes. — 2. A poet of the new come- 
dy, flourished about B.C. 300.— 3. A Greek his- 
torian of Mecyberna. wrote an account of the 
peninsula of Pallene. 

Hegesipyla ('HyijaLTTvlrj), daughter of Olorus, 
king of Thrace, and wife of Miltiades. 

[Hegesistratus (HyTjGiGTpaToc). 1. Natural 
son of Pisistratus, made by his father tyrant of 
Sigeum. — 2. Son of Aristagoras of Samos, came 
before the battle of Mycale on an embassy to 
the Spartan king Leotychides from the Samian.s 
to treat for the liberation of his countrymen 
from the Persian yoke.] 

Hegias. Vid. Hegesias. 

347 



HELENA. 



HELICON. 



Helena ('EXcvtj), daughter of Jupiter (Zeus) 
and Leda, and sister of Castor and Pollux (the 
Dioscuri). She was of surpassing beauty. In 
her youth she was carried off by Theseus and 
Pirithous to Attica. When Theseus was ab- 
sent in Hades, Castor and Pollux undertook an 
expedition to Attica, to liberate their sister. 
Ath ens was taken, Helen delivered, and JEtbra, 
the mother of Theseus, made prisoner, and car- 
ried as a slave of Helen to Sparta. According 
to some accounts, she bore to Theseus a daugh- 
ter, Iphigenia. On her return home she was 
sought in marriage by the noblest chiefs from 
all parts of Greece. She chose Menelaus for 
her husband, and became by him the mother of 
Hermione. She was subsequently seduced and 
carried off by Paris to Troy. For details, vid. 
Paris and Menelaus. The Greek chiefs who 
had been her suitors resolved to revenge her 
abduction, and accordingly sailed against Troy. 
Hence arose the celebrated Trojan war, which 
lasted ten years. During the course of the war 
she 13 represented as showing great sympathy 
with the Greeks. After the death of Paris to- 
ward the end of the war, she married his broth- 
er Deiphobus. On the capture of Troy, which 
she is said to have favored, she betrayed De- 
iphobus to the Greeks, and became reconciled 
to Menelaus, whom she accompanied to Sparta. 
Here she lived with him for some years in peace 
and happiness ; and here, according to Homer, 
Telemachus found her solemnizing the mar- 
riage of her daughter Hermione with Neoptole- 
mus. The accounts of Helen's death differ. 
According to the prophecy of Proteus in the 
Odyssey, Menelaus and Helen were not to die, 
but the gods were to conduct them to Elysium. 
Others relate that she and Menelaus were buried 
at Therapne in Laconia, where their tomb was 
seen by Pausanias. Others, again, relate, that 
after the death of Menelaus she was driven out 
of Peloponnesus by the sons of the latter and 
fled to Rhodes, where she was tied to a tree 
and strangled by Polyxo : the Rhodians ex- 
piated the crime by dedicating a temple to her 
under the name of Helena Dendritis. Accord- 
ing to another tradition she married Achilles in 
the island of Leuce, and bore him a son, Eupho- 
rion. *The Egyptian priests told Herodotus that 
Helen never went to Troy, but that when Paris 
reached Egypt with Helen on his way to Troy, 
she was detained by Proteus, king of Egypt ; 
and that she was restored to Menelaus when he 
visited Egypt in search of her after the Trojan 
war, finding that she had never been at Troy. 

Helena, Flavia Julia. 1. The mother of 
Constautine the Great. When her husband 
Constantius was raised to the dignity of Caesar 
by Diocletian, A.D. 292, he was compelled to 
repudiate his wife, to make way for Theodora, 
the step-child of Maximianus Herculius. Sub- 
sequently, when her son succeeded to the pur- 
ple, Helena was treated with marked distinc- 
tion, and received the title of Augusta. She 
died about 328. She was a Christian, and is 
said to have discovered at Jerusalem the sep- 
ulchre of our Lord, together with the wood of 
the true cross. — 2. Daughter of Constantine the 
Great and Fausta, married her cousin Julian the 
Apostate 355, and died 360. 

Helena ('Etevri). 1. (Now Makronisi), a 
348 



small and rocky island between the south oi 

Attica and Ceos, formerly called Crauae. 2. 

The later name of Illiberris in GauL 

Helenus ("EXevoc). 1. Son of Priam and 
Hecuba, was celebrated for his prophetic pow- 
ers, and also fought against the Greeks in the 
Trojan war. In Homer we have no further 
particulars about Helenus ; but in later tradi- 
tions he is said to have deserted his country- 
men and joined the Greeks. There are like- 
wise various accounts respecting his desertion 
of the Trojans. According to some, he did it 
of his own accord ; according to others, he was 
ensnared by Ulysses, who was anxious to ob- 
tain his prophecy respecting the fall of Troy. 
Others, again, relate that, on the death of Paris, 
Helenus and Deiphobus contended for the pos- 
session of Helena, and that Helenus being con- 
quered, fled to Mount Ida, where he was taken 
prisoner by the Greeks. After the fall of Troy 
he fell to the share of Pyrrhus. He foretold Pyr- 
rhus the sufferings which awaited the Greeks 
who returned home by sea, and prevailed upon 
him to return by land to Epirus. After the 
death of Pyrrhus he received a portion of the 
country, and married Andromache, by whom 
he became the father of Cestrinus." When 
iEneas, in his wanderings, arrived in Epirus, he 
was hospitably received by Helenus, who also 
foretold him the future events of his lite. — 2. 
Son of Pyrrhus, king of Epirus, by Lanaasa, 
daughter of Agathocles. He accompanied his 
father to Italy B.C. 280, and was with him 
when Pyrrhus perished at Argos, 272. He 
then fell into the hands of Antigonus Gonatas- 
who, however, sent him back in safety to Epirus. 
— [3. Son of CEnops, a Greek, slain by Hector 
before Troy.] 

Heliad.e and Heliades ('H2.Lu.dai and "H/Ug- 
<fcc), the sons and daughters of Helios (the Sun). 
The name Heliades is given especially to Pho- 

I ethusa, Lampetia, and Phcebe, the daughters of 
Helios and the nymph Clymene, and the sisters 
of Phaethon. They bewailed the death of their 
brother Phaethon so bitterly on the banks of 
the Eridanus, that the gods, in compassion, 
changed them into poplar-trees and their tears 
into amber. Vid. Eridanus. 

[Helicaon ('E?.lkuov), son of Antenor, and 
husband of Laodice ; he is said to have founded 
Patavium in Italy.] 

Helice ('EMktj), daughter of Lycaon, was 
beloved by Jupiter (Zeus), but Juno (Hera), out 
of jealousy, metamorphosed her into a she-bear, 
whereupon Jupiter (Zeus) placed her among the 
stars under the name of the Great Bear. 

Helice ('EXlki] ■ 'E2,ik6vlo£, 'EXikevc). I. 
The ancient capital of Achaia, said to have been 
founded by Ion, possessed a celebrated temple 
of Neptune (Poseidon), which was regarded as 
the great sanctuary of the Achsean race. Hel- 
ice was swallowed up by an earthquake together 
with Bura, B.C. 373. The earth sunk deep into 

J the ground, and the place on which the cities 

I stood was ever afterward covered by the sea. 

{ — 2. An ancient town in Tbessaly, which 

! disappeared in early times. 

! Helicon ('E2.tK.6v), son of Acesas, a celebra- 

j ted artist. Vid. Acesas. 

Helicon ('ETiikuv : now Helicon, Palceo-Buni, 
Turk. Zagora), a celebrated range of mountains 



HELIMUS. 



HELIOS. 



in Boeotia, between the Lake Copais and the 
Corinthian Gnlf, was covered with snow the 
greater part of the year, and possessed many 
romantic ravines and lovely valleys. Helicon 
was sacred to Apollo and the Muses, the latter 
of whom are hence called 'Efanuvtat napdevot 
and 'Elinuviudec vv[i<j>ai by the Greek poets, 
.and lb I aid Heliconides by the Roman 

poets. Hew sprang the celebrated fountains 
of the Muses. Aganippe and Hippoceene. At 
the fountain of Hippoerene was a grove sacred 
to the Muses, which was adorned with some of 
the finest works of art. On the slopes and in 
the valleys of the mountains grew many me- 
dicinal plants, which may have given occasion 
to the worship of Apollo as the healing god. 

[Helimus, a Oentaur, slain at the nuptials of 
Pirithous.] 

Heuodorus (W/ivSopoc). 1. An Athenian 
-uruamed Periegete* (n.epi7]y7}T?fc), probably liv- 
ed about B.C. 164, and wrote a description of 
the works of art in the Acropolis at Athens. 
This work was one of the authorities for Pliny's 
account of the Greek artists. — 2. A rhetorician 
at Rome in the time of Augustus, whom Horace 
mentions as the companion of his journey to 
Brundisium (Sat., i., 5, 2, 3.)— 3. A Stoic phi- 
losopher at Rome, who became a delator in the 
reign of Nero. (Juv., Sat., i., 33.) — 4. A rheto- 
rician, and private secretary to the Emperor 
Hadrian. — 5. Of Emesa in "Syria, lived about 
the end of the fourth century of our era, and 
was bishop of Tricca in Thessaly. Before he 
was made bishop he wrote a romance in ten 
books, entitled jEthiopica, because the scene of 
the beginning and the end of the story is laid in 
^Ethiopia. This work has come down to us, 
and is far superior to the other Greek romances. 
It relates the loves of Theagenes and Chariclea. 
Though deficient in those characteristics of 
modern fiction which appeal to the universal 
sympathies of our nature, the romance of Heli- 
odorus is interesting on account of the rapid 
succession of strange and not altogether im- 
probable adventures, the many and various 
characters introduced, and the beautiful scenes 
described. The language is simple and ele- 
gant. The best editions are by Mitscherlich, in 
his Scriptorcs Graci Erotici, Argentorat, 1798, 
and by Corae, Paris, 1804. — 6. Of Larissa, the 
author of a short work on optics, still extant, 
chiefly taken from Euclid's Optics : edited by 
Mantani, Pistor., 1758. 

Heliogabalus. Vid. Elagabalus. 

Heliopolis ('WAtov rroAir or 'H?aot>7ro/Uc, i. e., 
the City of the Sun). 1. (Heb. Baalath: now 
Baalbek, ruins), a celebrated city of Syria, a 
<?hief seat of the worship of Baal, one of whose 
symbols was the sun, and whom the Greeks 
identified with Apollo, as well as with Jupiter 
(Zeus) : hence the Greek name of the city. 
With the worship of Baal, here as elsewhere, 
was associated that of Astarte, whom the 
Greeks identified with Venus (Aphrodite). It 
was situated in the middle of Coele-Syria, at 
the western foot of Anti-Libanus, on a rising 
ground at the northeastern extremity of a large 
plain which reaches almost to the sea, and 
which is well watered by the River Leontes 
(now Kahr-cl-Kasimiyeh), near whose sources 
Heliopolis was built ; the sources of the Orontes 



also are not far north of the city. The situa- 
tion of Heliopolis necessarily made it a plac^ 
of great commercial importance, as it was on 
the direct road from Egypt and the Red Sea, 
and also from Tyre to Syria, Asia Minor, and 
Europe ; and hence, probably, the wealth of the 
city, to which its ruins still "bear witness. We 
know, however, very little of its history. It 
was made a Roman colony by the name of 
Colonia Julia Augusta Felix" Heliopolitana, and 
colonized by veterans of the fifth and eighth 
legions, under Augustus. Antoninus Pius built 
the great temple of Jupiter (i. e., Baal), of 
which the ruins still exist ; and there are med- 
als which show, in addition to other testimony, 
that it was favored by several of the later em- 
perors. All the existing ruins are of the Ro- 
man period, and most of them probably of later 
date than the great temple just mentioned ; but 
it is impossible to determine their exact times. 
They consist of a large quadrangular court 
in front of the great temple, another hexag- 
onal court outside of this, and in front of all, 
a portico or propylsea, approached by a flight 
of steps. Attached to one corner of the quad- 
rangular court is a smaller but more perfect 
temple, and at some distance from all these 
buildings there is a circular edifice, of a unique 
and very interesting architectural form. There 
is also a single Doric column on a rising ground, 
and traces of the city walls. — 2. (In the Old 
Testament, On, or Bethshemesh: now Mata- 
rieh, ruins northeast of Cairo), a celebrated city 
of Lower Egypt, capital of the Nomos Heliopo- 
lites, stood on the eastern side of the Pelusiae 
branch of the Nile, a little below the apex of 
the Delta, and near the canal of Trajan, and 
was, in the earliest period of which we have 
any record, a chief seat of the Egyptian wor- 
ship of the sun. Here, also, was established 
the worship of Mnevis, a sacred bull similar to 
Apis. The priests of Heliopolis were renowned 
for their learning. It suffered much during the 
invasion of Cambyses ; and by the time of 
Strabo it was entirely ruined. 

Helios ("Hltoc or 'He/Uoc), called Sol by the 
Romans, the god of the sun. He was the eon 
of Hyperion and Thea, and a brother of Selene 
and Eos. From his father he is frequently call- 
ed Hypeiuonides or Hyperion, the latter of 
which is an abridged form of the patronymic 
Hyperioniok. In the Homeric hymn on Helios? 
he is called a son of Hyperion and Euryphaessa, 
Homer describes Helios as giving light both to 
gods and men : he rises in the east from Ocea- 
nus, traverses the heaven, and descends in the 
evening into the darkness of the west and Ocea- 
nus. Later poets have marvellously embellish- 
ed this simple notion. They tell of a most 
magnificent palace of Helios in the east, con- 
taining a throne occupied by the god, and sur- 
rounded by personifications of the different di- 
visions of time. They also assign him a second 
palace in the west, and describe his horses as 
feeding upon herbs growing in the islands of the 
Blessed. The manner in which Helios during 
the night passes from the western into the east- 
ern ocean is not mentioned either by Homer or 
Hesiod, but later poets make him sail in a gold- 
en boat, tho work of Hephaestus, round one 
half of the earth, and thus arrive in the east at 
349 



HELISSON. 



HELOS. 



the point from which he has to rise again. . Tiniceus, and others. The fragments of Hellan- 
Others represent him as making his nightly ieus are collected by Sturz, Hellanici Lesbii 
voyage while slumbering in a golden bed. The \ Fragmenta, Lips., 1826 ; and by C. and Th. 
horses and chariot with which Helios traverses Muller, Fragm. Histor. Grcec„ Paris, 1841. — 2. 
The heavens are not mentioned in the Iliad and j A Greek grammarian, a disciple of Agathocles, 
Odyssey, but first occur in the Homeric hymn ' and apparently a contemporary of Aristarchus. 
on Helios, and both are described minutely by j wrote on the Homeric poems, 
later poets. Helios is described as the god who j Hellas, Hellenes. Vid. Ge.ecia. 
sees and hears every thing, and was thus able ! Helle CE?J*rj), daughter of Athamas aud 
to reveal to Vulcan (Hephsestus) the faithless- ' Xephele, and sister of Phrixus. When Phrixus 
ness of Venus (Aphrodite), and to Ceres (Deme- I was to be sacrificed (vid. Phrixus), Nephele Tes- 
ter) the abduction of her daughter. At a later : cued her two children, who rode away through 
time Helios became identified with Apollo, ■ the air upon the ram with the golden fleece, the 
Though the two gods were originally quite dis- gift of Mercury (Hermes) ; but, between Sige- 
Tinct ; but the identification was never carried I um and the Chersonesus, Helle fell into the sea. 
out completely, for no Greek poet ever made | which was thence called the Sea of Helle (Hel- 
Apollo ride in the chariot of Helios through the ! lespontus). Her tomb was shown near Pactya. 
heavens, and among the Romans we find this on the Hellespont. 

idea only after the time of Virgil. The repre- ! Hellex ("E?J.t}v), son of Deucalion and Pyr- 
sentations of Apollo with rays around his head, j rha, or of Jupiter (Zeus) and Dorippe, husband 
to characterize him as identical with the sun, j of Orseis, and father of iEolus, Dorus, and 
belong to the time of the Roman empire. The ' Xuthus. He was king of Phthia in Thessaly,. 
island of Thrinacia (Sicily) was sacred to Heli- and was succeeded by his son iEolus. He is 
os, and there he had flocks of sheep and oxen, ; the mythical ancestor of all the Hellenes; from 
which were tended by his daughters Phaethusa : his two sons xEolus and Dorus were descended 
and Lampetia. Later traditions ascribe to him ! the .zEolians and Dorians ; and from his two 
flocks also in the island of Erythia ; and it may I grandsons Achseus and Ion, the sons of Xuthus ; . 
be remarked, in general, that sacred flocks, es- the Achaeans and Ionians. 



pecially of oxen, occur in most places where 
the worship of Helios was established. His 
descendants are verv numerous; and the sur- 



Hellespontus ( f E/.A^c7rovrof : now Straits of 
the Dardanelles or of Gallipoli, Turk. Stomfad 
Denghiz), the long narrow strait connecting the 



names and epithets given him by the poets are j Propontis (now Sea of Ma 



i) with the jEgean 



mostly descriptive of his character as the sun. i Sea, and through which the waters of the Black 
Temples of Helios (if/uela) existed in Greece at j Sea discharge themselves into the Mediterra- 
a very early time : and in later times we find \ nean in a constant current. The length of the 
his worship established in various places, and j strait is about fifty miles, and the width varies 
•specially in the island of Rhodes, where the j from six miles at the upper end to two at the 



famous colossus was a representation of the 
^od. The sacrifices offered to him consisted 
of white rams, boars, bulls, goats, lambs, espe- 
cially white horses, and honey. Among the an- 
imals sacred to him, the cock is especially men- 
Tioned. The Roman poets, when speaking of 
the god of the sun (Sol), usually adopt the no- 



lower, and in some places it is only one mile- 
wide, or even less. The narrowest part is be- 
tween the ancient cities of Sestus and Abtdus, 
where Xerxes made his bridge of boats (vid. 
Xerxes), and where the legend related that 
Leander swam across to visit Hero. Vid. Leax- 
der. The name of the Hellespont (i. c, the 



tions of the Greeks. The worship of Sol was j Sea of Helle) was derived from the story of 
introduced at Rome, especially after the Ro- i Helle's being drowned in it. Vid. Helle. The 
mans had become acquainted with the East, j Hellespont was the boundary of Europe and 
Though traces of the worship of the sun and j Asia, dividing the Thraeian Chersonese in the 



moon occur at an early period. 



■ former from the Troad. and the territories of 



Helissox ('E?uaauv or 'FJ.lggovc). a small | Abydus and Lampascus in the latter. The die- 
Town in Arcadia, on a river of the same name, \ trict just mentioned, on the southern side of the 



which falls into the Alpheus. 



Hellespont, was also called 'E/jjc-ovroc, its in- 



[Heltum Ostium, one of the mouths of the | habitants 'E/./.tjcttovtloi, and the cities on its 



Rhine, formed by the union with the Mosa.] 



coast 'EM.rjC'novTiaL -noleic. — 2. Under the Ro- 



Hellaxicus {E/jAvlkoc). L Of Mytilene in j man empire, Hellespontus was the name of a 
Lesbos, the most eminent of the Greek logog- j proconsular province, composed of the Troad 
raphers or early Greek historians, was in all j and the northern part of Mysia, and having 
probability born about B.C. 496, and died 411. j Cyzicus for its capital. 

We have no particulars of his fife, but we may Hellomenum ('E/./Mfievov), a sea-port town 
presume that he visited many of the countries, of the Acarnanians on the island Leucas. 
of whose history he gave an account. He ! Hellopia. Vid. Ellopia. 
wrote a great number of genealogical, chrono- Helorus or Helorum (7/ "E/.upo^ : 'E/.top'iTTjc). 
logical, and historical works, which are cited a town on the eastern coast of Sicily, south of 
under the titles of Troica, ^Eolica, Persica, &c. \ Syracuse, at the mouth of the River Helorus. 
One of his most popular works was entitled \ There was a road from Helorus to Syracuse 
'lepeiat r;;c Upac : it contained a chronological (6(% 'E'/Mptvri, Thuc, vi., 70 ; vii, 80). 
list of the priestesses of Juno (Hera) at Argos, Helos (to "Eaoc : 'E/.eioc, : E?.edr'ijg). 1. A 
compiled from the records preserved in the tern- town in Laconia, on the coast, in a marshy sit- 
ple of the goddess of this place. Tins work uation, whence its name (D.oQ=marsh). The 
was one of the earliest attempts to regulate town was in ruins in the time of Pausanias. It 
fcbronologv. and was made use of by Thueydides, ' was commonly said that the Spartan slaves 
350 



HELVECONJE. 



HEPHAESTUS. 



/jailed Helotes (Et/.wrer), were originally the 
Achaean inhabitants of this town, who were re- 
duced by the Dorian conquerors to slavery ; but 
this account of the origin of the Helotes seems 
to have been merely an invention, in conse- 
quence of the similarity of their name to that 
of the town of Helos. Vid. Did. of Anhq., art. 
Helotes.— 2. A town or district of Elis, on the 
Alpheus. 

Helveconjk, a people in Germany, between 
the Viadus and the Vistula, south of the Rugii, 
and north of the Burgundiones, reckoned by 
Tacitus among the Ligii. 

Helvetii, a brave and powerful Celtic people, 
who dwelt between Mount Jurassus (now Jura), 
the Lacus Lemaunus (now Lake of Geneva), the 
Rhone, and the Rhine as far as the Lacus Brig- 
antinus (now Lake of Constance). They were 
thus bounded by the Sequaui oil the west, by 
the Nantuates and Lepontii in Cisalpine Gaul 
on the south, by the Rajti on the east, and by 
the German natious on the north beyond the 
Rhine. Their country, called Ager Helvetiorum 
(but never Helvetia), thus corresponded to the 
western part of Switzerland. Their chief town 
was Aventiccm. They were divided into four 
pagi or cantons, of which the Pagus Tigurlnus 
was the most celebrated. We only know the 
name of one of the three others, namely, the 
Vitus Vcrbigemis, or, more correctly, Urbigcnus. 
The Helvetii are first mentioned in the war with 
the Cimbri. In B.C. 1*07 the Tigurini defeated 
and killed the Roman consul L. Cassius Longi- 
nus, on the Lake of Geneva, while another di- 
vision of the Helvetii accompanied the Cimbri 
and Teutones in their invasion of Gaul. Sub- 
sequently the Helvetii invaded Italy along with 
the Cimbri, and they returned home in safety 
after the defeat of the Cimbri by Marius and 
Catulus in 101. About forty years afterward 
they resolved, upon the advice of Orgetorix, one 
of their chiefs, to migrate from their country 
with their wives and children, and seek a new 
home in the more fertile plains of Gaul. In 58 
they endeavored to carry their plan into execu- 
tion, but they were defeated by Cajsar, and 
driven back into their own territories. The 
Romans now planted colonies and built fort- 
resses in their country (Noviodunum, Vindo- 
nissa, Aventicum), and the Helvetii gradually 
adopted the customs and language of their con- 
querors. They were severely punished by the 
generals of Vitellius (A.D. 10), whom they re- 
fused to recognize as emperor ; and after that 
time they are rarely mentioned as a separate 
people. The Helvetii were included in Gallia 
Lugdunensis according to Strabo, but in Gallia 
Belgica according to Pliuy : most modern writ- 
ers adopt Pliny's statement. When Gaul was 
subdivided into a great number of provinces 
under the later emperors, the country of the 
Helvetii formed, with that of the Sequaui and 
the Rauraci, the province of Maxima Sequano- 
rum. 

Helvia. [1. Mother of the celebrated Cio 
keo.] — 2. Mother of the philosopher Seneca. 

Helvidius Priscus. Vid. Priscus. 

Helvii, a people in Gaul, between the Rhone 
and Mount Cebeuna, which separated them from 
the Arverui, were for a long time subject to 
Massilia, but afterward belonged to the prov- 



ince of Gallia ISTarbonensis. Their country pro- 
duced good wine. 

Helvius. 1. Blasio. Vid. Blasio.— 2. Cinna 
Vid. Cinna.— 3. Mancia. Vid. IIajtcia, — 4, Per 
xin'ax. Vid. Pertinax. 

Hemeresia ('H/iepijoia), the soothing goddess, 
a surname of Diana (Artemis), under which she 
was worshipped at the fountain Lusi (Aovtroi), 
in Arcadia. 

Hemeroscoi'Iox. 1-7(7. Dianium, No. 2. 

Hemina, Cassius. Vid, Cassius, No. 14, 

Heneti ('Everol), an ancient people inPaphla- 
gonia, dwelling on the River Parthenius, fought 
on the side of Priam against the Greeks, but 
had disappeared before the historical times. 
They were regarded by many ancient writers 
as the ancestors of the Veneti in Italy. Vid, 
Venetl 

HenIochi ('Hvloxoi), a people in Colchis, uortU 
of the Phasis, notorious as pirates. 
Henna. Vid, Enxa. 

Heph.estia ViL<j>aiaria). 1. ('H.(pat<jTuvc), a 
town in the northwest of the island of Lemnos. 
— 2. ( t H(paiGTL6i]g,-Teidjjc), a demus in Attica, be- 
longing to the tribe Acamantis. 

Heph^estiades Insula. Vid, ^Eolle. 

Heph^estion ('ll([>aioTMv). 1. Son of Amyn- 
tor, a Macedonian of Pella, celebrated as the 
friend of Alexander the Great, with whom he 
had been brought up. Alexander called He- 
phaestion his owu private friend, but Craterm 
the friend of the king. Hephaestion accom- 
panied Alexander to Asia, and was employed 
by the king in many important commands. He 
died at Ecbatana, after an illness of only sevei> 
days, B.C. 825. Alexander's grief for his loss 
was passionate and violent. A general mourn- 
ing was ordered throughout the empire, and a 
funeral pile and monument erected to him at 
Babylon, at a cost of ten thousand talents. — 2. 
A Greek grammarian, who instructed the Em- 
peror Yerus in Greek, and accordingly lived 
about A.D. 150. He was perhaps the author 
of a Manual on Metres ('E-yx El pi°* l ' 0V Kept /iirptjv), 
which has come down to us under the name of 
Hephaestion. This work is a tolerably complete 
manual of Greek metres, and forms the basis 
of all our knowledge on that subject. Edited 
by Gaisford, Oxon., 1810. 

Hephjestus ("H^aiGTog), called Tulcanus by 
the Romans, the god of fire. He was, accord- 
ing to Homer, the son of Zeus (Jupiter) and 
Hera (Juno). Later traditions state that he had 
no father, and that Hera (Juno) gave birth to 
him independent of Zeus (Jupiter), as she was 
jealous of Zeus (Jupiter) having given birth to 
Athena (Minerva) independent of her. He was 
born lame and weak, and was, in consequence, 
so much disliked by his mother that she threw 
him down from Olympus. The marine divini- 
ties, Thetis and Eurynome, received him, and 
he dwelt with them for nine years in a grotto, 
beneath Oceanus, making for them a variety of 
ornaments. He afterward returned to Olym- 
pus, though we are not told through what means, 
and he appears in Homer as the great artist of 
the gods of Olympus. Although he had beexi 
cruelly treated by his mother, he always show- 
ed her respect and kindness, and on one occa- 
sion took her part when she was quarrelling 
with Zeus (J upiter), which so much enraged th*- 
351 



HEPTAS0MI3. 



HERA. 



father of the gods that he seized Hephaestus 
(Vulcan) by the leg and hurled him down from 
heaven. Hephaestus (Vulcan) was a whole day 
i'alJing, but in the evening he alighted in the 
island of Lemnos. where he was kindly received 
by the Sintians. Later writers describe his 
lameness as the consequence of this fall, while 
Homer makes him lame from his birth. He again 
returned to Olympus, and subsequently acted 
the part of mediator between his parents. Ou 
that occasion he offered a cup of nectar to his 
mother and the other gods, who burst out into 
immoderate laughter on seeing him busily hob- 
bling from one god to another. Hephaestus 
(Vulcan) appears to have been originally the 
god of fire simply ; but as fire is indispensable 
in working metals, he was afterward regarded 
as an artist. His palace in Olympus was im- 
perishable and shining like stars. It contained 
hh workshop, with the anvil and twenty bel- 
lows, which worked spontaneously at his bid- 
ding. It was there that he made all his beauti- 
ful and marvellous works, both for gods and 
men. The ancient poets abound in descriptions 
of exquisite workmanship which had been man- 
ufactured by the god. All the palaces in Olym- 
pus were his workmanship. He made the ar- 
mor of Achilles; the fatal necklace of Harmo- 
uia ; the fire-breathing bulls of ^Eetes, king of 
Colchis. <fec. In later accounts, the Cyclopes 
are his workmen and servants, and his work- 
shop is no longer in Olympus, but in some vol- 
canic island. In the Iliad the wife of Hephaes- 
tus (Vulcan) is Charis : in Hesiod, Aglaia, the 
youngest of the Charites; but in the Odyssey, 
as well as iu later accounts, Aphrodite (Venus) 
appears as his wife. Aphrodite (Venus) proved 
faithless to her husband, and was in love with 
Ares (Mars) ; but Helios disclosed their amours 
so Hephaestus (Vulcan), who caught the guilty 
pair in an invisible net, and exposed them to 
the laughter of the assembled gods. The fa- 
vorite abode of Hephaestus (Vulcan) on earth 
was the island of Lemnos ; but other volcanic 
islands also, such as Lipara, Hiera, Imbros, and 
Sicily, are called his abodes or workshops. He- 
phaestus (Vulcan), like Athena (Minerva), gave 
skill to mortal artists, and, conjointly with her, 
he was believed to have taught men the arts 
which embellish and adorn life. Hence at 
Athens they had temples and festivals in com- 
mon. The epithets and surnames by which 
Hephaestus (Vulcan) is designated by the poets, 
generally allude to his skill in the "plastic arts 
or to his lameness. The Greeks frequently 
placed small dwarf-life statues of the god near 
the hearth. During the best period of Grecian 
art he was represented as a vigorous man with 
a beard, and is characterized by his hammer or 
some other instrument, his oval cap, and the 
ehiton, which leaves the right shoulder and arm 
uncovered. The Roman Vulcanus was an old 
Italian divinity. Vid. Vulcanus. 

Heptanomis. Vid. ^Egyptus. 

Hera ("Hpa or Hp??), called Juno by the Ro- 
mans. The Greek Hera, that is, Mistress, was 
a daughter of Cronos (Saturn) and Rhea, and 
sister and wife of Zeus (Jupiter). Some call 
her the eldest daughter of Cronos (Saturn), but 
others give this title to Hestia. According to 
Homer she was brought up bv Oceanvw and 
352 



Tethys, and afterward became the wife of Zeus 
(Jupiter) without the knowledge of her parents. 
This simple account is variously modified in 
other traditions. Being a daughter of Cronos 
(Saturn), she, bike his other children, was swal- 
lowed by her father, but afterward released; 
and, according to an Arcadian tradition, she was 
j brought up by Temenus, the son of Pelasgus. 
j The Argives, "on the other hand, related that 
she had been brought up by Eubcea, Prosy mna, 
I and Acraea, the three daughters of the River 
Asterion. Several parts of Greece claimed the 
j honor of being her birth-place, and more espe- 
| cially Argos and Samos, which were the prin- 
cipal seats of her worship. Her marriage with 
Zeus (Jupiter) offered ample scope for poetical 
invention, and several places in Greece also 
claimed the honor of having been the scene of 
the marriage, such as Eubcea, Samos, Cnosus 
in Crete, and Mount Thornax in the south of 
Argolis. Her marriage, called the Sacred Mar- 
riage (lepoc ydiLoc), was represented in many 
places where she was worshipped. At her nup- 
tials all the gods honored her with presents, and 
Ge (Terra) presented to her a tree with golden 
apples, which was watched by the Hesperi- 
des, at the foot of the Hyperborean Atlas. In 
J the Iliad Hera (Juno) is treated by the Olym 
I pian gods with the same reverence as her hus- 
| band. Zeus (Jupiter) himself listens to her 
i counsels, and communicates his secrets to her. 
j She is, notwithstanding, far inferior to him 
in power, and must obey him unconditionally. 
She is not, like Zeus (Jupiter), the queen of 
gods and men, but simply the wife of the su- 
preme god. The idea of her being the queen 
of heaven, with regal wealth and power, is of 
much later date. Her character, as described 
by Homer, is not of a very amiable kind ; and 
her jealousy, obstinacy, and quarrelsome dispo- 
sition sometimes make her husband tremble. 
Hence arise frequent disputes between Hera 
(Juno) and Zeus (Jupiter) ; and on one occasion 
I Hera (Juno), in conjunction with Poseidon (Nep- 
i tune) and Athena (Minerva), contemplated put- 
i ting Zeus (Jupiter) into chains. Zeus (Jupiter)i 
! in such cases, not only threatens, but beats her. 
i Once he even hung her up in the clouds, with 
her hands chained, and with two anvils sus- 
j pended from her feet ; and on another occasion, 
j when Hephaestus (Vulcan) attempted to help 
! her, Zeus (Jupiter) hurled him down from Olym- 
pus. By Zeus (Jupiter) she was the mother of 
j Ares (Mars), Hebe, and Hephaestus (Vulcan). 
Hera (Juno) was, properly speaking, the only 
really married goddess among the Olympians, 
for the marriage of Aphrodite (Venus) with 
Hephaestus (Vulcan) can scarcely be taken into 
consideration. Hence she is the goddess of 
J marriage and of the birth of children. Several 
| epithets and surnames, such as EtAeidvca, Tapq- 
I 71a, Zvy'ia, Te?.eia, <tc, contain allusions to thia 
character of the goddess, and the Ilithyia) are 
described as her daughters. She is represent- 
ed in the Iliad riding in a chariot drawn by two 
horses, in the harnessing and unharnessing ot 
which she is assisted by Hebe and the Horaa. 
Owing to the judgment of Paris (vid. Paris), 
she was hostile to the Trojans, and in the Tro- 
jan war she accordingly sided with the Greeks. 
She persecuted all the children of Zeus (Jupi- 



HERACLEA. 



HERACLIDjE. 



ter) by mortal mothers, and hence appears as 
the enemy of Dionysus (Bacchus), Hercules, 
and others. In the Argonautic expedition she 
I assisted Jason. It is impossible here to enu- 
merate all the events of mythical story in which 
Hera (Juno) acts a part, and the reader must 
refer to the particular deities or heroes with 
whose story she is connected. Hera (Juno) 
was worshiped in many parts of Greece, but 
more especially at Argos, in the neighborhood 
I of which she had a splendid temple, on the road 
to Mycena?. Her <?reat festival at Argos is de- 
scribed in the Diet, of Ant, art. Her.ea. She 
also had a splendid temple in Samos. The an- 
cients gave several interpretations respecting 
the real significance of Hera (Juno), but we 
must in all probability regard her as the great 
goddess of nature, who was worshipped every 
where from the earliest times. The worship 
of the Roman Juno is spoken of in a separate 
article. Vid. Juno. Hera (Juno) was usually 
represented as a majestic woman of mature 
age, with a beautiful forehead, large and wide- 
| }y-opened eyes, and with a grave expression 
> commanding reverence. Her hair was adorn- 
ed with a crown or a diadem. A veil frequent- 
l ly hangs down the back of her head, to charac- 
; terize her as the bride of Zeus (Jupiter), and 
! the diadem, veil, sceptre, and peacock are her 
i ordinary attributes. 

Heraclea ('Hpdn?<eia : 'Hpax'Aeu-?^ : Hera- 
cleotes). I. In JSiiropc. 1. H., in Lucania, on 
' the River Siris, founded by the Tarentines. 
| During the independence of the Greek states in 
the south of Italy, congresses were held in this 
town under the presidency of the Tarentines. 
It sunk into insignificance 'under the Romans. 
— 2. In Aearnania, on the Ambraeian Gulf. — 3. 
fu Pisatis Elis, in ruins in the time of Strabo. 
— 4. The later name of Perinthus in Thrace. 
Vid. Perinthus. — 5. H. Oaccabaria Porbaria, 
in Gallia Narbonensis, on the coast, a sea-port 
of the Massilians. — 6. H. Li'NCESTis (AvytcnoTtc) 
also called Pelagonia (now Bitoglia or Bitolia), 
in Macedonia, on the Via Egnatia, west of the 
Erigon, the capital of one of the four districts 
into which Macedonia was divided by the Ro- 
mans. — T. H. Minoa (Mcvua : ruins near Torre 
di Capo Bianco), on the southern coast of Sicily, 
at the mouth of the River Halycus, between 
Agrigentum and Selinus. According to tradi- 
tion it was founded by Minos, when he pursued 
. Daedalus to Sicily, and it may have been an an- 
j cient colony of the Cretans. We know, how- 
ever, that it was afterward colonized by the in- 
\ habitants of Seliuus, and that its original name 
was Minoa, which it continued to bear till about 
B.C. 500, when the towu was taken by the Lac- 
edaemonians, under Eurvlcon, who changed its 
name into that of Hermclt* ; but it continued to 
bear its ancient appellation as a surname, to dis- 
tinguish it from other places of the same name. 
It fell at an early period into the hands of the 
Carthaginians, and remained in their power till 
the conquest of Sicily by the Romans, who 
planted a colony there.— 8. H. Sintica (Zivtiict}), 
in Macedonia, a town of the Sinti, on the left 
bank of the Sttymon, founded by Amvntas, 
brother of Philip!— 9. H. Trachini^, in Thes- 
«aly. Vid. Trachis.— II. In Asia, 1. H. Pon- 
ricA ('H. 7] Uovtikt?, or Tlovrov, or h Uovtu : 
23 



now Harakli or Eregli), a city on the southern 
shore of the Pontus Euxinus, on the coast of 
Bithynia, in the territory of the Mariandyni, was 
situated twenty stadia north of the River Lycus, 
upon a little river called Acheron or Soonautes, 
and near the base of a peninsula called Acheru- 
sia, and had a fine harbor. It was founded about 
B.C. 550 by colonists from Megara and from 
Tanagra in Boeotia (not, as Strabo says, from 
Miletus). After various political struggles, it 
settled down under a monarchical form of gov- 
ernment. It reached the height of its prosperi- 
ty in the reign of Darius Codoinannus, when it 
had an extensive commerce, and a territory 
reaching from the Parthenius to the Sangarius. 
It began to decline in consequence of the rise 
of the kingdom of Bithynia and the foundation 
of Nicomedia, and the invasion of Asia Minor 
by the Gauls ; and its ruin was completed in 
the Mithradatic war, when the city was taken 
and plundered, and partly destroyed, by the Ro- 
mans under Cotta. It was the native city of 
Heraclides Ponticus, and perhaps of the paint- 
er Zeuxis. — 2. H. ad Latmum ('H. Adrpov or r/ 
vxd Adr/LHf) : ruins near the Lake of Baffi), a town 
of Ionia, southeast of Miletus, at the foot of 
Mount Latnius, and upon the Sinus Latmicus ; 
formerly called Latmus. Near it was a cave, 
with the tomb of Endymion. There was an- 
other city of the same name in Caria, one in 
Lydia, two in Syria, one in Media, and one in 
India, none of which require special notice here- 
HERACLEoroLis ('H.pan?.£ov7ro2,tg). 1. Parva 
{rj /xiKpd), also called Sethron, a city of Lower 
Egypt, in the Nomos Sethroitcs, 'twenty-two 
Roman miles west of Pelusium. — 2. Magna ($ 
piyaku, also rj avu), the capital of the fertile 
Nomos Heracleopolites or Heraeleotes, in the 
Heptanomis or Middle Egypt : a chief seat of 
the worship of the ichneumon. 

[Heracles ('Hpa/c/%). Vid. Hercules.] 
Heracleum ('H.puK?i.£iov), the name of several 
promontories and towns, of which none require 
special notice except, 1. A town in Macedonia, 
at the mouth of the Apilas, near the frontiers 
of Thessaly. — 2. The harbor of Cnosus in Crete. 
— 3. A town on the coast of the Delta of Egypt^ 
a little west of Canopus, from which the Cano- 
pic mouth of the Nile was often called also the 
Heracleotic mouth. — 4. A place near Gindarus, 
in the Syrian province of Cyrrhestice, where 
Ventidius, the legate of M. Antony, gained his 
great vietorv over the Parthians under Pacorus 
in B.C. 38. 

Heraclianus ('B.paK?.eiav6c), one of the offi- 
cers of Honorius, put Stilicho to death (A.D. 
408), and received, as the reward of that serv- 
ice, the government of Africa. He rendered 
good service to Honorius during the invasion of 
Italy by Alaric, and the usurpation of Attalus. 
In 413 he revolted against Honorius, and in- 
vaded Italy ; but his enterprise failed, and on 
his return to Africa he was put to death at Car- 
thage. 

HeraclidjE ('HpaKAtidat), the descendants of 
Hercules, who, in conjunction with the Dorians, 
conquered Peloponnesus. It had been the will 
of Jupiter (Zeus), so rau the legend, that Her- 
cules should rule over the country of the Per 
seids, at Mycenaa and Tiryns ; 'but, through 
Juno's (Hera) cunning, Eurvstheus had been 
353 



HERACLIDJE. 



HERACLIDES. 



put into the place of Hercules, who had become i 
the servant of the former. After the death of i 
Hercules, his claims devolved upon his sons 
and descendants. At the time of his death, I 
Hyllus, the eldest of his four sons bj Deiamra, j 
was residing with his brothers at the court of j 
Ceyx at Trachis. As Eurystheus demanded : 
their sui-render, and Ceyx was unable to pro- ' 
tect them, they fled to various parts of Greece, j 
until they were received as suppliants at Athens, j 
at the altar of Eleos {Mercy). According to the j 
Heraclidce of Euripides, the sons of Hercules ! 
were first staying at Argos, thence went to ! 
Trachis in Thessaly, and at length came to 
Athens. Demophon, the son of Theseus, re- 
ceived them, and they settled in the Attic tetrap- \ 
olis. Eurystheus, to whom the Athenians re- 1 
fused to surrender the fugitives, now marched 
against the Athenians with a large army, but 
was defeated by the Athenians under Iolaus, 
Theseus, and Hyllus, and was slain with his 
sons. The battle itself was celebrated in Attic 
story as the battle of the Scironian rock, on the 
coast of the Saronic Gulf, though Pindar places 
it in the neighborhood of Thebes. After the 
battle the Heraclidae entered the Pelop onnesus, 
and maintained themselves there for one year. 
This was their first invasion of Peloponnesus. 
But a plague, which spread over the whole pen- 
insula, compelled them to return to Attica, 
where, for a time, they again settled in the At- 
tic tetrapolis. From thence they proceeded to 
-Egimius, king of the Dorians, whom Hercules 
had assisted in his war against the Lapithae, and 
who had promised to preserve a third of his ter- 
ritory for the children of Hercules. Vid. Mgi- 
jiics. The Heraclidae were hospitably received 
by JSgimius, and Hyllus was adopted by the 
latter. After remaining in Doris three years, 
Hyllus, with a band of Dorians, undertook an 
expedition against Atreus, who had married a 
daughter of Eurystheus, and had become king 
of Mycenae and Tiiyns. Hyllus marched across 
the Corinthian isthmus, and first met Echemus 
of Tegea, who fought for the Pelopidae, the prin- 
cipal opponents of the Heraclidae. Hyllus fell 
in single combat with Echemus, and, according 
to an agreement which had been made before 
the battle, the Heraclidae were not to make any 
further attempt upon Peloponnesus for the next 
fifty years. Thus ended their second invasion. 
They now retired to Tricorythus, where they 
were allowed by the Athenians to take up their 
abode. During the period which followed (ten 
years after the death of Hyllus), the Trojan war 
took place ; and thirty years after the Trojan 
war Cleodaeus, 6on of Hyllus, again invaded 
Peloponnesus, which was the third invasion ; 
about twenty years later, Aristomachus, the son 
of Cleodaeus, undertook the fourth expedition ; 
but both heroes felL Not quite thirty years 
after Aristomachus (that is, about eighty years 
after the destruction of Troy), the Heraclidae 
prepared for their fifth and final attack. Teme- 
nus, Cresphontes, and Aristodemus, the sons 
of Aristomachus, upon the advice of an oracle, 
built a fleet on the Corinthian Gulf ; but this 
fleet was destroyed, because Hippotes, one of 
the Heraclidae, had killed Carnus, an Acarnani- 
an soothsayer ; and Aristodemus was killed by 
a flash of lightning. An oracle now ordered 
354 



them to take a three-eyed man for their com- 
mander. He was found in the person of Oxy- 
lus, the son of Andraemon, an iEtolian, but de- 
scended from a family in Elis. The expedition 
now successfully sailed from isaupaetus toward 
Rhiuni in Peloponnesus. Oxylus, keeping the 
invaders away from Elis, led them through Ar- 
cadia, The Heraclidae and Dorians conquered 
Tisamenus, the son of Orestes, who ruled over 
Argos, Mycenae, and Sparta. After this they 
became masters of the greater part of Pelopon- 
nesus, and then distributed by lot the newly-ac- 
quired possessions. Temenus obtained Argos ; 
Procles and Eurystheus, the twin sous of Aris- 
todemus, Lacedaemon ; and Cresphontes, Mes- 
senia. Such are the traditions about the Her- 
aclidae and their conquest of Peloponnesus. 
Toey are not purely mythical, but contain a 
genuine historical substance, notwithstanding 
the various contradictions in the accounts. 
They represent the conquest of the Achaean 
population by Dorian invaders, who hencefor- 
ward appear as the ruling race in the Pelopon- 
nesus. The conquered Achaeans became part- 
ly the slaves and partly the subjects of the Dori- 
ans. Vid. Diet, of Ant, art. Periceci. 

HekaclIdes ( f HpaKA«'(5j7f). 1. A Syracusau, 
sou of Lysimachus, one of the generals when 
Syracuse was attacked by the Athenians, B.C.. 
415. — 2. A Syracusan, who held the chief com- 
mand of the mercenary forces under the young 
er Dionysius. Being suspected by Dionysius. 
he fled from Syracuse, and afterward took part 
with Dion in expelling Dionysius from Syra- 
cuse. After the expulsion of the tyrant, a pow- 
erful party at Syracuse looked up to Heraclides 
as their leader, in consequence of which Dio:.\ 
caused him to be assassinated, 354. — 3. Son of 
Agathocles, accompanied his father to Africa, 
where he was put to death by the soldiers 
when they were deserted by Agathocles, 307- 
— 4. Of Tarentum, one of the chief counsellors 
of Philip V., king of Macedonia.— 5. Of Byzan- 
tium, sent as ambassador by Antiochus the 
Great to the two Scipios, 190—6. One of the 
three ambassadors sent by Antiochus Epipha- 
nes to the Romans, 169. Heraclides was ban- 
ished by Demetrins Soter, the successor of An- 
tioehus*(162), and iu revenge gave his support 
to the imposture of Alexander Balas. — 7. Sur- 
named Posticus, because he was born at Hera- 
clea in Pontus. He was a person of consider- 
able wealth, and migrated to Athens, where he 
became a pupil of Plato. He paid attention also 
to the Pythagorean system, and afterward at- 
tended the instructions of Speusippus, and final- 
ly of Aristotle. He wrote a great number oi 
works upon philosophy, mathematics, music, 
history, politics, grammar, and poetry ; but al- 
most all of these works are lost. There has 
come down to us a small work, under the name 
of Heraclides, entitled Tzepl Ho/uteiuv, of which 
the best editions are by Koler, Halle, 1804, by 
Corae, in his edition of yElian, Paris, 1805, [and 
by Schneidewin, 1849]. Another extant work- 
'■ AXfyyopiai 'O/xypinai, which also bears the 
name of Heraclides, was certainly not written 
by him. Diogenes Laertius, in his fife of Her- 
aclides, says that ''Heraclides made tragedies, 
and put the name of Thespis to them." Thi-- 1 
sentence has given occasion to a learned (fis- 



HERACL1TUS. 



HERCULES. 



juisition by Bentley (Phalaris, p. 239), to prove 
that the fragments attributed to Thespis are 
really cited from these counterfeit tragedies of 
Heraclides. Some childish stories are told about 
Heraclides keeping a pet serpent, and ordering 
one of his friends to conceal his body after his 
death, and place the serpent on the bed, that it 
might be supposed that he had been taken to 
the company ef the gods. It is also said that 
he killed a man who had usurped the tyranny 
i in Heracles, and there are other traditions about 
him scarcely worth relating.— 8. An historian, 
who lived in the reign of Ptolemy Philopator 
(222-205), and wrote several works, quoted by 
the grammarian, —9. A physician of Tarentum, 
lived in the third or secoud century B.C., and 
wroto some works on Materia Medica, and a 
commentary on all the works in the Hippocratic 
Collection— 10. A physician of Erythra? in Ionia, 
was a pupil of Chrysermus, and a contemporary 
of Strabo in the first century B.C. 

Heraclitus ('HpanlttToc). 1. Of Ephesus, a 
philosopher generally considered as belonging 
to the Ionian school, though he differed from 
their principles in many respects. In his youth 
i he travelled extensively, and after his return to 
Ephesus the chief magistracy was offered him, 
which, however, he transferred to his brother. 
He appears afterward to have become a com- 
plete recluse, rejecting even the kindnesses 
offered by Darius,' and at last retreatiug to the 
; mountains, where lie lived on pot-herbs; but, 
after some time, he was compelled by the sick- 
ness consequent on such meagre diet to return 
to Ephesus, where lie died He died at the age 
of sixty, and flourished about B.C. 513. Her- 
h aclitus wrote a work On Nature (Kepi 6vaeoc), 
I which contained his philosophical views. From 
I the obscurity of his style, he gained the title of 
the Obscure (atioretvoc). He considered fire to 
be the primary form of all matter; but by fire 
| he meant only to describe a clear fight fluid, 
' " self-kindled and self-extinguished," and there- 
fore not differing materially from the air of 
Anaximenes. — 2. An Academic philosopher of 
Tyre, a friend of Autiochus, and a pupil of Cli- 
tomachus and Philo. — 3. The reputed author of 
a work, Uepl 'Ktclgtuv, published by Wester- 
mann in his Mf/thographi, Brunsvig., 1843. — 
[4. Of Lesbos, author of a history of Macedo- 
nia. — 5. An elegiac poet of Halicarnassus, a 
contemporary and friend of Callimaehus, who 
"wrote an epigram on him.] 

[Heraclius ( r Hp(kX£<of : 'HpaKAioc). 1. The 
name of several Sicilians mentioned by Cicero, 
e. g. : a. A citizen of Centuripini, who appeared in 
evidence against Verres ; 6. A native of Segesta, 
put to death by Verres, though innocent ; c. Son 
of Hiero, a noble and opuleut Syracusan, strip- 
ped of nearly all his property by Verres ; d. An- 
other Syracusan, priest of Jupiter (Zeus), held 
in high estimatiou by his fellow-citizens. — 2. A 
eunuch, and favorite of Valentinian III. ; was 
the instigator of the murder of Aetius. — 3. A 
governor of the Emperor Leo's in Africa, fought 
successfully against the Vandals, 466 A.D.J 

Her,ea ('Hpaia : 'llpaizvc : ruins near St. Jo- 
annes), a town in Arcadia, on the right bank of 
the Alpheus, near the borders of Elis. Its ter- 
ritory was called Herjeatis ('HpaLurte). 

Heiukt Mooted (to. llpata bpy : now Monti 



Sort), a range of mountains iu Sicily, running 
• from the centre of the island southeast, and end- 
| ing in the promontory Pachynum. 

Her^eum. Vid. Argos, p. 92, a. 

Herbessus. Vid. Erbessus. 

Herbita ("Ep6i~a : 'EpGtraloc, Herbiteusis, a 
town in Sicily, north of Agyrium, in the mount- 
ains, was a powerful place in early times under 
the tyrant Archonides, but afterward declined 
in importance. 

Herculaneum, ii, town in Samnimn, conquer- 
ed by the consul Carvilius, B.C. 293 (Liv., x., 
45), must not be confounded with the more cel- 
ebrated town of this name mentioned below. 

Herculaneum, Herculanium, Herculamjjt, 
Herculense OrriDUM, Herculea Urbs ('Hpa- 
ic?,etov), an ancient city in Campania, near the 
coast, between Neapolis and Pompeii, was orig- 
inally founded by the Oseans, was next in the 
possession of the Tyrrhenians, and subsequent- 
ly was chiefly inhabited by Greeks, who ap- 
pear to have setted in the place from other 
cities of Magna Greecia, and to have given it its 
name. It was taken by the Romans in the So- 
cial war (B.C. 89, 88), and was colonized by 
them. In A.D. 63 a great part of it was de- 
stroyed by an earthquake; and in *79 it was 
overwhelmed, along with Pompeii and Stabise, 
by the great eruption of Mount Vesuvius. It 
was buried under showers of ashes and streams 
of lava, from seventy to one hundred feet under 
the present surface of the ground. On its 
site stand the modern Portici and part of the 
village of Resina: the Italian name of Erco- 
lano does not indicate any modern place, but 
only the part of Herculaneum that has been dis- 
interred. The ancient city was accidentally 
discovered by the sinking of a well in 1720, 
since w r hich time the excavations have been 
carried on at different periods ; and many works 
of art have been discovered, which are deposited 
in the Royal Museum at Portici. It has been 
found necessary to fill up again the excavations 
which were made, in order to render Portici and 
Resina secure, and therefore very little of the 
ancient city is to be seen. The buildings that 
have been discovered are a theatre capable of 
accommodating about ten thousand spectators, 
the remains of two temples, a large building, 
commonly designated as a forum civile, two 
hundred and twenty-eight feet long and one 
hundred and thirty-two broad, and some private 
houses, the walls of which w r ere adorned with 
paintings, many of which, when discovered, 
were in a state of admirable preservation. 
There have been also found at Herculaneum 
many MSS., written on rolls of papyrus ; but 
the difficulty of unrolling and deciphering them 
was very great ; and the few w r hich have been 
deciphered are of little value, consisting of a 
treatise of Philodemus on music, and fragments 
of unimportant works on philosophy. 

Hercules ('HpaK/.r/c), the most celebrated of 
all the heroes of antiquity. His exploits were 
celebrated not only in all the countries round 
the Mediterranean, but even in the most distant 
lands of the ancient world. I. Greek Legends, 
The Greek traditions about Hercules appear in 
their national purity down to the time of He- 
rodotus. But the poets of the time of Herodo- 
tus and of the subsequent periods introduced 
355 



HERCULES. 



HERCULES. 



considerable alterations, which were probably 
derived from the East or Egypt, for every nation 
possesses some traditions respecting heroes of 
superhuman strength and power. Xow while 
in the earliest Greek legends Hercules is a 
purely human hero, a conqueror of men, and 
cities, he afterward appears as the subduer of 
monstrous animals, and is connected in a va- 
riety of ways with astronomical phenomena. 
According to Homer, Hercules was the son of 
Jupiter (Zeus) by Alemene of Thebes in Bceo- 
tia. His stepfather was Amphitryon. Amphit- 
ryon was the son of Alca2us, the son of Perseus ; 
and Alemene was a grand-daughter of Pers- 
eus. Hence Hercules belonged to the family 
of Perseus. Jupiter (Zeus) visited Alemene 
in the form of Amphitryon, while the latter was 
absent warring against the Taphians ; and he, 
pretending to be her husband, became by her 
the father of Hercules. For details, vid. Alc- 
mexe, Amphitryon. On the day on which Her- 
cules was to be bora, Jupiter (Zeus) boasted of 
his becoming the father of a hero who was to 
rule over the race of Perseus. Juno (Hera) 
prevailed upon him to swear that the descend- 
ant of Perseus born that day should be the ruler. 
Thereupon she hastened to Argos, and there 
caused the wife of Sthenelus to give birth to 
Eurystheus; -whereas, by keeping away the 
Ilithyiee, she delayed the birth of Hercules, and 
thus robbed him of the entire which Jupiter 
(Zeus) had destined for him. Jupiter (Zeus) 
was enraged at the imposition practiced upon 
him, but could not violate his oath. Alemene 
brought into the world two boys, Hercules, the 
son of Jupiter (Zeus), and Iphicles, the son of 
Amphityron. .Nearly all the stories about the 
ehildhood and youth of Hercules, down to the 
time -when he entered the service of Eurysth- 
eus, seem to be inventions of a later age. At 
least in Homer and Hesoid we are only told that 
he grew strong in body and mind ; that, confid- 
ing in his own powers, he defied even the immor- 
tal gods, and wounded Juno (Hera) and Mars 
(Ares), and that under the protection of Jupiter 
(Zeus) and Minerva (Athena) he escaped the 
dangers which Juno (Hera) prepared for him. 
To these simple accounts, various particulars 
are added in later writers. As he lay in his 
cradle, Juno (Hera) sent two serpents to destroy 
him, but the infant hero strangled them with 
his own hands. As he grew up, he was in- 
structed by Amphitryon in driving a chariot, by 
Autolycus in wrestling, by Eurytus in archery, 
by Castor in fighting with heavy armor, and by 
Linus in singing and playing the lyre. Linus 
was killed by his pupil with the lyre because 
he had censured him ; and Amphitryon, to pre- 
vent similar occurrences, sent him to feed his 
?attle. In this manner he spent his life till his 
eighteenth year. His first great adventure hap- 
pened while he was still watching the oxen of 
his stepfather. A huge lion, which haunted 
Mount Cithffiron, made great havoc among the 
flocks of Amphitryon and Thespius (or Thesti- 
us), king of Thespke, Hercules promised to 
deliver the country of the monster ; and Thes- 
pius rewarded Hercules by making him his 
guest so long as the chase lasted." Hercules 
.slew the lion, and henceforth wore its skin as 
Tiif ordiuarv garment, and its mouth and head 
356 



as his helmet Others related that the lion's 
skin of Hercules was taken from the Nemean 
lion. On his return to Thebes, he met the 
envoys of King Erginus of Orchomenos, who 
were going to fetch the annual tribute of one 
hundred oxen, which they had compelled the 
Thebans to pay. Hercules cut off the noses 
and ears of the envoys, and thus sent them back 
to Erginus. The latter thereupon marched 
against Thebes; but Hercules defeated and 
killed Erginus, and compelled the Orchomeni- 
ans to pay double the tribute which they had 
formerly received from the Thebans. In this 
battle against Erginus Hercules lost his step- 
father Amphitryon, though the tragedians make 
him survive the campaign. Creon rewarded 
Hercules with the hand of his daughter Me- 
gara, by whom he became the father of several 
children, The gods, on the other hand, made 
him presents of arms : Mercury (Hermes) gave 
him a sword, Apollo a bow and arrows, Vulcan 
(Hephaestus) a golden coat of mail, and Mi- 
nerva (Athena) a peplus. He cut for himself a 
club in the neighborhood of Nemea, while, ac- 
cording to others, the club was of brass, and 
the gift of Vulcan (Hephaestus). Soon after- 
ward Hercules was driven mad by Juno (Hera), 
and in this state he killed his own children by 
Megara and two of Iphicles. In his grief he 
sentenced himself to exile, and went to Thes- 
pius, who purified him. Other traditions place 
this madness at a later time, and relate the cir- 
cumstances differently. He then consulted the 
oracle of Delphi as to where he should settle. 
The Pythia first called him by the name of Her- 
cules — for hitherto his name had been Alcides 
or Alcaeus — and ordered him to live at Tiryns, 
and to serve Eurystheus for the space of twelve 
years, after which he should become immortal. 
Hercules accordingly went to Tiryns, and did 
as he was bid by Eurystheus. The accounts 
of the twelve labors which Hercules performed 
at the bidding of Eurystheus are found only in 
the later writers. The only one of the twelve 
labors mentioned by Homer is his descent into 
the lower world to carry off Cerberus. We also 
find in Homer the fight of Hercules with a sea- 
monster ; his expedition to Troy, to fetch the 
horses which Laomedon had refused him; and 
his war against the Pylians, when he destroyed 
the whole family of their king Neleus, with the 
exception of Nestor. Hesiod mentions several 
of the feats of Hercules distinctly, but knows 
nothing of their number twelve. The selection 
of these twelve from the great number of feats 
ascribed to Hercules is probably the work of 
the Alexandrines. They are usually arranged 
in the following order. 1. Tfte fight with the 
Kemean lion. The valley of Kemea, between 
Cleonse and Phlius, was' inhabited by a mon- 
strous lion, the offspring of Typhon and Echid- 
na. Eurystheus ordered Hercules to bring hini 
the skin of this monster. After using in vain 
his club and arrows against the lion, he stran- 
gled the animal with his own hands. He re- 
turned carrying the dead lion on his shoulders ; 
but Eurystheus was so frightened at the gigan- 
tic strength of the hero, that he ordered him in 
future to deliver the account of his exploits 
outside the town. — 2. Fight against the Lernceap 
hvdro. This monster, like the lion, was the 



HERCULES. 



HERCULES. 



offspring of Typhon and Echidna, and was 
brought up by Juno (Hera). It ravaged the 
country of Lerna near Argos, and dwelt in a 
swamp near the well of Amymone. It had nine 
heads, of which the middle one .was immortal. 
Hercules struck off its heads Avith his club ; but 
in the place of the head he cut off, two new 
ones grew forth each time. A gigantic crab 
also came to the assistance of the hydra, and 
wounded Hercules. However, with the assist- 
ance of his faithful servant Iolaus, he burned 
away the heads of the hydra, and buried the 
ninth or immortal one under a huge rock. Hay- 
ing thus conquered the monster, he poisoned his 
arrows with its bile, whence the wounds inflict- 
ed by them became incurable. Eurystheus de- 
clared the victory unlawful, as Hercules had 
won it with the "aid of Iolaus. — 3. Capture of 
the Arcadian staff. This animal had golden 
antlers and brazen feet. It had been dedicated 
to Diana (Artemis) by the nymph Taygetc, be- 
cause the goddess had saved her from the pur- 
suit of Jupiter (Zeus). Hercules was ordered 
to bring the animal alive to Myceme. He pur- 
sued it in vain for a whole year : at length he 
wounded it with an arrow, caught it, and car- 
ried it away on his shoulders. While in Arca- 
dia, he was met by Diana (Artemis), who was 
angry with him for having outraged the animal 
sacred to her ; but he succeeded in soothing her 
anger, and carried his prey to Mycenre. Ac- 
cording to some statements he killed the stag. 
—4. Destruction of the Erymanthian boor. This 
animal, which Hercules was ordered to bring 
alive to Eurystheus hud descended from Mount j 
Erymanthu8 into Psophis. Hercules chased 
him through the deep snow and having thus 
worn him out, he eaught him in a net, aud car- 
ried him to Myeeiv\ Other traditions place 
the hunt of the Erymanthian boar in Thessaly, 
and some even in rarygia It must be observ- 
ed that this and the subsequent labors of Her- 
cules are connected with certain subordinate 
labors, called Parerga (Udpepya). The first of 
these parerga is the fight of Hercules with the 
Centaurs. In his pursuit of the hoar he came 
to the centaur Pholus who had received from 
Bacchus (Dionysus) a cask of excellent wine. 
Hercules opened it. contrary to the wish of his 
host, and the delicious fragrance attracted the 
other centaurs, who besieged the grotto of Pho- 
lus. Hercules drove them away ; they fled to 
the house of Chiron ; and Hercules, eager in 
his pursuit, wounded Chiron, his old friend, with 
one of his poisoned arrows ; in consequence of 
which, Chiron died. Vid. Cniaox. Photos like- 
wise was wounded by one of the arrows, which 
by accident fell on his foot and killed him. 
This fight with the centaurs gave rise to the I 
establishment of mysteries, by which Ceres (De- 
meter) inteuded to purify the hero from the blood 
he had shed against his own will. — 5. Cleansing 
of the stables of Augeas. Eurystheus imposed | 
upon Hercules the task of cleansing in one day ! 
the stalls of Augeas, king of Elis. Augeas had i 
a herd of throe Bkousand oxen, whose stalls had ' 
not been cleansed for thirty years. Hercules, 
without mentioning the command of Eurysth- 
eus, went to Augeas, and offered to eleanse his 
stalls in one day. If he would give him the tenth 
part of his cattle, \ngea« *ie:reed to the terms ; 



and Hercules, after taking Phyleus, the son of 
Augeas, as his witness, led the rivers Alpheus 
and Peneus through the stalls, which were thus 
cleansed in a single day. But Augeas, who 
learned that Hercules had undertaken the work 
by the command of Eurystheus, refused to give 
him the reward. His son Phyleus then bore 
witness against his father, who exiled him from 
Elis. Eurystheus, however, declared the exploit 
null and void, because Hercules had stipulated 
with Augeas for a reward for performing it. At 
a later time Hercules invaded Elis, and killed 
Augeas and his sons. After tlus he is said to 
have founded the Olympic games. — 6. Destruc- 
tion of the Stymphalian bird*. These voracious 
birds had been brought up by Mars (Ares). 
They had brazen claws, wings, and beaks, used 
their feathers as arrows, aud ate human flesh. 
They dwelt on a lake near Stymphalus in Arca- 
dia, from which Hercules was ordered by Eu- 
rystheus to expel them. When Hercules un- 
dertook the task, Minerva (Athena) provided 
him with a brazen rattle, by the noise of which 
he startled the birds ; and, as they attempted to 
fly away, he killed them with his arrows. Ac- 
cording to some accounts, he only drove the 
birds away, and they appeared again in the 
island of Aretias, where they were found by the 
Argonauts. — *7. Capture of the Cretan bull. Ac- 
cording to some, this bull was the one which 
had carried Europa across the sea. According 
to others, the bull had been sent out of the sea 
by Neptune (Poseidon), that Minos might offer 
it in sacrifice. But Minos was so charmed 
with the beauty of the animal, that he kept it. 
and sacrificed another in its stead. Neptune 
(Poseidon) punished Minos by driving the bull 
mad, and causing it to commit great havoc in 
the island. Hercules was ordered by Eurys- 
theus to eatch the bull, and Minos willingly 
allowed him to do so. Hercules accomplished 
the task, and brought the bull home on his shoul- 
ders; but he then set the animal free again. 
The bull now roamed through Greece, and at 
last came to Marathon, where we meet it again 
in the stories of Theseus. — 8. Capture of the 
■mares of the TJiracian Diomedes. This Diome- 
des, king of the Bistones in Thrace, fed his 
horses with human flesh. Eurystheus ordered 
Hercules to bring these animals to Mycenae. 
With a few companions, he seized the animals, 
and conducted them to the sea-coast. But here 
he was overtaken by the Bistones. During the 
fight he intrusted the mai*es to his friend Abde- 
rus, who was devoured by them. Hercules de- 
feated the Bistones, killed Diomedes, whose 
body he threw before the mares, built the town 
of Abdera iu honor of his unfortunate friend, and 
then returned to Mycenas with the mares, which 
had become tame after eating the flesh of their 
master. The mares were afterward set free, 
and destroyed on Mount Olympus by wild beasts. 
— 9. Seizure of the girdle of the queen of the Am- 
azons. Hippolyte, the queen of the Amazons, 
possessed a girdle, which she had received from 
Mars (Ares). Admete, the daughter of Eury- 
stheus, wished to obtain this girdle, and Her- 
cules was therefore sent to fetch it. He was 
accompanied by a number of volunteers, and 
after various adventures in Europe and Asia, he 
at length reached the country of the Amazons, 
357 



HERCULES. 



HERCULES. 



Hippolyte .at first received him kindly, and prom- 
ised him her girdle ; but J uno (Hera) having 
excited the Amazons against him, a contest en- 
sued, in which Hercules killed their queen. He 
then took her girdle, and carried it with him. 
In this expedition Hercules killed the two sons 
of Boreas, Calais and Zetes ; and he also begot 
three sons by Echidna, in the countiy of the 
Hyperboreans. On his way home he landed in 
Troas, where he rescued Hesione from the mon- 
ster sent against her by IS T eptune (Poseidon) ; 
in return for which service, her father, Laome- 
don, promised him the horses he had received 
from Jupiter (Zeus) as a compensation for Gauy- 
medes ; but, as Laomedon did not keep his word, 
Hercules, on leaving, threatened to make war 
against Troy. He landed in Thrace, where he 
slew Sarpedou, and at length returned through 
Macedonia to Pehyponnesus. — 10. Capture of 
the oxen of Geryoacs in Erythia. G-eryones, the 
monster with three bodies, lived in the fabu- 
lous island of Erythia (the reddish), so called 
because it lay under the rays of the setting sun 
in the west. This island was originally placed 
off the coast of Epirus, but was afterward iden- 
tified either with Gades or the Balearic Islands, 
and was at all times believed to be in the distant 
west. The oxen of Geryones were guarded by 
the giant Eurytiou and the two-headed dog 
Orthrus ; and Hercules was commanded by Eu- 
rystheus to fetch them. After traversing vari- 
ous countries, he reached at length the frontiers 
of Libya and Europe, where he erected two pil- 
lars (Calpe and Abyla) on the two sides of the 
Straits of Gibraltar, which were hence called the 
Pillars of Hercules. Being annoyed by the heat 
of the sun, Hercules shot at Helios, who so much 
admired his boldness, that he presented him 
with a golden cup or boat, in which he sailed to 
Erythia. He there slew Eurytiou and his dog, 
as well as Geryones, and sailed with his booty 
to Tartessus, where he returned the golden cup 
(boat) to Helios. On his way home he passed 
through Gaul, Italy, niyricuni, and Thrace, and 
met with numerous adventures, which are vari- 
ously embellished by the poets. Many attempts 
were made to deprive him of the oxen, but he 
at length brought them in safety to Eurystheus, 
who sacrificed them to Juno (Hera). These 
ten labors were performed by Hercules in the 
space of eight years and one month ; but as Eu- 
rystheus declared two of them to have been per- 
formed unlawfully, he commanded him to ac- 
complish two more. — 11. Fetching the golden 
apples of the Hesperides. This was particularly 
difficult, since Hercules did not know where to 
find them. They were the apples which Juno 
(Hera) had received at her wedding from Terra 
(Ge), and which she had intrusted to the keep- 
ing of the Hesperides and the dragon Ladon, on 
Mount Atlas, in the country of the Hyperbore- 
ans. Eor details, vid. Hesperides. After vari- 
ous adventures in Europe, Asia, and Africa, Her- 
cules at lengh arrived at Mount Atlas. On the 
advice of Prometheus, he sent Atlas to fetch 
the apples, and in the mean time bore the weight 
of heaven for him. Atlas returned with the 
apples, but refused to take the burden of heaven 
on his shoulders again. Hercules, however, 
contrived by a stratagem to get the apples, and 
hastened away. On his return Eurvstheus 
358 



made him a present of the apples ; but Hercules 
dedicated them to Minerva (Athena), who i 
stored them to their former place. Some trad: 
tions add that Hercules killed the dragon Lador 
— 12. Bringing Cerberus front the lower world. 
This was the most difficult of the twelve labors 
of Hercules. He descended into Hades, near 
Tsenarura in Laconia, accompanied by Mercury 
(Hermes) and Minerva (Athena). He delivered 
Theseus and Ascalaphus from their torments. 
He obtained permission from Pluto to carry 
Cerberus to the upper world, provided he could 
accomplish it without force of arms. Her- 
cules succeeded in seizing the monster and car- 
rying it to the upper world ; and after he had 
shown it to Eurystheus, he carried it back again 
to the lower world. Some traditions connect 
the descent of Hercules into the lower world 
with a contest with Hades, as we see even in 
the Iliad, (v., 397), and more particularly in the 
Alcestis of Euripides (24, 846). Besides these 
twelve labors, Hercules performed several othei 
feats without being commanded by Eurystheus. 
These feats were called Pa rerga by the ancient?. 
Several of them were interwoven with the 
twelve labors, and have been already described , 
those which had no connection with the twelvr 
labors are spoken of below. After Hercules had 
performed the twelve labors, he was releasee; 
from the servitude of Eurystheus, and returned 
to Thebes. Here there gave Megara in marriagt 
to Iolaus ; and he wished to gain in marriage 
for himself Iole, the daughter of Eurytus, king 
of GZchalia. Eurytus promised his daughter to 
the man who should conquer him and his son- 
in shooting with the bow. Hercules defeateu 
them; but Eurytus and his sons, with the ex- 
ception of Iphitus, refused to give Iole to him. 
because he had murdered his own children. 
Soon afterward the oxen of Eurytus were car- 
ried off, and it was suspected that Hercules was 
the offender. Iphitus again defended Hercules, 
and requested his assistance in searching after 
the oxea Hercules agreed ; but when the two 
had arrived at Tiryns, Hercules, in a fit of mad- 
ness, threw his friend down from the wall, and 
killed him. Deiphobus of Amyche purified Her- 
cules from this murder, but he was, neverthe- 
less, attacked by a severe illness. Hercules 
then repaired to Delphi to obtain a remedy, bu; 
the Pythia refused to answer his questions. A 
struggle ensued between Hercules and Apollo, 
and the combatants were not separated till Ju- 
piter (Zeus) sent a flash of lightning between 
them. The oracle now declared that he would 
be restored to health if he would serve three 
years for wages, and surrender his earnings to 
Eurytus, as an atonement for the murder of 
Iphitus. Therefore he became servant to 
Omphale, queen of Lydia, and widow of Tmolus. 
Later writers describe Hercules as living effem- 
inately during his residence with Omphale : he 
span wool, it is said, and sometimes put on the 
garments of a woman, while Omphale wore his 
lion's skin. According to other accounts, he 
nevertheless performed several great feats dur- 
ing this time. He undertook an expedition to 
Colchis, which brought him into connection with 
the Argonauts ; he took part in the Calydonian 
hunt, and met Theseus on his landing from 
Trcezene on the Corinthian isthmus. An ex- 



HERCULES. 

peditiou to India, which was mentioned in some 
traditions, may likewise be inserted in this 
place. When the time of his servitude had ex- 
pired, he sailed against Troy, took the city, and 
killed Laomedon, its king. On his return from 
Troy, a storm drove him on the islaud of Cos, 
where he was attacked by the Meropes; but he 
defeated them and killed their king, Eurypylus. 
It was about this time that the gods sent for 
him in order to light against the Giants. Vid. 
Gigantes. Soon after his return to Argos he 
marched against Augeas, as has been related 
above. He then proceeded against Pylos, which 
he took, and killed the sons of Neleus except 
Nestor. He next advanced against Lacedas- 
mou, to punish the sons of Hippocoon for hav- 
ing assisted Neleus and slain OZonus, the son of 
Licymnius. He took Lacedaemon, and assign- 
ed the government of it to Tyndareus. On his 
return to Tegea, he became, by Auge, the fa- 
ther of Telephus (vid, Auge) ; and he then pro- 
ceeded to Calydon, where he obtained De'ia- 
irira, the daughter of GSueus, for his wife, after 
fighting with Achelous for her. Vid. Deiani- 
ra, Achelous. After Hercules had been mar- 
jied to Deianira nearly three years, he acci- 
dentally killed, at a banquet in the house of 
(Eneus, the boy Euuomus. In accordance with 
the law, Hercules went into exile, taking with 
him his wife Deianira. On their road they 
came to the River Evenus, across which the 
centaur Nessus carried travellers for a small 
sum of money. Hercules himself forded the 
river, but gave Deianira to Nessus to I carry 
across. Nessus attempted to outrage her : Her- 
cules heard her screaming, and shot an arrow 
into the heart of Nessus. The dying centaur 
called out to Deianira to take his blood with 
her, as it was a sure meaus of preserving the 
love of her husband. He then conquered the 
Dryopes, and assisted ^Egimius, king of the 
Dorians, against the Lupitha?. Vid. jEgiuius. 
After this he took up his abode at Trachis, 
whence he marched against Eurytus of QEcha- 
lia. He took GSchalia, killed Eurytus and his 
sons, and carried off his daughter Iole as a pris- 
oner. On his return home he landed at Ce- 
oaeum, a promontory of Euboea, erected an altar 
to Jupiter (Zeus), and sent his companion Li- 
ohas to Trachis, in order to fetch him a white 
garment, which he intended to use during the 
sacrifice. Deianira, afraid lest Iole should sup- 
plant her in the affections of her husband, steep- 
ed the white garmeut he had demanded in the 
blood of Nessus. This blood had been poisoned 
by the arrow with which Hercules had shot Nes- 
sus ; and, accordingly, as soou as the garment 
became warm on the body of Hercules, the 
poison penetrated into all his limbs, and caused 
him the most excruciating agony. He seized 
Lichas by his feet, and threw him into the 
sea. He wrenched off the garment, but it 
stuck to his flesh, aud with it he tore away 
whole pieces from his body. In this state he 
was conveyed to Trachis. Deianira, on seeing 
what she had unwittingly done, hung herself. 
Hercules commanded Hyllus, his eldest son by 
Deianira, to marry Iole as soon as he should 
arrive at the age of manhood. He then as- 
cended Mount (Eta, raised a pile of wood, on 
which he placed himself, and ordered it to be 



HERCULES. 

set on fire. No one ventured to obey him, until 
at length Pceas the shepherd, who passed by. 
was prevailed upon to comply with the desire 
of the suffering hero. "When the pile was 
burning, a cloud came down from heaven, and, 
amid peah of thunder, carried him to Olympus, 
where he was honored with immortality, be- 
came reconciled to Juno (Hera), and married 
her daughter Hebe, by whom he became the 
father of Alexiares and Anicetus. Immediately 
after his apotheosis, his friends offered sacri- 
fices to him as a hero ; and he was, in course 
of time, worshipped throughout all Greece as a 
god and as a hero. His worship, however, pre- 
vailed more extensively among the Dorians 
than among any other of the Greek races. The 
sacrifices offered to him consisted principally 
of bulls, boars, rams, and lambs. The works of 
art in which Hercules was represented were 
extremely numerous, and of the greatest vari- 
ety, for he was represented at all the various 
stages of his life, from the cradle to his death. 
But whether he appears as a child, a youth, a 
struggling hero, or as the immortal inhabitant, 
of Olympus, his character is always one of 
heroic strength and energy. Specimens of 
every kind are still extaut. The finest repre- 
sentation of the hero that has come down to us 
is the so-called Farnese Hercules, which was 
executed by Glycon. The hero is resting, 
leaning on his right arm, and his head reclining 
on his left hand : the whole figure is a most ex- 
quisite combination of peculiar softness with 
the greatest strength. — II. Roman Traditions. 
The worship of Hercules at Rome and in Italy 
is connected by Roman writers with the hero's 
expedition to fetch the oxen of Geryones. 
They stated that Hercules, on his return, visited 
Italy, where he abolished human sacrifices 
among the Sabines, established the worship of 
fire, and slew Cacus, a robber, who had stolen 
his oxen. Vid, Cacus. The aborigines, and 
especially Evander, honored Hercules with di- 
vine worship ; and Hercules, in return, taught 
them the way in which he was to be worship- 
ped, and intrusted the care of his worship to 
two distinguished families, the Potitii and Pi- 
narii. Vid. Pinaria Gens. The Fabia gens 
traced its origin to Hercules ; and Fauna and 
Acca Laurentia are called mistresses of Her- 
cules. In this manner the Romans connected 
their eax-liest legends with Hercules. It should 
be observed that in the Italian traditions the 
hero bore the name of Recarauus, and this 
Recaranus was afterward identified with the 
Greek Hercules. He had two temples at 
Rome. One was a small round temple of Her- 
cules Victor, or Hercules Triumphalis, between 
the river and the Circus Maximus, in front of 
which was the ara maxima, on which, after a 
triumph, the tenth of the booty was deposited 
for distribution among the citizens. The sec- 
ond temple stood near the porta trigemina, and 
contained a bronze statue and the altar on 
which Hercules himself was believed to have 
once offered a sacrifice. Here the city praetor 
offered every year a young cow, which was 
consumed by the people within the sanctuary. 
At Rome Hercules was connected with the 
Muses, whence he is called Mumgetes, and was 
represented with a lyre, of which there is no 
359 



HERCULES. 



HERMAPHRODITUS. 



trace in Greece. III. Traditions of other 
nations. The ancients themselves expressly 
mention several heroes of the name of Her- 
cules, who occur among the principal nations 
of the ancient world. 1. The Egyptian Hercules, 
whose Egyptian name was Som, or Dsom, or 
Ohon, or, according to Pausanias, Maceris, was 
a eon of Amon or Nilus. He was placed by the 
Egyptians in the second of the series of the ev- 
olutions of their god6. — 2. Tft-e Cretan Hercules, 
one of the Idsean Dactyls, was believed to have 
founded the temple of Jupiter (Zeus) at Olympia, 
but to have come originally from Egypt. He 
was worshipped with funeral sacrifices, and was 
regarded as a magician, like other ancient dae- 
mones of Crete. — 3. The Indian Hercules, was 
called by the unintelligible name Dorsanes 
(Aopadvrjc). The later Greeks believed that he 
was their own hero, who had visited India ; and 
they related that in India he became the father 
of many sons and daughters by Pandsea, and 
the ancestral hero of the Indian kings. — 4. Tlic 
Phoenician Hercules, whom the Egyptians con- 
sidered to be more ancient than their own, was 
worshipped in ail the Phoenician colonies, such 
as Carthage and Gades, down to the time of 
Constantine, and it is said that children were 
sacrificed to him. — 5. Tlie Celtic and Germanic 
Hercules is said to have founded Alesia and 
Nemausus, and to have become the father of 
the Celtic race. We become acquainted with 
him in the accounts of the expedition of the 
Greek Hercules against Geryones. "We must 
either suppose that the Greek Hercules was 
identified with native heroes of those northern 
countries, or that the notions about Hercules 
had been introduced there from the East. 

Hercules ('HpaKlyc), son of Alexander the 
Great by Barsine, the widow of the Rhodian 
Memnon. In B.C. 310 he was brought forward 
by Polysperchon as a pretender to the Macedo- 
nian throne ; but he was murdered by Poly- 
sperchon himself in the following year, when 
the latter became reconciled to Cassander. 

Herculis Columns. Vid, Abyla, Calpe. 

Herculis Moncsci Portus. Vid, Moncecus. 

Herculis Portus. Vid. Cosa. 

[Portus Herculis Liburni or Labroms, 
(now Legliorn), a town of Italy, on the coast of 
Etruria. Vid. Labro.] 

Herculis Promontorium (now Cape Sparti- 
vento), the most southerly point of Italy in Brut- 
tium. 

Herculis Silva, a forest in Germany, sacred 
to Hercules, east of the Visurgis. 

Hercynia Silva, Hercynius Saltus, Her- 
cynium Jugum, an extensive range of mount- 
ains in Germany, covered with forests, is de- 
scribed by Ccesar (B. 67., vi., 24) as nine days' 
journey in breadth, and more than sixty days' 
journey in length, extending east from the ter- 
ritories of the Helvetii, Nemetes, and Rauraci, 
parallel to the Danube, to the frontiers of the 
Daeians. Under this general name Csesar ap- 
pears to have in eluded all the mountains and 
forests in the south and centre of Germany, 
the Black Forest, Odcnwald. Thuringenoald, the 
Harz, the Erzgcbirgc, the Riesengebirge, &Q. 
As the Romans became better acquainted with 
Germany, the name was confined to narrower 
limits. Pliny and Tacitus use if to indicate the 
'360 



range of mountains between the Thiiringerwaid 
and the Carpathian Mountains. The name is 
still preserved in the modern Harz and Erz. 

Herdonia (Herdoniensis : now Ordona), r 
town in Apulia, was destroyed by Hannibal, 
who removed its inhabitants to Thurii and Me- 
tapontum ; it was rebuilt by the Romans, but 
remained a place of no importance. 

Herdonius. 1. Turnus, of Aricia, in Latium, 
endeavored to rouse the Latins against Tar- 
quinius Superbus, and was, in consequence, 
falsely accused by Tarquinius, and put to death, 
— 2. Appius, a Sabine chieftain, who, in B.C. 
460, with a band of outlaws and slaves, made 
himself master of the Capitol. On the fourth 
day from his entry the Capitol was retaken, 
and Herdonius and nearly all his followers 
were slain. 

Herennia Gens, originally Samnite, and by 
the Samnite invasion established in Campania, 
became at a later period a plebeian house at 
Rome. The Herennii were a family of rank 
in Italy, and are frequently mentioned in the 
time of the Samnite and Punic wars. They 
were the hereditary patrons of the Marii. 

Herexxius. 1. Modestixus. Vid. Modesti- 
nus. — 2. Pontius. Vid. Pontius. — 3. Senecio. 
Vid. Senecio. 

Herillus ("Hpt/Uoc), of Carthage, a Stoic 
philosopher, was the disciple of Zeno of Citi- 
um. He did not, however, confine himself to 
the opinions of his master, but held some doc- 
trines directly opposed to them. He held that 
the chief good consisted in knowledge (kirio- 
~t)wi). This notion is often attacked by Cicero. 

[Herilus, son of the nymph Feronia, and 
king of Praeneste: his mother had given him 
three lives, and, accordingly, Evander, who 
fought with him, had to conquer and despoil 
him of his armor three times before he fully 
destroyed him.] 

Hermjsum, or, in Latin, Mercurii Promonto- 
rium ('Epjiata uupa). 1. (Now Cape Bon, Arab. 
Ras Addar), the headland which forms the east- 
ern extremity of the Sinus Carthaginiensis, and 
the extreme northeastern point of the Cartha- 
ginian territory (later the province of Africa) 
opposite to Lilybaeum, the space between the 
two being the shortest distance between Sicily 
and Africa. — 2. (Now Ras el Ashati), a promon- 
tory on the coast of the Greater Syrtis, fifty 
stadia west of Leptis. There were other pro- 
montories of the name on the coast of Africa. 

Hermagoras ('Epfiayopac). I. Of Temnos, a 
distinguished Greek rhetorician of the time of 
Cicero. He belonged to the Rhodian school 
of oratory, but is known chiefly as a teacher 
of rhetoric. He devoted particular attention to 
what is called the invention, and made a pecu- 
liar division of the parts of an oration, which 
differed from that adopted by other rhetoricians. 
— 2. Suruamed Carion, a Greek rhetorician, 
taught rhetoric at Rome in the time of Augus- 
tus. He was a disciple of Theodorus of Gadara. 

Hermaphroditus ('Epfia<f>p6diToe), son of 
Hermes (Mercury) and Aphrodite (Venus), and 
consequently great-grandson of Atlas, whence 
he is called Atlantiadcs or Atlantius. (Ov., 
Met., iv.. 368.) He had inherited the beauty 
of both his parents, and was brought up by the 
nymphs of Mouut Ida. In his fifteenth year he 



HERMARCHUS. 



HERMES. 



vent to Caria. In the neighborhood of Hali- 
«aroassu* he lay down by the fountain of Sal- • 
macis. The nymph of the fountain fell in love j 
with him, and tried in vain to win his affections. 
Oboe when he was bathing in the fountain she 
embraced liim, and prayed to the gods that she 
might be united with him forever. The gods 
granted th- Ifliwfr and the bodies of the youth 
and the n\mph became united together, but 
retained the characteristics of each sex. Her- 
maphroditic. 00 becoming aware of the change, 
prayed that, in future, every one who bathed in 
the well might be metamorphosed in the same 
manner. 

Hkrmarchi^ { E^fiapxoc), of Mytilene, a rhet- 
orician, became afterward a disciple of Epicu- 
rus, who left to him his garden, and appointed 
him his successor in his school, about B.C. 
270. He wrote several works, all of which are 
lost. 

Hermas (Epudc), a disciple of the Apostle 
Paul, and one of the apostolic fathers. He is 
supposed to be the same person as the Hermas 
who is mentioned in St Paul's epistle to the 
Romans (xvi., 14). He wrote in Greek a work 
entitled The Shepherd of Hermas, of which a 
Latin translation is still extant. Its object is to 
instruct persons in the duties of the Christian 
life. Edited by Cotelier in his P aires ApostoL 
Paris, 1672. 

Hkrmes ('Epfii/c, 'Epfielag, Dor. 'Epfxdr), called 
Mrrcurius by the Romans. The Greek Her- 
mes was a son of Zeus (J upiter) and Maia, the 
daughter of Atlas, and born in a cave of Mount 
Cyllene in Arcadia, wheucc he is called Atlan- 
tiades or Cyllcnius. A few hours after his birth 
he escaped from his cradle, went to Pieria, and 
carried off 6ome of the oxen of Apollo. In the 
Iliad and Odyssey this tradition is not men- 
tioned, though Hermes ( Mercury-) is character- 
ized as a cunning thief. That he might not be 
discovered by the. traces of his footsteps, he put 
on sandals, and drove the oxen to Pylos, where 
he killed two, and concealed the rest in a cave. 
The skins of the slaughtered animals were 
nailed to a rock, and part of their flesh was 
cooked and eaten, and the rest burned. There- 
upon he returned to Cyllene, where he found a 
tortoise at the entrance of his native cave. He 
took the animal's shell, drew strings across it, 
and thus invented the lyre, on which he imme- 
diately played. Apollo, by his prophetic power, 
had meantime discovered the thief, and went 
to Cyllene to charge Hermes (Mercury) with 
the crime before his mother Maia. She show- 
ed to the god the child in its cradle ; but Apollo 
carried the boy before Zeus (Jupiter), and de- 
manded back his oxen. Zeus (Jupiter) com- 
manded him to comply with the demand of 
Apollo, but Hermes (Mercury) denied that he 
had stolen the cattle. As, however, he saw 
that his assertions were not believed, he con- 
ducted Apollo to Pylos, and restored to him his 
oxen; but when Apollo heard the sounds of 
the lyre, he was so charmed that he allowed 
Hermes (Mercury) to keep the animals. Her- 
mes (Mercury) now invented the syrinx, and 
after disclosing his inventions to Apollo, the 
two gods concluded an intimate friendship with 
each other. Apollo presented his young friend 
with his own golden shepherd's staff, and 



taught him the art of prophesying by means of 
dice. Zeus (Jupiter) made him his own herald, 
: and likewise the herald of the gods of the low- 
i er world. The principal feature in the tradi- 
tions about Hermes (Mercury) consists in his. 
being the herald of the gods, and in this capac- 
ity he appears even in the Homeric poems 
His original character of an ancient Pelasgian, 
or Arcadian divinity of nature, gradually disap- 
peared in the legends. As the herald of the 
gods, he is the god of eloquence, for the heralds 
are the public speakers in the assemblies and 
on other occasions. The gods especially em- 
ployed him as messenger when eloquence was 
required to attain the desired object. Hence the 
tongues of sacrificial animals were offered to 
him. As heralds and messengers are usually 
men of prudence and circumspection, Hermes 
(Mercury) was also the god of prudence and 
skill in all the relations of social intercourse. 
These qualities were combined with similar 
ones, such as cunning, both in words and ac- 
tions, and even fraud, perjury, and the inclina- 
tion to steal; but acts of this kind were com- 
mitted by Hermes (Mercury) always with a 
certain skill, dexterity, and even gracefulness 
Being endowed with this shrewdness and sagac 
ity, he was regarded as the author of a variety 
of inventions, and, besides the lyre and syrinx, 
he is said to have invented the alphabet, num- 
bers, astronomy, music, the art of fighting, gym- 
nastics, the cultivation of the olive-tree, meas- 
ures, weights, and many other things. Th* 
powers which he possessed himself he confer- 
red upon those mortals and heroes who enjoyed 
his favor ; and all who possessed them wore 
under his especial protection or are called his 
sons. He was employed by the gods, and mortv 
especially by Zeus (Jupiter), on a variety of oc- 
casions, which are recorded in ancient story. 
Thus he led Priam to Achilles to fetch the body 
of Hector ; tied Ixion to the wheel ; conducted 
Hera (Juno), Aphrodite (Venus), and Athena 
(Minerva) to Paris ; fastened Prometheus to 
Mount Caucasus ; rescued Dionysus (Bacchus) 
after his birth from the flames, or received him 
from the hands of Zeus (Jupiter) to carry him 
to Athamas ; sold Hercules to Omphale ; and 
was ordered by Zeus (Jupiter) to carry off Io. 
who was metamorphosed into a cow, and guard- 
ed by Argus, whom he slew. Yid. Argus. From 
this murder he is very commonly called 'Apyei- 
(povTijc. In the Trojan war Hermes (Mercury) 
was on the side of the Greeks. His ministry 
to Zeus (Jupiter) was not confined to the offices 
of herald and messenger, but he was also his 
charioteer and cup-bearer. As dreams are sent 
by Zeus (Jupiter), Hermes (Mercury) conducts 
them to man, and hence he is also described m 
the god who had it in his power to send refresh- 
ing sleep or take it away. xAnother important 
function of Hermes (Mercury) was to conduct 
the shades of the dead from the upper into the 
lower world, whence he is called ^jvxoTcounor, 
v£f;po-o/i~6r, ^vxayuyor, &e. The idea of his 
being the herald and messenger of the gods, of 
his travelling from place to place and conclud- 
ing treaties, necessarily implied the notion that 
he was the promoter of social intercourse and 
of commerce among men. In this capacity ha 
was regarded as the maintainer of peace, and 
361 



HERMES TRISMEGISTUS. 



HERMIONE. 



as the god of roads, who protected travellers, 
and punished those who refused to assist travel- 
lers who had mistaken their way. Hence the 
Athenian generals, on setting out on an expe- 
dition, offered sacrifices to Hermes (Mercury), 
surnamed Hegemonius or Agetor; and numer- 
ous statues of the god were erected on roads, 
at doors and gates, from which circumstance 
he derived a variety of surnames and epithets. 
As the god of commerce he was called die/irro- 
poc, kfiTroZaioc, ira/uyKdrr^oc, nepde/iTropjc, uyo- 
pcloc, <fcc. As commerce is the source of 
wealth, he was also the god of gain and riches, 
especially of sudden and unexpected riches, 
such as are acquired by commerce. As the 
giver of wealth and good luck (tt/^ovtoSottjc), he 
also presided over the game of dice. Hermes 
(Mercury) was believed to be the inventor of 
sacrifices. Hence he not only acts the part of 
a herald at sacrifices, but is also the protector I 
of sacrificial animals, and was believed in par- 
ticular to increase the fertility of sheep. For 
this reason he was especially worshipped by 
-shepherds, and is mentioned in connection with 
Pan and the Nymphs. This feature in the char- 
acter of Hermes (Mercury) is a remnant of the 
ancient Arcadian religion, in which he was the 
fertilizing god of the earth, who conferred his 
blessing on man. Hermes (Mercury) was like- 
wise the patron of all the gymnastic games of 
the Greeks. This idea seems to be of late 
origin, for in Homer no trace of it is found. 
Athens appears to have been the first place in 
which he was worshipped in this capacity. At 
a later time almost all gymnasia were under his 
protection ; and the Greek artists derived their 
ideal of the god from the gymnasium, and rep- 
resented him as a youth whose limbs were 
beautifully and harmoniously developed by 
gymnastic exercises. The most ancient seat 
of the worship of Hermes (Mercury) is Arca- 
dia, the land of his birth, where Lycaon, the 
son of Pelasgus, is said to have built to him 
the first temple. From thence his worship 
was carried to Athens, and ultimately spread 
through all Greece. The festivals celebrated 
in hi3 honor were called Hermoea. Vid. Diet, of 
Ant, s. v. His temples and statues (vid. Diet, of 
Ant., s. v. Herm^e) were extremely numerous 
in Greece. Among the things sacred to him 
were the palm-tree, the tortoise, the number 
four, and several kinds of fish ; and the sacri- 
fices offered to him consisted of incense, honey, 
cakes, pigs, and especially lambs and young 
goats. The principal attributes of Hermes 
(Mercury) are, 1. A travelling hat with a broad 
brim, which in later times was adorned with 
two small wings. 2. The staff (pdSdoc or aiapr- 
rpov), which he bore as a herald, and had receiv- 
ed from Apollo. In late works of art the white 
ribbons which surrounded the herald's staff were 
changed into two serpents. 3. The sandals 
■{tz6l?.o). They were beautiful and golden, and 
carried the god across land and sea with the 
rapidity of wind; at the ankles of the god they 
were provided with wings, whence he is called 
TTTr/voTzeduoc, or alipes. The Roman Mercurius 
is spoken of separately. 

Hermes Trismegistcss {'Epitf/c Tptsutyioros), 
the reputed author of a variety of works, some 
of which are still extant 'The Greek God 
362 



Hermes was identified with the Egyptian Thot 
, or Theut as early as the time of Plato. The 
New Platonists regarded the Egyptian Hermes 
as the source of all knowledge and thought, or 
the z^oyoc embodied, and hence called him Tris- 
megistus. A vast number of works on philos- 
ophy and religion, written by the New Platon- 
ists, were ascribed to this Hermes, from whom 
it was pretended that Pythagoras and Plato had 
derived all their knowledge. Most of these 
works were probably written in the fourth cen- 
tury of our era. The most important of them 
is entitled Pcemander (from ttolu^v, a shepherd, 
pastor), apparently in imitation of the Pastor of 
Hermas. Vid. Hermas. This work is in the 
form of a dialogue. It treats of nature, the crea- 
tion of the world, the deity, his nature and attri- 
butes, the human soul, knowledge, <fcc. 

Hermesiaxax ('EiiTjcLdvatj), of Colophon, a 
: distinguished elegiac poet, lived in the time of 
Alexander the Great. His chief work was an 
elegiac poem, in three books, addressed to his 
mistress Leontium, whose name formed the title 
of the poem. His fragments are edited by Rigler 
and Axt, Colon., 1828, [by Hermann, in a univer- 
sity programme, Lips., 1828, 4 to], and by Bailey. 
London, 1839. 

Hermias or Hermias ('Eppeiag or 'Ep/iiag). 
1. Tyrant of Atarneus and Assos in Mysia, cel- 
ebrated as the friend and patron of Aristotle. 
Aristotle remained with Hermias three years, 
from B.C. 347 to 344, in the latter of which 
years Hercnias was seized by Mentor, the Greek 
general of the Persian king, and sent as a cap- 
tive to the Persian court, where he was put to 
death. Aristotle married Pythias, the adopted 
daughter of Hermias, and celebrated the praises 
of his benefactor in an ode addressed to Virtue, 
which is still extant. — 2. A Christian writer, 
who lived about A.D. 180, was the author of an ex- 
tant work, entitled Atacvp/udc ruv e£g) <piAoa6(puv, 
in which the Greek philosophers are held up to 
ridicule. Edited with Tatianus by Worth, Oxon., 
11 00. 

HermixIa Gens, a very ancient patrician house 
at Rome, which appears in the first Etruscan 
war with the republic, B.C. 506, and vanishes 
from history in 448. T. Herminius was one of 
the three heroes who kept the Sublician bridge 
along with Horatius Codes agaiDst the whole 
force of Porsena. 

Herminics Mons (now Sierra de la Estrella), 
the chief mountain in Lusitania, south of the 
Durius, from seven thousand to eight thousand 
feet high, called in the Middle Ages Hcrrneno or 
Arraina. 

Hermione ('Ep/iiuvrj), the beautiful daughter 
of Menelau3 and Helena. She had been prom- 
ised in marriage to Orestes before the Trojan 
war ; but Menelaus, after his return home, mar- 
ried her to Neoptolernus (Pyrrhus.). Thereupon 
0reste3 claimed Hermione for himself ; but 
Neoptolernus haughtily refused to give her up. 
Orestes, in revenge, incited the Delphians 
against him, and Neoptolernus was 6lain. Her- 
mione afterward married Orestes, whom she 
had always loved, and bore him a son Tisame- 
nus. The histoiy of Hermione is related with 
various modifications. According to some, Men- 
elaus betrothed her at Troy to Neoptolernus ; 
but in the meantime her grandfather, Tyndare- 



HERMIONE. 



HERMOPOLIS. 



us, promised her to Orestes, and actually gave 
her in marriage to him Neoptolemus, on his re- 
turn, took possession of her by force, but was 
slain soon after either at Delphi or in his own 
home at Phthia. 

HERMioNt { Epfiiuvy: 'Epfitovevc : now Kastri) 



and lived iu the reign of Marcus Aurelius, A.D 
161-180. At the age of fifteen Ins eloquence 
excited the admiration of Marcus Aurelius. He 
was shortly afterward appointed public teacher 
of rhetoric, and at the age of seventeen he began 
his career as a writer ; but, unfortunately, when 



a town of Anjolis, but originally independent of j he was twenty-five, his mental powers gave 
Argos, was situated on a promontory on the east- j way, and he never recovered their full use, al- 
ern coast, and oo a bay of the sea, which derived j though he lived to an advanced age. After his 

- death, his heart is said to have been found cov- 
ered with hair. His works, five in number, 
which are still extant, form together a complete 
system of rhetoric, and were for a long time 
used in all the rhetorical schools as manuals. 
They are, 1. T%W| pnropiKr) rrepi ruv ordceuv. 
2. ILepl evptceuc (Be Inventione). 3. Hepl ldewi> 
(Be Formis Oratoriis). 4. Ilepl pedodov deivurr]- 
roc (Be apto et solerti yenere dicendi Methodus.) 
5. Upoyvfivda/iara. An abridgment, of the latter 
work was made by Aphthonius, in consequence 
of which the original fell into oblivion. The 
works of Herniogenes are printed in Walz's 



its name from the town (Hermionicus Sinus). Its 
territory was called HxaMlowia It was origin- 
ally inhabited by the Dryopea ; and, in conse- 
quence of its isolated position, it became a flour- 
ishing city at au early period. It contained sev- 
eral temples, and, among them, a celebrated one 
of (Ceres) Demeter Chthonia. At a later time it 
joined the Achaean league. 
Heesuoxes. Vid. German ia. 
Heemipfus ("Ep/xirr-oc). 1. Au Athenian pet 
of the old comedy, vehemently attacked Pericles 
and Aspasia. [The fragments of Herruippus 
are published collectively by Meineke, Fragm 



Comic. Graze., vol. i.. p. 138-1 55, edit, minor.] — - Rhetor. Grcce. — 3. An architect of Alabanda, in 
Of Smyrna, a distinguished philosopher, was Caria, who invented what was called the pseu 



a disciple of Callimachus 
flourished about B.C. 200 

biographical work (Bioi), which is frequently 
referred to by later writers. — 3. Of Berytus, a 
grammarian, who flourished uuder Trajan and 
Hadrian. 

HermIsium, a town iu the Tauric Chersonesus, 
OS the Cimmerian Bosporus. 

Hermocrates ('Ep/ioKpuTijc), a Syraeusan of 



of Alcxandrea, and 1 dodipterus, that is, a form of a temple, with ap- 
He wrote a great ! patently two rows of columns. His great object 
as an architect was to increase the taste for the 
Ionic form of temples, in preference to Doric tem- 
ples. 

Hermogexes, M. Tigelliis, a notorious de- 
tractor of Horace, who calls him (Sat, i., 3, 129), 
j however, optimv.s cantor et modulator. He was 
opposed to satires altogether, was a man with- 



rank, and an able statesman and orator, was out talent, but yet had a foolish fancy for trying 



the prosody of the two names i.-> 
so that one may be substituted for 



his hand at literature. It is conjectured that 
under the fictitious name of Pantolabus (Sat., 
L, 8, 11 ; ii., 1, 21), Horace alludes to Hermog- 

for 

the same 
the other 

Hermogexiaxus, the latest Roman jurist from 
support with J whom there is an extract in the Digest, lived in 
the time of Constantine the Great. It is prob- 
He was, with two colleagues, appointed I able that he was the compiler of the Codex Her 

' mogenianus, but so many persons of the same 
lived nearly at the same time that this 



chosen one of the Syraeusan generals. B.C. 411 
in order to oppose the Athenian?. He after- 
ward served under i Jylippus, when the latter 
took the command of the Syraeusan forces ; and j ene 
after the destruction of the Athenian armament 
he attempted to sa\ the lives of Nicias and 
.Demosthenes. He than employed all his influ- 
ence to induce his count rymen to 
vigor the Lacedaemonians in the war in Greece 
itself. 

to the command of a small fleet, which "the Syr 
acusans sent to the assistance of the Lacedie- 
rnonians ; but, during his absence from home, 
he was banished by the Syraeusaus (410). Hav- 
ing obtained support from the Persian satrap 
Pharnabazus, he returned to Sicily, and endeav- 
ored to effect his restoration to his native city by 
force of arms, but was slain in an attack wliich 
he made upon Syracuse in 4» >7 

a 



HkrmSdorus fEtyrfdupoc). 1. Of Ephesus, 
person of distinction, was expelled by his fellow 
citizens, and is said t>. have gone to Rome, aud 
Co have explained to the decemvirs the Greek 
laws, and thus assist , d th. m iu drawing up the 
laws of the Twelve Tables. B.C. 451. — 2. A dis- 
ciple of Plato, is said to have circulated the 



name 

cannot be affirmed with certainty. 

Hermolaus ('Epfio?Moc), a Macedonian youth, 
and a page of Alexander the Great. During a 
hunting party in Bactria, B.C. 327, he slew a 
wild boar without waiting to allow Alexander 
the first blow, whereupon the king ordered him 
to be flogged. Incensed at this indignity, Her- 
molaus formed a conspiracy against the king's 
life ; but the plot was discovered, and Hermolaus 
and his accomplices were stoned to death by the 
Macedonians. 

Hermoxassa. 1. A town of the Sindi at the 
entrance of the Cimmerian Bosporus, founded by 
the Mytilenaeans, called after Hermonassa, the 



works of Plato, and to have sold them in Sicily. | wife of the founder, who died during its founda 
He wrote a work on Plato.— 3. Of Salamis, the : tion, and left to her the sovereignty.— 2. A towc 
architect of the temple of Mars in the Flaminian ■ on the coast of Pontus, near Trapezus. 



Circua 

Heemogexes ('Ep/xvyti Tu ). 1. A son of Hip- 
ponicus, and a bother of the wealthy Callias, is 
introduced by Plato as one of the speakers in 
bis " Cratylus," where he maintains that all the 
words of a language were formed by an agree- 
ment of men among themselves. — 2. A celebra- 
ted Greek rhetorician, was a native of Tarsus. 



Heemoxthis ("Eppovdie : now Erment, ruins), 
the chief city of the Nomos Hemionthites, in Up- 
per Egypt, on the west bank of the Nile, a little 
above Thebes. 

Hermopolis ('Ep{i6To?.ic, "Ep/iov -6Xig). 1. 
Parva (?) juiKpd : now Bamanhour), a city of 
Lower Egypt, the capital of the Nemos of Alex 
andrea, stood upon the canal which connected 
363 



HERMOS. 



HERODES. 



the Canopic branch of the Nile with the Lake 
Mareotis.— ^-2. Magna (7/ fxeyaTirj : ruins near Esh- 
mounein), the capital of the Homos Hermopo- 
Utes, in the Heptanomis, or Middle Egypt, and 
one of the oldest cities in the land, stood on the 
west bank of the Nile, a little below the con- 
fines of Upper Egypt. At the boundary line it- 
self was a military station, or custom-house, 
called 'EpfiOTToXiTiK7} ^vlaK-rj, for collecting a toll 
on goods entering the Heptanomis. Hermopo- 
lis was a chief seat of the worship of Anubis 
(Cynocephalus), and it was the sacred burial- 
place of the Ibis. 

Hermos (to "Epfxoc : 'Epueioc), a demus in At- 
tica, belonging to the tribe Acamantis, on the 
road from Athens to Eleusis. 
• Hermotimus ('Ep/LLOTifioc). 1. A mathemati- 
cian of Colophon, was one of the immediate 
predecessors of Euclid, and the discoverer of 
several geometrical propositions. — 2. Of Cla- 
aomenae, an early Greek philosopher of uncer- 
tain date, belonged to the Ionic school. Some 
traditions represent him as a mysterious per- 
son, gifted with supernatural power, by which his 
soul, apart from the body, wandered from place 
to place, bringing tidings of distant events in 
incredibly short spaces of time. At length his 
enemies burned his body, in the absence of the 
soul, which put an end to his wanderings. 

Hermunduri, one of the most powerful na- 
tions of Germany, belonged to the Suevie race, 
dwelt between the Main and the Danube, and 
were bounded by the Sudeti Mountains in the 
north, the Agri Decumates of the Romans in 
the west and south, the Narisci on the east, the 
Cherusci on the northeast, and the Catti on the 
northwest. They were for a long time the allies 
of the Romans ; but along with the other Ger- 
man tribes the y assisted the Marcomanni in the 
great war against the Romans in the reign of 
M. Aurelius. After this time they are rarely 
mentioned as a separate people, but are in- 
cluded under the general name of Suevi. 

Hermus ("Ep/iog : now Ghiediz-Chai), a con- 
siderable river of Asia Minor, rises in Mount 
Dindymene (now Mor ad- Dagh) in Phrygia; flows 
through Lydia, watering the plain north of Sar- 
dis, which was hence called "Epfxov iredlov ; pass- 
es by Magnesia and Temnus, and falls into the 
Gulf of Smyrna between Smyrna and Phoeaea. 
It formed the boundary between iEolis and 
Ionia. Its chief tributaries were the Hyllus, 
Cogamus, Pactolus, and Phrygnus. 

Hernici, a people in Latium, belonged to the 
Sabine race, and are said to have derived their 
name from the Marsic (Sabine) word herna, 
" rock." According to this etymology, their 
name would signify " mountaineers." They 
inhabited the mountains of the Apennines be- 
tween the Lake Fucinus and the River Trerus, 
and were bounded on the north by the Marsi 
and JEqai, and on the south by the Volsci. 
Their chief town was Anagnia. They were a 
brave and warlike people, and long offered a 
formidable resistance to the Romans. The 
Romans formed a league with them on equal 
terms in the third consulship of Sp. Cassius, 
B.C. 486. They were finally subdued by the 
Romans, 806. 

Hero. Vid. Leander. 

Hero ("Howv). 1. The Elder, a celebrated! 
364 



mathematician, was a native of Alexandres, 
and lived in the reigns of the Ptolemies Phila- 
delphus and Evergetes (B.C. 285-222). He is 
celebrated on account of his mechanical inven- 
tions, of which one of the best known is the 
common pneumatic experiment called Hero's 
fountain, in which a jet of water is maintained 
by condensed air. We also find in his works 
a description of a steam-engine, and of a double 
forcing pump used for a fire-engine. The fol- 
lowing works of Hero are extant, though not in 
a perfect form : 1. Xetpo6a?Juorpac KaracKevj/ 
nal ovfiuerpia, de Constructione et Mensura Man- 
ribalistce. 2. BeloTzound, on the manufacture of 
darts. 8. Uvevfiaruid, or Spiritalia, the most 
celebrated of his works. 4. TLepi avTOfiaTOTroirj- 
tikuv, de Automatorum Fabrica Libri duo. All 
these works are published in the Mathematici 
Veteres, Paris, 1693. — 2. The Younger, a math- 
ematician, is supposed to have lived under He- 
raclius (AD. 610-641). The principal extant 
works assigned to him are, 1. De Machinis bel- 
licis. 2. Geodmia, on practical geometry. 8. 
De Obsidione repellenda. Published in the Math- 
ematici Veteres. 

Herodes I. ('Hpwd?;c), commonly called Her- 
od. 1. Surnamed the Great, king of the Jews, 
was the second son of Antipater, and conse- 
quently of Idumsean origin. Vid. Antipatee, 
No. 3. When his father was appointed by Cae- 
sar procurator of Judaea, in B.C. 47, Herod, 
though only twenty-five years of age, obtained 
the government of Galilee. In 46 he obtained 
the government of Ccele-Syria. After the death 
of Caesar (44), Herod first supported Cassius ; 
but upon the arrival of Antony in Syria, in 41, 
he exerted himself to secure his favor, and com- 
pletely succeeded in his object. In 40 he went 
to Rome, and obtained from Antony and Oeta- 
vianus a decree of the senate, constituting him 
king of Judaea. He supported Antony in the 
civil war against Octavianus ; but after the bat- 
tle of Actium (31) he was pardoned by Octa- 
vianus and confirmed in his kingdom. During 
the remainder of his reign he cultivated with 
assiduity the friendship of Augustus and his 
counsellor Agrippa, and enjoyed the highest fa- 
vor both of the one and the other. He possess- 
ed a jealous temper and ungovernable passions. 
He put to death his beautiful wife Mariamne, 
whom he suspected, without cause, of adultery, 
and with whom he was violently in love ; and 
at a later period he also put to death his two 
sons by Mariamne, Alexander and Aristobulus. 
His government, though cruel and tyrannical, 
was vigorous ; and he was both feared and re- 
spected by his subjects and the surrounding na- 
tions. He especially loved to display his pow- 
er and munificence by costly and splendid pub- 
lic works. He commenced rebuilding the tem- 
ple of Jerusalem ; he rebuilt the city of Samaria, 
and bestowed on it the name of Sebaste ; while 
he converted a small town on the sea-coast into 
a magnificent city, to which he gave the name 
of Csesarea. He adorned these new cities with 
temples, theatres, gymnasia, and other build- 
ings in the Greek style ; and he even ventured 
to erect a theatre at Jerusalem itself, and an 
amphitheatre without the walls, in which he ex- 
hibited combats of wild beasts and gladiators. 
In the last year of his reign Jesus Chsl?" > : 



HERODIANUS. 



HERODOTUS. 



was born ; and it must have been on bis death- 
bed that he ordered that massacre of the chil- 
dren at Bethlehem which is recorded by the 
Evangelist (Matth, ii., 16). He died in the 
thirty-seventh year of his reign, and the seven- 
tieth of his age, B.C. 4.*— 2. Hkeodes Antipas, 
son of Herod the Great by Malthace, a Samar- 
itan, obtained the tetrarchy of Galilee and Penea 
on his father's death, while the kingdom of Ju- 
da?a devolved on his elder brother Archelaus. 
He married Herodias, the wife of his half-broth- 
er, Herod Philip, she having, in defiance of the 
Jewish law, divorced her first husband. He 
had been previously married to a daughter of 
the Arabian prince Aretas, who quitted him in 
disgust at this new alliance. Aretas thereupon 
invaded the dominions of Antipas,. and defeat- 
ed the army which was opposed to him. In 
A.D. 38, after the death of Tiberius, Antipas 
went to Rome to solicit from Caligula the title 
of king, which had just been bestowed upon his 
nephew, Herod Agrippa ; but, through the in- 
trigues of Agrippa, who was high in the favor of 
the Roman emperor, Antipas was deprived of 
his dominions, and sent into exile at Lyons (39) ; 
he was subsequently removed to Spain, where 
he died. It was Herod Antipas who imprison- 
ed and put to death John the Baptist, who had 
reproached him with his unlawful connection 
with Herodias. It was before him also that 
Christ was sent by Pontius Pilate at Jerusa- 
lem, as belonging to his jurisdiction, on accouut 
of his supposed Galilean origin. — 3. Herodes 
Agrippa. Fid. Agrippa. — 1 Brother of Herod 
Agrippa I, obtained the kingdom of Chaleis 
from Claudius at the request of Agrippa, 41. 
After the death of Agrippa (44), Claudius be- 
stowed upon him the superintendence of the 
temple of Jerusalem, together with the right of 
appointing the high priests. He died in 48, 
when his kingdom was bestowed by Claudius 
upon his nephew, Herod Agrippa II. — 5. Hk- 
rodes Atticus, the rhetorieiaa Vid. Amccs. 

HerodLvxus ('Hpudiavoc). 1- An historian, 
who wrote in Greek a history of the Roman 
empire in eight books, from the death of M. 
Aurelius to the commencement of the reign of 
Gordianus III. (A.D. 180-238). He himself in- 
forms us that the events of this period had oc- 
curred in his own lifetime ; but beyond this we 
know nothing respecting his life. He appears 
to have had Thueydides before him as a model, 
both for style and for the general composition 
of his work, like him, introducing here and 
there speeches wholly or iu part imaginary. 
In spite of occasional inaccuracies in chronolo- 
gy, his narrative is in the main truthful and im- 
partial Edited by lrmiseh. Lips., 1789-1805, 
5 vols., and by Bekker, Berlin, 1820. — 2. Mlivs 
Herodia.nts one of the most celebrated gram- 
marians of antiquity, was the son of Apollonius 
Dyscolus (vid. Aeoi.r.oMr->, No. 4), and was born 
at Alexandrea. From that place lie removed 
to Rome, where he gained the favor of the em- 
peror M. Aurelius, to whom he dedicated his 
work on prosody. This work seems to have 
embraced not merely prosody, but most of those 

* The death of Herod took place in the same year with 
the actual birth ©t Christ, as is mentioned above, but it is 
well known that this is to be placed four years before the 
date in general use as the Christian era. 



subjects now included in the etymological por- 
tion of grammar. The estimation in which he 
was held by subsequent grammarians was very 
great. Priscian styles him maximus auctor artis 
(jrammatica. He was a very voluminous writ- 
er ; but none of his works have come down to 
us complete, though several extracts from them 
are preserved by later grammarians. 

Herodicus ('HpOchKog). i. Of Babylon, a 
grammarian, was one of the immediate suc- 
cessors of Crates of Mallus, and an opponent of 
the followers of Aristarchus, against whom he- 
wrote an epigram, whieh is still extant and in- 
eluded in the Greek Anthology. — 2. A celebrated 
physician of Selymbria in Thrace, lived in the 
j fifth century B.C.. and was one of the tutors of 
Hippocrates. 

Herodorus ('Hpodwpos), of Heraclea, in Pon- 
j tus, a contemporary of Hecateeus and Phere- 
| cydes, about B.C. 510, wrote a work on Her- 
cules and his exploits. 

I Herodotus ('tipodoToc). 1. A Greek historian, 
j and the father of history, was born at Halicar- 
nassus, a Doric colony in Caria, B.C. 484. He 
belonged to a noble family at Halicarnassus. 
He was the son of Lyxes and Dryo; and the 
epic poet Panyasis was one of his relations. 
Herodotus left his native city at an early age, 
in order to escape from the oppressive govern- 
ment of Lygdamis, the tyrant of Halicarnassus, 
who put to death Panyasis. He probably set- 
tled at Samos for some time, and there became 
acquainted with the Ionic dialect ; but he spent 
many years in his extensive travels in Europe, 
Asia, and Africa, of which we shall speak pres- 
ently. At a later time he returned to Halicar- 
nassus, and took a prominent part in expelling 
Lygdamis from his native city. In the conten- 
tions which followed the expulsion of the ty- 
rant, Herodotus was exposed to the hostile at- 
tacks of one of the political parties, whereupon 
he again left Halicarnassus, and settled at Thurii 
in Italy, where he died. Whether he accom- 
panied the first colonists to Thurii in 443, or 
followed them a few years afterward, is a dis- 
puted point, and can not be determined with 
certainty, though it appears probable, from a 
passage in bis work, that he was at Athens at 
the commencement of the Peloponnesian war 
(431). It is also disputed where Herodotus 
wrote his history. Lucian relates that Herod- 
otus read his work to the assembled Greeks 
at Olympia, which was received with such uni- 
versal applause that the nine books of the work 
were in consequence honored with the name* 
of the nine muses. The same writer adds that 
the young Thueydides was present at this reci- 
tation, and was moved to tears. But this cele- 
brated story, whieh rests upon the authority of 
Lucian alone, must be rejected for many rea- 
sons. Nor is there sufficient evidence in favor 
of the tradition that Herodotus read his work at 
the Panathenaea at Athens in 446 or 445, and re- 
ceived from the Athenians a reward of ten tal- 
ents. It is far more probable that he wrote his 
work at Thurii, when he was advanced in years ; 
and it appears that he was engaged upon it, at 
least in the way of revision, when he was sev- 
enty-seven years of age, since he mentions the 
revolt of the Medes against Darius JSTothus, and 
the death of Amyrtasus, events which belong to 
365 



HERODOTUS. 



HEROPHILUS. 



the years 409 and 408. Though the work of gious sentiment. Herodotus shows the 
Herodotus was pfobably not written till he was i profound reverence for every thing which he 
advanced in years, yet he was collecting mate- ] conceives as divine, and rarely ventures to ex- 
rials for it during a great part of his life. It j press an opinion on what he considers a sacred 
was apparently with this view that he under- j or religious mystery. In order to form a fan- 
took his extensive travels through Greece and j judgment of the historical value of the work of 
foreign countries, and his work contains on ! Herodotus, we must distinguish between those 
almost every page the results of his personal j parts in which he speaks from his own obser- 
observations and inquiries. There was scarce- j vations and those in which he merely repeats 
ly a town of any importance in Greece Proper j what he was told by priests and others. In 
and on the coasts of Asia Minor with which he | the latter case he was undoubtedly often de- 
was not perfectly familiar ; and at many places j ceived ; but whenever he speaks from his own 
in Greece, such as Samos, Athens, Corinth, and i observations, he is a real model of truthfulness 
Thebes, he seems to have stayed some time. ! and accuracy ; and the more the countries which 
The sites of the great battles between the he describes have been explored by modern 
Greeks and barbarians, as Marathon, Thermop- 1 travellers, the more firmly has his authority 
ylae, Salamis, and Plataese, were well known to I been established. Many things which used to 
him ; and on Xerxes's line of march from the j be laughed at as impossible or paradoxical are 
Hellespont to Athens, there was probably not a J found now to be strictly in accordance with 
place which he had not seen with his own eyes, j truth. The dialect in which he wrote is the 
He also visited most of the Greek islands, not j Ionic, intermixed with epic or poetical expres- 
only in the ^Egean, but even in the west of j sions, and sometimes even with Attic and Doric* 
Greece, such as Zacynthus. Further north in j forms. The excellences of his style consist in 
Europe he visited Thrace and the Scythian j its antique and epic coloring, its transparent 
tribes on the Black Sea. In Asia he travelled { clearness, and the lively flow of the narrative, 
tlirough Asia Minor and Syria, and visited the j But, notwithstanding all the merits of Herodo- 
oities of Babylon, Ecbatana, and Susa. He ; tus, there were certain writers in antiquity who 
spent some time in Egypt, and travelled as far I attacked him both in regard to the form and 
south as Elephantine. He saw with his own i the substance of his work ; and there is still 
eyes all the wonders of Egypt, and the accuracy j extant a work ascribed to Plutarch, entitled 
of his observations and descriptions still excites ! " On the Malignity of Herodotus," full of the 
the astonishment of travellers in that country, j most futile accusations of every kind. The 
Prom Egypt he appears to have made excur- j best editions of Herodotus are by Schweighau- 
sions to the east into Arabia, and to the west j ser, Argentor., 1806, often reprinted ; by Gai^- 
into Libya, at least as far as Cyrene, which was i ford, Oxon., 1824 ; and by Bahr, Lips., 1830. — 
well known to him. The object of his work is I 2. A Greek physician, who practiced at Rome 
to give an account of the struggles between the i with great reputation, about A.D. 100. He 
Greeks and Persians. He traces the enmity j wrote some medical works, which are several 

times quoted by Galen. — 3. Also a Greek phy- 
sician, a native either of Tarsus or Philadel- 
phia, taught Sextus Empiricus. 

Heroopolis or Hero ('Hpuuv tco/uc, 'Hp6 : in 
the Old Testament, Raamses or Rameses ? : 
ruins near Abou-Kcshid?), the capital of the 
Nomos Heroopolites or Arsino'ites in Lower 
Egypt, stood on the border of the Desert east 
of the Delta, upon the canal connecting the Nile 
with the western head of the Red Sea, which 
was called from it Sinus Heroopoliticus (kuattoc 
'Hp6o>v, '¥Lpuo^o/uT7]r or -itlkoc). The country 
about it is supposed to be the Goshen of Scripture. 
Egypt induce him to enter into the details of j [Herophaxtus ('Hpoyavroc), tyrant at Pari- 
Egyptian history. The expedition of Darius j ura in the time of Darius Hystaspis.] 
against the Scythians causes him to speak of j Herophilus ( T Hp6fi?.oc), one of the most cele- 
Seythia and the north of Europe. In the mean ! brated physicians of antiquity, was bom at Chal- 
time the revolt of the Ionians breaks out, which j cedon in Bithynia, was a pupil of Praxagoras, 
eventually brings the contest between Persia | and lived at Alexandrea under the first Ptol- 
and Greece to an end. An account of this in- j emy, who reigned B.C. 323-285. Here he soon 
surrection is followed by the history of the in- ' acquired a great reputation, and was one of the 
vasion of Greece by the Persians ; and the his- j founders of the medical school in that city. He 
tory of the Persian war now runs in a regular I seems to have given his chief attention to 
channel until the taking of Sestos by the Greeks, ' anatomy and physiology, which he studied not 
B.C. 478, with which event his work concludes, j merely from the dissection of animals, but also 
It will be seen from the preceding sketch that j from that of human bodies. He is even said t*> 
the history is full of digressions and episodes ; j have carried his ardor in his anatomical put- 
out those do not impair the unity of the work, ; suits so far as to have dissected criminals alive, 
tor one thread, as it were, runs through the i He was the author of several medical and ana- 
whole, and the episodes are only like branches ! tomieal works, of which nothing but the titles 
"f the same tree. The structure of the work I and a few fragments remain. These have been 
'hus bears a strong resemblance to a grand epic I collected and published by Marx. Be Wetyphib 
poem. The work is pervaded bv a" deep reli- 1 VUa. &c Getting., 1840. 
366 



between Europe and Asia to the mythical times 
He passes rapidly over the mythical ages to 
come to Croesus, king of Lydia, who was known 
to have committed acts of hostility against the 
Greeks. This induces him to give a full his- 
tory of Croesus and of the kingdom of Lydia. 
The conquest of Lydia by the Persians under 
Cyrus then leads him to relate the rise of the 
Persian monarchy, and the subjugation of Asia 
Minor and Babylon. The nations which are 
mentioned in the course of this narrative are 
again discussed more or less minutely. The 
history ^ of Cambyses and his expedition into 



HEROSTRATUS. 



HESIONE. 



Herostratus {'HpoorpaToc), an Ephesian, set 
fire to the temple of Diana (Artemis) at Ephe- 
6U8 on the same night that Alexander the Great 
was born, B.C. 356. He was put to the torture, 
and eonfowed that he had fired the temple to 
immortalize himself. The Ephesians passed a 
decree condemning his name to oblivion; but 
it has been, us might have been expected, 
handed down by history. . 

Herse CEpctv), daughter of Cecrops and sister 
of Agrauloe, was beloved by Mercury (Hermes), 
by whom she became the mother of Cephalus. 
Respecting her story, vid, Ageaulos. At Ath- 
ens sacrifices were offered to her, aud the maid- 
ens who carried the vessels containing the li- 
bation (ipaq) were called e^opoi. 

Hersilia, the wife of Romulus, was the only 
married woman carried off by the Romans in 
the rape of the Sabiue maidens. As Romulus 
after death became Quirinus, so Hersilia his 
wife became a goddess, Hora or Horta. Some 
writers, however, made Hersilia the wife of 
Hostus, grandfather of Tullus Hostilius. 

Heetha (containing probably the 6ame ele- 
ments as the words earth, crde), the goddess of 
the earth among the ancient Germans 

Heeuli or Eruli, a powerful German race, 
are said to have come originally from Scandi- 
navia, but they appear on the shores of the 
Black Sea in the reign of Gallienus (A.D. 262), 
when, in conjunction with the Goths, they in- 
vaded the Romau empire. They were conquer- 
ed by the Ostrogoths, and afterward formed part 
of the great army of Attila, with which ho in- 
vaded Gaul and Italy. After the death of Attila 
(463) a portion of the Heruli united with other 
German tribes ; and uuder the command of 
Odoacer, who is said to have been an Hcru- 
lian, they destroyed the Western Empire, 476. 
Meantime the remainder of the nation formed 
a powerful kingdom on the banks of the Theiss 
and the Danube, which was eventually destroy- 
ed by the Langobardi or Lombards. Some of 
the Heruli were allowed by Anastasius to settle 
in Pannonia, an.l they served with great dis- 
tinction in the armies of Justinian. 

Hksiodus ('Hoiodoc) one of the earliest Greek 
poets, of whose personal history we possess 
little authentic information. He is frequently 
mentioned along with Homer; as Homer rep- 
resents the Ionic school of poetry in Asia Minor, 
so Hesiod represents the Boeotian school of 
poetry, which spread over Phocis and Eubcea. 
The only points of resemblance between the 
two schools consist in their versification and di- 
alect In other respects they entirely differ. 
The Homeric school takes for its subjects the 
restless activity of the heroic age, while the 
Hesiodic turns its attention to the quiet pursuits 
of ordinary life, to the origin of the world, the 
gods and heroes. Hesiod lived about a century 
later than Homer, and is placed about B.C. 315. 
Wc learn from his own poem on Works and 
Days that he was born in the village of Ascra 
in Boeotia, whither his father had emigrated 
from the ^Eolian Cyme iu Asia Minor. After 
the death of his father he was involved in a dis- 
pute with his brother Perses about his small 
patrimony, which was decided in favor of his 
brother. He then emigrated to Orehomenos, 
where he spent the remainder of his life. This 



is all that can be said with certainty about the life 
of Hesiod. Many of the stories related about 
him refer to his school of poetry, and not to the 
poet personally. In this light we may regard 
the tradition that Hesiod had a poetical contest 
with Homer, which is said to have taken place 
at Chalcis during the funeral solemnities of King 
Amphidamas, or, according to others, at Aulis or 
Delos. The story of this contest gave rise to a 
composition still extant under the title of 'kyu>\> 
'OfiTjpov nal 'Hatodov, the work of a grammarian 
who lived toward the end of the first century 
of our era, in which the two poets are repre- 
sented as engaged in the contest, aud answering 
one another. The following works were attrib- 
uted to Hesiod in antiquity : 1. "Epya or 'Epya 
Kal y/itpac, Opera et Dies, Works and Days. It 
is written in the most homely style, with scarce- 
ly any poetical imagery or ornament, aud must 
be looked upon as the most ancient specimen 
of didactic poetry. It contains ethical, politi- 
cal, and economical precepts, the last of which 
constitute the greater part of the work, consist- 
ing of rules about choosing a wife, the educa- 
tion of children, agriculture, commerce, and nav- 
igation. It would further seem that three dis- 
tinct poems have been inserted in it, viz., 1. The 
fable of Prometheus and Pandora (47-105) ; 2- 
On the ages of the world, which are designated 
by the names of metals (109-201); and, 3. A 
description of winter (504-558). 2. Qeoyovla, a 
Theogony, was not considered by Hesiod's coun- 
trymen to be a genuine production of the poet. 
This work gives an account of the origin of the 
world and the birth of the gods, explaining the 
whole order of nature in a series of genealogies, 
for every part of physical as well as moral na- 
ture there appears personified in the character 
of a distinct being. The whole concludes with 
an account of some of the most illustrious he- 
roes. 3. 'Holai or ijolai fieydlai, also called 
KaTu?Loyot yvvaiKuv, Catalogue of Women. This 
work is lost. It contained accounts of the 
women who had been beloved by the gods, and 
had thus become the mothers of the heroes in. 
the various parts of Greece, from whom the 
ruling families derived their origin. 4. 'AottIc 
'HpaK?Jovg, Shield of Hercules, which is extant 
probably formed part of the work last mention- 
ed. It contains a description of the shield of 
Hercules, and is an imitation of the Homeric 
description of the shield of Achilles. The best 
edition of Hesiod is by Gottling, Gotha and Er- 
furt, 1843, 2d ed. 

Hesione ('Hgiovti). 1. Daughter of Laomedon,, 
king of Troy, was chained by her father to a 
rock, in order to be devoured by a sea-monster, 
that he might thus appease the anger of Apollo 
and Neptune (Poseidon). Hercules promised 
to 6ave her if Laomedon would give him the 
horses which he had received from Jupiter 
(Zeus) as a compensation for Ganymedes. Her- 
cules killed the monster, but Laomedon refused 
to keep his promise. Thereupon Hercules took 
Troy, killed Laomedon, and gave Hesione to 
his friend aud companion Telamon, by whom 
she became the mother of Teucer. Her brother 
Priam sent Antenor to claim her back, and the 
refusal on the part of the Greeks is mentioned 
as one of the causes of the Trojan war. — [2 
Daughter of Oceanus-, and wife of Prometheus.] 
367 



HESPERIA 



HESYCHIUS. 



Hesperia ('Eo77epia), the Western laud (from 
hmepoQi vesper), the name given by the Greek 
poets to Italy, because it lay -west of Greece. 
In imitation of them, the Roman poets gave the 
name of Hesperia to Spain, which they some- 
times called ultima Hesperia (Hor., Carm n i., 
36, 4), to distinguish it from Italy, which they 
occasionally called Hesperia Magna (Virg., uSn., 
i, 569.) 

Hesperides ('Ec-epides), the celebrated guard- 
ians of the golden apples which Ge (Earth) gave 
to Juno (Hera) at her marriage with Jupiter 
Zeus.) Their parentage is differently related. 
They are called the daughters either of Night 
or Erebus, or of Phoreys and Ceto, or of Atlas 
and Hesperis (whence their names Atlantides 
or Hesperides), or of Hesperus, or of Jupiter 
(Zeus) and Themis. Some traditions mention- 
ed three Hesperides, viz., jEgle, Arethv.sa, and 
Hesperia; others four, -tEgle, Erytheia, Hestia, 
and Arethusa; and others again seven. The 
poets describe them as possessing the power of 
sweet song. In the earliest legends, these 
nymphs are described as living on the River 
Oceanus, in the extreme west ; but the later at- 
tempts to fix the geographical position of their 
gardens led poets and geographers to different 
parts of Libya, as the neighborhood of Cyrene, 
Mount Atlas, or the islands on the western coast 
cf Libya, or even to the northern extremity of 
the earth, beyond the wind Boreas, among the 
Hyperboreans. They were assisted in watch- 
ing the golden apples by the dragon Ladon. It 
was one of the labors of Hercules to obtain 
possession of these apples. ( Yid. p. 358, a.) 

Hesperidum Insula. Yid. Hesperium. 

Hesperis. Yid. Berenice, No. 5, p. 142. 

Hesperium ('Ecizipiov, 'Ec^epov Kepag : now 
Cape Yerde or Cape Hoxo), a headland on the 
western coast of Africa, was one of the furthest 
points to which the knowledge of the ancients 
extended along that coast. Near it was a bay 
called Sinus Hesperius ; and a day's journey 
from it a group of islands called Hesperidum 
Insula, wrongly identified by some with the 
Fortunate Insulas ; they are either the Cape de 
Verde islands, or, more properly, the Bissagos, 
at the mouth of the Rio G-rande. 

[Hesperius Senxs. Yid. Hesperioi.] 

Hesperus ("Ec-epoc), the evening star, is 
tailed by Hesiod a son of Astrteus and Aurora 
(Eos). He was also regarded as the same as 
the morning star, whence both Homer and He- j 
siod call him the bringer of light (eucq>6poc). A 
later account makes him a son of Atlas, who 
was fond of astronomy, and who disappeared 
after ascending Mount Atlas to observe the 
stars. He was worshipped with divine honors, 
and was regarded as the fairest star in the 
heavens. The Romans designated him by the 
names Lucifer and Hesperus, to characterize 
him as the morning or evening star. 

Hestia ('Earia, Ion. 'larin), called Vesta by j 
the Romans, the goddess of the hearth, or, rath- j 
-er, of the fire burning on the hearth, was one of j 
the twelve great divinities of the Greeks. She j 
was a daughter of Saturn (Cronus) and Rhea, j 
and, according to common tradition, was the j 
first-born of Rhea, and consequently the first of j 
the children swallowed by Saturn (Cronus). I 
She was a maiden divinitv. and when Apollo ! 
368 



and Neptune (Poseidon) sued for her hand, she 
swore by the head of Jupiter (Zeus) to remain 
a virgin forever. As the hearth was looked 
upon as the centre of domestic life, so Hestia 
was the goddess of domestic life and the giver 
of all domestic happiness ; as such she was be- 
lieved to dwell in the inner part of every house, 
and to have invented the art of building houses. 
In this respect she often appears together with 
Mercury (Hermes), who was likewise a deus 
penetralis. Being the goddess of the sacred fire 
of the altar, Hestia had a share in the sacrifices 
offered to all the gods. Hence, when sacrifices 
were offered, she was invoked first, and the 
first part of the sacrifice was presented to her. 
Solemn oaths were sworn by the goddess of 
the hearth ; and the hearth itself was the sa- 
cred asylum where suppliants implored the pro- 
tection of the inhabitants of the house. A town 
or city is only an extended family, and there- 
fore had likewise its sacred hearth. This pub- 
lic hearth usually existed in the prytaneum of 
a town, where the goddess had her especial 
sanctuary (d^d/Mfiog), under the name of Pry- 
tanltis (ilpvravinc), with a statue and the sacred 
hearth. There, as at a private hearth, Hestia 
protected the suppliants. When a colony was 
sent out, the emigrants took the fire which was 
to burn on the hearth of their new home from 
that of the mother town. If ever the fire of her 
hearth became extinct, it was not allowed to be 
lighted again with ordinary fire, but either by 
fire produced by friction, or by burning glasses 
drawing fire from the sun. The mystical specu 
lations of later times took their origin from the 
simple ideas of the ancients, and assumed a sa- 
cred hearth not only in the centre of the earth, 
but even in that of the universe, and confound- 
ed Hestia in various ways with other divinities, 
such as Cybele, Terra (Gasa), Ceres (Demeter). 
Proserpina (Persephone), and Diana (Artemis), 
There were but few special temples of Hestia 
in Greece, since every prytaneum was in reali- 
ty a sanctuary of the goddess, and since a por- 
tion of the sacrifices, to whatever divinity they 
were offered, belonged to her. The worship 
of the Roman Testa is spoken of under Vesta. 

[Hestlea ('EcTcaca), a city in the island of 
Eubcea, the later Oreus.) 

[Hestlea ('Ecriaia) a learned lady of Alex- 
andrea, who wrote a book in explanation of the 
Iliad.] 

Hestleotis ('EartaLcoTig). 1. The northwest- 
ern part of Thessaly. Yid. Thessalia. — 2. Or 
Histlea, a district in Eubcea. Vid. Eubcea. 

Hestchius ('Hovxioc). 1. An Alexandrine 
grammarian, under whose name a large Greek 
dictionary has come down to us. Respecting 
his personal history nothing is known, but he 
probably lived about A.D. 380. The work is 
based, as the writer himself tells us, upon the 
lexicon of Diogenianus. Hesychius was prob- 
ably a pagan: the Christian glosses and the 
references to Christian writers in the work are 
interpolations by a later hand. The work is 
one of great importance, not only on account of 
its explaining the words of the Greek language, 
but also from its containing much literary and 
archaeological information, derived from earlier 
grammarians and commentators, whose works 
are lost. The arrangement of the work, how- 



HETRICULUM. 



HIERON. 



ever, is very defective. The best edition is 
by Alberti, completed after Alberti's death by 
Ruhnken, Lugd. Bat., 1746-1766, 2 vols, fol.— 
2. Of Miletus, surnamed Illustris, from some 
office which he held, lived about AD. 540, and 
wrote, 1. An Onomasticon, or account of illus- 
trious men, published by Orelli, Lips., 1820. 2. 
A Chronicon, or synoptical view of universal his- 
tory, in six parts, from the reign of Belus, the 
reputed founder of the Assyrian empire, to the 
death of the Byzantine emperor, Anastasius I, 
A.D. 518. The work itself is lost, but an ac- 
count of it is preserved by Photius. 
Hetriculim, a town of the Bruttii. 
Hibeenia, also called Ierne, Iverxa or Ju- 
verxa ('lepvq, 'lepvcc v//<f0c, 'lovepvia), the island 
of Ireland, appears to have derived its name 
from the inhabitants of its southern coast, call- 
ed Juverni (Iwepvoi) by Ptolemy, but its orig- 
inal name was probably Bergion or Vergion. It 
; s mentioned by Ctesar, and is frequently spoken 
< >f by subsequent writers ; but the Romans never 
made any attempt to conquer the island, though 
they obtained some knowledge of it from the 
commercial intercourse which was carried on 
between it and Britain. We have no account 
of the island except from Ptolemy, who must 
have derived his information from the state- 
ments of the British merchants, who visited its 
coasts. Ptolemy gives rather a long list of its 
promontories, rivers, tribes, and towns. 
Hicesia. Vid. Mo\am Insula. 
[Hicetaox ('Ikstuuv), son of the Trojan king 
Laomedon, and brother of Priam.] 

Hicetas ('l/cerac or 'iK&njg). 1. A Syracusan, 
contemporary with the younger Dionysius and 
Timoleon. He was at first a friend of Dion, 
after whose death (B.C. 353) his wife Arete 
and his sister Aristomache placed themselves 
under the care of Hicetas ; but he was per- 
suaded, notwithstanding, to consent to their de- 
struction. A few years later he became tyrant 
of Leontini. He carried on war against the 
younger Dionysius, whom he defeated, and had 
made himself master of the whole city, except 
the island citadel, when Timoleon landed in 
Sicily, 344. Hicetas then opposed Timoleon, 
and called in the aid of the Carthaginians, but 
he was defeated and put to death by Timoleon, 
".39 or 338. — 2. Tyrant of Syracuse, during the 
interval between the reign of Agathocles and 
that of Pyrrhus. He defeated Phintias, tyrant 
of Agrigentum, and was himself defeated by 
vhe Carthaginians. After a reign of nine years 
12S8-279), he was expelled from Syracuse.— 3. 
Of Syracuse, otto <»f the earlier Pythagoreans. 

Hiempsal. 1. Son of Micipsa, king of Nu- 
midia, and grandson of Masinissa, was murder- 
ed by Jugurtha soon after the death of Micipsa, 
B.C. 118. — 2. King of JNumidia, grandson or 
great-grandson of Masinissa, and father of Juba, 
appears to have received the sovereignty of part 
of Numidia after the Jugurthine war. He was 
expelled from his kingdom by Cn. Domitius 
Ahenobarbus, the leader of the Marian party in 
Africa, but was restored by Ponrpey in 81. 
Hiempsal wrote some works in the Punic lan- 
guage, which are cited by Sallust (Jug., 17). 
Hiera. 1. Vid. JEolle. 2. Vid, JEgates. 
Hierapolis ( K lepaTto7ac), 1. (Now Bambuk- 
kalessi ?), a citv of Great Phrvgia. near the Mse- 
24 



! ander, celebrated for its hot springs and its tem- 
I pie of Cybele. Like the neighboring cities of 
| Colossae and Laodicea, it was an early seat of 
j Christianity, and it is mentioned in St. Paul's 
i Epistle to the Colossians (iv., 13). — 2. Formerly 
| Bambyce (BafM&vKrj : now Bambuch or Membij), 
| a city in the northeast of Syria, one of the chief 
| seats of the worship of Astarte. 

[Hierapytxa Vlepd-nVTva, in Dio Cass, 'lepo- 
| Trvdva : 'lepa-xvTVLog : now Girapietra), a town 
[ on the southern coast of Crete, fabled to have 
j been founded by the Corybantes.] 

[Hiero. Vid, Hierox.] 

Hierocles ViepoKlrjc). 1. A Greek rhetori- 
cian of Alabanda in Caria, lived about B.C. 100, 
and was distinguished, like his brother Menc- 
cles, by the Asiatic style of oratory. — 2. Gov- 
ernor of Bithynia, and afterward of Alexan- 
drea, is said to have been one of the chief insti- 
gators of the persecution of the Christians un- 
der Diocletian. He wrote a work against the 
Christians, entitled Aoyoi <t>i?\,aA?j8eic irpbe rovr 
Xptariavovc, of which we may form an idea from 
the account of Lactantius and the refutation 
which Eusebius wrote against it. We see from 
these writers that Hierocles attacked the char- 
acter of Jesus Christ and his apostles, and put 
him on an equality with Apollonius of Tyana. — 
3. A New Platonist, who lived at Alexandrea 
about the middle of the fifth century. He wrote, 
1. A commentary on the golden verses of Py- 
thagoras, in which he endeavors to give an in- 
telligible account of the philosophy of Pythag- 
oras. Published by Needham, Cambridge, 1709, 
and by Warren, London, 1742. 2. A work on 
Providence, Fate, and the reconciliation of man's 
free will with the divine government of the 
world, in seven books. The work is lost, but 
some extracts from it are preserved in Photius. 
3. An ethical work on justice, on reverence to- 
ward the gods, parents, relations, &c, which 
bore the title Tw fyO.ocotyovuzva. This work is 
also lost, but there are several extracts from it 
in Stobeeus. The extant work, entitled 'Aarela, 
a collection of ludicrous tales, is erroneously 
ascribed to Hierocles, the New Platonist, The 
work is of no merit. — 4. A Greek grammarian, 
the author of an extant work, entitled 'LvveKdrj- 
jxog, that is, The Travelling Companion, intend- 
ed as a hand-book for travellers through the 
provinces of the eastern empire. It was per- 
haps written at the beginning of the sixth cen- 
tury of our era. It contains a list of sixty ep- 
archiae or provinces of the Eastern empire, and 
of nine hundred and thirty-five different towns, 
with brief descriptions. Published by Wessel- 
ing, in Vetcrum Romaworum Itinerarla, Amster- 
dam, 1735. 

Hierox ('ttpuv ). 1. Tyrant of Syracuse (B. 
C. 478-467), was son of Diuomenes and brother 
of Gelon, whom he succeeded in the sovereign- 
ty. In the early part of his reign he became 
involved in a war with Theron of Agrigentum. 
who had espoused the cause of his brother 
Polyzelus, with whom he had quarrelled. But 
Hieron afterward concluded a peace with The- 
ron, and became reconciled to his brother Poly- 
zelus. After the death of Theron in 472, he 
carried on war against his son Thrasydseus, 
whom he defeated in a great battle, and ex- 
pelled from Agrigentum. But by far the most 
369 



HIEROX. 



HIERONYMUS. 



important event of his reign was the great 
victory which he obtained over the Etruscan 
Beet near Cumae (474), and which appears to 
have effectually broken the naval power of 
that nation. Hieron died at Cataua in the 
twelfth year of his reign, 467. His govern- 
ment was much more despotic than that of his : 
brother Gelon. He maintained a large guard 
of mercenary troops, and employed numerous ■ 
spies and informers. He was, however, a lib- 1 
eral and enlightened patron of men of letters, j 
and his court became the resort of the most dis- 
tinguished poets and philosophers of the day. j 
JEschylus, Pindar, and Bacchylides took up their ; 
abode* with him, and we find him associating in j 
friendly intercourse with Xenophanes, Epichar- ! 
mus, and Simonides. His intimacy with the j 
latter was particularly celebrated, and has been 
made the subject by Xenophon of an imaginary J 
dialogue, entitled the Hieron. His love of mag- j 
nificence was especially displayed in the great 
contests of the Grecian games, and his victories ; 
at Olympia and Delphi have been immortalized j 
by Pindar.— 2. King of Syracuse (B.C. 270-216), 
was the son of Hierocles, a noble Syracusan, 
descended from the great Gelon, but his moth- j 
er was a female servant, When Pyrrhus left ' 
Sicily (275), Hieron, who had distinguished 
himself in the wars of that monarch, was de- 
clared general by the Syracusan army. He 
strengthened his power by marrying the daugh- 
ter of Leptines, at that time the most influen- 
tial citizen at Syracuse ; and after his defeat of 
the Mamertines, he was saluted by his fellow- 
citizens with the title of king, 270." It was the 
great object of Hieron to expel the Mamertines 
from Sicily ; and accordingly, when the Romans, 
in 264, interposed in favor of that people, Hie- 
ron concluded an alliance with the Carthagini- 
ans, and, in conjunction with them, carried on 
war against the Romans. But having been de- 
feated by the Romans, he concluded a peace 
with them in the following year (263), in virtue 
of which he retained possession of the whole 
southeast of Sicily, and the eastern side of the 
island as far as Tauromenium. From this time 
till his death, a period of little less than half a 
century, Hieron continued the steadfast friend 
and ally of the Romans, a policy of which his 
subjects as well as himself reaped the benefits, 
in the enjoyment of a state of uninterrupted 
tranquillity "and prosperity. Even the heavy 
losses which the Romans sustained in the first 
three years of the second Punic war did not 
shake his fidelity ; and after their great defeats, 
he sent them large supplies of corn and auxiliary 
troops. He died in 216 at the age of ninety- 
two. His government was mild and equitable : 
though he did not refuse the title of king, he 
avoided all external display of the insignia of 
royalty, and appeared in public in the garb of a 
private citizen. The care he bestowed upon 
the financial department of his administration 
is attested by the laws regulating the tithes of 
corn and other agricultural produce, which, un- 
der the name of Leges Hieronicce, were retained 
by the Romans when they reduced Sicily to a 
province. He adorned the city of Syracuse 
with many public works. His power and mag- 
nificence were celebrated by Theocritus in his 
sixteenth Idyl. Hieron had onlv one son. Ge- 
370 



Ion, who died shortly before his father. He was 
succeeded by his grandson, Hieronymus. 

Hikroxymus ('leptjvvftoc). 1. Of Cardia, prob- 
ably accompanied Alexander the Great to Asia, 
and after the death of that monarch (B.C. 
served under his countryman Eumenes. In the 
last battle between Eumenes and Antigonus 
(316), Hieronymus fell into the hands of Antig- 
onus, who treated him with kindness, and to 
whose service he henceforth attached himself.. 
After the death of Antigonus (301), Hieronymus 
continued to follow the fortunes of his son De- 
metrius, and was appointed by the latter gov- 
ernor of Bceotia, after his first conquest of 
Thebes, 292. He continued unshaken in his 
attachment to Demetrius and to his son, Antig- 
onus Gonatas, after him. It appears that he 
survived Pyrrhus, and died at the advanced age 
of 104. Hieronymus wrote a history of the 
events from the death of Alexander to that of 
Pyrrhus, if not later. This work has not come 
down to us, but it is frequently cited by later 
writers as one of the chief authorities lor the 
history of Alexander's successors. We are told 
that Hieronymus displayed partiality to Antigo- 
nus and Demetrius, and, in consequence, treated 
Pyrrhus and Lysimaehus with great injustice. 
— 2. King of Syracuse, succeeded his grand- 
father Hieron II, B.C. 216, at fifteen years of 
age. He was persuaded by the Carthaginian 
party to renounce the alliance with the Romans 
which his grandfather had maintained for so 
many years. He was assassinated after a short 
reign of only thirteen months. — 3. Of Rhodes 
commonly called a peripatetic, though Cicero 
questions his right to the title, was a disciple of 
Aristotle, and appears to have lived down to the 
time of Ptolemy Philadelphus. He held the 
highest good to consist in freedom from pain 
and trouble, and denied that pleasure was to be 
sought for its own sake. — 4. Commonly known 
as Saixt Jerome, one of the most celebrated of 
the Christian fathers, was born at Stridon. a 
town upon the confines of Dalmatia and Pan- 
nonia, about A.D. 340. His father sent him to 
Rome for the prosecution of his studies, where 
he devoted himself with great ardor and suc- 
cess to the Greek and Latin languages, to rhet- 
oric, and to the different branches of philosophy, 
enjoying the instructions of the most distin- 
guished preceptors of that era, among whom 
was iElius Donatus. Vid. Doxatus. After com- 
pleting his studies he went to Gaul, where he 
remained some time, and subsequently travelled 
through various countries in the East. At An- 
tioch he was attacked by a dangerous malady, 
and on his recovery he resolved to withdraw 
from the world. In 374 he retired to the desert, 
of Chaleis, lying between Antioch and the Eu- 
phrates, where he passed four years, adhering 
strictly to the most rigid observances of monk- 
ish ascetism, but at the same time pursuing the 
study of Hebrew. In 379 he was ordained a 
presbyter at x\ntioch by Paulinus. Soon after 
he went to Constantinople, where he lived for 
three years, enjoying the instructions and friend- 
ship of Gregory of Nazianzus. In 382 he ac- 
companied Paulinus to Rome, where he forme : 
a close friendship with the Pope Damasus. H - 
remained at Rome three years, and there labor- 
ed in proclaiming the glory and merit of a eoi - 



11IER0S0LYMA. 



UIMILCO. 



templativc lift: und monastic discipline. H< 
had many enthusiastic disciples among the Ro- 
man ladies, but the influence which he exercis- 
ed over them excited the hatred of their velar 
tions, and exposed him to attacks against his 
character. Accordingly, he left Rome in 385, 
having lost his patron Damaus in the preceding 
year, and, accompanied by the rich widow Paula, 
her daughter Eustoehium, and a number of de- 
vout maidens, he made a tour of the Holy Land, 
and finally settled at Bethlehem, where Paula 
erected four monasteries, three for nuns and 
one for monks. Here he passed the remainder 
of his life. He died A.D. 420. Jerome wrote 
a great number of works, most of which have 
come down to us. Of these the most celebrated 
are his Commentaries on the various books of 
the Scriptures. He also translated into Latin 
the Old and New Testaments: his translation 
is in substance the Latin version of the Scrip- 
tures, known by the name of the Vulgate. The 
translation of the Old Testament was made by 
Jerome directly from the Hebrew ; but the 
translation of the New Testament was formed 
by him out of the old translations, carefully cor- 
rected from the original Greek. Jerome like- 
wise translated from the Greek the Chronicle 
of Eusebius, which he enlarged, chiefly in the 
department of Roman history, and brought down 
to A.D. 3*78. Jerome was the most learned of 
the Latin fathers. His profound knowledge of 
the Latin, Greek, and Hebrew languages, his 
familiarity with ancient history and philosophy, 
and his personal acquaintance with the man- 
ners and scenery of the East, enabled him to 
throw much light upon the Scriptures. In his 
controversial works he is vehement and dog- 
matical. His language is exceedingly pure, bear- 
ing ample testimony to the diligence with which 
he must have studied the choicest models. The 
best editions of the works of Jerome are the 
Benedictine, Paris, 5 vols, fol., 1693-1706, and 
that by Vallarsi, Veron., 11 vols, fol., 1734-1742; 
reprinted Venet., 11 vols. 4to, 1766. 

HlEROSOLYMA. V'lA. JERUSALEM. 

Hilarius. 1. A Christian writer, was born 
of pagan parents at Poitiers. He afterward be- 
i&me a Christian, and was elected bishop of his 
native place, A.D. 350. From this time he de- 
voted all his energies to check the progress of 
Arianism, which was making rapid strides in 
Gaul. He became so troublesome to the Ari- 
ans, that they induced the Emperor Constantius 
in 356 to banish him to Phrygia. He was allow- 
ed to return to Gnul about 361, and died in his 
diocese in Mf. Several of his works have 
come down to us. They consist chiefly of 
polemical treatises against the Arians and ad- 
dresses to the Emperor Constantius. The best 
edition of his works is by Constant, Paris, 1693, 
forming one of the Benedictine series, and re- 
printed by Scipio Mallei, Veron.. 1780. — 2. Bish- 
op of Aries, succeeded his master Honoratus in 
that diocese, A.D. 429, and died in 449. He 
wrote the lift; of Honoratus and a few other 
works. 

Hillkvionks. Hrf. Germania, p. 327, a. 

Himera ('luepa). 1. (Now Fiwne Salso,) one 
of the principal rivers in the south of Sicily, at 
one time the boundary between the territories 
«f the Carthaginians and Syracusans, receives 



near Elina the water of a salt spring, and hence 
has salt water as far as its mouth. — 2. A smaller 
river in the north of Sicily, flows into the sea 
between the towns of Himera and Thermae. — 
3. ('tyepaloc), a celebrated Greek city on the 
northern coast of Sicily, west of the mouth of 
the River Himera (No. 2), was founded by the 
Chalcidians of Zancle, B.C. 648, and afterward 
received Dorian settlers, so that the inhabitants 
spoke a mixed dialect, partly Ionic (Chalcidian) 
and partly Doric. AUout 560, Himera, being 
threatened by its powerful neighbors, placed it- 
self under the protection of Phalaris, tyrant of 
Agrigentum, in whose power it appears to "have 
remained till his death. At a later time (500) 
we find Himera governed by a tyrant Terillus, 
who was expelled by Theron of x\grigentum. 
Terillus thereupon applied for assistance to the 
Carthaginians, who, auxious to extend their in- 
fluence in Sicily, sent a powerful army into 
Sicily under the command of Hamilcar. The 
Carthaginians were defeated with great slaugh- 
ter at Himera by the united forces of Theron 
and Gelon of Syracuse on the same day that the 
battle of Salamis was fought (480). Himera 
was now governed by Thrasydseus, the son of 
Theron, in the name of his father ; but the in- 
habitants having attempted to revolt, Theron put 
to death or drove into exile a considerable part 
of the population, and repeopled the city with 
settlers from all quarters, but especially of Do- 
rian origin. After the death of Theron (472), 
Himera recovered its independence, and for the 
next sixty years was one of the most flourish- 
ing cities in Sicily. It assisted Syracuse against 
the Athenians in 415. In 409 it was taken by 
Hannibal, the son of Gisco, who, to revenge the 
great defeat which the Carthaginians had suf- 
fered before this town, levelled it to the ground 
and destroyed almost all the inhabitants. Hi- 
mera was never rebuilt ; but on the opposite 
bank of the River Himera, the Carthaginians 
founded a new town, which, from a warm me- 
dicinal spring in its neighborhood, was called 
Thermve (Q£p/uat : Qepju'iTijc, Thermitanus : now 
Termini). Here the remains of the unfortunate 
inhabitants of Himera were allowed to settle. 
The Romans, who higlily prized the warm 
springs of Therma?, permitted the town to retain 
its own constitution ; and Augustus made it a 
colony. The poet Stesichorus was born at the 
ancient Himera. and the tyrant Agathocles at 
Therma?. 

Himerius ('Ifiepioe)', a celebrated Greek soph- 
ist, was born at Prusa in Bithynia, and studied 
at Athens. He was subsequently appointed pro- 
fessor of rhetoric at Athens, where he gave in- 
struction to Julian, afterward emperor, and the 
celebrated Christian writers, Basil and Gregory 
Nazianzen. In 862 the Emperor Julian invited 
him to his court at Antioch, and made him his sec- 
retary. He returned to Athens in 368, and there 
passed the remainder of his life. Himerius was a 
pagan ; but he does not manifest in his writings 
any animosity against the Christians. There were 
extant in the time of Photius seventy -one orations 
! by Himerius ; but of these only twenty-four have 
I come down to us complete. Edited by Werns- 
dorf, Gottingen, 1790. 

Himilco ('IfiilKuv). 1. A Carthaginian, who 
' conducted a voyage of discovery from Gades 
371 



HIPPANA. 



HIPPOOENTAURI. 



toward the north, along the western shores of 
Europe, at the same time that Hanno undertook 
his voyage to the south along the coast of Afri- 
ca. Vid. Haxxo. So. 10. Himilco represent- j 
ed that his further progress was prevented by ' 
the stagnant nature of the sea, loaded with sea- 
weed, and bj the absence of wind. His voyage I 
is said to have lasted four months, but it is im- j 
possible to judge how far it was extended. Per- ■ 
haps it was intentionally wrapped in obscurity 
by the commercial jealousy of the Carthagini- 
ans. — 2. Son of Hanno, commanded, together 
with Hannibal, son of Gisco (vid. Haxxibal, \ 
So. 1), a Carthaginian army in Sicily, and laid 
siege to Agrigentuin, B.C. 406. Hannibal died 
before Agrigentum of a pestilence, -which broke 
out in the camp ; and Himilco, now left sole j 
general, succeeded in taking the place, after a j 
siege of nearly eight months. At a later period 
he carried on war against Dionysius of Syra- : 
cuse. In 395 he defeated Dionysius, and laid 
siege to Syracuse ; but while pressing the siege 
of the city, a pestilence carried off a great num- ! 
ber of his men. In this weakened condition, : 
Himilco -was attacked and defeated by Diony- j 
sius, and was obliged to purchase his safety by 
an ignominious capitulation. Such was his | 
grief and disappointment at this termination to | 
the campaign, that, on his return to Carthage, 
he put an end to his life by voluntary absti- 
nence. — 3. The Carthaginian commander at Lil- 
ybceum, which he defended with skill and brav- j 
ery when it was attacked by the Romans, 250. 1 
— 4. Commander of the Carthaginian forces in j 
Sicily during a part of the second Punic war, 214 j 
-212. — 5. Surnamed Phaaleas, commander of the j 
Carthaginian cavalry in the the third Punic war. 
He deserted to the Romans, by whom he was i 
liberally rewarded. 

Hippaxa (ra 'l~-ava), a town in the north of ; 
Sicily, near Panormus. 

Htpparchia (ln-apxia). wife of Crates the 
Cynic. (For details, vid. Crates, So. 3.) 

Hipparchus (l~^apxog). 1. Son of Pisistra- \ 
tus. Vid, Pisistratidje. — 2. A celebrated Greek 
astronomer, was a native of Xicsea in Bithynia, 
and flourished B.C. 160-145. He resided both 
at Rhodes and Alexandrea. He was the true 
father of astronomy, which he raised to that 
rank among the applications of arithmetic and 
geometry which it has always since preserved, j 
He was the first who gave and demonstrated ' 
the means of solving all triangles, rectilinear ; 
and spherical He constructed a table of chords, 
of which he made the same sort of use as we . 
make of our sines. He made more observa- 
tions than his predecessors, and understood 
them better. He invented the planisphere, or 
the mode of representing the starry heavens 
upon a plane, and of producing the solutions of 
problems of spherical astronomy. He is also 
the father of true geography, by his happy idea 
of marking the position of spots on the "earth, 
as was done with the stars, by circles drawn 
from the pole perpendiculai'ly "to the equator ; 
that is, by latitudes and longitudes. His method 
of eclipses was the only one by which differ- 
ences of meridians could be detennined. The 
catalogue which Hipparchus constructed of the 
stars is preserved in the Almagest of Ptolemy. 
Hipparchus wrote numerous works, which are i 
372 



all lost with the exception of his commenta- 
ry on the phenomena of Aratus. 

Hipparixus (iTTTraplvoe). 1. A Syracusax. 
father of Dion and Aristomache, supported the 
elder Dionysius, who married his daughter Aris- 
tomache. — 2. Son of Dion, and grandson of the 
preceding, threw himself from the roof of a 
house, and was killed on the spot, when his 
father attempted, by restraint, to cure him of 
the dissolute habits which he had acquired while 
under the power of Dionysius. — 3. Son of the 
elder Dionysius by Aristornache, daughter of 
Xo. 1, succeeded Callippus in the tyranny of 
Syracuse, B.C. 352, He was assassinated after 
reigning only two years. 

Hipparis ('l-Trapig : now Camarina), a river 
in the south of Sicily, which flows into the sea 
near Camaiina. 

Hippasus (TTTTracroc), of Metapontum or Cro- 
ton, in Italy, one of the elder Pythagoreans, 
held the element of fire to be the cause of all 
things. In consequence of his making known 
the sphere, consisting' of twelve pentagons, 
which was regarded by the Pythagoreans as a 
secret, he is said to have perished in the sea as 
an impious man. 

Hippia and Hippius ('ImcUi and lirmog, or 
'Ittttc/oc), in Latin Equester and Equestris, sur- 
names of several divinities, as of Juno (Hera^ 
and Minerva (Athena), of Xeptune (Poseidon) 
and of liars (Ares) ; and at Rome also of Fortuna 
and Venus. 

Hippias (lTT7:iac). L Son of Pisistratus. Vid. 
Pisistratid^e. — 2. The Sophist, was a native 
of Elis, and the contemporary of Socrates. His 
fellow-citizens availed themselves of his abili- 
ties in political matters, and sent hiaa on a dip- 
lomatic mission to Sparta. But he was in every 
respect like the other sophists of the time. Ho 
travelled through Greece for the purpose of ac- 
quiring wealth and celebrity by teaching and 
public speaking. His character as a sophist, 
his vanity, and his boastful arrogance, are well 
described in the two dialogues of Plato, Hippias 
major and Hippias minor. Though his knowl- 
edge was superficial, yet it appears that he had 
paid attention not only to rhetorical, philosoph- 
ical, and political studies, but also to poetry, 
music, mathematics, painting, and sculpture : 
and he must even have acquired some practical 
skill in the mechanical arts, as he used to boast 
of wearing on his body nothing that he had not 
made with his own hands, such as his seal-ring, 
his cloak, and shoes. He possessed great fa- 
cility in extempore speaking ; and once his van- 
ity led him to declare that he would travel tv 
Olympia, and there deliver before the assembled 
Greeks an oration on any subject that might be 
proposed to him. 

Hippo ( ; I"cjv), in Africa. 1. H. Regius {'L 
,3aci?uKog : ruins near JBonah), a city on the coast 
of jSurnidia, west of the mouth of the Rubrica- 
tes ; once a royal residence, and afterward cel- 
ebrated as the bishopric of St. Augustine. — 2. 
H. Diarrhttus or Zaritus ('I. dLu()(n)70Q : nowi?<- 
zerta), a city on the northern coast of the 
Carthaginian territory (Zeugitana), west of Uti- 
ca, at the mouth of the Sinus Hipponensis. — S. 
A town of the Carpetani in Hispania Tarraco- 
nensis, south of Toletum. 

Hippocextauri. Vid. Centaur i. 



HIPPOCOON. 



HIPPODAMUS. 



Hippocoon ('Itctcokouv). I. Son of (Ebalus and 
Batea. After bis father's death he expelled his 
brother Tyndareus, in order to secure the king- 
dom to himself; but Hercules led Tyndareus 
back, and slew Hippocoon and his sons. Ovid 
{Met, m, 314) mentions the sons of Hippocoon 
among the Calydonian hunters— [2. A Thra- 
cian, follower of Rhesus in the Trojan war.— 
3. Son of Hvitaeus, a companion of uEneas, dis- 
tinguished himself in the funeral games cele- 
brated in honor of Anchises.] 

Hippocratk* ('l-KonpdTT)s). 1. Father of Pi- 
sistratus, the tyrant of Athens.— 2. An Athe- 
nian, son of Ifcgaoles, was brother of Clisthe- 
nes, the legislator, and grandfather, through his 
daughter Agariste, of the illustrious Pericles. j 
— 3. An Athenian, son of Xanthippus and broth- j 
er of Pericles. He had three sons, who, as well j 
as their father, arc alluded to by Aristophanes j 
as men of a mean capacity, and devoid of edu- j 
cation. — 4. An Athenian, son of Ariphron, com- j 
manded the Athenians, B.C. 424, when he was j 
defeated and slain by the Boeotians at the battle 
of Delium. — 5. A Lacedasmoniau, served under 
Mindarus on the Asiatic coast in 410, and, after 
the defeat of Mindarus at Cyzicus, became com- 
mander of the fleet — 6. A Sicilian, succeeded 
his brother Oleander as tyrant of Gr-ela, 498. 
His reign was prosperous ; and he extended his 
power over several other cities of Sicily. He 
died in 491, while besieging Hybla. — 7. A Sicil- 
ian, brother of Epicydes. — 8. The most cele- 
brated physician of antiquity. He was born in 
the island of Cos about B.C. 4G0. He belonged 
to the family of the Aselepiadte, and was the 
son of Heraelides, who was also a physician. 
His mother's name was Phaenarete, who was 
said to be descended from Hercules. He was 
instructed in medical science by his father and 
by Herodicus, and he is said to have been also j 
a pupil of Gorgias of Leontini. He wrote, 
caught, and practiced his profession at home ; j 
travelled in different parts of the continent of i 
Greece ; and died at Larissa in Thessaly, about j 
357, at the age of 104. He had two sons, Thes- 
salus and Dracon, and a son-in-law, Polybus, ' 
all of whom followed the same profession, and i 
who are supposed to have been the authors of \ 
some of the works in the Hippocratic collec- 1 
tion. These are the only certain facts which j 
we know respecting the life of Hippocrates ; but 
to these later writers have added a large collec- j 
lion of stories, many of which are clearly fabu- ; 
lous. Thus he is said to have stopped the "plague I 
at Athens by burning fires throughout the city, 
by suspending cliaplets of flowers, and by the ! 
use of an antidote. It is also related that Ar- ' 
taxerxes Longimanus, king of Persia, invited j 
Hippocrates to come to his assistance during a 
time of pestilence, but that Hippocrates refused 
his request ou the ground of his being the en- 
emy of his country. The writings which have j 
come down to us under the name of Hippocrates 
were composed by several different persons, and j 
are of very different merit, They are more than j 
sixty in number, but of these only a few are I 
certainly genuine. They are : 1. UpoyvuaTiKov,] 
Prcenot ion es or Prognosticon. 2. 'A^opiafiol, Apho- \ 
rismi. 8, 'mmSfffuov Bi6Aia, De Morbis Populu- \ 
ribus (or Epidemiorum). 4. Uepl Hia'tTiqc '0£euv, 
De Matione Vidua in Morbis Acutis,or De Diceta ' 



j Acutorum. 5. Uepl 'Aepuv, 'Yddruv, Torwv, De 
A'ere, Aquis, et Locis. 6. Uepl tuv iv Ketya/.y 
TpujuuTuv, De Capitis Vulneribus. Some of the 
j other works were perhaps written by Hippo - 
j crates ; but the great majority of them were 
composed by his disciples and followers, many 
I of whom bore the name of Hippocrates. The 
ancient physicians wrote numerous comment- 
aries on the works in the Hippocratic collection. 
Of these the most valuable are the comment- 
aries of Galen. Hippocrates divided the causes 
of disease into two principal classes ; the one 
comprehending the influence of seasons, cli- 
mates, water, situation, tfcc, and the other the 
influence of food, exercise, &c. He considered 
that while heat and cold, moisture and dryness, 
succeeded one another throughout the year, 
the human body underwent certain analogous 
changes, which influenced the diseases of the 
period. He supposed that the four fluids or 
humors of the body (blood, phlegm, yellow bile, 
and black bile) were the primary seat of dis- 
ease ; that health was the result of the due 
combination (or crasis) of these, and that, when 
this crasis was disturbed, disease was the conse- 
quence; that, in the course of a disorder that 
was proceeding favorably, these humors under- 
went a certain change in quality (or coction), 
which was the sign of returning health, as pre- 
paring the way for the expulsion of the morbid 
matter, or crisis; and that these crises had a 
tendency to occur at certain stated periods, 
which were hence called " critical days:' Hip- 
pocrates was evidently a person who not only 
had had great experience, but who also knew 
how to turn it to the best account; and the 
number t)f moral reflections and apophthegms 
that we meet with in his writings, some of 
which (as, for example, " Life is short, and Art 
is long") have acquired a sort of proverbial no- 
toriety, show him to have been a profound 
thinker. His works are written in the Ionic 
dialect, and the style is so concise as to be 
sometimes extremely obscure. The best edi- 
tion of his works is" by Littre, Paris, 1839, seq., 
with a French translation. 

Hifpocrene ('Iirironpyjv)/), the " Fountain of 
the Horse," called by Persius Fans Gaballlnux, 
was a fountain in Mount Helicon in Boeotia, 
sacred to the Muses, said to have been j)roduc- 
ed by the horse Pegasus striking the ground 
with his feet. 

[Hippodamas ('l-nodd-uar ), son of Priam, slain 
by Achilles.] 

Hippodamia ( r l-~o6uii£ia). 1. Daughter of 
GSnomaus, king of Pisa in Elis. For details, 
vid, QEnomaus and Pelops. — 2. Wife of Pirith- 
ous, at whose nuptials took place the celebrated 
battle between the Centaurs and Lapitha3. For 
details, vid. Pibithous. — 3. Vid. Briseis. — [4. 
Wife of Amyntor, and mother of Phoenix. — 5. 
Daughter of Anchises, and wife of Alcathous. 
— 6. One of the female attendants of Penelope.] 

Heppodamus ('iTTTrodauog). [1. A Trojan hero, 
slain by Ulysses.] — 2. A distinguished Greek 
architect, a native of Miletus, and the son of 
Euryphon or Eurycoon. His fame rests on his 
construction, not of single buildings, but of 
whole cities. His first great work was the town 
of Piraeus, which he built under the auspices of 
Pericles. When the Athenians founded their 
373 



HIPPOLOCHUS. 



HIPPOTHOUS. 



colony of Thurii (B.C. 448), Hippodamus went 
out with the colonists, and was the architect of 
the new city. Hence he is often called a Thu- 
rian. He afterwards built Rhodes (408-40*7). 

Hippolochus ^InTToloxog). 1. Son of Bellero- 
phontes and Philonoe or Antielea, and father of 
Glaucus, the Lycian prince. — [2. A Trojan, son 
of Antimachus, slain by Agamemnon. — 3. One 
of the thirty tyrants at Athens.] 

Hippolyte ('Itt7to?[,vt7}^. 1. Daughter of Mars 
(Ares) and Otrera, was queen of the Amazons, 
and sister of Antiope and Melanippe. She wore 
a girdle given' to her by her father ; and when 
Hercules came to fetch this girdle, she was 
slain by Hercules. Vid. p. 357, b. According 
to another tradition, Hippolyte, with an army 
of Amazons, marched into Attica, to take venge- 
ance on Theseus for having earned off An- 
tiope ; but, being conquered by Theseus, she 
fled to Megara, where she died of grief, and was 
buried. In some accounts, Hippolyte, and not 
Antiope, is said to have been married to The- 
seus. — 2. Or Astydajviia, wife of Acastus, fell 
in love with Peleus. Vid. Acastus. 

Hippolytus ('Itcttoavtoc). 1. Son of Theseus 
by Hippolyte, queen of the Amazons, or her 
sister Antiope. Theseus afterwards married 
Phsedra, who fell in love with Hippolytus ; but, 
as her offers were rejected by her step-son, she 
accused him to his father of having attempted 
her dishonor. Theseus thereupon cursed his 
son, and requested his father, .ZEgeus or Nep- 
tune (Poseidon), to destroy him. Accordingly, 
as Hippolytus was riding in his chariot along 
the sea-coast, Neptune (Poseidon) sent forth a 
bull from the water. The horses were fright- 
ened, upset the chariot, and dragged Hippoly- 
tus along the ground till he was dead. The- 
seus afterward learned the innocence of his 
son, and Phaedra, in despair, made away with 
herself. Diana (Artemis) induced iEsculapius 
to restore Hippolytus to life again ; and, accord- 
ing to Italian traditions, she placed him, under 
the name of Virbius, under the protection of 
the nymph Egeria, in the grove of Aricia, in La- 
tium, where he was honored with divine wor- 
ship. Horace, following the more ancient tra- 
dition, says that Diana could not restore Hip- 
polytus to life (Carm., iv., 7, 25). — 2. An early 
ecclesiastical writer of considerable eminence, 
but whose real history is very uucertain. He 
appears to have lived early in the third century, 
and is said to have suffered martyrdom under 
Alexander Severus, being drowned in a ditch 
or pit full of water. Others suppose that he 
perished in the Decian persecution. He is said 
to have been a disciple of Irenseus and a teacher 
of Origen. His works, which are written in 
Greek, are edited by Fabricius, Hamb., 1716- 
1718, 2 vols. fol. 

[Hippomachus ('iTTirofiaxo^). 1. A Trojan war- 
rior, son of Antimachus, slain by Leonteus. — 2. 
One of the thirty tyrants at Athens, fell in bat- 
tle against the patriots under Thrasybulus.] 

Hippomedon ('lirTcofieduv), son of Aristoma- 
ehus, or, according to Sophocles, of Talaus, was 
one of the Seven against Thebes, where he was 
slain during the siege by Hyperbius orlsmarus. 

Hippomenes ('iTrKOjuevr]?). l. Son of Mega- 
reus, and great-grandson of Neptune (Poseidon), 
conquered Atalanta in the foot-race. For de- 
374 



I tails, vid, Atalanta. No. 2. — 2. A descendant 
I of Codrus, the fourth and last of the decennial 
j archons. Incensed at the barbarous punish 
! ment which he inflicted on his daughter, the 
! Attic nobles deposed him. 

Hippox ("Ittttuv), of Rhegium, a philosopher 
of uncertain date, belonging to the Ionian school. 
He was accused of atheism, and so got the sur- 
name of the Melian, as agreeing in sentiment 
with Diagoras. He held water and fire to be 
the principles of all things, the latter springing 
from the former, and developing itself by gener- 
ating the universe. 

Hipponax ('l-n'KuvaZ), of Ephesus, son of 
Pytheus and Protis, was, after Archilochus and 
Simonides, the third of the Iambic poets of 
Greece. He flourished B.C. 546-520. He wat 
distinguished for his love of liberty, and having 
been expelled from his native city by the tyrants, 
he took up his abode at Clazomenae, for whicL 
reason he is sometimes called a Clazomenian. 
In person, Hipponax was little, thin, and ugly, 
but very strong. The two brothers Bupalu* 
and Athenis, who were sculptors of Chios, mack- 
statues of Hipponax, in which they caricatured 
his natural ugliness, and he, in return, directed 
all the power of his satirical poetry against 
them, and especially against Bupalus. (Hor., 
Epod., vi., 14.) Later writers add that the 
sculptors hanged themselves in despair. Hip- 
ponax was celebrated in antiquity for the sever- 
ity of his satires. He severely chastised the 
effeminate luxury of his Ionian brethren ; he 
did not spare his own parents ; and he ventur- 
ed even to ridicule the gods. In his satires he 
introduced a spondee or a trochee in the last 
foot instead of an iambus. This change made 
the verse irregular in its rhythm, and gave it a 
sort of halting movement, whence it was called 
the Choliambus (xo)Aia/j.66c lame iambic), or Iam- 
bus Scazon (otcd&v, limping). He also wrote 
a parody on the Iliad. He may be said to oc- 
cupy a middle place between Archilochus and 
Aristophanes. He is as bitter, but not so earn- 
est, as the former, while in lightness and jocose- 
ness he more resembles the latter. The frag- 
ments of Hipponax are edited by Welcker, Got- 
ting., 1817, 8vo, and by-Bergk in the Poetee Ly- 
rid Grceci. 

Hipponicus. Vid. Callias and Hipponicus. 
Hipponium. Vid. Vibo. 
Hipponous. Vid, Bellerophon. 

HlPPOTADES ('IlTTtOTddTje) 1. son of Hip- 

potes, that is, ^Eolus. Vid. JEolus, No. 2. 
Hence the JSoliae Insula? are called Hippotadw 
regnwn. (Ov., Met, xiv., 86.) 

Hippotes ('iTmoTrjc). 1. Father of ^Eolu?. 
Vid. Molvs, No. 2.-2, Son of Phylas by a 
daughter of Iolaus, great-grandson of Hercules, 
and father of Aletes. When the Heraclidae in- 
vaded Peloponnesus, Hippotes killed the seer 
Carnus. The army, in consequence, began to 
suffer very severely, and Hippotes, by the com- 
mand of an oracle, was banished for ten years. 

Hippothoon ^lirrcodouv), an Attic hero, son 
of Neptune (Poseidon) and Alope, the daughter 
of Cercyon. He had a heroum at Athens ; and 
one of the Attic phyla?, or tribes, was called 
after him Hippothoontis. 

Hippothous ('iTTTzodooc). 1. Son of Cercyon, 
and father of iEpytus, succeeded Agapenor a? 



HIPPOTJOX. 



HISPANIA. 



king in Arcadia.— 2. Sou of Lethus, grandson 
of Teutaraus, and brother of Pvlaeus, led a band 
of Pelasgians from Larissa to the assistance of 
the Trojans. He was slain by the Telamonian 
Ajax. . . 

[Hippotion (\-~otmv), a Phrygian, slam by 
Meriones in the Trojan war.] 

Hirpixi, a Sanmite people, whose name is 
said to come from the Sabine word hirpus, " a 
■wolf," dwelt in the south of Samnium, between 
Apulia, Lucania, and Campania. Their chief 
town was Mcvismu. 

Hirtius, A., belonged to a plebeian family, 
which came probably from Ferentinum in the 
territory of the Hernici. He was the personal 
and political friend of Caesar the dictator. In 
B.C. 58 he was Caesar's legates in Gaul, and 
during the civil war his name constantly ap- 
peal* in Cicero's correspondence. He was one 
of the ten praetors nominated by Caesar for 46, 
and during Caesar's absence in Africa he lived 
principally at his Tusculan estate, which was 
contiguous to Cicero's villa. Though politi- 
cally opposed, they were on friendly terms, and 
Cicero gave Hirtius lessons in oratory. In 44 
Hirtius received Belgic Gaul for his province, 
but he governed it by deputy, and attended 
Caesar at Rome, who nominated him and Vibiu9 
Pansa consuls for 43. After Caesar's assassi- 
nation (44) Hirtius first joined Antony, but, being 
disgusted by the despotic arrogance of the latter, 
he retired to Puteoli, where he renewed his in- 
tercourse with Cicero. Later in the year he 
resided at his Tusculan villa, where he was at- 
tacked by a dangerous illness, from which he 
never perfectly recovered. On the first of Jan- 
uary, 43, Hirtius and Pansa entered on their 
consulship, according to Caesar's arrangement. 
The two consuls were sent along with Oetavi- 
anus against Antony, who was besieging Dec. 
Brutus at Mutina. Pansa was defeated by An- 
tony, and died of a wound which he had re- 
ceived in the battle. Hirtius retrieved this dis- 
aster by defeating Antony, but he also fell on 
the 27th of April, in leading an assault on the 
besieger's camp. Octavianus sent the bodies 
of the slain consuls to Rome, where they were 
received with extraordinary honors, and pub- 
licly buried in the Field of Mars. To Octavia- 
nus their removal from the scene was so timely, 
that he was accused by many of murdering 
them. Hirtius divides with Oppius the claim 
to the authorship of the eighth book of the Gallic 
war, as well as that of the Alexandrean, African, 
and Spanish. It is not impossible that he wrote 
the first three, but he certainly did not write the 
Spanish war. 

Hirtulkius, a distinguished general of Ser- 
torius in Spain. In B.C. 78 he was routed and 
slain near Italica, in Baetica, by Metellus. 

Hispalis, more rarely Hispal (now Seville), 
a town of the Turdetani in Hispania Baetica, 
founded by the Phoenicians, was situated on the 
left bank of the Baeti9, and was in reality a 
sea-port, for, although five hundred stadia from 
the sea, the river is navigable for the largest 
vessels up to the town. Under the Romans 
Hispalis was the third town in the province, 
Corduba and Gades being the two first. It was 
patronized by Caesar, because Corduba had es- 
poused the «ide of Pompey. He made it a Ro- 



man colony, under the name of Julia Romula 
or Romulensis, and a conventus juridicus or 
town of assize. Under the Goths and Vandals 
Hispalis was the chief town in the south of 
Spain, and under the Arabs was the capital of 
a separate kingdom. 

Hispania or Iberia (lo-avid, 'ICtipia : His- 
panus, Iberus : now Spain and Portugal), a pen- 
insula in the southwest of Europe, is connect- 
ed with the land only on the northeast, where 
the Pyrenees form its boundary, and is sur- 
rounded on all other sides by the sea, on the 
east and south by the Mediterranean, on the 
west by the Atlantic, and on the north by the 
Cantabrian Sea. The Greeks and Romans had 
no accurate knowledge of the country till the 
time of the Roman invasion in the second Pu- 
nic war. It was first mentioned by Hecataeus 
(about B.C. 500) under the name of Iberia ; but 
this name originally indicated only the eastern 
coast : the western coast beyond the Pillars of 
Hercules was called Tartessis (TapTrjooig) ■ and 
the interior of the country Celtica (// KeItlk^). 
At a later time the Greeks applied the name of 
Iberia, which is usually derived from the River 
Iberus, to the whole country. The name His 
pania, by which the Romans call the country, 
first occurs at the time of the Roman invasion. 
It is usually derived from the Punic word Span, 
" a rabbit," on account of the great number of 
rabbits which the Carthaginians found in the 
peninsula ; but others suppose the name to be 
J of native origin, and to be the same as the 
I Basque Ezpana, an edge or border. The poets 
| also called it Hesperia, or, to distinguish it from 
! Italy, Hesperia Ultima. Spain is a very mount - 
; ainous country. The principal mountains are, 
j in the northeast, the Pyrenees (vid. Pyren^eus 
Mons), and in the centre of the country the 
Idubeda, which runs parallel with the Pyrenees 
from the land of the Cantabri to the Mediter- 
ranean, and the Orospeda or Ortospeda, which 
begins in the centre of the Idubeda, runs south- 
west throughout Spain, and terminates at Calpe 
The rivers of Spain are numerous. The six 
most important are the Iberus (now Ebro), 
B^etis (now Guadalquiver), and Anas (now Gua~ 
diana), in the east and south; and the Tagus : 
Durius (now Douro), and Minius (now Minho), 
in the west. Spain was considered by the an- 
cients very fertile, but more especially the 
southern part of the country, Baetica and Lusi- 
tania, which were also praised for their splendid 
climate. The central and northern parts of the 
country were less productive, and the climate in 
these districts was very cold in winter. In the 
south there were numerous flocks of excellent 
sheep, the wool of which was very celebrated 
in foreign countries. The Spanish horses and 
asses were also much valued in antiquity ; and 
on the coast there was abundance of fish. The 
j country produced a great quantity of corn, oil, 
! wine, flax, figs, and other fruits. But the prin- 
I eipal riches of the country consisted in its min- 
I eral productions, of which the greatest quantity 
j was found in Turdetania. Gold was found in 
abundance in various parts of the country ; and 
there were many silver mines, of which the 
most celebrated were near Carthago Nova, H- 
ipa, Sisapon, and Castulo. The precious stones, 
copper, lead, tin, and other metals, were also 
375 



HISPANIA. 



HISPANIA. 



found in more or less abundance. The most 
ancient inhabitants of Spain were the Iberi, who, 
as a separate people, must be distinguished from 
the Iberi, a collective name of all the inhabit- 
ants of Spain. The Iberi dwelt on both sides 
of the Pyrenees, and were found in the south 
of Gaul as far as the Rhone. Celts afterward 
crossed the Pyrenees, and became mingled with 
the Iberi, whence arose the mixed race of the 
Celtiberi, who dwelt chiefly in the high table- 
land in the centre of the country. Vid. Celti- 
beri. But besides this mixed race of the Cel- 
tiberi, there were also several tribes, both of 
Iberians and Celts, who were never united with 
one another. The unmixed Iberians, from 
whom the modern Basques are descended, 
dwelt chiefly in the Pyrenees and on the coasts, 
and their most distinguished tribes were the 
Astures, Cantabri, Vacoei, <fcc. The un- 
mixed Celts dwelt chiefly on the River Anas, 
and in the northwest corner of the country or 
Gallaecia. Besides these inhabitants, there 
were Phoenician and Carthaginian settlements 
on the coasts, of which the most important were | 
Gades and Carthago Nova ; there were like- 
wise Greek colonies, such as Emporle and Sa- 
guxtoi ; and, lastly, the conquest of the coun- 
try by the Romans introduced many Romans 
among the inhabitants, whose customs, civiliza- j 
tion, and language gradually spread over the 
whole peninsula, and effaced the national char- | 
acteristics of the ancient population. The 
spread of the Latin language in Spain seems to 
have been facilitated by the schools, established ! 
by Sertorius, in which both the language and j 
literature of Greece and Rome were taught. | 
Under the empire some of the most distinguish- 1 
ed Latin writers were natives of Spain, such as j 
the two Senecas, Lucan, Martial, Quintilian, 
Silius Italicus, Pomponius Mela, Prudentius, 
and others. The ancient inhabitants of Spain 
were a proud, brave, and warlike race; easily 
excited and ready to take offence ; inveterate 
robbers ; moderate in the use of food and wine ; 
fond of song and of the dance; lovers of their 
liberty, and ready at all times to sacrifice their 
lives rather than submit to a foreign master. 
The Cantabri and the inhabitants of the mount- 
ains in the north were the fiercest and most 
uncivilized of all the tribes ; the Vaccaei and the 
Turdetani were the most civilized ; and the 
latter people were not only acquainted with the j 
alphabet, but possessed a literature which con- 
tained records of their history, poems, and col- 
lections of laws composed in verse. The his- i 
tory of Spain begins with the invasion of the j 
country by the Carthaginians, B.C. 238 ; for up ; 
to that time hardly any thing was known of j 
Spain except the existence of two powerful 
commercial states in the west, Tartessus and 
Gades. After the first Punic war, Hamilcar, 
the son of Hannibal, formed the plan of conquer- 
ing Spain, in order to obtain for the Carthagin- 
ians possessions which might indemnify them 
for the loss of Sicily and Sardinia. Lender his 
command (238-229), and that of his son-in-law j 
and successor, Hasdrubal (228-221), the Car- j 
thaginians conquered the greater part of the I 
southeast of the peninsula as far as the Iberus ; 
and Hasdrubal founded the important city of 
Carthago Nova. These successes of the Car- 
376 



thaginians excited the jealousy of the Romans ; 
i and a treaty was made between the two nations 
j about 228, by which the Carthaginians bound 
I themselves not to cross the Iberus. The town 
of Saguntum, although on the west side of the 
river, was under the protection of the Romans ■ 
j and the capture of this town by Hannibal in 819 
| was the immediate cause of the second Punic 
| war. In the course of this war the Romans 
t drove the Carthaginians out of the peninsula, 
and became masters of their possessions in the 
j south of the country. But many tribes in the 
. centre of the country, which had been only 
j nominally subject to Carthage, still retained 
j their virtual independence ; and the tribes in 
j the north and northwest of the country had 
i been hitherto quite unknown both to the Car- 
; thaginians and Romans. There now arose a 
long and bloody struggle between the Romans- 
and the various tribes in Spain, and it was 
nearly two centuries before the Romans suc- 
ceeded in subduing entirely the whole of the 
peninsula. The Celtiberians were conquered 
by the elder Cato (195), and Tib. Gracchus, the 
father of the two tribunes (179). The Lusita- 
nians, who long resisted the Romans under 
their brave leader Viriathus, were obliged to 
submit, about the year 137, to D. Brutus, whu 
penetrated as far as Gallaeeia; but it was not 
till Numantia was taken by Scipio Africanus the 
younger, in 133, that the Romans obtained thc 
undisputed sovereignty over the various tribe? 
in the centre of the country, and of the Lusita- 
nians to the south of the Tagus. Julius Ctesar. 
after his prastorship, subdued the Lusitanians 
north of the Tagus (60). The Cantabri, Astu- 
res, and other tribes in the mountains of the 
north, were finally subjugated by Augustus and 
his generals. The whole peninsula was now 
subject to the Romans ; and Augustus founded 
in it several colonies, and caused excellent roads 
to be made throughout the country. The Ro- 
mans had, as early as the end of the second Pu- 
nic war, divided Spain into two provinces, sep- 
arated from one another by the Iberus, and 
called Hispania Citerior and Hispania Ulterior. 
the former being to the east, and the latter to 
the west of the river. In consequence of there 
being two provinces, we frequently find the 
country called Hispania. The provinces were 
governed by two proconsuls or two proprie- 
tors, the latter of whom also frequently bore 
the title of proconsuls. Augustus made a new 
division of the country, and formed three 
provinces Tarraconensis, Batica, and Lusitania. 
The province Tarraconensis, which derived its 
name from Tarraco, the capital of the province, 
was by far the largest of the three, and com- 
prehended the whole of the north, east, and 
centre of the peninsula. The province Bcctica. 
which derived its name from the River Bsetis. 
was separated from Lusitania on the north 
and west by the River Anas, and from Tarraco- 
nensis on the east by a line drawn from the 
River Anas to the promontory Charidemus in 
the Mediterranean. The province Lusitania. 
which corresponded very nearly in extent to 
the modern Portugal, was separated from Tar- 
racouensis on the north by the River Durius. 
from Bietica on the east by the Anas, and from 
Tarraconensis on. the east bv a line drawn, from 



HISPELLUM. 



HOMERUS. 



the Durius to the Anas, between the territories 
of the Vettoues and Carpetani. Augustus made 
Baetica a senatorial province, but reserved the 
government of the two others for the Caesar ; 
so that the former was governed by a procon- 
sul appointed by the senate, and, the latter by 
imperial LegfttL ' In Bffitiea, Corduba or Hispahs 
was the seat of government ; in Tarraconensis, 
Tarraco ; and in' Lusitania, Augusta Ementa. 
On the reoxguiafttiot) of the empire by Constan- 
tine, Spain, together with Gaul and Britain, was 
under the general administration of the Prce- 
fectus Prcctori" Gallia, one of whose three vi- 
carii had the government of Spain, and usually 
resided at Hfepalk At the same time, the coun- 
try was divided into seven provinces: Bcetica, 
Lusitania, Gallacia, Tarraconensis, Carthagini- 
aisis, Balearcs, and Mauretania Tingitana in 
Africa (which was then reckoned part of Spain). 
The capitals of these seven provinces were re- 
spectively HispaHe, Augusta Emerita, Bracara, 
{Jcesaraugusto, Carthago Nova, Palma, and Tin- 
gis. In A.D. 409 the Vandals and Suevi, to- 
gether with other barbarians, invaded Spain, 
and obtained possession of the greater part of 
the country. In 414 the Visigoths, as allies of 
the Roman empire, attacked the Vandals, and in 
the course of f6ur years (414-418) compelled a 
great part of the peninsula to submit again to 
the Romans. In 429 the Vandals left Spain, 
and crossed over into Africa under their king 
Genseric ; after which time the Suevi establish- 
ed a powerful kingdom in the south of the pen- 
insula. Soon afterward the Visigoths again in- 
vaded Spain, and after many years' struggle, 
succeeded in conqueriug the whole peninsula, 
which they kept for themselves, and continued 
the masters of the country for two centuries, 
till they were in their turn conquered by the 
Arabs, A.D. '712. 

Hispellum (Hispellas, -atis : Hispellensis : 
now Sjpello), a town in Umbria, and a Roman 
colony, with the name of Colonia Julia His- 
pellum. 

Histlea. Vid. Hesti.eotis. 

Histleus ('loriaioc), tyrant of Miletus, was 
left with the other Ioniaus to guard the bridge 
of boats over the Danube when Darius invaded 
Seythia (B.C. 513). He opposed the proposal 
of Miltiades, the Athenian, to destroy the bridge, 
and leave the Persians to their fate, and was, 
in consequence, rewarded by Darius with the 
rule of Mytilene, and with a district in Thrace, 
where he built a town called Myrciuus, appa- 
rently with a view of establishing an independ- 
ent kingdom. This excited the suspicions of 
Darius, who invited Hktieeus to Susa, where he 
treated him kindly, but prohibited him from re- 
Turning. Tired of the restraint in which he 
Avas kept, he induced his kinsman Aristagoras 
to persuade the [onians to revolt, hoping that a 
revolution in Ionia might lead to his release. 
His design succeeded. Darius allowed His- 
tiaeus to depart (49G) on his engaging to reduce 
Ionia. The revolt, however, was nearly put 
down when Histiieus reached the coast. Here 
Histiaeus threw off the mask, and, after raising 
a small fleet, carried on war against the Per- 
sians for two years, and obtained possession of 
Chios. In 494 he made a descent upon the 
Ionian coast, but was defeated and taken pris- 



I oner by Harpagus. Artaphernes, the satrap of 
i Ionia, caused him to be put to death by impale - 
I ment, and sent his head to the king. 

Histoxium (Histoniensis : now Vasto a" Am- 
mone), a town of the Frentani on the coast, and 
subsequently a Roman colony. 

Homerit^e ('Ofj,r}plrat), a people of Arabia 
Felix, who migrated from the interior to the 
southern part of the western coast, and estab- 
lished themselves in the territory of the Sabaei 
(m El. 1 men), where they founded a kingdom 
which lasted more than five centuries. 

Homerus ("Ofuipoc). 1. The great epic poet 
of Greece. His poems formed the basis of 
Greek literature. Every Greek who had re- 
ceived a liberal education was perfectly well 
acquainted with them from his childhood, and 
had learned them by heart at school ; but no- 
body could state any thing certain about their 
author. His date and birth-place were equally 
matters of dispute. Seven cities claimed Ho- 
mer as their couutryman (Smyrna, Rhodus, Col- 
ophon, Salamis, Chios, Argos, Athenae) ; but 
the claims of Smyrna and Chios are the most 
plausible, and between these two we have to 
decide. It is supposed by the best modern 
writers that Homer was an Ionian, who settle:! 
at Smyrna at the time when the Achaeans and 
iEolians formed the chief part of the popula- 
tion. We can thus explain how Homer be- 
came so well acquainted with the traditions of 
the Trojan war, which had been waged by 
Achaeans and iEolians, but in which the Ionian- 
had not taken part. We know that the Ionian? 
were subsequently driven out of Smyrna ; and 
it is further supposed either that Homer him- 
self fled to Chios, or his descendants or disci- 
ples settled there, and formed the famous fami- 
ly of Homerids. According to this account, the 
time of Homer would be a few generations after 
the Ionian migration ; but, with the exception 
of the simple fact of his being an Asiatic Greek, 
all other particulars respecting his life are pure- 
ly fabulous. The common tradition related that 
he was the son of Maeon (hence called Maxnddks 
vates), and that in his old age he was blind ant; 
poor. Homer was universally regarded by the 
ancients as the author of the two great poems 
of the Iliad and the Odyssey. Other poems were 
also attributed to Homer, the genuineness of 
which was disputed by some ; but the Iliad and 
Odyssey were ascribed to him by the concur- 
rent voice of antiquity. Such continued to be 
the prevalent belief in modern times, till IT 9 5, 
when F. A. Wolf wrote his famous Prolegomena, 
in which he endeavored to show that the Iliac, 
and Odyssey were not two complete poems, but 
small, separate, independent epic songs, cele- 
brating single exploits of the heroes, and that 
these lays were for the first time written down 
and united, as the Iliad and Odyssey, by Pisis- 
tratus, the tyrant of Athens. This opinion gave 
rise to a long and animated controversy respect- 
ing the origin of the Homeric poems, which is 
not yet settled, and which probably never will 
be. The following, however, may be regarded 
as the most probable conclusion. An abundance 
of heroic lays preserved the tales of the Trojan 
war. Europe must necessarily have been the 
country where these songs originated, both be- 
cause the victorious heroes dwelt in Europe 
377 



HOMERUS. 



HONOMUS, FLAVIUS. 



and because so many traces in the poems still 
point to these regions. These heroic lays were 
brought to Asia Minor by the Greek colonies, 
xhieh left the mother country about three ages 
after the Trojan war. These unconnected sougs 
were, for the first time, united by a great genius, 
called Homer, and he was the one individual who 
conceived in Ins mind the lofty idea of that po- 
. tical unity which we must acknowledge and ad- 
mire in the Iliad and Odyssey. But as writing 
was not known, or at least little practiced, in 
the age in which Homer lived, it naturally fol- 
lowed that in such long works many interpola- 
tions were introduced, and that they gradually 
became more and more dismembered, and thus 
returned into their original state of separate in- 
dependent songs. They were preserved by the 
rhapsodists, who were rainstrels, and who sung 
lays at the banquets of the great and at public 
festivals. A class of rhapsodists at Chios, the 
Homerids, who called themselves the descend- 
ants of the poet, made it their especial business 
to sing the lays of the Iliad and Odyssey, and 
ro transmit them to their disciples by oral teach- 
ing, and not by writing. These rhapsodists 
preserved the knowledge of the unity of the 
Homeric poems ; and this knowledge was never 
entirely lost, although the public recitation of 
the poems became more and more fragmentary, 
and the time at festivals and musical contests 
formerly occupied by epic rhapsodists exclusive- 
ly, was encroached upon by the rising lyrical 
performances. Solon directed the attention of 
his countrymen toward the unity of the Ho- 
mevic poems ; but the unanimous voice of an- 
tiquity ascribed to Pisistratus the merit of hav- 
ing collected the disjointed poems of Homer, 
and of having first committed them to writing. 
From the time of Pisistratus, the Greeks had a 
written Homer, a regular text, which was the 
source and foundation of all subsequent edi- 
tions. "We have already stated that the an- 
cients attributed many other poems to Homer 
besides the Iliad and the Odyssey, but the 
claims of none of these to this honor can stand 
investigation. The hymns, which still bear the 
name of Homer, probably owe then- origin to 
the rhapsodists. They exhibit such a diversity 
of language and poetical tone, that in all prob- 
ability they contain iragments from every cen- 
tury from the time of Homer to the Persian 
war. The BatmcJiomyomachia, the Battle of the 
Frogs and Mice, an extant poem, and the Mar- 
Kjiies, a poem which is lost, and which ridiculed 
man who was said to know many things and 
who knew all badly, were both frequently as- 
cribed by the ancients to Homer, but were clear- 
ly of later origin. The Odyssey was evidently 
•composed after the Iliad ; "and" many writers 
maintain that they are the works of two differ- 
ent authors. But it has been observed in re- 
ply that there is not a greater difference in the 
two poems than we often find in the productions 
of the same man in the prime of life and in old 
age ; and the chief cause of difference in the 
two poems is owing to the difference of the 
subject "We must add a few words on the 
literary history of the Iliad and Odyssey, From 
the time of Pisistratus to the estabhshnient of 
Alexandrine school, we read of two new 
editions {thopd6czic) of the text, one made bv 
37S 



the poet Antimachus, and the other by Aristotle 
which Alexander the Great used to carry about 
with him in a splendid case (vupdj]^) on all his 
expeditions. But it was not till the foundation 
of the Alexandrine school that the Greeks pos- 
sessed a really critical edition of Homer. Ze 
nodotus was the first who directed his attention 
j to the study and criticism of Homer. He was 
; followed by Aristophanes and Aristarchus ; and 
| the edition of Homer by the latter has been the. 
' basis of the text to the present day. Aristarchus 
was the prince of grammarians, and did more 
for the text and interpretation of Homer than 
any other critic in modern times. He was op- 
posed to Crates of Mallus, the founder of the 
Pergamene school of grammar. Vid, Aristae, - 



chts, Crates. In the time of Augustus, the 



j great compiler, Didymus, wrote comprehensive 
j commentaries on Homer, copying mostly the 
works of preceding Alexandrine grammarians 
which had swollen to an enormous extent. Un- 
der Tiberius. Apollonius Sophista lived, whose 
Lexicon Homericum is very valuable (ed. Bek 
ker, 1833). The most valuable scholia on the 
j Iliad are those which were published by Villoi- 
! son from a MS. of the tenth century in the 
library of St. Mark at Venice, 1*788, fol. These 
J scholia were reprinted with additions, edited by 
I Bekker, Berlin, 1825, 2 vols. 4to. The most 
valuable scholia to the Odyssey are those pub- 
lished by Buttmann, Berl., 1821. The exten- 
i sive commentary of Eustathius contains much 
j valuable information from sources which are 
; now lost. Vid. Eustathius, lso. 3. The best 
! critical editions of Homer are by Wolf, Lips.. 
\ 1804, seo. ; bv Bothe, Lips., 1832, seq. ; and by 
Bekker, Berlin, 1813; of the Iliad alone, by 
j Heyne, Lips., 1802, sqq. There is a very good 
| edition of the Iliad by Spitzner, Gotka* 1832, 
j seq. ; and a valuable commentary on the Odys- 
sey by Nitzseh, Hannov., 1825, seq. — 2. A gram- 
marian and tragic poet of Bvzantium in the 
time of Ptolemy Philadelphus (about B.C. 280), 
was the son of the grammarian Andromachus 
and the poetess Myro. He was one of the seven 
\ poets who formed the tragic Pleiad. 

Homole ('Ofi6/-7]). 1. A lofty mountain in 
I Thessaly, near Tempo, with a sanctuary of Pan. 
— 2. Or Homolium ('OfioAtov : 'Ofio?.t£v<; : now 
Lamina), a town in Magnesia in Thessaly, at the 
foot of Mount Ossa, near the Peneus. 

Hoxor or Hoxos, the personification of hon- 
or at Pome. Marcellus had vowed a temple, 
which was to belong to Honor and Virtus in 
common ; but as the pontiffs refused to conse- 
crate one temple to two divinities, he built two 
temples, one of Honor and the other of Virtus, 
j close together. C. Marius also built a temple 
I to Honor, after his vietoiy over the Cimbri and 
! Teutones. There was also an altar of Honor 
outside the Colline gate, which was more an 
' cient than either of the temples. Honor is rep- 
' resented on coins as a male figure in armor, and 
i standing on a globe, or with the cornucopia in 
his left and a spear in his right hand. 
Hoxoria. Vid. Grata. 
Hoxorius, Flavius, Roman emperor of the 
I West, A.D. 395-423, was the second son of 
i Theodosius the Great, and was bora 384. On 
the death of Theodosius in 395, Honorius sue 
ceeded peaceably to the sovereignty of the West, 



HORiE. 



HORATIUS FLACCUS. 



■which he had received from his father in the 
preceding year, while his elder brother obtain- 
ed possession of the East. During the minority 
of Honorius, the government was entirely in 
the hands of the able and energetic Stilicho, 
whose daughter Maria the young emperor mar- 
ried. Stilicho for a time defended Italy against 
the attacks of tin' Visigoths under Alarie (402, 
403), and Mm ravages of other barbarians under 
Radagaisus ; but after Honorius had put to death 
Stilicho, on a charge of treason (408), Alaric again 
invaded Italy, ami took and plundered Home 
(410.) Honorius meantime lived an inglorious 
life at Ravenna, where he continued to reside till 
his death in 42:.. 

Hoa.fi ( T Qpat) originally the goddesses of the 
order of nature and of the seasons, but in later 
times the goddesses of order in general and of 
justice. In Homer, avIio neither mentions their 
parents nor their number, they are the Olympian 
divinities of the weather and the ministers of 
Jupiter (Zeus). In this capacity they guard the 
doors of Olympus, and promote the fertility of 
the earth, by the various kinds of weather which 
they give to mortals. As the weather, gener- 
ally speaking, is regulated according to the sea- 
sons, they are further described as the goddesses 
of the seasons. The course of the seasons is 
symbolically described as the dance of the 
Hor&\ At Athens, two Hora}, Tliallo (the Hora 
of spring) and Carpo (the Hora of autumn), were 
worshipped from very early times. The Hora 
of spring accompanied Proserpina (Persephone) 
every year on her ascent from the lower world ; 
and the expression of '• The chamber of the 
Hone opens" is equivalent to "The spring is 
coming." The attributes of spring — flowers, 
fragrance, and graceful freshness — are accord- 
ingly transferred to the Hora?. Thus they adorn- 
ed Venus (Aphrodite) as she rose from the sea, 
and made a garland of flowers for Pandora. 
Hence they bear a resemblance to and are men- 
tioned along with the Charites, and both are fre- 
quently confounded or identified. As they were 
conceived to promote the prosperity of every 
tiling that grows, they appear also as the pro- 
tectresses of youth and newly-born gods. Even 
in early times ethical notions Avere attached to 
the Horse ; and the influence which these god- 
desses originally exercised on nature was sub- 
sequently transferred to human life in particu- 
lar. Hesiod describes them as giving to a state 
good laws, justice, and peace ; he calls them 
rhe daughters of Jupiter (Zeus) and Themis, 
and gives thorn the B%nfficant names of Euno- 
mia, Met, and htm, The number of the Horffi 
is different in the different writers, though the 
most ancieuf number seems to have been Two, as 
;it Athens ; but afterward their common number 
was three, like that of the Moerae and Charites. 
In works of art the Horae were represented as 
blooming maidens, . ju rying the different products 
of the season-. 

HonAFOLLo ( lipairoZAav), the name prefixed 
to an extant work on hieroglyphics, which pur- 
ports to be a (4reek translation, made by one 
Philippus from the Egyptian. The writer was a 
native of Egypt, and probably lived about the 
beginning of the fifth century/ The best edition 
is by Leemans. Amsterdam, 1835. 

Horatia Gens, one of the most ancient patri- 



cian gentes at Rome. Three brothers of this 
race fought with the Curiatii, three brother; 
from Alba, to determine whether Rome or Alba 
was to exercise the supremacy. The battle 
was long undecided. Two of the Horatii fell ; 
but the three Curiatii, though a%e, were severe- 
ly wounded. Seeing this, the surviving Hora- 
tius, who was still unhurt, pretended to fly, and 
vanquished lus wounded opponents by encoun- 
tering them severally. He returned in triumph, 
bearing his threefold spoils. As he approached 
the Capene gate, his sister Horatia met him, and 
recognized on his shoulders the mantle of one 
of the Curiatii, her betrothed lover. Her im- 
portunate grief drew on her the wrath of Hora- 
tius, who stabbed her, exclaiming, " So perish 
every Roman woman who bewails a foe." For 
this murder he was adjudged by the duumviri 
to be scourged with covered head, and hanged 
on the accursed tree. Horatius appealed to his 
peers, the burghers or populus ; and his father 
pronounced him guiltless, or he would have pun- 
ished him by the paternal power. The populus 
acquitted Horatius, but prescribed a form of 
punishment. With veiled head, led by his father. 
Horatius passed under a yoke or gibbet — tigil- 
Iv.m sororium, " sister's gibbet." 

Horatius Cocles. Vid.. Cocles. 

Horatius Flaccus, Q., the poet, was born 
December 8th, B.C. Go, at Venusia in Apulia. 
His father was a libertinus or freedman. He 
had received his manumission before the birth 
of the poet, who was of ingenuous birth, but wh< 
did not altogether escape the taunt, which ad- 
hered to persons even of remote servile origin. 
His father's occupation was that of collector 
(coactor), either of the indirect taxes farmed by 
the publicans, or at sales by auction. "With the 
profits of his office he had purchased a small 
farm in the neighborhood of Venusia, where the 
poet was born. The father, either in his parent- 
al fondness for his only son, or discerning some 
hopeful promise in the boy, determined to de- 
vote his whole time and fortune to the educa- 
tion of the future poet. Though by no means 
rich, he declined to send the young Horace to 
the common school, kept in Venusia by one 
Flavius, to which the children of the rural 
aristocracy resorted. Probably about his twelfth 
year, his father carried him to Rome, to receive 
the usual education of a knight's or senators 
son. He frequented the best schools in the 
capital. One of these was kept by Orbilius, a 
retired military man, whose flogging propen- 
sities have been immortalized by his pupil 
(Epist., ii., 1, 11). The names of his other 
teachers are not recorded by the poet. He was 
instructed in the Greek and Latin languages : 
the poets were the usual school books, Home: 
in the Greek, and the old tragic writer, Livius 
Andronicus, in the Latin. In his eighteenth 
year Horace proceeded to Athens, in order to 
continue his studies at that seat of learning. 
He seems chiefly to have attached himself to 
the opinions which he heard in the Academy, 
though later in life he inclined to those of Epi- 
curus. When Brutus came to Athens after the 
death of Caesar, Horace joined his army, and 
received at once the rank of a mihtary tribune 
and the command of a legion. He was present 
at the battle of Philippi, and shared in the flight 
379 



HORATIUS FLACCUS. 



HORM1SDAS. 



of the republican army. In one of his poems he 
playfully alludes to his flight, and throwing away 
his shield. (Carm., ii., 7, 9.) He now resolved 
to devote himself to more peaceful pursuits, and, 
having obtained his pardon, he ventured at once 
to return to Rome. He had lost all his hopes in 
life ; his paternal estate had been swept away 
in the general forfeiture ; but he was enabled, 
however, to obtain sufficient money to purchase 
a clerkship in the quaestor's office ; and on the 
profits of that place he managed to live with 
the utmost frugality. Meantime some of his 
poems attracted the notice of Varius and Virgil, 
who introduced him to Maecenas (B.C. 39). 
Horace soon became the friend of Maecenas, 
and his friendship quickly ripened into inti- 
macy. In a year or two after the commence- 
ment of their friendship (37), Horace accom- 
panied his patron on that journey to Brundi- 
sium, so agreeably described in the fifth satire 
of the first book. About the year 34 Maecenas 
bestowed upon the poet a Sabine farm, sufficient 
to maintain him in ease, comfort, and even in 
content (satis beatus wnicis Sabinis), during the 
rest of his life. The situation of this Sabine 
farm was in the valley of Ustica, within view 
of the mountain Lucretilis, and near the Di- 
gentia, about fifteen miles from Tibur (now 
Tivoli). A site exactly answering to the villa 
of Horace, and on which were found ruins of 
buildings, has been discovered in modern times. 
Besides this estate, his admiration of the beau- 
tiful scenery in the neighborhood of Tibur in- 
clined him either to hire or to purchase a small 
cottage in that romantic town ; and all the later 
years of his life were passed between these two 
country residences and Rome. He continued 
to live on the most intimate terms with Maece- 
nas ; and this intimate friendship naturally in- 
troduced Horace to the notice of the other great 
men of his period, and at length to Augustus 
himself, who bestowed upon the poet substantial 
marks of his favor. Horace died on November 
17th, B.C. 8, aged nearly fifty-seven. His death 
was so sudden that he had not time to make 
his will, but he left the administration of his 
affairs to Augustus, whom he instituted as his 
heir. He was buried on the slope of the Esqui- 
line Hill, close to his friend and patron Maece- 
nas, who had died before him in the same year. 
Horace has described his own person. He was 
of short stature, with dark eyes and dark hair, 
but early tinged with gray. In his youth he 
was tolerably robust, but suffered from a com- 
plaint in his eyes. In more advanced life he 
grew fat, and Augustus jested about his protu- 
berant belly. His health was not always good, 
and he seems to have inclined to be a valetudi- 
narian. "When young he was irascible in tem- 
per, but easily placable. In dress he was rather 
careless. His habits, even after he became 
richer, wore generally frugal and abstemious ; 
though on occasions, both in youth and maturer 
age, he seems to have indulged in conviviality* 
He liked ehoiee wine, and in the society of 
friends scrupled not to enjoy the luxuries of his 
time. He was never married. The philosophy 
of Horace was that of a man of the, world. He 
playfully alludes to his Epicureanism, but it was 
practical rather than speculative Epicureanism. 
His mind, iudeed, was mt m the least specu- 
380 



lative. Common-life wisdom was his studv 
and to this he brought a quickness of observa- 
tion and a sterling common sense, which have 
made his works the delight of practical men. 
The Odes of Horace want the higher inspirations 
of lyric verse. His amatory verses are exqui- 
sitely graceful, but they have no strong ardor, 
no deep tenderness, nor even much of light and 
joyous gayety. But as works of refined art, of 
the most skillful felicities of language and of 
measure, of translucent expression, and of 
agreeable images, embodied in words which im- 
print themselves indelibly on the memory, they 
are unrivalled. According to Quintilian, Horace 
was almost the only Roman lyric poet worth 
reading. In the Satires of Horace there is none 
J of the lofty moral indignation, the fierce vehe- 
I mence of invective which characterized the 
i later satirists. It is the folly rather than the 
| wickedness of vice which he touches with such 
! playful skill. Nothing can surpass the keenness 
| of his observation, or his ease of expression : 
it is the finest comedy of manners, in a descrip- 
tive instead of a dramatic form. In the JEpodes 
there is bitterness provoked, it should seem, by 
some personal hatred or sense of injury, and 
the ambition of imitating Archilochus ; but in 
these he seems to have exhausted all the malig- 
! nity and violence of his temper. But the Epis- 
tles are the most perfect of the Horatian poetry, 
I the poetry of manners and society, the beauty 
of which consists in a kind of ideality of com- 
! mon sense and practical wisdom. The Epistles 
J of Horace are, with the Poem of Lucretius, the 
| Georgies of Virgil, and perhaps the Satires^ of 
j Juvenal, the most perfect and most originai 
i form of Roman verse. The title of the Art of 
\ Poetry for the Epistle to the Pisos is as old as 
\ Quintilian, but it is now agreed that it was not 
| intended for a complete theory of the poetic 
j art. It is conjectured with great probability 
that it was intended to dissuade one of the 
younger Pisos from devoting himself to poetry, 
for which he had little genius, or at least to 
suggest the difficulties of attaining to perfec- 
tion. The chronology of the Horatian poems 
is of great importance, as illustrating the life, 
the times, and the writings of the poet. There 
has been great dispute upon the subject, but 
the following view appears the most probable : 
The first book of Satires, which was the first 
publication, apj^eared about B.C. 35, in the thir- 
tieth year of Horace. The second book of 
Satires was published about 33, in the thirty- 
second year of Horace. The Epodes appeared 
about 31, in the thirty-fourth year of Horace, 
The first three books of the Odes were published 
about 24 or 23, in the forty-first or forty-second 
year of Horace. The first book of the Epistles 
was published about 20 or 19, in the forty- fifth 
or forty-sixth year of Horace. The Carmen 
Seculare appeared in 17, in the forty-eighth 
year of Horace. The fourth book of the Odes 
was published in 14 or 13, in his fifty-first or 
fifty-second year. The dates of the second 
book of Epistles, and of the Ars Poetica, are 
admitted to be uncertain, though both appeared 
before the poet's death, B.C. 8. One of the 
best editions of Horace is by Orelli, Turici, I&48. 
Horde o nils Flaccus. Vid. Flaccts. 
Hormisdas. Vid. SASSAXiBJS. 



HORTA. 



HUNNERIC. 



Hoiita or Hortanum (Hortanus : now Orlc), 
a town in Etruria, at the junction of the Nar 
and the Tiber, so called from the Etruscan god- 
dess Horta, whose temple at Rome always re- 
mained open. 

[Hortalus. Y'al. Hortensius. No. 2,J 
[Hortensia. 1. Sister of the celebrated ora- 
tor Hortensius, married to M. Valerius Messala. 
—2. Daughter of the orator Hortensius. She 
partook of her lather's eloquence, and spoke 
before the triumvirs on behalf of the wealthy 
matrons, when these were threatened with a 
special tax to defray the expenses of the war 
against Brutus and Cassius.] 
" Hortensius. 1. Q., the orator, was born in 
o.C. 114, eight years before Cicero. At the 
early age of nineteen he spoke with great ap- 
plause iu the forum, and at once rose to emi- 
nence as an advocate. He served two campaigns 
in the Social war (90, 89). In the civil wars 
he joined Sulla, and was afterward a constant 
supporter of the aristocratical party. His chief 
professional labors were in defending men of 
;his party when accused of mal-administration 
and extortion in their provinces, or of bribery 
and the like in canvassing for public honors. 
He had no rival in the forum till he encountered 
Cicero, and he long exercised an undisputed 
sway over the courts of justice. In 81 he was 
quaestor; in 75, sedile; in 72, praetor; and in 69, 
consul with Q. Caecilius Metellus. It was in the 
year before his consulship that the prosecution 
of Verres commenced. Hortensius was the ad- 
vocate of Verres, and attempted to put off the 
Trial till the next year, when he would be able 
to exercise all the consular authority in favor 
of his client. But Cicero, who accused Verres, 
baffled all the schemes of Hortensius; and the 
issue of this contest was to dethrone Horten- 
sius from the seat which had been already tot- 
tering, and to establish his rival, the despised 
provincial of Arpiuum, as the first orator and 
advocate of the Roman forum. After his con- 
sulship, Hortensius took a leading part iu sup- 
porting the optimates against the rising power 
of Pompey. He opposed the Gabinian law, 
which invested Pompey with absolute power on 
the Mediterranean, in order to put down the 
pirates of Cilicia (67) ; and the Manilian, by 
which the conduct of the war against Mithra- 
dates was transferred from Lucullus to Pompey 
(66). Cicero in his consulship (63) deserted 
the popular party, with whom he had hitherto 
acted, and became one of the supporters of the 
optimates. Thus Hortensius no longer appears 
as his rival. We first find them pleading to- 
gether for C. Rabirius, for L. Mursena, and for 
P. Sulla. After the coalition of Pompey with 
Caesar and Crassus iu 60, Hortensius drew back 
from public life, and confined himself to his ad- 
vocate's duties. He died in 50. The eloquence 
of Hortensius was of the florid or (as it was 
termed) " Asiatic'' style, fitter for hearing than 
for reading. His voice was soft and musical, 
his memory so ready and retentive that he is 
said to have been able to come out of a sale- 
room and repeat the auction-list backward. His 
action was very elaborate, so that sueerers call- 
ed him Dionysia — the name of a well-known 
dancer of the day ; and the pains he bestowed 
in arranging the folds of his toga have been re- 



corded by ancient writers. But in all this there 
must have been a real grace and dignity, for we 
rend that iEsopus and Roscius, the tragedians, 
used to follow him into the forum to take a les- 
son in their own art. He possessed immense 
wealth, and was keenly alive to all the enjoy- 
ments which wealth can give. He had several 
villas, the most splendid of which was the one 
near Laurentum. Here he laid up such a stock 
of wine, that he left ten thousand casks of Chiaii 
to his heir. Here he had a park full of all sorts 
of animals; and it was customary, during hi? 
sumptuous dinners, for a slave, dressed°like 
Orpheus, to issue from the woods with these 
creatures following the sound of his cithara. 
At his villa at Bauli he had immense fish-ponds, 
into which the sea came : the fish were so tame 
that they would feed from his hand ; and he was 
so fond of them that he is said to have wept for 
the death of a favorite muraena. He was also 
very curious in trees : he is said to have fed 
them with wine, and we read that he once beg- 
ged Cicero to change places in speaking, that 
he might perform this office for a favorite plane- 
tree at the proper time. It is a characteristic 
trait, that he came forward from his retirement 
(55) to oppose the sumptuary law of Pompey 
and Crassus, and spoke so eloquently and wit- 
tily as to procure its rejection. He was the 
first person at Rome who brought peacocks to 
table. — 2. Q., surnamed Hortalus, son of the 
preceding, by Lutatia, the daughter of Catulus. 
In youth he lived a low and profligate life, and 
appears to have been at last cast off by his 
father. On the breaking out of the civil war in 
49, he joined Caesar, and fought on his side in 
Italy and Greece. In 44 he held the province 
of Macedonia, and Brutus was to succeed him. 
After Caesar's assassination, M. Antony gave 
the province to his brother Caius. Brutus, how- 
ever, had already taken possession, with the as- 
sistance of Hortensius. When the proscription 
took place, Hortensius was in the list ; and, in 
revenge, he ordered C. Antonius, who had been 
taken prisoner, to be put to death. After the 
battle of Philippi, he was executed on thegrave 
of his victim. 

Horus ( 7 £2poc), the Egyptian god of the sun. 
whose worship was also established in Greece, 
and afterward at Rome. He was compared with 
the Greek Apollo, and identified with Harpocra- 
tes, the last-born and weakly son of Osiris. 
Both were represented as youths, and with the 
same attributes and symbols. He was believed 
to have been born with his finger on his mouth, 
as indicative of secresy and mystery. In the 
earlier period of his worship at Rome he seem& 
to have been particularly regarded as the god 
of quiet life and silence. 

Hostilia (now Ostiglia), a small town in Gal- 
lia Cisalpina, on the Po, and on the road from 
Mutina to Verona ; the birth-place of Cornelius 
Nepos. 

Hostilius Mancixus. FieL Haxctnus. 

HOSTILIUS TULLUS. Vid. TuLLUS HoSTILIUS. 

Hostius, the author of a poem on the Istrian 
war (B.C. 178), which is quoted by the gram- 
marians. He was probably a contemporary of 
Julius Caesar. 

Hunneric, king of the Vandals in Africa, A.D. 
477-484, was the son of Geuseric, whom he 
381 



HUNXI. 



HYBREAS. 



succeeded. His reign was chiefly marked by 
his savage persecution of the Catholics. 

Hcxni (Ovvvoc), an Asiatic race, who dwelt 
for some centuries in the plains of Tartary, and 
were formidable to the Chinese empire loog be- 
fore they were known to the Romans. It was 
to repel the inroads of the Huns that the Chinese 
built their celebrated wall, one thousand five 
hundred miles in length. A portion of the na- 
tion afterward migrated west, conquered the 
Alani, a warlike race between the Volga and 
the Tanais, and then crossed into Europe about 
A.D. 375. The appearance of these new bar- 
barians excited the greatest terror both among 
the R,ornans and Germans. They are described 
by the Greek and Roman historians as hideous 
and repulsive beings, resembling apes, with 
broad shoulders, flat noses, and small black eyes 
deeply buried in their head, while their man- 
ners and habits were savage to the last degree. 
They destroyed the powerful monarchy of the 
Ostrogoths, who were obliged to retire before 
them, and were allowed by Yalens to settle in 
Thrace, A.D. 876. The Huns now frequently 
ravaged the Roman dominions. They were 
joined by many other barbarian nations, and 
under their king Attila (A.D. 484-453) they de- 
vastated the fairest portions of the empire, both 
in the east and the west. Vid. Attila. On the 
death of Attila, the various nations which com- 
posed his army dispersed, and his sons were 
unable to resist the arms of the Ostrogoths. In 
a few years after the death of Attila, the em- 
pire of the Huns was completely destroyed. 
The remains of the nation became incorporated 
with other barbarians, and never appear again 
as a separate people. 

Hyacinthus ('YdKivdoc). 1. Son of the Spar- 
tan king Amyclas and Diomede, or of Pierus 
and Clio, or of GCbalus or Eurotas. He was a 
youth of extraordinary beauty, and was beloved 
')y Apollo and Zephyrus. He returned the love 
of Apollo ; and as he was once playing at quoit 
with the god, Zephyrus, out of jealousy, drove 
the quoit of Apollo with such violence against 
the head of the youth that he fell down dead. 
From the blood of Hyacinthus there sprang the 
flower of the same name (hyacinth), on the 
leaves of which appeared the" exclamation of 
woe AI, AI, or the letter Y, being the initial of 
Ydiavdoc. According to other traditions, the 
hyacinth sprang from the blood of Ajax. Hya- 
cinthus was worshipped at Amyche as a hero, 
and a great festival, Hyacinthia, was celebrated 
in his honor. Vid. Diet, of Antiq., s. v. — 2. A 
Lacedaemonian, who is said to have gone to 
Athens, and to have sacrificed his daughters for 
the purpose of delivering the city from a famine 
and plague, under which it was suffering dur- 
ing the war with Minos. His daughters were 
known in the Attic legends by the name of the 
Hyacirdhides, which they derived from their fa- 
thers. Some traditions make them the daughters 
of Erechtheus, and relate that they received their 
name from the village of Hyacinthus, where 
they were sacrificed at the time when Athens 
was attacked by the Eleusinians and Thraciaus, 
or Thebans. 

Hyades i'Tddec), that is, the Rainy, the name 
of nymphs, whose parentage, number, and names 
:\vc described in various way3 bv the ancients 
382 



Their parents were Atlas aud JEthra, or Atlas 
and Pleione, or Hyas and Bceotia : others call 
their father Oceauus, Melisseus, Cadmilus, or 
Erechtheus. Their number differs in various 
legends ; but their most common number is 
seven, as they appear in the constellation which 
bears their name, viz., Ambrosia, Eudora, Pe- 
dile, C'oro?iis, Polyxo, Phyto,a.nd Thyeneov Dionc. 
They were intrusted by Jupiter (Zeus) with the 
care of his infant son Bacchus (Dionysus), and 
were afterward placed by Jupiter (Zeus) among 
the stars. The story which made them the 
daughters of Atlas relates that their number 
was twelve or fifteen, and that at first five of 
them were placed among the stars as Hyades 
and the seven (or ten) others afterward under 
the name of Pleiades, to reward them for the 
sisterly love they had evinced after the death 
of their brother Hyas, who had been killed in 
Libya by a wild beast. Their name, Hyades, is 
derived by the ancients from their father, Hyas, 
or from Hyes, a mystic surname of Bacchus 
(Dionysus) ; or, according to others, from their 
position in the heavens, where they formed a 
figure resembling the Greek letter if. The Re- 
mans, who derived it from vc, a pig, translated 
the name by Suevlce. The most natural deriva- 
tion is from velv, to rain, as the constellation of 
the Hyades, when rising simultaneously with 
the sun, announced rainy weather. Hence Hor- 
ace speaks of the tristes Hyades {Carm., i, 3, 14V. 

[Hy^ea (Tarn : 'Yaloc), a place in the country 
of the Locri Ozolae, northward from Amphissa.] 

Hyampea. Vid. Parnassus. 

Hyampolis ('Yu[17to?uc : Ta/zrro/urTfc), a town 
in Phocis, east of the Cephisus, near CleonsB, 
was founded by the Hyantes when they were 
driven out of Bceotia by the Cadmeans; wa>- 
destroyed by Xerxes ; afterward rebuilt ; and 
again destroyed by Philip and the Amphictyon- 
Cleonae, from its vicinity to Hyampolis, is call- 
ed by Xenophon (Hell., vi., 4, § 2) 'Yafnro/urC/v 
to Trpodcrewv. Strabo speaks of two towns of 
the name of Hyampolis in Phocis, but it is 
doubtful whether his statement is correct. 

Hyantes ("Yavrec), the ancient inhabitants of 
Bceotia, from which country they were expelled 
by the Cadmeans. Part of the Hyantes emi- 
grated to Phocis (vid. Hyampolis), and part to 
jEtoiia. The poets use the adjective Hyantius 
as equivalent to Boeotian. 

Hyas ('Yac), the name of the father and the 
brother of the Hyades. The father was married 
to Bceotia, and was looked upon as the ancestor 
of the ancient Hyantes. His son, the brother 
of the Hyades, was killed in Libya by a serpent, 
a boar, or a Hon. 

Hybla ('Y6h] : 'YG'/Mioc, Hyblensis), three 
towns in Sicily. 1. Major (?) fiei&v or fieyd'Arj). 
on the southern slope of Mount iEtna and on 
the River Symeethus, was originally a town of 
the Siculi. — 2. Minor (rj fiLnpd), afterward call- 
ed Megara. Vid. Megara. — 3. Her^ea, in the 
south of the island, on the road from Syracuse 
to Agrigentum. It is doubtful from which oi 
these three places the Hyblsean honey came, so 
frequently mentioned by the poets. 

[Hyblox (*Y6?„ov), an ancient king in Sicily, 
under whose guidance the Megarians founded 
Hybla.] 

Hybreas ('Y6f).iae), of Mylasa in Caria. a 



HYDRIAS. 



HYLAS. 



celebrated orator, contemporary with the trium- 
vir Antonius. 

[Hybkias (Tfipmr), an ancient lyric poet of 
Crete, author of a celebrated scolion, which has 
been preserved in Athenaeus : edited by Graef- 
enhan, Mulhusa), 1834.] 

Hyccara (rd "YuKapa: 'YKKagevg: now Muro 
di Carini), a town of the Sicani on the northern 
ooast of Sicily, west of Panormus, said to have 
derived its name from the sea-fish v/atai. It was 
taken by the Athenians, and plundered, and its 
inhabitants sold as slaves, B.C. 415. Among 
the captives was the beautiful Timandra, the 
mistress of Aloibkdes and the mother of Lais. 

Hydarnes CYdupvvs). 1. One of the _ seven 
Persians who conspired against the Magi in B.C. 
521. — [2. Son of the foregoing, leader of the se- 
lect body in the army of Xerxes called the Im- 
mortals.] 

Hydaspes ('YddaxiK : now Jclmn), the north- 
ernmost of the five great tributaries of the In- 
dus, which, with the Indus itself, water the great 
plain of Northern India, which is bounded on 
the north by the Himalaya range, and which is 
now called the Punjab, i. e., Jive rivers. The 
Hydaspes falls into the Acesines (now Chenab), 
which also receives, from the south, first the 
Hydraotes (now Ravee), and then the Hyphasis 
(now Becas, and lower down, Gharra), which 
has previously received, on the southern side, 
the Hesidrus or Zaradrus (now Sutlej or Hesu- 
dru) ; and the Acesines itself falls into the In- 
dus. These five rivers all rise on the south- 
western side of the Emodi Mountains (now 
Himalaya), except the Satlcj, which, like the 
Indus, rises on the northeastern side of the 
range. They became know T n to the Greeks by 
Alexander's campaign in India : his great vic- 
tory over Porus (B.C. 327) was gained on the 
left side of the Hydaspes, near, or perhaps upon, 
the scene of the recent battle of Chillianwallah ; 
and the Hyphasis formed the limit of his prog- 
ress. The epithet " fabulosus," which Horace 
applies to the Hydaspes (Carm., i., 22, 7), refers 
to the marvellous stories current among the 
Romans, who knew next to nothing about India ; 
and the " Medus Hydaspes" of Virgil {Georg., 
iv, 211) is merely an example of the vagueness 
with which the Roman writers, especially the 
poets, refer to the countries beyond the eastern 
limit of the empire. 

[Hyde {"YStj), a town of Lydia, at the base 
of Mount Tmolus, according to the scholiast (on 
II. xx., 385) the later Sardis.] 

Hydra. Vid. Hercules, p. 356, b. 

Hydraotes ('Y^pa^-^, Strab. 'Ydpu-LC : now 
Ravee), a river of India, falling into the Ace- 
sines. Vid. Hydaspes. 

Hydrea ('Y<5pf'a : 'YSpedrijr : now Hydra), a 
small island in the gulf of Hermionc off Argolis, 
of no importance in antiquity, but the inhabit- 
ants of which in modern times played a distin- 
guished part in the war of Greek independence, 
and are some of the best sailors in Greece. 

Hydruntum or Hydrus ('Ydpovc : Hydrunti- 
nus : now Otraato), one of the most ancient 
towns of Calabria, situated on the southeastern 
coast, with a good harbor, and near a mountain 
Hydrus, was in later times a municipium. Per- 
sons frequently crossed over to Epirus from this 
port 



[Hydrussa CYdpovooa), an island in the Sa- 
ronic Gulf, off the coast of Attica.] 

Hyettus ('YijTTor : 'Y//TTiog), a small town is 
Bceotia, on the Lake Copais, and near the fron- 
tiers of Locris. 

Hygiea CYyuta), also called Hygea or Hygia. 
the goddess of health, and a daughter of ^Escu- 
lapius, though some traditions make her the 
wife of the latter. She was usually worship- 
ped in the temples of ^Esculapius, as at Argos, 
where the two divinities had a celebrated sane 
tuary, at Athens, at Corinth, &c. At Romo 
there was a statue of her in the temple of Con - 
cordia. In works of art she is represented as 
a virgin dressed in a long robe, and feeding a ser- 
pent from a cup. Although she was originally 
the goddess of physical health, she is sometimes 
conceived as the giver or protectress of mental 
health ; that is, she appears as vyceia opevti:' 
(J2schyl., Eum., 522), and was thus identified, 
with Minerva (Athena), surnamed Hygiea. 

Hyginus. 1. C. Julius, a Roman gramma- 
rian, was a native of Spain, and lived at Rome 
in the time of Augustus, whose freedman he 
was. He wrote several works, all of which 
have perished. — 2. Hyginus Gromaticus, so 
called from grama, an instrument used by the 
Agrimensore8. He lived in the time of Trajan, 
and wrote works on land surveying and eas- 
trametation, of which considerable fragment^ 
are extant. — 3. Hyginus, the author of two ex- 
tant works : 1. Fabularum Liber, a series oi 
short mythological legends, with an introdue 
tory genealogy of divinities. Although the lai 
ger portion of these narratives has been copied 
from obvious sources, they occasionally present 
the tales under new forms or with new circum- 
stances. 2. Pocticon Astronomicon Libri IV. 
We know nothing of the author of these two 
works. He is sometimes identified with C. 
Julius Hyginus, the freedman of Augustus, but 
he must have lived at a much later period. 
Both works are included in the Mythographi 
Latini of Muncker, Amst., 1681, and of Van. 
Staveren, Lugd. Bat., 1742. 

Hylyea VYlairj, Herod.), a district "in Scythia, 
covered with wood, in the peninsula adjacent 
to Taurica on the northwest, between the rivers 
Borysthenes and Hypacyris. 

Hyl^us ('YXaloc), that is, the Woodman, the 
name of an Arcadian centaur, who was slain 
by Atalante when he pursued her. According, 
to some legends, Hylams fell in the battle against 
the Lapithee, and others, again, said that he was 
one of the centaurs slain by Hercules. 

Hylas (°YAcf), son of Theodamas, king of the 
Dry opes, by the nymph Menodice ; or, accord- 
ing to others, son of Hercules, Euphemus, or 
Ceyx. He was beloved by Hercules, whom he 
accompanied in the expedition of the Argonauts. 
On the coast of Mysia, Hylas went on shore to 
draw water from a fountain ; but his beauty 
excited the love of the Naiads, who drew him 
down into the water, and he was never seen 
again. Hercules endeavored in vain to find 
him ; and when he shouted out to the youth, 
the voice of Hylas was heard from the bottom 
of the well only like a faint echo, whence some 
say that he was actually metamorphosed into 
an echo. While Hercules was engaged in seek- 
ing his favorite, the Argonauts sailed awav 
383 



HYLE. 



HYPERBOREI. 



leaving him and his companion, Polyphemus, 
behind. — [2. A famous pantomime at Rome, 
in the time of Augustus, pupil of Pylades, ac- 
quired great reputation as well as wealth.] 

Hyle ("Yatj, also T YA<u), a small town in Boe- 
otia, situated on the Hylice, which was called 
after this town, and into which the River Isme- 
nus flows. 

[Hyleus ("Y'Aevc), a Greek hero engaged in 
the hunt of the Calydonian boar, by which he 
was killed.] 

Hylias, a river in Bruttium, separating the 
territories of Sybaris and Croton. 

Hylice (77 'YaikIj liuvrj : now Lake of Lioadhi 
or Senzina), a lake in Bceotia, south of the Lake 
Copais. Vid. Hyle. 

Hylicus ("Talkoc, "T/Jukoc), a small river in 
Argolis, near Troezen. 

Hyllus ("TAAog), son of Hercules by Deianlra. 
For details, vid. Heraclilve. 

Hyllus ("YAAof : now Demirji), a river of 
Lydia, falling into the Hermus on its northern 
side. 

Hymen or Hymen^eus ("Yfiijv or 'YfiZvatos), 
the god of marriage, was conceived as a hand- 
some youth, and invoked in the hymeneal or 
bridal song. The names originally designated 
the bridal song itself, which was subsequently 
personified. He is described as the son of 
Apollo and a Muse, either Calliope, Urania, or 
Terpsichore. Others describe him only as the 
favorite of Apollo or Thamyris, and call him a 
son of Magnes and Calliope, or of Bacchus 
(Dionysus) and Venus (Aphrodite). The an- 
cient traditions, instead of regarding the god as 
a personification of the hymeneal song, speak 
of him as originally a mortal, respecting whom 
various legends were related. The Attic le- 
gends described him as a youth of such delicate 
beauty that he might be taken for a girl. He 
fell in love with a maiden, who refused to listen 
to him ; but, in the disguise of a girl, he followed 
her to Eleusis to the festival of Ceres (Deme- 
ter). The maidens, together with Hymenseus, 
were carried off by robbers into a distant and 
desolate country. On their landing, the robbers 
laid down to sleep, and were killed by Hyme- 
nseus, who now returned to Athens, requesting 
the citizens to give him his beloved in marriage 
if he restored to them the maidens who had 
been carried off by the robbers. His request 
was granted, and his marriage was extremely 
happy. For this reason he was invoked in the 
hymeneal songs. According to others, he was 
a youth who was killed by the fall of his house 
on his wedding-day, whence he was afterward 
invoked in bridal songs, in order to be propitia- 
ted. Some related that at the wedding of 
Bacchus (Dionysus) and Ariadne he sang the 
bridal hymn, but lost his voice. He is repre- 
sented in works of art as a youth, but taller and 
with a more serious expression than Eros, and 
carrying in his hand a bridal torch. 

Hymettus ('Y^ttoc), a mountain in Attica, 
celebrated for its marble (Hymettiw trabes, Hot., 
Oarm., ii., 18, 3), and more especially for its 
honey. It is about three miles south of Athens, 
and forms the commencement of the range of 
mountains which runs south through Attica. It 
is now called Telovuni, and by the Franks Monte 
Jfatto : the part of the mountain near the pro- 
384 



montory Zoster, which was called in ancient 
times Anhydrus (6 "Avvdpoc, sc. 'Y^jjttoc), or 
the Dry Hymettus, is now called Mavrovuni. 

Hypacyris, Hypacaris, or Pacaris (now Ka- 
nilshak), a river in European Sarmatia, which 
flows through the country of the nomad Scyth- 
ians, and falls into the Sinus Carcinites in the 
Euxine Sea. 

Hyp^ea. Vid. Stoechades. 

Hypjepa {'Yirairca : now Tapaya), a city of 
Lydia, on the south slope of Mount Tmolus, 
near the north bank of the Cayster. 

Hyp ana ('YTtuvn : ra "Trrava : 'YTravevg), a 
town in Triphylian Elis, belonging to the Pen- 
tapolis. 

Hypanis (now Bog), a river in European Sar- 
matia, rises, according to Herodotus, in a lake, 
flows parallel to the Borysthenes, has at first 
sweet, then bitter water, and falls into the Eux- 
ine Sea west of the Borysthenes. 

Hypata {tH "Trrara, ?) 'Tndrjj : 'Trraracog, 
TTrareuc: now Neopatra, Turk. Batrajik), a 
town of the JEnianes in Thessaly, south of the 
Spercheus, belonged in later times to the JEto- 
lian league. The inhabitants of this town were 
notorious for witchcraft. 

/ Hypatia ('TTraria), daughter of Theon, by 
whom she was instructed in philosophy and 
mathematics. She soon made such immense 
progress in these branches of knowledge, that 
she is said to have presided over the Neopla- 
tonic school of Plotinus at Alexandrea, where 
she expounded the principles of his system to 
a numerous auditory. She appears to have 
been most graceful, modest, and beautiful, but 
nevertheless to have been a victim to slander 
and falsehood. She was accused of too much 
familiarity with Orestes, prefect of Alexandrea, 
and the charge spread among the clergy, who 
took up the notion that she interrupted the 
friendship of Orestes with their archbishop, 
Cyril. In consequence of this, a number of 
them seized her in the street, and" dragged her 
into one of the churches, where they tore her 
to pieces, A.D. 415. 

Hypatodorus ('YTrarodupor), a statuary of 
Thebes, flourished B.C. Sl2. 

[Hypenor ('YTre'ivtop), a Trojan warrior, slain 
by Diomedes.] 

Hyperbolus ("YrrepCoAog), an Athenian dema- 
gogue in the Peloponnesian war, was of servile 
origin, and was frequently satirized by Aris- 
tophanes and the other comic poets. In order 
to get rid either of Mcias or Alcibiades, Hyper- 
bolus called for the exercise of the ostracism. 
But the parties endangered combined to defeat 
him, and the vote of exile fell on Hyperbolus 
himself : an application of that dignified punish- 
ment by which it was thought to have been so 
debased that the use of it was never recurred 
to. Some years afterward he was murdered by 
the oligarchs at Samos, B.C. 411. 

Hyperborei or Si ('T7rep66peoi, 'Yrrepfiopeioi). 
a fabulous people, the earliest mention of whom 
seems to have been in the sacred legends con- 
nected with the worship of Apollo, both at Deles 
and at Delphi. In the earliest Greek concep- 
tion of the Hyperboreans, as embodied by the 
poets, they were a blessed people, living beyond' 
the north wind (vTvepCopeoi, fr. virep and Bopeae). 
and therefore not exposed to its cold blasts, iu 



HYPERBOREI MONTES. 



HYPSIPYLE. 



a land of perpetual sunshine, which produced 
abundant fruits, on which the people lived, ab- 
staining from animal food. In innocence and 
peace, free from disease, and toil, and care, ig- 
norant of violence and war, they spent a long 
and happy life in the due and cheerful observ- 
ance of the worship of Apollo, who visited then- 
country soon after his birth, and spent a whole 
year among them, dancing and singing, before 
he returned to Delphi. The poets related fur- 
ther how the sun only rose once a year and set 
once a year upon the Hyperboreans, whose year 
was thus divided, at the equinoxes, into a six 
mouths' day and a six months' night, and they 
were therefore said to sow in the morning, to 
reap at noon, to gather their fruits in the even- 
ing, and to store them up at night ; how, too, 
their natural life lasted one thousand years, but 
if any of them was satiated with its unbroken 
enjoyment, he threw himself, crowned and 
anointed, from a sacred rock into the sea. 
The Delian legends told of offerings sent to 
Apollo by the Hyperboreans, first by the hands 
of virgins named Arge and Opis (or Hecaerge), 
aud then by Laodice and Hyperoche, escorted 
by five men called Perpherees; and, lastly, as 
their messengers did not return, they sent the 
offerings packed in wheat-straw, and the sacred 
package was forwarded from people to people 
till it reached Delos. If these legends are based 
ou any geographical relations at all, the most 
probable explanation is that which regards them 
as pointing to regions north of Greece (the north 
part of Thessaly especially) as the original seat 
of the worship of Apollo. Naturally enough, as 
the geographical knowledge of the Greeks ex- 
tended, they moved back the Hyperboreans fur- 
ther and further iuto the unknown parts of the 
earth ; and of those who sought to fix their pre- 
cise locality, some placed them in the extreme 
west of Europe, near the Pyrenaean Mouutains 
aud the supposed sources of the Ister, and thus 
they came to be identified with the Celtae ; 
while others placed them, in the extreme north 
of Europe, on the shores of the Hyperboreus 
Oceauus, beyond the fabulous Grypes and Ari- 
jnaspi, who themselves lived beyond the Scyth- 
ians. The latter opinion at length prevailed ; 
and then, the religious aspect of the fable being 
gradually lost sight of, the term Hyperborean 
came to mean only most northerly, as when Vir- 
gil and Horace speak of the li Hyperboreae orae" 
aud " Hyperborei eampi." The fable of the 
Hyperboreans may probably be regarded as one 
of the forms in which the tradition of an orig- 
inal period of iuuucence, happiness, and im- 
mortality existed among the nations of the an- 
cient world. 

Hyperborei Monies was originally the myth- 
ical name of au imaginary range of mountains 
in the north of the earth (vid. Hyperborei), and 
was afterward applied by the geographers to 
various chains, as, for example, the Caucasus, 
the Biupaei Moutes, and others. 

[Hyperenor ^YTrepijvop), a Trojan, son of 
Panthus, slain by Meuelaus in battle.] 

[HyperIa ('Yirtpeia). 1. A name of several j 
fouutaius mAitioned in Homer, in Thessaly ; 
one near the ancient Hellas, another in the city 
Pherae. — 2. The earlier place of residence of the 
Phaeaciaus, whence they removed to Scheria.] 

or 



HYPEfuoi:.^ (Y-7zepEidr]£ or 'YTrepldije), one of 
I the ten Attic orators, was the son of Glaucippus, 
I and belonged to the Attic demus of Collytus, 
was a pupil of Plato in philosophy, and of De- 
mosthenes in oratory. He was a friend of De- 
mosthenes, and with him and Lycurgus was at 
the head of the anti-Macedonian party. He is 
first mentioned about B.C. 358, when he and 
his sons equipped two triremes at their own 
expense in order to serve against Eubcea, and 
fro"m this time to his death he continued a stead- 
fast friend to the patriotic cause. After the 
death of Alexander (323), Hyperides took an 
active part in organizing that confederacy of 
the Greeks against Autipater which produced 
the Lamian war. Upon, the defeat of the con- 
federates at the battle of Crannon in the follow- 
ing year (332), Hyperides fled to iEgina,. where 
he was slain by the emissaries of Antipater. 
The number of orations attributed to Hyperides 
was seventy-seven, but none of them have come 
down to us. His oratory was graceful and 
powerful, holding a middle place between that 
of Lysias and Demosthenes.. 

Hyperion ('YTreptcov), a Titan, son of Ccelus 
(Uranus) and Terra (Ge), and married to his 
sister Thia or Euryphaessa, by whom he became 
the father of Helios (Sol), Selene (Luna), and 
Eos (Aurora). Homer uses the name as a pa- 
tronymic of Helios, so that it is equivalent to 
Hyperionion or Hyperionides, and Homer's ex- 
ample is imitated also by other poete. Vid. 
Helios. 

Hypermnestra ('YTrepfLvrjarpa). 1. Daughter 
of Thestius and Eurythemis, wife of Oicles, 
and mother of Amphiaraus. — 2. One of the 
daughters of Danaus, and wife of Lynceus. 
Vid. Danaus, Lynceus. 

[Hyperochus ('Y-nepoxoc, Ep. 'YTreipoxog). 1. 
A Trojan warrior slain by Ulysses. — 2. Of 
Cumae, author of a work entitled Kv/j.aiKd.~] 

Hyphasis, or Hypasis, or Hypanis ("Y^aaig, 
"YTrauig, "YizavLe : now Beeas and Gharra), a 
river of India. Vid. Hydaspes. 

Hypius ("Ytuoc), a river and mountain in Bi- 
thynia. 

Hypsas ("Yfag), two rivers on the southern 
coast of Sicily, one between Selinus and Ther- 
mae Selinuntiae (now Belici), and the other near 
Agrigentum (now Fiume drago). 

[Hypsenor ('Yfr/vtop). 1. A Trojan warrior, 
son of Dolopion. — 2. Son of Hippasus, a Greek, 
companion of Antilochus, slain by Deiphobus.J 

Hypseus ('Yipevg), son of Peneus and Creusa, 
was king of the Lapithae, and father of Cyrene. 

Hypsicles (Ti/u/cAf/f), of Alexandrea, a Greek 
mathematician, who is usually said to have lived 
about A.D. 160, but who ought not to be placed 
earlier than A.D. 550. The only work of his 
extant is entitled Hept ttjc rdv fadiuv avatyopac, 
published with the Optics of Heliodorus at Paris, 
1567. He is supposed, however, to have added 
the fourteenth aud fifteenth books to the Ele- 
ments of Euclid. 

Hypsipyle ('Yijjirrv/.rj), daughter of Thoas, 
kiug of Lemnos. When the Lemnian women 
f killed all the men in the island because they 
had takeu some female Thracian slaves to their 
beds, Hypsipyle saved her father. Vid. Thoas. 
She then became queen of Lemnos; and when 
the Argonauts landed there shortly afterward, 
385 



HTPSUS. 



HYSTASPES. 



she bore twin sons to Jason, Euneus and Ne- 
brophonus, also called Deiphilus or Thoas. The 
Leninian -women subsequently discovered that 
Thoas was alive, whereupon they compelled 
Hypsipyle to quit the island* On her flight she 
■was taken prisoner by pirates and sold to the 
Nernean king Lycurgus, who intrusted to her 
care his son Archemorus or Opheltes. Vid. 
Archemorus. 

Hypsus ('Ttpovc -ovvroe), a town in Arcadia, 
on a mountain of the same name. 

Hyrcaxia ('Ypnavta : 'Ypnuviog, Hyrcanus : 
now Mazanderan), a province of the ancient 
Persian empire, on the southern and southeast- 
ern shores of the Caspian or Hyrcanian Sea, 
and separated by mountains on the west, south, 
and east from Media, Parthia, and Margiana. 
Its valleys were very fertile ; and it flourished 
most under the Parthians, whose kings often 
resided in it during the summer. 

Hyrcaxum or -ium: Mare. Vid. Caspium 
Mare. 

Hyrcaxts ("TpKavog). 1. Joaxxes, prince 
and high-priest of the Jews, was the sou and 
successor of Simon Maccabseus, the restorer 
of the independence of Judsea. He succeeded 
to his father's power B.C. 135. He was at first 
engaged in war with Antiochus VII. Sidetes, 
who invaded Judsea, and laid siege to Jerusa- 
lem. In 133 he concluded a peace with Antio- 
chus on the condition of paying an annual trib- 
ute. Owing to the civil wars in Syria between 
the several claimants to the throne, the power 
of Hyrcanus steadly increased; and at length 
he took Samaria, and razed it to the ground 
(109), notwithstanding the army which Antio- 
chus IX. Cyzicenus had sent to the assistance 
of the city. Hyrcanus died in 106. Although 
he did not assume the title of king, he may be 
regarded as the founder of the monarchy of Ju- 
daea, which continued in his family till the ac- 
cession of Herod. — 2. High-priest and king of 
the Jews, was the eldest son of Alexander Jan- 
naeus and his wife Alexandra. On the death 
of Alexander (78) the royal authority devolved 
upon Alexandra, who appointed Hyrcanus to 
the high-priesthood. Alexandra reigned nine 
years; and, upon her death in 69, Hyrcanus 
succeeded to the sovereignty, but was quickly 
attacked by his younger brother Aristobulus, 
who possessed more energy and ambition than 
Hyrcanus. In the following year (68) Hyrcanus 
was driven from the throne, and took refuge 
with Aretas, king of Arabia Petraea. That 
monarch assembled an army, with which he in- 
vaded Judaea in order to restore Hyrcanus. He 
defeated Aristobulus, and blockaded him in the 
temple of Jerusalem. Aristobulus, however, 
gained over by bribes and promises Pompey's 
lieutenant, M. Scaurus, who had arrived at Da- 
mascus, and who now ordered Aretas and Hyr- 
canus to withdraw from Judaea (64). The next 
year Pompey himself arrived in Syria : he re- 
versed the decision of Scaurus, carried away 
Aristobulus as a prisoner to Rome, and rein- 
stated Hyrcanus in the high-priesthood, with 
the authority, though not the name of royalty. 
Hyrcanus, however, did not long enjoy his 
newly-recovered sovereignty in quiet Alex- 
ander, the son of Aristobulus, and subsequently 



[Aristobulus himself, escaped from Rome, and 
j excited dangerous revolts, which were ' only 
j quelled by the assistance of the Romans. The 
j real government was now in the able hands of 
I Antipater, the father of Herod, who rendered 
j such importaut services to Caesar during the 
(Alexandrean war (47) that Caesar made him 
| procurator of Judaea, leaving to Hyrcanus the 
I title of high-priest. Although Antipater was 
j poisoned by the contrivance of Hyrcanus (43), 
j the latter was a man of such feeble character 
; that he allowed Herod to take vengeance on the 
j murderer of his father, and to succeed to his fa- 
jther's power and influence. The Parthians on 
their invasion of Syria, carried away Hyrcanus 
as prisoner (40). He was treated with much 
liberabty by the Parthian king, and allowed to 
live in perfect freedom at Babylon. Here he 
remained for some years ; but having at length 
received an invitation from Herod, who had 
meanwhile established himself on the throne of 
Judaea, he returned to Jerusalem with the con- 
sent of the Parthian king. He was treated with 
respect by Herod till the battle of Actium, 
when Herod, fearing lest Augustus might place 
Hyrcanus on the throne, accused him of a trea- 
sonable correspondence with the king of Arabia, 
and on this pretext put him to death (30). 

[Hyrgis ("Tpyic; : now Donetz), sl tributary of 
the Tanais in Asia.] 

Hyria ('Ypia : "YpiEvg, Tptar^c). 1. A town 
in Boeotia, near Tanagra, was in the earliest 
times a place of importance, but afterward sunk 
into insignificance. — 2. A town in Apulia. Vid. 
Uria. 

Hyreeus ('Ypievc), son of Neptune (Poseidon) 
and Alcyone, king of Hyria in Bceotia, husband 
of Clonia, and father of Nycteus, Lycus, and 
Orion. Respecting his treasures, vid. Agamedes. 

Hyrmixa {"Tpfiivij), a town in Elis, mention- 
ed by Homer, but of which all trace had disap- 
peared in the time of Strabo. Near it was the 
promontory Hyrmina or Hormina (now Cape 
Chiarenza). 

HyrmIxe ('Ypficvi}), "daughter of Neleus, or 
Nycteus, wife of Phorbas, and mother of Actor. 

Hyrtacus (*Yp-aicoc), a Trojan, to whom Pri- 
am gave his first wife Arisba, when he married 
Hecuba. Homer makes him the father of Asius, 
hence called Hyrtacides. In Virgil, Nisus and 
Hippocoon are also represented as sons of Hyr- 
tacus. 

[Hyrtius (Tprtoc), a leader of the Mysians, 
slain in the Trojan war by Ajax, son of Tela- 
mon.] 

HysIjE (YGiat). 1. ('Yoidnjc), a town in Ar- 
golis, south of Argos, destroyed by the Spartans 
in the Peloponnesian war. — 2. ('Ycuevg), a town 
j in Boeotia, east of Plataeae, called by Herodotus 
! (v., 74) a demus of Attica, but probably belong - 
i ing to Plataeae. 

Hystaspes ('Yaru.G7Tj]c ; in Persian, Goshtasp, 
! Gustasp, Histasp, or Wistasp). 1. Son of Ar- 
' sanies, and father of Darius L, was a member 
! of the Persian royal house of the Achaenienida;. 
He was probably satrap of Persis under Cani- 
byses, and probably under Cyrus also. — 2. Sou 
of Darius I. and Atossa, commanded the Bac- 
i trians and Sacae in the army of his brother 
Xerxes. 



386 



IABADII INSULA. 



TAPIS. 



[Iabadii Insula ('latadiov vr/Gog : now prob- j 
ably Java, though Von Humboldt and others re- j 
gard it as Sumatra), a large and fruitful island j 
of the Iudiau Sea, southeast of the Aurea Cher- j 
sonesus, with a capital city called Argyre ('Ap- j 
yvp7i).~) 

Iacchus ('Ioa :.i-of ), the solemn name of Bac- 
chus in the Eleusiniau mysteries, whose name ' 
was derived from the boisterous song called j 
Iacchus. In these mysteries Iacchus was re- j 
garded as the son of Jupiter (Zeus) and Ceres 
(Demeter), and was distinguished from the The- J 
ban Bacchus (Dionysus), the son of Jupiter ' 
(Zeus) and Semcle. In some traditions lac- ] 
chus is even called a son of Bacchus, but in 
others the two are identified. On the sixth day 
of the Eleusiuian festival (the twentieth of Boe- 
dromion), the statue of Iacchus was carried from 
the temple of Ceres (Demeter) across the Thri- 
u<ian plain to Eleusis, accompanied by a nu- 
merous and riotous procession of the initiated, 
who sang the Iacchus. carried mystic baskets, 
and danced to the sound of cymbals and trump- 
ets. 

Iadera or Iader (Iadertiuus : now Old Zara), 
a town on the coast of Illyricum, with a good 
harbor, and a Roman colony under the name of 
" Colouia Claudia Augusta Felix." 

[Iaera ('Ideipa). 1. A daughter of Nereus 
and Doris. — 2. A wood nymph, who reared the 
sons of Alcanor, Paudarus and Bitias.] 

IaiScmob ('Ia/le/ioc), a similar personification 
to that of Linus, and hence called a son of 
Apollo and Calliope, and the iuventor of the 
song Ialemus, which was a kind of dirge, and 
is only mentioned as sung on most melancholy 
occasions. 

Ialmexus (JldXfievog), son of Mars (Ares) and 
Astyoche, and brother of Ascalaphus, was a 
native of the Boeotian Orchomenos. He was 
one of the Argonauts and a suitor of Helena. 
After the destruction of Troy, he wandered 
about with the Orchomenians, and founded col- 
onies in Colchis. 

Ialysus ('IdXvGog : now Ialyso), one of the 
three very ancient Dorian cities in the island of | 
Rhodes, and one of the six original members j 
of the Dorian Hexapolis (vid. Doris), stood on 
the northwestern coast of the island, about sixty 
stadia southwest of Rhodes. It is said to have 
derived its name from the mythical Ialysus, son ' 
of Cercaphus, and grandson of Helios. 

Iamee ('IdfiGr}), a Thracian woman, daughter 
of Pan and Echo, and a slave of Metanlra. 
When Ceres (Demeter), in search of her daugh- 
ter, arrived in Attica, and visited the house of 
Metanira, Iambe cheered the mournful goddess 
by her jokes. 

Iamblichls ('IdfiOlixog). 1. A Syrian, who 
lived in the time of the Emperor Trajan, wrote 
a romance in the Greek language entitled Baby- j 
lonica. The work itself is lost, but an epitome 
of it is preserved by Photius. — 2. A celebrated j 
Neo-Platonic philosopher, was born at Chalcis 
in Ccele-Syria. He resided in Syria during the 
greater part of his life, and died in the reign 
of Constantine the Great, probably before A.D. 
S33. He was inferior in judgment and learn- 



ing to the earlier Neo-Platonists, Plotinus and 
Porphyry ; and he introduced into his system 
many of the superstitions and mysteries of the 
East, by means of which he endeavored to check 
the progress of Christianity. The extant works 
of Iambliehus are, I. IIcol Uvdayopov alpeGeug, 
on the philosophy of Pythagoras. It was in- 
tended as a preparation for the study of Plato, 
and consisted originally of ten books, of which 
five only are extant. 1. The first book contains 
an account of the life of Pythagoras, and though 
compiled without care, it is yet of value, as the 
other works, from which it is taken, are lost. 
Edited by Kuster, Amsterd., 1707 ; and by 
Kiessling, Lips., 1815. 2. Ilporpe-riKol loyoi 
eig (pi?.oaooiav, forms a sort of introduction to 
the study of Plato. Edited by Kiessling, Lips., 
1813, 8vo. 3. Uept Kocvyg fiadrjixarLKyg ettlgt- 
rffirig, contains many fragments of the works of 
early Pythagoreans. Edited by Fries, Copen- 
hagen, 1790. 4. Uepl rrjg NuiOjidxov uptdfifjTL- 
ityc elgaycjyyg. Edited by Tennulius, Deventer 
and Arnheim, 1668. 5. Ta d-eoXoyov/ieva r//c 
dpid[i7jTLKri£. Edited by Ast, Lips., 1817. — II. 
TLepi /ivG^jptuv, written to prove the divine ori- 
gin of the Egyptian and Chaldaean theology. 
Edited by Gale, Oxon., 1678. Iambliehus wrote 
other works which are lost. — 3. A later Neo- 
Platonic philosopher of Apamea, a contempo- 
rary of the Emperor Julian and of Libanius. 

[Iamexus ('Idfcevog), a Trojan warrior, slain by 
Leonteus during the attack of the Trojans on 
the camp of the Greeks.] 

Iamid^e. Vid. Iamus. 

IamxTa ('Id/xveia ; 'lafivia : 'lafiveiTTjg : in Old 
Testament, Jabneel, Jabneh : now Ibneh or Gab- 
neh), a considerable city of Palestine, between 
Diospolis and Azotus, near the coast, with a 
good harbor, was taken by King Uzziah from 
the Philistines. Pompey united it to the prov- 
ince of Syria. After the destruction of Jerusa- 
lem it became the seat of the Sanhedrim, and 
of a celebrated school of Jewish learning. 

[L\mxo or Iamna ("la/iva : now Ciudadela), a 
city in the smaller of the Balearic Islands (Mi- 
norca)^ 

[Iamphorina, a strong place in the territory of 
the Meedi in Macedonia.] 

Iamus ("lafiog), son of Apollo and Evadne, re- 
ceived the art of prophecy from his father, and 
was regarded as the ancestor of the famous 
fitmily of seers, the Iamidas at Olympia. 

[Iaxassa ('ldvaGGa), one of the Nereids.] 

Iaxira ('Idveipa), one of the Nereids. 

Iaxthe ('IuvOt]). 1. Daughter of Oceanus and 
Tethys, and one of the playmates of Proserpina 
(Persephone). — 2. Daughter of Telestes of Crete, 
beloved by Irms. 

Iapetus ('la-erog), one of the Titans, son of 
Ccelus (Uranus) and Terra (Ge), married Asia 
or Clymene, the daughter of his brother Ocea- 
nus, and became by her the father of Atlas, Pro- 
metheus, Epimetheus. and Mencetius. He waa 
imprisoned with Saturn (Cronus) in Tartarus. 
Being the father of Prometheus, he was regard- 
ed by the Greeks as the ancestor of the human 
race. His descendants, Prometheus, Atlas, and 
others, are often designated by the patronymics 
Iapetidce(es), Iapetionidce(es), and the feminine 
Iapetionis. 

[Iapis, son of Iasus, beloved by Apollo, and 
'387 



IAPYDES. 



IBYCUS. 



received from hina the knowledge of medicine 
and the prophetic art : he cured iEneas of the 
wound received by kirn in the war against La- 
tinus.] 

Iapydes ('luTrvdeg or 'luTcodeg), a warlike and 
barbarous people in the north of Illyricum, be- 
tween the Rivers Arsia and Tedanius, were a 
mixed race, partly Illyrian and partly Celtic, 
who tattooed their bodies. They were subdued 
by Augustus. Their country was called Ia- 

PYDIA. 

Iapygia ('laxvyta : 'Idirvyeg), the name given 
by the Greeks to the south of Apulia, from Ta- 
rentum and Brundisium to the Promontorium 
Iapygium (now Cape Leuca), though it is some- 
times applied to the whole of Apulia. Vid. Apu- 
lia. The name is derived from the mythical 
lapyx. 

Iapyx ('luTzvt;). 1. Son of Lycaon and brother 
of Daunus and Peucetius, who went as leaders 
of a colony to Italy. According to others, he 
was a Cretan, and a brother of Icadius, or a son 
of Dsedalus and a Cretan woman, from whom 
the Cretans who migrated to Italy derived the 
name of lapyges. — 2. The west-northwestern 
wiud, blowing off the coast of Iapygia f Apulia), 
in the south of Italy, and consequently, favor- 
able to persons crossing over to Greece. It was 
the same as the upyearrjg of the Greeks. 

Iarbas or Hiarbas, king of the Gaetulians, 
and son of Jupiter Amnion by a Libyan nymph, 
sued in vain for the hand of Dido in marriage. 
For details, vid. Dido. 

Iaudanes ('Iap6dv7]c), a king of Lydia, and 
-father of Omphale, who is hence called Iardanis. 

Iardanes or Iardanus ('Iap6uv7jg, 'Idpdavog). 
1. (Blow Jardan), a river in Elis. — 2. A river in 
the north of Crete, which flowed near the town 
Cydonia. 

Iasion or Iasius ('laaluv, 'luGiog), son of Ju- 
piter (Zeus) and Electra, the daughter of Atlas, 
or son of Corythus and Electra. At the wed- 
ding of his sister Harmonia, Ceres (Demeter) 
fell in love with him, and in a thrice-ploughed 
iield (rpi7ro?.og) she became by him the mother 
of Pluton or Plutus in Crete ; Jupiter (Zeus), in 
consequence, killed Iasion with a flash of light- 
ning. Others represent him as living to an ad- 
vanced age as the husband of Ceres (Demeter). 
In some traditions Iasion and his brother Dar- 
danus are said to have carried the palladium to 
Samothrace, and there to have been instructed 
in the mysteries of Ceres (Demeter) by Jupiter 
(Zeus). Others relate that Iasion, being in- 
spired by Ceres (Demeter) and Cora (Proser- 
pina), travelled about in Sicily and many other 
countries, and every where taught the people 
the mysteries of Ceres (Demeter). 

Iasis, i. e., Atalante, the daughter of Iasius. 

{Iasius ^Idaog). 1. King of Orchomenos, 
father of Amphion. — 2. Vid. Iasion.] 

Iaso ('lao6), i. e., Recovery, a daughter of 
jEsculapius or Amphiaraus, and sister of Hy- 
giea, was worshipped as the goddess of recovery. 

Iassius or Iassicus Sinus ('laaindg KoXirog : 
now Gulf of Mandeliyeh), a large gulf on the 
western coast of Caria, between the peninsulas 
of Miletus and Myndus, named after the city 
of lassus, and called also Bargylieticus Sinus 
(Bapyv/u7]~LKdg Kolirog) from another city which 
stood upon it, namely, Bargylia. 
388 



Iassus or Iasus (j'laooog, 'lacog : 'lacevg ■ ruins 
at Asyn-Kalessi), a city of Caria, on the Iassius 
Sinus, founded by Argives and further colonized 
by Milesians. 

Lasus ("laaog). 1. An Arcadian, son of Ly- 
curgus and Cleophile or Eurynome, brother of 
Ancasus, husband of Clymene, the daughter of 
Minyas, and father of Atalante. He is likewise 
called Iasius and Iasion. — 2. Father of Amphion, 
and king of the Minyans. — [3. Son of Triopas, 
grandson of Phorbas, brother of Agenor, and 
father of lo, according to one account, was king 
of Argos. — 4. Son of Sphelus, a leader of the 
Athenians before Troy, slain by iEneas.] 

Iazyges ('Id&yeg), a powerful Sarmatian peo- 
ple, who originally dwelt on the coast of the 
Pontus Euxinus and the Palus Mseotis, but in 
the reign of Claudius settled near the Quadi in 
Dacia, in the country bounded by the Danube, 
the Theiss, and the Sarmatian Mountains. They 
are generally called Sarmatce Iazyges or simply 
Sarrnatce, but Ptolemy gives them the name of 
Iazyges Metanastai, on account of their migra- 
tion. The Iazyges were in close alliance with 
the Quadi, along with whom they frequently at- 
tacked the R,oman dominions, especially Moesia 
and Pannonia. In the fifth century they were 
conquered by the Goths. 

Iberia ('I67}pla : southern part of Georgia), a 
country of Asia, in the centre of the isthmus 
between the Black and Caspian Seas, was 
bounded on the north by the Caucasus, on the 
west by Colchis, on the east by Albania, and on 
the south by Armenia. It was surrounded on 
every side by mountains, through which there 
were only four passes. Sheltered by these 
mountains and watered by the Cyrus (now 
Kour) and its upper tributaries, it was famed 
for a fertility of which its modern name (from 
Teopyog) remains a witness. Its inhabitants, 
Iberes ("UrjpEg) or Iberi, were, and are still, 
among the most perfect specimens of the Cau- 
casian race. The ancients believed them to be 
of the same family as the Assyrians and Medes, 
whom they were thought to resemble in their 
customs. They were more civilized than their 
neighbors in Colchis and Albania, and were di- 
vided into four castes : 1. The nobles, from 
whom two kings were chosen; 2. The priests, 
who were also the magistrates ; 3. The soldiers 
and husbandmen ; 4. The slaves, who perform- 
ed all public and mechanical work. The chief 
employment of the Pberians was agriculture. 
The Romans first became acquainted with the 
country through the expedition of Pompey in 
B.C. 65 ; and under Trajan it was subjected to 
Rome. In the fifth century it was conquered 
by the Persian king Sapor. No connection 
can be traced between the Iberians of Asia and 
those of Spain. 

Iberus ("16r}pog or "Urjp : now Ebro), the prin- 
cipal river in the northeast of Spain, rises among 
the mountains of the Cantabri, near Juliobriga, 
flows southeast through a great plain between 
the Pyrenees and the Mons Idubeda, and falls 
into the Mediterranean near Dertosa, after 
forming a Delta. 

Ibycus ("UvKog), a Greek lyric poet, was a 
native of Rhegium, and spent the best part of 
his life at Samos, at the court of Polycrates. 
about B.C. 540. It is related that, travelling 



ICARIA. 



ICILIUS. 



through a desert place near Corinth, he was 
murdered bv robbers, but before he died he call- 
ed upon a flock of cranes that happened to fly 
over him to avenge his death. Soon afterward, 
when the people of Corinth were assembled in the 
theatre, the cranes appeared; and one of the 
murderers, who happened to be present, cried 
out involuntarily, « .Behold the avengers of Iby- 
cus :" and thus were the authors of the crime 
detected. The phrase al 'Uvkov yepavoi passed 
into a proverb. The poetry of Ibycus was 
chiefly erotic, and partook largely of the im- 
petuosity of his character. In his dialect there 
was a mixture of the Doric and JSolic.^ In an- 
tiquity there were seven books of his lyric 
poems, of which only a few fragments now re- 
main. [These fragments are collected in Schnei- 
dewin's Ibyci (Jarminum Reliquiae, Gottingen, 

1833.] , 

Icaria or Icarius Cluapia, 'lKupioc : 'iKapisvc), 
a mountain and a demus in Attica, belonging to 
the tribe iEgeis, where Bacchus (Dionysus) is 
said to have taught Icarius the cultivation of the 

yiDe - 

Icarius ('InupLoc), also called Icarus or Ica- 
rion. 1. An Athenian, who lived in the reign 
of Pandion, and hospitably received Bacchus 
(Dionysus) on his arrival in Attica. The god, 
in return, taught him the cultivation of the vine. 
Icarius made a present of some wine to peas- 
ants, who became intoxicated by it, and think- 
ing that they were poisoned by Icarius, slew 
him, and threw his body iuto a well, or buried 
it under a tree. His daughter Erigone, after a 
long search, found his grave, to which she was 
conducted by his faithful dog Maera. From 
grief she hung herself on the tree under which 
he was buried. Jupiter (Zeus) or Bacchus (Di- 
onysus) placed her and Icarius among the stars, 
making Erigone the Virgin, Icarius Bootes or 
Arcturus, and Maera Procyon or the little dog. 
Hence the latter is called Icarius canis. The 
god then punished the ungrateful Athenians 
with madness, in which condition the Athenian 
maidens hung themselves as Erigone had done. 
The Athenians propitiated Icarius and Erigone 
by the institution of the festival of the JEora. 
Vid. Diet, of Ant., s. v. — 2. A Lacedaemonian, 
son of Perieres and Gorgophone, and brother 
of Tyndareus. Others called him grandson of 
Perieres, and son of CEbalus. When Icarius 
and Tyndareus were expelled from Lacedasmon 
by their half-brother Hippocoon, Icarius went 
to Acarnania, and there became the father of 
Penelope, and of several other children. He 
afterward returned to Lacedasmon. Since there 
were many often for the hand of Penelope, he 
promised to give her to the hero who should 
conquer in a foot race. Ulysses won the prize, 
and was betrothed to Penelope. Icarius tried to 
persuade his daughter to remain with him, and 
not accompany Ulysses to Ithaca. Ulysses al- 
lowed her to do as she pleased, whereupon she 
covered her face with her veil to hide her blushes, 
and thus intimated that she would follow her 
husband. Icarius then desisted from further en- 
treaties, and erected a statue of Modesty on the 
spot. 

Icarus ("iKapoc), son of Daedalus. Vid. Dae- 
dalus. 

Icarus or Icaria (T/capoc, 'luapia : now Ni- 



karia), an island of the iEgean Sea, one of the 
Sporades, west of Samos, called also Doliche 
{6o7.lxv, i. e. long island). Its common name, 
and that of the surrounding sea, Icarium Maime, 
were derived from the myth of Icarus. It was 
first colonized by the Milesians, but afterward 
belonged to the Samians, who fed their herds on 
its rich pastures. 

Iccius. [1. A noble of Rheims in Gallia Bel- 
gica, who headed a deputation of his townsmen 
to Caesar in B.C. 57, placing their state at Cae- 
sar's disposal, and praying his aid against the 
other Belgie communities.] — 2. A friend of 
Horace, who addressed him an ode (Carm., i., 
29) and an epistle {Ep., i., 12). The ode was 
written in B.C. 25, when Iccius was preparing to 
join iElius Gallus in his expedition to Arabia. 
The epistle was composed about ten years after- 
ward, when Iccius had become Vipsanius Agrip- 
pa's steward in Sicily. In both poems Horace 
reprehends pointedly, but delicately, in Iccius an 
inordinate desire for wealth. 

Iceni, called Simeni (Juifievoi) by Ptolemy, a 
numerous and powerful people in Britain, who 
dwelt north of the Trinobantes, in the modern 
counties of Suffolk and Norfolk. Their revolt 
from the Romans, under their heroic queen 
Boadieea, is celebrated in history. Vid. Boa- 
dicea. Their chief town was Venta Icenorum 
(now Caister) about three miles from Norwich. 

Ichn^e ("Ixvat : Ixvaloc). 1. A town in Bot- 
tiaea in Macedonia, near the mouth of the Axius. 
— 2. A town in Phthiotis in Thessaly, celebrated 
for its worship of Themis, who was hence sur- 
named lchnaia. 

Ichsl-e or Ischn^e ('Ixvat, 'laxvai), a Greek 
city in the north of Mesopotamia, founded by the 
Macedonians, was the scene of the first battle be- 
tween Crassus and the Parthians, in which the 
former gained the victory. According to Appian, 
the Parthians soon after defeated the Romans 
near the same spot. 

[Ichnusa ('Ixvovaa), the ancient name of Sar- 
dinia. Yid. Sardinia.] 

Ichthyophagi ( 'IxOvofdyoL, i. e., Fish-eaters), 
was a vague descriptive name given by the an- 
cients to various tribes on the coasts of Asia and 
Africa, of whom they knew but little. Thus we 
find Ichthyophagi : 1. In the extreme south-east 
of Asia, in the country of the Sinas. 2. On the 
coast of Gedrosia. 3. On the northeastern coast 
j of Arabia Felix. 4. In Africa, on the coast of 
the Red Sea, above Egypt, 5. On the western 
j coast of Africa. 

i Icilius. 1. Sp., was one of the three envoys 
i sent by the plebeians, after their succession to 
i the Sacred Mount, to treat with the senate, B. 

C. 494. He was thrice elected tribune of the 
jplebs, namely, in 492, 481, and 471.— 2. L., a 

man of great energy and eloquence, was tribune 
I of the plebs 456, when he claimed for the trib- 
i unes the right of convoking the senate, and also 
| carried the important law for the assignment 
j of the Aventine (de Aventino publicando) to the 
' plebs. In the following year (455) he was again 
j elected tribune. He was one of the chief lead- 
< ers in the outbreak against the decemvirs, 449. 
j Virginia had been betrothed to him, and he bold- 
j ly defended her cause before Appius Claudius ; 
! and when at length she fell by her father's hand, 

Icilius hurried to the army which was carrying 
389 



IC01NIUM. 



IDPJEUS. 



on war against the Sabiues, and prevailed upon 
them to desert the government. 

JCONIUM ('Lkoviov : 'Lkovievc : now Koniyeh), 
the capital of Lycaonia, in Asia Minor, was, when 
visited by St. Paul, a flourishing city, with a mix- 
ed population of Jews and Greeks ; under the 
later emperors, a colony ; and in the Middle Ages, 
one of the greatest cities of Asia Minor, and im- i 
portant in the history of the crusades. 

Icxixus ('lKTivog), a contemporary of Pericles, I 
was the architect of two of the most celebrated j 
of the Greek temples, namely, the great temple j 
of Minerva (Athena) in the acropolis of Athens, j 
called the Parthenon, and the temple of Apollo j 
Epicurius, near Phigaha in Arcadia. Calli- ' 
crates was associated with Ictinus in building ; 
the Parthenon. 

Ida (Iffy, Dor. 'Ida). 1. (Now Ida or Kas- ' 
Dagh,) a mountain range of Mysia, in Asia Mi- 
nor, which formed the southern boundary of the 
Troad ; extending from Leetum Promontorium 
in the southwest corner of the Troad, eastward 
along the northern side of the Gulf of Adramyt- 
tium, and further east into the centre of Mysia. 
Its highest summits were Cotylus on the north ' 
and Gargara on the south ; the latter is about ■ 
five thousand feet high, and is often capped with 
snow. Lower down, the slopes of the mountain 
are well-wooded; and lover still, they form! 
fertile fields and valleys. The sources of the 
Seaman der and the iEsepus, besides other riv- 
ers and numerous brooks, are on ' Ida. The 
mountain is celebrated in mythology as the j 
scene of the rape of Ganymede, whom Ovid j 
(Fast., ii., 1-15) calls Idteus puer, and of the judg- 
ment of Paris, who is called Idceus Judex by 
Ovid (Fast, vi., 4-i), and Idwus pastor by Cicero 
(ad. Alt, ii., IS). In Homer, too, its summit is 
the place from which the gods watch the battles 
in the plain of Troy. Ida was also an ancient 
seat of the worship of Cybele, who obtained from 
it the name of Idee a Mater. — 2. (Now Psilorati), a I 
mountain in the centre of Crete, belonging to the \ 
mountain range which runs through the whole i 
length of the island. Mount Ida is said to be 
seven thousand six hundred and seventy-four feet 
above the level of the sea. It was closely con- \ 
nected with the worship of Jupiter (Zeus), who is ; 
said to have been brought up in a cave in this J 
mountain. 

Idjsa Mater. Vid. Ida. 

Id^ei Dactyli. Vid. Dactyli. 

[Idceus ('lSaloc). 1. A herald of the Trojans. 
— 2. Son of Dares, the priest of Vulcan (Hephses- - 
tus), slain by Diomede.J 

Idalium ('IddAiov), a town in Cyprus, sacred 1 
to Venus (Aphrodite), who hence bore the stir- ; 
name Idaiia. 

Idaxthyrsus ('lduvOvpaoc), a king of the Scy- , 
thians, under whom they overran Asia, and ad- i 
vanced as far as Egypt. 

Idas ("Idac), 1. Son of Aphareus and Areue, 
the daughter of (Ebalus, brother of Lynceus, 
husband of Marpessa, and father of Cleopatra or 
Alcyone. From the name of their father, Idas 
and Lynceus are called Apharetidce or Apharidce. 
Apollo was in love with Marpessa, the daughter 
of Evenus, but Idas carried her off in a winged 
chariot which Neptune (Poseidon) had given 
him. Evenus could not overtake Idas, but 
Apollo found him in Messene and took the 
390 



maiden from him. . The lovers fought for her 
possession, but Jupiter (Zeus) separated them 
and left the decision with Marpessa, who chose 
Idas, from fear lest Apollo should desert her if 
she grew old. The Apharetidas also took part 
in the Calydoniau hunt, and in the expedition of 
the Argonauts. But the most celebrated part of 
their story is their battle with the Dioscuri, Cas- 
tor and Pollux, which is related elsewhere (p. 
266, b.). — [2. One of the guests at the marriage 
of Perseus, slain by Phineus. — 3. One of the com- 
panions of Diomedes, changed by Venus (Aphro- 
dite) into a bird. — 4. A Trojan warrior, mention- 
ed by Virgil, slain by Turnus in Italy. — 5. Two 
heroes in the Theban war, the one from Onches- 
tus, the other from Taenarus.] 

[Ide ("1(5 77). 1. Daughter of Cory has and moth- 
er of Minos. — 2. A nymph, mother of Nisus by 
Hyrtacus.] 

Idistavisus Campus, a plain in Germany near 
the Weser, probably in the neighborhood of the 
Porta "Westphalica, between Rinteln and Haus- 
berge, memorable for the victory of Germanicus 
over the Cherusci, A. D. 16. 

Idmox ("Idfiuv). 1. Son of Apollo and Asteria, 
or Cyrene, was a soothsayer, and accompanied 
the Argonauts, although he knew beforehand 
that death awaited him. He was killed in the 
country of the Mariandynians by a boar or a 
serpent ; or, according to others, he died there 
of a disease. — [2. A Rutulian, sent by Turnus to 
iEneas to propose to settle the dispute for the 
hand of Lavinia by single combat between the 
heroes.] 

Idomexeus ('ldo/uevevc). 1. Son of the Cretan 
Deucalion, and grandson of Minos and Pasiphae, 
was king of Crete. He is sometimes called 
Lyctius or Cnosius, from the Cretan towns of 
Lyctus and Cnosus. He was one of the suitors 
of Helen ; and, in conjunction with Meriones, 
the son of his half-brother Molus, he led the 
Cretans in eighty ships against Troy. He was 
one of the bravest heroes in the Trojan war, 
and distinguished himself especially in the bat- 
tle near the ships. According to Homer, Idom- 
eneus returned home in safety after the fall of 
Troy. Later traditions relate that once in a 
storm he vowed to sacrifice to Neptune (Posei- 
don) whatever he should first meet on his land- 
ing, if the god would grant him a safe return. 
This was his own son, whom he accordingly 
sacrificed. As Crete was thereupon visited by 
a plague, the Cretans expelled Idomeneus. He 
went to Italy, where he settled in Calabria, and 
built a temple to Minerva (Athena). From thence 
he is said to have migrated again to Colophon, 
on the coast of Asia. His tomb, however, was 
shown at Cnosus, where he and Meriones were 
worshipped as heroes. — 2. Of Lampsacus, a 
friend and disciple of Epicurus, flourished about 
B.C. 310-270. He wrote several philosophical 
and historical works, all of which are lost. 
The latter were chiefly devoted to an account 
of the private life of the distinguished men of 
Greece. 

Idothea (ElSodm), daughter of Proteus, taught 
Menelaus how he might secure her father, and 
compel him to declare in what manner he might 
reach home in safety. 

Idrieus or Hidrieus ('Idpievc, 'ldpievg) king of 
Caria, second son of Hecatomnus, succeeded to 



IDUBEDA. 



ILIONEUS. 



the throne on the death of Artemisia, the widow 
of his brother Maussolus, in B.C. 351. He died 
in 344, leaving the kingdom to his sister Ada, 
whom he had married. 

Idubeda (now Sierra de Oca and Lorenzo), a 
range of mountains in Spain, begins among the 
Cantabri, forms the southern boundary of the 
plain of the Kbro, aud runs southeast to the 
Mediterranean. 

IdCalea ('Idov/iata), is the Greek form of the 
scriptural name Edom, but the terms are not 
precisely equivalent. Iu the Old Testament, 
and in the time before the Babylonish captivity 
of the Jews. Edom is the district of Mount Seir, 
that is, the mountainous region extending north 
and south from the Dead Sea to the eastern 
head of the Bed Sea, peopled by the descend- 
ants of Esau, aud added by David to the Israel- 
itish monarchy. The decline of the kingdom 
of Judaea, and at last its extinction by Nebu- 
chadnezzar, enabled the Edomites to extend 
their power to the northwest over the southern 
part of Judaea as far as Hebron, while their 
original territory was taken possession of by 
the Nabathaean Arabs. Thus the Iducoaea of 
the later Jewish and of the Roman history is 
the .southern part of Judaea aud a small portion 
of the north of Arabia Petraea, extending north- 
west aud southeast from the Mediterranean to 
the western side of Mount Seir. Under the 
Maccabees, the Idumaeans were again subject- 
ed to Judaea (B.C. 129), and governed, under 
them, by prefects (GTpaTT]yot), who were very 
probably descended from the old princes of 
Edom; but the internal dissensions in the As- 1 
monaean family led at last to the establishment J 
of an Idummau dynasty ou the Jewish throne, j 
Vid. Axtipater, Nos. 3, 4, Herodes. The Ro- 
man writers of the Augustan age and later use 
Idumaea and Judaea as equivalent terms. Soon 
after the destruction of Jerusalem the name of 
Idumaea disappears from histor}% and is merged 
in that of Arabia. Both the old Edomites and 
the later Idumaeans were a commercial peo- 
ple, and carried on a great part of the traffic be- 
tween the East and the shores of the Mediter- 
ranean. 

Idyia ('IdvZa), daughter of Oceauus and Te- 
thys, aud wife of the Colchian king ^Eetes. 
Ierxe. Vid. Hiberxia. 

IetvE ('leraZ : 'lerlvog : now Jato), a town in 
the interior of Sicily, ou a mountain of the same 
name, southwest of Macella. 

[Igilgiu {'lyilyi/u : now Jigelli or Jigel), a 
city of Mauretauia Caesariensis, west of the 
River Ampsaga, betweeu the rivers Audus aud 
Gulus.] 

Igilium (now Giglio), a small island off the 
Etruscan coast, opposite Cosa. 

Ignatius ('lyvurtoc), oue of the apostolical 
fathers, was a bearer of the Apostle John, and 
succeeded Evodiua as bishop of Autioch in A.D. 
69. He was condemued to death by Trajan at 
Antioch, and was taken to Rome, where he was 
thrown to the wild beasts iu the amphitheatre. 
The date of his martyrdom is uncertain. Some 
place it iu 107, but others as late as 116. On 
his way from Autioch to Rome, Ignatius wrote 
several epistles in Creek to various churches. 
There are extant at present fifteen epistles 
ascribed to Jguatius, but of these only seven are 



considered to be genuine ; and even these seven 
are much interpolated. The ancient Syriac ver- 
sion of some of these epistles, which has been 
recently discovered, is free from many of the 
interpolations found in the present Greek text, 
and was evidently executed when the Greek 
text was in a state of greater purity than it is 
at present. The Greek text has been publish- 
ed in the Patres Apostolici by Cotelerius, Am- 
sterd., 1724, and by Jaeobson, Oxon., 1838 ; and 
the Syriac version, accompanied with the Greek 
text, by Cureton, Lond., 1849. 

Iguvium (Iguvlnus, Iguvinas, -atis : now Gub- 
bio or Eugubio), an important town in Umbria, 
on the southern slope of the Apennines. On a 
mountain in the neighborhood of this town was 
a celebrated temple of Jupiter (Zeus), iu the 
ruins of which were discovered, four centuries 
ago, seven brazen tables, covered with Umbrian 
inscriptions, and which are still preserved at 
Gubbio. These tables, frequently called the 
Eugubian Tables, contain more than one thou- 
sand Umbrian words, and are of great import- 
ance for a knowledge of the ancient languages 
of Italy. They are explained by Grotefend, Ru- 
dimenta Linguce Umbricce, &c, Hannov., 1835, 
seq., and by Lepsius, Inscriptions, Umbricce et 
Oscce, Lips., 1841. 

Ilaira ('IMstpa), daughter of Leucippus and 
Philodice, and sister of Phoebe. The two sis- 
ters are frequently mentioned by the poets un- 
der the name of Leucippidte. Both were car- 
ried off by the Dioscuri, and Ilaira became the 
wife of Castor. 

Ileroaones, Ilercaoxexses, or Illurgavo- 
xenses, a people iu Hispania Tarraconensis, on 
the western coast, between the Iberus and Mons 
Idubeda. Their chief town was Dertosa. 

Ilerda (now Lerida), a town of the Ilergetes 
in Hispania Tarraconensis, situated on a height 
above the River Sicoris (now Segre), which was 
here crossed by a stone bridge. It was after- 
ward a Roman colony, but in the time of Au- 
sonius had ceased to be a place of importance. 
It was here that Africanus and Petreius, the le- 
gates of Pompey, were defeated by Caesar (B.C. 
49). 

Ilergetes, a people in Hispania Tarraconen- 
sis, between the Iberus and the Pyrenees. 

Ilia or Rhea Silvia. Vid. Romulus. 

Ilict or Illice (now Elche), a town of the 
Contestant^ on the eastern coast of Hispania 
Tarraconensis, on the road from Carthago Nova 
to Valentia, was a colonia immunis. The mod- 
! era Elche lies at a greater distance from the 
coast than the ancient town. 

Iliexses, an ancient people in Sardixia. 

Ilioxa (T/uovtj), daughter of Priam and Hec- 
uba, wife of Polymnestor or Polymestor, king 
of the Thracian Chersouesus, to whom she bore 
a son Deipylus. At the beginning of the Trojan 
war her brother Polydorus was intrusted to her 
care, and she brought him up as her own son. 
For details, vid. Polydorus. Iliona was the 
name of one of the tragedies of Pacuvius. 
(Hor., Sat., it, 3, 61.) 

Ilioneus ('IXiovevg). 1. A son of Niobe, whom 
Apollo would have liked to save, because he was 
praying ; but the arrow was no longer under the 
control of the god. Vid. Niobe. — [2. A Trojan, 
son of Phorbas, slain in battle by Peneleus. — 
391 



ILIPA. 



ILLYRICUM. 



3. One of the companions of iEneas. — L A Tro- j 
jan warrior, slain by Diomedes.] 

Ilipa (now Pennaflor), a town in Hispania j 
Bastiea, on the right bank of the Baetis, which j 
was navigable to this place with small vessels. 

[Ilipuia ('1/uTTovha). 1. Called Magna, a 
city of Hispania Baetica, between the rivers 
Anas and Bsetis. — 2. L Minor (now Lepe di 
Honda), also in Hispania Baetica, belongrng to 
the district of Astigi.] 

Ilissds ('I/.igoos more rarely EDuogoc), a 
small river in Attica, rises on the northern 
slope of Mount Hymettus, receives the brook 
Eridanus near the Lyceum, outside the walls of 
Athens, then flows through the eastern side of 
Athens, and loses itself in the marshes in the 
Atheniau plain. The Ilissus is now usually dry, 
as its waters are drawn off to supply the city. 

Ilithyia (El?yidvia), also called Elithyia, Ile- 
thyia, or Eleutho, the goddess of birth, who 
came to the assistance of women in labor. 
"When she was kindly disposed, she furthered 
the birth ; but when she was angry, she pro- 
tracted the labor. In the Iliad the Ilithviae (in 
the plural) are called the daughters of Hera 
(Juno). But in the Odyssey and Hesiod, and 
in the later poets in general, there is only one 
goddess of this name. Ilithyia was the servant 
of Hera (Juno), and was employed by the latter 
to retard the birth of Hercules. Vid. Hercules. 
The worship of Ilithyia appears to have been 
first established among the Dorians in Crete, 
where she was believed to have been born in a 
cave in the territory of Cnosus. From thence 
her worship spread over Delos and Attica. Ac- 
cording to a Delian tradition, Ilithyia was not 
horn in Crete, but had come to Delos from the 
Hyperboreans, for the purpose of assisting Leto 
(Latona). In an ancient hymn attributed to 
Olen, which was sung in Delos, Ilithyia was 
called the mother of Eros (Love). It is proba- 
ble that Ilithyia was originally a goddess of the 
moon, and hence became identified with Arte- 
mis or Diana. The moon was supposed to ex- 
ercise great influence over growth in general, 
and consequently over that of children. 

Ilium. Vid,. Troas. 

Illiberis ('l?M6eptg). 1. (Now Tech), called 
Tichis or Techum by the Romans, a river in 
Gallia Narbonensis, in the territory of the Sar- 
dones, rises in the Pyrenees, and falls, after a 
short course, into the Mare Gallicum. — 2. (Now 
Elne), a town of the San tones, on the above- 
mentioned river, at the foot of the Pyrenees, 
was originally a place of importance, but after- 
ward sunk into insignificance. It was restored 
by Constantine, who changed its name into 
Helena, after that of his mother, whence the 
modern Elne. 

Illiturgis or Illiturgi (now Andujar), an 
important town of the Turduli in Hispania Tar- 
raconensis, situated on a steep rock near the 
Baetis, and on the road from Corduba to Cas- 
tulo: it was destroyed by Scipio B.C. 210, but 
was rebuilt, and received the name of Forum 
Julium. 

Illyricum or Illyris, more rarely Illyria 
(to 'llXvpiKov TAAvpi'c, 'YkAvpia). included, in 
its widest signification, all the land west of 
Macedonia and east of Italy and Raetia, extend- 
ing south as far as Epirus, and north as far as 
392 



the valleys of the Savus and Dravus, and the 
junction of these rivers with the Danube. This 
wide extent of country was inhabited by numer- 
ous Illyriau tribes, all of whom were more or 
less barbarous. They were probably of the 
same origin as the Thracians, but some Celts 
were mingled with them. The country was di- 
vided into two parts : 1. Illyris Barbara or 
Romana, the Roman province of Illyricum, ex- 
tended along the Adriatic Sea from Italy (Istria), 
from which it was separated by the Arsia, to 
the River Drilo, and was bounded on the east 
by Macedonia and Mcesia Superior, from which 
it was separated by the Drinus, and on the north 
by Pannonia, from which it was separated by 
the Dravus. It thus comprehended a part of 
the modern Croatia, the whole of Dalmatia, al- 
most the whole of Bosnia, and a part of Albania. 
It was divided in ancient times into three dis- 
tricts, according to the tribes by which it was 
inhabited : Iapydia, the interior of the country 
on the north, from the Arsia to the Tedanius 
(vid. Iapydes); Liburnia, along the coast from 
the Arsia to the Titius (vid. Liburni) ; and Dal- 
matia, south of Liburnia, along the coast from 
the Titius to the Drilo. Vid. Dalmatia. The 
Liburnians submitted at an early time to the 
Romans ; but it was not till after the conquest 
of the Dalmatians, in the reign of Augustus, that 
the entire country was organized as a R,oman 
province. From this time the Illyrians, and 
especially the Dalmatians, formed an important 
part of the Roman legions. — 2. Illyris Gr^ca, 
or Illyria proper, also called Epirus Nova, ex- 
tended from the Drilo, along the Adriatic, to the 
Ceraunian Mountains, which separated it from 
Epirus proper : it was bounded on the east by 
Macedonia. It thus embraced the greater part 
of the modern Albania. It was a mountainous 
country, but possessed some fertile land on the 
coast. Its principal rivers were the Aous, Ap- 
sus, Genusus, and Panyasus. In the interior 
was an important lake, the Lychnitis. On the 
coast there were the Greek colonies of Epidam- 
nus, afterward Dyrrhachium, and Apollonia. 
It was at these places that the celebrated Yia 
Egnatia commenced, which ran through Mace- 
donia to Byzantium. The country was inhab- 
ited by various tribes, Atintanes, Taulantii, 
Parthini, Dassaretje, &c. In early times they 
were troublesome and dangerous neighbors to 
the Macedonian kings. They were subdued by 
Philip, the father of Alexander the Great, who 
defeated and slew in battle their king Bardvlis, 
B.C. 359. After the death of Alexander the 
Great, most of the Illyrian tribes recovered 
their independence. At a later time, the injury 
which the Roman trade suffered from their pi- 
racies brought against them the arms of the re- 
public. The forces of their queen Teuta were 
easily defeated by the Romans, and she was 
obliged to purchase peace by the surrender of 
part of her dominions and the payment of an 
annual tribute, 229. The second Illyrian war 
was finished by the Romans with the same ease. 
It was commenced by Demetrius of Pharos, who 
was guardian of Pineus, the son of Agron, but 
he was conquered by the consul iEmilius Pau- 
lus, 219. Pineus was succeeded by Pleuratus, 
who cultivated friendly relations with the Ro- 
mans. His son Gentius formed an alliance 



1LUS. 



INDIA. 



with Perseus, king of Macedonia, against i 
Rome ; but he was conquered by the praetor 
L.Anicius, in the same year as Perseus, 168; 
whereupon Illvria, as well as Macedouia, be 
came subject to Rome. In the new division of 
the empire uuder Constantine, Illyneum form- 
ed one of the great provinces of the empire It 
was divided mio Illyricum Occidentals, which 
included UWricum proper, Pannonia, and Nori- 
cum, and Illyricum Orientals, which compre- 
hended Daek, Moasia, Macedonia, and Thrace. 

Ilus('Iaoc). 1. Son of Dardanus by Batea, 
the daughter of Teucer. Ilus died without is- 
sue, and left his kingdom to his brother, Ench- 
thouius.— 2. Son of Troa and Callirrhoe, grand- 
son of Erichthouius, and great-grandson of Dar- 
danus ; wheuce he is called Dardanides. He 
was the father of Laomedon and the grandfather 
of Priam. He was believed to be the founder 
of Iliou, which was also called Troy, after his 
father. Jupiter (Zeus) gave him the palladium, 
a statue of three cubits high, with its feet close 
together, holding a spear in its right hand, and a 
distaff in its left, and promised that as long as 
it remained in Troy, the city should be safe. 
The tomb of Ilus was shown in the neighbor- 
hood of Troy. — 8. Son of Mermerus, and grand- 
son of Jason and Medea. He lived at Ephyra, 
between Elis and Olympia ; and when Ulysses 
came to him to fetch the poison for his arrows, 
Hus refused it, from fear of the vengeance of 
the gods. — [4. A Latin warrior, slain by Pallas, 
son of Evander.] 

Ilva. • Vid. ./Ethalia. 

Ilvates, a people in Liguria, south of the Po, 
in the modern MorUferrat. 

Imachara (Imacharensis : now Maccara), a 
town in Sicily, in the Herocan Mountains. 

[Lmanuentius, king of the Trinobantes, slain 
by Cassivelaunus.] 

[Imaon, a Latin warrior, whom Halesus pro- 
tected when attacked by Pallas, sou of Evander.] 

Imaus (to "l/uaov opoc), the name of a great 
mountain range of Asia, is one of those terms 
which the ancient geographers appear to have 
used indefinitely, for want of exact knowledge. 
In its most definite application, it appears to 
mean the western part of the Himalaya, between 
the Paropamisus and the Emodi Montes ; but 
when it is applied to some great chain, extend- 
ing much further to the north, and dividing 
Scythia into two parts, Scythia intra Imaum 
and Scythia extra Imaum, it must either be un- 
derstood to mean the modern Moussour or Al- 
tai Mountains, or else some imaginary range, 
which canuot be identified with any actually 
existing mountains. 

Imbrasus ( 'l/f'.ouffoc), a river in the island of 
Samos, formerly called Tarthenius, flowing into 
the sea not far from the city of Samos. The 
celebrated temple of Juno (Hera) (Hpacov) 
stood near it, ami it gave the epithet of Imbra- 
sia both to Juno (Hera) and to Diana (Artemis). 

[Imbrils ('IfiCptoc), son of Mentor d*f Pedasus 
in Caria, married au illegitimate daughter of 
Priam (named Medesicaste), and aided Priam 
agaiust the G reeks : he was slain by Teucer.] 

Imbros { v l/j.Cpoc : "IfiBpcog : now Embro or Im- 
brus), au island in the north of the iEgean Sea, 
near the Thracian Chersonesus, about eighteen 
miles southeast of Samothrace, and about twen- 



ty-two northeast of Lemnos. It is about twen- 
ty-five miles in circumference, and is hilly, but 
contains many fertile valleys. Imbros, like the 
neighboring island of Samothrace, was in an- 
cient times one of the chief seats of the wor- 
ship of the Cabiri and Mercury (Hermes). There 
was a town of the same name on the east of 
the island, of which there are still some ruins. 

Inachis ('Ivaxk), a surname of Io, the daugh- 
ter of Inachus. The goddess Isis is also called 
Inachis, because she was identified with Io ; 
and sometimes Inachis is used as synonymous 
with an Argive or Greek woman. Inacllides in 
the same way was used as a name of Epaphus, 
a grandson of Inachus, and also of Perseus, be- 
cause he was born at Argos, the city of Inachus. 

Inachus ("Ivaxoc), son of Oceanus and Tethys, 
aud father of Phoroneus and iEgialeus, to whom 
others add Io, Argus Panoptes, and Phegeus or 
Pegeus. He was the first king and the most 
ancient hero of Argos, whence, the country is 
frequently called the land of Inachus ; and he 
is said to have given his name to the River Ina- 
chus. The ancients made several attempts to 
explain the stories about Inachus : sometimes 
they looked upon him as a native of Argos, who, 
after the flood of Deucalion, led the Argives 
from the mountains into the plains ; and some- 
times they regarded him as the leader of au 
Egyptian or Libyan colony, which settled on 
the banks of the Inachus. 

Inachus ('Ivaxoc). 1. (Now Planitza or Zeria), 
the chief river in Argolis, rises in the mountain 
Lyrceus, on the borders of Arcadia, flows in a 
southeasterly direction, receives near Argos the 
Charadrus, and falls into the Sinus Argolicus 
south of Argos. — 2. [Now Krilceli, or, according 
to Leake, Ariadha], a river in Acarnania, which 
rises in Mount Lacmon, in the range of Pindus, 
and falls into the Achelous. 

Inarime. Vid. ^Enaria. 

Inaros {'Ivdpcoc, occasionally "Ivapog), son of 
Psammitichus, a chief of some Libyan tribes 
to the west of Egypt, commenced hostilities 
against the Persians, which ended in a revolt of 
the whole of Egypt, B.C. 461. In 460 Inaros 
called in the Athenians, who, with a fleet of 
two hundred galleys, were then off Cyprus : the 
ships sailed up to Memphis, and, occupying two 
parts of the town, besieged the third. In the 
same year Inaros defeated the Persians in a 
great battle, in which Achsemenes, the brother 
of the king Artaxerxes, was slain. But a new 
army, uuder a new commander, Megabyzus, 
was more successful. The Egyptians and their 
allies were defeated ; and Inaros was taken by 
treachery and crucified, 455. 

India (rj 'Ivdta : 'IvSog, Indus) was a name 
used by the Greeks and Romans, much as the 
modern term East Indies, to describe the whole 
of the southeast part of Asia, to the east, south, 
and southeast of the great ranges of mountains 
now called the Soliman and Himalaya Mount- 
ains, including the two peninsulas of Hindus- 
tan, and of Burmah, Cochin- China, Siam, and 
Malacca, and also the islands of the Indian Ar- 
chipelago. There is ample evidence that com- 
mercial intercourse was carried on, from a very 
early time, between the western coast of Hindus- 
tan and the western parts of Asia, by the way of 
the Persian Gulf, the Euphrates, and across the 
393 



INDIBILIS. 



INDUS. 



Syrian Desert to Phoenicia, and also by way 
of the Red Sea and Idunaaea, both to Egypt and 
to Phoenicia ; and so on from Phoenicia to Asia 
Minor and Europe. The direct acquaintance 
of the western nations with India dates from 
the reign of Darius, the son of Hystaspes, who 
added to the Persian empire a part of its north- 
west regions, perhaps only as far as the Indus, 
certainly not beyond the limits of the Punjab ; 
and the slight knowledge of the country thus 
obtained by the Persians was conveyed to the 
Greeks through the inquiries of travellers, es- 
pecially Herodotus, and afterward by those 
Greeks who resided for some time in the Per- 
sian empire, such as Ctesias, who wrote a spe- 
cial work on India ('Ivdinu). The expedition of 
Alexander into India first brought the Greeks 
into actual contact with the country ; but the 
conquests of Alexander only extended within 
Scinde and the Punjab, as far as the River Hy- 
phasis, down which he sailed into the Indus, 
and down the Indus to the sea. The Greek 
king of Syria, Seleucus Nicator, crossed the 
Hyphasis, and made war with the Prasii, a peo- 
ple dwelling on the banks of the upper Ganges, 
he afterward sent ambassador 



to whom ne afterward sent amoassadors, na 

liied Megasthenes and Daimachus, who lived j Romulus, and others. Thus iEneas, 
.for several years at Palibothra, the capital of j disappearance on the banks of the 



of Indibilis received from P. Scipio when they 
fell into his hands, the two brothers deserted 
the Carthaginian cause, and joined Scipio in 
209 with all the forces of their nation. But in 
206, the illness and reported death of Scipio 
gave them hopes of shaking off the yoke of 
Rome, and they excited a general revolt not 
only among their own subjects, but the neigh- 
boring Celtiberian tribes also. They were de- 
feated by Scipio, and upon sueing for forgiveness 
were pardoned. But when Scipio left Spain in 
the next year (205), they again revolted. The 
Roman generals whom Scipio had left in Spain 
forthwith marched against them ; Indibilis was 
slain in battle, and Mandonius was taken soon 
afterward and put to death. 

Indicetae or Indigetes, a people in the north- 
east corner of Hispania Tarraconensis, close 
upon the Pyrenees. Their chief town was Em- 
porium. 

Indicus Oceanus. Vid. Erythrjsum Mare. 
Indigetes, the name of those indigenous 
gods and heroes at Rome, who once lived on 
earth as mortals, and were worshipped after 
their death as gods, such as Janus, Picus, 
Faunus, iEneas, Evander, Hercules, Latinus, 

after his 
Nurnicus, 



the Prasii, and had thus the opportunity of ob- • became a deus Indiges, pater Indiges, or Jupit 



taining much information respecting the parts 
of India about the Ganges. Megasthenes com- 
posed a work on India, which appears to have 
been the chief source of all the accurate in- 
formation contained in the works of later writ- 
ers. After the death of Seleucus Nicator, B.C. 
281, the direct intercourse of the Western na- 
tions with India, except in the way of com- 
merce, ceased almost entirely ; and whatever 
new information the later writers obtained was 
often very erroneous. Meanwhile, the founda- 
tion of Alexandrea had created an extensive 
commerce between India and the West, by way 
of the Indian Ocean, the Red Sea, and Egypt, 



Indiges; and in like manner, Romulus became 
Quirinus, and Latinus Jupiter Latiaris. The 
Indigetes are frequently mentioned together 
with the Lares and Penates ; and many writers 
connect the Indigetes with those divinities to 
whom a share in the foundation of the Latin 
and Roman state is ascribed, such as Mars, 
j Venus, Vesta, (ire. 

I Indus or Sindus ('Ivdoc : now Indus, Sind), a 
! great river of India, rises in the table-land of 
, TJiibet, north of the Himalaya Mountains, flows 

nearly parallel to the great bend of that chain 
j on its northern side, till it breaks through the 

chain a little east of Attock, in the northwest 



which made the Greeks better acquainted with j corner of the Punjab, and then flows southwest 
the western coast of the peuinsula, and extended j through the great plain of the Punjab into the 
their knowledge further into the Eastern seas ; j Erythrseum Mare (now Indian Ocean), which 
but the information they thus obtained of the | it enters by several mouths, two according to 
countries beyond Cape Comorin was extremely ! the earlier Greek writers, six according to the 
vague and scanty. Another channel of inform- ! later. Its chief tributaries are the Cophen (now 
ation, however, was opened, during this period, Gabul), which enters it from the northwest at 
by the establishment of the Greek kingdom of Attock, and the Acesines on the east side. Vid. 
Bactria, to which a considerable part of North- j Hyphasis. Like the Nile, the Indus overflows 
ern India appears to have been subject. The | its banks, but with a much less fertilizing re- 



later geographers made two great divisions of 
India, which are separated by the Ganges, and 
are called India intra Gangem and India extra 



suit, as the country about its lower course is 
for the most part a sandy desert, and the de- 
posit it brings down is much less rich than that 



Gangem, the former including the peninsula of \ of the Nile. The erroneous notions of the early 
the Burmese peninsula. ! Greeks respecting the connection between the 



Hindustan, the latter 
They were acquainted 



with the division of the ! southeastern parts of the continents of Africa 



people of Hindustan into castes, of which they 
enumerate seven. It is not necessary, . for our 
object, to mention the other particulars which 
they relate concerning India and its people. 

Indibilis and Mandonius, two brothers, and 
chiefs of the Spanish tribe of the llergetes, who 
played an important part in the war between 
the Romans and Carthaginians in Spain during 
the second Punic war. For some years they 
were faithful allies of the Carthaginians; but 
in consequence of the generous treatment 
which the wife of Mandonius and the daughters 
394 



and Asia, led to a confusion between the Indus 
and the Nile ; but this and other mistakes were 
corrected by the voyage of Alexander's fleet 
down the Hyphasis and the Indus. The an- 
cient name of India was derived from the na- 
tive name of the Indus (now Sind). 

Indus ('lvdoc: now Dollomon-Chai), a con- 
siderable river of Asia Minor, rising in the 
southwest of Phrygia, and flowing through the 
district of Cibyratis and the southeastern corner 
of Caria into the Mediterranean, opposite to 
! Rhodes. 



INDUTIOMARUS. 



10. 



Indutiomarus or iNDUCiOMARUS, one of the j of the same name. — 2. A town in Latium, on 
leading chiefs of the Treviri in Gaul. As lie the Via Latiua, and at the junction of the Ca- 

the Liris, whence its inhabitants are 



was opposed to the Romaus, Caesar induced 
the leading ma of the nation to side with Cin- 
getorix, the sou-iu-law but rival of Iudutiomarus, 
B.C. 54. Iudutiomarus, in consequence, took up 
arms against the Romans, but was defeated and 
slain by Lab ion us. 

Inessa. Vid. JSt.va, No. 2. 
Inferi, the gods of the Nether World, m 
contradistinction from the Superi, or the gods 



sinus with 

called Interamnates Lirinates. It was made a 
Roman colony B.C. 312, but subsequently sunk 
into insignificenee. 

Intercatia, an important town of the Vacecei 
in Hispauia Tarraconeusis, on the road from As- 
turica to Ca3saraugusta. 

Lntercisa or Petra Pertlsa, a town in Um- 
bria, so called because a road was here cut 



of heaven. In (J reek the Inferi are called oi through the rocks by order of Vespasian. An 
kutu, oi x^oviot, oi vtto yalav, oi tvepde, or oi ( ancient inscription on the spot still commem- 
viTtvepde -deoi ; and the Superi, oi avcj, vixarot orates this work. 

and ovpdvLOL. But the word Inferi is also fre- Internum Mare, the Mediterranean Sea, ex- 
queutly used to designate the dead, in contra- 1 tended on the west from the Straits of Hercu- 
distiuctiou from those living upon the earth ; so \ les, which separated it from the Atlantic, to 



that apud inferos is equivalent to <; in Hades," 
or "iu the lower world.'' The Inferi therefore 



the coasts of Syria and Asia Minor ou the east. 
In the northeast it was usually supposed to 



comprise all the. inhabitants of the lower^ world, terminate at the Hellespont. From the Straits 
the gods, viz., Hades or Pluto, his wife Perse- j of Hercules to the furthest shores of Syria it is 



phone (Proserpina), the Erinnyes or Furies, and 
others, as well as the souls of departed men. The 
gods of the lower world are treated of in separate 
articles. 

Inferum Mare. Vid. Tyrrhenum Mare. 

Ing^evones. Vid. Germania, p. 327, a, 

Ingauni, a people iu Liguria, ou the coast, 
whose chief town was Albium Ixgaunum. 

[Ingena (now Avranches), a town of the Ab- 
rincatui in Gallia Lugdunensis.] 

Ingenues, one of the Thirty Tyrants, was gov- 
ernor of Paunonia when Valerian set out upon 
his campaign against the Persians, A.D. 258. He 
assumed the purple iu his province, but was de- 
feated and slain by Gallieuus. 

[Inguiomerus, brother of Sigimer and of Ar- 
minius : he had been the adherent of Rome, 
but afterward joined the party of Armiuius. 
After having served for some time with them, 
envy of the fame or power of Armiuius led him 
to abandon the cause of the Cheruscans : at the 
head of his clients he deserted to the Suevians, 
with whom he was defeated by Armiuius.] 

Ino ('lvu>), daughter of Cadmus and Harmo- 
nia, and wife of Athamas. For details, vid. 
Athamas. 

Inous, a name both of Melicertes and of Pake- 
mon, because they were the sons of Ino. 

Insubres, a Gallic people, who crossed the 
Alps, and settled in Gallia Transpadana, iu the 
north of Italy. Their chief town was Medio- 
lanum. Next to the Boii, they were the most 
powerful and warlike of the Gallic tribes in Cisal- 
pine Gaul. They were conquered by the Romans 
shortly before the eommencement of the second 
Punie war. 

Intapher.m.x {[. 7anCj>vijc), one of the seven 
conspirators against the two Magi in Persia, 
B.C. 522. He was afterward put to death by 
Darius. 

Intemelii, a people iu Liguria, on the coast, 
whose chief town was Albium Intemelium. 



j two thousand miles in length ; and, including 
the islands, it occupies an area of seven hun- 
! dred and thirty-four thousand square miles. It 
| was called by the Romans Mare Internum or 
i Intestinum ; by the Greeks, ?) too dd/iarra or ij 
| kvrbg -&d?.arra, or more fully, r) evrdg 'HpaKAet- 
| uv OTn?,Cjv -d-uAaT-a, and by Herodotus qde /) 
j SuAaTTa ; and from its washing the coasts both 
! of Greece and Italy, it was also called both by 
I Greeks and Romaus Our Sea (?/ rjjxerepa -&dAar- 
ra, ?/ icad' fyuuc ^uAarra, Mare Xostrum). The 
term Mare Mediterraneum is not used by the 
best classical writers, and occurs first in Soli- 
1 nus. Most of the ancients believed that the 
j Mediterranean received its waters from the At- 
\ lautic, and poured them through the Hellespont 
; aud the Propontis into the Euxine ; but others, 
1 on the contrary, maintained that the waters 
i came from the Euxine into the Mediterranean, 
j The ebb aud flow of the tide are perceptible in 
only a few parts of the Mediterranean, such as in 
J the Syrtes on the coast of Africa, in the Adriatic, 
<fec. The different parts of the Mediterranean are 
called by different names, which are spoken of in 
separate articles. Vid. Mare Tyerhenum or In- 
ferum, Adria or M. Adriaticum or M. SuPERU3r, 
M. Siculum, M. JEg^eum, &c. 

[Interocrea (now Introdoco), a town of the 
Sabines in the interior of Samnium.] 

Ixtonsus, the Unshorn, a surname of Apollo 
and Bacchus, in allusion to the eternal youth of 
these gods, since the Greek youths allowed their 
hair to grow until they attained manhood. 
Inui Castrum. Vid. Castrum, No. 1. 
Inycum ("Ivvkov or -oc : 'IvvkIv og : now Calda 
Bellota ?), a small town in the south of Sicily, not 
far from Selinus, on the River Hypsas. 

Io ('Id)), daughter of Inachus, the first king 
of Argos, or, according to others, of Iasus or 
Piren. Jupiter (Zeus) loved Io, but, on account 
of Juno's (Hera) jealousy, he metamorphosed 
her into a white heifer. The goddess, who 



Interamna (Interamnas), the name of sev-jwas aware of the change, obtained the heifer 
era! towns in Italy, so called from their lying ! from Jupiter (Zeus), and placed her under the 
between two streams. 1. (Now Tend), an an- j care of Argus Panoptes ; but Jupiter (Zeus) 
cient municipium in Umbria, situated on the ! sent Mercury (Hermes) to slay Argus and de- 
Nar, and surrounded by a canal flowing into j liver Io. Vid. Argus. Juno (Hera) then tor- 
this river, whence its inhabitants were called ; mented Io with a gad-fly, and drove her in a 
Interamnnt-.-XorUs. It was the birth-place of ! state of phrensy from land to land over the 
the historian Tacitus, as well as of the emperor | whole earth, until at length she found rest on 

395 



IOBATES. 



IONIA. 



the banks of the Nile. Here she recovered her at the period of his last illness. Those writers 
original form, and bore a son to Jupiter (Zeus) who adopt the idea of the king having been 
called Epapbus. Vid. Epaphus. This is the poisoned, represent Iollas as the person who ac- 
cornmon story, which appears to be very an- tually administered the fatal draught. — 2. Of Bi- 
cient, since Homer constantly gives the epithet ' thynia, a writer on materia medica, flourished in 
of Argiphordes (the slayer of Argus) to Mercury the third century B.C. 

(Hermes). The wanderings of Io were very Iox (*lcov). 1. The fabulous ancestor of the 
celebrated in antiquity, and were extended and Ionians, is described as the son of Apollo by 
embellished with the increase of geographical Creusa, the daughter of Erechtheus and wife 
knowledge. Of these there is a full account in of Xuthus. The most celebrated story about 
the Prometheus of JSschylus. The Bosporus Ion is the one which forms the subject of the 
is said to have derived its name from her swim- Ion of Euripides. Apollo had visited Creusa in 
ming across it. According to some traditions a cave below the Propylaea, at Athens ; and 
Io married Telegonus, king of Egypt, and was when she gave birth to a son, she exposed him 
afterward identified with Isis. The legend of j in the same cave. The god, however, had the 
Io is difficult to explain. It appears that Io j child conveyed to Delphi, where he was edu- 
was identical with the moon, which is prob- ; cated by a priestess. Some time afterward 
ably signified by her being represented as a wo- Xuthus and Creusa came to consult the oracle 
man, with the horns of a heifer. Her connection about the means of obtaining an heir. They 
with Egypt seems to be an invention of later received for answer that the first human being 
times, and was probably suggested by the resem- which Xuthus met on leaving the temple should 
blance which was found to exist between the Ar- ' he his son. Xuthus met Ion, and acknowledged 
give Io and the Egyptian Isis. I him as his son ; but Creusa, imagining him to 

Iobates, king of Lycia. Vid. Bellerophox. ! be a son of her husband by a former mistress, 
Iol. Vid. C-esaeea, No. 4. ! caused a cup to be presented to the youth, 

Iolaexses. Vid. Iolaus. which was filled with the poisonous blood of a 

Iolacs ('16/Mog) son of Iphicles and Autome- dragon. However, her object was discovered, 
ousa. Iphicles was the half-brother of Hercu- for as Ion, before drinking, poured out a liba- 
les, and Iolaus was the faithful companion and tion to the gods, a pigeon which drank of it 
charioteer of the hero. Vid, Hercules. He died on the spot. Creusa thereupon fled to the 
assisted Hercules in slaying the Lernasan Hy- j altar of the god. Iox dragged her away, and 
dra. After Hercules had instituted the Olvni- \ was on the point of killing her, when a priestess 
pic games, Iolaus won the victory with the interfered, explained the mystery, and showed 
horses of his master. Hercules sent him to I that Ion was the son of Creusa. Mother and 
Sardinia at the head of his sons whom he had son thus became reconciled, but Xuthus was 
by the daughters of Thespius. He introduced not let into the secret. Among the inhabitants 
civilization among the inhabitants of that island, of the ^Egialus, i. e., the northern coast of Pel- 
and was worshipped by them. From Sardinia oponnesus, who were Ionians, there was an- 
he went to Sicily, and then returned to Hercu- i other tradition current. Xuthus, when expelled 
les shortly before the death of the latter. After I from Thessaly, came to the iEgialus. After 
the death of the hero, Iolaus was the first who his death Ion was on the point of marching 
offered sacrifices to him as a demigod. Ac- against the iEgialeaus, when their king Seli- 
cording to Pausanias, Iolaus died in Sardinia, nus gave him his daughter Helice in marriage, 
-whereas, according to others, he was buried On the death of Selinus, Ion succeeded to the 
in the tomb of his grandfather, Amphitryon, j throne, and thus the JEgialeans received the 
His descendants in Sardinia were called 'Io/la- name of Ionians, and the town of Helice was 
elg and lolaensis. Vid. Sardinia. Iolaus, after built in honor of Ion's wife. Other traditions 
his death, obtained permission from the gods represent Ion as king of Athens between the 
of the nether world to come to the assistance of • reigns of Erechtheus and Cecrops ; for it is 
the children of Hercules. He slew Eurystheus, 1 said that his assistance was called in by the 
and then returned to the shades. i Athenians in their war with the Eleusinians, 

Iolcus ('lu/.Kog, Ep. 'lau?>Koc, Dor. "Ia/Uof : that he conquered Eumolpus, and then became 
'Iij/.Kiog), an ancient town in Magnesia in Thes- ; king of Athens. He there became the father 
saly, at the top of the Pegasaean Gulf, seven ' of four sons, Celeon, ./Egicores, Argades, and 
stadia from the sea. It is said to have been ; Hoples, whose names were given to the four 
founded by the mythical Cretheus, and to have ! Athenian classes. After his death he was buri- 
been colonized by Minyans from Orchomenus. j ed at Potamus. — 2. Of Chios, son of Orthomenes, 
It was celebrated in mythology as the residence ! was a celebrated tragic poet. He went to 
of Pelias and J ason, and as the place from which Athens when young, aud there enjoyed the society 
the Argonauts sailed in quest of the golden of iEsehylus and Cimon. The number of his 
fleece. At a later time it fell into decay, and its tragedies is variously stated at twelve, thirty, 
inhabitants were removed to the neighboring and forty. We have the titles and a few frag- 
town of Demetrias, which was founded by Dem- ! ments of eleven. Ion also wrote other kinds of 
etrius Poliorcetes. j poetry, and prose works both in history and phi- 

Iole ('I6Z77), daughter of Eurytus of OZchalia, losophy. [The fragments of his tragedies are 
was beloved by Hercules. For details, vid. p. 1 contained in Wagner's Fragm. Trag. Grcec, p. 21 
359, a. After the death of Hercules, she married j -36.]— 3. Of Ephesus, a rhapsodist in the time 
his son Hyllus. j f Socrates, from whom one of Plato's dialogues 

Iollas or Iolaus ('WJ.ag or 'l6/,aog). 1. Son 1 is named, 
of Antipater, and brother of Cassander, king of Ionia ('luvia : ltjv£^) and Idxis (Rom. poet), 
Macedonia. He was cup-bearer to Alexander a district on the western coast of Asia Minor 
396 



IONIA. 

eo called from the Ionian Greeks who colonized 
it at a time earlier than any distinct historical 
records. The mythical account of "the great 
Ionic migration" relates that in consequence 
of the disputes betweeu the sons of Codrus, 
king of Athens, about the succession to his gov- 
ernment, his younger sons, Neleus and Andro- 
clus, resolved to seek a new home beyond the 
^Egean Sea. Attica was at the time overpeo- 
pled by numerous exiles, whom the great rev- 
olution, known as " the return of the Heracli- 
dse," had driven out of their own states, the 
chief of whom were the Ionians who had been 
expelled from Peloponnesus by the Dorian in- 
vaders. A large portion of this superfluous 
population went forth as Athenian colonists, 
under the leadership of Androclus and Neleus, 
aud of other chieftains of other races, and set- 
tled on that part of the western shores of Asia 
Minor, which formed the coast of Lydia and 
part of Caria, ;iud also in the adjacent islands 
of Chios aud Samos, and in the Cyclades. The 
mythical chronology places this great move- 
ment one hundred and forty years after the 
Trojan war, or sixty years after the return of 
the Heiaclidoe, that is, in B.C. 1060, or 1044, 
according to the two chief dates imagined for 
the Trojan war. Passiug from mythology to 
history, the earliest authentic records show us 
the existence of twelve great cities on the above- 
named coast, claiming to be (though some of 
them only partially) of Ionic origin, and all 
united into one confederacy, similar to that of 
the twelve ancieDt Ionian cities on the northern 
coast of the Peloponnesus. The district they 
possessed formed a narrow strip of coast, ex- 
tending between, and somewhat beyond, the 
mouths of the rivers Maoander on the south, 
aud Hermus on the north. The names of the 
twelve cities goiug from south to north, were 
Miletus, Mvus, Priene, Samos (city and island), 
Ephesus, Colophon, Lebeuus, Teos, Erythr^e, 
Chios (city and island), Clazomen/e, and Pho- 
clea ; the first three on the coast of Caria, 
the rest on that of Lydia: the city of Smyrna, 
which lay within this district, but was of ^Eolic 
origin, was afterward (about B.C. 700) added 
to the Ionian confederacy. The common sanc- 
tuary of the league was the Pauionium (naviu- 
vlov), a sanctuary of Neptune (Poseidon) Heli- 
comus, on the northern side of the promontory 
of Mycale, opposite to Samos ; and here was 
held the great national assembly (rravrj-yvpLg) 
of the confederacy, called Panionia (■navLuvia : 
vid. Diet, of Aniif/., s. v.). It is very import- 
ant to observe that the inhabitants of these 
cities were very far from being exclusively 
and purely of toman descent. The traditions 
of the original a -Ionization and the accounts 
of the historians agree iu representing them 
as peopled by a great mixture, not only of 
Hellenic races, but also of these with the earlier 
inhabitants, such as Carians, Leleges, Lydians, 
Cretans, and Pelasgians ; their dialects, Herodo- 
tus expressly tells us, were very different, and 
nearly all of them were founded on the sites 
of pre existing native settlements. The reli- 
gious rites, also, which the Greeks of Ionia ob- 
served, in addition to their national worship of 
Neptune (Poseidon), were borrowed in part 
from the native communities; such were the 



IONIA. 

worship of Apollo Didymams at Branchidae, 
! near Miletus, of Diaua (Artemis) at Ephesus, 
aud of Apollo Clarius at Colophon. All these 
facts point to the conclusion that the Greek 
colonization of this coast was effected, not by 
one, but by successive emigrations from different 
states, but chiefly of the Ionic race. The cen- 
tral position of this district, its excellent har- 
bors, and the fertility of its plains, watered by 
the Maeander, the Cayster, aud the Hermus, 
combined with the energetic character of the 
Ionian race to confer a high degree of prosper- 
ity upon these cities ; and it was not long before 
they began to send forth colonies to many 
places on the shores of the Mediterranean aud 
the Euxine, and even to Greece itself. During the 
rise of the Lydian empire, the cities of Ionia 
preserved their independence until the reign of 
Croesus, w r ho subdued those on the main land, 
but relinquished his design of attacking the 
islands. When Cyrus had overthrown Crcesus, 
he sent his general Harpagus to complete the 
conquest of the Ionic Greeks, B.C. 557. Under 
the Persian rule they retained their political 
organization, subject to the government of the 
Persian satraps, and of tyrants who were set up 
in single cities, but they were required to render 
tribute and military service to the king. In 
B.C. 500 they revolted from Darius Hystaspis, 
under the leadership of Histi^eus. the former 
tyrant of Miletus, and his brother-in-law Aris- 
tagoras, and supported by aid from the Athe- 
nians. The Ionian army advanced as far as 
Sardis, which they took and burned, but they 
were driven back to the coast, and defeated 
near Ephesus, B.C. 499. The re-conquest of 
Ionia by the Persians was completed by the 
taking of Miletus in 496, and the Ionians were 
compelled to furnish ships, and to serve as sol- 
diers in the two expeditions against Greece. 
After the defeat of Xerxes, the Greeks carried 
the war to the coasts of Asia, and effected the 
liberation of Ionia by the victories of Mycale 
(479) and of the Eurymedon (469). In 387 the 
peace of Antalcidas restored Ionia to Persia ; 
and after the Macedonian conquest, it formed 
part, successively, of the kingdom of Pergamus, 
and of the Roman province of Asia. For the 
history of the several cities, see the respective 
articles. In no country inhabited by the Hel- 
lenic race, except at Athens, were the refine- 
ments of civilization, the arts, and literature, 
more highly cultivated than in Ionia. The rest- 
less energy and free spirit of the Ionic race, 
the riches gained by commerce, and the neigh- 
borhood of the great seats of Asiatic civilization, 
combined to advance with rapidity the intel- 
lectual progress and the social development of 
its people ; but these same influences, unchecked 
by the rigid discipline of the Doric race, or the 
simple earnestness of the iEolic, imbued their 
social life with luxury and licence, and invested, 
their works of genius with the hues of enchant- 
ing beauty at the expense of severe good 
taste and earnest purpose. Out of the long 
list of the authors and artists of Ionia, we may 
mention Mimnermus of Colophon, the first poet 
of the amatory elegy; Anacreon of Teos, who 
sang of love aud wine to the music of the lyre ; 
Thales of Miletus, Anaxagoras of Clazomena?, 
and several other early philosophers ; the early 
397 



IONIUM KAEE. 



IPHICRATES. N 



annalists, Cadmus, Diooysius, and Heeateeus, 
all of Miletus ; aud, iu the fine arts, besides 
being the home of that exquisitely beautiful 
order of architecture, the Ionic, and possess- 
ing many of the most magnificent temples in 
the -world, Ionia was the native countiy of 
that refined school of painting, which boasted 
the names of Zeuxis, Apelles, and Parrha- 
sius. The most flourishing period in the his- 
tory of Ionia is that during -which it -was subject 
to Persia ; but its prosperity lasted till the 
decline of the Roman empire, under -which its 
cities were among the chief resorts of the cel- 
ebrated teachers of rhetoric and philosophy. 
The important place "which some of the chief 
cities of Ionia occupy in the early history of 
Christianity is attested bv the Acts of the Apos- 
tles, and the Epistles of" St. Paul to the Ephe- 
sians, and of St. John to the seven churches of 
Asia. 

Ioxium Make ('lovioc ttovtoc, 'loviov Tre/.ayoc, 
'IovItj -d-dz-arTa, 'loviog rropoc), a part of the 
Mediterranean Sea between Italy and Greece, 
was south of the Adriatic, and began on the 
west at Hydruntura in Calabria, and on the east 
at Oricus in Epirus. or at the Ceraunian Mount- 
ains. In more ancient times the Adriatic was 
called 'lovioc fii'xoc or 'lovioc koIttoc ; while at a 
later time the Ionium Mare itself was included 
in the Adriatic. In its widest signification, the 
Ionium Mare included the Mare Sicv.lvm, Creti- 
cum, and Icarium. Its name was usually de- 
rived by the ancients frorn the wanderings of 
Io, but it was more probably so called from the 
Ionian colonies, which settled in Cephallenia 
and the other islands off the western coasts of 
Greece. 

[Iopas, a bard at the court of Queen Dido, 
who is represented by Virgil as siuging at the 
entertainment given by the queen to JEneas.] 

Iophox ('loduv). son of Sophocles by Xicos- 
trate, was a distinguished tragic poet. He 
brought out tragedies during the life of his 
father, and was still flourishing B.C. 405, the 
year in which Aristophanes brought out the 
Frogs. For the celefc-ated story of his undutiful 
charge against his father, vid, Sophocles. 

[Ios (Toe, now JHio), a small island in the clus- 
ter of the Sporades, south of Naxos, said to have 
contained the tomb of Homer.] 

[Ioxus (lo£oc), son of Melanippus, grandson 
of Theseus, leader of a colony to Caria.j 

[Ipheus ('losvc), a Lycian warrior, slain by 
Patroclus.] 

[Iphiaxassa ('loidvacca). 1. Daughter of Pros- 
tus. Vid, Prgetus. — 2. Daughter of Agamem- 
non and Clyteemuestra, same as Iphigexia.] 

Iphias ('loiuc), i. e., Evadne, a daughter of 
Iphis, and wife of Capaneus. 

Iphicles, or Iphiclus ('IpiK/jc, 'lain/.oc, or 
'Ioikasvc). 1. Son of Amphitryon and Alcmene 
of Thebes, was one night younger than his 
half-brother Hercules. He was first married 
to Automedusa, the daughter of Alcathous, by 
whom he became the father of Iolaus, and after- 
ward to the youngest daughter of Creon. He 
accompanied Hercules on several of his expedi- 
tions, aud also took part in the Calvdonian hunt. 
He fell in battle against the sons of Hippocoon, 
pr, according to another account, was wounded 
m the battle against the Molionidse, and was ear- 
398 



ried to Pheneus, where he died. — 2. Son of Thes- 
I tius by Laophonte, or Deidamia, or Eurythemis, 
or Leucippe. He took part in the Calydonian 
hunt and the expedition of the Argonauts. — 3. 
Son of Phylacus, and grandson of Deion and 
I Clymene, or son of Cephalus and Clymene, the 
daughter of Minyas. He was married to Dio- 
media or Astyoche, and was the father of Po- 
I darces and Protesilaus. He was also one of 
j the Argonauts ; and he possessed large herds 
I of oxen, which he gave to the seer Melampus. 
; He was also celebrated for his swiftness in run- 
! ning. 

IpzncEATEs (IpiKpurrjc), the famous Athenian 
' general, was the son of a shoemaker. He dis- 
: tinguished himself at an early age by his gal- 
lantry in battle ; and in B.C. 394, when he was 
i only twenty-five years of age, he was appointed 
; by the Athenians to the command of the forces 
which they sent to the aid of the Boeotians 
,' after the battle of Coronea. In 393 he com- 
manded the Athenian forces at Corinth, and at 
the same time introduced an important im- 
provement in military tactics, the formation of 
a body of targeteers (7re?~aaTa'i), possessing, to> 
: a certain extent, the advantages of heavy and 
light-armed forces. This he effected by sub- 
stituting a small target for the heavy shield,. 
| adopting a longer sword and spear, and repla- 
cing the old coat of mail by a linen corslet. At 
\ the head of his targeteers he defeated and 
nearly destroyed a Spartan Mora in the follow- 
• ing year (392), an exploit which became very 
celebrated throughout Greece. In the same 
year he was succeeded in the command at 
Corinth by Chabrias. In 389 he was sent to 
! the Hellespont to oppose Anaxibius, who was 
defeated by him and slain in the following 
' year. On the peace of Antalcidas in 3S7, 
iphicrates went to Thrace to assist Seuthes 
king of the Odrysae, but he soon afterward 
formed an alliance with Cotys, who gave him 
. his daughter in marriage. In 377 Iphicrates 
I was sent by the Athenians, with the command 
J of a mercenary force, to assist Pharnabazus 
■ in reducing Egypt to subjection ; but the ex- 
pedition failed through a misunderstanding be- 
tween Iphicrates and Pharnabazus. In 373 
Iphicrates was sent to Corcyra, in conjunction 
with Callistratus and Chabrias, in the com- 
mand of an Athenian force, and he remained 
in the Ionian Sea till the peace of 371 put an 
: end to hostilities. About 367 he was sent 
against Amphipolis, and after carrying on the 
iwar against this place for three years; was 
superseded by Timotheus. Shortly afterward, 
he assisted his father-in-law Cotys in his war 
against Athens for the possession of the Thra- 
cian Chersonesus. But his conduct in this 
matter was passed over by the Athenians. 
After the death of Chabrias (375), Iphicrates, 
Timotheus. and Menestheus were joined with 
Chares as commanders in the Social war, aud 
1 were prosecuted by their unscrupulous col- 
league, because they had refused to risk au en- 
gagement in a storm. Iphicrates was acquit- 
ted. From the period of his trial he seems to 
: have lived quietly at Athens. He died before 
! 348. Iphicrates has been commended fbr his 
combined prudence and energy as a general. 
; The worst words, he said, that a commander 



IPHIDAMAS. 



IRA. 



could utter were, " I should Dot have expected 
•it" His services were highly valued by the 
Athenians, and were rewarded by them with 
almost unprecedented honors. 

[Ifhidamas {'IdiAu/ias), son of Antenor and 
Theano, brother of Coon, came with twelve ships 
from Thrace to the assistance of the Trojans ; 
was slain, together with his brother, by Aga 
memnon.] 

Iphigenia Clot; t'if/a), accordiug to the most 
common tradition, a daughter of Agamemnon 
aud Cly thinnest ra, but according to others, a 
daughter of Theseus and Heleua, and brought 
up by ClyUemuestra as a foster-child. Aga- 
memnon had once killed a stag in the grove of 
Diana (Artemis) ; or he had boasted that the 
goddess herself could uot hit better ; or he had 
vowed iu the year iu which Iphigenia was born 
to sacrifice the most beautiful production of 
that year, but had afterward neglected to ful- 
fill his vow. One of these circumstances is 
said to have been the cause of the calm which 
detained the Greek fleet in Aulis when the 
Greeks wanted to sail against Troy. The seer 
Calchas declared that the sacrifice of Iphigenia 
was the only means of propitiating Diana (Ar- 
temis). Agamemnon w r as obliged to yield, and 
Iphigenia was brought to Chalcis under the 
pretext of being married to Achilles. When 
Iphigenia was on the point of being sacrificed, 
Diana (Artemis) carried her in a cloud to 
Tauris, where she became the priestess of the 
goddess, and a stag was substituted for her by 
Diana (Artemis). While Iphigenia was serv- 
ing Diana (Artemis) as priestess in Tauris, her 
brother Orestes and his friend Pylades came to 
Tauris to carry oft* the image of the goddess at 
this place, which was believed to have fallen 
from heaven. As strangers, they were to be 
sacrificed in the temple of Diana (Artemis) ; 
but Iphigenia recognized her brother, and fled 
with him and the status of the goddess. In the 
mean time, Electra, another sister of Orestes, 
had heard that he had been sacrificed in Tauris 
by the priestess of Diana (Artemis). At Delphi 
she met Iphigenia, who, she supposed, had mur- 
dered Orestes. She therefore resolved to de- 
prive Iphigenia of her sight, but was prevented 
by the interference of Orestes ; and a scene 
of recognition took place. All now returned 
to Mycenae ; but Iphigenia carried the statue 
of Diana (Artemis) to the Attic town of Brau- 
ron, near Marathon. She there died as priestess 
of the goddess. As a daughter of Theseus, 
Iphigenia was connected with the heroic fami- 
lies of Attica, and after her death the veils 
and most costly garments which had been worn 
by women who had died in childbirth were 
dedicated to her. According to some tradi- 
tions, Iphigenia never died, but was changed 
by Diana (Artemis) into Hecate, or was en- 
dowed by the goddess with immortality and 
eternal youlfc, and under the name of Orilochia 
became the wife of Achilles in the island of 
Leuce. The Laeedasmonians maintained that 
the image of Diana (Artemis), which Iphigenia 
and Orestes had carried away from Tauris, was 
preserved in Sparta and not in Attica, and was 
worshipped in the former place under the name 
of Diana (Artemis) Orthia. Both in Attica and 
in Sparta human sacrifices were offered to Iphi- 



genia in early times. In place of these human 
sacrifices the Spartan youths were afterward 
scourged at the festival of Diana (Artemis) Or- 
thia. It appears probable that Iphigenia was 
originally the same as Diana (Artemis) her- 
self. 

Iphimedia or Iphimede ('lfifiedeia, '\(pLut6ti) r 
daughter of Triops, and wife of Aloeus. Being 
in love with Neptune (Poseidon), she often 
walked on the sea-shore, and collected its wa- 
ters in her lap, whence she became, by Neptune 
(Poseidon), the mother of the Aloldae, Otus and 
Ephialtes. While Iphimedia and her daughter 
Pancratis were celebrating the orgies of Bac- 
chus (Dionysus) on Mount Drius, they were 
carried off by Thracian Pirates to Naxos or 
Strougyle ; but they were delivered by the Al- 
oidae. 

[Iphimedon ('l<pt/2t:do)v), a sou of Eurystheus, 
slain in battle in the attempt to repel the inva- 
sion of Peloponnesus by the Heraclida?.] 

[Iphixous ('IQlvooz), son of Dexius, a Greek, 
slain by the Lycian Glaucus before Troy.] 

Iphis ( y l<j>ic). 1. Son of Alector, and father 
of Eteoclus and Evadne, the wife of Capaneus. 
was king of Argus. He advised Polynices to 
give the celebrated necklace of Harmonia to 
Eriphyle, that she might persuade her husband 
Amphiaraus to take part in the expedition against 
Thebes. He lost his two children, and therefore 
left his kingdom to Sthenelus, son of Capaneus.. 
— 2. Son of Sthenelus, and brother of Eurys- 
theus, was one of the Argonauts who fell in the 
battle with ^Eetes. — 3. A youth in love with. 
Anaxarete. Vid. Anaxarete. — 4. Daughter of 
Ligdus and Telethusa, of Phasstus in Crete, 
She was brought up as a boy, on the advice of 
Isis, because her father, previous to her birth., 
had ordered the child to be killed if it should be 
a girl. When Iphis had grown up, and was to 
be betrothed to Iauthe, she w r as metamorphosed 
by Isis into a youth. — [5. Daughter of Euyeus 
of Scyrus, celebrated for her beauty, presented 
by Achilles to Patroclus.] 

[Iphitiox ('Itptriov), son of Otrynteus and a 
Naiad, came from Hyde, at the foot of Tmolus in 
Lydia, to the Trojan war ; slain by Achilles.] 

Iphitus ("ltpiToc). h Son of Eurytus of CEcha- 
lia, one of the Argonauts, was afterward killed 
by Hercules. (For details, vid. p. 358, b, 359, a.) 
— 2. Son of Naubolus, and father of Schedius,. 
Epistrophus, and Eurynome, in Phocis, likewise 
one of the Argonauts. — 3. Son of Hsemon, or 
Praxonides, or Iphitus, king of Elis, restored the 
Olympic games, and instituted the cessation of 
all war during their celebration, B.C. 884. 

[Iphthime ('lQdijUT}), daughter of Icarius, sister 
of Penelope ; under her form Minerva appeared 
to Penelope to console her when disquieted at 
the departure of Telemachus from Ithaca.] 

Ipsus ("lipooc), a small town in Great Phrygia ,. 
celebrated in history as the scene of the deci- 
sive battle which closed the great contest be- 
tween the generals of Alexander for the succes- 
sion to his empire, and iu which Antigonus was 
defeated and slain, B.C. 301. Vid. Antigonus. 
The site is unknown, but it appears to have 
been about the centre of Phrygia, not far from 
Synxada. 

Ira (Elpa, 'Ipd), a mountain fortress in Mes- 
senia, memorable as the place where Aristom- 
399 



IREKdSUS. 



ISAURIA. 



enes defended himself for eleven years against 
the Spartans. Its capture by the Spartans in B. 
C. 668 put an end to the second Messenian war. 
It is doubtful whether it is the same as Ira (II., 
ix., 150), one of the seven cities which Agamem- 
non promised to Achilles. 

Iren^eus (Eiprjvalog), one of the early Christian 
fathers, was probably born at Smyrna between 
A.D. 120 and 140. In his early youth he' heard 
Polycarp. He afterward went to Gaul, and in 
177 succeeded Pothiuus as bishop of Lyon. He 
made many converts from heathenism, and was 
most active in opposing the Gnostics, especially 
the Valentinians. He seems to have lived till 
about the end of the second century. The only 
work of Irenaeus now extant, Adversus Herceses, 
is intended to refute the Gnostics. The original 
Greek is lost, with the exception of a few frag- 
ments, but the work exists in a barbarous but 
ancient Latin version. Edited by Grabe, Oxon., 
1702; [and by Stieren, Leipzig, 1848, seqq., 2 
vols. 8vo.] 

Irene (Elprfv?}), called Pax by the Romans, 
the goddess of peace, was, according to Hesiod, 
a daughter of Jupiter (Zeus) and Themis, and 
one of the Horas. Vid. Hor^e. After the vic- 
tory of Timotheus over the Lacedsemonians, 
altars were erected to her at Athens at the pub- 
lic expense. Her statue at Athens stood by the 
side of that of Amphiaraus, carrying in its arms 
Plutus, the god of wealth, and another stood 
near that of Hestia in the Prytaneum. At Rome, 
where peace was also worshipped as a goddess, 
she had a magnificent temple, which was built 
by the Emperor Vespasian. Pax is represented 
on coins as a youthful female, holding in her 
left arm a cornucopia, and in her right hand an 
olive-branch or the staff of Mercury. Some- 
times she appears in the act of burning a pile 
of arms, or carrying corn-ears in her hand or 
upon her head. 

Iris (Tp^), daughter of Thaumas (whence 
she is called Tliaumantias) and of Electra, and 
sister of the Harpies. In the Iliad she appeal s 
as the messenger of the gods, especially of Ju- 
piter (Zeus) and Juno (Hera). In the Odyssey, 
Mercury (Hermes) is the messenger of the gods, 
and Iris is never mentioned. Iris appears to 
have been originally the personification of the 
rainbow, for this brilliant phenomenon in the 
skies, which vanishes as quickly as it appears, 
was regarded as the swift messenger of the gods. 
Some poets describe Iris as the rainbow itself, 
but other writers represent the rainbow as only 
the road on which Iris travels, and which there- 
fore appears whenever the goddess wants it, and 
vanishes when it is no longer needed. In the 
earlier poets Iris appears as a virgin goddess, 
but in the later she is the wife of Zephyrus and 
the mother of Eros. Iris is represented in 
works of art dressed in a long and wide tunic, 
over which hangs a light upper garment, with 
wings attached to her shoulders, carrying the 
herald's staff in her left hand, and sometimes also 
holding a pitcher. 

Iris (Tp*? : now Yeshil-Irmak), a considerable 
river of Asia Minor, rises on the northern side of 
the northernmost range of the Anti-Taurus, in 
the south of Pontus, and flows first west past 
v^omana Pontica, then north to Amasia, where it 
turns to the east of Eupatoria (Megalopolis), 



where it receives the Lycus, and then flows 
north through the territory of Themiscyra into * 
the Sinus Amisenus. Xenophon states its breadth 
at three plethra (three hundred feet). 

Irus (Tpof). 1. Son of Actor, and father of 
Eurydamas and Eurytion. He purified Peleus, 
when the latter had murdered his brother ; but, 
during the chase of the Calydonian boar, Peleus 
unintentionally killed Eurytion, the son of Irus. 
Peleus endeavored to soothe him by offering him 
his flocks ; but Irus would not accept them, and 
at the command of an oracle Peleus allowed 
them to run wherever they pleased. A wolf 
devoured the sheep, but was thereupon changed 
into a stone, which was shown, in later times, on 
the frontier between Locris and Phocis. — 2. The 
well-known beggar of Ithaca. His real name 
was Araseus, but he was called Irus because he 
was the messenger of the suitors of Penelope. 
He was slain by Ulysses. 

Is (Tf : now Hit), a city on the south of Mes- 
opotamia, eight days' journey from Babylon, on 
the western bank of the Euphrates, and upon a 
little river of the same name. Iu its neighbor- 
hood were the springs of asphaltus, from which 
was obtained the bitumen that was used, instead 
of mortar, in the walls of Babylon. 

Is^eus ('laalog). 1. One of the ten Attic ora- 
tors, was born at Chalcis, and came to Athens 
at an early age. He was instructed in oratory 
by Lysias and Isocrates. He was afterward 
engaged in writing judicial orations for others, 
and established a rhetorical school at Athens, 
in which Demosthenes is said to have been his 
pupil. It is further said that Isseus composed 
for Demosthenes the speeches against his guard- 
ians, or at least assisted him in the composition. 
We have no particulars of his life. He lived 
between B.C. 420 and 348. Isasus is said to 
have written sixty-four orations, but of these 
only eleven are extant. They all relate to ques- 
tions of inheritance, and afford considerable in- 
formation respecting this branch of the Attic 
law. The style of Isaeus is clear and concise, 
and, at the same time, vigorous and powerful. 
His orations are contained in the collections of 
the Greek orators. Vid. Demosthenes. There 
is a good separate edition by Schoinanu, Greifs- 
wald, 1831. — 2. A sophist and rhetorician, a na- 
tive of Assyria, taught at Rome in the time of 
the younger Pliny. 

Isagoras ('loayopag), the leader of the oligar- 
chical party at Athens, in opposition to Clis- 
thenes, B.C. 510. He was expelled from Athens 
by the popular party, although supported by 
Cleomenes and the Spartans. 

Isander ("IcavSpog), son of Bellerophon, killed 
by Mars (Ares) in the fight with the Solymi. 

Isara (now hire), a river in Gallia Narbonen- 
sis, descends from the Graian Alps, flows west 
with a rapid stream, and flows into the Rhone 
north of Valentia. At its junction with the 
Rhone, Fabius JEmilianus defeated the Allobro- 
ges and Arverni, B.C. 121. 

Isauria [i] 'laavpca, ij 'loavpinrj), a district of 
Asia Minor, on the northern side of the Taurus, 
between Pisidia and Cilicia, of which the an- 
cients knew little beyond the troublesome fact 
that its inhabitants, the Isauri ("Icavpoi), were 
daring robbers, whose incursions into the sur- 
rounding districts received only a temporary 



ISCA. 



ISMENUS. 



check from the victory over them, which gain- 
ed for Lucius Servilius the surname of lsau- 
ricus (B.C. 75). Their chief city was called 
Isaura. 

Isca. L (Now Axminster, or Bridport, or Ex- 
eter), the capital of the Damnonii or Dumnouii 
in the southwest of Britain.— 2. (Now Ccer Leon, 
at the mouth of the Usk), a town of the Silures 
in Britain, and the head-quarters of the Legio 
II. There are many Roman remains at Ccer 
Leon. The word Leon is a corruption of Legio : 
Ccer is the old Celtic name for " city." 

ISCHYS. Vid. uEsCULAPIL'S. 

Isidorus CloMupoc). 1. Of ^Egffi, a Greek 
poet of uncertain age, five of whose epigrams 
are contained in the Greek Anthology.— 2. Of 
Charax, a geographical writer, who probably 
lived uuder the early Roman emperors. His 
work, Irad/toi llapdiKoi, is printed in the edition 
of the minor geographers, by Hudson, Oxon., 
1703. — 3. Of Gaza, a Neo-Platonic philosopher, 
the friend of Proclus and Marinus, whom he 
succeeded as chief of the school. — 4. Of Pelu- 
sium, a Christian exegetical writer, a native of 
Alexandrea, who speut his life in a monastery 
near Pelusium, of which he was the abbot. He 
died about A.D. 450. As many as two thousand 
and thirteen of his letters are extant. They are 
almost all expositions of Scripture. Published 
at Paris, 1638. — 5. Bishop of Hispalis (now Se- 
ville) in Spain, from A.D. 600 to 636, one of the 
most learned men of his age, and an ardent 
cultivator of ancient literature. A great num- 
ber of his works is still extant, but by far the 
most important of them is his Originwu s. Ety- 
mologiarum Libri XX. This work is an Ency- 
clopaedia of Arts and Sciences, and treats of all 
subjects in literature, science, and religion, which 
were studied at that time. It was much used in 
the Middle Ages. Published in the Corpus 
Grammaticorum Veterum, Liudemann, Lips., 
1833. A complete collection of the works of 
Isidorus was published by Arevali, Rom., 1797- 
1803, 7 vols. 4to.— 6. Of Miletus, the elder and 
younger, were eminent architects in the reign of 
Justiuian. 

Isigonus {'Imyovoc), a Greek writer, of uncer- 
tain date, but who lived before the time of Pliny, 
wrote a work entitled 'Aetata, a few fragments 
of which are extant. Published in Westermann's 
Paradoxographi, Brunswick, 1839. 

Isionda {'latovia : 'laiovdevc, Isiondensis), a 
city of Pisidia in Asia Minor, east of the district 
of Cibyra, and five Roman miles northwest of 
Termessus. Mr. Fellows lately discovered con- 
siderable ruins twelve miles from Perge, which 
he supposes to be those of Isionda. 

Isis ( r laic), one of the principal Egyptian di- 
vinities. The ideas eutertaiued about her un- 
derwent very great c hanges in antiquity. She 
is described as the wife of Osiris and the mother 
of Horus. As Osiris, the god of the Nile, taught 
the people the use of the plough, so Isis invent- 
ed the cultivation of wheat and barley, which 
were carried about in the processions at her fes- 
tival. She was the goddess of the earth, which 
the Egyptiaus called their mother : whence she 
and Osiris were the only divinities that were 
worshipped by all the Egyptians. This simple j 
and primitive notion of the Egyptians was modi- 
fied at an early period through the influence of 
26 



the East, with which Egypt came into contact, 
and at a later time through the influence of the 
Greeks. Thus Osiris and Isis came gradually 
to be considered as divinities of the sun and the 
moon. The Egyptian priests represented that 
the principal religious institutions of Greece 
came from Egypt; and, after the time of He- 
rodotus, this belief became established among 
the learned men in Greece. Hence Isis was 
identified with Ceres (Demeter), and Osiris with 
Bacchus (Dionysus), and the sufferings of Isis 
were accordingly modified to harmonize with 
the mythus of the unfortunate Ceres (Demeter). 
As Isis was the goddess of the moon, she was 
also identified with Io. Vid. Io. The worship 
of Isis prevailed extensively in Greece. It was 
introduced into Rome in the time of Sulla • and 
though the senate made many attempts to sup- 
press her worship, and ordered her temples to 
be destroyed, yet the new religious rites took 
deep root at Rome, and became very popular. 
In B.C. 43 the triumvirs courted the popular 
favor by building a new temple of Isis and Se- 
rapis. Augustus forbade any temples to be 
erected to Isis in the city ; but this command 
was afterward disregarded ; and under the early 
Roman emperors the worship of Isis and Se- 
rapis became firmly established. The most im- 
portant temples of Isis at Rome stood in the 
Campus Martius, whence she was called Isis 
Campensis. The priests and servants of the 
goddess wore linen garments, whence she her- 
self is called linigeru. Those initiated in her 
mysteries wore in the jxiblio processions masks 
representing the heads of dogs. In works of 
art Isis appears in figure and countenance like 
Juno (Hera) : she wears a long tunic, and her 
upper garment is fastened on her breast by a 
knot : her head is crowned with a lotus flower, 
and her right hand holds the sistrum. Her son 
Horus is often represented with her as a fine 
naked boy, holding the fore-finger on the mouth, 
with a lotus flower on his head, and a cornuco- 
pia in his left hand. The German goddess Isis 
mentioned by Tacitus is probably the same as 
Hertha. 

[lSMARIS. Vid. IsMARUS.] 

Ismarus {"lauapoc : 'lo-ftdptoc), a town in Thrace 
near Maronea, situated on a mountain of the 
same name, which produced excellent wine. It 
is mentioned in the Odyssey as a town of the Ci- 
cones Near it was the Lake Ismaris {'iG/uaptc). 
The poets frequently use the adjective Ismarius 
as equivalent to Thracian. Thus Ovid calls Te- 
reus, king of Thrace, Ismarius tyranny^ {Am., iL, 
6, 7), and Polymnestor, king of Thrace, Ismarius 
rex {Met, xiii., 530). 

Ismene {'lo/uTjvT}). 1. Daughter of Asopus, 
wife of Argus, and mother of Iasus and Io. — 2. 
Daughter of ffidipus and Jocasta, and sister of 
Antigone. 

Ismenus (^lofivvoc;), a small river in Bceotia, 
which rises in Mount Cithffiron, flows through 
Thebes, and falls into the Lake Hylice. The 
brook Dirce, so celebrated in Thebau story, flow- 
ed into the Ismenus. From this river Apollo 
was called Ismenius. His temple, the Ismenium, 
at which the festival of the Daphnephoria was 
celebrated, was situated outside the city. The 
river is said to have been originally called La- 
don, and to have derived its subsequent Dame 
401 



ISOCRATES. 



ISUS. 



from Ismenus, a sou of Asopus and Metope. 
According to other traditions, Ismenus was a 
son of Amphion and Niobe, who, when struck by 
the arrow of Apollo, leaped into a river near 
Thebes, which was hence called Ismenus. 

Isocrates ('looKpuTqc). 1. One of the ten Attic 
orators, was the son of Theodorus, and was 
born at Athens B.C. 436. Theodorus was a 
man of wealth, and educated his son with the 
greatest care. Among his teachers were Tisias, 
Gorgias, Prodicus, and also Socrates. Since 
Isocrates was naturally timid, and of a weakly 
constitution, he did not come forward as a pub- 
lic speaker himself, but devoted himself to giv- 
ing instruction in oratory, and writing orations 
for others. He first taught rhetoric in Chios, 
and afterward at Athens. At the latter place 
he met with great success, and gradually ac- 
quired a large fortune by his profession. He 
had one hundred pupils, every one of whom paid 
him one thousand drachmas. He also derived 
a large income from the orations which he wrote 
for others ; thu3 he received twenty talents for 
the speech which he composed for Nicocles, 
king of Cyprus. Although Isocrates took no 
part in public affairs, he was an ardent lover of 
his country ; and, accordingly, when the battle 
of Chseronea had destroyed the last hopes of 
freedom, be put an end to his life, B.C. 338, at 
the age of ninety-eight. The school of Isoc- 
rates exercised the greatest influence upon the 
development of public oratory at Athens. No 
other rhetorician had so many disciples of ce- 
lebrity. The language of Isocrates forms a 
great contrast with the natural simplicity of 
Lysias, as well as with the sublime power of 
Demosthenes. His style is artificial. The care- 
fully-rounded periods, and the frequent applica- 
tion of figurative expressions, are features which 
remind us of the sophists. The immense care 
he bestowed upon the composition of his ora- 
tions may be inferred from the statement that 
he was engaged for ten, or, according to others, 
fifteen years, upon his Panegyric oration alone. 
There were in antiquity sixty orations which 
went under the name of Isocrates, but they were 
not all recognized as genuine. Only twenty- 
one have come down to us. Of these, eight 
were written for the courts ; all the others are 
political discourses, intended to be read by a 
large public. The most celebrated is his Pane- 
gyric oration, in which he shows what services 
Athens had rendered to Greece in every period 
of her history, and contends that she, and not 
Sparta, deserves the supremacy in Greece. The 
orations are printed in the collections of the 
Greek orators. The best separate edition is by 
Baiter and Sauppe, Turici, 1839— [2. Of Apol- 
lonia, a disciple of the foregoing, enjoyed con- 
siderable reputation as an orator ; the titles of 
five of his orations are mentioned, but none 
have come down to us. Some critics have as- 
eribed to him the rexv7] faTopiKy, which was 
included among the works of Isocrates of Ath- 
ens.] 

I68A ("Icca), daughter of Macareus of Lesbos, 
and beloved by Apollo, from whom the Lesbian 
town of Issa is said to have received its name. 

Issa (Issseus : now Lissa), a 6mall island in the 
Adriatic Sea, with a town of the same name off 
the coast of Dalmatia, was colonized at an early 
402 



period by Greeks. It was inhabited by a hardy 

race of sailors, whose barks (lembi Isscei) were 
much prized. The Issaei placed themselves un- 
der the protection of the Romans when they were 
attacked by the Illyrian queen Teuta, B.C. 229 : 
and their town is spoken of as a place of import- 
ance in Caesar's time. 

Issedones ('IccTjdovec), a Scythian tribe, in 
Scythia extra Imaum, the easternmost people 
with whom the Greeks of the time of Herodotus 
had any intercourse. Their country was in 
Great lurtary, near the Massagetse, whom they 
resembled in their manners. They are repre- 
sented as extending as far as the borders of 
Serica. 

Issicus Sinus (6 'IcoLnbg koTlttoq : now Gulf of 
Iskenderoon), the deep gulf at the northeast 
corner of the Mediterranean, between Cilicia and 
Syria, named after the town of Issus. The 
width is about eight miles. The coast is much 
altered since ancient times. 

Issoeia ('Icrcrwpm), a surname of Diana (Arte- 
mis), derived from Mount Issorion, in Laconia, 
on which she had a sanctuary. 

Issus ('Ictctoc, also 'laaoi, Xen. : 'laoaiog), a 
city in the southeastern extremity of Cilicia, 
near the head of the Issicus Sinus, and at the 
northern front of the pass of Mons Amanus call- 
ed the Syrian Gates ; memorable for the great 
battle in which Alexander defeated Darius Co- 
domannus (B.C. 333), which was fought in a 
narrow valley near the town. It was at that 
time large and flourishing, but its importance 
was much diminished by the foundation of Alex- 
andra in its neighborhood. Its exact site is 
doubtful. 

Ist^evones. VicL Germania, p. 321, a. 
Ister. Vid. Danubius. 

Ister, a Greek historian, was at first a slave of 
Callimachus, and afterward his friend, and ac- 
cordingly lived in the reign of Ptolemy Everge- 
tes (B.C. 247-222). He wrote a large number 
of works, the most important of which was an 
Atthis, or history of Attica. His fragments are 
published by C. and Th. Muller, Fragmenta His- 
tor. Grcec, vol. i., p. 418-427. 

Istria or Histria, a peninsula at the north- 
ern extremity of the Adriatic, between the Sinus 
Tergestinus on the west and the Sinus Flanati- 
cus on the east. It was separated from Venetia 
on the northwest by the River Timavus, and 
from Illyricum on the east by the River Arsia. 
Its inhabitants, the Istri or Histri, were a war- 
like Illyrian race, who carried on several wars 
with the Romans, till their final subjugation by 
the consul C. Claudius Pulcher, B.C. 177. Their 
chief towns were Tergeste and Pola. I6tria 
was originally reckoned part of Illyricum, but 
from the time of Augustus it formed one of the 
divisions of Upper Italy. In consequence of 
its name, it was believed at one time that a 
branch of the River Ister (Danube) flowed into 
} the Adriatic. 

ISTROPOLIS, ISTROS 01* ISTRIA {'laTp6TtO?Ug, 'lo- 

j rpoq> 'IvTpiTj, Herod., ii., 33 : now Istere), a town 
I in Lower Moesia, not far from the mouth of the 
! Danube, and at a little distance from the coast, 
j was a colony from Miletus. 

[Isus ( 7 Iaoc), a natural 6on of Priam, who, 
I with Antiphus, pastured their flocks on Mount 
I Ida : they were both captured by Achilles, but 



ITALIA. 



ITALIA. 



were ransomed ; afterward they were both slain 
by Agamemnon.] 

Italia ('Ira/ia), signified, from the time of 
Augustus, the country which we call Italy. It 
was bounded on the west by the Mare Ligusti- 
cum and Tyrrhenum, Tuscum or Inferum ; on 
the south by the Mare Siculum or Ausonium; on 
the east by the Mare Adriaticum or Superum ; 
and on the north by the Alps, which sweep 
round it in a semicircle, the River Varus (now 
Var, Voro) separating it on the northwest from 
Transalpine Gaul, and the River Arsia (now 
Arsa) on the northeast from Illyricum. The 
name Italia, however, was originally used to 
indicate a much more limited extent of country. 
Most of the ancients, according to their usual 
custom, derived the name from an ancient king 
Italus ; but others, still more absurdly, connect- 
ed it with the old Italian word Italus (in Oscan, 
vitlu or vitehi), an ox, because the country was 
rich in oxen ! But there can be no doubt that 
Italia, or Vitalia, as it was also called, was the 
land of the Itali, Vitali, Vitelli, or Vihcli, an an- 
cient race, who are better known under the 
name of Siculi. This race was widely spread 
over the southern half of the peninsula, aud may 
be said to have been bounded on the north by a 
line drawn from Mount Garganus on the east 
to Terracina on the west. The Greeks were 
ignorant of this wide extent of the name. Ac- 
cording to them, Italia was originally only the 
southernmost part of what was afterward called 
Bruttium, and was bounded on the north by a 
line drawn from the Lametic to the Scylletic 
Gulf. They afterward extended the name to 
signify the whole country south of Posidonia on 
the west and Tarentum on the east. After the 
Romans had conquered Tarentum and the south- 
ern part of the peninsula, about B.C. 272, the 
name Italia had a still further extension given 
to it. It then signified the whole countiy sub- 
ject to the Romans, from the Sicilian Straits as 
far north as the Arnus and the Rubico. The 
country north of these rivers continued to be 
called Gallia Cisalpina and Liguria down to the 
end of the republic. Augustus was the first 
who extended the name of Italia, so as to com- 
prehend the whole of the basin of the Po and 
the southern part of the Alps, from the Mari- 
time Alps to Pola in Istria, both inclusive. In 
the later times of the empire, when Maximian 
had transferred the imperial residence to Milan, 
the name Italia was again used in a narrower 
compass. As it had originally signified only the 
south of the country, so now it was restricted 
to the north, comprising the five provinces of 
^Emilia, Liguria, Flaminia, Venetia, and Istria. 
Besides Italia, the country was called by vari- 
ous other names, especially by the poets. These 
were Hespeeia, a name which the Greeks gave 
to it because it lay to the west of Greece, or 
Hespeeia Magna, to distinguish it from Spain 
(vid. Hespeeia), and Satubnia, because Saturn 
was said to have once reigned in Latium. The 
names of separate parts of Italy were also ap- 
plied by the poets to the whole country. Thus 
it was called GCnoteia, originally the land of 
the QSnotri, in the country afterward called 
Bruttium and Lucania : Ausonia, or Opica, or 
Opicia, originally the land of the Ausones or 
Ausonii. Opici or Osci, on the western coast, 



in the country afterward called Campania: 
Tyeeiienia, properly the land of the Tyrrheni, 
also on the western coast, north of Ausonia or 
Opica, and more especially in the country after- 
ward called Etruria : Iapygia, properly the land 
of the Iapyges, on the eastern coast, in the 
country afterward called Calabria : and Ombeica, 
the land of the Umbri, on the eastern coast, 
alongside of Etruria. Italy was never inhabit- 
ed by one single race. It contained a great 
number of different races, who had migrated 
into the countiy at a very early period. The 
most ancient inhabitants were Pelasgians or 
CEuotrians, a branch of the same great race 
who originally inhabited Greece and the coasts 
of Asia Minor. They were also called Aborig- 
ines and Siculi, who, as we have already seen, 
were the same as the Vitali or Itali. At the 
time when Roman history begins, Italy was in- 
habited by the following races. From the mouth 
of the Tiber, between its right bank and the 
sea, dwelt the Etruscans, who extended as far 
north as the Alps. Alongside of these, between 
the left bank of the Tiber and the Adriatic, 

S dwelt the Umbriaus. To the south of the Etrus- 
cans were the Sacrani, Casci, or Prisci, Oscan 

j tribes, who had been driven out of the mount- 
ains by the Sabines, had overcome the Pelas- 

; gian tribes of the Siculi, Aborigines, or Latins, 
aud, uniting with these conquered people, had 

I formed the people called Prisci Latini, subse- 
quently simply Latini. South of these again, as 
far as the River Laus, were the Opici, who were 
also called Ausones or Aurunci, and to whom 
the Volsci, Sidicini, Saticuli, and ^Equi also be- 
longed. The south of the peninsula was in- 
habited by the ffinotrians, who were subse- 
quently driven into the interior by the numer- 
ous Greek colonies founded along the coasts. 
South of the Umbrians, extending as far as 
Mount Garganus, dwelt the various Sabellian 
or Sabine tribes, the Sabines proper, the Peligni, 
Marsi, Marrucini, Vestini, and Hernici, from 
which tribes the warlike race of the Samnites 
subsequently sprung. From Mount Garganus 
to the southeastern extremity of the peninsula, 
the country was inhabited by the Daunians or 
Apulians, Peucetii, Messapii, and Sallentini. An 
account of these people is given in separate ar- 
ticles. They were all eventually subdued by the 
Romans, who became the masters of the whole 
of the peninsula. At the time of Augustus the 
following were the chief divisions of Italy, an 
account of which is also given in separate ar- 
ticles : I. Uppee Italy, which extended from 
the Alps to the Rivers Macra on the west and 
Rubico on the east. It comprehended, 1. Ligg- 
eia. 2. Gallia Cisalpina. 3. Venema, includ- 
ing Carnia. 4. Isteia. — II. Centeal Italy, 
sometimes called Italia Peopeia (a term not 
used by the ancients), to distinguish it from Gal- 
lia Cisalpina or Upper Italy, and Magna Graecia 
or Lower Italy, extended from the Rivers Macra 
on the west and Rubico on the east, to the Riv- 
ers Silarus on the west and Frento on the east, 
It comprehended, 1. Eteueia. 2. Umbeia.. 3. 
Picenum. 4. Samntum, including the country 
of the Sabini, Vestini, Marrucini, Marsi, Peligni, 
&c. 5. Latium. 6. Campania. — III. Lower 
Italy, or Magna Graecia, included the remain- 
ing part of the peninsula, south of the Riveri 
403 



ITALIA. 



ITHOME. 



Silarus and Freuto. It comprehended, 1. Apu- 
lia, including Calabria. 2. Lucania. 3. Baux- 
tium. Augustus divided Italy into the follow- 
ing eleven Regiones. 1. Latium and Campania. 

2. The land of the Hirpiui, Apulia and Calabria. 

3. Lucania and Bruttium. 4. The land of the 
Frentani, Marrucini, Peligni, Marsi, Vestini, and 
Sabini, together with Samnium. 5. Picenum. 
6. Umbria and the district of Ariminum, in what 
was formerly called Gallia Cisalpina. 7. Etru- 
ria. 8. Gallia Cispadana. 9. Liguria. 1 0. The 
eastern part of Gallia Transpadana, Veuetia, 
Carnia, and Istria. 11. The western part of 
Gallia Transpadana. The leading features of 
the physical geography of Italy are so well de- 
scribed by a modern writer, that we can not do 
better than quote his words. " The mere plan- 
geography of Italy gives us its shape and the po- 
sition of its towns ; to th< se it may add a semi- 
circle of mountains round the northern boundary, 
to represent the Alps ; and auother long line 
stretching down the middle of the country, to 
represent the Apennines. But let us carry this 
on a little further, and give life and harmony to 
what is at present at once lifeless and confused. 
Observe, in the first place, how the Apenniue 
line, beginning from the southern extremity of 
the Alps, runs across Italy to the very edge 
of the Adriatic, and thu3 separates naturally 
the Itnly proper of the Romans from Cisal- 
pine Gaul. Observe, again, how the Alps, after 
ruuuing north and south where they divide Italy 
from France, turn then away to the eastward, 
running parallel to the Apennines, till they too 
touch the head of the Adriatic, on the confines 
of Istria. Thus between these two lines of 
mountains there is inclosed one great basin or 
plain ; inclosed on three sides by mountains, 
open only on the east to the sea. Observe how 
widely it spreads itself out, and then see how 
well it is watered. One great river (the Po) 
flows through it in its whole extent ; and this 
is fed by streams almost unnumbered, descend- 
ing toward it on either side, from the Alps on 
one side, and from the Apennines on the other. 
Then, descending into Italy proper, we find the 
complexity of its geography quite in accordance 
with its manifold political divisions. It is not 
one simple central ridge of mountains, having 
a broad belt of level country on either side be- 
tween it aud the sea, nor yet is it a chain rising 
immediately from the sea on one side, like the 
Andes in South America, and leaving room 
therefore on the other eide for wide plains of 
table-land, and for rivers with a sufficient length 
of course to become at last great and navigable. 
It is a back-bone, thickly set with spines of un- 
equal length, some of them running out at reg- 
ular distances parallel to each other, but others 
twisted so strangely that they often run for a 
long way parallel to the back-bone, or main 
ridge, and interlace with one another in a maze 
almost inextricable. And, as if to complete the 
disorder, in those spots where the spine3 of the 
Apennines, being twisted round, run parallel to 
the sea and to their own central chain, and thus 
leave an interval of plain between their bases 
and the Mediterranean, volcanic agency has 
broken up the space thus left with other and 
distinct groups of hills of its own creation, as 
in the case of Vesuvius and of the Alban hills 

404 



near Rome. Speaking generally, then, Italy is 
made up of an infinite multitude of valleys pent 
in between high and steep hills, each forming a 
country to itself, and cut off by natural barriers 
from the others. Its several parts are isolated 
by nature, and no art of man can thoroughly 
unite them. Hence arises the romantic char- 
acter of Italian scenery : the constant combina- 
tion of a mountain outline, and all the wild feat- 
ures of a mountain country, with the wild vege- 
tation of a southern climate in the valleys." 
More minute details respecting the physical 
features of the different parts of Italy are gives 
in the articles on the separate provinces info 
which rt is divided. 

Italica. 1. (Now Sevilla la vieja, near San- 
tiponce), a municipium in Hispania Baetica, on 
the western bank of the Baetis, northwest of 
Hispalis, was founded by Scipio Africanus in 
the second Punic war, who settled here some 
of his veterans. It was the birth-place of the 
emperors Trajan and Hadrian. — 2. The name 
given to Corfiuium by the Italian Socii during 
their war with Rome. Vid. Corfinium. 

Italicus, Siucs. Vid. Silius. 

Italus ('Ira'Aoc), an ancient king of the Pelas- 
gians. Siculians, or OZnotrians, from whom Italy 
was believed to have derived its name. Some 
call him a son of Telegonus by Penelope. 

Itanus ("Iravog), a town on the eastern coast 
of Crete, near a promontory of the same name, 
founded by the Phoenicians. 

Ithaca ('Idd/cr] : 'WanrjcLor : now TJdaki), a 
small island in the louran Sea, celebrated as the 
birth-place of Ulysses, lies off the coast of Epi- 
rus, aud is separated from Cephalonia by a chan- 
nel about three or four miles wide. The island 
is about twelve miles long, and four in its great- 
est breadth. It is divided into two parts, which 
are connected by a narrow isthmus, not more 
than half a mile across. In each of these parts 
there is a mountain ridge of considerable height ; 
the one in the north called Neritum (NrfpiTov, 
now Anoi), and the one in the south Neiwn 
(JSijiov, now Stefano). The city of Ithaca, the 
residence of Ulysses, was situated on a precip- 
itous conical hill, now called Aeto, or " eagle's 
cliff," occupying the whole breadth of the isth- 
mus mentioned above. The acropolis, or cas- 
tle of Ulysses, crowned the extreme summit of 
the mountain, and is described by a modern 
traveller as " about as bleak and dreary a spot 
as can well be imagined for a princely resi- 
dence." Hence Cicero (De Oral, L, 44) de- 
scribes it, in asperrimis saxulis tanquam nidulus 
affiza. It is at the foot of Mount Neium, and 
is hence described by Telemachus as " Under- 
Neium" ('WuKrjr 'Tttovtjiov, Horn., Od., iii., 81). 
The walls of the ancient city are in many places 
well preser ved. Ithaca is one of the seven Ioni- 
an inlands under the protection of Great Britain. 

[Ithacus ("Idanog), son of Pterelaus, a hero, 
from whom Ithaca was said to have derived its 
name.] 

[Ith^emenes ('Wai/uvnc), a Trojan or Lycian 
warrior in the Iliad, father of Sthenelaus.] 

Ithome ('ld6fj.T) : '\6uv7f~vc. 'Wofxalos). 1- A 
strong fortress in Messenia, situated on a mount- 
ain of the same name, which afterward formed 
the citadel of the town of Messene. On the 
summit of the mountain stood the ancient tern- 



ITIUS PORTUS. 



JANA. 



pie of Jupiter (Zeus), who was hence surnamed 
Ithometas ('WopriTW, Dor. 'Wo/xdrac). It-home 
was taken bv the Spartans B. 0. 723, at the end 
of the first Messeuiau war, after a heroic defence 
by Aristodemus, and again in 455, at the end of 
the third Mmintrr war.— 2. A mountain fortress 
in Pelasgiotis. in Thessaly, near Metropolis, also 
called Tuome. , . 

Itius Tortus, a harbor of the Monro, on the 
northern coast of Gaul, from which Cassar set 
sail for Britain. The position of this harbor is 
much disputed. It used to be identified with 
Gesoriacum or Boulogne, but it is now usually 
supposed to be some harbor near Calais, probably 
Vissant or Witsand, 

Iton. Vid. Itonia. 

Itonia; ItonIas, or Itoms ('Iruvia, 'Irovidr, 
or 'Ituvic), a surname of Minerva (Athena), de- 
rived from the town of Iton, in the south of 
Phthiotis in Thessaly. The goddess there had 
a celebrated sanctuary and festivals, and hence 
is called Incola Itoni. From Iton her worship 
spread into Boeotia and the country about Lake 
Copais. where the Pamboeotia was celebrated, in 
the neighborhood of a temple and grove of Min- 
erva (Athena). According to another tradition, 
Minerva, (Athena) received the surname of Itonia 
from Itonus, a king or priest. 

Itucci ('Itvkkj], App.) a town in Hispania 
Baetica, in the district of Hispalis, and a Roman 
colony, under the name of Virtus Julia. 

Ituna (now Solway Frith), an actuary on the 
western coast of Britain, between England and 
Scotland. 

Itur.ea, Itvr.ea ('Iroi^ata : 'Irovpaloi, Itursei, 
Ityraei : now El-Jcidnr), a district on the north- 
eastern borders of Palestine, bounded on the 
north by the plain of Damascus, on the west by 
the mountain-chain (now Jebd-Hcish) which forms 
the eastern margin of the valley of the Jordan, 
on the southwest and south by Gaulanitis, and 
on the east by Aurauitis and Trachonitis. It 
occupied a part of the elevated plain into which 
Mount Herrnon sinks down ou the southeast, 
and was inhabited by au Arabian people, of war- 
like and predatory habits, which they exercised 
upon the caravans from Arabia to Damascus, 
whose great road lay through their country. In 
the wars between the Syrians and the Israelites, 
they are found actiug as allies of the kings of 
Damascus. They are scarcely heard of again 
till B.C. 105, wheu they were conquered by the 
Asmonasau king of Judah, Aristobulus, who 
compelled them to profess Judaism. Restored 
to independence by the decline of the Asmo- 
naean house, they seized the opportunity offer- 
ed, on the ofb«r side, by the weakness of the 
kiugs of Syria, to press their predatory incur- 
sions into Coelo Syria, and even beyond Leba- 
non, to Byblos, Botrys, and other cities on the 
coast of Phcenice. Pompey reduced them again 
to order, and many of their warriors entered 
the Roman army, in which they became cele- 
brated for their skill in horsemanship and arch- 
ery. They were not, however, reduced to com- 
plete subjection to Rome uutil after the civil 
wars. Augustus gave Ituraea, which had been 
hitherto ruled by its native princes, to the fam- 
ily of Herod. During the ministry of our Sa- 
viour, it was governed by Philip, the brother 
of Herod Antipas, as tetrarch. Upon Philip's 



I death in A.D. 37, it was united to the Roman 
province of Syria, from which it was presently 
again separated, and assigned partly to Herod 
Agrippa I, and partly to Soaenius, the prince of 
Emesa. In A.D. 50 it was finally reunited by 
Claudius to the Roman province of Syria, and 
there are inscriptions which prove that the 
Ituraaans continued to 6erve with distinction 
in the Roman armies. There were no cities or 
large towns in the country, a fact easily explain- 
ed by the unsettled character of the people, who 
lived in the Arab fashion, in unwalled villages 
and tents, and even, according to some state- 
ments, in the natural eaves with which the 
country abounds. 

[Itylus ("iTvXog), son of Zethus and Aedon. 
Vid. Aedon.] 

[Itymoneus ('lrvfcovevr), son of Hyperoehus 
of Elis, slain by Nestor.] 

Itys. 1. Vid. Tereus. — [2. A Trojan hero, 
accompanied ^Eneas to Italy, and was slain by 
Turnus.] 

Iulis ('lovXig : 'lovT^Ljjrv^, 'lovXievg), the chief 
town in Ceos ; the birth-place of Simonides. 
Vid. Ceos. 

Iulus. t. Son of JEneas, usually called As- 
canius. Vid. Ascanius. — 2. Eldest son of As- 
canius, who claimed the government of Latium, 
but was obliged to give it up to his brother Sil- 
vius. 

Ixion ('Uicjv), son of Phlegyas, or of Antion 
and Perimela, or of Pasion, or of Mars (Ares). 
According to the common tradition, his mother 
was Dia, a daughter of De'ioneus. He was king 
of the Lapithae or Phlegyes, and the father of 
Pirithous. When Deioneus demanded of Ixion 
the bridal gifts he had promised, Ixion treach- 
erously invited him to a banquet, and then con- 
trived to make him fall into a pit filled with fire. 
As no one purified Ixion of this treacherous 
murder, Jupiter (Zeus) took pity upon him, puri- 
fied him, carried him to heaven, and caused 
him to sit down at his table. But Ixion was 
ungrateful to the father of the gods, and at- 
tempted to win the love of Juno (Hera). Ju- 
piter (Zeus) thereupon created a phantom re- 
sembling Juno (Hera), and by it Ixion became 
the father of a Centaur. Vid. Centauri. Ix- 
ion was fearfully punished for his impious in- 
gratitude. His hands and feet were chained 
by Mercury (Hermes) to a wheel, which is said 
to have rolled perpetually in the air or in the 
lower world. He is further said to have been 
scourged, and compelled to exclaim, " Benefactors 
should be honored." 

Ixionides, i. e., Pirithous, the son of Ixion. The 
Centaurs are also called Ixionidce. 

Ixrus ( v I£ioc), a surname of Apollo, derived 
from a district of the island of Rhodes which was 
called Ixiaa or Ixia. 

Iynx (*I«y|), daughter of Peitho and Pan, or 
of Echo. She endeavored to charm Jupiter 
(Zeus,) or make him fall in love with Io ; but she 
was metamorphosed by Juno (Hera) into the bird 
called lynx. 

J. 

Jaccetani, a people in Hispania Tarraconen- 
I sis, between the Pyrenees and the Iberus. 
I Jana. Vid. Janus. 

405 



JANICULUM. 



JASON. 



Janiculum. Vid. Roma. 

Janus and Jana, a pair of ancient Latin di- 
vinities, who were worshipped as the sun and 
moon. The names Janus and Jana are only- 
other forms of Dianus and Diana, which words 
contain the same root as dies, day. Janus was 
worshipped both by the Etruscans and Romans, 
and occupied an important place in the Roman 
religion. He presided over the beginning of 
every thing, and was therefore always invoked 
first in every undertaking, even before Jupiter. 
He opened the year and the seasons, and hence 
the first month of the year was called after him. 
He was the porter of heaven, and therefore bore 
the surnames Patulous or Patulcius, the " open- 
er," and Clusius or Clusivius, the " shutter." 
In this capacity he is represented with a key in 
his left hand, and a staff or sceptre in his right. 
On earth also he was the guardian deity of 
gates, and hence is commonly represented with 
two heads, because every door looks two ways 
{Janus bifrons). He is sometimes represented 
with four heads (Jamis quadrifrons), because he 
presided over the four seasons. Most of the 
attributes of this god, which are very numerous, 
lare connected with his being the god who opens 
■and shuts ; and this latter idea probably has 
reference to his original character as the god 
-of the sun, in connection with the alternations 
of day and night. At Rome, ISTuma is said to 
■have dedicated to Janus the covered passage 
bearing his name, which was opened in times 
of war, and closed in times of peace. This 
passage is commonly, but erroneously, called a 
temple. It stood close by the forum. It ap- 
pears to have been left open in war to indicate 
symbolically that the god had gone out to assist 
the Roman warriors, and to have been shut in 
time of peace, that the god, the safeguard of the 
city, might not escape. A temple of Janus was 
built by C. Duilius in the time of the first Punic 
war : it was restored by Augustus, and dedi- 
cated by Tiberius. On new year's day, which 
was the principal festival of the god, people 
-gave presents to one another, consisting of 
sweetmeats and copper coins, snowing on one 
side the double head of Janus, and on the other 
a ship. The general name for these presents 
was strence. The sacrifices offered to Janus con- 
sisted of cakes (called janual), barley, incense, 
and wine. 

Jason ('luauv). 1. The celebrated leader of 
the Argonauts, was a son of iEson and Poly- 
mede or Alcimede, and belonged to the family 
of the iEolidae, at Iolcus in Thessaly. Cre- 
theus, who had founded Iolcus, was succeeded 
by his son JSson ; but the latter was deprived 
of the kingdom by his half brother Pelias, who 
attempted to take the fife of the infant Jason. 
He was saved by his friends, who pretended 
that he was dead, and intrusted him to the care 
of the centaur Chiron. Pelias was now warn- 
ed by an oracle to be on his guard against the 
one-sandalcd man. When Jason had grown up, 
he came to claim the throne. As he entered 
the market-place, Pelias, perceiving he had only 
one sandal, asked him who he was ; whereupon 
Jason declared his name, and demanded the 
kingdom Pelias consented to surrender it to 
him, but persuaded him to remove the curse 
which rested on the family of the ^Eolidfe by 
406 



| fetching the golden fleece and soothing the 
| spirit of Phrixus. Another tradition related 
j that Pelias, once upon a time, invited all his 
j subjects to a sacrifice, which he intended to 
I offer to Neptune (Poseidon). Jason came with 
the rest, but on his journey to Iolcus he lost 
' one of his sandals in crossing the River Anau- 
rus. Pelias, remembering the oracle about the 
one-sandaled man, asked Jason what he would 
do if he were told by an oracle that he should 
be killed by one of his subjects ? Jason, on the 
suggestion of Juno (Hera), who hated Pelias, 
answered, that he would send him to fetch the 
golden fleece. Pelias accordingly ordered Jason 
to fetch the golden fleece, which was in the pos- 
session of King iEetes, in Colchis, and was 
guarded by an over-watchful dragon. Jason 
willingly undertook the enterprise, and set sail 
in the ship Argo, accompanied by the chief 
heroes of Greece. He obtained the fleece with 
the assistance of Medea, whom he made his 
wife, and along with whom he returned to Iol- 
cus. The history of his exploits on this mem- 
orable enterprise, and his adventures on his re- 
turn home, are related elsewhere. Vid. Ar- 
gonauts. On his arrival at Iolcus, Jason, ac- 
cording to one account, found his aged father 
iEson still alive, and Medea made him young 
again ; but, according to the more common tra- 
dition, Mson had been slain by Pelias during 
the absence of Jason, who accordingly called 
upon Medea to take vengeance on Pelias. Me- 
dea thereupon persuaded the daughters of Pelias 
to cut their father to pieces and boil him, in or- 
der to restore him to youth and vigor, as she 
had before changed a ram into a lamb by boiling 
the body in a cauldron. But Pelias was never 
restored to life, and his son Acastus expelled 
Jason and Medea from Iolcus. They then went 
to Corinth, where they lived happily for several 
years, until Jason deserted Medea, in order to 
marry Glauce or Creusa, daughter of Creon, the 
king of the country. Medea fearfully revenged 
this insult. She sent Glauce a poisoned garment, 
which burned her to death when she put it on. 
Creon likewise perished in the flames. Medea 
also killed her children by Jason, viz., Mermerus 
and Pheres, and then fled to Athens in a chariot 
drawn by winged dragons. Later writers rep- 
resent Jason as becoming in the end reconciled 
to Medea, returning with her to Colchis, and 
there restoring ^Eetes to his kingdom, of which 
he had been deprived. The death of Jason 
is related differently. According to some, he 
made away with himself from grief ; according 
to others, he was crushed by the poop of the 
ship Argo, which fell upon him as he was lying 
under it. — 2. Tyrant of Pherae and Tagus of 
Thessaly (vid. Diet, of Antiq., art. Tagus), was 
probably the son of Lycophron, who established 
a tyranny on the ruins of aristocracy at Pherae. 
He succeeded his father as tyrant of Pheras soon 
after B.C. 395, and in a few years extended his 
power over almost the whole of Thessaly. Phar- 
salus was the only city in Thessaly which main- 
tained its independence under the government 
of Polydamus ; but even this place submitted to 
him in 375. In the following year (374) he was 
elected Tagus or generalissimo of Thessaly. 
His power was strengthened by the weakness 
of the other Greek states, and by the exhaust- 



JAVOLENUS PRISCUS. 



JERUSALEM. 



ing contest in which Thebes and Sparta were 
engaged. He was now in a position which held 
out to him every prospect of becoming master 
of Greece ; but when at the height of his power, 
he was assassinated at a public audience, 370. 
Jason had an insatiable appetite for power, 
which he sought to gratify by any and every 
means. With the chief men in the several 
states of Greece, as, e. g., with Timotheus and 
Pelopidas, he cultivated friendly relations. He 
is represented as having all the qualifications of 
a great general and diplomatist — as active, tem- 
perate, prudent, capable of enduring much fa- 
tigue, and skillful in concealing his own designs 
and penetrating those of his enemies. He was 
an admirer of the rhetoric of Gorgias ; and 
Isocrates was one of his friends. — 3. Of Argos, 
an historian, lived under Hadrian, and wrote a 
work on Greece in four books. 

Javolknus Prisccs, an eminent Roman jurist, 
was born about the commencement of the reign 
of Vespasian (A.D. 79), and was one of the 
council of Antoninus Pius. He was a pupil of 
Cselius Sabinus, and a leader of the Sabinian or 
Cassian school. Vid. p. 170, b. There are two 
hundred and six extracts from Javolenus in the 
Digest. 

Jaxartes ('Ia^apr??? : now Syr, Syderia, or Sy- 
houn), a great river of Central Asia, about which 
the aucient accounts are very different and con- 
fused. It rises in the Comedi Montes (now 
Moussour), and flows northwest into the Sea of 
Aral : the ancieuts supposed it to fall into the 
northern side of the Caspian, not distinguishing 
between the two seas. It divided Sogdiaua from 
Seythia. On its banks dwelt a Scythian tribe 
called Jaxartse. 

Jericho or Hib&iohus (lepixu, 'leptxovg : now 
Er-Riha ? ruins), a city of the Cauaanites, in a 
plain on the western side of the Jordan, near its 
mouth, was destroyed by Joshua, rebuilt in the 
time of the Judges, and formed au important 
frontier fortress of Judaja. It was again de- 
stroyed by Vespasian, rebuilt under Hadrian, 
and finally destroyed during the crusades. 

Jerom. Vid. Hieronymus. 

Jerusalem or HIerosolyma {'lepovaaArjfj., 'Ie- 
poGo?,.vjLta : 'lepo(joAvfj.iT?]g : now Jerusalem, Arab. 
JEl-Kuds, i. e., the Holy City), the capital of Pal- 
estine in Asia. At the time of the Israelitish 
conquest of Canaan, uuder Joshua, Jerusalem, 
then called Jebus, was the chief city of the Jeb- 
usites, a Canaan itish tribe, who were not en- 
tirely driven out from it till B.C. 1050, when 
David took the city, and made it the capital of 
the kingdom of Israel. It was also established 
as the permanent centre of the Jewish religion, 
by the erection of the temple of Solomon. Aft- 
er the division of the kingdom under Rehoboam, 
it remained the capital oi* the kingdom of Judah 
until it was entirely destroyed, and its inhabit- 
ants were carried into captivity by Nebuchad- 
Eezzar, king of Babylon, B.C. 588. In B.C. 536, 
the Jewish exiles, having been permitted by Cy- 
rus to return, began to rebuild the city and tem- 
ple ; and the work was completed in about 
twenty -four years. In B.C. 332 Jerusalem qui- 
etly submitted to Alexander. During the wars 
which followed his death, the city was taken 
by Ptolemy, the son of Lagus (B.C. 320), and 
remained subject to the Greek kings of Egypt 



till the conquest of Palestine by Antiochus III. 
the Great, king of Syria, B.C. 198. Up to this 
time the Jews had been allowed the free enjoy- 
ment of their religion and their own internal 
government, and Antiochus confirmed them in 
these privileges; but the altered government 
of his son, Antiochus IV. Epiphanes, provoked 
a rebellion, which was at first put down when 
Antiochus took Jerusalem and polluted the tem- 
ple (B.C. 170) ; but the religious persecution 
which ensued drove the people to despair, and 
led to a new revolt under the Maccabees, by 
whom Jerusalem was retaken, and the temple 
purified in B.C. 163. Vid. Maccab^l In B.C. 
133 Jerusalem was retaken by Antiochus VII. 
Sidetes, and its fortifications dismantled, but 
its government was left in the hands of the 
Maccabee, John Hyrcanus, who took advantage 
of the death of Antiochus in Parthia (B.C 128) 
to recover his full power. His son Aristobulus 
assumed the title of king of Judaea, and Jeru- 
salem continued to be the capital of the king- 
dom till B.C. 63, when it was taken by Pompey, 
and the temple was again profaned. For the 
events which followed, vid. Hyrcanus, Herodes, 
and Pal^estina. In A.D. 70, the rebellion of 
the Jews against the Romans was put down, 
and Jerusalem was taken by Titus, after a siege 
of several months, during which the inhabitants 
endured the utmost horrors ; the survivors were 
all put to the sword or sold as slaves, and 
the city and temple were utterly razed to the 
ground. In consequence of a new revolt of 
the Jews, the Emperor Hadrian resolved to 
destroy all vestiges of their national and reli- 
gious peculiarities ; and, as one means to this 
end, he established a new Roman colony, on 
the ground where Jerusalem had stood, by the 
name of JElia Capitolina, and built a temple 
of Jupiter Capitolinus on the site of the temple 
of Jehovah. A.D. 135. The establishment of 
Christianity as the religion of the Roman em- 
pire restored to Jerusalem its sacred character, 
and led to the erection of several churches ; 
but the various changes which have taken place 
in it since its conquest by the Arabs under 
Omar in A.D. 638, have left very few vestiges 
even of the Roman city. Jerusalem stands due 
west of the head of the Bead Sea, at the dis- 
tance of about twenty miles (in a straight Hue), 
and about thirty-five miles from the Mediterra- 
nean, on an elevated platform, divided, by a 
series of valleys, from hills which surround it 
on every side. This platform has a general 
slope from west to east, its highest point being 
the summit of Mount Zion, in the southwestern 
corner of the city, on which stood the original 
" City of David." The southeastern part of the 
platform is occupied by the hill called Moriah, 
on which the temple stood, and the eastern part 
by the hill called Acra ; but these two summits 
are now hardly distinguishable from the general 
surface of the platform, probably on account of 
the gradual filling up of the valleys between. 
The height of Mount Zion is two thousand five 
hundred and thirty-five feet above the level of 
the Mediterranean, and about three hundred feet 
above the valley below. The extent of the plat- 
form is five thousand four hundred feet from 
north to south, and one thousand one hundred 
feet from east to west 

407 



JOCASTE. 



JOSEPHUS, FLAVIUS. 



Jocaste ('louder?]), called Epicaste in Homer, 
daughter of Menoeceus, and wife of the Tbeban 
king Lai us, by "whom she became the mother of 
(Edipus. She afterward married (Edipus, not 
knowing that he was her son ; and when she dis- 
covered the crime she had unwittingly com- 
mitted, she put an end to her life. For details, 
vid (Edipus. 

Joppe, Joppa ('Iott-tj : in the Old Testament, 
Japho : now Jaffa), a very ancient maritime city 
of Palestine, and, before the building of Csesa- 
rea, the only sea-port of the whole country, and 
therefore called by Strabo the port of Jerusalem, 
lay just south of the boundary between Judaea 
and Samaria, southwest of Autipatris, and north- 
west of Jerusalem. 

Jobdanes ('lopddvTjg, 'lopdavoc : now Jordan, 
Arab. Esh-Sheriah el-Kebir, or el-Urdun), has 
its source at the southern foot of Mons Hermon 
(the southernmost part of Anti-Libanus), [about 
twenty miles above] Paneas (afterward Cass- 
area Philippi), whence it flows south into the 
little lake Semechonitis (now JBahr el-Huleh), 
and thence [after a course of twelve miles] into 
the Sea of Galilee (Lake of Tiberias), and thence 
through a narrow plain, depressed below the 
level of the surrounding country, into the Lake 
Asphaltites (now Dead Sea), where it is finally 
lost. Vid. Paljsstina. Its course, from the 
Lake of Tiberias to the Dead Sea, [in a dis- 
tance of sixty miles, i3, according to Lieutenant 
Lynch, about two hundred miles, and within 
that distance there are no less than twenty- 
seven considerable rapids, with many others of 
less descent ; thus giving an average of five feet 
descent to the mile in its whole extent] ; the 
depression through which it runs consists, first, 
of a sandy valley, from five to ten miles broad, 
within which is a lower valley, in width about 
half a mile, and, for the most part, beautifully 
clothed with grass and trees ; and, in some 
places, there is still a lower valley within 
this. The average width of the river itself 
is calculated at thirty yards, and its average 
depth at nine feet. It is fordable in many 
places in summer, but in spring it becomes much 
deeper, and often overflows its banks. Its bed 
is considerably below the level of the Mediter- 
ranean. 

Jornandes or Jordanes, an historiau, lived 
in the time of Justinian, or in the sixth century 
of our era. He was a Goth by birth ; was sec- 
retary to the King f the Alani, adopted the 
Christian religion, took orders, and was made 
a bishop in Italy. There is not sufficient evi- 
dence for the common statement that he was 
bishop of Ravenna. He wrote two historical 
works in the Latin language : 1. Be Getarum 
{Gothorum) Origine et Rebus Gestis, containing 
the history of the Goths from the earliest times 
down to their subjugation by Belisarius in 541. j 
The work is abridged from the lost history of 
the Goths by Cassiodorus, to which Jornandes i 
added various particulars ; but it is compiled 
without judgment, and is characterized by par- 
tiality to the Goths. 2. De Regnorum ac Tem- 
porum Suecessione, a short compendium of his- 
tory from the creation down to the victory ob- 
tained by Parses in 552 over King Theodatus. 
It is only valuable fir some accounts of the bar- 1 
"barous nations of the North, and the countries ! 
408 



which they inhabited. Edited by Lindenbroff 
Hamburg, 1611. 

Josephus, Flavius, the Jewish historian, was 
born at Jerusalem A.D. 37. On his mother's 
side he was descended from the Asmoneean 
princes, while from his father, Matthias, he in- 
herited the priestly office. He enjoyed an ex- 
cellent education ; and at the age of twenty-six 
he went to Rome to plead the cause of some 
Jewish priests wbom Felix, the procurator of 
Judaea, had sent thither as prisoners. After a 
narrow escape from death by shipwreck, he 
safely landed at Puteoli ; and being introduced 
to Poppaea, he not only effected the release of 
his friends, but received great presents from 
the empress. On his return to Jerusalem he 
found his countrymen eagerly bent on a re- 
volt from Rome, from which he used his best 
endeavors to dissuade them ; but failing in 
this, he professed to enter into the popular de- 
signs. He was chosen one of the generals 
of the Jews, and was sent to manage affairs 
in Galilee. When Vespasian and his army en- 
tered Galilee, Josephus threw himself into Io- 
tapata, which he defended for forty-seven days. 
When the place was taken, the life of Josephus 
was spared by Vespasian through the interces- 
sion of Titus. Josephus thereupon assumed the 
character of a prophet, and predicted to Vespa- 
sian that the empire should one day be his and 
his son's. Vespasian treated him with respect, 
but did not release him from captivity till he 
was proclaimed emperor nearly three years aft- 
erward (A.D. 70). Josephus was present with 
Titus at the siege of Jerusalem, and afterward 
accompanied him to Rome. He received the 
freedom of the city from Vespasian, who as- 
signed him, as a residence, a house formerly 
occupied by himself, and treated him honorably 
to the end of his reign. The same favor was 
extended to him by Titus and Domitian as well. 
He assumed the name of Flavius, as a depend- 
ent of the Flavian family. His time at Rome 
appears to have been employed mainly in the 
composition of his works. He died about 100. 
The works of Josephus are written in Greek. 
They are, 1. The History of the Jewish War 
(TLepl rod 'lovdaiiwv ttoM/xov ij 'lovdainr/c iuropia^ 
Tvspl a?.6aeug), in seven books, published about 
AD. 75. Josephus first wrote it in Hebrew, and 
then translated it into Greek. It commences 
with the capture of Jerusalem by Antiochus 
Epiphanes in B.C. 170, runs rapidly over the 
eveuts before Josephus's own time, and gives a 
detailed account of the fatal war with Rome. 2. 
The Jewish Antiquities ^lovdainrj dpxaio?,oyta), 
in twenty books, completed about A.D. 93, and 
addressed to Epaphroditus. The title as well 
as the number of books may have been sug- 
gested by the 'FufiaiKij upxaioAoyia of Dionysius 
of Halicarnassus. It gives an account of Jew- 
ish history from the creation of the world to 
A.D. 66, the twelfth year of Xero. in which the 
Jews were goaded to rebellion by Gessius Flo- 
rus. In this work Josephus seeks to accom- 
modate the Jewish religion to heathen tastes 
and prejudices. Thus he speaks of Moses and 
his law in a tone which might be adopted by 
any disbeliever in his divine legation. He says 
that Abraham went into Egypt (Gen., xii.), in- 
tending to adopt the Egyptian views of religion 



JOVIANUS. 



JUGURTHA. 



should he find them bet er thau his own. He f 
speaks doubtfully of the preservation of Jonah 
by the whale. He intimates a doubt of there 
having been any miracle in the passage of the 
Red Sea, and compares it with the passage of 
Alexander the Great along the shore of the sea 
of Pamphylia. He interprets Exod., xxii., 28, 
as if it conveyed a command to respect the idols 
of the heathen. Many similar instances might 
be quoted from his work. 3. His own Life, in 
one book. This is an appendage to the Archse- 
ologia, and is addressed to the same Epaphro- 
ditus. It was not written earlier than A.D. 97, 
since Agrippa II. is mentioned in it as no longer 
living. 4. A treatise on the Antiquity of tlie Jews, 
or Against Apion, in two books, also addressed 
to Epaphroditus. It is in answer to such as 
impugned the antiquity of the Jewish nation on 
the ground of the silence of Greek writers re- 
specting it Vid. Apion. The treatise exhibits 
extensive acquaintance with Greek literature and 
philosophy. 5. Eig Mannadaiovg 7} irepl avTonpa- 
ropog Aoytofzov, in one book. Its genuineness is 
doubtful. It is a declamatory account of the 
martyrdom of Eleazar (an aged priest), and of 
seven youths and their mother, in the persecu- 
tion under Antiochus Epiphanes. The best edi- 
tions of Josephus are by Hudson, Oxon., 1720 ; 
by Havercamp, Amst, 1726; [and by W. Din- 
dorf in Didot's Bibliotheca Grseca; the best edi- 
tion of the Jewish War, separately, is by Card- 
well, Oxford, 1837, 2 vols.]. 

Jovianus, Flavius Claudius, was elected em- 
peror by the soldiers in June, A.D. 363, after the 
death of Julian (vid. Julianus), whom he had 
accompanied in his campaign against the Per- 
sians. In order to effect his retreat in safety, 
Jovian surrendered to the Persians the Roman 
conquests beyond the Tigris, and several for- 
tresses in Mesopotamia. He died suddenly at 
a small town on the frontiers of Bithyuia and 
Galatia, February 17, 364, after a reign of little 
more thau seven mouths. Jovian was a Chris- 
tian, but he protected the heathens. 

Juba ('I66ag). 1. King of Numidia, was son 
of Hiempsal, who was re-established on the 
throne by Pompey. On the breaking out of the 
civil war between Ctesar and Pompey, he act- 
ively espoused the cause of the latter ; and, ac- 
cordingly, when Caesar sent Curio into Africa 
(BC. 49), he supported the Pompeian general 
Attius Varus with a large body of troops. Curio 
was defeated by their united forces, and fell in 
the battle. In 46 Juba fought along with Scipio 
against Coesar himself, and was present at the 
decisive battle of Tliapsus. After this defeat 
he wandered about for some time, and theu put 
an end to his own life.— 2. Kiug of Mauretania, 
son of the preceding, was a mere child at his 
father's death (46), was carried a prisoner to 
Rome by Ctosmr, and compelled to grace the 
conqueror's triumph. He was brought up in 
Italy, where he received an excellent education, 
and applied himself with such diligence to studv, 
that he turned out one of the most learned men 
of his day. After the death of Antony (30), 
Augustus conferred upon Juba hi3 paternal 
kingdom of Numidia, and, at the same time, 
gave him in marriage Cleopatra, otherwise call- 
ed Selene, the daughter of Antony and Cleopatra. 
At a subsequent period (25), Augustus gave him 



I Mauretania in exchange for Numidia, which 
was reduced to a Roman province. He contin- 
ued to reign in Mauretania till his death, which 
happened about A.D. 19. He was beloved by 
his subjects, among whom he endeavored to in- 
troduce the elements of Greek and Roman civ- 
ilization ; and, after his death, they even paid 
him divine honors. Juba wrote a great number 
of works in almost every branch of literature. 
They are all lost, with the exception of a few 
fragments. They appear to have been all writ- 
ten in Greek. The most important of them 
were, 1. A History of Africa (fu6viid), in which 
he made use of Punic authorities. 2. On the 
Assyrians. 3. A History of Arabia. 4. A Jio- 
man History ^VufialKrj lot op ia). 5. QearptKijla- 
ropia, a general treatise on all matters connect- 
ed with the stage. 6. Tlepl ypafttcyg, or izepl 
(uypd(j>uv, seems to have been a general history 
of painting. He also wrote some treatises on 
botany and on grammatical subjects. [The few 
fragments of Juba's historical works still extant 
are collected in Muller's Fragm. Hist. Grcec, 
vol. iii., p. 465-484.] 

Judaea, Jud^ei. Vid. Pal^estina. 
Jugunthi, a German people, sometimes de- 
scribed as a Gothic, and sometimes as an Ale- 
mannic tribe. 

Jugurtha ('lovyovpdag 'loyopdag), king of 
Numidia, was an illegitimate son of Mastanabal, 
and a grandson of Masinissa. He lost his father 
at an early age, but was adopted by his uncle 
Micipsa, who brought him up with bis own sons, 
Hiempsal and Adherbal. Jugurtha quickly dis- 
tinguished himself both by his abilities and his 
skill in all bodily exercises, and rose to so much 
favor and popularity with the Numidians, that 
he began to excite the jealousy of Micipsa. In 
order to remove him to a distance. Micipsa sent 
him, in B.C. 134, with an auxiliary force, to as- 
sist Scipio against Numantia. Here his zeal, 
courage, and ability gained for him the favor 
and commendation of Scipio, and of all the lead- 
ing nobles in the Roman camp. On his return 
to Numidia he was received with honor by Mi- 
cipsa, who was obliged to dissemble the fears 
which he entertaiued of his ambitious nephew. 
Micipsa died in 118, leaving the kingdom to Ju- 
gurtha and his two sons, Hiempsal and Adher- 
bal, in common. Jugurtha soon showed that 
he aspired to the sole sovereignty of the coun- 
try. In the course of the same year he found 
an opportunity to assassinate Hiempsal at Thir- 
mida, and afterward defeated Adherbal in bat- 
tle. Adherbal fled to Rome to invoke the as- 
sistance of the senate; but Jugurtha, by a lav- 
ish distribution of bribes, counteracted the just 
complaints of his enemy. The senate decreed 
that the kingdom of Numidia should be equally 
divided between the two competitors ; but the 
senators intrusted with the execution of this 
decree were also bribed by Jugurtha, who thus 
succeeded in obtaining the western division of 
the kingdom, adjacent to Mauretania, by far the 
larger and richer portion of the two (117). But 
this advantage was far from contenting him. 
Shortly afterward he invaded the territories of 
Adherbal with a large army, and defeated him. 
Adherbal made his escape to the strong fortress 
of Cirta, where he was closely blockaded by 
Jugurtha. The Romans commanded Jugurtha 
409 



JULIA. 



JULIANUS. 



to abstain from further hostilities ; but he paid j 
no attention to their commands, and at length} 
gained possession of Cirta, and put Adherbal to 
death, 112. War was now declared against 
Jugurtha at Rome, and the consul, L. Calpur- 
nius Bestia, was sent into Africa, 111. Ju- 
gurtha had recourse to his customary arts ; and, 
by means of large sums of money given to Bes- 
tia and M. Scaurus, his principal lieutenant, he 
purchased from them a favorable peace. The 
conduct of Bestia excited the greatest indigna- 
tion at Rome, and Jugurtha was summoned to 
the city under a safe conduct, the popular party 
hoping to be able to convict the nobility by 
means of his evidence. The scheme, however, 
failed ; since one of the tribunes, who had been 
gained over by the friends of Bestia and Scau- 
rus, forbade the king to give evidence. Soon 
afterward Jugurtha was compelled to leave 
Italy, in consequence of his having ventured on 
the assassination of Massiva, whose counter-in- 
fluence he regarded with apprehension. Vid. 
Massiva. The war was now renewed ; but the 
consul, Sp. Postumius Albinus, who arrived to 
conduct it (110), was able to effect nothing 
against Jugurtha. When the consul went to 
Rome to hold the comitia, he left his brother 
Aulus in command of the army. Aulus was de- 
feated by Jugurtha ; great part of his army was 
cut to pieces, and the rest only escaped a simi- 
lar fate by the ignominy of passing under the 
yoke. But this disgrace at once roused all 
the spirit of the Roman people : the treaty con- 
eluded by Aulus was instantly annulled ; and 
the consul Q. Csecilius Metellus was sent into 
Africa at the head of a new army (109). Metel- 
lus was an able general and an upright man, 
whom Jugurtha was unable to cope with in the 
field, or to seduce by bribes. In the course of 
two years Metellus frequently defeated Jugur- 
tha, and at length drove him to take refuge 
among the Gaetulians. In 10*7 Metellus was 
succeeded in the command by Marius ; but the 
cause of Jugurtha had meantime been espoused 
by his father-in-law Bocchus, king of Maureta- 
nia, who had advanced to his support with a 
large army. The united forces of Jugurtha and 
Bocchus were defeated in a decisive battle by 
Marius ; and Bocchus purchased the forgive- 
ness of the Romans by surrendering his son-in- 
law to Sulla, the quasstor of Marius (106). Ju- 
gurtha remained in captivity till the return of 
Marius to Rome, when, after adorning the tri- 
umph of his conqueror (Jan. 1, 104), he was 
thrown into a dungeon, and there starved to 
■death. 

Julia. 1. Aunt of Csesar the dictator, and 
wife of C. Marius the elder. She died B.C. 68, 
and her nephew pronounced her funeral oration. 
• — 2. Mother of M. Antonius the triumvir. In 
the proscription of the triumvirate (43) she 
saved the life of her brother, L. Csesar. Vid. 
Cesar, No. 5. — 3. Sister of Csesar the dictator, 
and wife of M. Atius Balbus, by whom she had 
Atia, the mother of Augustus. Vid. Atia. — 
4. Daughter of Caesar the dictator, by Cornelia, 
and his only child in marriage, was married to 
Cn. Pompey in 59. She was a woman of beauty 
and virtue, and was tenderly attached to her 
husband, although twenty-three years older than 
herself. She died in childbed in 54. — 5. Daugh- 
410 



| ter of Augustus by Scribonia, and his only child, 
j was born in 39. She was educated with great 
strictness, but grew up one of the most profligate 
women of her age. She was thrice married* 
first, to M. Marcellus, her first cousin, in 25 ; sec- 
ondly,, after his death (23) without issue, to M. 
Agrippa, by whom she had three sons, C. and 
L. Caesar, and Agrippa Postumus, and two 
daughters, Julia and Agrippina; and thirdly, 
after Agrippa's death in 12, to Tiberius Nero, the 
future emperor. In B.C. 2 Augustus at length 
became acquainted with the misconduct of his 
daughter, whose notorious adulteries had been 
one reason why her husband Tiberius had quit- 
ted Italy four years before. Augustus was in- 
censed beyond measure, and banished her to 
Pandataria, an island off the coast of Campania, 
At the end of five years she was removed to 
Rhegium, but she was never suffered to quit 
the bounds of the city. Even the testament of 
Augustus showed the inflexibility of his anger. 
He bequeathed her no legacy, and forbade her 
ashes to repose in his mausoleum. Tiberius, 
on his accession (A.D. 14), deprived her of almost 
all the necessaries of life, and she died in the 
course of the same year. — 6. Daughter of the 
preceding, and wife of L. iEmilius Paulus. She 
inherited her mother's licentiousness, and was, 
in consequence, banished by her grandfather 
Augustus to the little island Tremerus, on the 
coast of Apulia, A.D. 9, where she lived nearly 
twenty years. She died in 28. It was probably 
this Julia whom Ovid celebrated as Corinna in 
his elegies and other erotic poems ; and his in- 
trigues with her appear to have been the cause 
of the poet's banishment in A.D. 9. — *1. Young- 
est child of Germanicus and Agrippina, was 
born A.D. 18; was married to M. Vinicius in 
33 ; and was banished in 37 by her brother Ca- 
ligula, who was believed to have had an incest- 
uous intercourse with her. She was recalled 
by Claudius, but was afterward put to death by 
this emperor at Messalina's instigation. The 
charge brought against her was adultery, and 
Seneca, the philosopher, was banished to Cor- 
sica as the partner of her guilt. — 8. Daughter 
of Drusus and Livia, the sister of Germanicus. 
She was married, A.D. 20, to her first cousin, 
Nero, son of Germanicus and Agrippina, and, 
after Nero's death, to Rubellius Blandus, by 
whom she had a son, Rubellius Plautus. She, 
too, was put to death by Claudius, at the insti- 
gation of Messalina, 59. — 9. Daughter of Titus, 
the son of Vespasian, married Flavius Sabinus, 
a nephew of the Emperor Vespasian. Julia 
died of abortion, caused by her uncle Domitian, 
with whom she lived in criminal intercourse, 
— 10. Domna. Vid. Domna. — 11. Drusilla. 
Vid. Drusilla. — 12. Mesa. Vid. M-esa. 

Julia Gens, one of the most ancient patrician 
houses at Rome, was of Alban origin, and was 
removed to Rome by Tullus Hostilius upon the 
destruction of Alba Louga. It claimed descent 
from the mythical lulus, the son of Venus and 
Anchises. The most distinguished family in 
the gens is that of Cesar. Under the empire 
we find an immense number of persons of the 
name of Julius, the most important of whom 
are spoken of under their surnames. 
Julianus Didius. Vid. Didius. 
Julianus, Flavius Claudius, usually called 



JULIANUS, FLAVIUS CLAUDIUS. 



JULIAN US, SALVIUS. 



Julian, and surnamed the Apostate, Roman 
emperor A.D. 361-363. He was bom at Con- 
stantinople A.D. 331, and was the son of Julius 
Constantius by his second wife, Basilina, and 
the nephew of Coustantine the Great Julian 
and his elder brother, Gallus, were the only 
members of the imperial family whose lives 
were spared by the sons of Coustantine the 
Great, on the death of the latter in 337. The 
two brothers wore educated with care, and were 
brought up in the principles of the Christian re- 
ligion ; but as they advanced to manhood, they 
were watched with jealousy and suspicion by 
the Emperor Coustantiu*. After the execution 
of Gallus in 354 (vid. Gallus), the life of Julian 
was in great peril ; but he succeeded in pacify- 
ing the suspicions of the emperor, and was al- 
lowed to go to Atlieus in 355 to pursue his stud- 
ies. Here he devoted himself with ardor to the 
study of Greek literature and philosophy, and 
attracted universal attention both by his attain- 
ments and abilities. Among his fellow-students 
were Gregory of Nazianzus and Basil, both of 
whom afterward became so celebrated in the 
Christian church. Julian had already abandon- 
ed Christianity in his heart and returned to the 
pagan faith of his ancestors, but fear of Con- 
stantius prevented him from making an open 
declaration of his apostasy. Julian did not re- 
anain long at Athens. In November, 355, he 
received from Constantius the title of Caesar, 
and was sent to Gaul to oppose the Germans, 
who had crossed the Rhine, and were ravaging 
some of the fairest provinces of Gaul. During 
the next five years (356-360) Julian carried on 
war against the two German confederacies of 
the Alemanni aud Franks with great success, 
and gaiued many victories over them. His in- 
ternal administration was distinguished by jus- 
tice and wisdom, and he gained the good will 
and affection of the provinces intrusted to his 
care. His growiug popularity awakened the 
jealousy of Constantius, who commanded him 
to send some of his best troops to the East, to 
serve against the Persians. His soldiers re- 
fused to leave their favorite general, and pro- 
claimed him emperor at Paris in 360. After 
several fruitless negotiations between Julian 
and Constantius, both parties prepared for war. 
In 361 Julian marched along the valley of the 
Danube toward Constantinople ; but Constan- 
tius, who had set out from Syria to oppose his 
rival, died on his march in Cilicia. His death 
left Julian the uudisputed master of the empire. 
On the 11th of December Julian entered Con- 
stantinople. He lost no time in publicly avow- 
ing himself a pagan, but he proclaimed that 
Christianity would be tolerated equally with 
paganism. He did not, however, act impartial- 
ly toward the Christians. He preferred pagans 
as his civil and military officers, forbade the 
Christians to teach rhetoric and grammar in 
the schools, and, in order to annoy them, allow- 
ed the Jews to rebuild the temple at Jerusalem. 
In the following year (362) Julian went to Syria 
in order to make preparations for the war against 
the Persians. He speut the winter at Antioch, 
where he made the acquaintance of the orator 
Libanius ; and in the spring of 363 he set out 
against the Persians. He crossed the Euphrates 
and the Tigris ; and after burning his' fleet on 



the Tigris, that it might not fall into the hands 
of the enemy, he boldly marched iuto the in- 
terior of the country in search of the Persian 
king. His army suffered much from the heat, 
want of water, and provisions, and he was at 
length compelled to retreat. The Persians now 
appeared and fearfully harassed his rear. Still 
the Romans remained victorious in many a 
bloody engagement ; but in the last battle fought 
on the 26th of June, Julian was mortally wound- 
ed by an arrow, and died in the course of the 
day. Jovian was chosen emperor in his stead, 
on the field of battle. Vid. Joviaxus. Julian 
was an extraordinary character. As a monarch, 
he was indefatigable in his attention to busi- 
ness, upright in his administration, and compre- 
hensive in his views ; as a man, he was virtu- 
ous in the midst of a profligate age, and did not 
yield to the luxurious temptations to which he 
was exposed. In consequence of his apostasy 
he has been calumniated by Christian writers ; 
but, for the same reason, he has been unduly ex- 
tolled by heathen authors. He wrote a large 
number of works, many of which are extant. 
He was a man of reflection and thought, but 
possessed no creative genius. He did not, how T - 
ever, write merely for the sake of writing, like 
so many of his contemporaries ; his works show 
that he had his subjects really at heart, and that 
in literature as well as in business his extraor- 
dinary activity arose from the wants of a pow- 
erful mind, which desired to improve itself and 
the world. The style of Julian is remarkably 
pure, and is a close imitation of the style of the 
classical Greek writers. The following are his 
most important works : 1. Letters, most of which 
were intended for public circulation, and are of 
great importance for the history of the time. 
Edited by Heyler, Mainz, 1828. — 2. Orations, 
on various subjects, as, for instance, On the 
Emperor Constantius, On the worship of the 
sun, On the mother of the gods (Cybele), On 
true and false Cynicism, <fcc. — 3. The Ccesars, or 
the Banquet (Katoapeg rj liv/.tiroaiov), a satirical 
composition, which is one of the most agreea- 
ble and instructive productions of ancient wit 
Julian describes the Roman emperors approach- 
ing one after the other to take their seat round 
a table in the heavens ; and as they come up, 
their faults, vices, and crimes are censured 
with a sort of bitter mirth by old Silenus, where- 
upon each Caasar defends himself as well as he 
can. Edited by Heusinger, Gotha, 1736, and by 
Harless, Erlangen, 1785. — 4. Misopogon, or the 
Enemy of the Beard (Migottujuv), a severe satira 
on the licentious and effeminate manners of the 
inhabitants of Antioch, who had ridiculed Ju- 
lian, when he resided in the city, on account of 
his austere virtues, and had laughed at his al- 
lowing his beard to grow in the ancient fashion. 
— 5. Against tlie Christians {Kara Xpiercavuv). 
This work is lost, but some extracts from it are 
given in Cy rill's reply to it, which is still ex- 
tant. The best edition of the collected works 
of Julian is by Spanheim, Lips., 1696. 

Juliakus, Salvius, an eminent Roman jurist, 
who flourished under Hadrian and the Anto- 
nines. He was praefectus urbi, and twice con- 
sul, but his name does not appear in the Fasti. 
By the order of Hadrian, he drew np the edictum 
perpetuum, which forms an epoch in the history 
411 



JULIAS. 



JUPITER. 



of Roman jurisprudence. His work appears to 
have consisted in collecting and arranging the 
clauses which the praetors were accustomed to 
insert in their annual edict, in condensing the 
materials, and in omitting antiquated provisions. 
He was a voluminous legal writer, and his works 
are cited in the Digest. 

Julias ('lov?uac : Bib. Bethsaida : ruins at Et- 
Tell), a city of Palestine, on the eastern side of 
the Jordan, north of the Lake of Tiberias, so 
called by the tetrarch Philip, in honor of Julia, 
the daughter of Augustus. 

Juliobriga (now Retortillo, near Reynosa), a 
town of the Cantabri in Hispania Tarraconen- 
sis, near the sources of the Iberus. 

Juliomagus. Vid. Andecavi. 

J dliopolis ('1ov?a6tto?hc). Vid. Gordiuji, Tar- 
sus. 

Julius. Vid. Julia Gens. 

Juncaria (now Junquerd), a town of the In- 
digetes in Hispania Tarraconensis, on the road 
from Barcino to the frontiers of Gaul, in a plain 
covered with rushes ('lovyicdpiov iredcov). 

Junia. 1. Half-sister of M. Brutus, the mur- 
derer of Caesar, and wife of M. Lepidus, the 
triumvir. — 2. Tertia or Tertulla, own sister 
of the preceding, was the wife of C. Cassius, 
one of Caesar's murderers. She survived her 
husband a long while, and did not die till A.D. 
22. 

Junia Gens, an ancient patrician house at 
Rome, to which belonged the celebrated M. 
Junius Brutus, who took such an active part in 
expelling the Tarquins. But afterward the gens 
appears as only a plebeian one. Under the 
republic the chief families were those of Bru- 
tus, Bubulcus, Gracchanus, Norbanus, Pullus, 
Silanus. The Junii who lived under the em- 
pire are likewise spoken of under their various 
surnames. 

Juno, called Hera by the Greeks. The Greek 
goddess is spoken of in a separate article. Vid. 
Hera. The word Ju-no contains the same root 
as Ju-piter. As Jupiter is the king of heaven 
and of the gods, so Juno is the queen of heaven, 
or the female Jupiter. She was worshipped at 
Rome as the queen of heaven, from early times, 
with the surname of Regina. At a later period 
her worship was solemnly transferred from Veii 
to Rome, where a sanctuary was dedicated to 
her on the Aventine. As Jupiter was the pro- 
tector of the male sex, so Juno watched over 
the female sex. She was supposed to accom- 
pany every woman through life, from the mo- 
ment of her birth to her death. Hence she bore 
the special surnames of Virginalis and Matrona, 
as well as the general ones of Opigena and 
Sospita, and under the last-mentioned name 
she was worshipped at Lanuvium. On their 
birth-day women offered sacrifices to Juno 
surnamed Natalis, just as men sacrificed to 
their genius natalis. The great festival, cele- 
brated by all the women, in honor of Juno, was 
called Matronalia (vid. Diet, of Antiq., s. v.), and 
took place on the 1st of March. Her protection 
of womeu, and especially her power of making 
them fruitful, is further alluded to in the festival 
Populifugia (Diet, of Antiq., s . v.), as well as in 
the surname of Fcbrulis, Februata, Februta, or 
Februalis. Juno was further, like Saturn, the 
guardian of the finances, and under the name 
412 



of Moneta she had a temple on the Capitoline 
Hill, which contained the mint. The most im- 
portant period in a woman's life is that of her 
marriage, and she was therefore believed es- 
pecially to preside over marriage. Hence she 
| was called Juga or Jugalis, and had a variety 
of other names, such as Pronuba, Cinxia, Luci- 
na, (fee. The month of June, which is said to 
have been originally called Junonius, was consid- 
ered to be the most favorable period for marry- 
ing. Women in childbed invoked Juno Lucina 
to help them, and newly -born children were like- 
wise under her protection ; hence she was some- 
times confounded with the Greek Artemis or 
Ilithyia. In Etruria she was worshipped un- 
der the name of Cupra. She was also wor- 
shipped at Ealerii, Lanuvium, Aricia, Tibur, 
Praeneste, and other places. In the represent- 
ations of the Roman Juno that have come down 
to us, the type of the Greek Hera is commonly 
adopted. 

Jupiter, called Zeus by the Greeks. The 
Greek god is spoken of in a separate article. 
Vid. Zeus. Jupiter was originally an elemental 
divinity, and his name signifies the father or 
lord of heaven, being a contraction of Diovis 
pater or Diespiter. Being the lord of heaven, 
he was worshipped as the god of rain, storms, 
thunder, and lightning, whence he had the epi- 
thets of Pluvius, Fulgurator, Tonitrualis, To- 
nans, and Fulminator. As the pebble or flint 
stone was regarded as the symbol of lightning, 
Jupiter was frequently represented with such a 
stone in his hand instead of a thunderbolt. In 
concluding a treaty, the Romans took the sa- 
cred symbols of Jupiter, viz., the sceptre and 
flint stone, together with some grass from his 
temple, and the oath taken on such an occasion 
was expressed by per Jovejn Lapidem jurare. 
In consequence of his possessing such powers 
over the elements, and especially of his always 
having the thunderbolt at his command, he was 
regarded as the highest and most powerful 
among the gods. Hence he is called the Best 
and Most High (Optimus Maximus). His tem- 
ple at Rome stood on the lofty hill of the Capi- 
tol, whence he derived the surnames of Capi- 
tolinus and Tarpeius. He was regarded as the 
special protector of Rome. As such he was 
worshipped by the consuls on entering upon 
their office ; and the triumph of a victorious 
general was a solemn procession to his temple. 
He therefore bore the surnames of Imperator, 
Victor, Invictus, Stator, Opitulus, Feretrius, Prce- 
dator, Triumphator, and the like. Under all 
these surnames he had temples or statues at 
Rome; and two temples, viz., those of Jupiter 
Stator and of Jupiter Feretrius, were believed 
to have been built in the time of Romulus. Un- 
der the name of Jupiter Capitolinus, he presided 
over the great Roman games ; and under the 
name of Jupiter Latialis or Latiaris, over the 
Feriae Latinae. Jupiter, according to the belief 
of the Romans, determined the course of all 
human affairs. He foresaw the future, and the 
events happening in it were the results of his 
will. He revealed the future to man through 
signs in the heavens and the flight of birds, 
which are hence called the messengers of Ju- 
piter, while the god himself is designated as 
Prodigialis, that is, the sender of prodigies. 



JURA. 

For the same reason the god was invoked at 
the beginning of every undertaking, whether 
eacred or profane, together with Janus, who 
blessed the beginning itself. Jupiter was fur- 
ther regarded as the guardian of law, and as 
the protector of justice and virtue. He main- 
tained the sauctity of an oath, and presided over 
all transactions which were based upon faithful- 
ness and justice. Hence Fides was his com- 
panion on the Capitol, along with Victoria ; and 
hence a traitor to his country, and persons 
guilty of perjury, were thrown down from the 
Tarpeian rock. " As Jupiter was the lord of 
heaven, and consequently the prince of light, 
the white color was sacred to him, white ani- 
mals were sacrificed to him, his chariot was be- 
lieved to be drawn by four white horses, his 
priests wore white caps, and the consuls were 
attired in white when they offered sacrifices in 
the Capitol the day they entered on their office. 
The worship of Jupiter at Rome was under the 
special care of the Flamen Dialis, who was the 
highest iu rank of all the flamens. Vid. Diet, 
of Antiq., art. Flamen. The Romans, in their 
representations of the god, adopted the type of 
the Greek Zeus. 

Jura or Jurassus Moxs (now Jura), a range 
of mountains, which run north of the Lake Le- 
manus as far as Augusta Ram-acorum (now Au- 
gust, near Basle), on the Rhine, forming the 
boundary between the Sequani and Helvetii. 

Justiniana. 1. Prima, a town in Illyria, near 
Tauresium, was the birthplace of Justinian, and 
was built by that emperor ; it became the resi- 
dence of the archbishop of Illyria, and, in the 
Middle Ages, of the Servian kings. — 2. Secunda, 
also a town in Illyria, previously called Ulpiana, 
was enlarged and embellished by Justinian. 

Justiniaxus, surnamed the Great, emperor 
of Constantinople A.D. 527-505. He was born 
near Tauresium, in Illyria, A.D. 483 ; was adopt- 
ed by his uncle, the Emperor Justinus, in 520; 
succeeded his uncle in 527 ; married the beau- 
tiful but licentious actress, Theodora, who ex- 
ercised great influence over him ; and died in 
565, leaving the crown to his nephew, Justin II. 
He was, during the greater part of his reign, a 
firm supporter of orthodoxy, and thus has re- 
ceived from ecclesiastical writers the title of 
Great ; but toward the end of his life he became 
a heretic, being one of the adherents of Nesto- 
rianism. His foreign wars were glorious, but 
all his victories were won by his generals. The 
empire of the Vandals in Africa was overthrown 
by Belisarius, and their king Gelimer led a 
prisoner to Constantinople ; and the kingdom 
of the Ostrogoths in Italy was likewise destroy- 
ed by the successive victories of Belisarius and 
Narses. Vid. Belisarius, Narses. Justinian 
adorned Constantinople with many public build- 
ings of great magnificence ; but the cost of their 
erection, as well as the expenses of his foreign 
wars, obliged him to impose many new taxes, 
which were constantly increased by the natural 
covetousuess and rapacity of the emperor. 
The great work of Justinian is his legislation. 
He resolved to establish a perfect system of 
written legislation for all his dominions ; and, 
for this end, to make two great collections, one 
of the imperial constitutions, the other of all 
that was valuable in the works of jurists. His 



JUSTINIANUS. 

first work was the collection of the imperial 
constitutions. This he commenced in 528, in 
the second year of his reign. The task was 
intrusted to a commission of ten, who complet- 
ed their labors in the following year (529) ; and 
their collection was declared to be law under 
the title of Justinianeus Cadex. In 530, Tribo- 
nian, who had been one of the commission of 
ten employed in drawing up the Code, was au- 
thorized by the emperor to select fellow-laborers 
to assist him in the other division of the under- 
taking. Tribonian selected sixteen coadjutors ; 
and this commission proceeded at once to lay 
under contribution the works of those jurists 
who had received from former emperors " auc- 
toritatem conscribendarum interpretandique le- 
gum." They were ordered to divide their ma- 
terials into fifty books, and to subdivide each 
book into Titles (Tiluli). Nothing that was 
valuable was to be excluded, nothing that was 
obsolete was to be admitted, and neither repe- 
tition nor inconsistency was to be allowed. 
This work was to bear the name Digesta or 
Pandectce. The work was completed, in accord- 
ance with the instructions that had been given, 
in the short space of three years ; and on the 
30th of December, 533, it received from the im- 
perial sanction the authority of law. It com- 
prehends upward of nine thousand extracts, in 
the selection of which the compilers made use 
of nearly two thousand different books, con- 
taining more than three million lines. The 
Code and the Digest contained a complete body 
of law ; but as they were not adapted to ele- 
mentary instruction, a commission was appoint- 
ed, consisting of Tribonian, Theophilus, and Do- 
rotheus, to compose an institutional work, which 
should contain the elements of the law (legum 
incunabula), and should not be encumbered with 
useless matter. Accordingly, they produced a 
treatise under the title of Institutiones, which 
was based on elementary works of a similar 
character, but chiefly on the Institutiones of 
Gaius. Vid. Gaius. The Institutiones consist- 
ed of four books, and were published with the 
imperial sanction at the same time as the Di- 
gest. After the publication of the Digest and 
the Institutiones, fifty decisiones and some new 
constitutiones also were promulgated by the 
emperor. This rendered a revision of the Code 
necessary; and, accordingly, a new Code was 
promulgated at Constantinople on the 16th of 
November, 534, and the use of the decisiones, 
of the new constitutiones, and of the first edition 
of the Code was forbidden. The second edition 
{Codex Repetitai Pradectionis) is the code that 
we now possess, in twelve books, each of which 
is divided into titles. Justinian subsequently 
published various new constitutiones, to which 
he gave the name of Novellce Constitutiones. 
These Constitutiones form a kind of supplement 
to the Code, and were published at various times 
from 535 to 565, but most of them appeared be- 
tween 535 and 539. It does not seem, how- 
ever, that any official compilation of these No' 
vellce appeared in the lifetime of Justinian. The 
four legislative works of Justinian, the Institu- 
tiones, Digesta or Pandectce, Codex, and Novellce, 
are included under the general name of Corpus 
Juris Civilis, and form the Roman law, as re- 
ceived in Europe. The best editions of the 
413 



JUSTINUS. 



LABDA. 



Corpus for general use are by Gothofredus and 
Van Leeuwen, Amst, 1663, 2 vols. fol. ; by Ge- 
bauer and Spangenberg, Gotting., 1776-1797, 2 
vols. 4to ; and by Beck, Lips., 1836, 2 vols. 4to. 

Justinus. 1. The historian, of uncertain 
date, but who did not live later than the fourth 
or fifth century of our era, is the author of an 
extant work entitled Historiarum Philippicarxim 
Libri XLIV. This work is taken from the His- 
torian Philippics of Trogus Pompeius, who lived 
in the time of Augustus. The title Philippics 
was given to it, because its main object was to 
give the history of the Macedonian monarchy, 
with all its branches ; but in the execution of 
this design, Trogus permitted himself to indulge 
in so many excursions, that the work formed a 
kind of universal history from the rise of the 
Assyrian monarchy to the conquest of the East 
by Rome. The original work of Trogus, which 
was one of great value, is lost. The work of 
•Justin is not so much an abridgment of that of 
Trogus, as a selection of such parts as seemed 
to him most worthy of being generally known. 
Edited by Grasvius, Lugd. Bat., 1683 ; by Gro- 
novius, Lugd. Bat, 1719 and 1760 ; and by 
Erotscker, Lips., 1827, 3 vols. — 2. Surnamed 
the Maetye, one of the earliest of the Christian 
writers, was born about A.D. 108, at Flavia We- 
apon's, the Shechem of the Old Testament, a city 
in Samaria. He was brought up as a heathen, 
and in his youth studied the Greek philosophy 
with zeal and ardor. He was afterward con- 
verted to Christianity. He retained as a Chris- 
tian the garb of a philosopher, but devoted him- 
self to the propagation, by writing and other- 
wise, of the faith which he had embraced. He 
was put to death at Rome in the persecution 
under Marcus Antoninus, about 165. Justin 
wrote a large number of works in Greek, sev- 
eral of which have come down to us Of these 
the most important are, 1. An Apology for the 
Christians, addressed to Antoninus Pius, about 
139 ; 2. A Second Apology for the Christians, ad- 
dressed to the emperors M. Aurelius and L. 
Verus ; 3. A Dialogue with Tryphon the Jew, in 
which Justin defends Christianity against the 
objections of Tryphon. The best edition of the 
collected works of Justin is by Otto, Jena, 1842- 
1844,2 vols. 8vo; [second edition, Jena, 1848- 
50, 3 vols. 8vo.] 

Justus, a Jewish historian of Tiberias in Gal- 
ileea, was a contemporary of the historian Jo- 
sephus, who was very hostile to him. 

Jutubna, the nymph of a fountain in Latium, 
famous for its healing qualities. Its water was 
used in nearly all sacrifices ; a chapel was ded- 
icated to its nymph at Rome in the Campus 
Martius by Lutatius Catulus ; and sacrifices 
were offered to her on the 11th of January. A 
pond in the forum, between the temples of Cas- 
tor and Vesta, was called Lacus Juturnse, 
whence we must infer that the name of the 
nymph Juturna is not connected with jugis, but 
probably with juvare. She is said to have been 
beloved by Jupiter, who rewarded her with im- 
mortality and the rule over the waters. Some 
writers call her the wife of Janus and mother 
of Fontus, but in the ^Eneid she appears as the 
affectionate sister of Turnus. 

Juvavum or Juvavia (now Salzburg), a town 
in Noricum, on the River Jovavus or Isonta 
414 



I (now Salza), was a Roman colony founded by 
i Hadrian, and the residence of the Roman gov- 
! ernor of the province. It was destroyed by the 
[ Heruli in the fifth century, but was afterward 
rebuilt. 

Juvenilis, Decimus Junius, the Great Roman 
! satirist, but of whose life we have few authentic 
[ particulars. His ancient biographers relate 
' that he was either the son or the " alumnus " of 
a rich freedman ; that he occupied himself, until 
1 he had nearly reached the term of middle life, 
j in declaiming ; that, having subsequently com- 
j posed some clever lines upon Paris the panto- 
j mime, he was induced to cultivate assiduously 
| satirical composition ; and that, in consequence 
I of his attacks upon Paris becoming known to 
the court, the poet, although now an old man of 
eighty, was appointed to the command of a body 
of troops, in a remote district of Egypt, where 
he died shortly afterward It is supposed bj 
some that the Paris who was attacked by Ju 
venal was the contemporary of Domitian, and 
that the poet was accordingly banished by this 
emperor. But this opinion is clearly untena- 
ble. 1. "We know that Paris was killed in A.D 
83, upon suspicion of an intrigue with the Em- 
press Domitia. 2. The fourth satire, as appears 
from the concluding lines, was written after the 
death of Domitian, that is, not earlier than 96 
3. The first satire, as we learn from the forty- 
ninth line, was written after the condemnation 
of Mariys Priscus, that is, not earlier than 100. 
These positions admit of no doubt; and hence 
it is established that Juvenal was ahve at least 
seventeen years after the death of Paris, and 
that some of his satires were composed after 
the death of Domitian. The only facts with 
regard to Juvenal upon which we can implicitly 
rely are, that he flourished toward the close of 
the first century ; that Aquinum, if not the place 
of his nativity, was at least his chosen residence 
(Sat, hi., 319) ; and that he is, in all probability, 
the friend whom Martial addresses in three epi- 
grams. There is, perhaps, another circum- 
stance which we may admit. We are told that 
he declaimed for many years of his life; and 
every page in his writings bears evidence to 
the accuracy of this assertion. Each piece is 
a finished rhetorical essay, energetic, glowing, 
and sonorous. He denounces vice in the most 
indignant terms ; but the obvious tone of exag- 
geration which pervades all his invectives 
leaves us in doubt how far this sustained pas- 
sion is real, and how far assumed for show. 
The extant works of Juvenal consist of sixteen 
satires, the last being a fragment of very doubt- 
ful authenticity, all composed in heroic hexam- 
eters. Edited by Ruperti, Lips., 1819 ; and by 
Heinrich, Bonn, 1839. 
Juventas. Vid. Hebe. 

Juventius. 1. Celsus. Vid. Celsus. — 2. 
Lateeensis. Vid Lateeensis. — 3. Thalna. — 
Vid. Thalna. 

[Juveena, another name for Hibernia. Vid. 
Hibeenia.] 



Labda (Ad6da), a daughter of the Bacchiad Am- 
phion, and mother of Cypselus by Eetioa Vid 
Cypselus. 



LABDACIDJS. 



LAB US. 



LABDACIDiB. Vid. Labdacus. 
Labdacus (/LuBSokoc), son of the Theban king 
Polydorus, by Nycteis, daughter of Nycteus. 
Labdacus lost his father at an early age, and 
was placed under the guardianship of Nycteus, 
and afterward under that of Lycus, a brother 
of Nycteus. When Labdacus had grown up to 
manhood, Lycus surrendered the government 
to him • and ou the death of Labdacus, which 
occurred soon after, Lycus undertook the guard- 
ianship of his sou Laius, the father of (Edipus. 
The name LabdatXdcs is frequently given to the 
descendants of Labdacus— (Edipus, Polynices, 
Eteocles, and Antigone. 

Labdalum. Vid. Syracuse. 
Labeates, a warlike people in Dalmatia, 
whose chief town was Scodra, and in whose 
territory was the Labkatis Palus (now Lake of 
Scutari), through which the River Barbana (now 
Bogana) runs. 

Labeo, Antistius. 1. A Roman jurist, was 
one of the murderers of Julius Caesar, and put 
an end to his life after the battle of Philippi, B.C. 
42. — 2. Son of the preceding, and a still more 
eminent jurist. He adopted the republican opin- 
ions of his father, and was, in consequence, dis- 
liked by Augustus. It is probable that the 
Labeone insanior of Horace (Sat, i., 3, 80) was 
a stroke levelled at the jurist, in order to please 
the emperor. Labeo wrote a large number of 
works, which are cited in the Digest. He was 
the founder of one of the two great legal schools 
spoken of under CArno. 

Labeo, Q. Fabius, quaestor urbanus B.C. 196 ; 
praetor 189, when he commanded the fleet in the 
war against Antiochus ; and consul 183. 

Laberius, Decimus, a Roman eques, and a 
distinguished writer of mimes, was born about 
B.C. 107, and died in 43 at Puteoli, in Campa- 
nia, At Caesars triumphal games in October, 
45, P. Syrus, a professional mimus, seems to 
have challenged all his craft to a trial of wit in 
extemporaneous farce, and Caesar offered Labe- 
rius five hundred thousand sesterces to appear 
on the stage. Laberius was sixty years old, 
and the profession of a mimus was infamous, 
but the wish of the dictator was equivalent to 
a command, and he reluctantly complied. He 
had, however, revenge in his power, and took 
it. His prologue awakened compassion, and 
perhaps indignation ; and, during the perform- 
ance, he adroitly availed himself of his various 
characters to point his wit at Caesar. In the 
person of a beaten Syrian slave he cried out, 
" Marry ! Quirites, but we lose our freedom" 
(Porro, Quirites. libertatem perdidimus), and all 
eyes were turned upon the dictator ; and in an- 
other mime ho uttored the pregnaut maxim, 
"Needs must he fear who makes all else 
adread" (Necesse est multos timeat quern multi 
timent). Caesar, impartially or vindictively, I 
awarded the prize to Syrus. The prologue pf 
Laberius has been preserved by Macrobius (Sat, j 
ii., 7); and, if this may be taken as a specimen 
of his style, he would rank above Terence, and 
second only to Plautus, in dramatic vigor. La- 
berius evidently made great impression on bis 
contemporaries, although he is depreciated by 
Horace (Sat., i., 10, 6). 

Labicum, Labici, Lavicum, Lavici (Labica-, 
nus : now Colonna), an ancient town in Latium 



I on one of the hills of the Alban Mountain, fifteen 
miles southeast of Rome, west of Praeneste, and 
northeast of Tusculum. It was an ally of the 
^Equi ; it was taken and was colonized by the 
Romans, B.C. 418. 

Labienus. 1. T, tribune of the plebs B.C. 
63, the year of Cicero's consulship. Under pre- 
tence of avenging his uncle's death, who had 
joined Saturninus (100), and had perished along 
with the other conspirators, he accused Rabir- 
ius of perduellio or high treason. Rabirius wa? 
defended by Cicero. Vid. Rabirius. In his 
tribuneship Labienus was entirely devoted to 
Caesar's interests. Accordingly, when Caesar 
went into Transalpine Gaul in 58, he took Labi- 
enus with him as his legatus. Labienus con- 
tinued with Caesar during the greater part of 
his campaigns in Gaul, and was the ablest offi- 
cer he had. On the breaking out of the civil 
war in 49, he deserted Caesar and joined Pom- 
pey. His defection caused the greatest jov 
among the Pompeian party ; but he disappoint- 
ed the expectations of his new friends, and 
never performed any thing of importance. He- 
fought against his old commander at the battle 
of Pharsalia in Greece, 48, at the battle of Thap - 
sus in Africa, 46, and at the battle of Munda ii: 
Spain, 45. He was slain in the last of thess 
battles. — 2. Q., son of the preceding, joined the 
party of Brutus and Cassius after the murder 
of Caesar, and was sent by them into Parthia to 
seek aid from Orodes, the Parthian king. Be- 
fore he could obtain any definite answer from 
Orodes, the news came of the battle of Philippi. 
42. Two years afterward he persuaded Orodesr 
to intrust him with the command of a Parthian 
army ; and Pacorus, the son of Orodes, was as- 
sociated with him in the command. In 40 they 
crossed the Euphrates and met with great suc- 
cess. They defeated Decidius Saxa, the lieu- 
tenant of Antony, obtained possession of the 
two great towns of Antioch and Apamea, and 
penetrated into Asia Minor. But in the follow- 
ing year, 39, P. Yentidius, the most able of An- 
tony's legates, defeated the Parthians. Labi- 
enus fled in disguise into Cilieia, where he was 
apprehended and put to death. — 3. T., a cele- 
brated orator and historian in the reign of Au- 
gustus, either son or grandson of No. 1. He re- 
tained all the republican feelings of his family, 
and never became reconciled to the imperial 
government, but took every opportunity to attack 
Augustus and his friends. His enemies obtained 
a decree of the senate that all his writings should 
be burned ; whereupon he shut himself up in the 
tomb of his ancestors, and thus perished, about 
A.D. 12. 

Labraxda (tu AdCpavda : Aa6pav5evg, Aa6pav- 
6r}v6g, Labrandeuus), a town in Caria, sixty-eight 
stadia north of Mylasa, celebrated for its temple 
of Jupiter (Zeus) Stratios or Labrandenus, on a 
hill near the city. Mr. Fellowes considers some 
ruins at Jakli to be those of the temple ; but this 
is doubtful. 

Labro, a sea port in Etruria, mentioned by 
Cicero along with Pisae, and supposed by some 
to be the Liburnum mentioned by Zosimus, and 
the modern Livorno or Leghorn. Others, how- 
ever, maintain that the ancient Portus Pisanus 
corresponds to Leghorn. 

Labus or Labutas (Ad6og or AaSovrac : now 
415 



LABYNETUS. 



LACTANTIUS. 



Sobad Koh, part of the Elburz), a mountain of 
Parthia, between the Coronus and the Sariphi 
Montes. 

Labyxetcs (Aa6vv7}~og), a name common to 
several of the Babylonian monarchs, seems to 
have been a title rather than a proper name. The 
Labynetus mentioned by Herodotus (i., 74) as 
mediating a peace between Cyaxares and Alyat- 
tes is the same with Nebuchadnezzar. The 
Labynetus who is mentioned by Herodotus (i, | 
77) as a contemporary of Cyrus and Croesus is | 
the same with the Belshazzar of the prophet j 
Daniel. By other writers he is called Nabona- 
dius or Nabonidus. He was the last king of 
Babylon. Vid. Cyrus. 

Labyrixthus. Vid. Diet, of Antiq., s. v. 

Laced^emox (Aanedaiuuv), son of Jupiter 
(Zeus) and Taygete, was married to Sparta, the 
daughter of Eurotas, by whom he became the 
father of Amyclas, Eurydice, and Asine. He 
was king of the country which he called after 
his own name, Lacedsemon, while he called the 
capital Sparta after the name of his wife. Vid. 
Sparta. 

Laced-emoxius (AaKedai/xoviog), son of Cimon, 
so named in honor of the Lacedaemonians. 

Lacedas {AaK-r/dac) or Leocedes (Herod., vi., 
127), king of Argos, and father of Melas. 

Lacetaxi, a people in Hispania Tarraconensis, 
at the foot of the Pyrenees. 

Lachares (Aaxdpjjc). 1. An Athenian dema- 
gogue, made himself tyrant of Athens B.C. 
296, when the city was besieged by Demetrius. 
When Athens was on the point of falling into 
the hands of Demetrius, Lachares made his 
escape to Thebes. — 2. An eminent Athenian 
rhetorician, who flourished in the fifth century 
of our era. 

Laches (Aa^e), an Athenian commander in 
ihe Peloponnesian war, is first mentioned in 
B.C. 427. He fell at the battle of Mantinea, 
41 S. In the dialogue of Plato which bears his 
name, he is represented as not over-acute in ar- 
gument, and with temper on a par with his 
acuteness. 

Lachesis, one of the Fates. Vid. Mcerjj. 

Lacia or Laciace (Aa/a'a, AaKiddai : AaKiddrig, 
AaKtevg), a demus in Attica, belonging to the 
tribe CEneis, west of, and near to Athens. 

Lacixium (Aclklviov aKpov), a promontory on 
the eastern coast of Bruttium, a few miles south 
of Croton, and forming the western boundary 
of the Tarentine Gulf. It possessed a cele- 
brated temple of Juno, who was worshipped here ; 
under the surname of Lacinia. The remains of 
this temple are still extant, and have given the | 
modern name to the promontory, Capo delle Co- 
lonne or Capo di Nao (uaog). Hannibal dedicat- j 
ed in this temple a bilingual inscription (in Punic 
and Greek), which recorded the history of his ! 
campaigns, and of which Polybius made use in j 
writing his history. 

Lacippo (now Alecippe), a town m Hispania 
Baetica, not far from the sea, and west of Mal- 
aca. 

Lacmox or Lacmcs (AuKfiov, AaKfiog), the 
northern part of Mount Pindus, in which the 
River Aous has its origin. 

Lacobriga. 1. (Now Lobera), a town of the 
Vaccaei in the north of Hispania Tarraconen- 
sis, on the road from Asturica to Tarraeo. — 2. 
416 



(Now Lagoa), a town on the southwest of Lusi- 
tania, east of the Promontorium Sacrum. 

Lacoxica (AaKuviK^), sometimes called Laco- 
xia by the Romans, a country of Peloponnesus, 
was bounded on the north by Argolis and Ar- 
cadia, on the west by Messenia, and on the east 
and south by the sea. Laconica was a long 
valley, running southward to the sea, and was 
inclosed on three sides by mountains. On the 
north it was separated by Mount Parnon from 
Argolis, and by Mount Sciritis from Arcadia. 
It was bounded by Mount Taygetus on the west, 
and by Mount Parnon on the east, which are 
two masses of mountains extending from Ar- 
cadia to the southern extremities of the Pelo- 
ponnesus, Mount Taygetus terininating at the 
Promontorium Tamarum, and Mount Parnon 
continued under the names of Thornax and 
Zarex, terminating at the Promontorium Malea, 
The River Eurotas flows through the valley 
lying between these mountain masses, and falls 
into the Laconian Gulf In the upper part of 
its course the valley is narrow, and near Sparta 
the mountains approach so close to each other 
as to leave little more than room for the chan- 
nel of the river. It is for this reason that we 
find the vale of Sparta called the hollow Lace- 
dcemon. Below Sparta the mountains recede, 
and the valley opens out into a plain of consid- 
erable extent. The soil of this plain is poor, 
but on the slopes of the mountains there is land 
of considerable fertility. There were valuable 
marble quarries near Taenarus. Off the coast 
shell-fish were caught, which produced a purple 
dye inferior only to the Tyrian. Laconica is 
well described by Euripides as difficult of access 
to an enemy. On the north the country could 
only be invaded by the valleys of the Eurotas 
and the GSnus ; the range of Taygetus formed 
an almost insuperable barrier on the west ; and 
the want of good harbors on the eastern coast 
protected it from invasion by sea on that side. 
Sparta was the only town of importance in the 
country. Vid. Sparta. The most ancient in- 
habitants of the country are said to have been 
Cynurians and Leleges. They were expelled 
or conquered by the Achaeans, who were the 
inhabitants of the country in the heroic age. 
The Dorians afterward invaded Peloponnesus 
and became the ruling race in Laconica. Some 
of the old Achasan inhabitants were reduced to 
slavery ; but a great number of them became 
subjects of the Dorians under the name of Peri- 
oeci (IleploLKoi). The general name for the in- 
habitants is Lacoxes (AuKuveg) or Lacedjjmonii 
(Aaaedai/iovioi) ; but the Periceci are frequently 
called Lacedaemonii, to distinguish them from the 
Spartans. 

LacOxicus Sixus {noATTog AatcoviKog), a gulf 
in the south of Peloponnesus, into which the 
Eurotas falls, beginning west at the Promonto- 
rium Teenarum, and east at the Promontorium 
Malea. 

[Lacratldes (AaKparidng), said to have been 
an archon at Athens at the time of the Persian 
invasion : in his archonship there was so heavy 
a fall of snow, and so intense cold, that the 
epithet " Lacratidian" became proverbial for in- 
tense cold.] 

Lactaxtius, a celebrated Christian father, 
but his exact name, the place of his nativity, 



LACTARIUS MONS. 



L.ELIUS. 



and the date of his birth, are uncertain. In 
modern work9 we find him denominated Lucius 
Ccelius Firwiauns Lactantius; but the two for- 
mer appellations, in the second of which Ccecil- 
ius is often substituted for Ccelius, are omitted 
in many MSS., while the two latter are fre- 
quently presented in an inverted order. Since 
he is spoken of as far advanced in life about 
A.D. 315, he must have been born not later than 
the middle of the third century, probably in 
Italy, possibly at Firmum, on the Adriatic, and 
certainly studied in Africa, where he became 
the pupil of Arnobius, who taught rhetoric at 
Sicca. His fame became so widely extended, 
that about 301 he was invited by Diocletian to 
settle at Nicomedia, and there to practice his 
art. At this period he appears to have become 
a Christian. He was summoned to Gaul about 
312-318, when now an old man, to superintend 
the education of Crispus, son of Constantine, 
and he probably died at Treves some ten or 
twelve years afterward (325-330). The extant 
works of Lactantius, are, i. Divinarum Instita- 
tionum Libri VII., a sort of introduction to 
Christianity, intended to supersede the less per- 
fect treatises of Minueius Felix, Tertullian, and 
Cyprian. Each of the seven books bears a sep- 
arate title : (1.) Be Falsa Religione. (2.) Be 
Origine Erroris. (3.) Be Falsa Sapicntia. (4.) 
Be Vera §apientia et Religione. (5.) Be Justitia. 
(6.) Be Vero Caltu. (7.) Be VitaBeata. — n. An 
Epitome of the Institutions. — in. Be Ira Bei. — 

iv. Be Opificio Bei s. Be Formatione Hominis. — 

v. Be Mortibus Persecutorum. — vi. Various Po- 
ems, most of which were probably not written by 
Lactantius. The style of Lactantius, formed 
upon the model of the great orator of Rome, has 
gained for him the appellation of the Christian 
Cicero, and not undeservedly. The best edition 
of Lactantius is by Le Brun and Lenglet du 
Fresnoy, Paris, 1748. 

Lactarius Mons or Lactis Moxs, a mountain 
in Campania, belonging to the Apennines, four 
miles east of Stabiae, so called because the cows 
which grazed upon it produced excellent milk. 
Here Narses gained a victory over the Goths, 
A.D. 553. 

[Lactodurum (now probably Towcester), a city 
of the Catyeuchlani in Britannia Romana, on the 
way from Londinium to Lindum.] 

Lacydes (Aaicvdnc,) a native of Cyrene, suc- 
ceeded Arcesilaus as president of the Academy 
at Athens. The place where his instructions 
were delivered was a garden, named the Lacy- 
deum (Aanvdeiov), provided for the purpose by 
his frieud Attains Philometor, king of Pergamus. 
This alteration in the locality of the school seems 
at least to have contributed to the rise of the 
name of theAvw Academy. He died about 215 
from the effects, it is said, of excessive drink- 
ing. 

Lade (Addrj), an island off the western coast 
of Caria, opposite to Miletus and to the bay into 
which the Maeander falls. 

[Lades, son of Imbrasus, a follower of ^Eneas, 
slain by Turuus in Italy.] 

Ladon (Adduv). 1. The dragon who guard- 
ed the apples of the Hespei*ides, was the off- 
spring of Typhou and Echidna, or of Terra (Ge), 
or of Phorcys and Ceto. He was slain by Her- 
eules ; and the representation of the battle was 
27 



placed by Jupiter (Zeus) among the stars.- -|^2. 
An Arcadian, companion and friend of ./Eneas, 
slain by Halesus.] 

Ladon (Adduv). 1. A river in Arcadia, which 
rose near Clitor, and fell into the Alpheus be- 
tween Hera and Phrixa. In mythology Ladon 
is the husband of Stymphalis, and the father of 
Daphne and Metope. — 2. A small river in Elis, 
which rose on the frontiers of Achaia and fell into 
the Peneus. 

L^eetani, a people on the eastern coast of 
Hispania Tarraeonensis, near the mouth of the 
River Rubicatus (now Llobrcgat), probably the 
same as the Laletani, whose country, Lale- 
tania, produced good wine, and whose chief 
town was Barctno. 

L^elaps (Aaihaip), i. e., the storm wind, per- 
sonified in the legend of the dog of Procris 
which bore this name. Procris had received 
this swift animal from Diana (Artemis), and 
gave it to her husband Cephalus. When the 
Teumessian fox was sent to puuish the The- 
bans, Cephalus sent the dog Lselaps against the 
fox. The dog overtook the fox, but Jupiter 
(Zeus) changed both animals into a stone, which 
was shown in the neighborhood of Thebes. 

L,elianus, one of the thirty tyrants, emper- 
or in Gaul after the death of Postumus, A.D. 
267, was slain, after a few months, by his own 
soldiers, who proclaimed Victorinus in his 
stead. 

Ljelius. 1. C, was from early manhood the 
friend and companion of Scipio Africanus the 
elder, and fought under him in almost all his 
campaigns. He was consul B.C. 190, and ob- 
tained the province of Cisalpine Gaul. — 2. C, 
surnamed Sapiens, son of the preceding. His 
intimacy with Scipio Africanus the younger was 
as remarkable as his father's friendship with the 
elder, and it obtained an imperishable monument 
in Cicero's treatise Lailius sive de Amicitia. He 
was born about 186, was tribune of the plebs 
151, praetor 145, and consul 140. Though not 
devoid of military talents, as his campaign 
against the Lusitanian Viriathus proved, he 
was more of a statesman than a soldier, and 
more of a philosopher than a statesman. From 
Diogenes of Babylon, aud afterward from Pa- 
naetius, he imbibed the doctrines of the Stoic 
school ; his father's friend Polybius was his 
friend also ; the wit and idiom of Terence 
were pointed and polished by his aud Scipio's 
conversation ; and the satirist Lucilius was his 
familiar companion. The political opinions of 
Lselius were different at different periods of his 
life. He endeavored, probably during his trib- 
unate, to procure a redivision of the public laud, 
but he desisted from the attempt, and for his 
forbearance received the appellation of the Wise 
or the Prudent. He afterward became a stren- 
uous supporter of the aristocratical party. Sev- 
eral of his orations were extant in the time of 
Cicero, but were characterized more by smooth- 
ness (lenitas) than by power. Laelius is the 
principal interlocutor in Cicero's dialogue Be 
Amicitia, aud is one of the speakers in the Be 
Senectute and in the Be Republica. His two 
daughters w ere married, the one to Q. Mucius 
Scaevola, the augur, the other to C. Fannius 
Strabo. The opinion of his worth seems to 
have been universal, and it is one of Sen^-a's 
417 



LMNAS, POPILIUS. 



LAIUS. 



injunctions to his friend Lucilius " to live like 
Lfelius." 

L^enas, Popilius, plebeians. The family was 
unfavorably distinguished, even among the Ro- 
mans, for their sternness, cruelty, and haughti- 
ness of character. 1. M., four times consul, B. 
C. 359, 356, 350, 348. In his third consulship 
(350) he won a hard-fought battle against the 
Gauls, for which he celebrated a triumph — the 
first ever obtained by a plebeian. — 2. M., praetor 
176, consul 172, and censor 159. In his con- 
sulship he defeated the Ligurian mountaineers ; 
and when the remainder of the tribe surrender- 
ed to him, he sold them all as slaves. — 3. O, 
brother of No. 2, was consul 172. He was aft- 
erward sent as ambassador to Antiochus, king 
of Syria, whom the senate wished to abstain 
from hostilities against Egypt. Antiochus was 
just marching upon Alexandrea when Popilius 
gave him the letter of the senate, which the 
king read, and promised to take into considera- 
tion with his friends. Popilius straightway de- 
scribed with his cane a circle in the sand round 
the king, and ordei*ed him not to stir out of it 
before he had given a decisive answer. This 
boldness so frightened Antiochus, that he at 
once yielded to the demand of Rome. — 4. P., 
consul 132, the year after the rnurder of Tib. 
Gracchus. He was charged by the victorious 
aristocratical party with the prosecution of the 
accomplices of Gracchus ; and in this odious 
task he showed all the hard-heartedness of his 
family. He subsequently withdrew himself, by 
voluntary exile, from the vengeance of C. Grac- 
chus, and did not return to Rome till after his 
death. 

[Laerces (Aaepurjc). 1. Father of Alcimedon, 
one of the chiefs of the Myrmidons under Achil- 
les. — 2. An artist employed by Nestor to gild 
the horns of the victims sacrificed to the gods.] 

Laertes {Aaeprrjc), king of Ithaca, was son 
of Acrisius and Chalcomedusa, and husband of 
Anticlea, by whom he became the father of Ulys- 
ses and Ctimene. Some writers call Ulysses 
the son of Sisyphus. Vid. Anticlea. Laertes 
took part in the Calydonian hunt, and in the 
expedition of the Argonauts. He was still alive 
when Ulysses returned to Ithaca after the fall of 
Troy. 

Laertius, Diogexes. Vid. Diogexes. 

L^estrygoxes (Aaia~pvy6vec), a savage race 
of cannibals, whom Ulysses encountered in his 
wanderings. They were governed by Axtiph- 
ates and Lamus. They belong, however, to my- 
thology rather than to history. The modern in- 
terpreters of Homer place them on the north- 
western coast of Sicily. The Greeks themselves 
placed them on the eastern coast of the island, in 
the plains of Leontini, which are therefore called 
Lcestrygonii Gampi. The Romans, however, and 
more especially the Roman poets, who regarded 
the Promontorium Circeium as the Homeric 
island of Circe, transplanted the Lsestrygones 
to the southern coast of Latium, in the neighbor- 
hood of Formiae, which they supposed to have 
been built by Lamus, the king of this people. 
Hence Horace ( C'arm., iiL, 16, 34) speaks of 
Lcestrigonia Bacchus in amphora, that is, For- 
mian wine ; and Ovid (if<?£., xiv., 233) calls Forniiae 
Lastrygonis Lami Urbs. 

L,evi or Levi, a Ligurian people in Gallia 
418 



Transpadana, on the River Ticinus, who, in con- 
junction with the Marici, built the town of Ti- 
cinum (now Pavia) 

LjEvInus, Valerius. 1. P., consul B.C. 280 
had the conduct of the war against Pyrrhus'. 
The king wrote to Laevinus, offering to arbitrate 
between Rome and Tarentum ; but Laevinus 
bluntly bade him mind his own business, and 
begone to Epirus. An Epirot spy having been 
taken in the Roman lines, Laevinus showed him 
the legions under arms, and bade him tell his 
master, if he was curious about the Roman men 
and tactics, to come and see them himself. In 
the battle which followed, Laevinus was defeat- 
ed by Pyrrhus on the banks of the Siris. — 2. M., 
praetor 215, crossed over to Greece and carried 
on war against Philip. He continued in the 
command in Greece till 211, when he was elect- 
ed consul in his absence. In his consulship 
(210) he carried on the war in Sicily, and took 
Agrigentum. He continued as proconsul in 
Sicily for several years, and in 208 made a de- 
scent upon the coast of Africa. He died 200, 
and his sons Publius and Marcus honored his 
memory with funeral games and gladiatorial 
combats, exhibited during four successive days 
in the forum. — 3. C., son of No. 2, was by the mo- 
ther's side brother of M. Fulvius Nobilior, consul 
189. Laevinus was himself consul in 176, and 
carried on war against the Ligurians.* 

Lagos, a city in great Phrygia. 

Lagus (Auyoc), a Macedonian of obscure birth, 
was the father, or reputed father, of Ptolemy, 
the founder of the Egyptian monarchy. He 
married Arsinoe, a concubine of Philip of Mace- 
don, who was said to have been pregnant at the 
time of their marriage, on which account the 
Macedonians generally looked upon Ptolemy as 
the son of Philip. 

Lais (Aaig), the name of two celebrated 
Grecian Hetaerae or courtezans. 1. The elder, 
a native probably of Corinth, lived in the time 
of the Peloponnesian war, and was celebrated 
as the most beautiful woman of her age. She 
was notorious also for her avarice and caprice. 
— 2. The younger, was the daughter of Timan- 
dra, and was probably born at Hyccara in Sicily. 
According to some accounts she was brought 
to Corinth when seven years old, having been 
taken prisoner in the Athenian expedition to 
Sicily, and bought by a Corinthian. This story, 
however, involves numerous difficulties, and 
seems to have arisen from a confusion between 
this Lais and the elder one of the same name. 
She was a contemporary and rival of Phryne. 
She became enamored of a Thessalian named 
Hippolochus or Hippostratus, and accompanied 
him to Thessaly. Here, it is said, some Thessa- 
lian women, jealous of her beauty, enticed her 
into a temple of Venus (Aphrodite), and there 
stoned her to death. 

[Laispodias (AaiGKod'iac), an Athenian com- 
mander in the Peloponnesian war. In B. C. 411 
one of the envoys sent by the Four Hundred to 
Sparta,] 

Laius (Ad'coc), son of Labdacus, lost his father 
at an early age, and was brought up by Lycus. 
Vid. Labdacus. When Lycus was slain by Am- 
phion and Zethus, Laius took refuge with Pe- 
lops in Peloponnesus. After the death of Am- 
phion and Zethus, Laius returned to Thebes. 



LALA. 



L AM PUS. 



and ascended the throne of his father. He ! Oaterus ; and, thus strengthened, he gained a 
married Jocasta, and became by her the father decisive victory over the confederates at the 
of (Edipus, by whom he was slain. For details, ; battle of Cranon, which put an end to the La- 
vid. (Edipus. j ni ian war. 

[Lala, of Cyzieus. a female painter, who j Lajonium (Laminitanus), a town of the Car- 
lived at Rome "about B.C. 74 ; celebrated espe- petani in Hispania Tarraconensis, ninety-five 
cially for her portraits of women.] j miles southeast of Toletum. 

Lalage, a mnmm name of courtezans, from j Lampa or Lappa (Adfinrj, AdTnrrj : Aau7raloc t 
the Greek "kaXxph pratthng, used as a term of j Aa^evg), a town in the north of Crete, 'a little 
endearment, "little prattler." inland, south of Hydramum, said to have been 

Laletaxi. ViJ. L.ektaxi. | built by Agamemnon, but to have been called 

Lamachcs (Aaftaxoi), an Athenian, son of after Lampus. 
Xenophanes, was the colleague of Alcibiades Lampea (r/ Adjmeia), or Lampeus Moxs a part 



and Nicias in the great Sicilian expedition, B. 
C. 415. He fell under the walls of Syracuse, 
in a sally of the besieged. He appears among 
the dramatis persona? of Aristophanes as the 
brave and somewhat blustering soldier, delight- 
ing in the war, and thankful, moreover, for its 
pay. Plutarch describes him as brave, but so 
poor, that on every fresh appointment he used 
to beg for money from the government to buy 
clothing and shoes. 

[Lambbus (now Lambro), a river in Gallia 
Transpadana. which rose in the Lake Eupilis 
(now Lago di Pusiano), and fell into the Po be- 
tween Ticinum and Placcntia.] 

Lametus (now Lamata), a river in Bruttium, 
near Croton, which falls into the Lameticus 
Sinus. Upon it was the town Lametixi (now 
St. Eufemia). 

Lamia {Aafiia). 1. A female phantom. Vid. 
Empusa. — 2. A celebrated Athenian courtezan, 
was a favorite mistress for many years of De- 
metrius Poliorcetes. 

LamiA) iELlus. This family claimed a high 
antiquity, and pTetcnded to be descended from 
the mythical hero Lamus. 1. L., a Roman 
eques, supported Cicero in the suppression of 



the Catilinarian conspiracy, B.C. 63, and was j and a lower city. 



of the mountain range of Erymanthus, on the 
frontiers of Achaia and Elis. 

Lampetia (Aa/iTren?]), daughter of Helios by 
the nymph Neara. She and her sister Phae- 
thusa tended the flocks of their father in Sicily 
In some legends she appears as one of the sis- 
ters of Phaethon. 

Lampox (Ad/nruv). 1. An ^Eginetan, son of 
Pytheas, urged Pausanias, after the battle of 
Platseae, to avenge the death of Leonidas by in- 
sulting the corpse of Mardonius. — 2. An Athe- 
nian, a celebrated soothsayer and interpreter of 
oracles. In conjunction with Xenocritus, he 
]ed the colony which founded Thurii in Italy, B. 
C. 443, 

Lampoxia or -fuM (Ad/j.ir6veia, -uviov), an 
important city of Mysia, in the interior of the 
Troad, near the borders of iEolis. 

[Lamponius M., a Lucanian, one of the prin- 
cipal captains of the Italians in the war of the 
allies with Rome, B.C. 90-88.] 

Lampea, Lampr^e, or Lamptr^e (ActfxirptL, 
Aeu~pai, Aa/nrrpat : Aa/nTrpevg : now Zamorica), 
a demus on the western coast of Attica, near 
the promontory Astypalaea, belonging to the 
tribe Erechtheis. It was divided into an upper 



accordingly banished by the influence of the 
consuls Gabinius and Piso in 58. He Was sub- 
sequently recalled from exile, and during the 
civil wars espoused Csesar's party. — 2. L., son 
of the preceding, and the friend of Horace, was 
consul A.D. 3. He was made praefectus urbi 
in 32, but he died in the following year. — 3. L, 



Lampridius, -ZElius, one of the Scriptores 
Histories Augustce, Mved in the reigns of Diocle- 
tian and Coustantine, and wrote the lives of 
the emperors : 1. Commodus ; 2. Antoninus Di- 
adumenus ; 3. Elagabalus ; and, 4. Alexander 
Severus. It is not improbable that Lampridius 
is the same as Spartianus, and that the name 



was married to Domitia Longina, the daughter of the author in full was JElius Lampridius 
of Corbulo ; but during the lifetime of Vespa- Spartianus. For the editions of Lampridius, 



Bian he was deprived of her by Domitian, who 
first lived with her as his mistress, and subse- 
quently married her. Lamia was put to death 
by Domitian after his accession to the throne. 

Lamia (Aa/wa : Aauie v<;, Aap.i6~ijg : novr Zeitun 
or Zeituni), a town in Phthiotis in Thessaly, 
situated on the small river Achelous, and fifty 
stadia inland from the Maliac Gulf, on which it 
possessed a harbor, called Phalara. It has given 
its name to the war, which was carried on by 
the confederate. Greeks against Antipater after 
the death of Alexander, B.C. 323. The con- 
federates under the command of Leosthenes, 
the Athenian, defeated Antipater, who took ref- 
uge in Lamia, where he was besieged for some 
months. Leosthenes was killed during the 



vid. Capitolixus. 

[Lamprocles {AafjL-nponlriq). 1. The eldest 
son of Socrates. — 2. An Athenian dithyrambie 
poet and musician, who probably flourished at 
the end of the sixth or beginning of the fifth 
century B.C.] 

Lampsacus (Ad/npa.K0£ : AafiipaK-^voc : ruins at 
Lapsahi) an important city of Mysia, in Asia 
Minor, on the coast of the Hellespont, possess- 
ed a good harbor. It was celebrated for its 
wine ; and hence it was one of the cities as- 
signed by Xerxes to Themistocles for his main- 
tenance. It was the chief seat of the wor- 
ship of Priapus, and the birth-place of the his- 
torian Charon, the philosophers Adimantus and 
Metrodorus, and the rhetorician Anaximenes. 



siege ; and the confederates were obliged to j Lampsacus was a colony of the Phocaeans : 



"raise it in the following year (322), in conse- 
quence of the approach of Leonnatus. The 
confederates under the command of Antiphilus 
defeated Leonnatus, who was slain in the ac- 



the name of the surrounding district, Bebrycia, 
connects its old inhabitants with the Thraeian 
Bebryces. 

[Lampus (Adunog). 1. A eon of Laomedon, 



tion. Soon afterward Antipater was joined by and father of Dolops, was one of the Trojan 

419 



LAODAMIA. 



elders. — 2. The name of two horses, one be- 
longing to Aurora (Eos), the other to Hector.] 

Lams (Aouof). 1. Son of JSeptune (Poseidon), 
and king of the L«sstrjgones, was said to hare 
founded Fornriae in Italy. Yid. Fokmlr. — 
[i. A Rut-Iian leader, skin by Nisus.] 



caa, the boundary between 
Cflieia Campestris ; with a 

[Xaxas&a. (AdvaGtra). 1. 
Hercules, carried away fh 
Jupiter (Zens) at Dodona I 
Achilles, bore him eight chi 
of Agathocles, wife of Pvrrh 
left tin ;.: riirrv I^zz.-. 

Svllancia, near Leon), a t 
in Hispania Tarraconensis, 
Xcgio, was destroyed by til 
ry-ri 'Jpp-lvi. u 



Lanxtioi (Lanuvinus: now LmtimaL an 
ancient city in Latimn, situated on a hifl of the 
Alban Mount not far from the Appia Via, and 

subsequently a Soman municipium. ft pos- 
srssri zz. uuuiru: u- i. ■iV.t ru:-i teaple c: 
Juu: S:s::::u Tui-s: ±r rr_ri-e :: ..b^hei 
some importance as the birth-place of Antoni- 
nus Pius. Part of the walls of Lanurmm and 
:ir su:srr_:~:ii :: ±-s ' jls- Juu-: are still 



River 



gobakjh, corrupted 



wii± clt euiei. —>! ±e -:~ iuur.-i: 


the latter people. In AJD. 568, Alboin, the 


kino- of the T/wrrVsarr^ iiihIpp vWo tvwnmanrl 


they had defeated th 








pbmm of Xorthem Italy, winch received and 
have ever since retained the name of Lom- 


■;• . He: J- .: ;:-.-/•; ^bratei -u- 




— ar-i two Oriirrri- 
Puu. 

Lombard by birth, de 
:• ' . .;. :_ u • '. 




rives Lini :: Luu- 
: - z ... is : '. .: 


critics reject this etyi 
name to have reference 
banks of the Elbe, i 


.' . .... . - . . • "... 

s to their dwelling on the 
nasmuch as Borde signi- 


fies ib low German a 
of a river, and there is 


:. :.. • : : ... 

fttfll a rfi~trir<t m ^Vfacril - 


burg called the hmge 


Bonk. Panics Diaeonus 


W {mm ^ruW,™ 





ghter of | Xaocoox {Aook6uv\ a Trojan, who plays a 
mple of 'prominent part in the post-Homeric legends, 
s, son of ! was a son of Anterior or Aerates, and a priest 
Daughter ! of the Thymbrapan Apollo. He tried to dis- 
suade his countrymen from drawing into the 
ehy the wooden horse, which the Greeks had 
> or f left behind them when they pretended to sail 
ores I away from Troy ; and, to show the danger 
t of | from the horse, be burled a spear into its side. 
Sur- ■ The Trojans, however, would not listen to hn 
s in advice; and as he was preparing to sacrifice a 
the I* bull to Neptune (Poseidon), suddenly two fear- 
Oi- 1 ful serpents were seen swimming toward the 
>':. Tr: : uu xus: iuru Teuei^s. They rushed 
the [' toward Laocoon, who, while ail the people 
I' took to flight, remained with his two suns 
into 1 standing by the altar of the god The serpents 
■ace. first coiled around the two boys, and then 
the around the father, and thus all three perished 
rard The serpents then hastened to the aeropohs of 
tern f Troy, and disappeared behind the shield of 
time I Tritonis. The reason why Laocoon suffered 
rius. I this fearful death is differently stared. Ac- 
:;ur . iiug :•: s-.uir. :: — us because he uu i run 
man ■ his lance into the side of the horse ; accord- 
the ing.to others, because, contrary to the will of 
hem I Apollo, he had married and begotten children ; 
^ in I or, according to others again, because Neptune 
1 al- 1 (Poseidon), being hostile to the Troj&ns. want- 
: of J ed to show to the Trojans in the person of La- 
?, at ocoon what fete an of them desert ed The 
?an- 1 story of Laocoon s death was a fine subject lor 
irty j epic and lyric as well as tragic poetry, and was 
"lerefore frequently related by ancient rx«eta, 
ich as by Bacchyfides, Sophocles, Ecpburioo, 
irgfl, and others. His death also formed the 
inject of many ancient works of art ; and a 
ugu : irr.ur. :-iz:mz~-g the :^:u-r: and 
is two sons entwined by the two serpents, is 
fll extant, and preserved in the Vatican. Vid. 

[Laocoosa (AaoutuGa), wife of Aphareus, 
id mother of Idas and Lyneeus in The>.critus.j 

LaodIjos (Aaoduiiael. 1. Son of 



G: 



--rXiUUir LUf 



king of the Phaeacians, and Arete — 2. Sun of 
Eteocles, and king of Thebes, in wht»se reign 
the Epigoni marched against Thebes. Id the 
battle against the Epigoni he slew their leader 
^^uuItUS. bu: —us luus-tJ: slain by Al* 
Others related that after the battle was" 
"TaMMfamaB fled to the Eheheleans in fLy 
— [3. A son of Antenor, slain be£j.re Ti«y '% 
Ajax, son of TeJamon.] 

Laooajoa {Aao&ufitid). 1. Daughter of Acas- 
tusy and wife of Protesilaus. ^ ben her hus- 
band was slam before Troy, she begged the 
gods to be allowed to eunverse with him fur 
only three hours. The request wa* granted 
Mereury (Hermes) led Pn tesflaus back to the 
upper world and when Protesiaus cied a see- 



■:u: uuui: 



died with him. A later 



4.: 



LAODICE. 



LAODICEA. 



tradition states that, after the second death of 
Protesilaus, Laodamia made au image of her 
husband, to which she paid divine honors ; but 
as her father Acastus interfered, and commanded 
her to burn the image, she herself leaped into 
the fire.— 2. Daughter of Belleropbontes, became 
by Jupiter (Zeus) the mother of Sarpedon, and 
was killed by Diuua (Artemis) while she was en- 
gaged in weaving.— 3. Nurse of Orestes, usually 
called Arsinoe. 

Laodice (Aao&KJ/). 1. Daughter of Priam 
aud Hecuba, and wife of Helicaon. Some re- 
late that she fell in love with Acamas, the son 
of Theseus, when he came with Diomedes as 
ambassador to Troy, and that she became by 
Acamas the mother of Muuitus. On the death 
of this son she leaped down a precipice, or 
was swallowed up by the earth.— 2. Daughter 
of Agamemnon and Clytaemnestra (Horn., II., 
ix., 146), called Electra by the tragic poets. 
Vid. Electra. — 3. Mother of Seleucus Nicator, 
the founder of the Syrian monarchy. — 4. Wife 
of Antioohus II. Theos, king of Syria, and 
mother of Seleucus Callinicus. For details, vid. 
p. 66, b. — 5. Wife of Seleucus Callinicus, and 
mother of Seleucus Ceraunus and Antiochus 
the Great. — 6. Wife of Antiochus the Great, 
was a daughter of Mithradates IV., king of 
Pontus, and grand-daughter of No. 4. — 7. Wife 
of Aehaeus, the cousin and adversary of An- 
tiochus the Great, was a sister of No. 6. — 8. 
Daughter of Antiochus the Great by his wife 
Laodice (No. 6). She was married to her eldest 
brother Antiochus, who died in his father's life- 
time. 195.— 9. Daughter of Seleucus IV. Philo- 
pator, was married to Perseus, king of Macedo- 
nia. — 10. Daughter of Antiochus IV. Epiphanes, 
was married to the impostor Alexander Balas. 
— 11. Wife and also sister of Mithradates Eu- 
pator (commonly called the Great), king of 
Pontus. During the absence of her husband, 
aud deceived by a report of his death, she 
gave free scope to her amours; and, alarmed 
for the consequences, on his return attempted 
his life by poison. Her designs were, however, 
betrayed to Mithradates, who immediately put 
her to death. — 12. Another sister of Mithra- 
dates Eupator, married to Ariarathes VI., 
king of Cappadocia. After the death of her 
husband she married Nicomedes, king of Bi- 
thynia. 

Laodicea (Aaod/neta : Aaoditcevg, Laodicensis, 
Laodicenus), the name of six Greek cities in 
Asia, four of which (besides another now un- 
known) were founded by Seleucus I. Nicator, 
and named in honor of his mother Laodice, 
the other two by Antiochus II. and Antiochus 
I. or III. Vid. Nos. 1. and 5. 1. L. ad Ly- 
cum (A. npog rti Amp, ruins at Eski-Hissar), a 
city of Asia Minor, stood on a ridge of hills 
near the southern bank of the River Lycus 
(now Ohoruk-Su), a tributary of the Maeander, 
a little to the west of Colossae and to the south 
of Hierapolis, on the borders of Lydia, Caria, 
and Phrygia, to each of which it is assigned by 
different writers ; but, after the definitive divi- 
sion of the provinces, it is reckoned as belong- 
ing to Great Phrygia, and under the later Ro- 
man emperors it was the capital of Phrygia 
Pacatiana. It was founded by Antiochus II. 
Theos, on the site of a previously existing 



I town, and named in honor of his wife Laodice. 
It passed from the kings of Syria to those of 
Pergamus, and from them to the Romans, to 
whom Attalus III. bequeathed his kingdom. 
Under the Romans it belouged to the province 
of Asia. At first it was comparatively an in- 
significant place, and it suffered much from 
the frequent earthquakes to which its site 
seems to be more exposed than that of any 
other city of Asia Minor, and also from the 
Mithradatic War. Under the later Roman re- 
public and the early emperors, it rose to im- 
portance; and, though more than once almost 
destroyed by earthquakes, it was restored by 
the aid of the emperors and the munificence o£ • 
its own citizens, and became, next to Apamea,. 
the greatest city in Phrygia, and one of the 
most flourishing in Asia Minor. In an inscrip- 
tion it is called " the most splendid city of 
Asia," a statement confirmed by the magnif- 
icent ruins of the city, which comprise an aque- 
duct, a gymnasium, several theatres, a stadium 
almost perfect, besides remains of roads, por- 
ticoes, pillars, gates, foundations of houses, 
and sarcophagi. This great prosperity was 
owing partly to its situation, on the high road, 
for the traffic between the east and west of 
Asia, and partly to the fertility and beauty of 
the country round it. Already in the apostolic 
age it was the seat of a flourishing Christian 
Church, which, however, became very soon 
infected with the pride and luxury produced by 
the prosperity of the city, as we learn from St- 
John's severe Epistle to it [Revel, iii., 14-22). 
St. Paul also addresses it in common with the 
neighboring church of Colossce (Coloss. ii., 1 ; 
iv., 13, 16). — 2. L. Combusta (A. 57 KaTatceKav/ievi}: 
or KEKavfiivT), i. e., the burned ; the reason of the 
epithet is doubtful: ruins at Ladik), a city of 
Lycaonia, north of Iconium, on the high road 
from the western coast of Asia Minor to the 
Euphrates. — 3. L. ad Mare (A. tirl rrj ^aXdrrti : 
now Ladikiyeh), a city on the coast of Syria, 
about fifty miles south of Antioch, was built 
by Seleucus I. on the site of an earlier city, 
called Ramitha, or Aevurj 'Akttj. It had the 
best harbor in Syria, and the surrounding 
country was celebrated for its wine and fruits, 
which formed a large part of the traffic of the 
city. In the civil contests during the later pe- 
riod of the Syrian kingdom, Laodicea obtained 
virtual independence, in which it was confirm- 
ed probably by Pompey, and certainly by Julius- 
Caesar, who greatly favored the city. In the 
civil wars, after Caesar's death, the Laodiceans , 
were severely punished by Cassius for their 
adherence to Dolabella, and the city again suf- 
fered in the Parthian invasion of Syria, but 
was recompensed by Antony with exemption 
from taxation. Herod the Great built the La- 
odiceans an aqueduct, the ruins of which still 
exist. It is mentioned occasionally as an im- 
portant city under the later Roman empire ; 
and, after the conquest of Syria by the Arabs, 
it was one of those places on the coast which 
still remained in the hands of the Greek em- 
perors, and with a Christian population. It 
was taken and destroyed by the Arabs in 1188- 
It is now a poor Turkish village, with very 
considerable ruins of the ancient city, the chief 
of which are a triumphal arch, the remains of 
421 



LA0D0CU8. 



LARES. 



the mole of the harbor, of a portico near it, of 
catacombs on the sea-coast, of the aqueducts 
and cisterns, and of pillars where the Necrop- 
olis is supposed to have stood. — L. ad Li- 
BANUii (A. AiBavov, irpdg AibavC)), a city of Ccele- 
Syria, at the northern entrance to the narrow 
valley (av?Mv), between Libanus and Antilib- 
anus, appears to have been, through its favor- 
able situation, a place of commercial import- 
ance. During the possession of Ccele-Syria 
by the Greek kings of Egypt, it was the south- 
western border fortress of Syria. It was the 
chief city of a district 'called Laodicene. — 5. A 
city in the southeast of Media, near the bound- 
ary of Persis, founded either by Antiochus I. 
Soter, or Antiochus II. the Great: site un- 
known. — 6. In Mesopotamia : site unknown. 

Laodocps (Aaodofcog). 1. Son of Bias and 
Pero, and brother of Talaus, took part in the ex- 
peditions of the Argonauts, and of the Seven 
agaiust Thebes. — 2. Son of An tenor. — [3. A 
Grecian, companion and charioteer of Antilo- 
chus in the Trojan war.] 

Laomedox (Aaojuedcov). 1. King of Troy, son 
of Bus and Eurydice, and father of Priam, He- 
sione, and other children. His wife is called 
Strymo, Rhceo, Placia, Thoosa, Zeuxippe, or 
Leucippe. Neptune (Poseidon) and Apollo, 
who had displeased Jupiter (Zeus), were doom- 
ed to serve Laomedon for wages. Accordingly, 
Neptune (Poseidon) built the walls of Troy, 
while Apollo tended the king's flocks on Mount 
Ida. When the two gods had done their work, 
Laomedon refused them the reward he had 
promised them, and expelled them from his do- 
minions. Thereupon Neptune (Poseidon) in 
wrath let loose the sea over the lands, and also 
sent a marine monster to ravage the country. 
By the command of an oracle, the Trojans were 
obliged, from time to time, to sacrifice a maiden 
to the monster ; and on one occasion it was de- 
cided by lot that Hesione, the daughter of La- 
omedon himself, should be the victim. But it 
happened that Hercules was just returning from 
bis expedition against the Amazons, and he 
promised to save the maiden if Laomedon 
would give him the horses which Tros had once 
received from Jupiter (Zeus) as a compensation 
for Ganymedes. Laomedon promised them to 
Hercules, but again broke his word, when Her- 
cules had killed the monster and saved Hesione. 
Hereupon Hercules sailed with a squadron of 
six ships against Troy, killed Laomedon, with 
all his sons, except Podarces (Priam), and gave 
Hesione to Telamou. Hesione ransomed her 
brother Priam with her veil. Priam, as the son 
of Laomedon, is called Laomedoxtiades ; and 
the Trojans, as the subjects of Laomedon, are 
called Laomedoxtiad^e. — 2. Of Mytilene, was 
one of Alexander's generals, and after the king's 
death (B.C. 323) obtained the government of 
Syria. He was afterward defeated by Nicanor, 
the general of Ptolemy, and deprived of Syria. 

_ [Laothoe {Aaodorj), daughter of Altes, the 
king of the Leleges, and mother of Lycaon by 
Priam.] 

[Lapathus, a village in Pieria in Macedonia, 
at the pass of Tempe, with a fortress adjacent 
named Charax (the modevn Carisso) on the 
south side and at the narrowest part of the pass ] 

[Lapers2e. Vid. Las.J 
422 



I Lapethus or Lapathus (Aa7i7/0oc, Adit ados ■ 
AaTTTjdtog, AaTTTjQevg : now Lapitho or Lapta), an 
important town on the northern coast of Cyprus, 
! on a river of the same name, east of the Prom- 
ontorium Crommyon. 

Laphria (Aaqpla), a surname of Diana (Arte- 
mis) among the Calydonians, from whom the 
worship of the goddess was introduced into 
Naupactus and Patrae, in Achaia. The name 
was traced back to a hero, Laphrius, son of 
Castalius, who was said to have instituted her 
worship at Calydon. 

Laphtstius (AadvarLoc), a mountain in Boeo- 
tia, between Coronea, Lebadea, and Orchome- 
nus, on which was a temple of Jupiter (Zeus), 
who hence bore the surname Laphystius. 

Lapidei CAiiPi. Vid. Campi Lapidel 

Lapithes (AaTTtd/jc), son of Apollo and Stilbe, 
brother of Centaurus, and husband of Orsinome, 
the daughter of Eurynomus, by whom he be- 
came the father of Phorbas, Triopas, and Peri- 
phas. He was regarded as the ancestor of the 
Lapitho in the mountains of Thessaly. The 
Lapithas were governed by Pirithous, who, being 
a son of Ixion, was a half-brother of the Cen- 
taurs. The latter, therefore, demanded their 
share in their father's kingdom, and, as their 
claims were not satisfied, a war arose between 
the Lapithse and Centaurs, which, however, was 
terminated by a peace. But when Pirithous 
married Hippodamia, and invited the Centaurs 
to the marriage feast, the latter, fired by wine, 
and urged on by Mars (Ares), attempted to carry 
off the bride and the other women. Thereupon 
a bloody conflict ensued, in which the Centaurs 
were defeated by the Lapithse. The Lapithas 
at e said to have been the inventors of bits and 
bridles for horses. It is probable that they were 
a Pelasgian people, who defeated the less civ- 
ilized Centaurs, and compelled them to abandon 
Mount Pelion. 

[Lapurdum (now Bayonne), a city of the Tar- 
belli in Gallia Aquitanica, on the River Atur- 
rus.] 

Lar or Lars, was an Etruscan praenomen, 
borne, for instance, by Porsena and Tolumnius. 
From the Etruscans it passed over to the Ro- 
mans, whence we read of Lar Herminius, who 
was consul B.C. 448. This word signified lord, 
king, or hero in the Etruscan. 

Lara. Vid. Laruxda. 

Laraxda (to. Aupavda : now Larenda or Cara- 
man), a considerable town in the south of Ly- 
caonia, at the northern foot of Mount Taurus, 
in a fertile district : taken by storm by Perdic- 
cas, but afterward restored. It was used by 
the Isaurian robbers as one of their strongholds, 

Larextia. Vid. Acca Larextia. 

Lares, inferior gods at Rome. Their wor- 
ship was closely connected with that of the 
Manes, and was analogous to the hero worship 
of the Greeks. The Lares may be divided into 
two classes, the Lares domestici and Lares pub- 
lici. The former were the Manes of a house 
raised to the dignity of heroes. The Manes 
were more closely connected with the place of 
burial, while the Lares were more particularly 
the divinities presiding over the hearth and the 
whole house. It was only the spirits of good 
men that were honored as Lares. All the do- 
mestic Lares were headed by the Lar familia- 



LAKES. 



LARIUS LACUS. 



ris, who was regarded as the founder of the 
family. He was inseparable from the family; 
and when the latter changed their abode, he 
went with them. Among the Lares publici we 
have mention made of Lares prmtites and Lares 
compitales, who are in reality the same, and 
differ ouly in regard to the place or occasion of 
their worship. Servius Tullius is said to have 
instituted their worship; and when Augustus 
improved the regulations of the city, he also re- 
newed the worship of the public Lares. Their 
name, Lares prtcstiles, characterizes them as the 
proteccing spirits of the city, in which they had 
a temple in the uppermost part of the Via Sacra, 
that is, near a compitum, whence they might 
be called Compitales. This temple (Sacellum 
Larum or cedes Lamm) contained two images, 
which were probably those of Romulus and Re- 
mus. Now, while these Lares were the gen- 
eral protectors of the whole city, the Lares com 
pitales must be regarded as those who presided 
over the several divisions of the city, which 
were marked by the compita or the points where 
two or more streets crossed each other, and 
where small chapels (cediciclce) were erected to 
them. In addition to the Lares prsestites and 
compitales, there are other Lares which must 
be reckoned among the public ones, viz., the 
Lares rurales, who were worshipped in the coun- 
try ; the Lares viales, who were worshipped on 
the high roads by travellers ; and the Lares ma- 
rini or permarini, to whom P. ^Emilius dedicated 
a sanctuary in remembrance of his naval vic- 
tory over Antiochus. The worship of the do- 
mestic Lares, together with that of the Penates 
and Manes, constituted what are called the 
sacra privata. The images of the Lares, in 
great houses, were usually in a separate com- 
partment, called lediculce or lararia. They were 
generally represented in the cinctus Gabinus. 
Their worship was very simple, especially in 
early times and in the country. The offerings 
were set before them in patella?, whence they 
themselves were called patellarii. Pious people 
made offerings to them every day ; but they 
were more especially worshipped on the calends, 
nones, and ides of every month. When the in- 
habitants of the house took their meals, some 
portion was offered to the Lares, and on joy- 
ful family occasions they were adorned with 
wreaths, and the lararia were thrown open. 
When the young bride entered the house of her 
husband, her first duty was to offer a sacrifice 
to the Lares. Respecting the public worship 
of the Lares, and the festival of the Larentalia, 
oid. Diet, of Ant., art. Larentalia, Compitalia. 
■ Lares (Aupnc > Dare Alarbous), a city of North- 
ern Africa, iu the Carthaginian territory (Byza- 
cena), southwest of Zama; a place of some im- 
portance at the time of the war with Jugurtha. 
Largus, Schjbonius. Vid. Scribonius. 
LarInum (Laiiuas, atis: now Larino), a town 
of the Frentani (whence the inhabitants are 
sometimes called Fretani Larinates), on the 
River Tifernus, and near the borders of Apulia, 
subsequently a Roman municipium, possessed 
a considerable territory extending down to the 
Adriatic Sea. The town of Clitoria, on the 
- coast, was subject to Larinum. 

Larissa (Adpiaaa), the name of several Pelas- 
gian places, whence Larissa is called in my- 



thology the daughter of Pelasgus. L In Europe. 
1. (Now Larissa or Larza), an important town 
of Thessaly, in Pelasgiotis, situated on the Pe- 
neus, in an extensive plain. It was once the 
capital of the Pelasgi, and had a democratical 
constitution, but subsequently became subject 
to the Macedonians. It retained its importance 
under the Romans, and after the time of Con- 
stantine the Great became the capital of the 
province of Thessaly. — 2. Surnamed Cremaste 
[i] Kpe/uao-TT?), another important town of Thes- 
saly, in Phthiotis, situated on a height, whence 
probably its name, and distant twenty stadia 
from the Malian Gulf. — II. In Asia. 1. An an- 
cient city on the coast of the Troad, near Ha- 
maxitus ; ruined at the time of the Persian war. 
— 2. L. Phriconis (A. rj QptKovic, also ai Ar/pio- 
aai), a city on the coast of Mysia, near Cyme 
(hence called ?j irept rr/v Kv/Ltrjv), of Pelasgian 
origin, but colonized by the iEolians, and made 
a member of the JEolic confederacy. It was 
also called the Egyptian Larissa (rj AiyvirTia), 
because Cyrus the Great settled in it a body of 
his Egyptian mercenary soldiers. — 3. L. Ephe- 
sia (A. rj 'E<peata), a city of Lydia, in the plain 
of the Cayster, on the northern side of Mount 
Messogis, northeast of Ephesus ; with a temple 
of Apollo Larissaeus. — 4 In Assyria, an ancient 
city on the eastern bank of the Tigris, some 
distance north of the mouth of the River Zaba- 
tas or Lycus, described by Xenophon (Anab., 
hi., 4). It was deserted when Xenophon saw 
it; but its brick walls still stood, twenty-five 
feet thick, one hundred feet high, and two para- 
sangs (=sixty stadia=six geographical miles) 
in circuit, and there was a stone pyramid near 
it. Xenophon relates the tradition that, when 
the empire passed from the Medes to the Per- 
sians, the city resisted all the efforts of the 
Persian king (i. e., Cyrus) to take it, until the 
inhabitants, terrified at an obscuration of the 
sun, deserted the city. Mr. Layard identifies 
the site of Larissa with that of the ruins near 
Nimroud, the very same site as that of Nineveh. 
The name Larissa is no doubt a corruption of 
some Assyrian name (perhaps Al-Assur), which 
Xenophon naturally fell into through his famil- 
iarity with the word as the name of cities in 
Greece. — 5. In Syria, called by the Syrians Si- 
zara (li^apa: now Kulat Seijar), a city in the 
district of Apamene, on the western bank of the 
Orontes, about half way between Apamea and 
Epiphania. 

Larissus or Larisus (Adpiaaoc. Adptaoc : now 
Risso), a small river forming the boundary be- 
tween Achaia and Elis, rises in Mount Scollis, 
and flows into the Ionian Sea. 

Larius Lacus (now Lake of Como), a beauti- 
ful Lake in Gallia Transpadana, running from 
north to south, through which the River Adda 
flows. After extending about fifteen miles, it 
is divided into two branches, of which the one 
to the southwest is about eighteen miles in 
length, and the one to the southeast about 
twelve miles. At the extremity of the south- 
western branch is the town of Comum ; and at 
the extremity of the southeastern branch the 
River Adda issues out of the lake. The beauty 
of the scenery of this lake is praised by Pliny. 
He had several villas on the banks of the lake, 
of which he mentions two particularly ; one 
423 



LARS TOLUMNIUS. 



LATIUM. 



called Comcedia, and the other Tragaedia. (Plin., 
Ep., ix., 7). Some believe Comoedia to have 
been situated at the modern Bellagio, on the 
promontory which divides the two branches of 
the lake ; and Tragoedia at Lcnno, on the west- 
ern bank, where the scenery is more wild. The 
intermitting fountain, of which Pliny gives an 
account in another letter (Ep., iv., 30), is still 
called Pliniana. 

Lars Tolumnius. Vid. Tolumnius. 

Lartia Gens, patrician, distinguished at the 
beginning of the republic through two of its 
members, T. Lartius, the first dictator, and Sp. 
Lartius, the companion of Horatius on the 
wooden bridge. The name soon after disap- 
pears entirely from the annals. The Lartii 
were of Etruscan origin, as is clearly shown by 
their name, which comes from the Etruscan 
word Lar or Lars. Vid. Lak. 

[Lartol^eet^e (AapTOAaiyrat), a people in the 
northeast of Hispania Tarraconensis.] 

Larunda or Lara, daughter of Almon, was a 
nymph who informed Juno of the connection 
between Jupiter and Juturna ; hence her name 
is connected with %akelv. Jupiter deprived her 
of her tongue, and ordered Mercury to conduct 
her into the lower world. On the way thither, 
Mercury fell in love with her, and she afterward 
gave birth to two Lares. 

Larvae. Vid. Lemures. 

Larymna (Aupv/xva), the name of two towns 
on the Paver Cephisus, on the borders of Bceo- 
tia and Locris, and distinguished as Upper and 
Lower Larymna. The latter was at the mouth 
of the river, and the former a little way inland. 

[Larysius Mons (Aapvctov bpoc, to), a mount- 
ain of Laconia sacred to Bacchus (Dionysus).] 

Las (Aug : Ep. Auac : now Passava), an an- 
cient town of Laconia, on the eastern side of 
the Laconian Gulf, ten stadia from the sea, and 
south of Gytheum. It is said to have been once 
destroyed by the Dioscuri, who hence received 
the Surname of Lapersce, or the Destroyers of 
Las. In the time of the Romans it had ceased 
to be a place of importance. 

Las^ea (Aacala), a town in the east cf Crete, 
not far from the Promontorium Samonium, men- 
tioned in the Acts of the Apostles (xxvii., 8). 

Lasion (Aaatuv : Aaaiuvtoc : now Lai a), a 
fortified town in Elis, on the frontiers of Arca- 
dia, and not far from the confluence of the Ery- 
manthus and the Alpheus. The possession of 
this town was a constant source of dispute be- 
tween the Eleans and Arcadians. 

Lasthenes (Aao~dev7}c). 1. An Olynthian, 
who, together with Euthy crates, betrayed his 
country to Philip of Macedon, by whom he had 
been bribed, B.C. 347. — 2. A Cretan, one of the 
principal leaders of his countrymen in their war 
with the Romans. He was defeated and taken 
prisoner by Q. Metellus, 67. 

Lasus (Adaoc), one of the principal Greek lyr- 
ic poets, was a native of Hermione in Argolis. 
He is celebrated as the founder of the Athenian 
school of dithyrambic poetry, and as the teacher 
of Pindar. He was contemporary with Simon- 
ides, like whom he lived at Athens, under the 
patronage of Hipparchus. It would appear that 
Lasus introduced a greater freedom, both of 
rhythm and of music, into the dithyrambic Ode ; 
that he gave it a more artificial and more mi- 
424 



I metic character ; and that the subjects of his 
poetry embraced a far wider range than had 

j been customary. 

[Latagus, a Trojan warrior, slain by Mezen- 

tius in the wars of ^Eneas in Italy.] 

Latera Stagnum (now Etang de Maguelone 
et de Perols), a lake in the territory of Nemau- 
sus in Gallia Narbonensis, connected with the 
sea by a canal. On this lake was a fortress of 
the same name {Chateau de la Latte). 

[Lateranus, L. Sextius. 1. The friend and 
supporter of C. Licinius Stolo in his attempt to 
throw open the consulship to the plebeians : he 
was tribune of the plebs with Licinius B.C. 37 6 
to 367, and was elected consul B.C. 366, being 
the first plebeian who had obtained that dignity. 
— 2. Plautius, one of the lovers of Messalina, 
wife of the Emperor Claudius, and was, in con- 
sequence, condemned to death by the emperor 
A.D. 48, but afterward pardoned ; he subse- 
quently took part in the conspiracy of Piso 
against iNero, but was seized and put to death.] 
Laterensis, Juventius, was one of the ac- 
cusers of Plancius, whom Cicero defended, B.C. 
54. Vid. Plancius. He was praetor in 51. He 
served as legate in the army of M. Lepidus, and 
when the soldiers of Lepidus passed over to 
Antony, Laterensis put an end to his life. 

Lathox, Lethox, Lethes, Leth^eus (Auduv 
Doric, Aqdov, Arjdaloc), a river of Cyrenaica in 
Northern Africa, falling into a Lacus Hesperi- 
dum, near the city of Hesperis or Berenice, in 
the region which the early Greek navigators 
identified with the gardens of the Hesperides. 

Latialis or Latiaris, a surname of Jupiter 
as the protecting divinity of Latium. The Latin 
towns and Rome celebrated to him every year 
the feriae Latinae, on the Alban Mount, which 
were conducted by one of the Roman consuls. 
Vid. Latinos. 

[Latini. Vid, Latium. 

Latinus. 1. King of Latium, son of Faunus 
and the nymph Marica, brother of Lavinius, hus- 
band of Amata, and father of Lavinia, whom he 
gave in marriage to ^Eneas. Vid. Lavinia. 
This is the common tradition ; but, according 
to Hesiod, he was a son of Ulysses and Circe, 
and brother of Agrius, king of the Tyrrhenians ; 
according to Hyginus, he was a son of Telem- 
aehus and Circe ; while others describe him 
as a son of Hercules by a Hyperborean wom- 
an, who was afterward married to Faunus, or 
as a son of Hercules by a daughter of Faunus. 
According to one account, Latinus, after his 
death, became Jupiter Latiaris, just as Romulus 
became Quiriuus. — 2. A celebrated player in 
the farces called mimes (vid. Diet, of Ant., s. v.) 
in the reign of Domitian, with whom he was a 
great favorite, and whom he served as a delator. 
He frequently acted as mimus with Thymele as 
mima. 

Latium (t/ Aarivrj), a country in Italy, inhab- 
ited by the Latini. The origin of the name is 
uncertain. Most of the ancients derived it from 
j a king Latinus, who was supposed to have been 
j a contemporary of ^Eueas (vid. Latinus) ; but 
there can be no doubt that the name of the people 
was transferred to this fictitious king. Other 
ancient critics connected the name with the 
verb latere, either because Saturn had been 
hidden in the country, or because Italy is hidden 



LATIUM. 



LATIUM. 



between the Alps and the Apennines ! But 
neither of these explanations deserves a serious 
refutation. A modern writer derives Latium 
from latus (like Campania from campus), and 
supposes it to mean the "flat land;" but the 
quautity of the a in latus is opposed to this ety- 
mology. The boundaries of Latium varied at 
different periods. 1. In the most ancient times 
it reached only from the River Tiber on the 
north, to the Kiver Numicus and the town of 
Ardea on the south, and from the sea-coast on 
the west to lh< Alban Mount on the east. 2. 
The territory of Latium was subsequently ex- 
tended southward ; and long before the con- 
quest of the Latins by the Romans, it stretched 
from the Tiber on the north, to the Proinonto- 
rium Circeium and Auxur or Tarracina on the 
south. Even in the treaty of peace made be- 
tween Rome and Carthage in B.C. 509, we find 
Antium, Circeii, and Tarracina mentioned as 
belonging to Latium. The name of Latium an- 
tiquum or vetus was subsequently given to the 
country from the Tiber to the Promontorium Cir- 
ceiurn. 3. The Romans still further extended 
the territories of Latium by the conquest of the 
Hernici, jEqui, Volsci, and Aurunei, as far as the 
Liris on the south, and even beyond this river 
to the town Sinuessa and to Mount Massicus. 
This new accession of territory was called La- 
tium novum or adjectum. Latium, therefore, in 
its widest signification, was bounded by Etruria 
on the north, from which it was separated by the 
Tiber ; by Campania on the south, from which it 
was separated by the Liris ; by the Tyrrhene Sea 
on the west, and by the Sabine and Samnite 
tribes on the east. The greater part of this 
country is an extensive plaiu of volcanic origin, 
out of which rises an isolated range of mountains 
known by the name of Mons Albanus, of which 
the Algidus and the Tusculan hills are branches. 
Part of this plaiu, on the coast between Antium 
and Tarracina, which was at one time well culti- 
vated, became a marsh in consequence of the 
rivers Nymphseus, Ufens, and Amasenus find- 
ing no outlet for their waters (via 1 . Pomptin^e 
Paludes) ; but the remainder of the country 
was celebrated for its fertility in antiquity. The 
Latini were some of the most ancient inhabit- 
ants of Italy. They appear to have been a Pe- 
lasgian tribe, aud arc frequently called Aborigi- 
nes. At a period long anterior to the founda- 
tion of Rome, these Pelasgians or Aborigines 
descended into the narrow plain between the 
Tiber aud the Numicus, expelled or subdued 
the Siculi, the original inhabitants of that dis- 
trict, and there beeune known under the name 
of Latini. These aneieut Latius, who were 
called Prisci Latini, to distinguish them from 
the later Latins, the subjects of Rome, formed 
a league or confederation, consisting of thirty 
states. The town of Alba Longa subsequently 
became the head of the league. This town, 
which founded several colonies, and among 
others Rome, boasted of a Trojan origin ; but 
the whole story of a Trojan settlement in Italy 
is probably an invention of later times. Al- 
though Rome was a colony from Alba, she be- 
came powerful enough in the reign of her third 
king, Tullus Hostilius, to take Alba and raze it 
to file ground. In this war Alba seems to have 
received no assistance from the other Latin 



; towns. Aucus Marcius and Tarquinius Priscus 
carried on war successfully with several other 
Latin towns. Under Servius Tullius Rome was 
admitted into the Latin league ; aud his suc- 
I cessor Tarquinius Superbus compelled the other 
Latin towns to acknowledge Rome as the head 
of the league, and to become dependent upon 
the latter city. But upon the expulsion of the 
kings the Latins asserted their independence, 
and commenced a struggle with Rome, which, 
though frequently suspended and apparently 
terminated by treaties, was as often renewed, 
and was not brought to a final close till B.C. 
340, when the Latins were defeated by the Ro- 
mans at the battle of Mount Vesuvius. The 
Latin league was now dissolved, and the Latins 
became the subjects of Rome. The following 
were the most important institutions of the 
Latins during the time of their independence : 
The towns of Latium were independent of one 
another, but formed a league for purposes of 
mutual protection. This league consisted, as 
we have already seen, of thirty cities, a number 
which could not be exceeded. Each state sent 
deputies to the meetings of the league, which 
were held in a sacred grove at the foot of the 
Alban Mount, by the fountain of Ferentina. On 
the top of the mountain was a temple of J upiter 
Latiaris, and a festival was celebrated there in 
honor of this god from the earliest times. This 
festival, which was called the Ferice Latino:, is 
erroneously said to have been instituted by Tar- 
quinius Superbus, in commemoration of the al- 
liance between the Romans and Latins. It is 
true, however, that the festival was raised into 
one of much greater importance when Rome 
became the head of the league ; for it was now 
a festival common both to Rome and Latium, 
and served to unite the two nations by a reli- 
gious bond. Having thus become a Roman as 
well as a Latin festival, it continued to be cele- 
brated by the Romans after the dissolution of 
the Latin league. Via 1 . Diet, of Ant., art. Ferine. 
The chief magistrate in each Latin town appears 
to have borne the title of dictator. He was 
elected annually, but might be re-elected at the 
close of his year of office. Even in the time 
of Cicero we find dictators in the Latin towns, 
as, for instance, in Lanuvium. (Cic, pro Mil., 
10). In every Latin town there was also a sen- 
ate and a popular assembly, but the exact na- 
ture of their powers is unknown. The old Latin 
towns were built for the most part on isolated 
hills, the sides of which were made by art very 
steep and almost inaccessible. They were 
surrounded by walls built of great polygonal 
stones, the remains of which still excite our 
astonishment. On the conquest of the Latins 
in 340, several of the Latin towns, such as La- 
nuvium, Aricia, Momentum, Pedum, and Tus- 
culum, received the Roman franchise. All the 
other towns became Roman Socii, and are men- 
tioned in history under the general name of No- 
men Latinum or Latini. The Romans, however, 
granted to them from time to time certain rights 
and privileges, which the other Socii did not 
enjoy; and, in particular, they founded many 
! colonies, consisting of Latins, in various parts 
! of Italy. These Latin colonies formed a part 
! of the Nomen Latinum, although they were not 
situated in Latium. Thus the Latini came 
425 



LATMICUS. 



LAVINIUM. 



eventually to hold a certain status intermediate 
between that of Roman citizens and peregriui. 
(For details, vid. Diet, of Ant., art. Latini.) 

Latmicus Sinus (6 AarfiLKog noJ^og), a gulf 
on the coast of Ionia, in Asia Minor, into which 
the River Mseander fell, named from Mount 
Latmus, which overhangs it. Its width from 
Miletus, which stood on its southern side, to 
Pyrrha, was about thirty stadia. Through the 
changes effected on this coast by the Mseander, 
the gulf is now an inland lake, called Akees- 
Chai or Ufa-Bassi. 

Latmus (Aut/ioc : now Monte di Palatia), a 
mountain in Caria, extending in a southeastern 
direction from its commencement on the south- 
ern side of the Mseander, northeast of Miletus 
and the Sinus Latmicus. It was the mytholog- 
ical scene of the story of Luna and Endymion, 
who is hence called by the Roman poets " Lat- 
rnius heros" and " Latmius venator :" he had 
a temple on the mountain, and a cavern in its 
side was shown as his grave. 

Latobrigi, a people in Gallia Belgica, who 
are mentioned, along with the Tulingi and Rau- 
raci, as neighbors of the Helvetii. They prob- 
ably dwelt near the sources of the Rhme, in 
Switzerland. 

Latona. Vid. Leto. 

Latopolis (AaroTcolae : ruins at JEsneh), a city 
of Upper Egypt, on the west bank of the Nile, 
between Thebes and Apollonopolis ; the seat of 
the worship of the Nile-fish called latus, which 
was the symbol of the goddess Neith, whom the 
Greeks identified with Athena. 

Latovici, a people in the southwest of Pan- 
nonia, on the River Savus, in the modern IUyria 
and Croatia. 

Latro, M. Porcius, a celebrated Roman rhet- 
orician in the reign of Augustus, was a Spaniard 
by birth, and a friend and contemporary of the 
elder Seneca, by whom he is frequently men- 
tioned. His school was one of the most fre- 
quented at Rome, and he numbered among his 
pupils the Poet Ovid. He died B.C. 4. Many 
modern writers suppose that he was the author 
of the Declamations of Sallust against Cicero, 
and of Cicero against Sallust. 

[Latymnus Mons (AuTV/j.vog), a mountain of 
Bruttium, near Croton.] 

Laureacum or Lauriacum (now Lorch, near 
JSns), sl strongly fortified town on the Danube, 
in Noricum Ripense, the head-quarters of the 
second legion, and the station of a Roman fleet. 

Laurentia, Acca. Vid. Acca Laurentia. 

Laurentius Lydus. Vid. Lydus. 

Laurentum (Laurens, -ntis : now Casale di { 
■Copocotta, not Paterno), one of the most ancient 
towns of Latium, was situated on a height be- 
tween Ostia and Ardea, not far from the sea, 
and was surrounded by a grove of laurels, from 
which the place was supposed to have derived 
its name. According to Virgil, it was the resi- 
dence of King Latinus and the capital of Lati- 
um ; and it is certain that it was a place of im- 
portance in the time of the Roman kings, as it 
is mentioned in the treaty concluded between 
Rome and Carthage in B.C. 509. The younger 
Pliny and the Emperor Commodus had villas 
at Laurentum, which appears to have been a 
healthy place, notwithstanding the marshes in 
the neighborhood. These marshes supplied the 
426 



tables of the Romans with excellent boars. In 
the time of the Antonines Laurentum was united 
with Lavinium, from which it was only six miles 
distant, so that the two formed only one town, 
which was called Laurolavinium, and its in- 
habitants were named Laurentes Lavinates. 

Lauretanus Portus, a harbor of Etruria, on 
the road from Populonia to Cosa. 

Lauriacum. Vid. Laureacum. 

Laurium (Aavpiov, Aavpstov), a mountain in 
the south of Attica, a little north of the Promon- 
torium Sunium, celebrated for its silver mines, 
which in early times were so productive that 
every Athenian citizen received annually ten 
drachmas. On the advice of Themistocles, the 
Athenians applied this money to equip two 
hundred triremes shortly before the invasion 
of Xerxes. In the time of Xenophon the pro- 
duce of the mines was one hundred talents.' 
They gradually became less and less productive, 
and in the time of Strabo they yielded nothing. 

[Laurolavinium. Vid. Lavinium.] 

Lauron (now Laury, west of Xucar in Valen- 
cia), a town in the east of Hispania Tarraconen- 
sis, near the sea and the River Sucro, celebrat- 
ed on account of its siege by Sertorius, and as 
the place where Cn. Pompey, the younger, was 
put to death after the battle of Munda. 

Laus (A uog : Aalvoc), a Greek city in Lucania, 
situated near the mouth of the River Laus, 
which formed the boundary between Lucania 
and Bruttium. It was founded by the Sybarites, 
after their own city had been taken by the in- 
habitants of Croton, B.C. 510, but it had disap- 
peared in the time of Pliny. The gulf into 
which the River Laus flowed was also called 
the Gulf of Laus. 

Laus Pompeii (now Lodi Vecchio), a town in 
Gallia Cisalpina, northwest of Placentia, and 
southeast of Mediolanum. It was founded by 
the Boii, and was afterward made a municipium 
by Pompeius Strabo, the father of Pompeius 
Magnus, whence it was called by his name. 

Lausus. 1. Son of Mezentius, king of the 
Etruscans, slain by iEneas. — 2. Son of Nurnitor 
and brother of Hia, killed by Amulius. 

Lautul^e, a village of the Volsci in Latium, 
in a narrow pass between Tarracina and Fundi. 

Laverna, the Roman goddess of thieves and 
impostors. A grove was sacred to her on the 
Via Salaria, and she had an altar near the Porta 
Lavernalis, which derived its name from her. 

Lavicum. Vid. Labicum. 

LavInia, daughter of Latinus and Amata, was 
betrothed to Turnus (vid. Turnus), but was aft- 
erward given in marriage to jEneas, by whom 
she became the mother of ^Eneas Silvius. 

Lavinium (Laviniensis : now Pratica), an an- 
cient town of Latium, three miles from the sea 
and six miles east of Laurentum, on the Via 
Appia, and near the River Numicus, which di- 
vided its territory from that of Ardea. It is said 
to have been founded by iEneas, and to have 
been called Lavinium in honor of his wife La- 
vinia, the daughter of Latinus. It possessed a 
temple of Venus, common to all the Latins, of 
which the inhabitants of Ardea had the over- 
sight. It was at Lavinium that the king Titus 
Tatius was said to have been murdered. La- 
vinium was at a later time united with Lauren- 
tum ; respecting which, vid. Laurentum. 



LAZM. 



LELEGES. 



Lazjs or Lazi (Adject, Aufri), a people of Col- 
chis, south of the Phasis. 

[Lea (now probably Piana or Pianosa), a 
small island in the southern part of the iEgean 
Sea.] 

[Leades (Aeddtjc), son of Astacus, according 
to Apollodorus slew Eteocles at the attack on 
Thebes, while JSschylus makes Eteocles to 
have fallen by the hand of Megareus.] 

Le^na (Atawa), an Athenian hetaera, beloved 
by Aristogiton or Harmodius. On the murder 
of Hipparchus she was put to the torture ; but 
she died under her sufferings without making 
any disclosure, and, if we may believe one ac- 
count, she bit off her tongue that no secret 
might be wrung from her. The Athenians hon- 
ored her memory greatly, and, in particular, by 
a bronze statue of a lioness (Izaiva) without a 
tongue, in the vestibule of the Acropolis. 

[Leagrus (Ataypog), son of Glaucon, one of 
the commanders of the Athenians in the at- 
tempt to colonize Amphipolis, B.C. 465, perish- 
ed in a battle with the Thracians at Drabescus 
or Datus.] 

Leaxdeb. (Adav dpog or AeavSpog), the famous 
youth of Abydos, who was iu love with Hero, 
the priestess of Venus (Aphrodite) in Sestus, 
and swam every night across the Hellespont to 
visit her, and returned before daybreak. Once 
during a stormy night he perished in the waves. 
Next morning his corpse was washed on the 
coast of Sestus, whereupon Hero threw herself 
into the sea. This story is the subject of the 
poem of Musaeus, entitled Be Amore Herus et 
Leandri (yid. Mus^eus), and is also mentioned 
by Ovid {Her., xviiL 19) and Virgil (Georg., iii., 
258). 

Leakchus (Aeapxog). 1. Vid. Athamas. — 2. 
Of Rhegium, one of those Daidalean artists who 
stand on the confines of the mythical and his- 
torical periods, and about whom we have ex- 
tremely uncertain information. One account 
made him a pupil of Daedalus, another of Dipoe- 
nus and Scyllis. 

Lebadea (AeSddeta : now Llvadhia), a town 
in Bceotia, west of the Lake Copais, between 
Chreronea and Mount Helicon, at the foot of a 
rock from which the River Hercyna flows. In 
a cave of this rock, close to the town, was the 
celebrated oraele of Trophonius, to which the 
place owed its importance. 

[LebjEa (AeGair/), an ancient city in Upper 
Macedonia, mentioued only by Herodotus (viii., 
137) ; not a trace of it now exists.] 

Lebedos (Aefiedof : Ae6t(Jioc),oneof the twelve 
cities of the louiau confederacy, in Asia Minor, 
stood on the coast of Lydia, between Colophon 
and Teos, ninety stadia east of the promontory 
of Myonnesus. It was said to have been built 
at the time of the louiau migration, on the site 
of an earlier Cariau city ; and it flourished, 
chiefly by commerce, uutil Lysimachus trans- 
planted most of its inhabitants to Ephesus. 
Near it were some mineral springs, which still 
exist near Ekklcsia, but no traces remain of the 
city itself. 

Leben or Lebena (AeGyv, AeC^vo), a townon 
the southern coast of Crete, ninety stadia south 
cast of Gortyua, of which it was regarded as 
the harbor. It possessed a celebrated temple 
of jEsculapiua. 



Lit binthus (AtCivdog : now Lebitha), an island 
| in the jftgveuu Sea, one of the Sporades, west 
. of Calymna, east of Amorgos, and north of As- 
i typalaea. 

Lech^eum (to Aexalov : Ae^aZof), one of the 
j two harbors of Corinth, with which it was con- 
nected by two long walls. It was twelve stadia 
from Corinth, was situated on the Corinthian 
Gulf, and received all the ships which came 
from Italy and Sicily. It possessed a temple 
of Neptune (Poseidon), who was hence sur- 
named Lechaeus. 

Lectum (to Aektov : now Cape Baba or S. Ma- 
ria), the southwestern promontory of the Troad, 
is formed where the western extremity of Mount 
Ida juts out into the sea, opposite to the north- 
ern side of the island of Lesbos. It was the 
southern limit of the Troad; and, under the 
Byzantine emperors, the northern limit of the 
province of Asia. An altar was shown here in 
Strabo's time, which was said to have been 
erected by Agamemnon to the twelve chief gods 
of Greece. 

Leda (A?jda), daughter of Thestius, whence 
she is called Thestias, and wife of Tyndareus, 
king of Sparta. One night she was embraced 
both by her husband and by Jupiter (Zeus) ; by 
the former she became the mother of Castor 
and Clytaemnestra, by the latter of Pollux and 
Helena. According to Homer (Od., xi., 298), 
both Castor and Pollux were sons of Tyndareus 
and Leda, while Helena is described as a daugh- 
ter of Jupiter (Zeus). Other traditions reverse 
the story, making Castor and Pollux the sons 
of Jupiter (Zeus), and Helena the daughter of 
Tyndareus. According to the common legend, 
Jupiter (Zeus) visited Leda in the form of a 
swan ; and she brought forth two eggs, from 
the one of which issued Helena, and from the 
other Castor and Pollux. The visit of Jupiter 
(Zeus) to Leda in the form of a swan was fre- 
quently represented by ancient artists. The 
Roman poets sometimes call Helena Ledaza, and 
Castor and Pollux Ledazi Dii. 

Ledon (Aiduv), a town in Phocis, northwest 
of Tithorea; the birth-place of Philomelus, the 
commander of the Phocians in the Sacred war ; 
it was destroyed in this war. 

Ledus or Ledum (now Les or Lez, near Mont- 
pellier), a small river in Gallia Narbonensis. 

Leg^e (Arj-yai or Af/yec;), a people on the south- 
ern shore of the Caspian Sea, belonging to the 
same race as the Cadusii. A branch of them 
was found by the Romans in the northern 
mountains of Albania, at the time of Pompey's 
expedition into those regions. 

Legio Septima Gemina (now Leon), a town in 
Hispania Tarraconensis, in the country of the 
Astures, which was originally the head-quarters 
of the legion so called. 

Leitus (AtfiTog), son of Alector or Alectryon 
by Cleobule, and father of Peneleus, was one 
of the Argonauts, and commanded the Boeo- 
tians in the war against Troy. 

Lelantds Campus (to Afaavrov rcsdiov), a 
plain in Eubcea, between Eretria and Chalcis, 
for the possession of which these two cities 
often contended. It contained warm springs 
and mines of iron and copper, but was subject 
to frequent earthquakes. 

Leleges (Aeheyeg), an ancient race which in- 
427 



LELEX. 



LENTIENSES. 



habited Greece before the Hellenes. They are 
frequently mentioned along with the Pelasgians | 
as the most ancient inhabitants of Greece. ! 
Some writers erroneously identify them with 
the Pelasgians, but their character and habits 
were essentially different : the Pelasgians were ; 
a peaceful and agricultural people, whereas the | 
Leleges were a warlike and migratory race. 
They appear to have first taken possession of 1 
the coasts and the islands of Greece, and after- ! 
ward to have penetrated into the interior. Pi- , 
racy was probably their chief occupation ; and 
they are represented as the ancestors of the 
Teleboans and the Taphians. who sailed as far j 
as Phoenicia, and were notorious for their pira- 
cies. The coasts of Arcarnania and ^Etolia ap- ; 
pear to have been inhabited by Leleges at the 
earliest times, and from thence they spread 
over other parts of Greece. Thus we find them 
in Phocis and Locris, in Boeotia, in Megaris, in 
Laconia, which is said to have been more an- 
ciently called Lelegia, in Elis, in Euboea, in sev- 
eral of the islands of the iEgaean Sea, and also 
on the coasts of Asia Minor, in Caria, Ionia, 
and the south of Troas. The origin of the Lel- 
eges is uncertain. Many of the ancieuts con- 
nected them with the Carians, and according 
to Herodotus (i., 171), the Leleges were the 
same as the Carians ; but whether there was 
any real connection between these people can 
not be determined. The name of the Leleges 
was derived, according to the custom of the an- 
cients, from an ancestor Lelex, who is called 
king either of Megaris or of Lacedasmon. Ac- 
cording to some traditions, this Lelex came 
from Egypt, and was the son of Neptune (Posei- 
don) and Libya : but the Egyptian origin of the 
people was evidently an invention of later times, j 
The Leleges must be regarded as a branch of 
the great Indo-Germanic race, who became j 
gradually incorporated with the Hellenes, and 
thus ceased to exist as an independent people. 
Lelex. Vid. Leleges. 

Lemannds or Lemanus Lacus (now Lake of 
Geneva), a large lake formed by the River Rhod- 
anus, was the boundary between the old Roman 
province in Gaul and the land of the Helvetii. 
Its greatest length is fifty-five miles, and its 
greatest breadth six miles. 

[Lemaxus Portus, a harbor on the southern 
coast of Britain, directly south of Durovernura, 
and supposed to correspond to the modern 
Lynwie.j 

Lemxos (Ay/uvoc : Aij/ivioc, fem. ^rj[j.vLag : now 
Stalimene, i. e., elg rav Atjuvov), one of the larg- 
est islands in the jEgeean Sea, was situated 
nearly midway between Mount Athos and the 
Hellespont, and about twenty-two miles south- 
west of Imbros. Its area is about one hundred 
and forty-seven square miles. In the earliest 
times it appears to have contained only one 
town, which bore the same name as the island 
(Horn., II., xiv., 299) ; but at a later period we 
read of two towns, Myriua (now Palceo Castro) 
on the west of the island, and Hephssstia or 
Hephaestias (near Rapanidi) on the northwest, 
with a harbor. Lemnos was sacred to Hephaes- 
tus (Vulcan), who is said to have fallen here 
when Zeus (Jupiter) hurled him down from 
Olympus. Hence the workshop of the god is 
sometimes placed in this island. The legend 
428 



appears to have arisen from the volcanic nature 
of Lemnos, which possessed in antiquity a vol- 
cano called Mosychlus (Moctv^aoc). The island 
still bears traces of having been subject to the 
action of volcanic fire, though the volcano has 
long since disappeared. The most ancient in- 
habitants of Lemnos, according to Homer, were 
the Thracian Sinties ; a name, however, which 
probably only signifies robbers (LivTiec, from 
civo/Ltai). When the Argonauts landed at Lem- 
nos, they are said to have found it inhabited 
only by women, who had murdered all their 
husbands, and had chosen as their queen Hyp- 
sipyle. the daughter of Thoas, the king of the 
island. Vid. Hysipyle. Some of the Argo- 
nauts settled here, and became by the Lemnian 
women the fathers of the Minyce, the later in- 
habitants of the island. The Minyae are said 
io have been driven out of the island by the 
Pelasgians, who had been expelled from Attica. 
These Pelasgians are further said to have car- 
ried away from Attica some Athenian women ; 
but, as the children of these women despised 
their half-brothers, born of Pelasgian women, 
the Pelasgians murdered both them and their 
children. In consequence of this atrocity, and 
of the former murder of the Lemnian husbands 
by the wives, Lemnian Deeds became a proverb 
in Greece for all atrocious acts. Lemnos was 
afterward conquered by one of the generals of 
Darius; but Miltiades delivered it from the Per- 
sians, and made it subject to Athens, in whose 
power it remained for a long time. Pliny speaks 
of a remarkable labyrinth at Lemnos, but no 
traces of it have been discovered by modern 
travellers. The principal production of the isl- 
and was a red earth called terra Lemnia or sigil- 
lata, which was employed by the ancient physi- 
cians as a remedy for wounds and the bites of 
serpents, aud which is still much valued by the 
Turks and Greeks for its supposed medicinal 
virtues. 

Lemoxia, one of the country tribes of Rome, 
named after a village Lemonium, situated on 
the Via Latina, before the Porta Capena. 

Leaiovices, a people in Gallia Aquitanica, be- 
tween the Bituriges and Arverui, whose chief 
town was Augustoritum, subsequently called 
Lemovices, the modern Limoges. 

Lemovii, a people of Germany, mentioned 
along u ith the Rugii, who inhabited the saores 
of the Baltic in the modern Pomerania. 

Lemures, the spectres or spirits of the dead. 
Some writers describe Lemures as the common 
name for all the spirits of the dead, and divide 
them into two classes ; the Lares, or the souls 
of good men, and the Larvce, or the souls of 
wicked men. But the common idea was that 
the Lemures and Larvce were the same. They 
were said to wander about at night as spectres, 
and to torment and frighten the living. In 
order to propitiate them, the Romans celebra- 
ted the festival of the Lemuralia or Lcmuria. 
Vid. Diet, of Antiq., s. v. 

Lexjsus (Anvaioc), a surname of Bacchus 
(Dionysus), derived from /.vvug, the wine-press 
or the vintage. 

Lextia (now Linz), a town in Noricum, on 
the Danube. 

Lextiexses, a tribe of the Alemanni, who 
lived on the northern shore of the Lacus Brig- 



LENTO, CjESENNIUS. 



LENTULUS, CORNELIUS. 



antmus (now Lake of Constance), in the modern 
Linzgau. ■ _ 

Lento, MBWNios, a follower of M. Antony. 
He was one of Antony's seven agrarian commis 
doners U> ptmiviratus) in B.C. 44, for apportion- 
ing the Campanian and Leontiue lands, whence 
Cicero terms hi in divisor Italia. 

Lentuixs, Cornelius, one of the haughtiest 
patrician families at Rome ; so that Cicero coins 
the words Appietas and Lentulitas to express the 
qualities of the high aristocratic party {ad Fam., 
iii 7) The name was derived from lens, like 
Cicero from ciar. 1. L., consul B.C. 327, le- 
gate in the Caudiue campaign 321, and dictator 
320 when he avenged the disgrace of the Fur- 
culffi Caudinae. This was indeed disputed (Liv., 
ix., 15); but his descendants at least claimed 
the honor for him, by assuming the agnomen of 
Caudinus.— 2. L., suruamed Caudinus, pontifex 
maximus, aud consul 237, when he triumphed 
over the Ligurians. He died 213.— 3. P., sur- 
named Caudinus, served with P. Scipio in Spaiu 
210, praetor 204, one of the ten ambassadors 
sent to Philip of Macedon 196.— 4. P., praetor 
in Sicily 214, and continued in his province for 
the two following years. In 189 he was one 
of ten ambassadors sent into Asia after the 
submission of Antioehus. — 5. Cn., quaestor 212, 
acurule aedile 204, consul 201, and proconsul in 
Hither Spain 199. — 6. L., praetor in Sardinia 211, 
succeeded Scipio as proconsul in Spaiu, where 
he remained for eleven years, and on his return 
was only allowed an ovation, because he only 
held proconsular rauk. He was consul 199, and 
the next year proconsul iu Gaul. — 7. L., curule 
■aedile 163, cousul 156, censor 147. — 8. P., curule 
aedile with Scipio Nasica 169, consul suffectus 
with C. Domitius 162, the election of the former 
consuls being declared informal. He became 
princeps senatus, aud must have lived to a good 
old age, since he was wounded iu the contest 
with C. Gracchus in 121. — 9. P., suruamed 
Sura, the man of chief note in Catiline's crew. 
He was quaestor to Sulla in 81 : before him and 
L. Triarius, Verres had to give an account of 
the moneys he had received as quaestor in Cisal- 
pine Gaul. He was soon after himself called 
to account for the same matter, but was ac- 
quitted. It is said that he got his cognomen of 
Sura from his conduct on tins occasion ; for 
when Sulla called him to account, he answer- 
ed by scornfully puttiug out his leg, " hike boys," 
says Plutarch, " when they make a blunder in 
playing at ball." Other persous, however, had 
borne the name before, oue perhaps of the Len- 
tulus family. In 75 he was praetor; and Hor- 
tensius, pleading before such a judge, had no 
difficulty in procuring the acquittal of Terentius 
Varro when accused of extortion. In 71 he 
was consul. But in the next year he was eject- 
ed from the senate, with sixty-three others, for 
infamous life and manners. It was this, prob- 
ably, that led him to join Catiline and his crew. 
Prom his distinguished birth and high rank he 
calculated on becoming chief of the conspiracv ; 
and a prophecy of the Sibylline books was ap- 
plied by flattering haruspices to him. Three 
Cornelii were to rule Rome, and he was the 
third after Sulla aud Cinna ; the twentieth year 
after the burning of the Capitol, <fce., was to be 
fatal to the city. To gain power, and recover 



place in the senate, he became praetor again 
in 63. When Catiline quitted the city for Etru- 
ria, Leutulus was left as chief of the home con 
spirators, and his irresolution probably saved 
the city from being fired, for it was by his 
over-caution that the negotiation with the am- 
bassadors of the Allobroges was entered into : 
these unstable allies revealed the secret to the 
consul Cicero, who directed them to feign com- 
pliance with the conspirators' wishes, aud thus 
to obtain written documents which might be 
brought in evidence against them. The well- 
known sequel will be found under the life of 
Catiline. Leutulus was deposed from the prae- 
torship, and was strangled in the Capitoline 
prison on the 5th of December His step-son 
Antony pretended that Cicero refused to deliver 
up his corpse for burial. — 10. P., surnamed Spin- 
ther. He received this nickname from his re- 
semblance to the actor Spinther. Caesar com- 
monly calls him by this name : not so Cicero ; 
but there could be no harm in it, for he used it 
on his coins when propraetor in Spain, simply to 
distinguish himself from the mauy of the same 
family ; and his son bore it after him. He was 
curule aedile in 63, the year of Cicero's consul- 
ship, and was intrusted with the care of the 
apprehended conspirator, P. Sura (vid. No. 9). 
His games were long remembered for their 
splendor;. but his toga, edged with Tyrian pur- 
ple, gave offence. He was praetor in 60, and by 
Caesar's interests he obtained Hither Spain for 
his next year's province, where he remained 
into part of 58. In 57 he was consul, which 
dignity he also obtained by Caesar's support. In 
his consulship he moved for the immediate re- 
call of Cicero, brought over his colleague Me- 
tellus Nepos to the same views, and his serv- 
ices were gratefully acknowledged by Cicero. 
Now, therefore, notwithstanding his obligations 
to Caesar, he had openly taken part with the 
aristocracy. He received Cilicia as his prov- 
ince, but he attempted in vain to obtain a de- 
, cree of the senate charging him with the office 
of restoring Ptolemy Auletes, the exiled king 
of Egypt. He remained as proconsul in Cilicia 
from 56 till July, 53, and obtained a triumph, 
though not till 51. On the breaking out of the 
civil war in 49 he joined the Pompeian party. 
He fell into Caesar's hands at Corfinium, but 
was dismissed by the latter uninjured. He then 
joined Pompey in Greece ; and after the battle 
of Pharsalia, he followed Pompey to Egypt, and 
got safe to Rhodes. — 11. P., surnamed Spin- 
ther, son of No. 10, followed Pompey 's for- 
tunes with his father. He was pardoned by 
Caesar, and returned to Italy. In 45 he was 
divorced from his abandoned wife, Metella. 
(Comp. Hor., Serm., ii., 3, 239.) After the mur- 
der of Caesar (44) he joined the conspirators. 
He served with Cassius against Rhodes ; with 
Brutus in Lycia. — 12. Cn., surnamed Clodi- 
anus, a Claudius adopted into the Leutulus fam- 
ily. He was consul in 72 with L. Gelfius Publi- 
cola. In the war with Spartacus both he and 
his colleague were defeated, but after their con- 
sulship. With the same colleague he held the 
censorship in 70, aud ejected sixty -three mem- 
bers from the senate for infamous life, among 
whom were Leutulus Sura {vid. No. 9) and C. 
Antouius, afterward Cicero's colleague in the 
429 



LEO, 



LEOCHARES. 



consulship. Yet the majority of those expelled 
were acquitted by the courts, and restored ; and 
Lentulus supported the Manilian law, appoint- 
ing Pompey to the command against Mithra- 
dates. As an orator he concealed his want of 
talent by great skill and art, and by a good voice. 
— 13. L., surnamed Ceus, appeared in 61 as the 
chief accuser of P. Clodius for violating the 
mysteries of the Bona Dea. In 58 he was prae- 
tor, and in 49 consul with C. Marcellus. He 
was raised to the consulship in consequence of 
his being a known enemy of Caesar. He did all 
he could to excite his wavering party to take 
arms and meet Caesar: he called Cicero cow- 
ardly ; blamed him for seeking a triumph at 
such a time ; urged war at any price, in the 
hope, says Caesar {B.C., i., 4), of retrieving his 
ruined fortunes, and becoming another Sulla. 
It was mainly at Lentulus's instigation that 
the violent measures passed the senate early 
in the year, which gave the tribunes a pretence 
for flying to Caesar at Ravenna, He himself 
fled from the city at the approach of Caesar, 
and afterward crossed over to Greece. After 
the battle of Pharsalia he fled to Egypt, and 
arrived there the day after Pompey's murder. 
On landing he was apprehended by y6ung Ptole- 
my's ministers, and put to death in prison. — 14. 
L., surnamed Niger, flamen of Mars. In 57 he 
was one of the priests to whom was referred 
the question whether the site of Cicero's house 
was consecrated ground. In 56 he was one of 
the judges in the case of P. Sextius, and he died 
in the same year, much praised by Cicero. — 15. 
L., son of the last, and also flamen of Mars. 
He defended M. Scaurus in 54, when accused 
of extortion ; he accused Gabinius of high trea- 
son about the same time, but was suspected of 
collusion. In the Philippics he is mentioned as 
a friend of Antony's. — 16. Cossus, surnamed 
G^etuxicus, consul B.C. 1, was sent into Africa 
in A.D. 6, where he defeated the Gaetuli ; hence 
his surname. On the accession of Tiberius, A. 
D. 14, he accompanied Drusus, who was sent 
to quell the mutiny of the legions in Pannonia. 
He died 25, at a very great age, leaving behind 
him an honorable reputation. — 17. Cx, sur- 
named Gjetulicus, son of the last, consul A. 
1). 26. He afterward had the command of the 
legions of Upper Germany for ten years, and 
was very popular among the troops. In 39 he 
was put to death by order of Cahgula, who fear- 
ed his influence with the soldiers. He was an 
historian and a poet ; but we have only three 
lines of his poems extant, unless he is the author 
of nine epigrams in the Greek Anthology, in- 
scribed with the name of Gaetulicus. 

Leo or Leox (Ae6v). 1. Also called Leoxides 
(AeovtdTjs), of Heraclea on the Pontus, disciple 
of Plato, was one of the conspirators who, with 
their leader Chion, assassinated Clearchus, ty- 
rant of Heraclea. B.C. 353—2. Of Byzantium, 
a rhetorician and historical writer of the age of 
Philip and Alexander the Great. — 3. Diaconus 
or the Deacon, Byzantine historian of the tenth 
century. His history, in ten books, includes 
the period from the 'Cretan expedition of Ni- J 
eephovus Phocas, in the reign of the Emperor 
Romanus II., A.D. 959, to the death of Joannes 
I SmiaeeSj 975. The style of Leo is vicious : j 
he employs unusual and inappropriate words 1 
430 



! (many of them borrowed from Homer, Agathias 
| the historian, and the Septuagint), in the place 
I of simple and common ones ; and he abounds in 
tautological phrases. His history, however, is 
a valuable contemporary record of a stirring 
time, honestly and fearlessly written. Edited 
for the first time by Hase, Paris, 1818. — iGrani- 
maticus, one of the continuators of Byzantine 
i history from the period when Theophanes leaves 
I off. His work, entitled Chrouographia, extends 
! from the accession of Leo V. the Armenian, 
813, to the death of Romanus Lecapenus, 944. 
Edited with Theophanes by Combefis, Paris, 
1655 ; [reprinted in the collection of the Byzan- 
tine Historians with an emended text by Bek- 
ker, Bonn., 1842,] — 5. Archbishop of Thessa- 
lonica, an eminent Byzantine philosopher and 
ecclesiastic of the ninth century. His works 
are lost, but he is frequently mentioned in terms 
of the highest praise by the Byzantine writers, 
especially for his knowledge of geometry and 
astronomy. — 6. Magentenus, a commentator on 
Aristotle, flourished during the first half of the 
fourteenth century. He was a monk, and after- 
ward archbishop of Mytilene. Several of his 
commentaries on Aristotle are extant, and have 
been published. — 7. Leo was also the name of 
six Byzantine emperors. Of these, Leo VI., sur- 
named the philosopher, who reigned 886-911, 
is celebrated in the history of the later Greek 
literature. He wrote a treatise on Greek tac- 
tics, seventeen oracles, thirty-three orations, 
and several other works, which are still extant. 
He is also celebrated in the history of legisla- 
tion. As the Latin language had long ceased 
to be the official language of the Eastern em- 
pire, Basil, the father of Leo, had formed and 
partly executed the plan of issuing an authorized 
Greek version of Justinian's legislation. This 
plan was carried out by Leo. The Greek ver- 
sion is known under the title of BaciXiicai Aia- 
rd^eig, or, shortly, BaatXiKat ; in Latin Basili- 
ca, which means " Imperial Constitutions" or 
"Laws." It is divided into sixty books, sub- 
divided into titles, and contains the Institutes, 
the Digest, the Codex, and the Kovellae; and 
likewise such constitutions as were issued by 
the successors of Justinian down to Leo VL 
There are, however, many laws of the Digest 
omitted in the Basilica, which contain, on the 
other hand, a considerable number of laws or 
extracts from ancient jurists which are not in 
the Digest. The publication of this authorized 
body of law in the Greek language led to the 
gradual disuse of the original compilations of 
Justinian in the East. But the Roman law was 
thus more firmly established in Eastern Europe 
and Western Asia, where it has maintained it- 
self among the Greek population to the present 
day. The best edition of the Basilica is the 
one now pubhsbing by Heimbach, Lips., 1833, 
seq. 

Leobotes. Vid. Labotas. 
[Leocedes {AeuK^drjc) son of Phidon. Vid. 
Phidox.] 

[Leochares (Aecoxupnc), an Athenian statuary 
and sculptor, was one of the great artists of the 
later Athenian school, at the head of which 
were Scopas and Praxiteles. He flourished B. 
C. 352-338. The master-piece of Leochares 
seems to have been his statue of the rape of 



LEOCORIUM. 



LEONTINL 



Ganymede. The original work was in bronze, j 236, and was succeeded by his son, Cleomenes 
Of the extant copies in marble, tbe best is one, | III. — 3. A kinsman of Olympias, the mother of 
half the size uf life, in the Museo Pio-Clemen- Alexander the Great, was intrusted with the 



uno, 



mam superintendence of Alexander's education 



LeocokIim ( XtunopLov), a shrine in Athens, in j in his earlier years, before he became the pupil 



the Ceramics, erected in honor of the daugh- 
ters of Leos. Hipparchus was murdered here. 
Leodamas y\tu6dfxag), a distinguished Attic 



orator, was 



of Aristotle. Leonidas was a man of austere 
character, and trained the young prince in hardy 
and self-denying habits. They were two ex- 



educated in the school of Isocrates, cellent cooks (said Alexander afterward) with 



and is greatly praised by ^Eschines. 

[Leooamas (Afu<5a//af), one of the 
chieftains who defended Thebes 



| which Leonidas had furnished him 
Theban ; march to season his breakfast, and 
against the j breakfast to season his dinner. — 4. Of Taren 



a night's 
a scanty 



attack of the Argives ; he slew ^Egialeus, and | turn, the author of upward of one hundred epi 



was himself slain by Alcmieon.] 



grams m the Doric dialect. His epigrams form- 



[Leon (Atwv). a village on the eastern coast : ed a part of the Garland of Meleager. They 
of Sicily, near Syracuse, occupied by both the | are chiefly inscriptions for dedicatory offerings 
Athenians and the Romans in their respective - and works of art, and, though not of a" very high 
" t city.] j order of poetry, are usually pleasing, ingenious, 

[Leodes (AeiuArjc), son of GEnops, one of the j and in good taste. Leonidas probably lived in 

'the time of Pyrrhus.— 5. Of Alexandrea, also an 

"ero and 

Vespasian. In the Greek Anthology, forty -three 
epigrams are ascribed to him : they are of a 
very low order of merit. 

Leoxxatus (iVeowuror). 1. A Macedonian of 
Pella, one of Alexander's most distinguished 
officers. His father's name is variously given, 
as Anteas, Anthes, Onasus, and Eunus. He 



operations against that city.] 

[Leodes (Aetui^r), son of 
6uitore of Penelope, hated by the rest as an un- j the time of Pyrrhus.— 5. Of Alexandrea 
welcome warner ; he was slain by Ulysses.] j epigrammatic poet, flourished under N 

Leoxica, a town of the Edetani in the west 
of Hispania Tarracouensis. 

Leo.vidas (Aeuv'idag). 1. I. King of Sparta 
B.C. 491-480, was one of the sons of Anaxan- 
drides by his first wife, and, according to some 
accounts, was twin-brother to Cleombrotus. 
He succeeded his half-brother Cleomenes L, 



B.C. 491, his elder brother Dorieus also having | saved Alexander's life in India in the assault on 
previously died. When Greece was invaded j the city of the Mali After the death of Alexan- 
by Xerxes, 480, Leonida3 was sent with a small ; der (B.C. 323), he obtained the satrapy of the 
army to make a stand against the enemy at the ' Lesser or Hellespontine Phrygia, and in the fol- 
pass of Thermopylae. The number of his army j lowing year he crossed over into Europe, to as- 
is variously stated : according to Herodotus, it sist Antipater against the Greeks ; but he was 
amounted to somewhat more than five thousand defeated by the Athenians and their allies, and 
men, of whom three hundred were Spartans ; i fell in battle. — [2. Another officer in the service 
in all probability, the regular band of (so called) j of Alexander, a native of iEgae, and son of An- 



Tcnights (l~~eic). The Persians in vain attempt 
ed to force their way through the pass of Ther- 
mopylae. They were driven back by Leonidas 
and his gallant band with immense slaughter. 
At length the Malian Ephialtes betrayed the 
mouutain path of the Anopaea to tbe Persians, 
who were thus able to fall upon the rear of the 
Greeks. When it became known to Leonidas 
that the Persians were crossing the mountain, 



tipater. — 3. A Macedonian officer in the service 
of Pyrrhus, king of Epirus, who saved the life 
of that monarch at the battle of Heraclea, B.C. 
280.] 

[Leoxorius (Aeovopioc), one of the leaders of 
the Gauls in their invasion of Macedonia and 
the adjacent countries.] 

[Leoxteus (Aeovrevg), son of Coronus, led the 
Lapithae to Troy in forty ships ; one of the com 
batants at the funeral games in honor of Pa- 



he dismissed all the other Greeks except the 
Thespian and Theban forces, declaring that he j troclus.] 
and the Spartans under his command must Leoxtiades {Aeovriddr,^). 1. A Theban, corn- 
needs remain in the post they had been sent to manded at Thermopylae the forces supplied by 
guard. Then, before the body of Persians, who j Thebes to the Grecian army, B.C. 480.— 2. A 
were crossing the mountain under Hydarnes, \ Theban, assisted the Spartans in seizing the 
could arrive to attack him in the rear, he ad- j Cadmea, or citadel of Thebes, in 382. He was 
vauced from the narrow pass and charged the ! slain by Pelopidas in 379, when the Theban ex- 
myriads of the enemy with his handful of troops, ! iles recovered possession of the Cadmea. 
hopeless now of preserving their lives, and anx- j Leoxtixi (ol Aeovrlvot : Aeovrlvog : now Len- 
ious only to sell them dearly. In the desperate ' ti-ai), a town in the east of Sicily, about five 
battle which ensued. Leonidas himself fell soon. \ miles from the sea, northwest of Syracuse, was 
His body was rescued by the Greeks, after a j situated upon the small river Lissus. It was 
violent struggle. Ou the hillock in the pass, 1 built upon two hills, which were separated from 



where the remnant of the Greeks made their 
last stand, a li<>n of stone was set up in his 
honor. — 2. II. King of Sparta, was son of the 
traitor Cleonymus. He acted as guardian to 
his infant relative, Areus LL, on whose death 
he ascended the throne, about 256. Being op- 
posed to the projected reforms of his contem 



one another by a valley, in which were the fo- 
rum, the senate hou?e, and the other public 
buildings, while the temples and the private 
houses occupied the hills. The rich plains 
north of the city, called Leontini Campi, were 
some of the most fertile in Sicily, and produced 
abundant crops of most excellent wheat Le- 



poiary, Agis IV'., he was deposed, and the throne \ ontini was founded by Chalcidians from Xaxos. 
was transferred to his son-in-law Cleombrotus j j B.C. 730, only six years after the foundation of 
but he waa aoon afterward recalled, and caused j Naxos itself. It never attained much political 
Agis to be put to death, 240. He died about ! importance in consequence of it3 proximity to 

431 



LEONTIS. 



LEPIDUS ^EMILIUS. 



Syracuse, to which it soon became subject, and 
whose fortunes it shared. At a later time it 
joined the Carthaginians, and was, in conse- 
quence, taken and plundered by the Romans. 
Under the Romans it sunk into insignificance. 
Gorgias was a native of Leontini. 

Leontes (Aeovrtg), one of the ten Attic tribes 
formed by Clisthenes, and deriving its name 
from the hero Leos. Vid. Leos.] 

Leontium (AeovTiov), an Athenian hetasra, the 
disciple and mistress of Epicurus, wrote a trea- 
tise against Theophrastus. She had a daughter, 
Danae, who was also an hetasra of some noto- 
riety. 

Leoxtium (Aeovnov). a town in Achaia, be- 
tween Pharae and iEgium. 

Leo>'t6p6lis (AeovronOAtg, Aeovruv TroXig). 
1. A city in the Delta of Egypt south of 
Thmuis, and northwest of Athnbis, was the 
capital of the jNomos LeontopoJites, and proba- 
bly of late foundation, as no writer before Strabo 
mentions it. Its site is uncertain. — 2. Vid. Ni- 

CEPHOB.IUM. 

Leopeepides, i. e., Simonides, the son of Leo- 
prepes. 

Leos (Aeug), one of the heroes eponymi of 
the Athenians, said to have been a son of Or- 
pheus. The phyle or tribe of Leontis derived 
its name from him. Once, when Athens was 
suffering from famine or plague, the Delphic 
oracle demanded that the daughters of Leos 
should be sacrificed, and the father complied 
with the command of the oracle. The maidens 
were afterward honored by the Athenians, who 
erected the Leocorium (from Aeuc and nupai) to 
them. Their names were Praxithea, Theope, 
and Eubule. 

Leosthenes (Aeua8£V7]g), an Athenian com- 
mander of the combined Greek army in the 
Lamian war. In the year after the death of 
Alexander (B.C. 323)." he defeated Antipater 
near Thermopylae; Antipater thereupon threw 
himself into the small town of Lamia. Leos- 
thenes pressed the siege with the utmost vigor, 
but was killed by a blow from a s-tone. His 
loss was mourned by the Athenians as a public 
calamity. He was honored with a public burial 
in the Ceramieus, and his funeral oration was 
pronounced by Hypei id. s. 

Leotychides (AeurvxLd7]g, Aevrvxidrjc;, He- 
rod). 1. King of Sparta, B.C. 491-469. He 
commanded the Greek fleet in 479, and defeated 
the Persians at the battle of Mycale. He was 
afterward 6ent with an army into Thessaly to 
punish those who had sided with the Persians ; 
but, in consequence of his accepting the bribes 
of the Aleuadae, he was brought to trial on his 
return home, and went into exile to Tegea, 469, 
where he died. He was succeeded by his grand- 
son, Archidamus IL — 2. Grandson of Archida- 
mus II., and son of Agis II. There was, how- 
ever, some suspicion that he was, in reality, ihe 
fruit of an iutrigue of Alcibiades with Timaea, 
the queen of Agis ; in consequence of which he 
was excluded from thd throne, mainly through 
the influence of Lysander, and his uncle, Agesi- 
laus IL, was substituted in his room. 

Lepidus ^EmilIus, a distinguished patrician 
family. 1. M., sedile B.C. 192 ; praetor 191, 
with Sicily as his province ; consul 187, when 
he defeated the Liguriaus; pontifex maximus 
432 



j 180; censor 179 with M. Fulvius Nobilior; and 
consul a second time 175. He was six times 

' chosen by the censors priuceps senatus, and he 
died 152, full of years and honors. Lepidus the 
triumvir is called by Cicero (Phil, xiii., 7) the 
pronepos of this Lepidus ; but he would seem 
more probably to have been his ab?iepos, or 
great-great-grandson. — 2. M., consul 137, car- 
ried on war in Spain against the Vaccaei, but 
unsuccessfully. Since he had attacked the Vac- 
caei in opposition to the express orders of the 
senate, he was deprived of his command, and 
condemned to pay a fine. He was a man of 
education and refined taste. Cicero, who had 
read his speeches, speaks of him as the greatest 
orator of his age. He helped to form the style 
of Tiberius Gracchus and C. Carbo, who were 
accustomed to 1 sten to him with great care. — 

3. M., the father of the triumvir, was praetor in 
Sicily in 81, where he earned a character by 
his oppressions only second to that of Verres. 
In the civil wars between Marius and Sulla he 
belonged at first to the party of the latter, but 
he afterward came forward as a leader of the 
popular party. In his consulship, 78, he at- 
tempted to rescind the laws of Sulla, who had 
lately died, but he was opposed by his colleague 
Catulus, who received the powerful support of 
Pompey. In the following year (77) Lepidus 
took up arms and marched against Rome. He 
was defeated by Pompey and Catulus, under 
the walls of the city, in the Campus Martius, 
and was obliged to "take to flight. Finding it 
impossible to hold his ground in Italy, Lepidus 
sailed with the remainder of his forces to Sar- 
dinia ; but repulsed even in this island by the 
propraetor, he died shortly afterward of chagrin 
and sorrow, which is said to have been increas- 
ed by the discovery of his wife's infidelity. — 

4. Mam., surnamed Livianus, because he be- 
longed originally to the Livia gens, consul 77, 
belonged to the aristocratical party, and was 
one of the influential persons who prevailed 
upon Sulla to spare the life of the young Julius 
Caesar. — 5. M., consul 66, with L. Volcatus Tul- 
lus, the same year in which Cicero was praetor. 
He belonged to the aristocratical party, but on 
the breaking out of the civil war in 49, he re- 
tired to his Formian villa to watch the progress 
of events. — 6. L. .^Emilius Paulus, son of No. 
3, and brother of M. Lepidus, the triumvir. His 
surname of Paulus was probably given him by 
his father, in honor of the celebrated -/Einiliua 
Paulus, the conqueror of Macedonia : but, since 
he belonged to the family of the Lepidi, and not 
to that of the Pauli, he is inserted in this place, 
and not under Paulus. ^Emilius Paulus did 
not follow the example of his father, but com- 
menced his public career by supporting the aris- 
tocratical party. His first public act was the 
accusation of Catiline in 63. He was quaestor 
in Macedonia 59 ; aedile 55 ; praetor 53 ; and 
consul 50, along with M. Claudius Marccllus. 
Paulus was raised to the consulship on account 
of his being one of the most determined ene- 
mies of Caesar, but Caesar gained him over to 
his side by a bribe of fifteen hundred talents, 
which he is said to have expended on the com- 
pletion of a magnificent basilica which he had 
commenced in his ssdiieship. After the murder 
of Caesar (44), Paulus joined the senatorial par- 



LEPIDUS ^EMILIUS. 



LEPREUM. 



ty. He was one of the senators who declared 
M. Lepidus a public enemy on account of his 
having joined Antony ; and, accordingly, when 
the triumvirate was formed, his name was set 
down first in the proscription list by his owu 
brother. The soldiers, however, who were ap- 
pointed to kill him, allowed him to escape. He 
passed over to Brutus iu Asia, and after the 
deaih of the latter repaired to Miletus. Here 
he remained, and refused to go to Rome, al- 
though he was pardoned by tbe triumvirs.— 7. 
M. ^Emilius Lftidus, the Triumvir, brother of 
the last. Ou the breaking out of the civil war 
(49), Lepidus, who was then praeor, joined 
Ceesar's party ; and as the consuls had fled 
with Pompey from Italy, Lepidus, as praetor, 
was the highest magistrate remaining in Italy. 
During Caesar's absence in Spain, Lepidus pre- 
sided at the comitia iu which the former was 
iippointed dictator. In the following year (48) 
he received the province of Nearer Spain. On 
his return to Rome in 47, Caesar granted him 
a triumph, and made bill) his magister equitum ; 
aud in the next year (46), his colleague iu the 
consulship. In 44 he received from Caesar the 
government of Narbonese Gaul and Nearer 
Spain, but had not quitted the neighborhood of 
Rome at the time of the dictator's death. Hav- 
ing the command of an army near the city, he 
was able to render M. Antony efficient assist- 
ance ; and the latter, iu consequence, allowed 
Lepidus to be chosen poutifex maximus, which 
dignity had become vacant by Caesar's death. 
Lepidus soon afterward repaired to his provin- 
ces of Gaul and Spain. He remained neutral 
iu the struggle between Antony aud the senate; 
but he subsequently joiued Antony, when the 
latter fled to him in Gaul after his defeat at 
Mutina. This was in the end of May, 43 ; and 
when the news reached Rome, the senate pro- 
claimed Lepidus a public euemy. In the au- 
tumn Lepidus and Antony crossed the Alps at 
the head of a powerful army. Octavianus (aft- 
erward Augustus) joiued them ; and in the 
month of October the celebrated triumvirate was 
formed, by which the R >man world was divid- 
ed between Octavianus-, Antony, and Lepidus. 
Vid. p. 129, b. In 42 Lepidus remained in Italy 
as consul, while the two other triumvirs pros- 
ecuted the war against Brutus aud Cassius. 
In the fresh division of the provinces after the 
battle ot Philippi, Lepidus received Africa, 
where he renraiued till 36. In this year Oc- 
tavianus summoned him to Sicily to assist him 
in the war against Sextus Pompey. Lepidus 
obeyed, but, tired of beiug treated as a subor- 
dinate, he resolved to make an effort to acquire 
Sicily for himself aud to regain his lost power. 
He was easily subdued by Octavianus, who 
spared his life, but deprived him of his trium- 
virate, his army, and his provinces, and com- 
manded that he should live at Circeii, under 
strii t surveillance. He allowed him, however, 
to retaiu his dignity of poutifex maximus. He 
died B.C. 13. Augustus succeeded him as 
poutifex maximus. Lepidus was fond of ease 
aud repose, aud it is not improbable that he 
possessed abilities capable of effecting much 
more than he ever did. — 8. Paulus ./Emilius 
Lepidus, son of No. 6, with whom he is fre- 
quently confounded. His name is variously 
28 



• given by the ancient writers, JEmilius Paulus, 
or Paulus jEmilius, or jEmilius Lepidus Paulus, 
but Paulus JEhnilius Lepidus seems to be the 
most cm i ect form. He probably fled with his 
father to Brutus, but he afterward made his 
peace with the triumvirs. He accompanied 
Ociavianus in his campaign against Sex. Pom- 
pey iu Sicily in 36. Iu 34 he was consul suf- 
fectus. In 22 he was censor with L. Muuatius 
Plaucus, and died while holding this dignity. — 
9. M. JEmilius Lepidus, sou of the triumvir 
(No. 7) and Junia, formed a conspiracy iu 30 
for the purpose of assassinating Octavianus on 
his return to Rome after the battle of Actium. 
Maecenas, who had charge of the city, became 
acquainted with the plo'f, seized Lepidus, and 
sent him to Octavianus in the East, who put 
him to death. His father was ignoraut of the 
conspiracy, but his mother was privy to it 
Lepidus was married twice: his first wife was 
Automa, the daughter of the triumvir, and his 
second Servilia, who put an end to her life by 
swallowing burning coals when the conspir- 
acy of her husband was discovered. — 10. Q. 
JEmilius Lepidus, consul in 21 with M. Lollius. 
(Hor., JSp. t i., 20, 28.)— 11. L. JEmilius Paulus, 
son of No. 8 and Cornelia, married Julia, the 
grand-daughter of Augustus. Vid. Julia, No. 6. 
Paulus is therefore called the progener of Au- 
gustus. He was consul A.D. 1, with C. Caesar, 
his wife's brother. He eutered into a conspir- 
acy against Augustus, of the particulars of 
which we are not informed. — 12. M. JEmilius 
Lepidus, brother of the last, consul A.D. 6 
with L. Arruntius. He lived on the most inti- 
mate terms with Augustus, who employed him 
in the war against the Dalmatians in A.D. 9. 
After the death of Augustus, he was also held 
in high esteem by Tiberius. — 13 M. JEmilius 
Lepidus, consul with T. Statilius Taurus in 
A.D. 11, must be carefully distinguished from 
the last. In A.D. 21 he obtained the province 
of Asia. — 14. JEmilius Lepidus, the son of No. 
11 and Julia, the graud-daughter of Augustus, 
and consequently the great-grandson of Augus- 
tus. He was one of the minions of the Emper- 
or Caligula, with whom he had the most shame- 
ful connection. He married Drusilla, the fa- 
vorite sister of the emperor ; but he was, not- 
withstanding, put to death by Caligula, A.D. 39. 

Lepontii, a people inhabiting the Alps, in 
whose country Caesar places the sources of the 
Rhine, and Pliny the sources of the Rhone. 
They dwelt on the southern slope of the St. 
Gothard and the Simplon, toward the Lago 
Maggiore, aud their name is still retained in 
the Vol Lcventina. Their chief town was Os- 
cela (now Domo d'Ossola). 

Leprea (AeTrpm) daughter of Pyrgeus, from 
whom the town of Lepreum in Elis was said to 
have derived its name. Vid. Lepreum. An- 
other tradition derived the name from Lepreus, 
a son of Caucon, Glaucon, or Pyrgeus, by As- 
tydamia. He was a grandson of Neptuue (Po- 
seidon), and a rival of Hercules both in bis 
strength and his powers of eating, but he was 
conquered and slain by the latter. His tomb 
was believed to exist iu Phigalia. 

Lepreum (Aerrpeov, Aerrpeog: Aenpedryg : uovr 
Strovitzi), a town of Elis in Triphylia,* situated 
forty stadia from the sea, was said to have been 
433 



LEPREUS. 



LESBOS. 



founded in the time of Theseus by Minyans 
from Lemnos. After the Messeniaa wars it 
■was subdued by the Eleans with the aid of 
Sparta: but it recovered its independence in 
the Peloponnesian war, and was assisted by 
the Spartans against Elis. At the time of the 
Achaean league it was subject to Elis. 
[Lepreus (AeTrpevg). Vid. Leprea.] 
Lepta, Q., a native of Cales in Campania, 
and praefectus fabrum to Cicero in Cilicia, B.C. 
51. He joined the Pompeian party in the civil 
war, and is frequently mentioned in Cicero's 
letters. 

Leptines (Aetttlvi](). 1. A Syracusan, son 
of Hermocrates, and brother of Dionysius the 
Elder, tyrant of Syracuse. He commanded his 
brother's fleet in the war against the Cartha- 
ginians, B.C. 397, but was defeated by _Mago 
with great loss. In 390 he was sent by Dionys- 
ius with a fleet to the assistance of the Luca- 
nians against the Italian Greeks. Some time 
afterward he gave offence to the jealous tem- 
per of the tyrant by giving one of his daugh- 
ters in marriage to Philistus, without any pre- 
vious intimation to Dionysius, and on this ac- 
count he was banished from Syracuse, together 
with Philistus. He thereupon retired to Thurii, 
but was subsequently recalled by Dionysius to 
Syracuse. Here he was completely reinstated 
in his former favor, and obtained one of the 
daughters of Dionysius in marriage. In 383 
he again took an active part in the war against 
the Carthaginians, and commanded the right 
wing of the Syracusan army in the battle near 
Cronium, in which he was killed. — 2. A Syra- 
cusan, who joined with Calippus in expelling 
the garrison of the younger Dionysius from 
Pvhegium, 351. Soon afterward he assassin- 
ated Calippus, and then crossed over to Sicily, 
where he made himself tyrant of Apollonia and 
Engyum. He was expelled in common with 
the other tyrants by Timoleon ; but his life 
was spared, and he was sent into exile at 
Corinth, 342. — 3. An Athenian, known only as 
the proposer of a law taking away all special 
exemptions from the burden of public charges 
(uTe/<.ELai rtiv ?^EtrovpyiQv), against which the 
celebrated oration of Demosthenes is directed, 
usually known as the oration against Leptines. 
This speech was delivered 355; and the law 
must have been passed above a year before, 
as we are told that the lapse of more than that 
period had already exempted Leptines from all 
personal responsibility. Hence the efforts of 
Demosthenes were directed solely to the re- 
peal of the law, not to the punishment of its 
proposer. His arguments were successful, and 
the law was repealed. — 4. A Syrian Greek, who 
assassinated with hia own hand, at Laodicea, 
Cn. Octavius, the chief of the Roman deputies, 
who had been sent into Syria, 162. Demetrius 
caused Leptines to be seized, and sent as a 
prisoner to Rome ; but the senate refused to 
receive him, being desirous to reserve this 
cause of complaint as a public grievance. 

Leptis (AfTTTic). 1. Lepti8 Magna or Neapo- 
us (tj Actttic fisydXi}, Neddie), a city on the 
•oast of Northern Africa, between the Syrtes, 
•aat of Abrotonum, and west of the mouth of 
tfcc little river Cinyps, was a Phoenician col- 
ony, with a flourishing commerce, though it 
434 



possessed no harbor. With Abrotonum and 
G2a it formed the African Tripolis. The Ro- 
mans made it a colony^ : it was the birth-place 
of the Emperor Septimius Severus ; and it con- 
tinued to flourish till A.D. 366, when it was al- 
most ruined by an attack from a Libyan tribe. 
Justinian did something toward its restoration; 
but the Arabian invasion completed its destruc- 
tion. Its ruins are still considerable. — 2. Lep- 
tis Minor or Parva (Aetctic; tj p,inpd: ruins at 
Zamta), usually called simply Leptis, a Phoeni- 
cian colony on the coast of Byzacium, in North- 
ern Africa, between Hadrumetum and Thap- 
sus: an important place under both the Car- 
i thaginians and the Romans. 

Lerina (now St. Honorat), an island off the 
coast of Gallia Narbonensis, opposite Antipoiis 
(now Antibes). 

Lerna or Lerne (Aspvij), a district in Argo- 
lis, not far from Argos, in which was a marsh 
and a small river of the same name. It was- 
celebrated as the place where Hercules killed 
the Lernean Hydra. Vid. p. 357, a. 

Lero (now St. Marguerite), a small island 
off the coast of Gallia Narbonensis. 

Leros (AspoQ : Aipioc), a small island, one of 
the Sporades, opposite to the mouth of the Si- 
nus Iassius, on the coast of Caria. Its inhab- 
itants, who came originally from Miletus, bore 
a bad character. Besides a city of the same 
name, it had in it a temple of Diana (Artemis), 
where the transformation of the sisters of Mel- 
eager into Guinea-fowls was said to have taken 
place, in memory of which Guinea-fowls were 
kept in the court of that temple. 

Lesbonax (AEcStivatj). 1. Son of Potamon 
of Mytilene, a philosopher and sophist in the 
time of Augustus. He was the father of Pole- 
mon, the teacher and friend of the Emperor Ti- 
berius. Lesbonax wrote several political ora- 
tions, of which two have come down to us, 
one entitled irEpl rov Tzo?i£juov KoptvOltov, and 
the other TtporpETTTiKdc loyoc, both of which are 
not unsuccessful imitations of the Attic orators 
of the best times. They are printed in the col- 
lections of the Greek orators (vid. Demosthe- 
nes), and separately by Orelli, Lips., 1820. — 
2. A Greek grammarian, of uncertain age, but 
later than No. l,the author of an extant work on 
grammatical figures (iTEpl gxvH-utuv), published 
by Valckenaer in his edition of Ammonius. 

Lesbos (Aec6oq : AsaSiog, Lesbius : now Myt- 
ilene, Metelin), the largest, and by far the most 
important, of the islands of the iEgean along 
the coast of Asia Minor, lay opposite to the 
Gulf of Adramyttium, off the coast of Mysia, 
the direction of its length being northwest and 
southeast. It is intersected by lofty mount- 
ains, and indented with large bays, the chief 
of which, on the western side, runs more than 
half way across the island. It had three chief 
headlands, Argenum, on the northeast, Sigri- 
um on the west, and Malea on the south. Its- 
valleys were very fertile, especially in the 
northern part, near Methymna ; and it pro- 
duced corn, oil, and wine renowned for its ex- 
cellence. In early times it was called by va- 
rious names, the chief of which were Issa, 
Pelasgia, Mytanis, and Macaria :: the late Greek 
writers called it Mytilene, from its chief city, 
and this name has been preserved to modern 



LESBOTHEMIS. 



LEUCiE. 



timeB. The earliest, reputed inhabitants were j 
Pelasgians ; the next, an Ionian colony, who j 
were said to ba7e settled it in two generations j 
before the Trojan war; lastly, at the time of 
the great JEoI'iq migration (one hundred and j 
thirty years after the Trojan war, according j 
to the mythical chronology), the island was 
colonized by -Eolians, who founded in it an j 
Hexapolis, consisting of the six cities, Myti- 
lene, Methynina, Eresus, Pyrrha, Antissa, and! 
Arisbe, afterward reduced to fire through the 1 
destruction of Arisbe by the Methymnaeans. j 
The ^Eolians of Lesbos afterward founded! 
numerous settlements along the coast of the 
Troad and in the region of Mount Ida, and at 
one time a great part of the Troad seems to 
have been subject to Lesbos. The chief facts 
in the history of the island are connected with 
its principal city, Mytilene, which was the 
scene of the struggles between the nobles and 
the commons, in which Alcleus and Pittacus 
took part. At the time of the Peloponnesian 
war, Lesbos was subject to Athens. After 
various changes, it fell under the power of 
Mithradates, and passed from him to the Ro- 
mans. The island is most important in the 
early history of Greece, as the native region 
of the JEolian school of lyric poetry. It was 
the birth-place of the musician and poet Ter- 
panoer, of the lyric poets Algous, Sappho, 
and others, and of the dithyrambic poet Arion. 
Other forms of literature and philosophy early 
and long flourished in it : the sage and states- 
man Pittacus, the historians Hellanicus and 
Theophanes, and the philosophers Theophras- 
tus and Phanias, were all Lesbians. 

Lesbothemis (AeaGodefiic), a statuary of an- 
cient date, and a native of Lesbos. 

Lesches or Leschecs (Aeo^r, Atc^wc). one 
of the so-called cyclic poets, son of iEschylinus, 
a native of Pyrrha, in the neighborhood of Myt- 
ilene, and hence called a Mytilenean or a Les- 
bian. He flourished about B.C. 708, and was 
usually regarded as the author of the Little Il- 
iad ('IXtdc 7) kMccuv or 'Utac fUKpd), though 
this poem was also ascribed to various other 
poets. It consisted of four books, and was in- 
tended as a supplement to the Homeric Iliad. 
It related the events after the death of Hector, 
the fate of Ajax, the exploits of Philoctetes, 
Neoptolemus, and Ulysses, and the final cap- 
ture and destruction of Troy, which part of the 
poem was called The destruction of Troy ('I/l- 
iuv -rrepacg). There was no unity in the poem, 
except that of historical and chronological suc- 
cession. Hence Aristole remarks that the little 
Iliad furnished materials for eight tragedies, 
while only one could be based upon the Iliad or 
Odyssey of Homer. 

[Lessa (Af/ooa : ruins at Lycurio), a village 
of Argolis, eastward from Argos, on the west- 
ern confines of the territory of Epidaurus, and 
at the base of Mount Arachnaeus : it contained 
a temple of Minerva (Athena).] 

[Letandeos, a Bmall island of the JEgean Sea, 
•lassed among the Cyclades, lying near Gyaros.] 
LethvEUS (Arjdaloc). 1. A river of Ionia, in 
Asia Minor, flowing south past Magnesia into 
the Maeander. — 2. A river in the south of Crete, 
flowing past Gortyna. — 3. Vid. Lathox. 

Lethe ( qdrj), the personification of oblivion, 



called by Hesiod a daughter of Eris. A river 
in the lower world was likewise called Lethe. 
The souls of the departed drank of this river, 
and thus forgot all they had said or done in 
the upper world ; [and, according to Virgil (^En., 
vi., 713), the souls destined by the Fates to in- 
habit new bodies on earth also drank of its 
waters, to remove the remembrance of the joys 
of Elysium.] 

Lethe, a river in Spain. Vid, Lim^a. 

Liiio (Avt6), called Latona by the Romans, 
is described by Hesiod as a daughter of the 
Titan Coeus and Phoobe, a sister of Asteria, and 
the mother of Apollo and Diana (Artemis) by 
Jupiter (Zeus), to whom she was married be- 
fore Juno (Hera). Homer likewise calls her 
the mother of Apollo and Diana (Artemis) by 
Jupiter (Zeus) ; he mentions her in the 6tory 
of Niobe, who paid so dearly for her conduct 
toward Latona (Leto) (vid, Niobe), and he also 
describes her as the friend of the Trojans in the 
war with the Greeks. In later writers these 
elements of her story are variously embellish- 
ed, for they do not describe her as the lawful 
wife of Jupiter (Zeus), but merely as his mis- 
tress, who was persecuted by Juno (Hera) during 
her pregnancy. All the world being afraid of 
receiving Latona (Leto) on account of Juno 
(Hera), she wandered about till she came to 
Delos, which was then a floating island, and 
bore the name of Asteria or Ortygia. When 
Latona (Leto) arrived there, Jupiter (Zeus) fas- 
tened it by adamantine chains to the bottom of 
the sea, that it might be a secure resting-place 
for his beloved, and here she gave birth to Apollo 
and Diana (Artemis). The tradition is also re- 
lated with various other modifications. Some 
said that Jupiter (Zeus) changed Latona (Leto) 
into a quail {oprbg), and that in this state she 
arrived in the floating island, which was hence 
called Ortygia. Others related that Jupiter 
(Zeus) was enamored with Asteria, but that she, 
being metamorphosed into a bird, flew across 
the sea ; that she was then changed into a rock, 
which for a long time lay under the surface 
of the sea ; and that this rock arose from the 
waters and received Latona (Leto) when she 
was pursued by Python. Latona (Leto) was 
generally worshipped only in conjunction with 
her children. Delos was the chief seat of her 
worship. Vid. Apollo. It is probable that the 
name of Leto belongs to the same class of words 
as the Greek Xrjdri and the Latin lateo. Leto 
would therefore signify " the obscure" or * con- 
cealed," not as a physical power, but as a di- 
vinity yet quiescent and invisible, from whom 
issued the visible divinity with all his splendor 
and brilliancy. This view is supported by tho 
account of her genealogy given by Hesiod. 
From their mother Apollo is frequently called 
Letdius or Latdius, and Artemis (Diana) Letdia, 
Leto'is, Lato'is, or Latoe, 

Leuca (to, AevKa), town at the extremity of 
the Iapygian promontory in Calabria, with a 
fetid fountain, under which the giants who were 
vanquished by Hercules are said to have been 
buried. The promontory is still called Capo di 
Leuca. 

Leucadia. Vid. Leucas.] 
Leuc^e, Leuca (Atvnai, Atvutj : now Lefke), a 
small town on the coast of Ionia, in Asia Minor, 
435 



LEUCAS. 



LEUCOPHRYNE. 



near Phocaea, built by the Persian general Ta- [Leuce Come (Acvkt/ Ku^jj), a fortified place 
chos iu B.C. 352, and remarkable as the scene in the north of Arabia Felix, on the Arabicia 
of the battle between the cousul Licinius Cras- Sinus, which served as a depdt for goods 6ent 
sua and Aiistouicus in 131. to Petra and Northern Arabia.] 

Leucas or Leucadia [AevKac, Aevicadca : Aev- j Leuci, a people in the southeast of Gallia Bel- 
Kudtog : now Santa Maura), an island in the : gica, south of the Mediomatrici, between the 
Ionian Sea, off the western coast of Acarnania, Matroua and Mosella. Their chief town was 
about twenty miles iu length, aud from five to Tullutn (now Tout). 

eight miles in breadth. It has derived its name Leuci Montes, called by the Romans Albi 
from the numerous calcareous hills which cover Montes, a range of mountaius in the west of 
its surface. It was originally united to the Crete. Vid. Albi Motes. 
main laud at its northeastern extremity by a I Leucippe. Vid. Alcathoe. 
narrow isthmus. Homer speaks of it as a peu- : LeucippIdes (AevKiTntidTf^), i. e., Phoebe and 
insula and mentions its weil-fortified town Ne- Hilalra, the daughters of Leucippus. They 
ricus (?\7jpiKoc). It was at that time inhabited were priestesses of Minerva (Athena) and Di- 
by the Teieboaus aud Leleges. Subsequently ana (Artemis), and betrothed to Idas and" Lyn- 
the Corinthians uuuer Cypselus, between B.C. ceus. the sons of Aphareus ; but Castor and 
665 aud 625, fouuded a new town, called Leu- , Pollux, being charmed with their beauty, car- 
cas, in the northeast of the country, near the j ried them off and married them, 
isthmus, in which they settled one thousand of '■ Leucippus (Aeviuinrog). 1. Son of (Enomaus. 
their citizens, aud to which they removed the : For details, vid. Daphne. — 2. Son of Perieres 
inhabitauts of Neiicus, which lay a little to the and G-orgophone, brother of Aphareus, and prince 
West of the new town. The Corinthians also of the Messenians, was one of the Calydonian 
cut a canal througli the isthmus, aud thus con- hunters. By his wife Philodice he had two 
verted the peuinsul.i into an island. This canal daughter*, Phoebe and Hilaira, usually called 
was afterward filled up by deposits of sand ; and Leucippides. — 3. A Grecian philosopher, the 
in the Peloponuesian war it was no longer avail- founder of the atomic theory of the ancient 
able For ships, which during that period were philosophy, which was more fully developed by 
conveyed across the isthmus on more than one ; Deinocritus. Where aud when he Was born 
occasion (Thuc, iii., 81 ; iv., 8). The canal was we have no data for deciding. Miletus, Abdera. 
opened again by the Ptomaus. At present the aud E!ea have been assigned as his birth-place ; 
cnaunel is dry iu some parts, and has from three the first, apparently, for no other reasou than 
to four feet of water iu others. The town of | that it was the birth-place of several natural 
Leucas was a place of importance, and during 1 philosophers ; the second, because Democritus 
the war between Philip and the Romaus was at came from that town ; the third, because he 
the head of the Acai uanian league, and the • was looked upon as a disciple of the Eleatic 
place where the meetings of the league were school. The period when he lived is equally 
heid. It was, in consequence, taken and pluu- i uucertain. He is called the teacher of Democ- 
deied by the Romans, B.C. 197. The remains' ritus, the disciple of Parmenides, or according 
of this town are still to be seen. The other to other accounts, of Zeno, of Mebssus, nay. 
towns iu the island were Hellomenum ('EA/,6/z£- 1 even of Pythagoras. With regard to his philo- 
vov) on the southeastern coast, and 1'hara ($apd) sophical system it is impossible to speak with 
on the southwestern coast. At the southern ex- certainty, since the writers who- mention him 
tremity of the island, opposite Cephallenia, was either mention him in conjunction with Democ- 
the celebrated prouioutory, variously called Leu- ritus, or attribute to him doctrines which are in 
cas, Leucatas, Leucdtes, or Leucdte (now Cape like manner attributed to Democritus. Vid. De- 
Ducato), ou which w T as a temple of Apollo, who : mocritus. 

hence had the surname of Leucadius. At the j Lkucon (Asvkuv). 1. Son of Neptune (Posei- 
annual festival of the god it was the custom to ■ don) or Athamas and Themisto, and father of 
cast down a criminal from this promontory into ■ Erythrus and Evippe. — 2. A powerful king of 
the sea : to break his fall, birds of all kiuds were : Bosporus, who reigued B.C. 393-353. He was 
attached to him, and if he reached the 6ea un- in close alliance with the Athenians, whom he 
injured, boats were ready to pick him up. This supplied with corn in great abundauce, and 
appears to have been an expiatory rite ; and it 1 who, in return for his services, admitted him 
gave rise to the well known story that lovers and his sons to the citizenship of Athens. — 3. 
leaped from this rock in order to seek relief An Athenian poet, of the old comedy, a con- 
front the pangs of love. Thus Sappho is said temporary and rival of Aristophanes. [A frag- 
to have leaped down from this rock when in ment preserved in Hesychius is given iu Mei- 
love with Phaou ; but this well-known story neke's Comic. Grcec. Fragm., vol. i., p. 423]. 
vanishes at the first approach of criticism. I Leucoxium (Acvkcjviov), a place in the island 

[-l-eucasia {AevKacia). Vid. Leucosia.] 1 of Chios. (Thuc, viii., 24.) 

[Leucatas (now Akrita), also called Aceitas, Leuooxoe (Aevkovotj), daughter of Minyas, 
a promontory of Bithynia, west of Nicomedia.] ; usually called Leucippe. Vid, Aleathoe. 

Leuce (AevKij). 1. An island in the Euxine j Leucopetra (AevnoTrerpa : now Cape delV 
Sea, near the mouth of the Borysthenes, sacred j Armi), a promontory in the southwest of Brut- 
to Achilles. Vid. Achilleus Dromos. — [2. A tium, on the Sicilian Straits, and a few miles 
small island on the eastern coast of Crete, south i south of Rhegium, to whose territory ic belong - 
of the Promontory Itauum.] ed. It was regarded by the ancient writers as 

[Leuce Acte (Aewcs 'Akttj : now St. Georgia), the termination of the Apennines, and it derived 
a town and roadstead of Thrace, on the Pro- \ its name from the white color of its rocks, 
poutis.] i Leucophryxe. Vid. Leucophrys. 

436 



LEUCOPHRYS. 



LIBANUS. 



Leucophrys (Aevn6<ppvc). TL A city of Caria, 
in the plain of the Meander, close to a curious 
lake of warm water, and having a renowned 
temple of Diana (Artemis) Leucophryue. — 2. A 
name given to the island of Tenedos, from its 
white cliffs. 

Letjcosia or Leucasia (now Piano), a small 
island in the south of the Gulf of Paestum, off 
the coast of Lucania, and opposite the Promon- 
tory Posidium, said to have been called after 
one of the Sirens. 

Leucosyri {Atvuvavpoi, i. e., Write Syrians), 
was a name early applied by the Greeks to the 
inhabitants of Cappadocia, who were of the 
Syrian race, in contradistinction to the Syrian 
tribes of a darker color beyond the Taurus. 
Afterward, when Cappadoces came to be the 
common name for the people of Southern Cap- 
padocia, the word Leucosyri was applied spe- 
cifically to the people in the north of the coun- 
try (afterward Poutus) on the coast of the Eux- 
ine, between the rivers Halys and Iris : these 
are the White Syriaus of Xenophon (Anab., v., 
6). After the Macedonian conquest the name 
appears to have fallen into disuse. 

Leucothea (Aevfcodea), a marine goddess, was 
previously Ino, the wife of Athamas. For de- 
tails, vid. Athamas. 

Leucothoe, daughter of the Babylonian king 
Orchamus and Euryuome, was beloved by Apol- 
lo. Her amour was betrayed by the jealous 
Clytia to her father, who buried her alive ; 
Whereupon Apollo metamorphosed her into an 
mcense shrub. Leucothoe is in some writers 
only another form for Leucothea. 

Leuctra (rd evKTpa : now Lefka or Lefkra). 
t. A small town in Boeotia, on the road from 
Plataeaa to Thespia 1 , memorable for the victory 
which Eparninoudas and the Thebans here gain- 
ed over Cleombrotus and the Spartans, B.C. 
371.— [2. Vid. Leuctrum.] 

Leuctrum (Aevurpov). 1. Or Leuctra (now 
Leftro), a town in Messeuia, on the eastern side 
of the Messenian Gulf, between Cardamyle and 
Thalama, on the small river Pamisus. The 
Spartans and Messenians disputed for the pos- 
session of it. — 2. A small town in Achaia, de- 
pendent on Rhypas. 

[Leucus (AeiKog) a companion of Ulysses in 
the Trojan war, slain by Antiphus.] 

[Leucyamas (AevKvaviag), a small river of 
Elis, that flows from Mount Pholoe, and emp- 
ties into the Alpheus. Ou its banks was a tem- 
ple of Bacchus (Dionysus) Leucyanites.] 

Lexovh or Lkxobii, a people in Gallia Lug- 1 
duuensis, on the Ocean, west of the mouth of j 
the Sequana. Their capital was Noviomagus 
(now LisieuxX 

Liba (37 A't6a), a city of Mesopotamia, between j 
Nisibis and the Tigris. 

Libanius {Ai6dvtos), a distinguished Greek) 
sophist and rhetorician, was born at Antioch, j 
on the Oroutes, about A.D. 314. He studied at | 
Athens, where he imbibed an ardent love for 
the great classical writers of Greece ; and he 
afterward set up a piivate school of rhetoric at 
Constantinople, which was attended by so large 
a number of pupils that the classes of the pub- 
lic professors were completely deserted. The 
latter, iu revenge, charged Libanius with being 
a magician, and obtained his expulsion from 



Constantinople about 346. He then went to 
Nicomedia, where he taught with equal success, 
but also drew upon himself an equal degree of 
malice from his opponents. After a stay of five 
years at Nicomedia, he was recalled to Con- 
stantinople. Eventually he took up his abode 
at Antioch, where he spent the remainder of 
his life. Here he received the greatest marks 
of favor from the Emperor Julian, 362. In the 
reign of Valens he was at first persecuted, but 
he afterward succeeded in winning the favor of 
that monarch also. The Emperor Theodosius 
likewise showed him marks of respect, but his 
enjoyment of life was disturbed by ill health, by 
misfortunes in his family, and more especially 
by the disputes in which he was incessantly in- 
volved, partly with rival sophists, and partly 
with the prefects. It can not, however, be de- 
nied, that he himself was as much to blame as 
hi3 opponents, for he appears to have provoked 
them by his querulous disposition, and by the 
pride and vanity which every where appear in 
his orations, and which led him to interfere in 
political questions which it would have been 
wiser to have left alone. He was the teacher 
of St. Basil and Chrysostom, with whom he al- 
ways kept up a friendly connection. The year 
of his death is uncertain, but from one of his 
epistles it is evident that he was alive in 391, 
and it is probable that he died a few years after, 
in the reign of Arcadius. The extant works of 
Libanius are, 1. Models for rhetorical exercises 
{TipoyvjivaofidTCdv rcapa6eiyfiara). 2. Orations 
(Aoyoi), sixty- seven in number. 3. Declama- 
tions (MfAcraj), i. e., orations on fictitious sub- 
jects, and descriptions of various kinds, fifty in 
number. 4. A life of Demosthenes, and argu- 
ments to the speeches cf the same orator. 5. 
Letters ('Et icro?iat), of which a very large num- 
ber is still extant. Many of these letters are 
extremely interesting, being addressed to the 
most eminent men of his time, such as the Em- 
peror Julian, Athanasius, Basil, Gregory of Nys- 
sa, Chrysostom, and others. The style of Li- 
banius is superior to that of the other rhetori- 
cians of the fourth century. He took the best 
orators of the classic age as his models, and we 
can often see in him the disciple and happy imi- 
tator of Demosthenes; but he is not always 
able to rise above the spirit of his age. and we 
rarely find in him that natural simplicity which 
constitutes the great charm of the best Attie 
orators. His diction is a curious mixture of 
the pure old Attic with what may be termed 
modern. Moreover, it is evident that, like all 
other rhetoricians, he is more concerned about 
the form than the substance. As far as the 
history of his age is concerned, some of his ora- 
tions, and still more his epistles, are of great 
value, such as the oration in which he relates 
the events of his own life, the eulogies on Con- 
stantius and Constans, the orations on Julian, 
several orations describing the condition of An- 
tioch, and those which he wrote against his pro- 
fessional and political opponents. There is no 
complete edition of all the works of Libanius. 
The best edition of the orations and declama- 
tions is by Reiske, Altenburg, 11 9 1-97, 4 vols. 
8vo, and the best edition of the epistles' is by 
Wolf, Amsterdam, 1738, fol. 

Libaxts (6 AtCavog, to Acfiavov : Heb. Leb- 
437 



LI BAR X A. 



LIBO. 



anon, i. e., the WJiite Mountain : now Jehel Lib- ] or a wreath of laurel. Sometimes she appears 
nan), a lofty and steep mountain range on the holding the Phrygian cap in her hand, 
confines of Syria and Palestine, dividing Phce- J LibethrIdes. Vid. Libethrum. 
nice from Ccele-Syria. It extends from above; Libetheius Moxs (to AiCqdpiov opog), a mount- 
Sidon, about latitude 33-J- north, in a direction | ain in Boeotia, a branch of Mount Helicon, forty 
north-northeast as far as about latitude 34^°. 1 stadia'from Coronea, possessing a grotto of the 
Its highest summits are covered with perpetual Libethrian nymphs, adorned with their statues, 
snow ; its sides were in ancient times clothed and two fountains Libethrias and Petra. 
with forests of cedars, of which only scattered Libethrum (Ae'dTjdpov, ra Atibrjdpa, t>1 Al&jj- 
trees now remain, and on its lower slopes grow 6pa), an ancient Thracian town in Pieria in Mac- 
vines, figs, mulberries, and other fruits : its edonia, on the slope of Olympus, and southwest 
wines were highly celebrated in ancient times, of Dium, where Orpheus is said to have lived. 
It is considerably lower than the opposite range ; This town and the surrounding country were 
of Axtili baxus. In the Scriptures the word sacred to the Muses, who were hence called 
Lebanon is used for both ranges, and for either j Libethrides ; and it is probable that the worship 
of them ; but in classical authors the names j of the Muses under this name was transferred 
Libanus and Antilibanus are distinctive terms, ! from this place to Boeotia. 

being applied to the western and eastern ranges ! [Libissoxis Turris (AiCiccuvo^ Trvpyoc), a city 
respectively. on the northern coast of Sardinia, and, according 

Libarxa or Libarxum, a town of Liguria, on ! to Pliny, the only Roman colony in the island; 
the Via Aureiia, northwest of Genua. ! probably the usual landing place for ships com- 

Libextixa. Lubextixa, Lubextia, a surname ing from Corsica. Its ruins are now seen on a 
of Yenus among the Romans, by which she is height near a harbor which still bears the name 
described as the goddess of sexual pleasure (dea j Porto Torre.'} 

libidinis). Libitixa. an ancient Italian divinity, who was 

Libee, or Libee Patee, a name frequently identified by the later Romans sometimes with 
given by the Roman poets to the Greek Bacchus ! Persephone (Proserpina), on account of her Con- 
or Dionysus, who was accordingly regarded as ; nection with the dead and their burial, and some- 
identical with the Italian Liber. But the god times with Aphrodite (Venus). The latter was 
Libee and the goddess Libera were ancient probably the consequence of etymological specu- 
Italiau divinities, presiding over the cultivation ! lations on the name of Libitina, which people 
of the vine and the fertility of the fields. Hence connected with libido. Her temple at Rome 
they were worshipped even in early times in I was a repository of every thing necessary for 
conjunction with Ceres. A temple to these j burials, and persons might there either buy or 
three divinities was vowed by the dictator A. hire those things. Hence a person undertaking 
Postumius in B.C. 496, and was built near the : the burial of a person (an undertaker) was call- 
Circus Flaminius; it was afterward restored ; ed libitinarius, and his business libitina ; hence 
by Augustus, and dedicated by Tiberius. The the expressions libit iuam exercerc or facere, and 
name Liber is probably connected with libcrare. \ libitina funeribus no a mfficiebat, i. e., they could 
Hence Seneca says, Liber dictus est quia liberal not all be buried. It is related that King Ser- 
servitio curarum animi ; while others, who were | vius Tullius, in order to ascertain the number 
evidently thinking of the Greek Bacchus, found ! of deaths, ordained that for every person who 
in the name an allusion to licentious drinking J died, a piece of money should be deposited in 
and speaking. Poets usually called him Liber ! the temple of Libitina. Owing to this connec- 
Pater, the latter word being very commonly tion of Libitina with the dead, Roman poets 
added by the Italians to the names of gods. ' frequently employ her name in the sense of 
The female Libera was identified by the Ro- '■ death itself. 

mans with Cora or Proserpina, the daughter of ■ Libo, Sceiboxics, a plebeian family. 1. L, 
Demeter (Ceres) ; whence Cicero calls Liber tribune of the plebs, B.C. 149, accused Ser. 
and Libera children of Ceres; whereas Ovid , Sulpicius Galba on account of the outrages 
calls Ariadne Libera. The festival of the Libe- , which he had committed against the Lusita- 
ralia was celebrated by the Romans every year i nians. Vid. Galba, No. 6. It was perhaps this 
on the 17th of March. Libo who consecrated the Puteal Scribonianum 

Libeea. Vid. Liber. or Puteal Libo)iis, of which we so frequently 

[Libeealis. Vid. Axtoxixus Libeealis.] : read in ancient writers. The Puteal was an 
Libertas, the personification of Liberty, was inclosed place in the forum, near the Arcus 
worshipped at Rome as a divinity. A temple Fabianus, and was so called from its being open 
was erected to her on the Aventine by Tib. at the top, like a puteal or well. It appears that 
Sempronius Gracchus. Another was built by I there was only one such puteal at Rome, and 
Clodius on the spot where Cicero's house had not two, as is generally believed. It was dedi- 
stood. A third was erected after Cfesar's vie- ! cated in very ancient times either on account 
tories in Spain. From these temples we must of the whetstone of the augur Navius (comp. 
distinguish the Atrium Libertatis, which was in | Liv„ i., 36), or because the spot had been struck 
the north of the forum, toward the Quirinal. by lightning ; it was subsequently repaired and 
This building, under the republic, served as an re-dedicated by Libo, who erected in its neigh- 
office of the censors, and also contained tables borhood a tribunal for the prsetor, in conse- 
with laws inscribed upon them. It was rebuilt quence of which the place was frequented by 
by Asinius Pollio, and then became the reposi- persons who had lawsuits, such as money -lend- 
tory <rf the first public library at Rome. Liber- ers and the like. (Comp. Hor., Sat., ii.,"6, 35; 
tas is usually represented in works of art as a JSpist., L, 19, 8.) — 2. L., the father-in-law of Sex. 
matron, with the pileus, the symbol of liberty, 1 Pompey, the son of Pompey the Great. On the 



LIBON. 



LIOINIUS. 



breaking out of the civil war in 49 he naturally 
sided with Pompey, and was intrusted with the 
command of Etruvia. Shortly afterward he ac- 
companied Pompey to Greece, and was actively 
engaged in the war that ensued. On the death 
of Bibulus (48) he had the chief command of 
the Pompeian fleet. In the civil wars which 
followed Caesars death, he followed the fortunes 
of his son-in-law Sex. Pompey. In 40 Octavi- 
anus married his sister Scribonia, and this mar- 
riage was followed by a peace between the tri- 
umvirs and Pompey (39). When the war was 
renewed in 36, Libo for a time continued with 
Pompey, but, seeing his cause hopeless, he de- 
serted him in the following year. In 34 he was 
consul with M. Antony. 

Libon (Attuv), an Eleau, the architect of the 
great temple of Jupiter (Zeus) in the Altis at 
Olympia, flourished about B.C. 450. 

[Libora (Ai6opa), a town of the Carpetani, 
same as the jEbvra (q. v.) of Livy.] 

Libut, a Gallic tribe in Gallia Cispadana, to 
whom the towns of Brixia and Verona formerly 
belonged, from which they were expelled by the 
Cenomani. They are probably the same people 
whom we afterward find in the neighborhood 
of Vercellas under the name of Lebeeii or Libici. 

Liburnia, a district of Illyricum, along the 
coast of the Adriatic Sea, was separated from 
Istria on the northwest by the River Arsia, and 
from Dalmatia on the south by the River Titius, 
thus corresponding to the western part of Croa- 
tia and the northern part of the modern Dal- 
matia. The country is mountainous and unpro- 
ductive, and its inhabitants, the Liburni, sup- 
ported themselves chiefly by commerce and nav- 
igation. They were celebrated at a very early 
period as bold and skillful sailors, and they ap- 
pear to have been the first people who had the 
sway of the waters of the Adriatic. They took 
possession of most of the islands of this sea as 
far as Corcyra, and had settlements even on the 
opposite coast of Italy. Their ships were re- 
markable for their swift sailing, and hence ves- 
sels built after the same model were called 
Liburnicai or Liburncc naves. It was to light 
vessels of this description that Augustus was 
mainly indebted for his victory over Autony's 
fleet at the battle of Actium. The Liburnians 
were the first Illyrian people who submitted to 
the Romans. Being hard pressed by the Iapydes 
on the north and^ by the Dalmatians on the 
south, they sought the protection of Rome at a 
comparatively early period. Hence we find that 
many of their towns were immunes, or exempt 
from taxes. The islands off the coast were 
reckoned a part of Liburnia, and are known by 
the general name of Liburnides or Lihiryiica In- 
sulae. Vid. Illyricum. 

Libya (AlCvt]), daughter of Epaphus and Mem- 
phis, from whom Libya (Africa) is said to have 
derived its name. By Neptune (Poseidon) she 
became the mother of Agenor, Belus, and Lelex. 

Libya (AlSvt) : AiGvec, Libyes). 1. The Greek 
.name for the continent of Africa in general. 
Vid. Africa. — 2. L. Interior )A. t) hrOg), the 
whole interior of Africa, as distinguished from 
the well-known regions on the northern and 
northeastern coasts. — 3. Libya, specifically, or 
LibyvS Nomos (Al6vtis vofioc), a district of North- 
ern Africa, between Egypt and Marmariea, so 



called because it once forWd an Egyptian No- 
mos.^ It is sometimes called Libya Exterior. 

Libyci Montes (to Ai6vicbv bpoc : now Jebel 
Selseleh), the range of mountains which form 
the western margin of the valley of the Nile. 
Vid. ^Egyptus. 

Libycum Mare (to Al6vkov neAayoc), the part 
of the Mediterranean between the island of 
Crete and the northern coast of Africa. 

LlBYFHCSNlCES {Ac6v(j>oivtKec, Aibotyo'iviKEc), a 
term applied to the people of those parts of 
Northern Africa in which the Phoenicians had 
founded colonies, and especially to the inhabit- 
ants of the Phoenician cities on the coast of the 
Carthaginian territory: it is derived from the 
fact that these people were a mixed race of the 
Libyan natives with the Phoenician settlers. 

Libyssa (Aidvaaa : now Herelcch ? according 
to Leake, Malsum), a town of Bithynia, in Asia 
Minor, on the northern coast of the Sinus Asta- 
cenus, west of Nicomedia, celebrated as the 
place where the tomb of Hannibal was to be 
seen. 

Licates or Licatii, a people of Vindelicia, on 
the eastern bank of the River Licus or Licia 
(now Lech), one of the fiercest of the Vindeli- 
cian tribes. 

Lichades (Aixddeg : now Ponticonesi), three 
small islands between Euboea and the coast of 
Locris, called Scarphia, Caresa, and Phoearia. 
Vid. Lichas, No. 1. 

Lichas (Atxac). 1. An attendant on Hercules, 
brought his master the poisoned garment which 
destroyed the hero. ( Vid. p. 359, a.) Her- 
cules, in anguish and wrath, threw Lichas into 
the sea, and the Lichadian islands were believ- 
ed to have derived their name from him. — 2. A 
Spartan, son of Arcesilaus, was proxenus of 
Argos, and is frequently mentioned in the Pel- 
oponnesian war. He was famous throughout 
Greece for his hospitality, especially in his en- 
tertainment of strangers at the Gymnopasdia. 

Licia or Licus. Vid. Licates. 

Licinia. 1. A Vestal virgin, accused of in- 
cest, together with two other Vestals, ^Emilia 
and Marcia, B.C. 114. L. Metellus, the pontifex 
maximus, condemned JEmilia, but acquitted Li- 
cinia and Marcia. The acquittal of the two 
last caused such dissatisfaction that the people 
appointed L. Cassius Longinus to investigate 
the matter, and he condemned both Licinia and 
Marcia. — 2. "Wife of C. Sempronius Gracchus, 
the celebrated tribune. — 3. Daughter of Crassus 
the orator, and wife of the younger Marius. 

Licinia Gens, a celebrated plebeian house, 
to which belonged C. Licinius Calvus Stolo, 
whose exertions threw open the consulship to 
the plebeians. Its most distinguished families 
at a later time were those of Crassus, Lucul- 
lus, and Murena. There were likewise numer- 
ous other surnames in the gens, which are also 
given in their proper places. 

Licinius. 1. 6. Licinius Calvus, surnamed 
Stolo, which he derived, it is said, from the 
care with which he dug up the shoots that sprang 
up from the roots of his vines. He brought the 
contest between the patricians and plebeians to 
a happy termination, and thus became the found- 
er of Rome's greatness. He was tribune of 
the people from B.C. 376 to 36*7, and was faith- 
fully supported in his exertions by his colleague 
439 



Licmius. 



LICYNNIUS. 



L. Sextius. The laws which he proposed were : 
1. That in future no more consular tribunes 
should be appointed, but that consuls should be 
elected, one of whom should always be a ple- 
beian. 2. That no one should possess more 
than five hundred jugera of the public land, or 
keep upon it more than one hundred head of 
large and five hundred of small cattle. 3. A 
law regulating the affairs between debtor and 
creditor. 4. That the Sibylline books should, be 
intrusted to a college of ten men (decemviri), 
half of whom should be plebeians. These ro- 
gations were passed after a most vehement op- 
position on the part of the patricians, and L. 
Sextius was the first plebeian who obtained the 
consulship, 366. Licinius himself was elected 
twice to the consulship, 364 and 361. Some 
years later he was accused by M. Popilius 
Laenas of having transgressed his own law re- 
specting the amount of public land which a per- 
son might possess. He was condemned and 
sentenced to pay a heavy fine. — 2. C. Licinius 
Macer, an annalist and an orator, was a man 
of praetorian dignity, who, wheu impeached (66) 
of extortion by Cicero, finding that the verdict 
was against him, forthwith committed suicide 
before the formalities of the trial were com- 
pleted, and thus averted the dishonor and loss 
which would have been entailed upon his family 
by a public condemnation and by the confisca- 
tion of property which it involved. His Annates 
commenced with the very origin of the city, 
and extended to twenty -one-books at least ; but 
how far he brought down his history is un- 
known. — 3. C. Licinius Macer Calvus, son of 
the last, a distinguished orator and poet, was 
born in 82, and died about 47 or 46, in his thirty- 
fifth or thirty-sixth year. His most celebrated 
oration was delivered against Vatinius, who was 
defended by Cicero, when he was only twenty- 
seven years of age. So powerful was the ef- 
fect produced by this speech, that the accused 
started up in the midst of the pleading, and pas- 
sionately exclaimed, " Rogo vos, judices, num. 
si iste disertus est, ideo me damnari oporteat ?" 
His poems were full of wit and grace, and pos- 
sessed sufficient merit to be classed by the an- 
cients with those of Catullus. His elegies, espe- 
cially that on the untimely death of his mis- 
tress Quintilia, have been warmly extolled by 
Catullus, Propertius, and Ovid. Calvus was 
remarkable for the shortness of his stature, and 
hence the vehement action in which he in- 
dulged while pleading was in such ludicrous 
contrast with his insiguificant person, that even 
his friend Catullus has not been able to resist 
a joke, and has presented him to us as the 
" Salaputium disertum," " the eloquent Tom 
Thumb." 

Licinius, Roman emperor A.D. 30*7-324, 
whose full name was Publius Flavius Gale- 
mus Valerius Licinianus Licinius. He was 
a Dacian peasant by birth, and the early friend 
and companion in arms of the Emperor Gale- 
rius, by whom he was raised to the rank of Au- 
gustus, and invested with the command of the 
fllyrian provinces at Carmentum, on the 11th 
of November, A.D. 307. Upon the death of 
Galerius in 311, he concluded a peaceful ar- 
rangement with Maximinus II., in virtue of 
which the Hellespont and the Bosporus were 
440 



to form the boundary of the two empires. In 
313 he married at Mrian, Constantia, the sister 
of Constantine, and in the same year set out to 
encounter Maximinus, who had invaded his do- 
minions. Maximinus was defeated by Licinius 
near Heraclea, and died a few months after- 
ward at Tarsus. Licinius and Constantine 
were now the only emperors, and each was 
anxious to obtain the undivided sovereignty. 
Accordingly, war broke out between them in 
315. Licinius was defeated at Cibalis in Pan- 
nonia, and afterward at Adriauople, and was 
compelled to purchase peace by ceding to Con- 
stantine Greece, Macedonia, and Illyricum. 
This peace lasted about nine years, at the end of 
which time hostilities were renewed. The great 
battle of Adrianople (July, 323), followed by the 
reduction of Byzantium, and a second great 
victory achieved near Chalcedon (September), 
placed Licinius at the mercy of Constantine, 
who, although he spared his life for the moment, 
and merely sentenced him to an honorable im- 
prisonment at Thessalonica, soon found a con- 
venient pretext for putting him to death, 324. 

Licinus. 1. A Gaul by birth, was taken pris- 
oner in war, and became a slave of Julius Cae- 
sar, whose confidence he gained so much as to 
be made his dispensator or steward. Caesar 
gave him his freedom. He also gained the 
favor of Augustus, who appointed him, in B.C. 
15, governor of his native country, Gaul. By 
the plunder of Gaul and by other means, he ac- 
quired enormous wealth, and hence his name is 
frequently coupled with that of Crassus. He 
lived to see the reign of Tiberius. — 2. The bar- 
ber {tonsor) Licinus spoken of by Horace (Ars 
Poet, 301) must have been a different person 
from the preceding, although identified by the 
Scholiast — 3. Clodius Licinus, a Roman an- 
nalist, who lived about the beginning of the 
first century B.C., wrote the history of Rome 
from its capture by the Gauls to his own time. 
This Clodius is frequently confounded with Q. 
Claudius Quadrigarius. Yid. Quadrigarius. — 
4. L. Porcius Licinus, plebeian aedile 210, and 
praetor 207, when he obtained Cisalpine Gaul 
as his province. — 5. L. Porcius Licinus, praetor 
193. with Sardinia as his province, and consul 
184, when he carried on war against the Ligu- 
rians. — 6. Porcius Licinus. an ancient Roman 
poet, who probably lived in the latter part of 
the second century B.C. 

[Licus, a river" of Yiudelicia. Yid. Licates.] 

Licymnia, spoken of by Horace (Carm,, ii, 
12, 13. seg.), is probably the same as Terentia, 
the wife of Maecenas. 

Licymnius (AiKVfivwg). 1. Son of Electryon 
and the Phrygian slave Midea, and consequent- 
ly half-brother of Alcmene. He was married 
to Perimede, by whom he became the father of 
OZonus. Argeus, and Melas. He was a friend 
of Hercules, whose son Tlepolemus slew him, 
according to some unintentionally, and accord- 
ing to others in a fit of anger. — 2. Of Chios, a 
distinguished dithyiambic poet, of uncertain 
date. Some writers place him before Simon- 
ides ; but it is perhaps more likely that he be- 
longed to the later Athenian dithyrambic school 
about the end of the fourth centuiy B.C. — 3. Of 
Sicily, a rhetorician, the pupil of Gorgias. and 
the teacher of Polus. 



LIDE. 



LILYBAEUM. 



Lide (Mir/), a mountain of Caria, above Pe- 
cliisus 

LigabJob, Q.. was legate, in Africa, of C. Con- 
gidius Longus, who left him in command of the 
province, B.C. 50. Next year (49) Ligarius re- 
signed the government of the province into the 
hands of L. Alt ins Varus. Ligarius fought un- 
der Varus against Curio in 49, and against 
Cfiesar himself k 4& After the battle of Thap- 
sus, Ligarius MM taken prisoner at Adrume- 
tum ; his life whs spared, but he was banished 
by Caesar. Meantime, a public accusation was 
brought agaiust Ugarius by Q. ^Elius Tubero. 
The case was pleaded before Caesar himself in 
the forum. Cicero defended Ligarius in a 
speech, still extant, in which he maintains that 
Ligarius had as much claims to the mercy of 
Cajsar, as Tubero and Cicero himself. Liga- 
rius was pardoned by Caesar, who was on the 
point of setting out for the Spanish war. The 
speech which Cicero delivered in his defence 
was subsequently published, and was much ad- 
mired. Ligaz-ius joined the conspirators who 
assassinated Caesar in 44. Ligarius and his 
two brothers perished in the proscription of the 
triumvirs in 43. 

[Ligea, a daughter of ISTereus and Doris, one 
of the nymphs in the train of Cyrene.] 

Liger or Ligeris (now Loire), one of the 
largest rivers in Gaul, rises in Mount Cevenna, 
flows through the territories of the Arverni, 
uEdui, and Carnutes, and falls into the ocean 
between the territories of the Namnetes and 
Pictones. 

Liguria (?) XiyvQTtKT}, i] AiyvcTLVT}), a district 
of Italy, was, in the time of Augustus, bounded 
on the west by the river Varus and the Mari- 
time Alps, which separated it from Transalpine 
Gaul, on the southeast by the River Macra, 
which separated it from Etruria, on the north 
by the River Po, and on the south by the Mare 
Ligustieum. The country is very mountainous 
and unproductive, as the Maritime Alps and the 
Apennines run through the greater part of it. 
The mountains run almost down to the coast, 
leaving only space sufficient for a road, which 
formed the highway from Italy to the south of 
Gaul. The chief occupation of the inhabitants 
was the rearing and feeding of cattle. The 
numerous forests on the mountains produced 
excellent timber, which, with the other pro- 
ducts of the country, was exported from Genua, 
the principal towu of the country. The inhab- 
itants were called by the Greeks Ligyes (At- 
yveg) and Ligystini (Aiyvanvoi), and by the Ro- 
mans Ligures (sing. Lie/us, more rarely Ligur). 
They were in early times a powerful and widely- 
extended people ; but their origin is uncertaiu, 
some writers supposing them to be Celts, others 
Iberians, and others, again, of the same race as 
the Siculians, or most ancient inhabitants of 
Italy. It is certain that the Ligurians at one 
time inhabited the southern coast of Gaul, as 
well as the country afterward called Liguria, 
and that they had possession of the whole coast 
from the mouth of the Rhone to Pisae in Etru- 
ria. The Greeks probably became acquainted 
with them first from the Samians and Phocae- 
ans, who visited their coasts for the purposes of 
eommerce ; and so powerful were they consid- 
ered at this time, that Hesiod names them, along 



with the Scythians and Ethiopians, as one of 
the chief people of the earth. Tradition also 
related that Hercules fought with the Ligurians 
on the plain of stones near Massilia ; and even 
a writer so late as Eratosthenes gave the name 
of Ligystice to the whole of the western pen- 
insula of Europe. So widely were they believ- 
ed to be spread, that the Ligyes in Germany and 
Asia were supposed to be a branch of the same 
people. The Ligurian tribes were divided by 
the Romans into Ligures Transalpini and Cisal- 
pini. The tribes which inhabited the Maritime 
Alps were called in general Alpini, and also Ga- 
pillati or Gomati, from their custom of allowing 
their hair to grow long. The tribes which in- 
habited the Apennines were called Montani. 
The names of the principal tribes were : on the 
western side of the Alps, the Salves or Sallu- 
vii, Oxybii, and Deciates ; on the eastern side 
of the Alps, the Intemelii, Ingauni, and Apuani 
near the coast, the Vagienni, Salassi, and Tau- 
rini on the upper course of the Po, and the 
L^evi and Marisci north of the Po. The Liguri- 
ans were small of stature, but strong, active, 
and brave. In early times they served as mer- 
cenaries in the armies of the Carthaginians^ 
and subsequently they carried on a long and 
fierce struggle with the Romans. Their coun- 
try was invaded for the first time by the Ro- 
mans in B.C. 238 ; but it was not till after the 
termination of the second Punic war, and the 
defeat of Philip and Antiochus, that the Romans 
were able to devote their energies to the sub- 
jugation of Liguria. It was many years, how- 
ever, before the whole country was finally sub- 
dued. "Whole tribes, such as the Apuani, were • 
transplanted to Samnium, and their place sup- 
plied by Roman colonists. The country was 
divided between the provinces of Gallia Narbo- 
nensis and Gallia Cisalpina ; and in the time 
of Augustus and of the succeeding emperors, 
the tribes in the mountains were placed under 
the government of an imperial procurator, called 
Procurator or Proefectus Alpium Maritimarum, 

Ligusticum Mare, the name originally of the 
whole sea south of Gaul and of the northwest 
of Italy, but subsequently only the eastern part 
of this sea, or the Gulf of Genoa, whence later 
writers speak only of a Sinus Ligusticus. 

[Ligyes (Acyvec), the inhabitants of Liguria, 
Vid. Liguria.] 

Lil^ea (AiXaia : ALlauvc), an ancient town in 
Phocis, near the sources of the Cephisus. 

LiLYBiEUM (Ai/\,v6aiov : now Marsala), a town 
in the west of Sicily, with an excellent harbor, 
situated on a promontory of the same name 
(now Gape Bozo or di Marsala), opposite to the 
Promontorium Hermaeum or Mercurii (now Cape 
Bon) in Africa, the space between the two be- 
ing the shortest distance between Sicily and 
Africa. The town of Lilybaeum was founded 
by the Carthaginians about B.C. 397, and was 
made the principal Carthaginian fortress in Sici- 
ly. It was surrounded by massive walls and by 
a trench sixty feet wide and forty feet deep. 
On the destruction of Selinus in 249, the inhab- 
itants of the latter city were transplanted to 
Lilybaeum, which thus became still more pow- 
erful. Lilybaeum was besieged by the Romans 
in the first Punic war, but they were unable to 
take it ; and they only obtained possession of 
441 



LIM^EA. 



LIPARIS. 



it by the treaty of peace. Under the Romans 
Iiljbaeum continued to be a place of importance. 



Asiatic coast It is mentioned by Homer (77., 
ii., 656), with its kindred cities Ialysus and Ca 



At Marsala, which occupies only the southern mirus. These three cities, with Cos, Cnidus, and 
half of the ancient town, there are the ruins of | Halicarnassus, formed the original hexapolis, in 



a Roman aqueduct, and a few other ancient 
remains. 

Lim^ea, Limia, Limits, Beliox (now Lima), a 
river in Gallaecia in Spain, between the Durius 
and the Minius, which flowed into the Atlantic 
Ocean. It was also called the river of Forget- 
fulness (6 rr/c Arjdnc, Flumen Oblivionis) ; and it 
is said to have been so called because the Tur- 
duli and the Celts on one occasion lost here 
their commander, and forgot the object of their 
expedition. This legend was so generally be- 
lieved that it was with difficulty that Brutus 
Callaicus could induce his soldiers to cross the 
river when he invaded Gallsecia, B.C. 136. On 
the banks of this river dwelt a small tribe called 
Ldhci. 



the southwestern corner of Asia Minor. Lin- 
i dus stood upon a mountain in a district abound- 
j ing in vines and figs, and had two celebrated 
i temples, one of Minerva (Athena), surnamed 
\ Aivdla, and one of Hercules. It was the birth- 
; place of Cleobulus, one of the seven wise mea 
! It retained much of its consequence even after 
! the foundation of Rhodes. Inscriptions of some 
importance have lately been found in its Acrop- 
| olis. 

Ltxgoxes. 1. A powerful people in Trans- 
alpine GauL whose territory extended from the 
: foot of Mount Vogesus and the sources of the 
; Matrona and Mosa, north as far as the Treviri, 
• and south as far as the Sequani, from whom 
; they were separated by the River Arar. The 



Lemites Romaxi, the name of a continuous ; Emperor Otho gave them the Roman franchise 



series of fortifications, consisting of castles, 
walls, earthen ramparts, and the like, which the 
Romans erected along the Rhine and the Dan- 
ube, to protect their possessions from the at- 
tacks of the Germans. 

Lemx-E (A'tuvai, Aiuvaioc). 1. A town in Mes- 
senia, on the frontiers of Laconia, with a temple 
of Diana (Artemis), who was hence surnamed 
Limnatis. This temple was common to the 
people of both countries ; and the outrage which 
the Messenian youth committed against some 
Lacedaemonian maidens, who were sacrificing 
at this temple, was the occasion of the first 
Messenian war. Limns was situated in the 
Ager Dentheliatis, which district was a subject 



Their chief town was Andematunnum, after- 
ward Lingones (now Langres). — 2. A branch 
of the above-mentioned people, who migrated 
into Cisalpine Gaul along with the Boii, and 
shared the fortunes of the latter. Vid. Bon. 
They dwelt east of the Boii, as far as the Adri- 
atic Sea, in the neighborhood of Ravenna. 

LlNTERNUM. Vid. LlTERXUM. 

Lixus (Aivoc), the personification of a dirge 
or lamentation, and therefore described as a son 
of Apollo by a Muse (Calliope or Psamathe 
or Chalciope), or of Amphimarus by Urania. 
Both Argos and Thebes claimed the honor of 
his birth. An Argive tradition related that 
Linus was exposed by his mother after his birth, 



of constant dispute between the Lacedfemoni- : and was brought up by shepherds, but was aft- 

terward torn to pieces by dogs. Psamathe's 
grief at the occurrence betrayed her misfortune 
to her father, who condemned her to death. 



ans and Messenians after the re-establishment 
of the Messenian independence by Epaminon- 
A town in the Thracian Chersonesus 



das. 



on the Hellespont not far from Sestus, founded ; Apollo, indignant at the father's cruelty, visited 



by the Milesians. — 3. Vid. Sparta 

Lars\£A (Aifivata : Aijxval<x), a town in the 
north of Acarnania, on the road from Argos 
Amphilochicum to Stratos, and near the Am- 
bracian Gulf, on which it had a harbor. 

LrM>\£A, Limxetes, Leuxegexes (Acfivala 
(oc), Aifivi'iTTjr (ic), Aifjivriyevris), i e., inhabiting 
or born in a lake or marsh, a surname of sev- 
eral divinities who were believed either to have 



Argos with a plague ; and, in obedience to an 
oracle, the Argives endeavored to propitiate 
Psamathe and Linus by means of sacrifices. 
Matrons and virgins sang dirges which were 
called /.h-oi. According to a Boeotian tradition, 
Linus was killed by Apollo because he had ven- 
tured upon a musical contest with the god ; and 
every year before sacrifices were offered to the 
Muses, a funeral sacrifice was offered to him. 



likewise by Chalcis in Euboea. It is probably 
owing to the difficulty of reconciling the differ- 
ent mythuses about Linus that the Thebans 
thought it necessary to distinguish between an 
earlier and later Linus; the latter is said to 
have instructed Hercules in music, but to have 



sprung from a lake, or who had their temples j and dirges (?.h-ot) were sung in his honor. His 
near a lake. Hence we find this surname given j tomb was claimed by Argos and by Thebes, and 
to Bacchus (Dionysus) at Athens, and to Diana 
(Artemis) at various places. 
Lemoxum. Vid. Pictoxes. 
Limtra (ra Aiuvpa : ruins north of Pincha ?), 
a city in the southeast of Lycia, on the River 
Lemtrus, twenty stadia from its mouth. 

Liiif rus (Aifivpoc : now Pkincka ?\ a river of ■ been killed by the hero. In the time of the 
Lycia, flowing into the bay west of the Sacrum ; Alexandrine grammarians, Linus was consider- 
Promontorium (now Phineka Bay) : navigable ed as the author of apocryphal works, in which 

' the exploits of Bacchus (Dionysus) were de- 
\ scribed. 

: [Liocritts (Aeiu/cptToc). 1. Son of Arisbaa, 
a Greek, slain by JSneas. — 2. Son of Euenor. 
I one of the suitors of Penelope.] 

Lipara and Liparexses Insula Vid. Mo- 
li.e. 

Liparis (Ai-apic), a small river of Ciiicia, 
flowing past Soloe, [deriving its name from the 
unctuous character of its waters.] 



as far up as Lemyra. The recent travellers 
differ as to whether the present River Phineka 
is the Limyrus or its tributary the Arycandus. 

Lixdcm (now Lincoln), a town of the Coritani 
in Britain, on the road from Londinium to Ebor- 
acum, and a Roman colony. The modem name 
Lincoln has been formed out of Lindum Colonia. 

Lixdcs (Aivdoc : Atvdioc : ruins at Lindo), on 
the eastern side of the island of Rhodes, was 
xine of the most ancient Dorian colonies on the 
442 



LIPAXUS. 



LIVIUS. 



[Lipaxus (AiVa^of), a city on the coast of 
Crossaea, in Macedonia.] 

Liquentia (now Livcnza), a river in Venetia, 
in the north of Italy, between Altinum and Con- 
cordia, which flowed iuto the Sinus Terges- 
tinus. 

[Liriopk, an ocean nymph, who became by 
Cephisus the mother of the beautiful Narcis- 
sus.] 

LIris (now Gariqliano), more anciently called 
Clanis or Glaxis, one of the principal rivers 
in central Italy, rises in the Apennines west of 
Lake Fucinus, flows first through the territory 
of the Marsi in a southeasterly direction, then 
turns southwest pear Sora, and at last flows 
southeast into the Sinus Oaietanus near Min- 
turnae, forming the boundary between Latium 
and Campania. Its stream was sluggish, whence 
the " Liris quieta aqua' of Horace (Oarm., i., 31). 

Lissus (Aigcuc : AfafftoCt Alooevs). 1. (Now 
Alcssio), a town in tlie south of Dalmatia, at the 
mouth of the River Drilou, founded by Dionys- 
ius of Syracuse, B.C. 385. It was situated on 
a hill near the coast, and possessed a strongly 
fortified acropolis, called Acrolissus, which 
was considered impregnable. The town after- 
ward fell into the hands of the lllyrians, and 
was eventually colouized by the Romans. — 2. 
A small river in Thrace, west of the Hebrus. 

Lista (now S. Anatoglia), a town of the Sa- 
bines, south of Reate, is said to have been the 
capital of the Aborigines, from which they were 
driven out by the Sabiues, who attacked them 
in the night. 

Litana Silva (now Silva di Luge), a large 
forest on the Apeuuiues, in Cisalpine Gaul, 
southeast of Mutina, in which the Romans were 
defeated by the Gauls, B.C. 216. 

Liternum or Linternum (now Patria), a town 
on the coast of Campania, at the mouth of the 
River Clanius or Glauis, which in the lower 
part of its course takes the name of Liternus 
(now Patria or Clanio), and which flows through 
a marsh to the north of the town called Literna 
Palus. The town was made a Roman colony 
B.C. 19-i, and was re-colonized by Augustus. It 
was to this place that the elder Scipio Africanus 
retired when the tribunes attempted to bring 
him to trial, and here he is said to have died. 
His tomb was shown at Liternum ; but some 
maintained that he was buried in the family 
sepulchre near the Porta Capena at Rome. 

[Liternus. Vid. Liternum.] 

Livia. 1. Sister of M. Livius Drusus, the 
celebrated tribune, B.C. 91, was married first 
to M. Porcius Cato ; by whom she had Cato Uti- 
censis, and subsequently to Q. Servilius Caepio, 
by whom she had a daughter, Servilia, the 
mother of M. Brutus, who killed Caesar.— 2. 
Livia Drusilla, the daughter of Livius Drusus 
Claudianus {vid. D&usus, No. 3), was married 
first to Tib. Claudius Nero, and afterward to 
Augustus, who compelled her husband to di- 
vorce her, B.C. 38. She had already borne her 
husband one sou, the future emperor Tiberius, 
and at the time of her marriage with Augustus 
was six months pregnant with another, who 
subsequently received the name of Drusus. She 
never had any children by Augustus, but she 
retained his affections till his death. It was 
generally believed that she caused C. Caesar 



and L. Caesar, the two grandsons of Augustus, 
to be poisoned, in order to secure the succes- 
sion for her own children ; and she was even 
suspected of having hastened the death of Au- 
gustus. On the accession of her son Tiberius 
to the throne, she at first attempted to gain an 
equal share in the government; but this the 
jealous temper of Tiberius would uot brook. 
He commanded her to retire altogether from 
public affairs, and soon displayed even hatred to- 
ward her. When she was on her death-bed he 
refused to visit her. She died in A.D. 29, at the 
age of eighty-two or eighty-six. Tiberius took no 
part in the funeral rites, and forbade her conse- 
cration, which had been proposed by the senate. 
— 3. Or Livilla, the daughter of Drusus senior 
and Antonia, and the wife of Drusus junior, the 
son of the Emperor Tiberius. She was seduc- 
ed by Sejanus, who persuaded her to poison her 
husband, A.D. 23. Her guilt was not discover- 
ed till the fall of Sejanus eight years afterward, 
31. — 3. Julia Livilla, daughter of Germanicus 
and Agrippina. Vid. J ulia, No. 7. 

Livia Gens, plebeian, but one of the most 
illustrious houses among the Roman nobility. 
The Livii obtained eight consulships, two cen- 
sorships, three triumphs, a dictatorship, and a 
mastership of the horse. The most distinguish- 
ed families are those of Drusus and Salinator. 

Livius, T., the Roman historian, was born at 
Patavium (now Padua), in the north of Italy, 
B.C. 59. The greater part of his life appears 
to have been spent at Rome, but he returned to 
his native town before his death, which hap- 
pened at the age of seventy-six, in the fourth 
year of Tiberius, A.D. 17. We know that he 
was married, and that he had at least two chil- 
dren, a son and a daughter, married to L. Ma- 
gius, a rhetorician. His literary talents secured 
the patronage and friendship of Augustus ; he 
became a person of consideration at court, and 
by his advice Claudius, afterward emperor, was 
induced in early life to attempt historical com- 
position ; but there is no ground for the asser- 
tion that Livy acted as preceptor to the young 
prince. Eventually his reputation rose so high 
and became so widely diffused, that a Spaniard 
travelled from Cadiz to Rome solely for the 
purpose of beholding him, and, having gratified 
his curiosity in this one particular, immediately 
returned home. The great and only extant 
work of Livy is a History of Rome, termed by 
himself Annates (xliii., 13), extending from the 
foundation of the city to the death of Drusus, 
B.C. 9, comprised in one hundred and forty-two 
books. Of these thirty-five have descended to 
us ; but of the whole, with the exception of two, 
we possess Epitomes, which must have been 
drawn up by one who was well acquainted with 
his subject/ By some they have been ascribed 
to Livy himself, by others to Florus ; but there 
is nothing in the language or context to war- 
rant either of these conclusions, and external 
evidence is altogether wanting. From the cir- 
cumstance that a short introduction or preface 
is found at the beginning of books one, twenty- 
one, and thirty-oue, and that each of these marks 
the commencement of an important epoch, the 
whole work has been divided into decades, con- 
taining ten books each ; but the grammarians 
Priscian and Diomedes, who quote repeatedly 
443 



LIVIUS. 



LIVIUS. 



from particular books, never allude to any such j their want of harmony, and occasionally to offer 
distribution. The commencement of book forty- j an opinion of their comparative credibility, 
one is lost, but there is certainly no remarkable j But in no case did he ever dream of ascending 
crisis at this place which invalidates one part ; to the fountain head. He never attempted to 
of the argument in favor of the antiquity of the j test the accuracy of his authorities by examin- 



arraugement. The first decade (books one to 
ten) is entire. It embraces the period from the 
foundation of the city to the year B.C. 294, 
•when the subjugation of the Samnites may be 
said to have been completed. The second de- 
cade (books eleven to twenty) is altogether lost 



ing monuments of remote antiquity, of which 
not a few were accessible to every inhabitant 
of the metropolis. Thus it is perfectly clear 
that he had never read the Leges Regiae, nor 
the Commentaries of Servius Tullius, nor even 
the Licinian Rogations; and that he had nev- 



It embraced the period from 294 to 219, com- j er consulted the vast collection of decrees of 
prising an account, among other matters, of the j the senate, ordinances of the plebs, treaties 
invasion of Pyrrhus and of the first Punic war. j and other state papers, which were preserved 
The third decade (books twenty-one to thirty) ; in the city. Nay, more, he did not consult even 
is entire. It embraces the period from 219 to \ all the authors to whom he might have resorted 
201, comprehending the whole of the second j with advantage, such as the Annals and Anti- 
Punic war. The fourth decade (books thirty- | quities of Varro, and the Origines of Cato. And 
one to forty) is entire, and also one half of the j even those writers whose authority he followed 
fifth (books forty-one to forty-five.) These fif- ! he did not use in the most judicious manner, 
teen books embrace the period from 201 to 167, j He seems to have performed his task piecemeaL 



and develop the progress of the Roman arms 
in Cisalpine Gaul, in Macedonia, Greece, and 
Asia, ending with the triumph of ^Emilius Pau- 
lus. Of the remaining books nothing remains 
except inconsiderable fragments, the most not- 
able being a few chapters of the ninety-first 



A small section was taken in hand, different ac- 
counts were compared, and the most plausible 
was adopted : the same system was adhered to 
in the succeeding portions, so that each, con- 
sidered by itself, without reference to the rest, 
was executed with care ; but the witnesses 



book, concerning the fortunes of Sertorius. j who were rejected in one place were admitted 



in another, without sufficient attention being 
paid to the dependence and the connection of 
the events. Hence the numerous contradic- 
tions and inconsistencies which have been de- 
tected by sharp-eyed critics. Other mistakes 
also are found in abundance, arising from his 
want of any thing like practical knowledge of 
the world, from his never having acquired even 
the elements of the military art, of jurispru- 
dence, or of political economy, and, above all, 
from his singular ignorance of geography. But 
while we fully acknowledge these defects in 
Livy, we cannot admit that his general good 
that the first book must have been written be- J faith has ever been impugned with any show 
tween the years 29 and 25. Moreover, since i of justice. We are assured (Tacit, Ann., iv., 
the last book contained an account of the death ! 34) that he was fair and liberal upon matters of 
of Drusus, it is evident that the task must have j contemporary history ; we know that he prais- 



The composition of such a vast work neces 
sarily occupied many years; and we find indi 
cations which throw some light upon the epochs 
when different sections were composed. Thus, 
in book first (c. 19), it is stated that the temple 
of Janus had been closed twice only since the 
reign of Numa, for the first time in the consul- 
ship of T. Manlius (B.C. 285), a few years after 
the termination of the first Punic war ; for the 
second time by Augustus Caesar, after the bat- 
tie of Actium, in 29. But we know that it was 
shut again by Augustus, after the conquest of 
the Cantabriaus, in 25 ; and hence it is evident 



been spread over seventeen years, and probably 
occupied a much longer time. The style of 
Livy may be pronounced almost faultless. The 
narrative flows on in a calm, but strong cur- 
rent; the diction displays richness without 
heaviness, and simplicity without tameness. 
There is, morever, a distinctness of outline 
and a warmth of coloring in all his delineations, 
whether of living men in action, or of things 



ed Cassius and Brutus, that his character of 
Cicero was a high eulogium, and that he spoke 
so warmly of the unsuccessful leader in the 
great civil war, that he was sportively styled a 
Pompeian by Augustus. It is true that, in re- 
counting the domestic strife which agitated the 
republic for nearly two centuries, he represents 
the plebeians and their leaders in the most un- 
favorable light. But this arose, not from any 



inanimate, which never fail to call up the whole ' wish to pervert the truth, but from ignorance 
scene before our eyes. In judging of the merits '■ of the exact relation of the contending parties, 
of Livy as an historian, we are bound to ascer- ' It is manifest that he never can separate in his 
tain, if possible, the end which he proposed to ' own mind the spirited plebeians of the infant 
himself. No one who reads Livy with attention i commonwealth from the base and venal rabble 
can suppose that he ever conceived the project j which thronged the forum in the days of Marius 
of drawing up a critical history of Rome. His } and Cicero ; while, in like manner, he confounds 
aim was to offer to his countrymen a clear and ! those bold and honest tribunes, who were the 
pleasing narrative, which, while it gratified their j champions of liberty, with such men as Satur- 
vanity, should contain no startling improbabili- 1 ninus or Sulpioius, Clodius or Yatinius. There 
ties nor gross amplifications. To effect this pur- ; remains one topic to which we must advert, 
pose, he studied with care the writings of some I We are told by Quintilian (i., 5, § 56; viii., 1, § 
of his more celebrated predecessors on Roman 3) that Asinius Pollio had remarked a certain 
history. Where his authorities were in accord- 1 Patavinity in Livy. Scholars have given tbern- 
ance with each other, he generally rested satis- i selves a vast deal of trouble to discover what 
fied with this agreement ; where their testimony j this term may indicate, and various hypotheses 
was irreconcilable, he was content to point out I have been propounded ; but if there is anv truth 
444 



LIVIUS ANDRONICUS. 



LOLLUNUS. 



in the slory, it is evident that Pollio must have 
intended to censure some provincial peculiari- 
ties of expression, which we, at all events, are 
in no position to detect. The best edition of 
Livy is by Drakenborch, Lugd. Bat., 1738-46, 
7 vols. 4to. There is also a valuable edition, 
now in course of publication, by Alchefski, 
Berol., 8vo, 1841, M£. 

Livius AndbjomIcdb. Vid. Andronicus. 

Lix, Lixa, taxxm (A#, A^c, A#o? : now Al- 
Araish), a city on the western coast of Maure- 
tania Tingitaua, in Africa, at the mouth of a 
river of the same name : it was a place of some 
commercial importance. 

Locri (Aonpot), sometimes called Locrenses 
by the Romans, the inhabitants of Locris (t] 
Aonptc), were an ancient people in Greece, de- 
scended from the Leleges, with which some 
Hellenic tribes were intermingled at a very 
early period They were, however, in Homer's 
time regarded as Hellenes; and, according to 
tradition, even Deucalion, the founder of the 
Hellenic race, was said to have lived in Locris, 
in the time of Opus or Cynos. In historical 
times the Locrians were divided into two dis- 
tinct tribes, differing from one another in cus- 
toms, habits, and civilization. Of these, the 
Eastern Locrians, called Epicnemidii and Opun- 
tii, who dwelt on the eastern coast of Greece, 
opposite the island of Euboea, were the more 
ancient and more civilized, while the Western 
Locrians, called Ozola?, who dwelt on the Co- 
rinthian Gulf, were a colony of the former, and 
were more barbarous. Homer mentions only 
the Eastern Locrians. At a later time there j 
was no connection between the Eastern and i 
Western Locrians ; and in the Peloponnesian 
war we find the former siding with the Spar- 
tans, and the latter with the Athenians. 1. 
Eastern Locris, exteuded from Thessaly and 
the pass of Thermopylae along the coast to the 
frontiers of Bceotia, and was bounded by Doris 
and Phocis on the west. It was a fertile and 
well-cultivated country. The northern part j 
was inhabited by the Locri Epicnemidii ('Etti- J 
nvrjfiidioi), who derived their name from Mount ' 
Cnemis. The southern part was inhabited by j 
the Locri Opuntii ('Ottovvtloi), who derived 
their name from their principal town, Opus. 
The two tribes were separated by Daphnus, a 
small slip of land, which at one time belonged 
to Phocis. These two tribes are frequently con- 
founded with one another; and aucient writers 
sometimes use the name either of Epicnemidii 
or of Opuntii alone, when both tribes are in- 
tended. The Epk-uemidii were for a long time 
subject to the Phocians, and were included un- 
der the name of the latter people, whence the 
name of the Opuntii occurs more frequently in 
Greek history. — 'J. Western Locris, or the 
country of the Locri Ozolae ('0£6Aac), was 
bounded on the north by Doris, on the west by 
^Etolia, on the east by Phocis, and on the south 
by the Corinthiau Gulf. The origin of the name 
of Ozolae is uncertain. The ancients derived j 
it either from the undressed skins worn by the | 
inhabitants, or from o&iv, " to smell," on account 
of the great quantity of asphodel that grew in 
their country, or from the stench arising from 
mineral springs, beneath which the centaur 
Nessus is 6aid to have been buried. The coun- 



try is mountainous, and for the most part unpro- 
ductive. Mouut Corax from ^Etolia, and Mount 
Parnassus from Phocis, occupy the greater part 
of it. The Locri Ozolae, resembled their neigh- 
bors, the ^toliaus, both in their predatory habits 
and in their mode of warfare. They were di- 
vided into several tribes, and are described by 
Thucydides as a rude and barbarous people, 
even in the time of the Peloponnesian war. 
From B.C. 315 they belonged to the ^EtoliaD 
league. Their chief town was Amphissa. 

Locri Epizephyrii (Aonpol 'Ejri&Qvpioi : now 
Motta di Burzano), one of the most aucient 
Greek cities in Lower Italy, was situated iu the 
southeast of Bruttium, north of the promontory 
of Zephyrium, from which it was said to have 
derived its surname Epizephyrii, though others 
suppose this name given to the place simply 
because it lay to the west of Greece. It was 
founded by the Locrians from Greece, B.C. 683. 
Strabo expressly says that it was founded by 
the Ozolae, and not by the Opuntii, as most wri- 
ters related ; but his statement is not so prob- 
able as the common one. The inhabitants re- 
garded themselves as descendants of Ajax 
Oileus ; and as he resided at the town of Naryx 
among the Opuntii, the poets gave the name of 
Narycia to Locris (Ov., Met., xv., 705), and 
called the founders of the town the Narycii Lo- 
cri (Virg., jEn., iii., 399). For the same reason, 
the pitch of Bruttium is frequently called Nary- 
cia (Virg., Georg., ii., 438). Locri was cele- 
brated for the excellence of its laws, which 
were drawn up by Zaleucus soon after the foun- 
dation of the city. Vid. Zaleucus. The town 
enjoyed great prosperity down to the time of 
the younger Diouysius, who resided here for 
some years after his expulsion from Syracuse, 
and committed the greatest atrocities against 
the inhabitants. It suffered much in the wars 
against Pyrrhus, and in the second Punic war. 
The Romaus allowed it to retain its freedom 
and its own constitution, which was democrat- 
ical ; but it gradually sunk iu importance, and 
is rarely meutioued in later times. Near the 
town was an ancient and wealthy temple of 
Proserpina. 

[Locrus (AoKpoc). son of Physcius and grand- 
son of Amphictyou, became by Cabya the father 
of Locrus, the mythical ancestor of the Locri 
Ozolae.] 

Locusta, or, more correctly, Lucusta, a wom- 
an celebrated for her skill in concocting poisons. 
She was employed by Agrippina iu poisoning 
the Emperor Claudius, and by Nero for dispatch- 
ing Britauuicus. She was rewarded by Nero 
with ample estates, but under the Emperor 
Galba she was executed with other malefactors 
of Nero's reign. 

Lollia Paulina, grand-daughter of M. Lollius, 
mentioned below, and heiress of his immense 
wealth. She was married to C. Memmius Reg- 
ulus ; but, on the report of her grandmother's 
beauty, the Emperor Caligula sent for her, di- 
vorced her from her husband, and married her, 
but soou divorced her again After Claudius 
had put to death his wife Messalina, Lollia was 
one of the candidates for the vacancy, but she 
was put to death by means of Agrippina. 

Lollianus (AoA'AtavGc), a celebrated Greek 
sophist in the time of Hadriau and Antoninus 
445 



i 



LOLLIUS. 



LORIUM. 



Pius, was a native of Ephesus, and taught at 
Athens. 

Lollius. 1. M. Lollius Palicaxus, tribune 
of the plebs B.C. 71, and an active opponent of 
the aristocracy. — 2. M. Lollius, consul 21, and 
governor of Gaul in 16. He was defeated by 
.some German tribes who had crossed the Rhine. 
Lollius was subsequently appointed by Augus- 
tus as tutor to his grandson, 0. Coesar, whom 
he accompanied to the East, B.C. 2. Here he 
incurred the displeasure of C. Caesar, and is said, 
in consequence, to have put an end to his life 
by poison. Horace addressed an Ode (iv., 9) 
to Lollius, and two Epistles (i.; 2, 18) to the 
eldest son of Lollius. 

Londinium, also called Oppidum Londiniense, 
Lundinium, or Londinum (now London), the cap- 
ital of the Cantii in Britain, was situated on the 
southern bank of the Thames, in the modern 
Southwark, though it afterward spread over the 
other side of the river. It is not mentioned by 
Caasar, probably because his line of march led 
him in a different direction ; and its name first 
occurs in the reign of Nero, when it is spoken 
of as a flourishing and populous town, much 
frequented by merchants, although neither a 
Roman colony nor a municipium. On the re- 
volt of the Britons under Boadicea, A.D. 62, the 
Roman governor Suetonius Paulinus abandoned 
Londinium to the enemy, who massacred the 
inhabitants and plundered the town. From the 
effects of this devastation it gradually recover- 
ed, and it appears again as an important place 
in the reign of Antoninus Pius. It was sur- 
rounded with a wall and ditch by Constantine 
the Great or Theodosius, the Roman governor 
of Britain ; and about this time it was distin- 
guished by the surname of Augusta, whence 
some writers have conjectured that it was then 
made a colony. Londinium had now extended 
eo much on the northern bank of the Thames, 
that it was called at this period a town of the 
Trinobantes, from which we may infer that the 
new quarter was both larger and more populous 
than the old part on the southern side of the 
river. The wall built by Constantine or The- 
odosius was on the northern side of the river, 
and is conjectured to have commenced at a fort 
near the present site of the tower, and to have 
been continued along the Minories, to Cripple- 
gate, Newgate, and Ludgate. London was the 
central point, from which all the Roman roads 
in Britian diverged. It possessed a Milliarium 
Aureum, from which the miles on the roads 
were numbered ; and a fragment of this Millia- 
rium, the celebrated London Stone, may be seen 
affixed to the wall of Saint Swithin's Church in 
Cannon Street. This is almost the only monu- 
ment of the Roman Londinium still extant, with 
the exception of coins, tesselated pavements, 
and the like, which have been found buried un- 
der the ground. 

Longanus (now Saint Lucia), a river in the 
northeast of Sicily, between Mylse and Tyndaris, 
on the banks of which Hieron gained a victory 
over the Mamertines. 

Longinus, a distinguished Greek philosopher 
and grammarian of the third century of our era. 
His original name seems to have been Dionys- 
ius ■ but he also bore the name of Dionysius 
Longinus, Cassius Longintis, or Dionytiut Cas- 
446 



sius Longinus, probably because he or one 
of his ancestors had received the Roman fran- 
chise through the influence of some Cassius 
Longinus. The place of his birth is uncertain ; 
he was brought up with care by his uncle 
Fronto, who taught rhetoric at Athens, whence 
it has been conjectured that he was a native of 
that city. He afterward visited many countries, 
and became acquainted with all the illustrious 
philosophers of his age, such as Ammonius Sac- 
cas, Origen, the disciple of Ammonius, not to be 
confounded with the Christian writer, Plotinus, 
and Amelius. He was a pupil of the two former, 
and was an adherent of the Platonic philosophy ; 
but instead of following blindly the system of 
Ammonius, he went to the fountain head, and 
made himself thoroughly familiar with the works 
of Plato. On his return to Athens he opened 
a school, which was attended by numerous 
pupils, among whom the most celebrated was 
Porphyry. He seems to have taught philosophy 
and criticism, as well as rhetoric and grammar ; 
and the extent of his information was so great, 
that he was called " a living library" and " a 
walking museum." After spending a consid- 
erable part of his life at Athens he went to the 
East, where he became acquainted with Zeuo- 
bia of Palmyra, who made him her teacher of 
Greek literature. On the death of her husband 
Odenathus, Longinus became her principal ad- 
viser. It was mainly through his advice that 
she threw off her allegiance to the Roman em- 
pire. On her capture by Aurelian in 273, Lon- 
ginus was put to death by the emperor. Lon- 
ginus was unquestionably the greatest philoso- 
pher of his age. He was a man of excellent 
sense, sound judgment, and extensive knowl- 
edge. His work on the- Sublime (Hepl vipovc), 
a great part of which is still extant, surpasses 
in oratorical power every thing written after 
the time of the Greek orators. There is scarce- 
ly any work in the range of ancient literature^ 
which, independent of its excellence of style, 
contains so many exquisite remarks upon ora- 
tory, poetry, and good taste in general. The 
best edition of this work is by Weiske, Lips., 
1809, 8vo, reprinted in London, 1820. Longi- 
nus wrote many other works, both rhetorical 
and philosophical, all of which have perished. 

Longinus, Cassius. Vid. Cassius. 

Longobardl Vid. Langobardi. 

Longula (Longulanus : now Buon Riposo), a 
town of the Volsci in Latium, not far from Co- 
rioli, and belonging to the territory of Antium, 
but destroyed by the Romans at an early period. 

Longus (Aoyyoc), a Greek sophist, of uncer- 
tain date, but not earlier than the fourth or fifth 
century of our era, is the author of an erotic 
work, entitled UotueviKuv tQv Kara Adtyviv teal 
XXonv, or Pastoralia de Daphnide et Chloe, writ- 
ten in pleasing and elegant prose. The best 
editions are by Villoison, Paris, 1778 ; Schsefer, 
Lips., 1803 ; and Passow, Lips., 1811. 

[Longus jEstuarium {Aoyyoc elexvate), a bay 
of Britannia Barbara, on the western coast, now 
Linnhe Loch in Scotland.] 

Lopadusa (Aonadovaa : now Lampedusa), an 
island in the Mediterranean, between Melita 
(now Malta) and the coast of Byzaeium in Africa. 

Lorium or Lorii, a email place in Etruria,. 
with an imp«rial villa, twelve miles northwest 



LORYMA. 



LUCANUS. 



of Rome, on the Via Am elia, where Antoninus 
Pius was brought up, and where he died. 

Loryma (rd Aupvfia : ruins at Aplotheki), a 
city on the southern coast of Caria, close to the 
promontory of Cyuossema (now Cape Aloupo), 
opposite to Ialysus in Rhodes, the space be- 
tween the two being about the shortest distance 
between Rhodes and the coast of Caria. 

Lotis, a nymph, who, to escape the embraces 
of Priapus, was metamorphosed into a tree, 
called after her Lotus. (Ov., Met, ix., 347.) 

Lotophagi (Awro^u'yot, i. e., lotus-eaters). Ho- 
mer, in the Odyssey, represents Ulysses as com- 
ing in his wanderings to a coast inhabited by a 
people who fed upon a fruit called lotus, the 
taste of which was so delicious that every one 
who ate it lost all wish to return to his native 
country, but desired to remain there with the 
Lotophagi, and to eat the lotus (Od., ix., 94). 
Afterward, in historical times, the Greeks found 
that the people on the northern coast of Africa, 
between the Syrtes, and especially about the 
Lesser Syrtis, used to a great extent, as an ar- 
ticle of food, the fruit of a plant, which they 
identified with the lotus of Homer, and they 
called these people Lotophagi. To this day, 
the inhabitants of the same part of the coast of 
Tunis and Tripoli eat the fruit of the plant 
which is supposed to be the lotus of the an- 
cients, and drink a wine made from its juice, 
as the ancient Lotophagi are also said to have 
done. This plant, the Zizyphus lotus of the 
botanists (or jujube-tree), is a prickly branching 
shrub, with fruit of the size of a wild plum, of 
a saffron color and a sweetish taste. The an- 
cient geographers also place the Lotophagi in 
the large island of Meuiux or Lotophagitis (now 
Jerbali), adjacent to this coast. They carried 
on a commercial intercourse with Egypt and 
with the interior of Africa by the very same 
caravan routes which are used to the present 
day. 

Loxias (Ao&ac), a surname of Apollo, deriv- 
ed by some from his intricate and ambiguous 
oracles (Aofa), but better from Xeyeiv, as the 
prophet or interpreter of Jupiter (Zeus). 

Loxo (Ao£cj), daughter of Boreas, one of the 
Hyperborean maidens, who brought the wor- 
ship of Diana (Artemis) to Delos, whence the 
name is also used as a surname of Diana (Ar- 
temis) herself. 

Lua, also called Lua mater or Lua Saturm, 
one of the early Italian divinities, whose wor- 
ship was forgotten in later times. It may be 
that she was the same as Ops, the wife of Sat- 
urn ; but all we know of her is, that sometimes 
the arms taken from a defeated enemy were 
dedicated to her, aud burned as a sacrifice, with 
a view of averting calamity. 

Luca (Lucensis : now Lucca), a Ligurian city 
in Upper Italy, at the foot of the Apennines and 
on the River Ausus, northeast of Pisoa. It was 
included in Etruria by Augustus, but in the 
time of Julius Caesar it was the most southerly 
city in Liguria, and belonged to Cisalpine Gaul 
It was made a Roman colony B.C. 177. The 
amphitheatre of Lucca may still be seen at the 
modern town in a state of tolerable preserva- 
tion, and its great size proves the importance 
and populousuess of the ancient city. 

Lucania (Lucaaus), a district in Lower Italy, 
28 



was bounded on the north by Campania and 
Samnium, on the east by Apulia and the Gulf 
of Tareutum, on the south by Bruttium, and on 
the west by the Tyrrhene Sea, thus correspond- 
ing, for the most part, to the modern provinces 
of Principato, Citeriore, and Basilicata, in the 
kingdom of Naples. It was separated from 
Campania by the River Silarus, and from Brut- 
tium by the River Laus, and it extended along 
the Gulf of Tarentum from Thurii to Metapou- 
tnm. The country is mountainous, as the Ap- 
ennines run through the greater part of it ; but 
toward the Gulf of Tarentum there is an exten- 
sive and fertile plain. Lucania was celebrated 
for its excellent pastures (Hor., Ep., i., 28), and 
its oxen were the fiuest and largest in Italy. 
Hence the elephant was at first called by the 
Romans a Lucanian ox {Lucas bos). The swine, 
also, were very good ; and a peculiar kind of 
sausages was celebrated at Rome under the 
name of Lucanica. The coast of Lucania was 
inhabited chiefly by Greeks, whose cities were 
numerous and flourishing. The most import- 
ant were Metapontum, Heraclea, Thurii, Bux- 

ENTUM, ELEA Or VELIA, POSIDONIA Or PvESTUJf. 

The interior of the country was originally in- 
habited by the Chones and CEnotrians. The 
Lucanians proper were Samnites, a brave aud 
warlike race, who left their mother-country and 
settled both in Lucania and Bruttium. They 
not only expelled or subdued the CEnotrians,. 
but they gradually acquired possession of most 
of the Greek cities on the coast. They are first 
mentioned in B.C. 396 as the allies of the elder 
Dionysius in his war against Thurii. They 
were subdued by the Romans after Pyrrhus had 
left Italy. Before the second Punic war their 
forces consisted of thirty thousand foot and three 
thousand horse ; but in the course of this war 
their country was repeatedly laid waste, and 
never recovered its former prosperity. 

Lucanus, M. Ann^eus, usually called Lucais, 
a Roman poet, was born at Corduba in Spain, 
A.D. 39. His father was L. Annaeus Mella, a 
brother of M. Seneca, the philosopher. Lucan 
was carried to Rome at an early age, where his 
education was superintended by the most emi- 
nent preceptors of the day. His talents devel- 
oped themselves at a very early age, and ex- 
cited such general admiration as to awaken the 
jealousy of Nero, who, unable to brook compe- 
tition, forbade him to recite in public. Stung 
to the quick by this prohibition, Lucan embarked 
in the famous conspiracy of Piso, was betrayed, 
and by a promise of pardon, was induced to 
turn informer. He began by denounciug his 
own mother Acilia (or Atilia), aud then reveal- 
ed the rest of his accomplices without reserve. 
But he received a traitor's reward. After the 
more important victims had been dispatched, 
the emperor issued the mandate for the death 
of Lucan, who, finding escape hopeless, caused 
his vein 8 to be opened. When, from the rapid 
effusion of blood, he felt his extremities becom- 
ing chill, he began to repeat aloud some verses 
which he had once composed, descriptive of a 
wounded soldier perishing by a like death, and,, 
with these lines upon his lips, expired, A.D. 65, 
in the twenty-sixth year of his age. Lucan 
wrote various poems, the titles of which are 
preserved, but the only extant production is an- 
447 



LUOANUS. 



LUCIANUS. 



heroic poem, in ten books, entitled Pharsalia, 
in which the progress of the struggle between 
Caesar and Pompey is fully detailed, the events, 
commencing with the passage of tlie Rubicon, 
being arranged in regular chronological order. 
The tenth book is imperfect, and the narrative 
breaks off abruptly in the middle of the Alex- 
andrean war, but we know not whether the con- 
clusion has been lost, or whether the author 
ever completed his task. The whole of 'what 
we now possess was certainly not composed at 
the same time, for the different parts do not by 
any means breathe the same spirit. In the ear- 
lier portions w r e find liberal sentiments expressed 
in very moderate terms, accompanied by open 
and almost fulsome flattery of Nero ; but, as 
we proceed, the blessings of freedom are loudly 
proclaimed, and the invectives against tyranny 
are couched in language the most offensive, 
evidently aimed directly at the emperor. The 
work coutaius great beauties and great defects. 
It is characterized by copious diction, lively 
imagination, and a bold and masculine tone of" 
thought; but it is, at the same time, disfigured 
by extra vagauee, far-fetched conceits, and un- 
natural similes. The best editions are by Ou- 
demloi-p, Lugd. Bat., 1728; by Burmann, 1740; 
and by Weber, Lips., 1821-1831. 

Luoanus, Ocellus. Vid. Ocellus. 

Lucceius. 1. L., an old friend and neighbor 
of Cicero. His name frequently occurs at the 
commencement of Cicero's correspondence with 
Atticus, with whom Lucceius had quarrelled. 
Cicero attempted to reconcile his two friends. 
In B..C. 63 Lucceius accused Catiline ; and in 
60 he became a candidate for the consulship, 
along with Julius Caesar, who agreed to support 
him ; but he lost his election in consequence 
of the aristocracy bringing in Bibulus as a 
counterpoise to Caesar's influence. Lucceius 
seems now to have withdrawn from public life 
and to have devoted himself to literature. He 
was chiefly engaged iu the composition of a 
contemporaneous history of Rome, commenc- 
ing with the Social or Marsic war. In 55 he 
had nearly finished the history of the Social and 
of the first Civil war, when Cicero wrote a most 
urgent letter to his friend, pressing him to sus- 
pend the thread of his history, and to devote a 
separate work to the period from Catiline's con- 
spiracy to Cicero's recall from banishment (ad 
yam., v., 12). Lucceius promised compliance 
with his request, but he appears never to have 
written the work. On the breaking out of the 
civil war in 49, he espoused the side of Pom- 
pey. He was subsequently pardoned by Caesar 
and returned to Rome, where he continued to 
live on frieudly terms with Cicero. — 2. O, sur- 
named Hirrus, of the Pupinian tribe, tribune 
of the plebs 53, proposed that Pompey should 
be created dictator. In 52 he was a candidate 
with Cicero for the augurship, and in the fol- 
lowing year a candidate with M. Caelius for the 
aedileship, but he failed in both. On the break- 
ing out of the civil war in 49, he joined Pom- 
pey. He was sent by Pompey as ambassador 
to Orodes, king of Parthia, but he was thrown 
into prison by the Parthian king. He was par- 
doned by Caesar after the battle of Pharsalia, 
and returned to Rome. 

Lucenses Callaici, one of the two chief 
448 



' tribes of the Callaici or Grallaeci, on the north- 
j ern coast of Hispania Tarraconensis, derived 
| their name from their town Lucus Augusti. 

Lucentum (now Alicante), a town of the Con- 
i testani, on the coast of Hispania Tarraconensis. 

Luceria (Lucerinus : now Lucera), sometimes 
! called Nuceria, a town in Apulia, on the borders 
} of Samnium, southwest of Arpi, was situated on 
' a steep hill, and possessed an ancient temple 
| of Minerva. In the war between Rome and 
Samnium, it was first taken by the Samnites 
(B.C. 321), and next by the Romans (319); but 
having revolted to the Samnites in 314, all the 
inhabitants were massacred by the Romans, 
and their place supplied by two thousand five 
hundred Roman colonists. Having thus become 
a Roman colony, it continued faithful to Rome 
in the second Punic war. In the time of Au- 
gustus it had declined greatly in prosperity ; 
but it was still of sufficient importance in the 
third century to be the residence of the praetor 
of Apulia. 

Luciaxus (AovKiavoc), usually called Luciax, 
a Greek writer, born at Samosata, the capital 
of Commagene, in Syria. The date of his birth 
and death is uncertain ; but it has been conject- 
ured, with much probability, that he was born 
about A.D. 120, and he probably lived till to- 
ward the end of this century. We know that 
some of his more celebrated works were writ- 
ten in the reign of M. Aurelius. Lucian's par- 
ents were poor, and he was at first apprenticed 
to his maternal uncle, who was a statuary. He 
afterward became an advocate, and practiced at 
Antioch. Being unsuccessful in this calling, 
he employed himself in writing speeches for 
others instead of delivering them himself. But 
he did not remain long at Antioch ; and, at an 
early period of his life, he set out upon his trav- 
els, and visited the greater part of Greece, Italy, 
and Gaul. At that period it was customary for 
professors of the rhetorical art to proceed to dif- 
ferent cities, where they attracted audiences by 
their displays, much in the same manner as mu- 
sicians or itinerant lecturers in modern times. 
He appears to have acquired a good deal of mon- 
ey as well as fame. On his return to his native 
country, probably about his fortieth year, he 
abandoned the rhetorical profession, the artifices 
of which, he tells us, were foreign to his tem- 
per, the natural enemy of deceit and pretension. 
He now devoted most of his time to the com- 
position of his works. He still, however, occa- 
sionally travelled ; for it appears that he was in 
Achaia and Ionia about the close of the Par- 
thian war, 160-165; on which occasion, too, 
he seems to have visited Olympia, and beheld 
the self-immolation of Peregrinus. About the 
year 170, or a little previously, he visited the 
false oracle of the impostor Alexander, in Paph- 
lagonia. Late in life he obtained the office of 
procurator of part of Egypt, which office was 
probably bestowed upon him by the Emperor 
Commodus. The nature of Lucian's writings 
inevitably procured him many enemies, by whom 
he has been painted in very black colors. Ac- 
cording to Suidas he was surnamed the Blas- 
phemer, and was torn to pieces by dogs as a 
punishment for his impiety ; but on this account 
no reliance can be placed. Other writers state 
that Lucian apostatized from Christianity ; but 



LUCIANUS. 

there is no proof in support of this charge ; aud 
the dialogue entitled Philopatris, which would 
appear to prove that the author had ouce been 
a Christian, was certainly not written by Luci- 
an, and was probably composed in the reign of 
Julian the Apostate. As many as eighty-two 
works have come down to us under the name 
of Lucian; but some of these are spurious. 
The most important of them are his Dialogues. 
They are of very various degrees of merit, and 
are treated in the greatest possible variety of 
style, from seriousuess down to the broadest 
humor and buffoonery. Their subjects and 
tendency, too, vary considerably ; for, while 
some are employed in attacking the heathen 
philosophy and religion, others are mere pictures 
of mauuers without any polemic drift. Our 
limits only allow us to mention a few of the 
more important of these dialogues. The Dia- 
logues of the Gods, twenty-six in number, con- 
sist of short dramatic narratives of some of the 
most popular incidents in the heathen mytholo- 
gy. The reader, however, is generally left to 
draw his own conclusions from the story, the 
author only taking care to put it in the most 
absurd point of view. In the Jupiter Convicted 
a bolder style of attack is adopted ; and the 
cynic proves to Jupiter's face, that, every thing 
being under the dominion of fate, he has no 
power whatever. As this dialogue shows Ju- 
piter's want of power, so the Jupiter the Trage- 
dian strikes at his very existence, and that of 
the other deities. The Vitarum Audio, or Sale 
of the Philosophers, is an attack upon the aucient 
philosophers. In this humorous piece the heads 
of the different sects are put up to sale, Hermes 
being the auctioneer. The Fisherman is a sort 
of apology for the preceding piece, and may be 
reckoned among Lucian's best dialogues. The 
philosophers are represeuted as having obtained 
a day's life for the purpose of taking vengeance 
upon Lucian, who confesses that he has bor- 
rowed the chief beauties of his writings from 
them. The Banquet, or the Lapitho?, is one of 
Lucian's most humorous attacks on the philos- 
ophers. The scene is a wedding feast, at which 
a representative of each of the principal philo- 
sophic sects is present. A discussion ensues, 
which sets all the philosophers by the ears, and 
ends in a pitched battle. The Nigrinus is also 
an attack on philosophic pride ; but its main 
scope is to satirize the Romans, whose pomp, 
vain-glory, and luxury are unfavorably contrast- 
ed with the simple habits of the Athenians. 
The more miscellaneous class of Lucian's dia- 
logues, in which the attacks upon mythology 
and philosophy are not direct, but incidental, or 
which are mere pictures of manners, contains 
some of his best. At the head must be placed 
Thnon, which may, perhaps, be regarded as Lu- 
cian's master-piece. The Dialogues of the Dead 
are perhaps the best known of all Luciau's 
works. The subject affords great scope for 
moral reflection, aud for satire on the vanity 
of human pursuits. Wealth, power, beauty, 
streugth, not forge* ting the vain disputations of 
philosophy, afford the materials. Among the 
moderns these dialogues have been imitated by 
Fouteuelle aud Lord Lyttleton The Icaro-Me- 
nippus is in Luciau's best vein, aud a master- 
piece of Arietophanic humor. Menippus, dis- 
29 



LUCILIUS. 

gusted with the disputes aud pretensions of the 
philosophers, resolves on a visit to the stars, for 
the purpose of seeing how far their theories are 
correct. By the mechanical aid of a pair of 
wings he reaches the moon, and surveys thence 
the miserable passions and quarrels of men. 
Hence he proceeds to Olympus, and is intro- 
duced to the Thunderer himself. Here he is 
witness of the manner in which human prayers 
are received in heaven. They ascend by enor- 
mous vent-holes, and become audible when Ju- 
piter removes the covers. Jupiter himself is 
represented as a partial judge, and as influenced 
by the largeness of the rewards promised to 
him. At the end he pronounces judgment 
against the philosophers, and threatens in four 
days to destroy them all. Charon is a very ele- 
gant dialogue, but of a graver turn than the pre- 
ceding. Charon visits the earth to see the 
course of life there, and what it is that always 
makes men weep when they enter his boat. 
Mercury acts as his cicerone. Lucian's merits 
as a writer consist in his knowledge of human 
nature ; his strong common sense ; the fertility 
of his invention ; the raciness of his humor ; 
aud the simplicity and Attic grace of his diction. 
There was abundance to justify his attacks in 
the systems against which they were directed. 
Yet he establishes nothing in their stead. His 
aim is only to pull down — to spread a universal 
skepticism. Nor were his assaults confined to 
religion and philosophy, but extended to every 
thing old and venerated, the poems of Homer 
and Hesiod, and the history of Herodotus. The 
best editions of Lucian are by Hemsterhuis and 
Reitz, Amst., 1743, 4 vols. 4to ; by Lehmann, 
Lips., 1821-1831, 9 vols. 8vo; and by Dindorf, 
with a Latin version, but without notes, Paris, 
1840, 8vo. 

Lucifer or Phosphorus (<&oc<p6poc, also by the 
poets '~Euc<j)6pog or Qaeccpopog), that is, the bring- 
er of light, is the name of the planet Venus, 
when seen in the morning before sunrise. The 
same planet was called Hesperus, Vesperugo, 
Vesper, Noctifer, or Nocturnus, when it appeared 
in the heavens after sunset. Lucifer, as a per- 
sonification, is called a son of Astrieus and Au- 
rora or Eos, of Cephalus and Aurora, or of At- 
las. By Philonis he is said to have been the 
father of Ceyx. He is also called the father of 
Daedalion and of the Hesperides. Lucifera is 
also a surname of several goddesses of light, as 
Diana (Artemis), Aurora, and Hecate. 

Lucilius. 1. O, was born at Suessa of the 
Aurunci, B.C. 148. He served in the cavalry 
under Scipio in the Numantine war ; lived upon 
terms of the closest familiarity with Scipio and 
Laelius ; and was either the maternal grand- 
uncle, or, which is less probable, the maternal 
grandfather of Pompey the Great. He died at 
Naples, 103, in the forty-sixth year of his age. 
Ancient critics agree that, if not absolutely the 
inventor of Roman satire, he was the first to 
mould it into that form which afterward receiv- 
ed full development in the hands of Horace, 
Persius, and Juvenal. The first of these three, 
great masters, while he censures the harsh ver- 
sification and the slovenly haste with which Lu- 
cilius threw off his compositions, acknowledges 
with admiration the fierceness and boldness of 
his attacks upon the vices and follies of his con- 
449 



LUCILLA, ANNIA. 



LUCRINtTS LACUS. 



temporaries. The Satires of Lucilius were di- 
vided into thirty books. Upward of eight hund- 
red fragments from these have been preserved, 
but the greatest number consist of isolated coup- 
lets or single lines. It is clear from these frag- 
ments that his reputation for caustic pleasantry 
•was by no means unmerited, and that in coarse- 
ness and broad personalities he in no respect 
fell short of the license of the old comedy, 
which would seem to have been, to a certain 
extent, his model. The fragments were pub- 
lished separately, by Franciscus Dousa, Lugd. 
Bat., 4to, 1597, reprinted by the brothers Volpi, 
8vo, Patav., 1735 ; and, along with Censorinus, 
by the two sons of Havercamp, Lugd. Bat., 8vo, 
1743. — 2. Lucilius Junior, probably the author 
of an extant poem in six hundred and forty hex- 
ameters, entitled JEtna, which exhibits through- 
out great command of language, and contains 
not a few brilliant passages. Its object is to 
explain upon philosophical principles, after the 
fashion of Lucretius, the causes of the various 
physical phenomena presented by the volcano. 
Lucilius Junior was the procurator of Sicily, 
and the friend to whom Seneca addresses his 
Epistles, his Natural Questions, and his tract on 
Providence, and whom he strongly urges to 
select this very subject of ^Etna as a theme for 
his muse. 

Luoilla, Annia, daughter of M. Aurelius and 
the younger Faustina, was born about A.D. 147. 
She was married to the Emperor L. Verus, and 
after his death (169) to Claudius Pompeianus. 
In 183 she engaged in a plot against the life of 
her brother Commodus, which having been de- 
tected, she was banished to the island of Ca- 
prea3, and there put to death. 

[Lucillius (AovKtlXtog), a Greek poet, who 
published two books of epigrams ; in the Greek 
Anthology there are one hundred and twenty- 
four epigrams ascribed to him, but some of these 
in certain MSS. are credited to other poets : he 
probably lived under Nero.] 

Lucina, the goddess of light, or, rather, the 
goddess that brings to light, and hence the god- 
dess that presides over the birth of children. 
It was therefore used as a surname of Juno and 
Diana. Lucina corresponded to the Greek god- 
dess Ilithyia. 

[Lucin^e Oppidum (Et?LEidviac nroTiic, now El- 
Kab), a city of the Thebaid, on the eastern bank 
of the Nile, with a temple of Bubastis.] 

[Lucius (AovKtog), of Patras, a Greek writer 
of uncertain date, author of Metamorphoseon 
Libri Diversi, which aie now lost: Luciau bor- 
rowed from him, and, at the same time, ridiculed 
him in a piece called from him Lucius.] 

Lucretia, the wife of L. Tarquinius Collati- 
nus. whuse rape by Sextus Tarquinius led to the 
dethronement of Tarquinius Superbus and the 
establishment of the republic. For details, vid. i 
Tarquinius. 

Lucretia Gens, originally patrician, but sub- j 
sequently plebeian also. The surname of the i 
patrician Lucre ii was Tricipitinus, one of whom, 
Sp. Lucretius Tricipitinus, the father of Lucre- 1 
tia, was elected consul, with L. Junius Brutus, on 
the establishment of the republic. B.C. 509. The 
plebeian families are known by the surnames of 1 
Gallus, Ofella, and Vespillo, but none of them is | 
of sufficient importance to require notice 
450 



Lucretilis, a pleasant mountain in the coun- 
try of the Sabiues, overhanging Horace's villa 
a part of the modern Monte Gennaro. 

Lucretius Carus, T., the Roman poet, re- 
specting whose personal history our informa- 
tion is both scanty and suspicious. The Euse- 
bian Chronicle fixes B.C. 95 as the date of his 
birth, adding that he was driven mad by a love 
potion, that during his lucid intervals he com- 
posed several works which were revised by 
Cicero, and that he perished by his own hand 
in his forty-fourth year, B.C. 52 or 51. Another 
ancient authority places his death in 55. From 
what source the tale about the philtre may have 
been derived, we know not, but it is not im- 
probable that the whole story was an invention 
of some enemy of the Epicureans. Not a hint 
is to be found any where which corroborates the 
assertion with regard to the editorial labors of 
Cicero. The work, which has immortalized the 
name of Lucretius, is a philosophical didactic 
poem, composed in heroic hexameters, divided 
into six books, containing upward of seven thou- 
sand four hundred lines, addressed to C. Mem- 
mius Gemellus, who was praetor in 58, and is 
entitled De Rerum Naiura. It was probably 
published about 57 or 56 ; for, from the way in 
which Cicero speaks of it in a letter to his 
brother, written in 55, we may conclude that it 
had only recently appeared. The poem has 
been sometimes represented as a complete ex- 
position of the religious, moral, and physical 
doctrines of Epicurus, but this is far from beiug 
a correct description. Epicurus maintained 
that the unhappiness and degradation of man- 
kind arose in a great degree from the slavish 
dread which they entertained of the power of 
the gods, and from terror of their wrath ; and 
the fundamental doctrine of his system was, 
that the gods, whose existence he did not deny, 
lived in the enjoyment of absolute peace, and 
totally indifferent to the world and its inhabit- 
ants. To prove this position, Epicurus adopted 
the atomic theory of Leucippus, according to 
which the material universe was not created 
by the Supreme Being, but was formed by the 
union of elemental particles which had existed 
from all eternity, governed by certain simple 
laws. He further sought to show that all those 
striking phaenomena which had been regarded 
by the vulgar as direct manifestations of divine 
power were the natural results of ordinary pro- 
cesses. To state clearly and develop fully the 
leading principle of this philosophy, in such a 
form as might render the study attractive to 
his countrymen, was the object of Lucretius, 
his work being simply an attempt to show that 
there is nothing iu the history or actual condi- 
tion of the world which does not admit of ex- 
planation without having recourse to the active 
interposition of divine beings. The poem of 
Lucretius has been admitted by all modern 
critics to be the greatest of didactic poems. 
The most abstruse speculations are clearly ex- 
plained in majestic verse, while the subject 
which in itself was dry and dull, is enlivened by 
digressions of matchless power and beauty. 
The best editions are by Wakefield, London, 
1796, 3 vols. 4to, reprinted at Glasgow, 1813, 
4 vols. 8vo ; and by Forbiger, Lips., 1828, 12mo. 
Lucrinus Lacus, was properly the inner part 



LUCTERIUS. 

of the Sinus Cumanus or Puteolanus, a bay on 
the coast of Campauia, between the promontory 
Misenum and Puteoli, ruuuing a considerable 
way inland. But at a very early period the 
Lucrine Lake was separated from the remain- 
der of the bav by a dike eight stadia in length, 
which was probably formed originally by. some 
volcanic change, and was subsequently render- 
ed more complete by the work of man. Being 
thus separated from the rest of the sea, it as- 
sumed the character of an inland lake, and is 
therefore called Lac us by the Romans. Its 
waters still remained salt, and were celebrated 
for their oyster beds. Behind the Lucrine Lake 
was another lake called Lacus A vermis. In 
the time of Augustus, Agrippa made a commu- 
nication between the Lake Avernus and the 
Lucrine Lake, and also between the Lucrine 
Lake and the Sinus Cumanus, thus forming out 
of the three the celebrated Julian Harbor. The 
Lucrine Lake was filled up by a volcanic erup- 
tion in 1538, when a conical mountain rose in 
its place, called Monte Nuovo. The Avernus 
has thus become again a separate lake, and no 
trace of the dike is to be seen in the Gulf of 
Pozzuoli. 

[Lucterius, the Cadurcan, described by Cae- 
sar as a man of the greatest daring, was sent 
into the country of the Ruteni by Vercingetorix 
on the breaking out of the great Gallic insur- 
rection in B.C. 52. He at first met with great 
success, but was compelled by Caesar's advance 
to retire ; he was afterward defeated by C. 
Caninius Rebilus.] 

Lucullus, Licinius, a celebrated plebeian 
family. 1. L., the grandfather of the conqueror 
of Mithradates, was consul B.C. 151, together 
with A. Postumius Albinus, and carried on war 
in Spain against the Vaccaei. — 2. L., son of the 
preceding, was praetor 103, and carried on war 
unsuccessfully against the slaves in Sicily. On 
his return to Rome he was accused, condemned, 
and driven into exile. — 3. L., son of the preced- 
ing, and celebrated as the conqueror of Mithra- 
dates. He was probably born about 110. He 
served with distinction in the Marsic or Social 
war, and accompanied Sulla as his quaestor into 
Greece and Asia, 88. % When Sulla returned to 
Italy after the conclusion of peace with Mithra- 
dates in 84, Lucullus was left behiud in Asia, 
where he remained till 80. In 79 he was curule 
aedile with his younger brother Marcus. So 
great was the favor at this time enjoyed by 
Lucullus with Sulla, that the dictator, on his 
death-bed, not only confided to him the charge 
of revising and correcting his Commentaries, 
but appointed him guardian of his son Faustus, 
to the exclusion of Pompey ; a circumstance 
which is said to have first given rise to the en- 
mity and jealousy that ever after subsisted be- 
tween the two. In 77 Lucullus was praetor, 
and at the expiration of this magistracy obtain- 
ed the government of Africa, where he distin- 
guished himself by the justice of his adminis- 
tration. In 74 he was consul with M. Aurelius 
Cotta. In this year the war with Mithradates 
was renewed, and Lucullus received the con- 
duct of it. He carried on this war for eight 
years with great success. The details are given 
under Mithradates, and it is only necessary to 
mention here the leading outlines. Lucullus 



LUCLLLUS. 

defeated Mithradates with great slaughter, and 
drove him out of his hereditary dominions, and 
Compelled him to take refuge in Armenia with 
his son-in-law Tigranes (71). He afterward 
invaded Armenia, defeated Tigranes, and took 
his capital Tigranocerta (69). in the next cam- 
paign (68) he again defeated the combined forces 
of Mithradates, and laid siege to Nisibis ; but 
in the spring of the following year (67) a mutiny 
among his troops compelled him to raise the 
siege of Nisibis and return to Pontus. Mith- 
radates had already taken advantage of his ab- 
sence to invade Pontus, and had defeated his 
lieutenants Fabius and Triarius in several suc- 
cessive actions. But Lucullus, on his arrival, 
was unable to effect any thing against Mithra- 
dates, in consequence of the mutinous disposi- 
tion of his troops. The adversaries of Lucul- 
lus availed themselves of so favorable an occa- 
sion, and a decree was passed to transfer to 
Acilius Glabrio, one of the consuls for the year, 
the province of Bithynia and the command 
against Mithradates. But Glabrio was wholly 
incompetent for the task assigned him ; on ar- 
riving in Bithynia, he made no attempt to as- 
sume the command, but remained quiet within 
the confines of the Roman province. Mithra- 
dates meanwhile ably availed himself of this 
position of affairs, and Lucullus had the morti- 
fication of seeing Pontus and Cappadocia occu- 
pied by the enemy before his eyes, without be- 
ing able to stir a step in their defence. But it 
was still more galling to his feelings when, in 
66, he was called upon to resign the command 
to his old rival Pompey, who had been appoint- 
ed by the Manilian law to supersede both him 
and Glabrio. Lucullus did not obtain bis tri- 
umph till 63, in consequence of the opposition 
of his enemies. He was much courted by the 
aristocratical party, who sought in Lucullus a 
rival and antagonist to Pompey ; but, instead 
of putting himself prominently forward as the 
leader of a party, he soon began to withdraw 
gradually from public affairs, and devote him- 
self more and more to a fife of indolence and 
luxury. He died in 57 or 56. Previous to his 
death he had fallen into a state of complete 
dotage, so that the management of his affairs 
was confined to his brother Marcus. The name 
of Lucullus is almost as celebrated for the lux- 
ury of his later years as for his victories over 
Mithradates. He amassed vast treasures in 
Asia; and these supplied him the means, after 
his return to Rome, of gratifying his natural 
taste for luxury, together with an ostentatious 
display of magnificence. His gardens in the 
immediate suburbs of the city were laid out in 
a style of extraordinary splendor ; but still more 
remarkable were his villas at Tusculum and in 
the neighborhood of Neapolis. In the construc- 
tion of the latter, with its parks, fish-ponds, <fcc, 
he had laid out vast sums in cutting through 
hills and rocks, and throwing out advanced 
works into the sea. So gigantic, indeed, was 
the scale of these labors for objects apparently 
so insignificant, that Pompey called him, in de- 
rision, the Roman Xerxes. His feasts at Rome 
itself were celebrated on a scale of inordinate 
magnificence : a single supper in the hall, call- 
ed that of Apollo, was said to have cost the sum 
of fifty thousand denarii. Even during his cam- 
451 



LUOUMO. 



LITN^E PROMONTORIUM. 



paigns the pleasures of the table had not been 
forgotten ; and it is well known that he was the 
first to introduce cherries into Italy, which he 
had brought with him from Cerasus in Pontus. 
Lucullus was an enlightened patron of litera- 
ture, and had from has earliest years devoted 
much attention to literary pursuits. He col- 
lected a valuable library, which was opened to 
the free use of the literary public ; and here he 
himself used to associate with the Greek phi- 
losophers and literati, and would enter warmly 
into their metaphysical and philosophical dis- 
cussions. Hence the picture drawn by Cicero 
at the commencement of the Academics w r as 
probably, to a certain extent, taken from the 
reality. His constant companion from the time 
of bis quaestor ship had been Autiochus of Asca- 
lon, from whom he imbibed the precepts of the 
Academic school of philosophy, to which he 
contiuued through life to be attached. His pat- 
ronage of the poet Archias is well known. He 
composed a history of the Marsic war in Greek. 
— 4. L. or M., son of the preceding and of Ser- 
vilia, half-sister of M. Cato, was a mere child 
at his father's death. His education was super- 
intended by Cato and Cicero. After Caesar's 
death he joined the republican party, and fell 
at the battle of Philippi, 42. — 5. M., brother of 
No. 3, was adopted by M. Terentius Vab.ro 
Lucullus. He fought under Sulla in Italy, 82 ; 
was curule aedile with his brother, 7 9 ; praetor, 
77 ; and consul, 73. After his consulship he 
obtained the province of Macedonia. He car- 
ried ou war against the Dardanians and Bessi, 
and penetrated as far as the Danube. On his 
return to Rome he obtained a triumph, 71. He 
was a strong supporter of the aristocratical 
party. He pronounced the funeral oration of 
his brother, but died before the commencement 
of the civil war, 49. 

Luuumo. Vid. Tarquinius. 

[Lucus occurs frequently in appellations of 
places, from connection with some grove in the 
vicinity. 1. L. Angiti^e, a grove in the terri- 
tory of the Marsi, near the Lacus Fucinus. Vid. 
Angitia. — 2. L. Augusti, the second capital of 
the Vocontii, in the interior of Gallia Narbonen- 
sis, on the military road leading from Mediola- 
num over the Cottian Alps to Vienna and Lug- 
duuum.] 

Ludias. Vid. Ltdias. 

Lugdunensis Gallia. Vid. Gallia. 

Lugdunum (Lugdunensis). 1. (Now Lyon), 
the chief town of Gallia Lugdunensis, situated 
at the foot of a hill at the confluence of the Arar 
(now Saone) and che Rhodanus (now Rhone), is 
said to have been founded by some fugitives 
from the town of Vienna, further down the 
Rhone. In the year after Caesar's death (B.C. 
43) Lugdunum was made a Roman colony by 
L. Muuatius Plancus, and became under Au- 
gustus the capital of the province and the resi- 
dence of the Roman governor. Being situated 
on two navigable rivers, and being connected 
with the other parts of Gaul by roads, which 
met at this town as their central point, it soon 
became a wealthy aud populous place, and is 
described by Strabo as the largest city in Gaul 
next to Narbo. It received many pi'ivileges 
from the Emperor Claudius ; but it was burned 
down in the reign of Nero. It was, however, 
452 



| soon rebuilt, and continued to be a place of 
great importance till A.D. 197, when it was 
plundered and the greater part of it destroyed 
by the soldiers of Septimius Severus, after his 
victory over his rival Albinus in the neighbor- 
hood of the town. From this blow it never re- 
covered, and was more and more thrown into 
the shade by Vieuna, Lugdunum possessed a 
vast aqueduct, of which the remains may still 
be traced for miles, a mint, and an imperial 
palace, in which Claudius was born, and in 
which many of the other Roman emperors re- 
sided. At the tongue of land between the Rhone 
and the Arar stood an altar dedicated to Au- 
gustus by the different states of Gaul ; and here 
Caligula instituted contests in rhetoric, prizes 
being given to the victors, but the most ridicu- 
lous punishments inflicted on the vanquished. 
(Comp. Juv., i., 44.) Lugdunum is memorable 
in the history of the Christian Church as the 
seat of the bishopric of Irenaeus, and on ac- 
count of the persecutions which the Christians 
endured here in the second and third centuries. 
— 2. L. Batavorum (now Leyden), the chief town 
of the Batavi. Vid. Batavi. — 3. Convenarum 
(now Saint Bertrand de Comminges), the chief 
town of the Convenae in Aquitania. Vid. Con- 
vene. 

[Luguvallum (now Carlisle), a place in the 
north of Britain, near the wall of Hadrian.] 
Luna. Vid. Selene. 

Luna (Lunensis : now Zuni), an Etruscan 
town, situated on the left bank of the Macra, 
about four miles from the coast, originally form- 
ed part of Liguria, but became the most north- 
erly city of Etruria when Augustus extended 
the boundaries of the latter country as far as 
the Macra. The town itself was never a place 
of importance, but it possessed a large and 
commodious harbor at the mouth of the river, 
called Lun^e Portus (now Gulf of Spezzia). In 
B.C. 177 Luna was made a Roman colony, 
and two thousand Roman citizens were settled 
there. In the civil war between Caesar and 
Pompey it had sunk into utter decay, but was 
colonized a few years afterward. Luna was 
celebrated for its white marble, which now takes 
its name from the neighboring town of Carrara. 
The quarries from which this marble was ob- 
tained appear not to have been worked before 
the time of Julius Caesar, but it was extensively 
employed in the public buildings erected in the 
reign of Augustus. The wine and the cheeses 
of Luna also enjoyed a high reputation : some 
of these cheeses are said to have weighed one 
thousand pounds. The ruins of Luna are few 
and unimportant, consisting of the vestiges of 
an amphitheatre, fragments of columns, <tc. 

Lun^e Montes (to r?/f lehyvnc opog), a range 
of mountains which some of the ancient geog- 
raphers believed to exist in the interior of Africa, 
covered with perpetual snow, and containing 
the sources of the Nile. Their actual exist- 
ence is neither proved nor disproved. 

[Lun^e Portus. Vid. Luna.J 

[LUN^E PROMONTORIUM (Z£?i7]Vne anpov). 1. A 

promontory on the coast of Etruria, somewhat 
to the southeast of Luna. — 2. A promontory on 
the west coast of Lusitania; according to Uk- 
ert, in the neighborhood of Cintra, but accord- 
j ing to others, Cap Eocco or Cadbueyro.] 



LUPERCA. 



LYCAON. 



Luperca or Lupa, an aucieut Italian divinity, 
the wife of Lupercus, who, in the shape of a 
she-wolf, performed the office of nurse to Rom- 
ulus and Remus. In some accounts she is iden- 
tified with Ac a Laurentia, the wife of Faus- 
tulus. . . 

Lupercus, an ancient Italian divinity, who 
was worshipped by the shepherds as the pro- 
tector of their flocks against wolves. On the 
northern side of the Palatine Hill there had 
been in ancieut times a cave, the sanctuary of 
Lupercus, surrounded by a grove, containing an 
altar of the god and his figure clad in a goat- 
skin, just as his priests, the Luperci. The Ro- 
mans sometimes identified Lupercus witft the 
Arcadian Pan. Respecting the festival cele- 
brated in honor of Lupercus and his priests, the 
Luperci, vid. Did. of Ant, art. Lupercalia and 
Luperci. 

[Lupercus, a friend of the younger Pliny, to 
whom the latter oecasionally sent his orations for 
revision.] 

Lupia. Vid. Luppia. 

Lupine or Luppi^e, a town in Calabria, between 
Rrundisium and Hydruntum. 

Lupodunum (now Ladenburg ?), a town in 
Germany, on the River Nicer (now Neckar). 

Luppia or Lupia (now Lippe), a navigable riv- 
er in the northwest of Germany, which falls into 
the Rhine at Wesel in Westphalia, and on which 
the Romans built a fortress of the same name. 
The River Eliso (now Alme) was a tributary of 
the Luppia, and at the confluence of these two 
rivers was the fortress of Aliso. 

Lupus, Rutilius. 1. P., consul with L. Ju- 
lius Caesar in B.C. 90, was defeated by the 
Marsi, and slain in battle. — 2. P., tribune of the 
plebs 56, and a warm partisan of the aristocra- 
cy. He was praetor in 49, and was stationed at 
Terracina with three cohorts. He afterward 
crossed over to Greece. — 3. Probably a son of 
the preceding, the author of a rhetorical treat- 
ise in two books, entitled De Figuris Sententia- 
rum et Elocutionis, which appears to have been 
originally an abridgment of a work by Gorgias 
of Athens, one of the preceptors of young M. 
Cicero, but which has evidently undergone many 
changes. Its chief value is derived from the nu- 
merous translations which it contains of striking 
passages from the works of Greek orators now 
lost. Edited by Ruhnken along with Aquila and 
Julius Ruffiniauus, Lugd. Bat,, 1768, reprinted by 
Frotscher, Lips., 1831. 

Lurco, M. Auninus, tribune of the plebs B.C. 
61, the author of a law on bribery (De Ambitu). 
He was the maternal grandfather of the Em- 
press Livia, wife of Augustus. He was the 
first person in Rome who fattened peacocks for 
sale, and he derived a large income from this 
source. 

Luscinus, Fai3uk h s. Vid. Fabricius. 

[Luscius Laviml.-, a Latin comic poet, the 
contemporary and rival of Terence, who men- 
tions him several times in the prologues to his 
plays.] 

[Luscus. Ai KiDius, chief magistrate at Fundi, 
ridiculed by Horace on account of the ridiculous 
and pompous airs he gave himself when Maecenas 
and his friends passed through Fundi in their cel- 
ebrated journey to Brundisium.] 

Lusitania, Lusitani. Vid. Hispania. 



[Lusius Quietus. Vid. Quietus.] 

Lusoxes, a tribe of the Celtiberi in Hispania 
Tarracoueusis, near the sources of the Tagus. 

Lutatius Catulus. Vid. Catulus. 

Lutatius Cerco. Vid. Cerco. 

Lutetia, or more commonly, Lutetia Pari- 
siorum (now Paris), the capital of the Parish' 
in Gallia Lugdunensis, was situated on an island 
in the Sequana (now Seine), and was connected 
with the banks of the river by two wooden 
bridges. Under the emperors it became a place 
of importance, and the chief naval station on the 
Sequana. Here Julian was proclaimed emperor, 
A.D. 360. 

[Luteva (now Lodeve), a city of the Volca& 
Arecomici in Gallia Narbonensis ; also called 
Forum Neronis.~\ 

[Lutia (Aovria), a considerable town of the 
Arevaci in Hispania Tarraconensis, the site of 
which is not determined.] 

[Ly^eus (Avalog), an epithet of Bacchus (Dio- 
nysus), who frees men from cares and anxiety.] 

Lycabettus (AvKaBr/TToc : now St. George); a 
mountain in Attica, belonging to the range of 
Pentelicus, close to the walls of Athens on the 
northeast of the city, and on the left of the road 
leading to Marathon. It is commonly, but er- 
roneously, supposed that the small hill north of 
the Pnyx is Lycabettus, and that St. George is 
the ancient Anchesmus. 

Lyoeus (Avtcaiog) or Lyceus, a lofty mount- 
ain in Arcadia, northwest of Megalopolis, from 
the summit of which a great part of the coun- 
try could be seen. It was one of the chief 
seats of the worship of Jupiter (Zeus), who was 
hence surnamed Lycceus. Here was a temple 
of this god ; and here, also, was celebrated the 
festival of the Lyccea (vid. Diet, of Ant., s. v.), 
Pan was likewise called Lycceus, because he was 
born and had a sanctuary on this mountain. 

Lycambes. Vid. Archilochus. 

Lycaon (Avkuuv). 1. King of Arcadia, son of 
Pelasgus by Melibcea or Cyllene. The traditions 
about Lycaon represent him in very different 
lights. Some describe him as the first civilizer 
of Arcadia, who built the town of Lycosura, 
and introduced the worship of Jupiter (Zeus) 
Lycaeus. But he is more usually represented 
as an impious king, with a large number of 
sons as impious as himself. Jupiter (Zeus) 
visited the earth in order to punish them. The 
god was recognized and worshipped by the 
Arcadian people. Lycaon resolved to murder 
him ; and, in order to try if he were really 
a god, served before him a dish of human flesh. 
Jupiter (Zeus) pushed away the table which 
bore the horrible food, and the place where this 
i happened was afterward called Trapezus. Ly- 
' caon and all his sons, with the exception of the 
I youngest (or eldest), Nyctimus, were killed by 
Jupiter (Zeus) with a flash of lightning, or, ac- 
cording to others, were changed into wolves. 
Callisto, the daughter of Lycaon, is said to have 
been changed into the constellation of the Bear, 
whence she is called by the poets Lycaonis Arc- 
tos, Lycaonia Arctos, or Lycaonia Virgo, or by 
her patronymic Lycaonis. — [2. Ruler in Ly- 
cia, father of the celebrated Pandarus. — 3. Son 
of Priam and Laothoe, was taken captive by 
Achilles, who sold him in Lemnos ; he escaped 
thence, returned to Troy, and was finally slain 
453 



LYCAOMA. 



LYCIA. 



by Achilles. — 4. An artisan of Cnosus meu- | 
tioned in the iEneid (ix., 304) as having made 
a beautiful sword for lulus, which he gave to 
Euryalus.] 

Lycaonia (Avuaovca : Avkuovec : part of Ka- 
raman), a district of Asia Minor, assigned, un- 
der the Persian Empire, to the satrapy of 
Cappadocia, but considered by the Greek and 
Roman geographers the southeastern part of 
Phrygia ; bounded on the north by Galatia, on 
the east by Cappadocia, on the south by Cilicia , 
Aspera, on the southwest by Isauria (which 
was sometimes reckoned as a part of it) and 
by Phrygia Paroreios, and on the northwest by j 
Great Phrygia. Its boundaries, however, va- j 
ried much at different times. It was a long, j 
narrow strip of country, its length extending in j 
the direction of northwest and southeast. Xen- 1 
ophon, who first mentions it, describes its width J 
as extending east of Icouium (its chief city) to | 
the borders of Cappadocia, a distance of thirty . 
parasangs, about one hundred and ten miles. | 
It forms a table-land between the Taurus and i 
the mountains of Phrygia, deficient in good wa- j 
ter, but abounding in flocks of sheep. The peo- 
ple were, so far as can be traced, an aboriginal I 
race, speaking a language which is mentioned 
in the Acts of the Apostles as a distinct dialect, j 
They were warlike, and especially skilled in ! 
archery. After the overthrow of Antiochus the j 
Great by the Romans, Lycaonia, which had be- j 
longed successively to Persia and to Syria, was j 
partly assigned to Eumenes and partly govern- j 
ed by native chieftains, the last of whom, An- 
tipater, a contemporary of Cicero, was conquer- 
ed by Amyntas, king of Galatia, at whose death, ; 
in B.C. 25, it passed, w'th Galatia, to the Ro- j 
mans, and was finally united to the province of 
Cappadocia. Lycaonia was the chief scene of j 
the labors of the Apostle Paul on his first mis- j 
sion to the Gentiles ( Acts, xiv). 

[Lycaretus (AvK(ip7]-oc), brother of Msean- 1 
drius, tyrant of Samos, the successor of Poly- j 
crates, was governor of Lemnos under the Per- 1 
sians, and died in this office.] 

Lyceum (to Avkelov), the name of one of the j 
three ancient gymnasia at Athens, called after j 
the temple of Apollo Lyceus in its neighbor- j 
hood. It was situated southeast of the city, out- J 
side the walls, and just above the River Ilissus. 
Here the polemarch administered justice. It is 
celebrated as the place where Aristotle and the 
Peripatetics taught. 

Ltceus (Avkeloc), a surname of Apollo, the 
meaning of which is not quite certain. Some 
derive it from Avkoc, a wolf, so that it would j 
mean " the wolf-slayer ;" others from ?,vktj, j 
light, according to which it would mean " the 
giver of light f and others, agaiu, from the • 
country of Lycia. 

Lychnites. Vid. Lychnidus. 

Lychnidus, more rarely Lychnidium or Lych- j 
Nis (Avxvi&oc, Avxvldiov, Avxvlc ■ Avxvidiog : j 
now Achrita, Ochrida), a town of IUyricum, was | 
the ancient capital of the Dessaretii, but was in 
the possession of the Romans as early as their ' 
war with King Gentius. It was situated in the j 
interior of the country, on a height on the north | 
bank of the Lake Lychmtis (Avxvlrtc or rj Avx- 
vidla l.t/ivT]) from which the River Drilo rises. 
The town was strongly fortified, and contained 
454 



many springs within its walls. In the Middle 
Ages it was the residence of the Bulgarian kings, 
and was called Achris or Achrita, whence its 
modern name. 

Lycia (AvKca : Avkioc, Lycius : now Meis), a 
small but most interesting district on the south 
side of Asia Minor, jutting out into the Medi- 
terranean in a form approaching to a rough 
semicircle, adjacent to parts of Caria and Pam- 
phylia on the west and east, and on the north 
to the dislrict of Cibyratis in Phrygia, to which, 
under the Byzantine emperors, it was consid- 
ered to belong. It was bounded on the north- 
west by the little river Glaucus and the gulf 
of the same name, on the northeast by the 
mountain called Climax (the northern part of 
the same range as that called Solyma), and on 
the north its natural boundary was the Taurus, 
but its limits in this direction were not strictly 
defined. The northern parts of Lycia and the 
district of Cibyratis form together a high table- 
land, which is supported on the north by the 
Taurus, on the east by the mountains called 
Solyma (now Taktalu-Bagh), which run from 
north to south along the eastern coast of Lycia, 
far out into the sea, forming the southeastern 
promontory of Lycia, called Sacrum Promonto- 
rium (now Cape Khelidonia) ; the summit of this 
range is seven thousand eight hundred feet high, 
and is covered with snow;* the southwestern 
and southern sides of this table-land are formed 
by the range called Massicytus (now Aktar 
Dagh,) which runs southeast from the eastern 
side of the upper course of the River Xanthus : 
its summits are about four thousand feet high, 
and its southern side descends toward the sea 
in a succession of terraces, terminated by bold 
cliffs. The mountain system of Lycia is com- 
pleted by the Cragus, which fills up the space 
between the western side of the Xanthus and 
the Gulf of Glaucus, and forms the southwest- 
ern promontory of Lycia : its summits are near- 
ly six thousand feet high. The chief rivers are 
the Xanthus (now Echen-Chai), which has its 
sources in the table-land south of the Taurus, 
and flows from north to south between the 
Cragus and Massicytus, and the Limyrus, which 
flows from north to south between the Massi- 
cytus and the Solyma Mountains. The valleys 
of these and the smaller rivers, and the terraces 
above the sea in the south of the country, were 
fertile in corn, wine, oil, and fruits, and the 
mountain slopes were clothed with splendid 
cedars, firs, and plane-trees : saffron also was 
one chief product of the land. The total length 
of the coast, from Telmissus on the west to 
Phaselis on the east, including all windings, is 
estimated by Strabo at one thousand seven hun- 
dred and twenty stadia (one hundred and sev- 
enty-two geographical miles), while a straight 
line drawn across the country, as the chord of 
this arc, is about eighty geographical miles in 
length. The general geographical structure of 
the peninsula of Lycia, as connected with the 
rest of Asia Minor, bears no little resemblance 
to that of the peninsula of Asia Minor itself, as 
connected with the rest of Asia. According to 
the tradition preserved by Herodotus, the most 



* According to many of the ancients the Taurus be- 
gan at this range. 



LYCIDAS. 



LYCOPHRON. 



ancient name of the country was Milya3 (// Mt- 
/U/uc), and the earliest inhabitants (probably of 
the Syro- Arabian race) were called Milyae, and 
afterward Solymi : subsequently the Termite, 
from Crete, settled iu the country; and lastly, 
the Athenian Lycus, the son of Pandion, fled 
from his brother JSgeus to Lyeia, and gave his 
name to the cuuutry. Homer, who gives Lycia 
a prominent place in the Iliad, represents its 
chieftains, Glaucus and Sarpedon, as descended 
from the royal family of Argos (Solids) ■ he 
does not mention the name of Milyas ; ana he 
speaks of the Solymi as a warlike race, inhab- 
iting the mountain, against whom the Greek 
hero Bellerophoutes is sent to fight, by his rela- 
tive the king of Lycia. Besides the legend of 
Bellerophon and the chimaera, Lycia is the 
scene of another popular Greek story, that of 
the Harpies and the daughters of Pandarus ; 
and memorials of both are preserved on the 
Lycian monuments now in the British Museum. 
On the whole, it is clear that Lycia was colo- 
nized by the Helleuic race (probably from Crete) 
at a very early period, and that its historical 
inhabitants were Greeks, though with a mixture 
of native blood. The earlier names were pre- 
served in the district in the north of the country 
called Milyas, and in the mountains called So- 
ly ni a. The Lyciaus always kept the reputation 
they have in Homer as brave warriors. They 
and the Cilicians were the only people west of 
the Halys whom Croesus did not conquer, and 
they were the last who resisted the Persians. 
Vid. Xanthus. Under the Persian empire they 
must have been a powerful maritime people, as 
they furnished fifty ships to the fleet of Xerxes. 
After the Macedonian conquest, Lycia formed 
part of the Syrian kingdom, from which it was 
taken by the Romans after their victory over 
Antiochus III. the Great, and given to the Rho- 
dians. It was soon restored to independence, 
and formed a flourishing federation of cities, 
each having its own republican form of govern- 
ment, and the whole presided over by a chief 
magistrate, called AvKiupxvc. There was a fed- 
eral council, composed of deputies from the 
twenty-three cities of the federation, in wdiich 
the six chief cities, Xanthus, Patara, Pinara, 
Olympus, Myra, and Tlos, had three votes each, 
certain lesser cities two each, and the rest one 
each ; this assembly determined matters relat- 
ing to the general government of the country, 
and elected the Lyciarches, as well as the judges 
and the inferior magistrates. Internal dissen- 
sions at length broke up this constitution, and 
the country was united by the emperor Clau- 
dius to the proviuce of Pamphylia, from which 
it was again separated by Theodosius, who 
made it a separate province, with Myra for its 
capital. Its cities were numerous and flourish- 
ing {vid. the articles), and its people celebrated 
for their probity. Their customs are said to 
have resembled those both of the Carians and of 
the Cretans. Respecting the works of art found 
by Mr. Fellows in Lycia. and now in the British 
Museum, vid. Xanthus. 

[Lycidas (Avki6tjs), an Athenian, one of the 
couueil of the five hundred, stoned to death by 
his fellow-citizens because he advised them to 
listen to the proposals of peace offered by Mar- 
nonius, B.C. 479.] 



Lixiis (AiiKiog). 1. The Lycian, a surname 
of Apollo, who was worshipped in several places 
of Lycia, especially at Patara, where he had an 
oracle. Hence the Lycice sortes are the re- 
sponses of the oracle at Patara (Virg., ^En., iv., 
346). — 2. Of Eleutherae in Bceotia, a distinguished 
statuary, the disciple or son of Myron, flourished 
about B.C. 428. 

Lycomedes {AvKOfirjdris). 1. A king of the 
Dolopians, in the island of Scyros, near Euboea. 
It was to his court that Achilles was sent dis- 
guised as a maiden by his mother Thetis, who 
was anxious to prevent his going to the Trojan 
war. Here Achilles became by Deidamia, the 
daughter of Lycomedes, the father of Pyrrhus 
or Neoptolemus. Lycomedes treacherously kill- 
ed Theseus by thrusting him down a rock. — 2. 
A celebrated Arcadian general, was a native of 
Mantinea, and one of the chief founders of Mega- 
lopolis, B.C. 3*70. He afterward showed great 
jealousy of Thebes, and formed a separate alli- 
ance between Athens and Arcadia in 366. He 
was murdered in the same year, on his return 
from Athens, by some Arcadian exiles. 

[Lycon (Avkuv). 1. Son of Hippocoon, slain 
by Hercules. — 2. A Trojan, slain before Troy 
by Peneleus.] 

Lycon {Avkuv). 1. An orator and demagogue 
at Athens, was one of the three accusers of 
Socrates, and prepared the case against him. 
When the Athenians repented of their condem- 
nation of Socrates, they put Meletus to death, 
and banished Anytus and Lycon. — 2. Of Troas, 
a distinguished Peripatetic philosopher, and the 
disciple of Straton, whom he succeeded as the 
head of the Peripatetic school, B.C. 272. He 
held that post for more than forty-four years, 
and died at the age of seventy-four. He enjoy- 
ed the patronage of Attalus and Eumenes. He 
was celebrated for his eloquence and for his 
skill in educating boys. He wrote on the 
boundaries of good and evil (De Finibus). — [3. 
A celebrated comic actor of Scarphea, who per- 
formed before Alexander the Great, and receiv- 
ed from him on one occasion a present of ten 
talents.] 

[Lycophontes (AvkoQovtiic;). I. Son of Au- 
tophonus, a Theban, who, in conjunction with 
Maeon, lay in ambush with fifty men against 
Tydeus, but was slain by him. — 2. A Trojan 
warrior, slain by Teucer.] 

Lycophron (Avtc6<ppG)v). 1. Younger son of 
Periander, tyrant of Corinth, by his wife Me- 
lissa. For details, vid. Periander. — 2. A citizen 
of Pherae, where he put down the government 
of the nobles and established a tyranny about 
B.C. 405. He afterward endeavored to make 
himself master of the whole of Thessaly, and 
in 404 he defeated the Larissaeans and others of 
the Thessalians who opposed him. He was 
probably the father of Jason of Pherae. — 3. A 
son, apparently, of Jason, and one of the brothers 
of Thebe, wife of Alexander, the tyrant of Phe- 
rae, in whose murder he took part, together with 
his sister and his two brothers, Tisiphonus and 
Pitholaus, 367. On Alexander's death the pow- 
er appears to have been wielded mainly by Ti- 
siphonus, though Lycophron had an important 
share iu the government. Lycophron succeeded 
to the supreme power on the death of Tisipho- 
nus, but in 352 he was obliged to surrender 
455 



LYCOPOLIS. 



LYCURGUS. 



Pherae to Philip, and withdraw from Thessaly. 
— 4. A grammarian and poet, was a native of 
Chalcis in Euboea, and lived at Alexandrea, un- 
der Ptolemy Philadelphia (B.C. 285-247), who 
intrusted to him the arrangement of the works 
of the comic poets in the Alexandrean library. 
In the execution of this commission Lycophron 
drew up an extensive work on comedy. Noth- 
ing more is known of his life. Ovid (Ibis, 533) 
states that he was killed by an arrow. As a 
poet, Lycophron obtained a place in the Tragic 
Pleiad. He also wrote a satyric drama. But 
the only one of his poems which has come down 
to us is the Cassandra or Alexandra. This is 
neither a tragedy nor an epic poem, but a long 
iambic monologue of one thousand four hundred 
and seventy-four verses, in which Cassandra is 
made to prophesy the fall of Troy, the advent- 
ures of the Grecian and Trojan heroes, with 
numerous other mythological and historical 
events, going back as early as the fables of Io 
and Europa, and ending with Alexander the 
Great. The work has no pretensions to poet- 
ical merit. It is simply a cumbrous store of 
traditional learning. Its obscurity is proverbial. 
Its author obtained the epithet of the Obscure 
(oKoreivoc). Its stores of learning and its ob- 
scurity alike excited the efforts of the ancient 
grammarians, several of whom wrote comment- 
aries on the poem. The only one of these 
works which survives is the Scholia of Isaac 
and John Tzetzes, which are far more valuable 
than the poem itself. The best editions are 
by Potter, Oxon., 1697, folio ; Reichard, Lips.. 
1788, 2 vols. 8vo ; and Bachmann, Lips., 1828, 
2 vols. 8vo. 

Lycopolis (rj Avkov ttoIlq : ruins at Siout), a 
city of Upper Egypt, on the western bank of the 
Nile, between Hermopolis and Ptolemais, said to 
have derived its name from the circumstance 
that an ^Ethiopian army was put to flight near 
it by a pack of wolves. 

Lycorea (AvKupsta : AvKupsvg, Avuupioc, Av- 
KupeiTng), an ancient town at the foot of Mount 
Lycorea (now Liakura), which was the south- 
ern of the two peaks of Mount Parnassus. Vid. 
Parnassus. Hence Apollo derived the surname 
of Lycoreus. The town Lycorea is said to have 
been the residence of Deucalion, and Delphi is 
also reported to have been colonized by it. 

Lycoris. Vid. Cytheris. 

Lycortas (AvKoprac), of Megalopolis, was the 
father of Polybius the historian, and the close 
friend of Philopoemen, whose policy he always 
supported. He is first mentioned, in B.C. 189, 
as one of the ambassadors sent to Rome ; and 
his name occurs for the last time in 168. 

Lycosura (AvKoaovpa : Avicooovpevc : now Pa- 
leokrambavos or Sidhirokastro, near Stala), a town 
in the south of Arcadia, and on the northwest- 
ern slope of Mount Lycaeus, and near the small 
river Plataniston, said by Pausanias to have 
beeu the most ancient town in Greece, and to 
have been founded by Lycaon, the son of Pelas- 
gus. 

Lyctus (AvKTog : Avktloc), sometimes called 
Lyttus (Avttoq), an important town in the east 
of Crete, southeast of Cnosus, was situated on 
a height of Mount Argseus, eighty stadia from 
the coast. Its harbor was called Chersonesus. 
It was one of the most ancient cities in the 
456 



island, and is mentioned in the Iliad. It was 
generally considered to be a Spartan colony^ 
and its inhabitants were celebrated for their 
bravery. At a later time it was conquered and 
destroyed by the Cnosians, but it was afterward 
rebuilt, and was extant in the seventh century of 
our era. 

Lycurgus ( AvKovpyoc). 1 . Son of Dry as, and 
king of the Edones in Thrace. He is famous 
for his persecution of Dionysus (Bacchus) and 
his worship in Thrace. Homer relates that, in 
order to escape from Lycurgus, Bacchus (Dio- 
nysus) leaped into the sea, where he was kindly 
received by Thetis; and that Jupiter (Zeus) 
thereupon blinded the impious king, who died 
soon afterward, hated by the immortal gods. 
This story has received many additions from 
later poets and mythographers. Some relate 
that Bacchus (Dionysus), on his expeditions, 
came to the kingdom of Lycurgus, but was 
expelled by the impious king. Thereupon the 
god drove Lycurgus mad, in which condition he 
killed his son Dryas, and also hewed off one of 
his legs, supposing that he was cutting down 
vines. The country now produced no fruit ; 
and the oracle declaring that fertility should 
not be restored unless Lycurgus were killed, 
the Edonians carried him to Mount Pangaaus, 
where he was torn to pieces by horses. Ac- 
cording to Sophocles (Antig., 955), Lycurgus 
was entombed in a rock. — 2. King in Arcadia, 
son of Aleus and Nesera, brother of Cepheus 
and Auge, husband of Cleophile, Eurynome, or 
Antinoe, and father of Ancseus, Epochus, Am- 
phidamas, and Iasus. Lycurgus killed Are- 
thous, who used to fight with a club. Lycurgus 
bequeathed this club to his slave Ereuthalion, 
his sons having died before him. — 3. Son of 
Pronax and brother of Amphithea, the wife of 
Adrastus. He took part in the war of the Seven 
against Thebes, and fought with Amphiaraus. 
He is mentioned among those whom iEsculapius 
called to life again after their death. — 4. King of 
Nemea, son of Pheres and Periclymene, brother 
of Admetus, husband of Eurydice or Amphithea, 
and father of Opheltes. 

Lycurgus. 1. The Spartan legislator. Of 
his personal history we have no certain infor- 
mation ; and there are such discrepancies re- 
specting him in the ancient writers, that many 
modern critics have denied his real existence 
altogether. The more generally received ac- 
count about him was as follows : Lycurgus was 
the son of Eunomus, king of Sparta, and brother 
of Polydectes. The latter succeeded his father 
as king of Sparta, and afterward died, leaving 
his queen with child. The ambitious woman 
proposed to Lycurgus to destroy her offspring 
if he would share the throne with her. He 
seemingly consented ; but when she had given 
birth to a son (Charilaus), he openly proclaimed 
him king, and as next of kin acted as his guard- 
ian. But, to avoid all suspicion of ambitious 
designs, with which the opposite party charged 
him, Lycurgus left Sparta, and set out on his 
celebrated travels, which have been magnified 
to a fabulous extent. He is said to have visit- 
ed Crete, and there to have studied the wise 
laws of Minos. Next he went to Ionia and 
| Egypt, and is reported to have penetrated into 
Libya, Iberia, and even India. In Ionia he is 



LYCURGUS. 

laid to have met either with Homer himself, 
or at least with the Homeric poems, which he 
introduced into the mother country. The re- 
turn of Lycurgus to Sparta was hailed by all 
parties. Sparta was in a state of anarchy and 
licentiousness, and he was considered as the 
man who aloue could cure the growing diseases 
of the state. He undertook the task ; yet, be- 
fore he set to work, he strengthened himself 
with the authority of the Delphic oracle, and 
with a strong party of influential men at Sparta. 
The reform seems not to have been carried al- 
together peaceably. The new division of the 
laud among the citizens must have violated 
many existing interests. But all opposition 
was overborne, and the whole constitution, mil- 
itary and civil, was remodelled. After Lycur- 
gus had obtained for his institutions an approv- 
ing oracle of the national god of Delphi, he ex- 
acted a promise from the people not to make 
any alteration iu his laws before his return. 
And now he left Sparta to finish his life in vol- 
untary exile, in order that his countrymen might 
be bound by their oath to preserve his consti- 
tution inviolate forever. Where and how he 
died nobody could tell. He vanished from the 
earth like a god, leaving no traces behind but 
his spirit ; aud he was honored as a god at 
Sparta with a temple and yearly sacrifices down 
to the latest times. The date of Lycurgus is 
variously given, but it is impossible to place it 
later than B.C. 825. Lycurgus was regarded 
through all subsequent ages as the legislator 
of Sparta, and therefore almost all the Spartan 
institutions were ascribed to him as their author. 
We therefore propose to give here a sketch of 
the Spartan constitution, referring for details to 
the Diet, of Antiq. ; though we must not imag- 
ine that this constitution was entirely the work 
of Lycurgus. The Spartan constitution was 
of a mixed nature : the monarchical principle 
was represented by the kings, the aristocracy 
by the senate, and the democratical element by 
the assembly of the people, and subsequently by 
their representatives, the ephors. The kings 
had originally to perform the common functions 
of the kings of the heroic age. They were 
high priests, judges, and leaders in war ; but in 
all of these departments they were in course 
of time superseded more or less. As judges 
they retained only a particular branch of juris- 
diction, that referring to the succession of prop- 
erty. As military commanders, they were re- 
stricted and watched by commissioners sent by 
the senate ; the functions of high priest were 
curtailed least, perhaps because least obnoxious. 
In compensation for the loss of power, the kings 
enjoyed great honors, both during their life and 
after their death. Still the principle of mon- 
archy was v. ry w» ak among the Spartans. The 
powers of the senate ivere very important : they 
had the right of originating and discussing all 
measures before they could be submitted to the 
decision of the popular assembly; they had, in 
conjunction with the ephors, to watch over the 
due observance of the laws and institutions ; 
and they were judges in all criminal cases, 
without being bouud by any written code. For 
all this they were not responsible, holding their 
office for life. But with all these powers, the 
elders formed no real aristocracy. They were 



LYCURGUS 

not chosen either for property qualification or 
for noble birth. The senate was open to the 
poorest citizen, who, during sixty years, had 
been obedient to the laws and zealous in the 
performance of his duties. The mass of the 
people, that is, the Spartans of pure Doric de- 
scent, formed the sovereign power of the state. 
The popular assembly consisted of every Spar- 
tan of thirty years of age and of unblemished 
character ; only those were excluded who had 
not the means of contributing their portion to 
the syssitia. They met at stated times, to de- 
cide on all important questions brought before 
them, after a previous discussion in the senate. 
They had no right of amendment, but only that 
of simple approval or rejection, which was given 
in the rudest form possible, by shouting. The 
popular assembly, however, had neither fre- 
quent nor very important occasions for directly 
exerting their sovereign power. Their chief 
activity consisted in delegating it; hence arose 
the importance of the ephors, who were the 
representatives of the popular element of the 
constitution. The ephors answer in every char- 
acteristic feature to the Roman tribunes of the 
people. Their origin was lost in obscurity and 
insignificance ; but at the end they engrossed 
the whole power of the state. With reference 
to their subjects, the few Spartans formed a 
most decided aristocracy. On the conquest of 
Peloponnesus by the Dorians, part of the an- 
cient inhabitants of the country, under name 
of the Periceci, were allowed, indeed, to retain 
their personal liberty, but lost all civil rights, 
and were obliged to pay to the state a rent for 
the land that was left them. But a great part 
of the old inhabitants were reduced to a state 
of perfect slavery, different from that of the 
slaves of Athens and Rome, and more similar 
to the villanage of the feudal ages. These were 
called Helots. They were allotted with patches 
of land to individual members of the ruling 
class. They tilled the land, and paid a fixed 
rent to their masters, not, as the periceci, to the 
state. The number of these miserable creat- 
ures was large. They were treated with the 
utmost cruelty by the Spartans, and were fre- 
quently put to death by their oppressors. The 
Spartans formed, as it were, an army of invad- 
ers in an enemy's country, their city was a 
camp, and every man a soldier. At Sparta, the 
citizen only existed for the state ; he had no 
interest but the state's, and no property but 
what belonged to the state. It was a funda- 
mental principle of the constitution, that all citi- 
zens were entitled to the enjoyment of an equal 
portion of the common property. This was 
done in order to secure to the commonwealth 
a large number of citizens and soldiers, free 
from labor for their sustenance, and able to de- 
vote their whole time to warlike exercises, in 
order thus to keep up the ascendency of Sparta 
over her periceci and helots. The Spartans were 
to be warriors, and nothing but warriors. There- 
fore, not only all mechanical labor was thought 
to degrade them ; not only was husbandry de- 
spised and neglected, and commerce prevented, 
or at least impeded, by prohibitive laws and by 
the use of iron money, but also the nobler arts 
and sciences were so effectually stifled, that 
Sparta is a blank in the history of the arts and 
457 



LYCUS. 



LYDIA. 



literature of Greece. The state took care of a 
Spartan from bis cradle to his grave, and super- 
intended his education in the minutest poiuts. 
This was not confined to his youth, but extend- 
ed throughout his whole life. The syssitia, or, 
as they were called at Sparta, phiditia, the com- 
mon meals, may be regarded as an educational 
institution ; for at these meals subjects of geu- 
eral interest were discussed and political ques- 
tions debated. The youths and boys used to 
eat separately from the men, in their own divi- 
sions. — 2. A Lacedaemonian, who, though not 
of the royal blood, was chosen king in B.C. 
220, together with Agesipolis III, after the 
death of Cleomenes. It was not long before he 
deposed his colleague and made himself sole 
sovereign, though under the control of the 
ephori. He carried on war against Philip V. 
of Macedon and the Achasans. He died about 
210, and Machanidas then made himself tyrant. 
— 3. An Attic orator, son of Lycophron, who 
belonged to the noble family of the Eteobutadae, 
was born at Athens about B.C. 396. He was 
a disciple of Plato and Isocrates. In public life 
he was a warm supporter of the policy of De- 
mosthenes, and was universally admitted to be 
one of the most virtuous citizens and upright 
statesmen of his age. He was thrice appointed 
Tamias or manager of the public revenue, and 
held this office each time for five years, begin- 
ning with 337. He discharged the duties of 
this office with such ability and integrity, that 
he raised the public revenue to the sum of twelve 
hundred talents. One of his laws enacted that 
bronze statues should be erected to iEschylus, 
Sophocles, and Euripides, and that copies of 
their tragedies should be preserved in the pub- 
lic archives. He often appeared as a success- 
ful accuser in the Athenian courts, but he him- 
self was as often accused by others, though he 
always succeeded in silencing his enemies. He 
died while holding the office of president of the 
theatre of Dionysus in 323. A fragment of an 
inscription, containing an account of his admin- 
istration of the finances, is still extant. There 
were fifteen orations of Lycurgus extant in an- 
tiquity ; but only one has come down to us en- 
tire, the oration against Leocrates, which was 
delivered in 330. The style is noble and grand, 
but neither elegant nor pleasing. The oration 
is printed in the various collections of the Attic 
orators. [Separately by A. G-. Becker, Magde- 
burg, 1821 ; and by Maetzner, Berlin, 1836. The 
fragments of his other orations are collected 
by Kiessling, Lycurgi Deperd. Oratt Fragmenta, 
Halle, 1847.] Vid, Demosthenes. 

Lycus (Avkoc). I. Son of Neptune (Posei- 
don) and Celaeno, who was transferred by his 
father to the islands of the blessed. By Alcy- 
one, the sister of Celaeno, Neptune (Poseidon) 
begot Hyrieus, the father of the following. — 2. 
Son of Hyrieus and Clonia. and brother of Nyc- 
teus. Polydorus, king of Thebes, married the 
daughter of Nycteus, by whom he had a son, 
Labdacus ; and on his "death he left the gov- 
ernment of Thebes and the guardianship of 
Labdacus to his father-in-law. Nycteus after- 
ward fell in battle against Epopeus, king of Si- 
cyon, who had carried away his beautiful daugh- 
ter Antiope. Lycus succeeded his brother in 
the government of Thebes and in the guardian- 
458 



ship of Labdacus. He surrendered the king- 
dom to Labdacus when the latter had grown up. 
On the death of Labdacus, soon afterward, Ly- 
cus again succeeded to the government of 
Thebes, and undertook the guardianship of 
Laius, the son of Labdacus. Lycus marched 
against Epopeus, whom he put to death (ac- 
cording to other accounts, Epopeus fell in the 
war with Nycteus), and he carried away Antio- 
pe to Thebes. She was treated with the great- 
est cruelty by Dirce, the wife of Lycus ; in re- 
venge for which, her sons by Jupiter (Zeus), 
Amphion and Zethus, afterward put to death 
both Lycus and Dirce. Vid. Amphion. — 3. Son 
of No. 2. or, according to others, son of Nep- 
tune (Poseidon), was also king of Thebes. In 
the absence of Hercules, Lycus attempted to 
kill his wife Megara and her children, but was 
afterward put to death by Hercules. — 4 Son of 
Pandion, and brother of ^Egeus, Nisus, and 
Pallas. He was expelled by ^Egeus, and took 
refuge in the country of the Termili, which was 
called Lycia after him. He was honored at 
Athens as a hero, and the Lyceum derived its 
name from him. He is said to have introduced 
the Eleusinian mysteries into Andania in Mes- 
senia. He is sometimes, also, described as an 
ancient prophet, and the family of the Lycome- 
dae, at Athens, traced their name and origin 
from him. — 5. Son of Dascylus, and king of the 
Mariandynians, who received Hercules and the 
Argonauts with hospitality. — [6. A companion 
of ^Eneas in his voyage from Troy to Italy : he 
was slain by Turnus in Italy.] — 7. Of Rhegi- 
um, the father, real or adoptive, of the poet Ly- 
cophron, was an historical writer in the time of 
Demetrius Phalereus. 

Lycus (Avkoc;), the name of several rivers, 
which are said to be so called from the impetu- 
osity of their current. 1. (Now Kilij), a little 
river of Bithynia, falling into the sea south of 
Heraclea Pontica. — 2. (Now Gerineneh-Chai\ 
a considerable river of Pontus, rising in the 
mountains on the north of Armenia Minor, and 
flowing west into the Iris at Eupatoria. — 3. 
(Now Choruk-Su), a considerable river of Phryg- 
ia, flowing from east to west past Colossae and 
Laodicea into the Maeander. — 4 (Now Nahr-el- 
Kelb), a river of Phoenicia, faDing into the sea 
north of Berytus. — 5. (Now Great Zab or Ulu- 
Su), a river of Assyria, rising in the mountains 
on the south of Armenia, and flowing south- 
west into the Tigris, just below Larissa (now 
Nvtiroud). It is undoubtedly the same as the 
Zabatus of Xenophon. 

Lydda (rd Avdda, j] Avddi] : now Lud), a town 
of Palestine, southeast of Joppa and northwest 
of Jerusalem, at the junction of several roads 
which lead from the sea-coast, was destroyed 
by the Romans in the Jewish war, but soon aft- 
er rebuilt, and called Diospolis. 

[Lyde (Av6rj), the wife or mistress of the poet 
Antimachus, dearly beloved by him : he follow- 
ed her to Lydia, but she appears to have died 
early, and the poet sought to allay his grief by 
the composition of an elegy, which he named, 
from her, Lyde.] 

Lydia (Avdta : Avdog, Lydus), a district of 
Asia Minor, in the middle of the western side of 
the peninsula, between Mysia on the north and 
Caria on the south, and between Phrygia on 



LYDIA. 

the east and the vEgean Sea on the west. Its 
boundaries varied so much at different times 
that they can Dot be described with any ap- 
proach to exactness till we come to the time 
of the Roman rule over Western Asia. At that 
time the northern boundary, toward Mysia, was 
the range of mountains which form the northern 
margin of the valley of the Hermus, called Sar- 
dene, a southwestern branch of the Phrygian 
Olympus ; the eastern boundary, toward Phryg- 
ia, was an imaginary line ; and the southern 
boundary, toward Caria, was the River Mean- 
der, or, according to some authorities, the range 
of mountains which, under the name of Messo- 
i gis (now Kastane Dac/h), forms the northern 
margin of the valley of the Maeander, and is a 
; northwestern prolongation of the Taurus. From 
' the eastern part of this range, in the southeast- 
' ern corner of Lydia, another branches off to the 
northwest, and runs to the west far out into the 
^Egean Sea, where it forms the peninsula oppo- 
site to the island of Chios. This chain, which 
is called Tmolus (now Kisilja Musa Dagh), di- 
vides Lydia into two unequal valleys, of which 
the southern and smaller is watered by the Riv- 
er Catster, and the northern forms the great 
plain of the Hermus : these valleys are very 
beautiful and fertile, and that of the Hermus, 
especially, is one of the most delicious regions 
of the earth. The eastern part of Lydia, and 
the adjacent portion of Phrygia, about the up- 
per course of the Hermus and its tributaries, is 
an elevated plain, showing traces of volcanic 
action, and hence called Catacecaumene (Kara- 
KE/cavfievt]). In the boundaries of Lydia, as just 
described, the strip of coast belonging to Ionia 
is included, but the name is sometimes used in 
a narrower signification, so as to exclude Ionia. 
Iu early times the country had another name, 
Maeonia (Mriovt?], Maiovla), by which alone it is 
known to Homer ; and this name was after- 
ward applied specifically to the eastern and 
southern part of Lydia, and then, in contradis- 
tinction to it, the name Lydia was used for the 
northwestern part. Iu the mythical legends, 
the common name of the people and country, 
Lydi and Lydia, is derived from Lydus, the son 
of Atys, the first king. The Lydians appear to 
have been a race closely connected with the 
Cariaus and the Mysians, with whom they ob- 
served a common worship in the temple of Ju- 
piter (Zeus) Carius at Mylasa : they also prac- 
ticed the w T orship of Cybele and other Phrygian 
customs. Amid the uncertainties of the early 
legends, it is clear that Lydia was a very early 
seat of Asiatic civilization" and that it exerted a 
very important iunuence on the Greeks. The 
Lydian monarchy, which was founded at Sar- 
dis before the time of authentic history, grew 
up into an empire, under which the mauy dif- 
ferent tribes of Asia Minor west of the River 
Halys were for the first time united. Tradition 
mentioned three dynasties of kiugs : the Atya- 
dae, which ended (according to the backward 
computations of chronologers) about B.C. 1221 ; 
the Heraclldae, which reigned five hundred and 
five years, down to 716; and the Mermnadae, 
one hundred and sixty years, down to 556. 
Only the last dynasty cau be safely regarded 
as historical, and the fabulous element has a 
large place in the details of their history : their 



LYDUS. 

names and computed dates were : (1.) Gyges, 
B.C. 716-678 ; (2.) Ardys, 678-629 ; (3.) Sady- 
attes, 629-617 ; (4.) Alyattes, 617-560 ; (5.) 
Crcesus, 560 (or earlier )-546 ; under whose 
names an account is giveu of the rise of the 
Lydiau empire in Asia Minor, and of its over- 
throw by the Persians under Cyrus. Under 
these kings, the Lydians appear to have been a 
highly civilized, industrious, and wealthy peo- 
ple, practicing agriculture, commerce, and man- 
ufactures, and acquainted with various arts ; 
and exercising, through their intercourse with 
the Greeks of Ionia, an important influence on 
the progress of Greek civilization. Among the 
inventions or improvements which the Greeks 
are said to have derived from them were the 
weaving and dyeing of fine fabrics ; various 
processes of metallurgy; the use of gold and 
silver money, which the Lydians are said first 
to have coined, the former from the gold found 
on Tmolus and from the golden sands of the 
Pactolus ; and various metrical and musical 
improvements, especially the scale or mode of 
music called the Lydian, and the form of the 
lyre called the magadis. ( Vid. Diet, of Antig., 
art. Musica.) The Lydians had, also, public 
games similar to those of the Greeks. Their 
high civilization, however, was combined with 
a lax morality, and, after the Persian conquest, 
when they were forbidden by Cyrus to carry 
arms, they sank gradually into a by-word for ef- 
feminate luxuriousness, and their very name 
and language had almost entirely disappeared 
by the commencement of our era. Under the 
Persians, Lydia and Mysia formed the second 
satrapy. After the Macedonian conquest, Lydia 
belonged first to the kings of Syria, and next 
(after the defeat of Antiochus the Great by the 
Romans) to those of Pergamus, and so passed, 
by the bequest of Attalus III, to the Romans, 
under whom it formed part of the province of 
Asia. 

Lydiades {Avdtdd^g), a citizen of Megalopo- 
lis, who, though of an obscure family, raised 
himself to the sovereignty of his native city 
about B.C. 244. In 234 he voluntarily abdica- 
ted the sovereignty, and permitted Megalopolis 
to join the Achaean league as a free state. 
He was elected several times general of the 
Achaean league, and became a formidable rival 
to Aratus. He fell in battle against Cleome- 
nes, 226. 

Lydias or Ludias {Avdiag, Ion. Av5ltj^, Aov- 
d'tas : now Karasmak or Mavronero), a river ia 
Macedonia, rises in Eordaea, passes Edessa, 
and, after flowing through the lake on which 
Pella is situated, falls into the Axius a short 
distance from the Thermaic Gulf. In the up- 
per part of its course it is called the Eordaean 
River ('Eopdainog Tvorap.6^) by Arrian. Herodo- 
tus (vii., 127), by mistake, makes the Lydias 
unite with the Haliacmon, the latter of which 
is west of the former. 

Lydus (Avdos), son of Atys and Callithea, and 
brother of Tyrrhenus, said to have been the 
mythical ancestor of the Lydians. 

Lydus, Joannes Laurentius, was born at 
Philadelphia, in Lydia (whence he is called Ly- 
dus or the Lydian), in A.D. 490. He held va- 
j rious public offices, and lived to an advanced 
; age. He wrote, 1. Uepl ii-qvuv cvyypa^ y Be 
459 



LYGDAMIS. 



LYSANDER. 



Memibus Liber, of which there are two epito- I of jEgyptus, whose hfe was saved by his wife 
mae, or summaries, and a fragment extant. 2. HypermneBtra, when all his other brothers were 
Hepldpxuv, k. t. a., Be Magistratibus Reipublicce ! murdered by the daughters of Danaus on their 
Romance. 3. ILepc dioorj/xeiuv, Be Ostentis. The wedding night Yid. JEgyptus. Danaus there- 
work Be Mensibus is an historical commentary upon kept Hypermnestra in strict confinement, 
on the Roman calendar, with an account of the but was afterward prevailed upon to give her 
various festivals, derived from a great number to Lynceus, who succeeded him on the throne 
of authorities, most of which have perished, of Argos. According to a different legend, Lyn- 
Of the two summaries of this curious work, the ceus slew Danaus and all the sisters of Hyperm- 
larger one is by an unknown hand, the shorter nestra in revenge for his brothers. Lynceus 
one by Maxim us Planudes. The work Be Ma- was succeeded as king of Argos by his son 
gistratibm was thought to have perished, but Abas. — 2. Son of Aphareus and Arene, and 
was discovered by Villoison in the suburbs of brother of Idas, was one of the Argonauts, and 
Constantinople, in 1785. The best edition of . famous for his keen sight. He is also men- 
these works is by Bekker. Bonn, 1837. tioned among the Calydonian hunters, and was 

Lygdamis (Avyda/iLc). 1. Of Xaxos. a distin- slain by Pollux. For details respecting his 
guished leader of the popular party of the island death, vid. p. 266, b. — [3. A Trojan, companion 
in the struggle with the oligarchy. He con- of ^Eneas, slain by Turnus in Italy.]— 4. Of Sa- 
quered the latter, and obtained thereby the mos, the disciple of Theophrastus, and the broth- 
chief power in the state. He assisted Pisistra- : er of the historian Duris, was a contemporary 
tus in his third return to Athens ; but, during ; of Menander, and his rival in comic poetry. He 
his absence, his enemies seem to have got the l survived Menander, upon whom he wrote a 
upper hand again ; for Pisistratus afterward book. He seems to have been more distin- 
subdued the island, and made Lygdamis tyrant ! guished as a grammarian and historian than as 
of it, about B.C. 510. In 532 he assisted Poly- \ a comic poet 

crates in obtaining the tyranny of Samos. — 2. ; Lyxccs, king of Seythia, or, according to oth- 
Father of Artemisia, queen of Haliearnassus, 1 ers, of Sicily, endeavored to murder Triptole- 
the contemporary of Xerxes. — 3. Tyrant of Hal- mus, who came to him with the gifts of Ceres 
icarnassus. the son of Pisindelis, and the grand- I (Demeter), but he was metamorphosed by the 
son of Artemisia. The historian Herodotus is i goddess into a lynx. 

said to have taken an active part in delivering I [Lyxcus (Avynos), capital of Lyncestis. Yid. 
his native city from the tyranny of this Lygda- ; Lyncestis.] 

mis. Lyrcea or Lyrceum (Avp/ceta, Avpnsiov). a 

Lygii or Ligii, an important people in Ger- small town in Argolis, situated on a mountain 
many, between the Yiadus (now Oder) and the ; of the same name. 

Vistula, in the modern Silesia and Posen, were I Lyrnessus (Avpv?]acoc), a town in the inte- 
bounded by the Burgundiones on the north, the rior of Mysia, in Asia Minor, frequently men- 
Goths on the east, the Bastarnas and Osi on the tioned by Homer : destroyed before the time of 
west, and the Marsingi, Silingae, and Semnones Strabo. 

on the south. They were divided into several Lysander (Aioavdpo^), a Spartan, was of 
tribes, the chief of which were the Manimi, servile origin, or, at least, the offspring of a 
Duni, Elysii, Burii. Arii, Xaharvali, and Helve- ; marriage between a freeman and a woman of 
conae. They first appear in history as mem- inferior condition. He obtained the citizenship, 
bers of the great Marcomannic league formed and became one of the most distinguished of 
by Maroboduus in the reigns of Augustus and the Spartan generals and diplomatists. In B.C. 
Tiberius. In the third century some of the i 407, he was sent out to succeed Cratesippidas 
Lygii migrated with the Burgundians westward, in the command of the fleet off the coasts of 
and settled in the country bordering on the Asia Minor. He fixed his head-quarters at 
Rhine. Ephesus, and soon obtained great influence, not 

[Lygints (Avyivoc), a river of Thrace in the only with the Greek cities, but also with Cyrus, 
territory of the Triballi, emptying into the Pon- who supplied him with large sums of money to 
tus Euxiuus.] | pay his sailors. Xext year, 406, he was sue- 

[Lymax (AvuaZ), a small river in the south- I ceeded by Calhcratidas. In one year the rep- 
west of Arcadia, which empties into the Xeda utation and influence of Lysander had become 
near Phigalea.] so great that Cyrus and the Spartan allies in 

Lyncestis (Ary/c^or/c). a distinct in the south- Asia requested the Lacedaemonians to appoint 
west of Macedonia, north of the River Erigon, Lysander again to the command of the fleet 
and upon the frontiers of niyria. Its inhabit- The Lacedaemonian law, however, did not al- 
ants, the Lyncest-e, were Llyrians, and were low the office of admiral to be held twice by the 
originally an independent people, who were same person ; and, accordingly, Aracus was sent 
governed by their own princes, said to be de- out in 405 as the nominal commander-in-chief, 
scended from the family of the Bacchiadae. while Lysander, virtually invested with the su 
The Lyncestae appear to have become subject preme direction of affairs, had the title of vice 
to Macedonia by a marriage between the roy- admiral (e-igto'/.evc;). In this year he brought 
al families of the two countries. The ancient the Ptiloponnesian war to a conclusion by the 
capital of the country was Lyxcus Avynor), defeat and capture of the Athenian fleet off 
though Heraclea, at a later time, became the JEgospotami. Only eight Athenian ships made 
chief town in the district. Near Lyneus was a their escape under the command of Conon. He 
river, the waters of which are said to have been afterward sailed to Athens, and in the spring of 
as intoxicating as wine. (Ov., Met., xv., 329.) 404 the city capitulated ; the long walls and 

Ltnceus ( AvyKevc). 1. One of the fiftv sons the fortifications of the Piraeus were destroyed, 
460 



LYSANDRA. 



LYSICLES. 



and an oligarchical form of government estab- 
lished, known by the name of the Thirty Ty- 
rants. Lysaiuler was now by far the most pow- 
erful man in Greece, aud he displayed more 
than the usual pride aud haughtiness which dis- 
tinguished the Spartan commanders in foreign 
countries. He Ml passionately fond of praise, 
and took care that his exploits should be cele- 
brated by the most illustrious poets of his time. 
He always kept the poet Chcerilus in his ret- 
inue, aud his praises were also sung by Antilo- 
chus, Antimachus of Colophon, and Niceratus 
of Heraclea. He was the rirst of the Greeks to 
whom Greek cities erected altars as to a god, 
offered sacrifices, and celebrated festivals. His 
power and ambition caused the Spartan gov- 
ernment uneasiness, and, accordingly, the eph- 
ors recalled him from Asia Minor, to which he 
had again repaired, and for some years kept him 
without any public employment. On the death 
of Agis II. in 897, he secured the succession 
for Agesilaus, the brother of Agis, in opposition 
to Leotychides. the reputed son of the latter. 
He did not receive from Agesilaus the gratitude 
he had expected. He was one of the members 
of the council, thirty in number, which was ap- 
pointed to accompany the new king in his ex- 
pedition into Asia in 396. Agesilaus purposely 
thwarted all his designs, and refused all the 
favors which he asked. On his return to Spar- 
ta, Lysander resolved to bring about the change 
he had long meditated in the Spartan constitu- 
tion, by abolishing hereditary royalty, and mak- 
ing the throne elective. He is said to have at- 
tempted to obtain the sanction of the gods in 
favor of his scheme, aud to have tried in suc- 
cession the oracles of Delphi, Dodona, and Ju- 
piter (Zeus) Amnion, but without success. He 
does not seem to have ventured upon any overt 
act, aud his enterprise was cut short by his 
death in the following year. On the breaking 
out of the Boeotian war in 395, Lysander was 
placed at the head of one army and the king 
fausanias at the head of another. Lysander 
marched against Haliartus, and perished in battle 
under the walls, 395. 

Lysandra (Avodvdpa), daughter of Ptolemy 
Soter and Eurydice, the daughter of Antipater. 
She was married first to Alexander, the son of 
Cassauder, king of Macedonia, and after his 
death to Agathocles, the son of Lysimachus. 
After the murder of her second husband, B.C. 
284 [vid. Agathocles, No. 3), she fled to Asia, 
and besought assistance from Seleucus. The 
latter, in consequeuce, marched against Lysim- 
achus, who was defeated and slain in battle, 281. 

Lysanias {Avoavias). 1. Tetrarch of Abi- 
lene, was put to death by Antony to gratify 
Cleopatra, B.C. S6. — 2. A descendant of the last, 
who was tetrarch of Abilene at the time when 
our Saviour entered upon his ministry (Luke, 
hi., 1). 

[Lysanias (Avcavtag), a Greek grammarian 
of Cyrene, author of a work irepl 'lafi6o7roiQv. 
Suidas speaks of him as the instructor of Era- 
tosthenes.] 

[Lysiaoes, an Epicurean philosopher of Ath- 
ens, son of the celebrated philosopher Phsedrus, 
contemporary with Cicero, who attacks his ap- 
pointment by Autony as a judge.] 

Lysias (Avoids). 1. An Attic orator, was born 



at Athens B.C. 458. He was the son of Cepha- 
lus, who was a native of Syracuse, and had tak- 
en up his abode at Athens on the invitation of 
Pericles. At the age of fifteen, Lysias and his 
brothers joiued the Athenians who went as col- 
onists to Thurii in Italy, 443. He there com- 
pleted his education under the instruction of two 
Syracusans, Tisias aud Nicias. He afterward 
enjoyed great esteem among the Thurians, and 
seems to have taken part in the administration 
of the city. After the defeat of the Athenians 
in Sicily, he was expelled by the Spartan par- 
ty from Thurii as a partisan of the Athenians. 
He now returned to Athens, 411. During the 
rule of the Thirty Tyrants (404), he was looked 
upon as an enemy of the government, his large 
property was confiscated, and he was thrown 
into prison ; but he escaped, and took refuge at 
Megara. He joined Thrasybulus and the ex- 
iles, and, in order to render them effectual as- 
sistance, he sacrificed all that remained of bis 
fortune. He gave the patriots two thousand 
drachmas and two hundred shields, and engaged 
a band of three hundred mercenaries. Thrasyb- 
ulus procured him the Athenian franchise, which 
he had not possessed hitherto, since he was the 
son of a foreiguer; but he was afterward de- 
prived of this right because it had been confer- 
red without a probuleuma. Henceforth he lived 
at Athens as an isoteles, occupying himself, as 
it appears, solely with writing judicial speeches 
for others, and died in 378, at the age of eighty. 
Lysias wrote a great number of orations, and 
among those which were current under his 
name, the ancient critics reckoned two hund- 
red and thirty as genuine. Of these, thirty-five 
only are extant, and even some of these are in- 
complete, and others are probably spurious. 
Most of these orations were composed after his 
return from Thurii to Athens. The only one 
which he delivered himself is that against Era- 
tosthenes, 403. The language of Lysias is per- 
fectly pure, and may be regarded as one of the 
best specimens of the Attic idiom. All the an- 
cient writers agreed that his orations were dis- 
tinguished by grace and elegance. His style is 
always clear and lucid, and his delineations of 
character striking and true to life. The ora- 
tions of Lysias are contained in the collections 
of the Attic orators. Vid. Demosthenes. The 
best separate editions are by Foertsch, Lips., 
1829 ; and by Franz, Monac., 1831.— [2. One of 
the Athenian generals at the battle of the Ar- 
ginusse islands : on his return to Athens he was 
accused of having neglected to carry off the 
bodies of the dead, was condemned and exe- 
cuted. — 3. A general and minister of Antiochus 
Epiphanes, who was charged with the prosecu- 
tion of the war against the Jews, but his armies 
were totally defeated by Judas Maccaba3us ; he 
subsequently compelled Maccabeeus to retire to 
Jerusalem, and there shut him up, till the ap- 
proach of his rival, Philip, made him grant the 
Jews favorable terms. Lysias subsequently fell 
into the hands of the young prince Demetrius, 
whom he had opposed, and was by him put to 
death.] 

[Lysicles (AvglkItis). 1. Sent out by the 
Athenians with four colleagues, in command of 
twelve ships, for raising money among the al- 
lies, B.C. 428. He was attacked, in an expedi- 
461 



LYSIMACHIA. 



LYSIPPUS. 



tion up the plain of the Mseander, by some Ca- 
rians and Samians of Ansea, and fell, with many 
of his men. — 2. One of the commanders of the 
Athenian army at the battle of Chaaronea, B.C. 
S3S, was subsequently condemned to death on 
the accusation of the orator Lycurgus.] 

Lysimachia or -ea ( Avaifiaxia, Avaifiuxeia : 
Avoi/uaxevc). 1. (Now Eksemil,) an important 
town on the northeast of the Gulf of Melas, and 
on the isthmus connecting the Thracian Cher- 
sonesus with the main land, was founded B.C. 
309 by Lysimachus, who removed to his new 
city the greater part of the inhabitants of the 
neighboring town of Cardia. It was subse- 
quently destroyed by the Thracians, but was 
restored by Antioehus the Great. Under the 
Romans it greatly declined ; but Justinian built 
a strong fortress on the spot, which he called 
Hexamilium ( ! E^afj,L?uov), doubtless from the 
width of the isthmus, under which name it is men- 
tioned in the Middle Ages. — 2. A town in the 
southwest of iEtolia, near Pleuron, situated on a 
lake of the same name, which was more ancient- 
ly called Hydra. 

Lysimachus (AvGijuaxog), king of Thrace, was 
a Macedonian by birth, and one of Alexander's 
generals, but of mean origin, his father Agath- 
ocles having been originally a Penest or serf in 
Sicily. He was early distinguished for his un- 
dauuted courage, as well as for his great activ- 
ity and strength of body. We are told by Q. 
Curtius that Lysimachus, when hunting in Syr- 
ia, had killed a lion of immense size single- 
handed ; and this circumstance that writer re- 
gards as the origin of a fable gravely related by 
many authors, that, on account of some offence, 
Lysimachus had been shut up by order of Alex- 
ander in the same den with a lion ; but, though 
unarmed, had succeeded in destroying the ani- 
mal, and was pardoned by the king in consid- 
eration of his courage. In the division of the 
provinces after the death of Alexander (B.C. 
823), Thrace, and the neighboring countries as 
far as the Danube, were assigned to Lysima- 
chus. For some years he was actively engaged 
in war with the warlike barbarians that border- 
ed his province on the north. At length, in 315, 
he joined the league which Ptolemy, Seleucus, 
and Cassander had formed against Antigonus, 
but he did not take any active part in the war 
for some time. In 806 he took the title of king, 
when it was assumed by Antigonus, Ptolemy, 
Seleucus, and Cassander. In 302 Lysimachus 
crossed over into Asia Minor to oppose Antigo- 
nus, while Seleucus also advanced against the 
latter from the East. In 801 Lysimachus and 
Seleucus effected a junction, and gained a de- 
cisive victory at Ipsus over Antigonus and his 
son Demetrius. Antigonus fell on the field, 
and Demetrius became a fugitive. The con- 
querors divided between them the dominions 
of the vanquished, and Lysimachus obtained for 
his share all that part of Asia Minor extending 
from the Hellespont and the iEgean to the heart . 
of Phrygia. In 291 Lysimachus crossed the 
Danube and penetrated into the heart of the 
country of the Getee ; but he was reduced to 
the greatest distress by want of provisions, and 
was ultimately compelled to surrender with his 
whole army. Dromichaetes, king of the Get*, 
treated him with the utmost generosity, and re- 
462 



' stored him to liberty. In 288 Lysimachus united 
\ with Ptolemy, Seleucus, and Pyrrhus in a com- 
j mon league against Demetrius, who had for 
some years been in possession of Macedonia, 
and was now preparing to march into Asia. 
ISText year, 287, Lysimachus and Pyrrhus in- 
vaded Macedonia. Demetrius was abandoned 
by his own troops, and was compelled to seek 
safety in flight. Pyrrhus for a time obtained 
possession of the Macedonian throne, but he 
was expelled by Lysimachus in 286. Lysim- 
achus was now in possession of all the domin- 
ions in Europe that had formed part of the Mace- 
donian monarchy, as well as of the greater part 
of Asia Minor. He remained in undisturbed 
possession of these vast dominions till shortly 
before his death. His downfall was occasioned 
by a dark domestic tragedy. His wife Arsinoe, 
daughter of Ptolemy Soter, had long hated her 
step-son Agathocles, and at length, by false ac- 
cusations, induced Lysimachus to put his son to 
death. This bloody deed alienated the minds 
of his subjects, and many cities of Asia broke 
out into open revolt. Lysandra, the widow of 
Agathocles, fled with her children to the court of 
Seleucus, who forthwith invaded the dominions 
of Lysimachus. The two monarchs met in the 
plain of Corus (Corupedion), and Lysimachus 
fell in the battle that ensued, B.C. 281. He was 
in his eightieth year at the time of his death. 
Lysimachus founded Lysimachia, on the Hel- 
lespont, and also enlarged and rebuilt many ocher 
cities. 

LysimeiIa (// Avcufxeleia ?ufivrj), a marsh near 
Syracuse in Sicily, probably the same as the 
marsh more anciently called Syraco, from which 
the town of Syracuse is said to have derived its 
name. 

Lysinoe {AvGLvorj : now Atjelan ?), a town in 
Pisidia, south of the Lake Asoania. 

Lysippus (Avai-nTtog). 1. Of Sicyon, one of the 
most distinguished Greek statuaries, was a con- 
temporary of Alexander the Great. Originally 
a simple workman in bronze (faber ararius), he 
rose to the eminence which he afterward ob- 
tained by the direct study of nature. He re- 
jected the last remains of the old conventional 
rules which the early artists followed. In his 
imitation of nature the ideal appears almost to 
have vanished, or perhaps it should rather be 
said that he aimed to idealize merely human 
beauty. He made statues of gods, it is true ; 
but even in this field of art his favorite subject 
was the human hero Hercules ; while his por- 
traits seem to have been the chief foundation 
of his fame. The works of Lysippus are said to 
have amounted to the enormous number of one 
thousand five hundred. They were almost all, 
if not all, in bronze ; in consequence of which, none 
of them are extant. He made statues of Alex- 
ander at all periods of life, and in many differ- 
ent positions. Alexander's edict is well known, 
that no one should paint him but Apeiles, and 
no one make his statue but Lysippus. The most 
celebrated of these statues was that in which 
Alexander was represented with a lance, which 
was considered as a sort of companion to the 
picture of Alexander wielding a thunderbolt, by 
Apelles. — [2. A Lacedaemonian, harmost for a 
time at Epitalium in Elis : he devastated the 
Elean territory, and compelled them to sue for 



LYSIS. 



MACCABjEL 



peace, B.C. 399.-3. An Arcadian, a comic poet 
of the old comedy, gained the first prize B.C. 
434 : a few fragments of his comedies are pre- 
served in Meineke, Fragm. Comic. Gram., vol. i., 
p. 421-3, -'dit. minor.] 

Lysis (Awrtf), an eminent Pythagorean philos- 
opher, who, driven out of Italy in the persecu- 
tion of his seet, betook himself to Thebes and 
became the teacher of Epamiuondas, by whom 
he was held in the highest esteem. 

Lysis, a river of Caiia, only mentioned by Livy 
(xxxviu., 15). 

Lysistratus, of Sicyon, the brother of Lysip- 
pus, was a statuary, and devoted himself to the 
making of portraits. He was the first who took 
a cast of the human face in gypsum ; and from 
this mould he produced copies by pouring into it 
melted wax. 

[Lyso. L A Sicilian of rank at Lilybaeum, 
plundered by Verrea while praetor of Sicily in 
B.C. 73-71. — 2. A native of Patrae, an intimate 
friend of Cicero's, who intrusted to his care 
Tullius Tiro during his illness at that place : 
when Lyso subsequently visited Rome, he re- 
ceived great attention from both Tiro aud Ci- 
eero.] 

Lystra (rj Avcrpa, ra Avarpa : ruins probably 
at Karadagh, called Bin Bir Kilisseh), a city of 
Lycaonia, on the confines of Isauria, celebrated 
as one chief scene of the preaching of Paul and 
Barnabas (Acts, xiv.). 



M. 

Maoe (Md/cai). 1. A people on the eastern 
coast of Arabia Felix, probably about Muscat. — 

2. An inland people of Libya, in the Regio Syr- 
tica, that is, the part of Northern Africa between 
the Syrtes. 

Macalla, a town on the eastern coast of Brut- 
tium, which was said to possess the tomb and a 
sanctuary of Philoctetes. 

Macar or Macareus (Ma/cap or Manapevc). 
1. Son of Helios (or Crinacus) and Rhodos, fled 
from Rhodes to Lesbos after the murder of 
Tenages. — 2. Son of JEolus. Vid. Canace. — 

3. Son of Jason and Medea, also called Merme- 
rus or Mormorus. — [4. One of the Lapithae, slew 
the centaur Erigdupus at the nuptials of Pirith- 
ous. — 5. Of Nericus, one of the companions of 
Ulysses.] 

Macaria (MaKapUi), daughter of Hercules and 
Deianira. 

Macaria (Ma naptu). A poetical name of sev- 
eral islauds, such a* Lesbos, Rhodes, and Cyprus. 
— 2. An island in the southern part of the Sinus 
Arabicus (now Red Sui), off the coast of the 
Troglodytae. 

Macarius (MaKuptor), a Spartan, was one of 
the three commanders of the Peloponnesian 
force sent to aid the JStolians in the reduction 
of Naupactus, B.C. 426, which, however, was 
saved by Demosthenes ; he was afterward slain 
at the battle of Olpie. 

Maccab.ei (MannaBalot), the descendants of 
the family of the heroic Judas Maccabi or Mae- 
cabaeus, a surname which he obtained from his 
glorious victories. (From the Hebrew makkab 
" a hammer.*') They were also called Asamo 
ncei ('Aoafiuvaiot), from Asamonaeus, or Chas 
mon, the great-grandfather of Mattathias, the 



father of Judas Maecabaeus, or, in a shorter 
form, As?nonaii or JIasmonice. This family first 
obtained distinction from the attempts which 
were made by Antiochus IV. Epiphanes, kiug of 
Syria, to root out the worship of Jehovah, and 
introduce the Greek religion among the inhab- 
itants of Judaea. Autiochus published an edict,, 
which enjoined uniformity of worship through- 
out his dominions. At Mo do, a town not far 
from Lydda, lived Mattathias, a man of the 
priestly line and of deep religious feeling, who 
had five sons in the vigor of their days, John, 
Simon, Judas, Eleazar, and Jonathan. When 
the officer of the Syrian king visited Modiu to 
enforce obedience to the royal edict, Mattathias 
not only refused to desert the religion of his 
forefathers, but with his own hand struck dead 
the first renegade who attempted to offer sacri- 
fice on the heathen altar. He then put to death 
the king's officer, and retired to the mountains 
with his five sons (B.C. 167). Their numbers 
daily increased ; and as opportunities occurred, 
they issued from their mountain fastnesses, cut 
off detachments of the Syrian army, destroyed 
heathen altars, and restored iu many places the 
synagogues and the open worship of the Jewish 
religion. Within a few months the insurrec- 
tion at Modin had grown into a war for national 
independence. But the toils of such a war 
were too much for the aged frame of Mattathias, 
who died in the first year of the revolt, leaving 
the conduct of it to Judas, his third soa 1. Ju- 
das, who assumed the surname of Maecabaeus, 
as has been mentioned above, carried on the 
war with the same prudence and energy with 
which it had been commenced. After meeting 
with great success, he at length fell iu battle 
against the forces of Demetrius I. Soter, 160. 
He was succeeded in the command by his broth- 
er, — 2. Jonathan, who maintained the cause of 
Jewish independence with equal vigor and suc- 
cess, and became recognized as high-priest of 
the Jews. He was put to death by Tryphon, 
the minister of Antiochus VI., who treacher- 
ously got him into his power, 144. Jonathan 
was succeeded in the high-priesthood by his 
brother, — 3. Simon, who was the most fortunate 
of the sons of Mattathias, and under whose gov- 
ernment the country became virtually independ- 
ent of Syria. He was murdered by his son-in- 
law Ptolemy, the governor of Jericho, together 
with two of his sons, Judas and Mattathias, 135. 
His other son, Joannes Hyrcanus, escaped, and 
succeeded his father. — 4. Joannes Hyrcanus L. 
was high-priest 135-106. He did not assume 
the title of king, but was to all intents and pur- 
poses an independent monarch. Vid. Hyrca- 
nus. He was succeeded by his son Aristobu- 
lus I. — 5. Aristobulus I, was the first of the 
Maccabees who assumed the kingly title, which, 
was henceforth borne by his successors. His 
reign lasted only a year, 106-105. Vid. Aris- 
tobulus. He was succeeded by his brother, — 
6. Alexander Jann.eus, who reigned 105-78. 
Vid. Alexander, p. 42, b. He was succeeded 
by his widow, — 7. Alexandra, who appointed 
her son Hyrcanus II. to the priesthood, and held 
the supreme power 78-69. On her death in the 
latter year, her son, — 8. Hyrcanus II., obtained 
the kingdom, 69, but was supplanted almost im- 
mediately afterward by his brother, — 9. Aris- 
463 



MACEDONIA. 



MACESTUS. 



tobulus II, "who obtained the throne 68. Vid. 
Aristobulus. For the remainder of the history 
of the house of the Maccabees, vid. Hyrcaxus II. 
and Herodes L 

Macedonia (ttafcedovia : MaKedovec), a coun- 
try in Europe, north of Greece, which is said to 
have derived its name from an ancient King 
Macedon, a son of Jupiter (Zeus) and Thyia, a 
daughter of Deucalion. The name first occurs 
in Herodotus, but its more ancient form appears 
to have been Macetla [MoKetea) ; and, accord- 
ingly, the Macedonians are sometimes called 
Macetce. The country is said to have been 
originally named Emathia. The boundaries of 
Macedonia differed at different periods. In the 
time of Herodotus the name Slacedonis desig- 
nated only the country to the south and west 
of the River Lydias. The boundaries of the 
ancient Macedonian monarchy, before the time 
of Philip, the father of Alexander, were on the 
south Olympus and the Cambunian Mountains, 
which separated it from Thessaly and Epirus, 
on the east the River Strymon, which separated 
it from Thrace, and on the north and west II- 
lyria and Pasonia, from which it was divided by 
no well-defined limits. Macedonia was greatly 
enlarged by the conquests of Philip. He added 
to his kingdom Paeonia on the north, so that the 
mountains Scordus and Orbelus now separated 
it from Mcesia ; a part of Thrace on the east as 
far as the River Xestus, which Thracian district 
was usually called Macedonia adjecta ; the pen- 
insula Chalcidice on the south ; and on the 
west a part of Illyria, as far as the Lake Lych- 
nitis. On the conquest of the country by the 
Romans, B.C. 168, Macedonia was divided into 
four districts, which were quite independent of 
one another : 1. The country between the Stry- 
mon and the Nestus, with a part of Thrace east 
of the Nestus, as far as the Hebrus, and also 
including the territory of Heraclea Sintica and 
Bisaltice, west of the Strymon ; the capital of 
this district was Amphipolis. 2. The country 
between the Strymon and the Axius, exclusive 
of those parts already named, but including 
Chalcidice; the capital Thessalonica. 3. The 
country between the Axius and Peneus ; the 
capital Pella. 4. The mountainous country in 
the west ; the capital Pelagonia. After the I 
conquest of the Achaeans in 146, Macedonia' 
was formed into a Roman province, and Thes- 
saly and Illyria were incorporated with it ; but, 
at the same time, the district east of the Nestus 
was again assigned to Thrace. The Roman 
province of Macedonia accordingly extended 
from the ^Egaaan to the Adriatic Seas, and was 
bounded on the south by the province of Achaia. 
It was originally governed by a proconsul ; it 
was made by Tiberius one of the provinces of 
the Caesar ; but it was restored to the senate 
by Claudius. Macedonia may be described as 
a large plain, surrounded on three sides by lofty 
mountaius. Through this plain, however, run 
many smaller ranges of mountains, between 
which are wide and fertile valleys, extending 
from the coast far into the interior. The chief 
mountains were Scordus or Scardus, on the 
northwestern frontier, toward Illyria and Dar- 
dauia ; further east, Orbelus and Scomils. 
which separated it from Mcesia ; and Rhodope, 
which extended from Scomius in a southeast- 
464 



, erly direction, forming the boundary between 
j Macedonia and Thrace. On the southern fron- 
j tier were the Cambu.vii Monies and Olympus. 
j The chief rivers were in the direction of east 
j to west, the .Nestus, the Strymon, the Axius, 
the largest of all, the Ludias or Lydias, and the 
! Haliaomon. The great bulk of the iuhabit- 
j ants of Macedonia consisted of Thracian and 
Illyrian tribes. At an early period some Greek 
tribes settled in the southern part of the coun- 
try. They are said to have come from Argos, 
and to have been led by Gauanes, Aeropus, and 
Perdiccas, the three sons of Temenus the Hera- 
clid. Perdiccas, the youngest of the brothers, 
was looked upon as the founder of the Macedo- 
nian monarchy. A later tradition, however, re- 
garded Caranus, who was also a Heraclid from 
Argos, as the founder of the monarchy. These 
Greek settlers intermarried with the original 
inhabitants of the country. The dialect which 
they spoke was akin to the Doric, but it con- 
tained many barbarous words and forms ; and 
the Macedonians were accordingly never re- 
garded by the other Greeks as genuine Hellenes. 
Moreover, it was only in the south of Macedonia 
that the Greek language was spoken ; iu the 
north and northwest of the country the Illyrian 
tribes continued to speak their own language, 
and to preserve their ancient habits and cus- 
toms. Very little is known of the history of 
Macedonia till the reign of Amyntas I., who 
was a contemporary of Darius Hystaspis ; but 
from that time their history is more or less in- 
timately connected with that of Greece, till at 
length Philip, the father of Alexander the Great, 
became the virtual master of the whole of 
Greece. The conquests of Alexander, extend- 
ed the Macedonian supremacy over a great part 
of Asia ; and the Macedonian Kings contiuued to 
exercise their sove eignty over Greece till the 
conquest of Perseus by the Romans, 168, brought 
the Macedonian monarchy to a close. The details 
of the Macedonian history are given in the lives 
of the separate kings. 

Macella (now J/acellaro), a small fortified 
town iu the west of Sicily, southeast of Segesta. 

Macer, JEmilius. 1. A Roman poet, a native 
of Verona, died in Asia B.C. 16. He wrote a 
poem or poems upjn birds, suakes, and medicinal 
plauts, in imitation, it would appear, of the 
Ther.aca of JSicander. (Ov., Trial., iv., 10, 44.) 
The work now extant, entitled ' ^Emilius Macer 
de Herbarum Virtutibus," belongs to the Middle 
Ages. — 2. We must carefully distinguish from 
.dSmiiius Macer of Veroua, a poet Macer, who 
wrote on the Trojan war, and who must have 
been alive in A.D. 12, since he is addressed by 
Ovid in that year (ez-Pont., ii., 10, 2). — 3. A 
Roman jurist, who lived in the reign of Alex- 
ander Severus. He wrote several works, extracts 
from which are given in the Digest. 

Macer. Clodius, was governor of Africa at 
jSero's death, A.D. 68, when he laid claim to the 
throne. He was murdered at the instigation 
of Galba by the procurator Trebonius Garuci- 
anus. 

Macer, Licinius. Vid. Licinius. 

Maoestus (M.uk7)ctoc : now Si?naul-Su, and 
lower Susugherli), a considerable river of Mysia, 
rises in the northwest of Phrygia, and flows 
north through Mysia into the Rhyndacus. It 



MACH-EREUS. 



MACROBIUS. 



ts probably the same river which Polybius (v., 
77) calls Megistus (Meyiaroc). 

[Mach/ereus (Maxaipcvf), son of Daetas of 
Delphi, is said to have slain Neoptolemus, the 
son of Achilles, in a quarrel about the sacrifi- 
cial meat at Delphi ] 

M achjErus (Maxaipove : Maxatpcrrjc), a strong 
border fortress in the south of Peraea, in Pales- 
tine, on the confines of the Nabathaei : a strong- 
hold of the Sicarii in the Jewish war. A tradi- 
tion made it the place where John the Baptist 
was beheaded. 

Machanidas, tyrant of Lacedaemon, succeed- 
ed* Lycurgus about B.C. 210. Like his prede- 
cessor, he had no hereditary title to the crown, 
but ruled by the swords of his mercenaries 
alone. He was defeated and slain in battle by 
Philopcemen, the general of the Achaean league, | 
in 207. 

Machaon (Ma^iwiO, son of JEsculapius, was ! 
married to Anticlea, the daughter of Diocles, by | 
whom he became the father of Gorgasus, Nico- 
machus, Alexanor, Sphyrus, and Polemocrates. 
Together with his brother Podalirius, he went 
to Troy with thirty ships, commanding the men 
who came from Tricca, Ithome, and (Echalia. 
In this war he acted as the surgeon of the 
Greeks, and also distinguished himself in battle. 
He was himself wounded by Paris, but was car- 
ried from the field by Nestor. Later writers 
mention him as one of the Greek heroes who 
were concealed in the wooden horse, and he is 
said to have cured Philoctetes. He was killed 
by Eurypylus, the son of Telephus, and he re- 
ceived divine honors at Gerenia, in Messenia. 

[Machares (M.axdpvs), son of Mithradates the 
Great, was appointed by his father king of Bos- 
porus. After the repeated defeats of Mithradates 
by the Romans, Machares proved a traitor, and 
sent supplies to Lucullus : his father, though 
hard pressed by the Roman troops, marched 
against Machares, and the latter put himself to 
death to avoid falling into his enraged father's 
hands.] 

Machlyes (Mu^Auef), a people of Libya, near 
the Lotophagi, on the western side of the Lake 
Triton, in what was afterward called Africa 
Propria. 

Machon (Md^wv), of Corinth or Sicyon, a 
comic poet, flourished at Alexandrea, where he 
gave instructions respecting comedy to the 
grammarian Aristophanes of Byzantium. [Two 
or three fragments remain, which are given by 
Meineke, Fragm. Comic. Gr<zc, vol. ii., p. 1133- 
4, edit, minor.] 

Macistus or Macistum (Mukiotoc, Mokiotov : 
McikIotioc), an ancient town of Elis in Triphylia, 
northeast of Lepreum, originally called Plata- 
nistus (TlXaTavevToig). and founded by the Cau- 
cones. 

Macoraba (ManopuGa : now Mecca), a city in 
the west of Arabia Felix ; probably the sacred 
city of the Arabs, even before the time of Mo- 
hammed, and the seat of the worship of Alitat 
or Alitta under the emblem of a meteoric stone. 

Macra (now Magra), a small river rising in 
the Apennines and flowing into the Ligurian 
Sea near Luna, which, from the time of Au- 
gustus, formed the boundary between Liguria 
and Etruria. 

Macriancs. one of the thirtv tyrants, a dis- 
33 



tinguished general, who accompanied Valerian 
in his expedition against the Persians, A.D. 
260. On the capture of that monarch, Macri- 
anus was proclaimed emperor, together with 
his two sons Macrianus and Quietus. He as- 
signed the management of affairs in the East 
to Quietus, and set out with the younger Mac- 
rianus for Italy. They were encountered by 
Aureolus on the confines of Thrace and Illyria, 
defeated and slain, 262. Quietus was shortly 
afterward slain in the East by Odenathus. 

Macri Campi. Vid. Campi Macri. 

Macrinus, M. Opilius Severus, Roman em- 
peror, April, A.D. 217-June, 218. He was born 
at Caesarea in Mauretania, of humble parents, 
A.D. 164, and rose at length to be praefect of the 
praetorians under Caracalla. He accompanied 
Caracalla in his expedition against the Parthi- 
ans, and was proclaimed emperor after the death 
of Caracalla, whom he had caused to be assas- 
sinated. He conferred the title of Caesar upon 
his son Diadumenianus, and at the same time 
gained great popularity by repealing some ob- 
noxious taxes. But in the course of the same 
year he was defeated with great loss by the 
Parthians, and was obliged to retire into Syria. 
While here, his soldiers, with whom he had be- 
come unpopular by enforcing among them order 
and discipline, were easily seduced from their 
allegiance, and proclaimed Elagabalus as em- 
peror. With the troops which remained faith- 
ful to him, Macrinus marched against the usurp- 
er, but was defeated, and fled in disguise. He 
was shortly afterward seized in Chalcedon, and 
put to death, after a reign of fourteen months. 

[Maoris (Manpic), another name for the isl- 
and Helena. Vid. Helena.] 

Macro, N^evius Sertorius, a favorite of the 
Emperor Tiberius, was employed to arrest the 
powerful Sejanus in A.D. 31. On the death of 
the latter he was made praefect of the praetori- 
ans, an office which he continued to hold for 
the remainder of Tiberius's reign and during 
the earlier part of Caligula's. Macro was as 
cruel as Sejanus. He laid informations ; he 
presided at the rack ; and he lent himself to the 
most savage caprices of Tiberius during the 
last and worst period of his government. Dur- 
ing the lifetime of Tiberius he paid court to the 
young Caligula ; and he promoted an intrigue 
between his wife Ennia and the young prince. 
It was rumored that Macro shortened the last 
moments of Tiberius by stifling him with the 
bedding as he recovered unexpectedly from a 
swoon. But Caligula soon became jealous of 
Macro, and compelled him to kill himself with 
his wife and children, 38. 

Macrobii (Mclkp66loi, i. e., Long-lived), an 
./Ethiopian people in Africa, placed by Herodotus 
(iii., 17) on the shores of the Southern Ocean. 
It is in vain to attempt their accurate identifi- 
cation with any known people. 

Macrobius, the grammarian, whose full name 
was Ambrosius Aurclius Thcodosius Macrobius. 
All we know about him is that he lived in the 
age of Honorius and Theodosius, that he was 
probably a Greek, and that he had a son named 
Eustathius. He states in the preface to his 
Saturnalia that Latin was to him a foreign 
tongue, and hence we may fairly conclude that 
he was a Greek by birth, more especially as we 

465 



MACRONES. 



MAECENAS. 



find numerous Greek idioms in his style. He 
was probably a pagan. His extant works are, 
1. Saturnaliorum Conviviorum Libri VII., con- 
sisting of a series of dissertations on history, 
mythology, criticism, and various points of an- 
tiquarian research, supposed to have been de- 
livered during the holidays of the Saturnalia at 
the house of Vettius Praetextatus. who was in- 
vested with the highest offices of state under 
Valentinian and Valens. The form of the work 
is avowedly copied from the dialogues of Plato, 
especially the Banquet : in substance it bears a 
strong resemblance to the Noctes Atticae of A. 
Gellius. The first book treats of the festivals 
of Saturnus and Janus, of the Roman calendar, 
&c. The second book commences with a col- 
lection of bon mots, ascribed to the most cele- 
brated wits of antiquity ; to these are appended 
a series of essays on matters connected with 
the pleasures of the table. The four following 
books are devoted to criticisms on Virgil. The 
seventh book is of a more miscellaneous char- 
acter than the preceding. 2. Commentarius cx 
Cicerone in Somnium Scipionis, a tract much 
studied during the Middle Ages. The Dream 
of Scipio, contained in the sixth book of Cic- 
ero's De Republica, is taken as a text, which 
suggests a succession of discourses on the 
physical constitution of the universe, according 
to the views of the New Platonists, together 
with notices of some of their peculiar tenets 
on mind as well as matter. 3. De Differentiis 
et Societatibus Grceci Latinique Verbi, a treatise 
purely grammatical, of which only an abridg- 
ment is extant, compiled by a cf -ain Joannes. 
The best editions of the works A Macrobius 
are by Gronovius, Lugd. Bat., 1670, and by 
Zeunius, Lips., 1774 : [the first volume of a 
new and more copious critical edition was pub- 
lished at Quedlinburg and Leipzig, 1848, edited 
by Lud. Janus.] 

Macrones (Md/cpcjvef), a powerful and war- 
like Caucasian people on the northeastern shore 
of the Pontus Euxinus. 

Mactorium (MaK-uptov : MaKTopivoc), a town 
in the south of Sicily, near Gela. 

Macynia (Ma/twi'o : Manvvsvc), a town in. the 
south of vEtolia, near the mountain Taphiassus, 
east of Calydon and the Evenus. 

[Madadra or Madurus (Mddovpoc), a town 
in northern Numidia, near Tagaste, not to be 
confounded with Medaura.] 

MadianiT/E (M.adtav Irai, N.adi7/valoi, 'Madtnvoi : 
in the Old Testament, Midianim), a powerful 
nomad people in the south of Arabia Petraea, 
about the head of the Red Sea. They carried 
on a caravan trade between Arabia and Egypt, 
and were troublesome enemies of the Israelites 
until they were conquered by Gideon. They 
do not appear in history after the Babylonish 
captivity. 

[Madyas (Madvac, Ion. Madvng), a king of the 
Scythians, under whom they overran Asia and 
advanced as far as Egypt : he is called by 
Strabo Idanthyrsus.] 

Madytus (Mddvroc '■ Madvrtoc : now Maito), 
a sea-port town on the Thracian Chersonesus. 

Meander (Uaiavdpoc : now Mendereh or Mein- 
der, or Boyuk- Mendereh, i. e., the Great Men- 
dereh, in contradistinction to the Little Mendereh, 
the ancient Cayster), has its source in the 
466 



mountain called Aulocrenas, above Celaenae, in 
the south of Phrygia, close to the source of the 
Marsyas, which immediately joins it. Vid. Ce- 
l^en.e. It flows in a general western direction, 
with various changes of direction, but on the 
whole with a slight inclination to the south 
After leaving Phrygia, it flows parallel to Mount 
Messogis, on its southern side, forming the 
boundary between Lydia and Caria, and at last 
falls into the Icarian Sea between Myus and 
Priene. Its whole length is above one hundred 
and seventy geographical miles. The Maean- 
der is deep, but narrow, and very turbid, and 
therefore not navigable far up. Its upper course 
lies chiefly through elevated plains, and partly 
in a deep rocky valley : its lower course, for 
the last one hundred and ten miles, is through 
a beautiful wide plain, through which it flows 
in those numerous windings that have made its 
name a descriptive verb (to meander), and which 
it often inundates. The alteration made in the 
coast about its mouth by its alluvial deposit was 
observed by the ancients, and it has been con- 
tinually going on. Vid. Latmicus Sinus and 
Miletus. The tributaries of the Maeander were, 
on the right or northern side, the Marsyas. 
Cludrus, Lethaeus, and Gaeson, and on the left 
or southern side, the Obrimas, Lycus, Harpa- 
sus, and another Marsyas. As a god, Maeander 
is described as the father of the nymph Cyane. 
who was the mother of Caunus. Hence the 
latter is called by Ovid (Met., ix., 573) Maan- 
drius juvenis. 

[MiEANDRius (Mauivdpioc), secretary to Poly- 
crates, tyrant of Samos, through whose treach- 
ery or incompetency Polycrates was induced to 
place himself in the pow r er of Oroetes, and was 
by him put to death. Maeandrius, upon this, re- 
tained in his own hands the tyranny, until the 
advance of the Persians under Otanes to place 
Syloson, brother of Polycrates, on the throne, 
when he capitulated : having brought about the 
assassination of the chief Persians, he made his 
escape to Sparta ; the ephori, however, banish- 
ed him from the Peloponnesus.] 

Maecenas, C. Cilnius, was born some time 
between B.C. 73 and 63 ; and we learn from 
Horace (Carm., iv., 11) that his birth-day was 
the thirteenth of April. His family, though be- 
longing wholly to the equestrian order, was of 
high antiquity and honor, and traced its descent 
from the Lucumones of Etruria. His paternal 
ancestors, the Cilnii, are mentioned by Livy (x., 
3, 5) as having attained great power and wealth 
at Arretium about B.C. 301. The maternal 
branch of the family was likewise of Etruscan 
origin, and it was from them that the name 
of Maecenas was derived, it being customary 
among the Etruscans to assume the mother's 
as well as the father's name. It is in allusion 
to this circumstance that Horace (Sat., i., 6, 3) 
mentions both his avus maternus atque paternus 
as having been distinguished by commanding 
numerous legions ; a passage, by the way, from 
w r hich we are not to infer that the ancestors of 
Maecenas had ever led the Roman legions. Al- 
though it is unknown where Maecenas received 
his education, it must doubtless have been a 
careful one. We learn from Horace that he 
was versed both in Greek and Roman literature ; 
and his taste for literary pursuits was shown, 



MAECENAS. 



M/ELIUS, SP. 



not only bv his patronage cf the most eminent 
poets of hi* time, but also by several perform- 
ances of his own, both in verse at.d prose. It 
has been conjectured that he became acquaint- 
ed with Augustus at Apollonia before the death 
of Julius Caesar ; but he is mentioned for the 
first time in l.G; 40, and from this year his 
name constantly occurs as one of the chief 
friends and ministers of Augustus. Thus we 
find him employed in B.C. 37 in negotiating 
with Antony ; and it was probably on this oc- 
casion that Horace accompanied him to Brun- 
disium, a journey which he has described in 
the fifth satire of the first book. During the 
war with Antony, which was brought to a close 
by the battle of Actium, Maecenas remained at 
Rome, being intrusted with the administration 
of the civil°affairs of Italy. During this time 
he suppressed the conspiracy of the younger 
Lepidus. Maecenas was not present at the bat- 
tle of Actium, as some critics have supposed ; 
and the first epode of Horace probably does net 
relate at all to Actium, but to the Sicilian ex- 
pedition against Sextus Pompeius. On the re- 
turn of Augustus from Actium, Maecenas en- 
joyed a greater share cf his favor than ever, 
and, in conjunction with Agrippa, had the man- 
agement of all public affairs. It is related that 
Augustus at this time took counsel with Agrip- 
pa and Maecenas respecting the expediency of 
restoring the republic ; that Agrippa advised 
him to pursue that course, but that Maecenas 
strongly urged him to establish the empire. 
For many years Maecenas continued to preserve 
the uninterrupted favor of Augustus ; but, be- 
tween B.C. 21 and 16, a coolness, to say the 
least, had sprung up between the emperor and 
his faithful minister, and after the latter year 
he retired entirely from public life. The cause 
of this estrangement is enveloped in doubt. 
Dion Cassius positively attributes it to an in- 
trigue carried on by Augustus with Terentia, 
Maecenas's wife. Maecenas died B.C. 8, and 
was buried on the Esquiline. He left no chil- 
dren, and he bequeathed his property to Augus- 
tus. Maecenas had amassed an enormous for- 
tune. He had purchased a tract of ground on 
the Esquiline Hill, which had formerly served 
as a burial place for the lower orders. (Hor., 
Sat., i., 8, 7.) Here he had planted a garden, 
and built a house, remarkable for its loftiness, 
on account of a tower by which it was sur- 
mounted, and from the top of which Nero is 
said to have afterward contemplated the burn- 
ing of Rome. In this residence he seems to 
have passed the greater part of his time, and 
to have visited the country but seldom. His 
house was the rendezvous of all the wits of 
Rome ; and whoever could contribute to the 
amusement of the company was always wel- 
come to a seat at his table. But his really in- 
timate friends consisted of the greatest gen- 
iuses and most learned men of Rome ; and if 
it was from his universal inclination toward 
men of talent that he obtained the reputation 
of a literary patron, it was by his friendship for 
such poets as Virgil and Horace that he de- 
served it. Virgil was indebted to him for the 
recovery of his farm, which had been appro- 
priated by the soldiery in the division of lands 
in B.C. 41 ; and it was at the request of Mae- 



j cenas that he undertook the Georgics, the most 
finished of all his poems. To Horace he was a 
I still greater benefactor. He presented him with 
| the means of a comfortable subsistence, a farm 
! in the Sabine country, if the estate was but 
j a moderate one, we learn from Horace himself 
that the bounty of Maecenas was regulated by 
his own contented views, and not by his pa- 
tron's want of generosity. (Carm., iii., 16, 38.) 
Of Maecenas's own literary productions only a 
few fragments exist. From these, however,, 
and from the notices which we find of his writ- 
ings in ancient authors, we are led to think that 
[ we have not suffered any great loss by their 
destruction ; for, although a good judge of lit- 
I erary merit in others, he does not appear to 
| have been an author of much taste himself. In 
! his way of life Maecenas was addicted to every 
! species of luxury. We find several allusions 
| in the ancient authors to the effeminacy of his 
I dress. He was fond of theatrical entertain- 
i ments, especially pantomimes, as may be in- 
j ferred from his patronage of Bathyllus, the cel- 
! ebrated dancer, who was a freedman of his, 
' That moderation of character which led him to 
! be content with his equestrian rank, probably 
! arose from his love of ease and luxury, or it 
might have been the result of more prudent and 
politic views. As a politician, the principal 
trait in his character was fidelity to his master, 
and the main end of all his cares was the con- 
solidation of the empire ; but, at the same 
time, he recommended Augustus to put no check 
on the free expression of public opinion, and, 
i above all, to avoid that cruelty which for so 
J many years had stained the Roman annals with 
; blood. 

M^ecics Tarpa. Vid. Tarpa. 
M.^dica (Maidinr/), the country of the Maedi, 
a powerful people in the west of Thrace, on the 
, western bank of the Strymon, and the southern 
slope of Mount Scomius. They frequently made 
i inroads into the country of the Macedonians, till 
at length they were conquered by the latter peo- 
ple, and their land incorporated with Macedonia, 
of which it formed the northeastern district. 

Melius, Sp., the richest of the plebeian 
knights, employed his fortune in buying up corn 
j in Etruria in the great famine at Rome in B.C. 
j 440. This corn he sold to the poor at a small 
S price, or distributed it gratuitously. Such lib- 
! erality gained him the favor of the plebeians, 
but, at the same time, exposed him to the hatred 
; of the ruling class. Accordingly, in the follow- 
; ing year he was accused of having formed a 
conspiracy for the purpose cf seizing the king- 
ly power. Thereupon Cincinnatus was appoint- 
j ed dictator, and C. Servdius Ahala the master 
j of the horse. Maelius was summoned to appear 
j before the tribunal of the dictator ; but as he 
I refused to go, Ahala, with an armed band of 
1 patrician youths, rushed into the crowd and 
slew him. His property was confiscated, and 
his house pulled down ; its vacant site, which 
was called the JEquimcelium, continued to sub- 
sequent ages a memorial of his fate. Later 
ages fully. believed the story of Maelius's con- 
spiracy, and Cicero repeatedly praises the glori- 
ous deed of Ahala. But his guilt is very doubt- 
; ful. None of the alleged accomplices of Mae- 
! lius were punished ; and Ahala was brought to 



MJENACA. 



MAG AS. 



trial, and only escaped condemnation by a vol- 
untary exile. 

MastrlcA (MatvaKn), a town in the south of 
Hispania Baetica, on the coast, the most west- 
erly colony of the Phocaeans. 

M^enades (Matvddec), a name of the Bac- 
chantes, from fiaivo/iai, " to be mad, : ' because 
they were phrensied in the worship of Dionysus 
or Bacchus. 

M/ENalus (to Maiva/.ov or Maivd?.iov opoc. : 
now Ro'inon), a mountain in Arcadia, which ex- 
tended from Megalopolis to Tegea, was cele- 
brated as the favorite haunt of the god Pan. 
From this mountain the surrounding country 
was called Mcenalia (Macva/.ia) ; and on the 
mountain was a town Manalus. The mountain 
was so celebrated that the Roman poets fre- 
quently use the adjectives Ma.no.lius and Mana- 
lis as equivalent to Arcadian. 

Maenius. 1. C, consul B.C. 338, with L. Fu- 
rius Camillus. The two consuls completed the 
subjugation of Latium ; they were both reward- 
ed with a triumph ; and equestrian statues were 
erected to their honor in the forum. The statue 
of Meenius was placed upon a column, which is 
spoken of by later writers under the name of 
Columna Mama, and which appears to have 
stood near the end of the forum, on the Capi- 
toline. Maenius was dictator in 320, and cen- 
sor in 318. In his censorship he allowed bal- 
conies to be added to the various buildings sur- 
rounding the forum, in order that the spectators 
might obtain more room for beholding the games 
which were exhibited in the forum ; and these 
balconies were called after him Maniana (sc. 
<zdijicia). — 2. The proposer of the law, about 
286, which required the patres to give their 
sanction to the election of the magistrates be- 
fore they had been elected, or, in other words, 
to confer, or agree to confer, the imperium on 
the person whom the comitia should elect. — 3. 
A contemporary of Lucilius, was a great spend- 
thrift, who squandered all his property, and aft- 
erward supported himself by playing the buffoon. 
He possessed a house in the forum, which Cato 
in his censorship (184) purchased of him, for 
the purpose of building the basilica Porcia. 
Some of the scholiasts on Horace ridiculously 
relate, that when Maenius sold his house, he re- 
served for himself one column, the Columna 
Maenia, from which he built a balcony, that he 
might thence witness the games. The true 
origin of the Columna Maenia, and of the balco- 
nies called Maeniana, has been explained above. 
(Hor., Sat., i., 1, 101 ; i., 3, 21 ; Epist., i., 15, 
26.) 

M^enoba, a town in the southeast of Hispania 
Baetica, near the coast, situated on a river of 
the same name, and twelve miles eastofMalaca. 

plaeNus. Vid. Mcenl-s.] 

M.eox (Matwv). 1. Son of Haemon of Thebes. 
He and Lycophontes were the leaders of the 
band that lay in ambush against Tydeus, in the 
war of the Seven against Thebes. Maeon was 
the only one whose life was spared by Tydeus. 
Maeon, in return, buried Tydeus when the latter 
was slain.— 2. Husband of Dindyme, the moth- 
er of Cybele. — [3. A Latin warrior, who was 
wounded by iEneas in the wars between iEneas 
and Turnus in Italy.] 

JVLeoxia. Vid. Lydia. 
468 



M^onides (Matovidnc), i. e., Homer, either 
I because he was a son of Maeon, or because he 
j was a native of Maeonia, the ancient name of 
: Lydia. Hence he is also called Maenius senex, 
and his poems the Maonia chartce, or Meconium 
' carmen. M^eo.vis also occurs as a surname of 
Omphale, and of Arachne, because both were 
Lydians. 

~Mmotje. Vid. M^otis Palus. 
M^otis Palus (77 'Maiuric A'tfivn : now Sea of 
Azov), an inland sea on the borders of Europe 
and Asia, north of the Pontus Euxinus (now 
Black Sea), with which it communicates by the 
Bosporus Cimmerius. Its form may be de- 
1 scribed roughly as a triangle, with its vertex at 
its northeastern extremity, where it receives 
the waters of the great river Tanais (now Don) : 
j it discharges its superfluous water by a constant 
! current into the Euxine. The ancients had very 
; vague notions of its true form and size : the ear- 
lier geographers thought that both it and the 
! Caspian Sea were gulfs of the great Northern 
i Ocean. The Scythian tribes on its banks were 
1 called by the collective name of Maeotee or Maeo- 
tici (MaitiraL, Mo-iutikol). The sea had also the 
names of Cimmerium or Bosporicum Mare. 
yEschylus (Prom., 731) applies the name of 
Mseotic Strait to the Cimmerian Bosporus (av- 

! 7.WV' ^laLUTlKOV). 

M^era (Malpa). 1. The dog of Icarius, the 
father of Erigone. Vid. Icarius, No. 1. — 2. 
Daughter of Prcetus and Antea, a companion of 
Diana (Artemis), by whom she was killed, after 
she had become by Jupiter (Zeus) the mother 
of Locrus. Others state that she died a virgin. 
— 3. Daughter of Atlas, was married to Tege- 
ates, the son of Lycaon. Her tomb was shown 
both at Tegea and Mantinea in Arcadia. 

M^esa, Julia, sister-in-law of Septimius Se- 
I verus, aunt of Caracalla, and grandmother of 
' Elagabalus and Alexander Severus. She was 
! a native of Emesa in Syria, and seems, after 
1 the elevation of Septimius Severus, the husband 
1 of her sister Julia Domna, to have lived at the 
imperial court until the death of Caracalla, and 
to have accumulated great wealth. She con- 
j trived and executed the plot which transferred 
the supreme power from Macrinus to her grand- 
! son Elagabalus. When she foresaw the down- 
; fall of the latter, she prevailed on him to adopt 
I his cousin Alexander Severus. By Severus 
she was always treated with the greatest re- 
! spect ; she enjoyed the title of Augusta during 
! her life, and received divine honors after her 
\ death. 

M^evius. Vid. Bavius. 
Magaba, a mountain in Galatia, ten Roman 
; miles east of Ancyra. 

Ma gas (Mdyag), king of Cyrene, was a step- 
son of Ptolemy Soter, being the offspring of 
Berenice by a former marriage. He was a 
Macedonian by birth ; and he seems to have 
accompanied his mother to Egypt, where he 
soon rose to a hish place in the favor of Ptole- 
my. In B.C. 308 he was appointed by that 
monarch to the command of the expedition des- 
tined for the recovery of Cyrene after ihe death 
of Ophelias. The enterprise was completely 
successful, and Magas obtained from his step- 
father the government of the province. At first 
. he ruled over the province only as a dependency 



MAGDALA. 



MAGNENTIUS. 



of Egypt, but after the death of Ptolemy Soter 
he not onlj assumed the character of an inde- 
pendent monarch, but even made war on the 
King of Egypt He married Apama, daughter 
of Antiochus Soter, by whom he had a daughter, 
Berenice, afterward the wife of Ptolemy Euer- 
getes. He died 258. 

[Macdala (MaydaAa: Maydafajvoc, probably 
the Old Testament Migdal-El : now El-Meydel), 
a village of Palestine, on the Sea of Galilee, 
probabfy on the western shore, where the mod- 
ern El-Meydel stands.] I 

Magdolum (Mdydo?.ov, MuydtAov : in the Old i 
Testament, Migdol), a city of Lower Egypt, i 
near the northeastern frontier, about twelve j 
miles southwest of Pelusium : where Pharaoh 
Necho defeated the Syrians, according to He- 
rodotus (ii., 159). 

Magetobria (now Moigtc de Broie, on the 
Saone), a town on the western frontiers of the j 
Sequani, near which the Gauls were defeated | 
by the Germans shortly before Cassar's arrival j 
jn Gaul. 

Magi (Md/ot), the name of the order of priests ' 
and religious teachers among the Medes and j 
Persians, is said to be derived from the Persian | 
word mag, mog, or mugh, i. e., a priest. There j 
is strong evidence that a class similar to the i 
Magi, and in some cases bearing the same name, I 
existed among other Eastern nations, especially j 
the Chaldaeans of Babylon ; nor is it at all prob- 
able that either the Magi, or their religion, were i 
of strictly Median or Persian origin ; but, in j 
classical literature, they are presented to us i 
almost exclusively in connection with Medo- i 
Persian history. Herodotus represents them j 
as one of the six tribes into which the Median j 
people were divided. Under the Median em- j 
pire, before the supremacy passed to the Per- 
sians, they were so closely connected with the 
throne, and had so great an influence in the j 
state, that they evidently retained their posi- 
tion after the revolution ; and they had power 
enough to be almost successful in the attempt 
they made to overthrow the Persian dynasty 
after the death of Cambyses, by putting forward I 
one of their own number as a pretender to the ' 
throne, alleging that he was Smerdis, the son I 
of Cyrus, who had been put to death by his 
brother Cambyses. It is clear that this was a 
plot to restore the Median supremacy ; but j 
whether it arose from mere ambition, or from | 
any diminution of the power of the Magi under ! 
the vigorous government of Cyrus, can not be 
said with certainty. The defeat of this Magian ! 
conspiracy by Darius the son of Hystaspes°and ! 
the other Persian nobles was followed by a gen- | 
eral massacre of the Magi, which was celebrated I 
by an annual festival (rd Mayo<p6via), during' 
which no Magian was permitted to appear in | 
public. Still their position as the only ministers 
of religion remained unaltered. The breaking 
up of the Persian empire must have greatly 
altered their condition ; but they still continue 
to appear in history down to the time of the 
later Roman empire. The " wise men" who 
came from the East to Jerusalem at the time 
of our Saviour's birth were Magi (udyoi is their 
name in the original, Matt., ii., 1). Simon, who 
had deceived the people of Samaria before 
Philip preached to them {Acts, viii.), and Elymas, 



who tried to hinder the conversion of Sergius 
Paulus at Cyprus (Acts, xiii.), are both called 
Magians ; but in these cases the words payor 
and uaycvuv are used in a secondary sense, for 
a person who pretends to the wisdom, or prac- 
tices the arts of the Magi. This use of the 
name occurs very early among the Greeks, and 
from it we get our word magic {ij fiayiKy, i. e., 
the art or science of the Magi). The constitu- 
tion of the Magi as an order is ascribed by tra- 
dition to Zoroastres, or Zoroaster as the Greeks 
and Romans called him, the Zarathustra of the 
Zendavesta (the sacred books of the ancient 
Persians), and the Zerdusht of the modern Per- 
sians ; but whether he was their founder, their 
reformer, or the mythical representative of their 
unknown origin, can not be decided. He is said 
to have restored the true knowledge of the su- 
preme good principle (Ormuzd), and to have 
taught his worship to the Magi, whom he divid- 
ed into three classes, learners, masters, and per- 
fect scholars. They alone could teach the truths 
and perform the ceremonies of religion, foretell 
the future, interpret dreams and omens, and as- 
certain the will of Ormuzd by the arts of divi- 
nation. They had three chief methods of divi- 
nation, by calling up the dead, by cups or dishes, 
and by waters. The forms of worship and div- 
ination were strictly defined, and were handed 
down among the Magi by tradition. Like all 
early priesthoods, they seem to have been the 
sole possessors of all the science of their age. 
To be instructed in their learning was esteemed 
the highest of privileges, and was permitted, 
with rare exceptions, to none but the princes 
of the royal family. Their learning became cel- 
ebrated at an early period in Greece, by the 
name of payua, and was made the subject of 
speculation by the philosophers, whose knowl- 
edge of it seems, however, to have been very 
limited ; while their high pretensions, and the 
tricks by which their knowledge of science en- 
abled them to impose upon the ignorant, soon 
attached to their name among the Greeks and 
Romans that bad meaning which is still com- 
monly connected with the words derived from 
it. Besides being priests and men of learning, 
the Magi appear to have discharged judicial 
functions. 

[Magius, Decius, one of the most distinguish- 
ed men at' Capua in the time of the second Pu- 
nic war, and leader of the Roman party in that 
town in opposition to Hannibal : on the surren- 
der of the town Hannibal required him to be de- 
livered up to him.] 

Magna Grjecia. Vid. Gr;ecia. 

Magna Mater. Vid. Rhea. 

Magnentius, Roman emperor in the West, 
A.D. 350-353, whose full name was Flavius 
Popilius Magnentius. He was a German by 
birth, and after serving as a common soldier 
was eventually intrusted by Constans, the son 
of Constantine the Great, with the command of 
the Jovian and Herculian battalions who had 
replaced the ancient prsetorian guards when the 
empire was remodelled by Diocletian. He avail- 
ed himself of his position to organize a conspir- 
acy against the weak and profligate Constans, 
who was put to death by his emissaries. Mag- 
nentius thereupon was acknowledged as emper- 
or in all the Western provinces except Illyria, 

469 



MAGNES 



MAGO 



where Vetranio had assumed the purple. Con- of the north coast of Hispania Tarraconensis, 
stantius hurried from the frontier of Persia to among the Callaici Lucenses. — 3. (Meya^ Jtt- 
crush the usurpers. Yetranio submitted to Con- firjv), a haven on the south coast of Britain, op- 
stantius at Sardica in December, 350. Mag- posite the island Vectis (now Me of Wight), 
nentius was first defeated by Constantius at the ; now probably the Gulf of Portsmouth.'] 
sanguinary battle of Mursa on the Drave, in the \ [Magnus Sinus (o [ikyaq koTlttoc, now Gulf 
autumn of 351, and was obliged to fly into Gaul, j of Siam), the great gulf on the east coast of In- 
He was defeated a second time in the passes J dia extra Gangem, or the Chersonesus Aurea, 
of the Cottian Alps, and put an end to his own ! separating this from the opposite coast of the 
life about the middle of August, 353. Magnen- j Sinae.] 

tius was a man of commanding stature and ' Mago (Mayan). 1. A Carthaginian, said to 
great bodily strength ; but not one spark of have been the founder of the military power of 
virtue relieved the^blackness of his career as a ! that city, by introducing a regular discipline 
sovereign. The power which he obtained by , and organization into her armies. He flour- 
treachery and murder he maintained by extor- ished from B.C. 550 to 500, and was probably 
tion and cruelty. the father of Hasdrubal, who was slain in the 

Magnes (Muyr?^-), one of the most important battle against Gelo at Himera. Vid. Hamil- 
of the earlier Athenian comic poets of the old ! car, No. 1. — 2. Commander of the Carthaginian 
comedy, was a native of the demus of Icaria or 1 fleet under Himilco in the war against Dionys- 
Icarius in Attica. He flourished B.C. 460 and j ius, 396. When Himilco returned to Africa 
onward, and died at an advanced age, shortly after the disastrous termination of the expedi- 
before the representation of the Knights of Aris- , tion, Mago appears to have been invested with 
tophanes, that is, in 423. (Aristoph., Equit., j the chief command in Sicily. He carried on the 
524.) His plays contained a great deal of coarse \ war with Dionysius, but in 392 was compelled 
buffoonery. [A few fragments of his plays are J to conclude a treaty of peace, by which he aban- 
collected by Meineke. Fragm. Com. Grcec, vol. ; doned his allies the Sicilians to the power of Dio- 
i, p. 5-6.] nysius. In 3S3 he again invaded Sicily, but was 

Magnesia {Wryvyoia : Mayvijc, pi. Mdyviyrc?). j defeated by Dionysius and slain in battle. — 3. 
1. The most easterly district of Thessaly, was a j Commanderof the Carthaginian army in Sicily in 
long, narrow slip of country, extending from the j 344. He assisted Hicetas in the war against Ti- 
Peneus on the north to the Pagassean Gulf on ; moleon ; but, becoming apprehensive of treach- 
the south, and bounded on the west by the great ! ery, he sailed away to Carthage. Here he put 
Thessalian plain. It was a mountainous coun- j an end to his own life, to avoid a worse fate at 
try, as it comprehended the Mounts Ossa and the hands of his countrymen, who nevertheless 
Pelion. Its inhabitants, the Magnetes, are said crucified his lifeless body. — 4. Son of Hamilcar 
to have founded the two cities in Asia mention- Barca, and youngest brother of the famous Han- 
ed below-. — 2. M. ad Sipylum (M. ttooc StTruAo nibal. He accompanied Hannibal to Italy, and 
or vtto Znrvlo) : ruins at Manissa), a city in the J after the battle of Cannae (216) carried the news 
northwest of Lydia, in Asia Minor, at the foot ! of this great victory to Carthage ; but, instead 
of the northwest declivity of Mount Sipylus, of returning to Italy, he was sent into Spain, 
and on the south bank of the Hermus, is famous \ with a considerable force to the support of his 
in history as the scene of the victory gained by ' other brother Hasdrubal, who was hard pressed 
the two Scipios over Antiochus the Great, which ] by the two Scipios (215). He continued in this 
secured to the Romans the empire of the East, j country for many years ; and after his brother 
B.C. 190. After the Mithradatic war, the Ro- j Hasdrubal quitted Spain in 20S, in order to 
mans made it a libera civitas. It suffered, with | march to the assistance of Hannibal in Italy, 
other cities of Asia Minor, from the great earth- J the command in Spain devolved upon him and 
quake in the reign of Tiberius ; but it was still j upon Hasdrubal, the son of Gisco. After their 
a place of importance in the fifth century. — 3. ; decisive defeat by Scipio at Silpia in 206, Mago 
M. ad MiEANDRCM (M. ij TTpbq Macau 6 pu, M. srrl j retired to Gades, and subsequently passed the 
Maidvdpu : ruins at Inek-bazar), a city in the : winter in the lesser of the Balearic Islands, 
southwest of Lydia, in Asia Minor, was situated \ where the memory of his sojourn is still pre- 
on the River Letheeus, a northern tributary of ; served in the name of the celebrated harbor, 
the Mseander. It was destroyed by the Cim- \ Portus Magonis, or Port Malum. Early in the 
merians (probably about B.C. 700) and rebuilt 1 ensuing summer (205) Mago landed in Liguria, 
by colonists from Miletus, so that it became an • where he surprised the town of Genoa. Here 
Ionian city by race as well as position. It was , he maintained himself for two years, but in 203 
-one of the cities given to Themistocles by Ar- ; he was defeated with great loss, in Cisalpine 
taxerxes. It was celebrated for its temple of I Gaul by Quintilius Varus, and was himself se- 
Artemis Leucophryne. one of the most beauti- < verely wounded. Shortly afterward he em- 
ful in Asia Minor, the ruins of which still exist. ! barked his troops in order to return to Africa, 

MagnopSlis (Mayvoa-aJltf ). or Eupatoria Mag- [ but he died of his wound before reaching Africa. 
nopolis, a city of Pontus, in Asia Minor, near Cornelius Nepos, in opposition to all other au- 
the confluence of the rivers Lycus and Iris, be- ! thorities, represents Mago as surviving the bat- 
gun by Mithradates Eupator and finished by > tie of Zama, and says that he perished in a ship- 
Pompey, but probably destroyed before very j wreck, or was assassinated by his slaves. — 5 
long. " j Surnamed the Samnite, was one of the chief of 

[Magnus Portus. 1. (Now Gulf of Aimer la), a i ficers of Hannibal in Italy, where he held for a 
harbor of Hispania Baetica, on the Iberian Gulf, j considerable time the chief command in Brut- 
between Abdera and the promontory Charide- \ tium. — 6. Commander of the garrison of New 
raus. — 2. {Meyaq Xiuyv), a harbor on the west ! Carthage when that citv was taken bv Scipio 
470 



MAGONIS PORTUS. 



MAMERCUS. 



Africanus, 209. Mago was sent a prisoner to j 
Rome.— 7. A Carthaginian of uncertain date, 
who wrote a work upon agriculture in the Pu- | 
nic language, in twenty-eight books. So great 
was the reputation of this work even at Rome, : 
that after the destruction of Carthage, the sen- | 
ate ordered that it should be translated into j 
Latin by competent persons, at the head of j 
whom was D. Silanus. It was subsequently j 
translated into Greek, though with some abndg- | 
ment and alteration, by Cassius Dionysius of | 
Utica. Mago's precepts on agricultural matters j 
are continually cited by the Roman writers on J 
those subjects'in terms of the highest commen- j 
dation. 

Magonis Portus. Vid. Mago, No. 4. 

Magontiacum. Vid. Mogontiacum. 

[Magrada (now Urumca, or, according to oth- 
ers, Bidassoa), a small river on the northern j 
coast of Hispania Tarraconensis ] 

Maharbal (UadpCac), son of Himilco, and one 
of the most distinguished officers of Hannibal [ 
in the second Punic war. He is first mention- j 
ed at the siege of Saguntum. After the battle 
of Cannae he urged Hannibal to push on at once j 
with his cavalry upon Rome itself ; and on the 
refusal of his commander, he is said to have ob- 
served, that Hannibal knew indeed how to gain j 
victories, but not how to use them. 

Maia (Mam or Matuc), daughter of Atlas and 
Pleione, was the eldest of the Pleiades, and the 
most beautiful of the seven sisters. In a grotto j 
of Mount Cyllene in Arcadia she became by Ju- 
piter (Zeus) the mother of Mercury (Hermes). 
Areas, the son of Jupiter (Zeus) by Callisto, 
was given to her to be reared. Vid. Pleiades. 
Maia w T as likewise the name of a divinity wor- J 
shipped at Rome, who was also called Majesta. 
She is mentioned in connection with Vulcan, ' 
and was regarded^by some as the wife of that j 
god, though it seems for no other reason but j 
because a priest of Vulcan offered a sacrifice to | 
her on the first of May. In the popular super- I 
stition of later times she was identified with 
Maia, the daughter of Atlas. 

Majorianus, Julius Valerius, Roman em- 
peror in the West, A.D. 457-461, was raised to 
the empire by Ricimer. His reign w r as chiefly 
occupied in making preparations to invade the 
Vandals in Africa ; but the immense fleet which 
he had collected for this purpose in the harbor 
of New Carthage in Spain was destroyed by the 
Vandals in 460. Thereupon he concluded a I 
peace with Genserie. His activity and popu- ! 
larity excited the jealousy of Ricimer, who com- 
pelled him to abdicate, and then put an end to ! 
his life. 

Majuma. Vid. Constantia, No. 3. 

Malaga (now Malaga), an important town on I 
the coast of Hispania Baetica. and on a river of j 
the same name (now Guadalmedina), was found- J 
ed by the Phoenicians, and has always been a 
flourishing place of commerce from the earliest 
times to the present day. 

Malalas. Vid. Malelas. 

Malanga (MaAnyya), a city of India, probably 
the modern Madras. 

Malchts (MdA^of). 1 Of Philadelphia in Syr- i 
ia ; a Byzantine historian and rhetorician, wrote j 
a history of the empire from A.D. 474 to 480, j 
of which we have some extracts, published alono- ! 



with Dexippus by Bekker and Niebuhr, Bonn, 
1829. — [2. King of Arabia Petraea, was contem- 
porary with Herod the Great, who fled to him 
for refuge when he was driven out of Jerusa- 
lem by Antigonus and the Parthians, B.C. 40. 
This was probably the same Malchus who is 
mentioned by Hirtius as sending an auxiliary 
force of cavalry to Caesar in Egypt.] 

Ma lea (MaTip.a uKpa : now Cape Maria), the 
southern promontory of the island of Lesbos. 

Malea (MaAta or Ma awl : now Cape St. An- 
gelo or Malio di St. Angelo), a promontory on 
the southeast of Laconia, separating the Argolic 
and Laconic Gulfs ; the passage round it was 
much dreaded by sailors. Here was a temple 
of Apollo, who hence bore the surname Maledtes. 

Malelas or Malalas, Joannes Cluuvvrje 6 
Ma.7J2.ct or MaMAa), a native of Antioch, and a 
Byzantine historian, lived shortly afier Justin- 
ian the Great. The word Malalas signifies in 
Syriac an orator. He wrote a chronicle of uni- 
versal history from the creation of the world to 
the reign of Justinian inclusive. Edited by Din- 
dorf, Bonn, 1831. 

Malene (Ma?,r)V7]), a city of Mysia, only men- 
tioned by Herodotus (vi., 29). 

[Maleventum. Vid. Beneventum.] 

Maliacus Sinus (MaAiaKoc koattoc : now Bay 
of Zeitun), a narrow bay in the south of Thes- 
saly, running west from the northwest point of 
the island of Euboea. On one side of it is the 
Pass of Thermopylae. It derived its name from 
the Malienses, who dwelt on its shores. It is 
sometimes called the Lamiacus Sinus, from the 
town of Lamia in its neighborhood. 

Malis {MaVic yrj, Ionic and Attic Mrj/ac yfj : 
Ma?uevc or Mrj?uevc, Maliensis, a district in the 
south of Thessaly, on the shores of the Malia- 
cus Sinus, and opposite the northwest point of 
the island of Euboea. It extended as far as the 
Pass of Thermopylae. Its inhabitants, the Ma- 
lians, were Dorians, and belonged to the Am- 
phict}^onic league. 

Malli (Ma/Uo/), an Indian people on both 
sides of the Hydraotes : their capital is sup- 
posed to have been on the site of the celebrated 
fortress of Mooltan. 

Mallus (MaAAdc), a very ancient city of Ci- 
licia, on a hill a little east of the mouth of the 
River Pyramus, was said to have been founded 
at the time of the Trojan war by Mopsus and 
Amphilochus. It had a port called Magarsa. 

[Malostas (MaAot'rac), a small river of Arca- 
dia, on which Orchomenus founded the colony 
Methydrium] 

Maluginensis, a celebrated patrician family 
of the Cornelia gens in the early ages of the 
republic, the members of which frequently held 
the consulship. It disappears from history be- 
fore the time of the Samnite wars. 

Malva. Vid. Mulucha. 

Mam^ea, Julia, a native of Emesa in Syria, 
was daughter of Julia Maesa, and mother of 
Alexander Severus. She was a woman of in- 
tegrity and virtue, and brought up her son with 
the utmost care. She was put to death by the 
soldiers along with her son, A.D. 235. 

Mamercus. L Son of King Numa accord- 
ing to one tradition, and son of Mars and Sil- 
via according to another. — 2. Tyrant of Cata- 
na, when Timoleon landed in Sicily, B.C. 344. 

471 



MAMERCUS. 



MANES. 



After his defeat by Timoleon he fled to Messa- 
na, and took refuge with Hippon, tyrant of that 
city. But when Timoleon laid siege to Messa- 
na, Hippon took to flight, and Mamercus sur- 
rendered, stipulating only for a regular trial be- 
fore the Syracusans. But as soon as he was 
brought into the assembly of the people there, 
he was condemned by acclamation, and exe- 
cuted like a common malefactor. 

Mamercus or Mamercinus, ^Emilius, a dis- 
tinguished patrician family which professed to 
derive its name from Mamercus in the reign of 
iNuma. 1. L., thrice consul, namely, B.C. 484, 
478, 473.-2. Tib., twice consul, 470 and 467. 
—3. Mam., thrice dictator, 437, 433, and 426. 
In his first dictatorship he carried on war against 
the Veientines and Fidenae. LarTolumnius, the 
king of Veii, is said to have been killed in sin- 

f le combat in this year by Cornelius Cossus. 
n his second dictatorship ^Emilius carried a 
law limiting to eighteen months the duration of 
the censorship, which had formerly lasted for 
five years. This measure was received with 
great approbation by the people ; but the cen- 
sors then in office were so enraged at it that 
they removed him from his tribe, and reduced 
him to the condition of an aerarian. — 4. L., a 
distinguished general in the Samnite wars, was 
twice consul, 341 and 329, and once dictator, 
335. In his second consulship he took Priver- 
nurn, and hence received the surname of Pri- 
vernas. 

Mamers, the Oscan name of the god Mars. 

Mamertini. Vid. Messana. 

Mamertium (Mamertini), a town in Bruttium, 
of uncertain site, founded by a band of Sam- 
nites, who had left their mother country under 
the protection of Mamers or Mars to seek a new 
home. 

Mamilia Gens, plebeian, was originally a dis- 
tinguished family in Tusculum. They traced 
their name and origin to Mamilia, the daughter 
of Telegonus, the founder of Tusculum, and the 
son of Ulysses and the goddess Circe. It was 
to a member of this family, Octavius Mamilius, 
that Tarquinius betrothed his daughter ; and on 
his expulsion from Rome he took refuge with 
his son-in-law, who, according to the beautiful 
lay preserved by Livy, roused the Latin people 
against the infant republic, and perished in the 
great battle at the Lake Regillus. In B.C. 458, 
the Roman citizenship was given to L. Mamil- 
ius, the dictator of Tusculum, because he had 
two years before marched to the assistance of 
the city when it was attacked by Herdonius. 
The gens was divided into three families, Lim- 
ctanns, Turrinus, and Vitulus, but none of them 
became of much importance. 

Mammula, the name of a patrician family of 
the Cornelia gens, which never became of much 
importance in the state. 

Mamurius Veturius. Vid. Veturius. 

Mamurra, a Roman eques, born at Formiae, 
was the commander of the engineers (prcefectus 
fabrum) in Julius Caesar's army in Gaul. He 
amassed great riches, the greater part of which, 
however, he owed to Caesar's liberality. He 
was the first person at Rome who covered all 
the walls of his house with layers of marble, 
and also the first all of the columns in whose 
house were made of solid marble. He was 
472 



violently attacked by Catullus in his poems, who 
called him decocior Formianus. Mamurra seems 
to have been alive in the time of Horace, who 
calls Formiae, in ridicule, Mamurrarum urbs 
(Sat., i., 5, 37), from which we may infer that 
his name had become a by-word of contempt. 

[Manastabal. Vid. Mastanabal.] 

MANciA,HELvius,a Roman orator about B.C. 
90, who w r as remarkably ugly, and whose name 
is recorded chiefly in consequence of a laugh 
being raised against him on account of his de- 
formity by C. Julius Caesar Strabo, who was op- 
posed to him on one occasion in some lawsuit. 

Mancinus, Hostilius. 1. A., was praetor ur- 
banus B.C. 180, and consul 170, when he had 
the conduct of the war against Perseus, king of 
Macedonia. He remained in Greece for part of 
the next year (169) as proconsul. — 2. L., was 
legate of the consul L. Calpurnius Piso (148) in 
the siege of Carthage, in the third Punic war. 
He was consul 145. — 3. C, consul 137, had the 
conduct of the war against Numantia. He w^as 
defeated by the Numantines, and purchased the 
safety of the remainder of his army by making 
a peace with the Numantines. The senate re- 
fused to recognize it, and went through the 
hypocritical ceremony of delivering him over to 
the enemy by means of the fetiales. This was 
done with the consent of Mancinus, but the en- 
emy refused to accept him. On his return to 
Rome Mancinus took his seat in the senate as 
heretofore, but was violently expelled from it 
by the tribune P. Rutilius, on the ground that 
he had lost his citizenship. As the enemy had 
not received him, it was a disputed question 
whether he was a citizen or not by the Jus 
Postliminii (vid. Diet, of Ant., s. v. Postlimini- 
um), but the better opinion was that he had lost 
his civic rights, and they were accordingly re- 
stored to him by a lex. 

[Mancunium (now Manchester), a city of the 
Brigantes in Britannia, on the road from Clano- 
venta to Mediolanum.] 

Mandane. Vid. Cyrus. 

[Mandela (now Bardela), a village to the 
southeast of Cures, near which stood Horace's 
Sabine villa.] 

[Mandrocles (M.av Sponge), an architect of 
Samos, who constructed the bridge on which 
Darius led his army over the Thracian Bospo- 
rus : he also made a painting commemorating 
this labor.] 

Mandonius. Vid. Indibilis. 

Mandrupium, Mandropus, or Mani>rupoli3 
(MavSpoimoliic ), a town in the south of Phrygia, 
on the Lake Caralitis. 

Mandubii, a people in Gallia Lugdunensis, in 
the modern Burgundy, whose chief town was 
j Alesia. 

Manduria (Mavdvpiov in Plut. : now Casal 
j Nuovo), a town in Calabria, on the road from 
Tarentum to Hydruntum, and near a small lake, 
which is said to have been always full to the 
edge, whatever water was added to or taken 
from it. Here Archidamus III., king of Sparta, 
was defeated and slain in battle by the Messa- 
pians and Lucanians, B.C. 338. 

Manes, the general name by which the Ro- 
mans designated the souls of the departed ; but 
as it is a natural tendency to consider the souls 
of departed friends as blessed spirits, the Manes 



MANETHO 



MANTINEA. 



were regarded as gods, and were worshipped j 
with divine honors. Hence on Roman sepul- 
chres we find D. M. S., that is, Dis Manibus j 
Sacrum. Vid. Lares. Atcertain seasons, which 
were looked upon as sacred days (fena dem- 
sales), sacrifices were offered to the spirits of 
the departed An annual festival, which be- 
longed to all the Manes in general, was cele- 
brated on the nineteenth of February, under the 
name of Feraha or Parentalia, because it was 
the duty of children and heirs to offer sacrifices 
to the shades of their parents and benefactors. 

Manetho (Mavftfuf or MaveOuv), an Egyptian 
priest of the town of Sebennytus, who lived in 
the reign of the first Ptolemy. He was the first 
Egyptian who gave in the Greek language an 
account of the religion and history of his coun- 
try. He based his information upon the ancient 
works of the Egyptians themselves, and more 
especially upon their sacred books. The work 
in which he gave an account of the theology of 
the Egyptians, and of the origin of the gods and 
ihe world, bore the title of Tuv Qvaintiv 'Erri- 
rofiTi. His historical work was entitled a His- 
tory of Egypt. It was divided into three parts 
or books. The first contained the history of 
the country previous to the thirty dynasties, or 
what may be termed the mythology of Egypt, 
and also of the first dynasties. The second 
opened with the eleventh, twelfth, and conclu- 
ded with the nineteenth dynasty. The third 
gave the history of the remaining eleven dynas- 
ties, and concluded with an account of Necta- 
nebus, the last of the native Egyptian kings. 
The work of Manetho is lost ; but a list of the 
dynasties is preserved in Julius Africanus and 
Eusebius (most correct in the Armenian ver- 
sion), who, however, has introduced various in- 
terpolations. According to the calculation of 
Manetho, the thirty dynasties, beginning with 
Menes, filled a period of three thousand five 
hundred and fifty-five years. The lists of the 
Egyptian kings and the duration of their sev- I 
eral reigns were undoubtedly derived by him i 
from genuine documents, and their correctness, ! 
so far as they are not interpolated, is said to be 
confirmed by the hieroglyphic inscriptions on 
the monuments. There exists an astrological j 
poem, entitled \\7roT£?.EO(xaru<d, in six books, ! 
which bears the name of Manetho ; but this j 
poem is spurious, and can not have been written I 
before the fifth century of our era. Edited by 
Axt and Rigler, Cologne, 1832. 

Mania, a formidable Italian, probably Etrus- I 
can, divinity of the lower world, called the moth- 1 
er of the Manes or Lares. The festival of the ! 
Compitalia was celebrated as a propitiation to ! 
Mania in common with the Lares. 

Manilius. 1. M., was consul B.C. 149, the 
first year of the third Punic war, and carried on 1 
war against Carthage. He was celebrated as 1 
a jurist, and is one of the speakers in Cicero's 
De 'Republica 12).— 2. C, tribune of the j 
plebs B.C. 66, proposed the law granting to 
Pompey the command of the war against Mith- 
radates and Tigranes, and the government of 
the provinces of Asia, Cilicia, and Bithynia. j 
This bill was warmly opposed by Q. Catulus, j 
Q. Hortensius, and the leaders of the aristocrat- \ 
ical party, but was supported by Cicero in an i 
oration which has come down to us. At the | 



end of his year Manilius was brought to trial by 
the aristocratical party, and was condemned ; 
but we do not know of what offence he waa 
accused.— 3. Also called Manlius or Mallius, 
a Roman poet of uncertain age, but is conjectur- 
ed to have lived in the time of Augustus. He 
is the author of an astrological poem in five 
books, entitled Astronomica. The style of this 
poem is extremely faulty, being harsh and ob- 
scure, and abounding in repetitions and in forced 
metaphors. But the author seems to have con- 
sulted the best authorities, and to have adopted 
their most sagacious views. The best edition 
is by Bentley, Lond., 1739. 

Manlia Gens, an ancient and celebrated patri- 
cian gens at Rome. The chief families were 
those of Acidinus, Torquatus, and Vulso. 

Manliana (Mavlcava : ruins at Miliaria). 1. 
A city of importance in Mauretania Caesariensis, 
where one of Pompey's sons died. — [2. A city 
of Etruria, on the road leading from Rome over 
the Alpes Maritimae to Arelate : it corresponds 
to the modern Magliana, near Siena.'] 

Manlius, M., consul B.C. 392, took refuge in. 
the Capitol when Rome was taken by the Gauls 
in 390. One night, when the Gauls endeavored 
to ascend the Capitol, Manlius was roused from 
his sleep by the cackling of his geese ; collect- 
ing hastily a body of men, he succeeded in driv- 
ing back the enemy, who had just reached the 
summit of the hill. From this heroic deed he 
is said to have received the surname of Capi- 
tolinus. In 395 he defended the cause of the 
plebeians, who were suffering severely from 
their debts, and from the harsh and cruel treat- 
ment of their patrician creditors. The patri- 
cians accused him of aspiring to royal power, 
and he was thrown into prison by the dictator 
Cornelius Cossus. The plebeians put on mourn- 
ing for their champion, and were ready to take 
up arms in his behalf. The patricians, in alarm, 
liberated Manlius ; but this act of concession 
only made him bolder, and he now did not 
scruple to instigate the plebeians to open vio- 
lence. In the following year the patricians 
charged him with high treason, and brought him 
before the people assembled in the Campus Mar- 
tius ; but as the Capitol which had once been 
saved by him could be seen from this place, the 
court was removed to the Pcetelinian grove, out- 
side the Porta Nomentana. Here Manlius was 
condemned, and the tribunes threw him down 
the Tarpeian Rock. The members of the Man- 
lia gens accordingly resolved that none of them 
should ever bear in future the praenomen of 
Marcus. 

Mannus, a son of Tuisco, was regarded by 
the ancient Germans, along with his father, as 
the founders of their race. They further as- 
scribed to Mannus three sons, from whom the 
three tribes of the Ingaevones, Hermiones, and 
Istaevones derived their names. 

Mantiana Palus. Vid. Arsissa Palus. 

Mantinea (MavTiveta : Mavrivsvc : now Pa- 
leopoli), one of the most ancient and important 
towns in Arcadia, situated on the small river 
Ophis, near the centre of the eastern frontier of 
the country. It is celebrated in history for the 
great battle fought under its walls between the 
Spartans and Thebans, in which Epaminondas 
fell, B.C. 362. According to tradition, Manti- 

473 



MANTINORUM. 



MARCELLA 



nea was founded by Mantineus, the son of Ly- 
caon, but it was formed in reality out of the 
union of four or five hamlets. Till the founda- 
tion of Megalopolis, it was the largest city in 
Arcadia, and it long exercised a kind of suprem- 
acy over the other Arcadian towns ; but in the 
Peloponnesian war the Spartans attacked the 
city, and destroyed it by turning the waters of 
the Ophis against its walls, which were built of 
bricks. After the battle of Leuctra the city re- 
covered its independence. At a later period it 
joined the Achaean league, but, notwithstanding, 
formed a close connection with its old enemy 
Sparta, in consequence of which it was severely 
punished by Aratus, who put to death its lead- 
ing citizens and sold the rest of its inhabitants 
as slaves. It never recovered the effects of 
this blow. Its name was now changed into 
Aniigonla, in honor of Antigonus Doson, who 
had assisted Aratus in his campaign against the 
town. The Emperor Hadrian restored to the 
place its ancient appellation, and rebuilt part of 
it in honor of his favorite Antinous, the Bithyn- 
ian, who derived his family from Mantinea. 

[Mantinorum Oppidum (Mclvtlvuv 7r6/Uf , very 
probably the modern Bastia), a place in Corsica 
on the northwest coast, east of the River Va- 
lerius.] 

[Mantitheus (Mavrideor), an Athenian, the 
companion of Aleibiades in his escape from Sar- 
dis B.C. 411 : in B.C. 408 he was one of the 
ambassadors sent from Athens to Darius ; but 
he and his colleagues were given up to Cyrus, 
and kept in custody three years.] 

Mantius (Mav-i'of), son of Melampus, and 
fjrother of Antiphates. Vid. Melampus. 

Manto (Mavru, -ove). 1. Daughter of the 
Theban soothsayer Tiresias, was herself proph- 
etess of the Ismenian Apollo at Thebes. After 
the capture of Thebes by the Epigoni,she was 
sent to Delphi with other captives, as an offer- 
ing to Apollo, and there became the prophetess 
of this god. Apollo afterward sent her and her 
companions to Asia, where they founded the 
sanctuary of Apollo near the place where the 
town of Colophon was afterward built. Rha- 
cius, a Cretan, who had settled there, married 
Manto, and became by her the father of Mopsus. 
According to Euripides, she had previously be- 
come the mother of Amphilochus and Tisiphone, 
by Alcmaeon, the leader of the Epigoni. Being 
a prophetess of Apollo, she is also called Daphne, 
i. e., the laurel virgin.— 2. Daughter of Hercu- 
les, was likewise a prophetess, and the person 
from whom the town of Mantua received its 
name. (Virg., Mn., x., 199.) 

Mantua (Mantuanus : now Mantua). 1. A 
town in Gallia Transpadana, on an island in the 
River Mincius, was not a place of importance, 
but is celebrated because Virgil, who was born 
at the neighboring village of Andes, regarded 
Mantua as his birth-place. It was originally an 
Etruscan city, and is said to have derived its 
name from Manto, the daughter of Tiresias.— 
[2. Now probably Mondejar), a town of the Car- 
petani in Hispania Tarraconensis, by some er- 
roneously regarded as Madrid.} 

Maracanda (to. Mapuicavda : now Samarkand), 
the capital of the Persian province of Sogdiana, 
in the northern part of the country, was seventy 
stadia (seven geographical miles ii in circuit, ft 
474 



' was here that Alexander the Great killed his 
friend Clitus. 

Maraphti (*slapd<j>ioi), one of the three noblest 
| tribes of the Persians, standing, with the Mas- 
I pii, next in honor to the Pasargadae. 

[Maratha (Mdpada : now AtziJcolo), a small 
town of Arcadia, at the sources of the Bupha- 
| gus, and in the neighborhood of Gortys.] 

Marathesium (Mapadr/ciov), a town on the 
! coast of Ionia, between Ephesus and Neapolis : 
it belonged to the Samians, who exchanged it 
with the Ephesians for Neapolis, which lay 
nearer to their island. The modern Scala Nova, 
marks the site of one of these towns, but it is 
doubtful which. 

Marathon (Mqpadtjv : Mapaduviot;), a demus 
in Attica, belonging to the tribe Leontis, was 
situated near a bay on the eastern coast of At- 
; tica, twenty-two miles from Athens by one 
1 road, and twenty-six miles by another. It orig- 
inally belonged to the Attic tetrapolis, and is 
' said to have derived its name from the hero Mar- 
i athon. This hero, according to one account, 
! was the son of Epopeus, king of Sicyon, who, 
j having been expelled from Peloponnesus by the 
! violence of his father, settled in Attica ; while, 
j according to another account, he was an Arca- 
! dian, wiio took part in the expedition of the 
! Tyndaridae against Attica, and devoted him- 
j self to death before the battle. The site of the 
! ancient town of Marathon w T as probably not at 
! the modern village of Marathon, but at a place 
! called Vrana, a little to the south of Marathon. 
Marathon was situated in a plain, which ex- 
tends along the sea-shore, about six miles in 
length, and from three miles to one mile and a 
half in breadth. It is surrounded on the other 
three sides by rocky hills and rugged mount- 
ains. Two marshes bound the extremity of 
the plain ; the northern is more than a square 
j mile in extent, but the southern is much small- 
I er, and is almost dry at the conclusion of the 
I great heats. Through the centre of the plain 
j runs a small brook. In this plain was fought 
the celebrated battle between the Persians and 
j Athenians, B.C. 490. The Persians were drawn 
i up on the plain, and the Athenians on some 
j portion of the high ground above the plain ; but 
I the exact ground occupied by the two armies 
j can not be identified, notwithstanding the in- 
vestigations of modern travellers. The tumu- 
fus raised over the Athenians who fell in the 
battle is still to be seen. 

Marathus (NLapadog), an important city on the 
| coast of Phoenicia, opposite to Aradus and near 
i Antaradus : it was destroyed by the people of 
: Aradus in the time of the Syrian king. Alexan- 
! der Balas, a little before B.C. 150. 

[Marathusa QA.apu.6ovG a). 1. A small island 
of the iEgean Sea, on the coast of Ionia, near 
; Clazomenae. — 2. A city in the western part of 
! Crete ; according to Hoeck, probably on the 
Promontorium Drepanum.] 

Marcella. 1. Daughter of C. Marcellus and 
I Octavia, the sister of Augustus. She was thrice 
married : first to M. Vipsanius Agrippa, who 
| separated from her in B.C. 21, in order to marry 
1 Julia, the daughter of Augustus ; secondly, to 
j Julus Antonius, the son of the triumvir, by whom 
she had a son Lucius ; thirdly, to Sextus Ap- 
puleius, consul A.D. 14, by whom she had a 



MARCELLINUS. 



MARCELLUS, CLAUDIUS. 



daughter. Appuleia Varilia— 2. Wife of the poet 
Martiai, to whom he has addressed two epi- 
grams (xii, 21, 31). She was a native of Spain, 
and Drought him as her dowry an estate. As 
Martial was married previously to Cleopatra, 
he espoused Marcclla probably after his return 
to Spain about A D. 96. 

Marcelunus. the author of the life oi Thu- 
cydides. Vid. Thucydides. 

Mirci:llus, Claudius, an illustrious plebeian 
family. 1. M., celebrated as five times consul, 
and the conqueror of Syracuse. In his first con- 
sulship, B.C. 222, Marcellus and his colleague 
conquered the Insubrians in Cisalpine Gaul, and 
took their capital Mcdiolanum. Marcellus dis- 
tinguished himself by slaying in battle with his 
own hand Britomartus or Viridomarus, the king 
of the enemy, whose spoils he afterward dedi- 
cated as spolia opima in the temple of Jupiter 
Feretrius. This was the third and last instance 
in Roman history in which such an offering was 
made. In 216 Marcellus was appointed praetor, 
and rendered important service to the Roman 
cause in the south of Italy after the disastrous 
battle of Cann;e. In 215 he remained in the 
south of Italy, with the title of proconsul. In 
the course of the same year he was elected 
consul in the place of Postumius Albinus, who 
had been killed in Cisalpine Gaul ; but as the 
senate declared that the omens were unfavor- 
able, Marcellus resigned the consulship. In 
214 Marcellus was consul a third time, and still 
continued in the south of Italy, where he car- 
ried on the war with ability, but without ob- 
taining any decisive results. In the summer 
of this year he was sent into Sicily, since the 
party favorable to the Carthaginians had ob- 
tained the upper hand in many of the cities in 
the island. After taking Leontini, he proceed- 
ed to lay siege to Syracuse, both by sea and 
land. His attacks were vigorous and unremit- 
ting ; but, though he brought many powerful 
military engines against the walls, these were 
rendered wholly unavailing by the superior skill 
and science of Archimedes, who directed those 
of the besieged. Marcellus was at last com- 
pelled to give up all hopes of carrying the city 
by open force, and to turn the siege into a block- 
ade. It was not till 212 that he obtained pos- 
session of the place. It was given up to plun- 
der, and Archimedes was one of the inhabitants 
slain by the Roman soldiers. The booty found 
in the captured city was immense ; and Mar- 
cellus also carried off many of the works of 
art with which the city had been adorned, to 
grace the temples at Rome. This was the first 
instance of a practice which afterward became 
so general. In 210 he was consul a fourth time, 
and again had the eonduct of the war against 
Hannibal. He fought a battle with the Cartha- 
ginian general n< ar Numistro in Lucania, but 
without any decisive result. In 209 he retain- 
ed the command of his army with the rank of 
proconsul. In 208 he was consul for the fifth 
time. He and his colleague were defeated by 
Hannibal near Venusia, and Marcellus himself 
was slain in the battle. He was buried with 
all due honors by order of Hannibal. Marcel- 
lus appears to have been a rude, stern soldier, 
brave and daring to excess, but harsh, unyield- 
ing, and cruel. The great praise? bestowed 



j upon Marcellus by the Roman historians arc 
certainly undeserved, and probably found their 
I way into history from his funeral oration by his 
J son, which was used as an authority by some 
I of the earlier annalists.— 2. M., son of the pre- 
! ceding, accompanied his father as military trib- 
une in 20S, and was present with him at the 
| time of his death. In 204 he was tribune of 
| the people ; in 200, curule acdile ; in 198, praetor; 
and in 196, consul. In his consulship he carried 
on the war against the Insubrians and Boii in 
Cisalpine Gaul. He was censor in 189.— 3. M., 
consul 183, carried on the war against the Li* 
gurians. — 4. M., son of No. 2, waslhrice consul, 
first in 166, when he gained a victory over the 
Alpine tribes of the Gauls ; secondly in 155, 
when he defeated the Ligurians ; and thirdly in 
152, when he carried on the war against the 
Celtiberians in Spain. In 148 he °was sent 
ambassador to Masinissa, king of Numidia, but 
was shipwrecked on the voyage, and perished. 
— 5. M., an intimate friend of Cicero, is first 
mentioned as curule aedile with P. Clodius in 
56. He was consul in 51, and showed himself 
a bitter enemy to Cesar. Among other ways 
in which he displayed his enmity, he caused a' 
citizen of Comum to be scourged, in order to 
show his contempt for the privileges lately be- 
stowed by Caesar upon that colony. But the 
animosity of Marcellus did not blind him to the 
imprudence of forcing on a war for which his 
party was unprepared ; and at the beginning of 
49 he in vain suggested the necessity of mak- 
ing levies of troops, before any open steps were 
taken against Caesar. His advice was over- 
I ruled, and he was among the first to fly from 
| Rome and Italy. After the battle of Pharsalia 
(48) he abandoned all thoughts of prolonging 
j the contest, and withdrew to Mytilene, where 
he gave himself up to the pursuits of rhetoric 
and philosophy. Marcellus himself was un- 
willing to sue to the conqueror for forgiveness, 
but his friends at Rome were not backward in 
their exertions for that purpose. At length, in 
46, in a full assembly of the senate, C. Mar- 
cellus, the cousin of the exile, threw himself at 
Caesar's feet to implore the pardon of his kins- 
man, and his example was followed by the 
whole body of the assembly. Caesar yielded to 
this demonstration of opinion, and Marcellus 
was declared to be forgiven. Cicero thereupon 
returned thanks to Caesar, in the oration Pre 
Marcello, which has come down to us. Marcel 
lus set out on his return ; but he was murder 
ed at the Piraeus by one of his own attendants, 
P. Magius Chilo. — 6. C, brother of the preced- 
ing, was consul 49. He is constantly confound- 
ed with his cousin, C. Marcellus (No. 8), who 
was consul in 50. He accompanied his col- 
league, Lentulus, in his flight from Rome, and 
eventually crossed over to Greece. In the fol- 
lowing year (48) he commanded part of Pom- 
pey's fleet ; but this is the last we hear of him. 
— 7. C, uncle of the two preceding, was prae- 
tor in 80, and afterward succeeded M. Lepidus 
in the government of Sicily. His administra- 
tion of the province is frequently praised by 
Cicero in his speeches against Verres, as af- 
fording the most striking contrast to that of the 
accused. Marcellus himself was present on 
that occasion, as one of the judges of Verres. 

475 



MARCELLUS, EPRIUS. 



MARCIA GENS. 



— 8. C, son of the preceding, and first cousin 
of M. Marcellus (No. 5), whom he succeeded in 
the consulship, 50. He enjoyed the friendship 
of Cicero from an early age, and attached him- 
self to the party of Pompey, notwithstanding 
his connection with Caesar by his marriage 
with Octavia. In his consulship he was the ad- 
vocate of all the most violent measures against 
Caesar ; but when the war actually broke out, 
he displayed the utmost timidity and helpless- 
ness. He could not make up his mind to join 
the Pompeian party in Greece ; and after much 
hesitation, he at length determined to remain in 
Italy. He readily obtained the forgiveness of 
Caesar, and thus was able to intercede with the 
dictator in favor of his cousin, M. Marcellus 
(No. 5). He must have lived till near the close 
of 41, as his widow, Octavia, was pregnant by 
him when betrothed to Antony in the following 
year. — 9. M., son of the preceding and of Oc- 
tavia, the daughter of C. Octavius and sister of 
Augustus, was born in 43. As early as 39 he 
was betrothed in marriage to the daughter of 
Sextus Pompey; but the marriage never took 
place, as Pompey's death in 35 removed the oc- 
casion for it. Augustus, who had probably des- 
tined the young Marcellus as his successor, 
adopted him as his son in 25, and, at the same 
time, gave him his daughter Julia in marriage. 
In 23 he was curule a?dile, but in the autumn 
of the same year he was attacked by the disease 
of which he died shortly after at Baiae, notwith- 
standing all the skill and care of the celebrated 
physician Antonius Musa. He was in the twen- 
tieth year of his age, and was thought to have 
given so much promise of future excellence 
that his death was mourned as a public calam- 
ity ; and the grief of Augustus, as well as that 
of his mother Octavia, was for a time unbound- 
ed. Augustus himself pronounced the funeral 
oration over his remains, which were deposited 
in the mausoleum lately erected for the Julian 
family. At a subsequent period (14) Augustus 
dedicated in his name the magnificent theatre 
near the FoTum Olitorium. of which the re- 
mains are still visible. But the most durable 
monument to the memory of Marcellus is to be 
found in the well-known passage of Virgil (JEn., 
vi., 860-886), which must have been recited to 
Augustus and Octavia before the end of 22. — 
10. M., called by Cicero, for distinction's sake, 
the father of iEserninus (Brut., 36), served un- 
der Marius in Gaul in 102, and as one of the 
lieutenants of L. Julius Caesar in the Marsic 
war, 90. — 11. M. Claudius Marcellus JEser- 
jiinus, son or grandson of No. 10, quaestor in 
Spain in 48, under Q. Cassius Longinus, took 
part in the mutiny of the soldiers against Cas- 
sius. — 12. P. Cornelius Lentulus Marcel- 
linus, son of No. 10. must have been adopted 
by one of the Cornelii Lentuli. He was one 
of Pompey's lieutenants in the war against the 
pirates, B.C. 67.— ] 3. Cx. Cornelius Lentulus 
Marcellinus, son of the preceding, was praetor 
59, after which he governed the~ province of 
Syria for nearly two years, and was consul 56, 
when he showed himself a friend of the aristo- 
cratical party, and opposed all the measures of 
the triumvirate. 

Marcellus, Eprius. born of an obscure fam- 
ily at Capua, rose bv his oratorical talents to 
476 



distinction at Rome in the reigns of Claudius,. 
Nero, and Vespasian. He was one of the prinl 
, cipal delators under Nero, and accused many 
: of the most distinguished men of his time. He 
i was brought to trial in the reign of Vespasian, 
; but was acquitted, and enjoyed the patronage 
I and favor of this emperor as well. In A.D. 69, 
! however, he was convicted of having taken part 
! in the conspiracy of Alienus Caecina, and there - 
\ fore put an end to his own life. 

Marcellus, Nonius, a Latin grammarian, the 
I author of an important treatise, entitled De 
Compendiosa Doctrina per Litteras ad Filivm, 
sometimes, but erroneously, called De Propric- 
tate Sermonis. He must have lived between 
; the second and sixth centuries of the Christian 
era. His work is divided into eighteen chap- 
ters, but of these the first twelve are in reality 
separate treatises on different grammatical sub- 
| jects. The last six are in the style of the Ono- 
masticon of Julius Pollux, each containing a 
series of technical terms in some one depart- 
ment. The whole work contains numerous 
quotations from the earlier Latin writers. The 
■ best edition is by Gerlach and Roth, Basil., 1842. 
Marcellus Sidetes, a native of Side in Pam- 
phylia, lived in the reigns of Hadrian and Anto- 
ninus Pius, A.D. 117-161. He wrote a long 
medical poem in Greek hexameter verse, con- 
sisting of forty-two books, of which two frag- 
ments remain, [and are found in the Corpus 
| Poetarum of Maittaire.j 

Marcellus, Ulpius, a jurist, lived under An- 
toninus Pius and M. Aurelius. He is often 
cited in the Digest. 

Marcia. 1. Wife of M. Regulus, who was 
taken prisoner by the Carthaginians. — 2. Wife 
of M. Cato Uticensis, daughter of L. Marcius 
Philippus, consul B.C. 56. It was about 56 
that Cato is related to have ceded her to his 
friend Q. Hortensius, with the approbation of 
her father. She continued to live with Hor- 
tensius till the death of the latter in 50, after 
which she returned to Cato. — 3. Wife of Fabius 
Maximus, the friend of Augustus, learned from 
her husband the secret visit of the emperor to 
his grandson Agrippa, and informed Livia of it, 
in consequence of which she became the cause 
of her husband's death, A.D. 13 or 14. She is 
mentioned on two or three occasions by Ovid. 
— 4. Daughter of Cremutius Cordus. Vid. Cor- 
dus. — 5. The favorite concubine of Commodus, 
organized the plot by which the emperor perish- 
ed. Vid. Commodus. She subsequently became 
the wife of Eclectus, his chamberlain, also a 
conspirator, and was eventually put to death by 
Julianus, along with Laetus, who also had been 
actively engaged in the plot. 

[Marcia Aqua, a Roman aqueduct commenc- 
ed by the prsetor Marcius Rex 145 B.C., and fin- 
ished by him in the following year, his term of 
office having been renewed for that purpose. It 
passed near^Tibur, and through the country of 
the Peligni and Marsi, and supplied Rome with 
its best water: vid. Roma p. 753 b.] 

Marcia Gens, claimed to De descended from 
Ancus Marcius, the fourth king of Rome. Vid. 
Ancus Marcics. Hence one of its families sub- 
sequently assumed the name of Rex, and the 
heads of Numa Pompilius and Ancus Marcius 
were placed noon the coins of the Marcii. But, 



MARCIANA. 



MARDUS. 



notwithstanding these claims to such high an- j 
tiquity, no patricians of this name, with the ex- j 
ception of Coriolanus, are mentioned in the ear- 
ly history of the republic (vid. Coriolanus) ; 
and it was nor till after the enactment of the 
Licinian laws that any member of the gens ob- 
tained the consulship. The names of the most 
distinguished families are Censorinus, Philip- 
pus, Rex, and Ritilus. 

Marciana, the sister of Trajan, and mother 
of Matidia, who was the mother of Sabina, the 
wife of the Emperor Hadrian. 

Marcianopolis (UapKtavoviroXic), an import- 
ant city in the interior of Mcesia Inferior, west 
of Odessus, founded by Trajan, and named after 
his sister Marciana. It was situated on the high 
road from Constantinople to the Danube. It 
subsequently became the capital of the Bulga- 
rians, who called it Pristhlava (RpLodlaba), 
whence its modern name Presthlaw, but the 
Greeks still call it Marcenopoli. 

Marcianus. L. Emperor of the East A.D. 
450-457, was a native of Thrace or Illyricum, 
and served for many years as a common soldier 
in the imperial army. Of his early history we 
have only a few particulars ; but he had attain- 
ed such distinction at the death of Theodosius 
II. in 450, that the widow of the latter, the cel- 
ebrated Pulcheria, offered her hand and the im- 
perial title to Marcian, who thus became Em- 
peror of the East. Marcian was a man of res- 
olution and bravery ; and when Attila sent to | 
demand the tribute which the younger Theodo- 
sius had engaged to pay annually, the emperor 
sternly replied, " I have iron for Attila, but no 
gold." Attila swore vengeance ; but he first 
invaded the Western Empire, and his death, 
two years afterward, saved the East. In 451 
Marcian assembled the council of Chalcedon, in 
which the doctrines of the Eutychians were con- 
demned. He died in 457, and was succeeded 
by Leo. — 2. Of Heraclea in Pontus, a Greek 
geographer, of uncertain date, but who perhaps 
lived in the fifth century of the Christian era. 
He wrote a work in prose, entitled " A Periplus 
of the External Sea, both eastern and western, 
and of the largest Islands in it." The External 
Sea he used in opposition to the Mediterranean. 
This work was in two books ; of which the for- 
mer, on the East and South Seas, has come 
down to us entire ; but of the latter, which 
treated of the West and North Seas, we pos- 
eess only the three last chapters on Africa, and 
a mutilated one on the distance from Rome to 
the principal cities in the world. In this work 
he chiefly follows Ptolemy. He also made an 
epitome of the Pcnplus of Artemidorus of Eph- 
esus (vid. Artkmidorus, No. 4), of which we 
possess the introduction, and the periplus of j 
Pontus, Bithynia, and Paphlagonia. Marcianus 
likewise published an edition of Menippus with 
additions ami corrections. Vid Menippus. The; 
works of Marcianus are edited by Hudson, in ! 
the Gcographi Qraci Minor es, and separately by ! 
Hoffmann, Marciani Periplus, &c, Lips., 1841. i 

Marcianus, ^Ei.ius, a Roman jurist, who lived j 
under Caracalia and Alexander Severus. His ] 
works are frequently cited in the Digest. 

Marcianus Capella. Vid. Capella. 

Marcius, an Italian seer, whose prophetic 
verses (Carmtna Marciana) were first discover- j 



ed by M. Atilius, the praetor, in B.C. 213. They 
were written in Latin, and two extracts from 
them are given by Livy, one containing a proph- 
ecy of the defeat of the Romans at Cannae, and 
the second, commanding the institution of the 
Ludi Apollinares. The Marcian prophecies 
were subsequently preserved in the Capitol 
with the Sibylline books. Some writers men- 
tion only one person of this name, but others 
speak of two brothers, the Marcii. 

Marcius. Vid. Marcia Gens. 

[Marcodurum (now Durcn), a city of the 
Ubii in Germania Inferior.] 

Marcomanni, that is, men of the mark or bor- 
der, a powerful German people of the Suevic 
race, originally dwelt in the southwest of Ger- 
many, between the Rhine and the Danube, on 
the banks of the Main ; but under the guidance 
of their chieftain Maroboduus, who had been 
brought up at the court of Augustus, they mi- 
grated into the land of the Boii, a Celtic race, 
who inhabited Bohemia and part of Bavaria. 
Here they settled after subduing the Boii, and 
founded a powerful kingdom, which extended 
south as far as the Danube. Vid. Maroboduus. 
At a later time, the Marcomanni, in conjunc- 
tion with the Quadi and other German tribes, 
carried on a long and bloody war with the Em- 
peror M. Aurelius, which lasted during the great- 
er part of his reign, and was only brought to a 
conclusion by his son Commodus purchasing 
peace of the barbarians as soon as he ascended 
the throne, A.D. 180. 

Mardene or Mardyene (Mapdrivrj, Map8vrjvfj), 
a district of Persis, extending north from Tao- 
cene to the western frontier and to the sea- 
coast. It seems to have taken its name from 
some branch of the great people called Mardior 
Amardi, who are found in various parts of west- 
ern and central Asia ; for example, in Arme- 
nia, Media, Margiana, and, under the same form 
of name as those in Persis, in Sogdiana. 

Mardi. Vid. Amardi, Mardene. 

Mardonius (Mapdovioc), a distinguished Per- 
sian, was the son of Gobryas, and the son-in- 
law of Darius Hystaspis. In B.C. 492 he was 
sent by Darius with a large armament to pun- 
ish Eretria and Athens for the aid they had 
given to the Ionians. But his expedition was 
an entire failure. His fleet was destroyed by a 
storm off Mount Athos, and the greater part of 
his land forces was destroyed on his passage 
through Macedonia by the Brygians, a Thra- 
cian tribe. In consequence of his failure, he 
was superseded in the command by Datis and 
Artaphernes, 490. On the accession of Xerxes, 
Mardonius was one of the chief instigators of 
the expedition against Greece, with the gov- 
ernment of which he hoped to be invested after 
its conquest ; and he was appointed one of the 
generals of the land army. After the battle of 
Salamis (480) he became alarmed for the con- 
sequences of the advice he had given, and per- 
suaded Xerxes to return home with the rest 
of the army, leaving three hundred thousand 
men under his command for the subjugation of 
Greece. He was defeated in the following year 
(470 B.C.), near Plateeas, by the combined Greek 
forces under the command of Pausanias, and 
was slain in the battle. 

Mardus. Vid. Amardus. 

477 



MARDYENE. 



MARIUS. 



Mardyene, Mardyeni. Vid. Mardene. 

Marea, -ea, -ia (Mape??, Mapeia, Mapm: Ma- 
oeuTTjc, Mareota : ruins at Mariouth), a town of 
Lower Egypt, in the district of Mareotis, on the 
southern side of the Lake Mareotis, at the mouth 
of a canal. 

Mareotis (MapEurt^). 1. Also called Mape- 
uttjq No,udf, a district of Lower Egypt, on the 
extreme northwest, on the borders of the Lib- 
yas Nomos : it produced good wine. — 2. A town 
in the interior of the Libyae Nomos, between 
the Oasis of Ammon and the Oasis Minor. 

Mareotis or Marea or (-ia) Lacus (57 Mcpew- 
r*f, Mapeia, Mapca Vl^vj] : now Birket- Mariouth, 
or El-Kreit), a considerable lake in the north- 
west of Lower Egypt, separated from the Med- 
iterranean by the neck of land on which Alex- 
andrea stood, and supplied with water by the 
Canopic branch of the Nile, and by canals. It 
was less than three hundred stadia (thirty geo- 
graphical miles) long, and more than one hund- 
red and fifty wide. It was surrounded with vines, 
palms, and papyrus. It served as the port of 
Alexandrea for vessels navigating the Nile. 

Mares (Mapef), a people of Asia, on the north- 
ern coast of the Euxine, who served in the army 
of Xerxes, being equipped with helmets of wick- 
er-work, leathern shields, and javelins. 

Maresa, Makescha (Mapijca, Mapicd, Mapia- 
ca, Mapecxa ■ probably ruins southeast of Beit 
Jibrin), an ancient fortress of Palestine, in the 
south of Judaea, of some importance in the his- 
tory of the early kings of Judah and of the Mac- 
cabees. The Parthians had destroyed it before 
the time of Eusebius ; and it is probable that 
its ruins contributed to the erection of the city 
of Eleutheropolis (now Beit Jibrin), which was 
afterward built on the site of the ancient Baeto- 
gabra, two Roman miles northwest of Maresa. 

Marescha. Vid. Maresa. 

Margiana (rj Mapytavfi : the southern part of 
Khiva, southwest part of Bokhara, and north- 
east part of Khorassan), a province of the an- 
cient Persian empire, and afterward of the Gre- 
co-Syrian, Parthian, and Persian kingdoms in 
Central Asia, north of the mountains called 
Sariphi (now Ghoor), a part of the chain of the 
Indian Caucasus, which divided it from Aria ; 
and bounded on the east by Bactriana, on the 
northeast and north by the River Oxus, which 
divided it from Sogdiana and Scythia, and on 
the west by Hyrcania. It received its name 
from the River Margus (now Moorghab), which 
flows through it, from southeast to northwest, 
and is lost in the sands of the Desert of Khiva. 
On this river, near its termination, stood the 
capital of the district, Antiochia Margiana (now 
Mcru). With the exception of the districts 
round this and the minor rivers, which produced 
excellent wine, the country was for the most 
part a sandy desert. Its chief inhabitants were 
the Derbices, Parni, Tapuri, and branches of 
the great tribes of the Massagetse, Dahae, and 
Mardi. The country became known to the 
Greeks by the expeditions of Alexander and 
Antiochus I., the first of whom founded, and 
the second rebuilt, Antiochia ; and the Romans 
of the age of Augustus obtained further infor- 
mation about it from the returned captives who 
had been taken by the Parthians and had resided 
at Antiochia. 

478 



Margites. Vid. Homerus, p. 378, a. 

Maegum or Margus, a fortified place in Mce>- 
sia Superior, west of Viminacium, situated on 
the River Margus (now Morava), at its conflu- 
ence with the Danube. Here Diocletian gained 
a decisive victory over Carinus. The River 
Margus, which is one of the southern tributa- 
ries of the Danube, rises in Mount Orbelus. 

Margus. Vid. Margiana. 

Maria. Vid. Marea, Mareotis. 

Mariaba. Vid. Saba. 

Mariamma (Mapidp,jur], -tdfin, -idjuvn), a city ot 
Coele-Syria, some miles west of Emesa, assign- 
ed by Alexander the Great to the territory of 
Aradus. 

Mariamne. Vid. Herodes. 

Mariamne Turris, a tower at Jerusalem, 
built by Herod the Great. 

[Mariana (Mapiavrj), a colony established by 
C. Marius on the east coast of Corsica, the sec- 
ond chief city of the island, with a good har- 
bor : its ruins still exist at the mouth of the 
Golo (the ancient Tavola), in a district called 
the plain of Mariana.] 

Marianne FossiE. Vid. Fossa. 

Mariandyni (Mapiavdwoi), an ancient people 
of Asia Minor, on the northern coast, east of 
the River Sangarius, in the northeast part of 
Bithynia. With respect to their ethnical affin- 
ities, it seems doubtful whether they were con- 
nected with the Thracian tribes (the Thyni and 
Bithyni) on the west, or the Paphlagonians on 
the east ; but the latter appears the more prob- 
able. 

Marianus Mons (now Sierra Morena), a 
mountain in Hispania Baetica, properly only a 
western offshoot of the Orospeda. The east- 
ern part of it was called Saltus Castulonensis, 
and derived its name from the town of Castulo. 

Marica, a Latin nymph, the mother of La- 
tinus by Faunus, was worshipped by the inhab- 
itants of Minturnae in a grove on the River Li- 
ris. Hence the country round Minturnae is 
called by Horace (Carm., iii., 17, 7) Marica 
litora. 

Marinus (Maptvog). 1. Of Tyre, a Greek 
geographer, who lived in the middle of the sec- 
ond century of the Christian era, and was the 
immediate predecessor of Ptolemy. Marinus 
was undoubtedly the founder of mathematical 
geography in antiquity ; and Ptolemy based his 
whole work upon that of Marinus. Vid. Ptol- 
em^us. The chief merit of Marinus was, that 
he put an end to the uncertainty that had hith- 
erto prevailed respecting the positions of places, 
by assigning to each its latitude and longitude. 
— 2. Of Flavia Neapolis, in Palestine, a philos- 
opher and rhetorician, was the pupil and suc- 
cessor of Proclus, whose life he wrote, a work 
which is still extant, edited by Boissonade, 
Lips., 1814. 

Marisus (now Marosch), called Maris (Ma- 
pi?) by Herodotus, a river of Dacia, which, ac- 
cording to the ancient writers, falls into the Dan- 
ube, but which in reality falls into the Theiss, 
and, along with this river, into the Danube. 

Maritima, a sea-port town of the Avatici, and 
a Roman colony in Gallia Narbonensis. 

Marius. 1. C, the celebrated Roman, who 
was seven times consul, was born in B.C. 157, 
near Arpinum, of an obscure and humble family. 



MARIUS. 



MARIUS 



His father's name was C. Marius, and his moth- 
er's Fulcinia ; and his parents, as well as Mari- 
us himself, were clients of the noble plebeian 
house of the Herennii. So indigent, indeed, is 
the family represented to have been, that young 
Marius is said to have worked as a common 
peasant for wa<res, before he entered the ranks 
of the Roman ^army. (Comp. Juv., viii., 246.) 

, The meanness of his origin has probably been 
somewhat exaggerated ; but, at all events, he 
distinguished himself so much by his valor at 
the siege of Numantia in Spain (134) as to at- 
tract the notice of Scipio Africanus, who is said 
to have foretold his future greatness. His name 
does not occur again for fifteen years ; but in 
119 he was elected tribune of the plebs, when 

! he was thirty-eight years of age. In this office 
he came forward as a popular leader, and pro- 
posed a law to give greater freedom to the peo- 
ple at the elections ; and when the senate at- 
tempted to overawe him, he commanded one 
of his officers to carry the consul Metellus to 
prison. He now became a marked man, and 
the aristocracy opposed him with all their might. 
He lost his election to the aedileship, and with 
difficulty obtained the praetorship ; but he ac- 
quired influence and importance by his marriage 
with Julia, the sister of C. Julius Caesar, who 
was the father of the future ruler of Rome. In 
109 Marius crossed over into Africa as legate 
of the consul Q. Metellus. Here, in the war 
against Jugurtha, the military genius of Marius 
had ample opportunity of displaying itself, and 

I he was soon regarded as the most distinguish- 

i ed officer in the army. He also ingratiated j 
himself with the soldiers, who praised him in j 
the highest terms in their letters to their friends 
at Rome. His popularity became so great that 
he resolved to return to Rome, and become at 
once a candidate for the consulship ; but it was 
with great difficulty that he obtained from Me- 
tellus permission to leave Africa. On his arri- 
val at Rome he was elected consul with an 
enthusiasm which bore down all opposition be- 
fore it ; and he received from the people the 
province of Numidia, and the conduct of the 
war against Jugurtha (107). On his return to 
Numidia he carried on the war with great vigor ; 
and in the following year (106) Jugurtha was 
surrendered to him by the treachery of Bocchus, 
king of Mauretania. Vid. Jugurtha. Marius 
sent his quaestor Sulla to receive the Numidian 
king from Bocchus. This circumstance sowed 
the seeds of the personal hatred which after- 
ward existed between Marius and Sulla, since 
the enemies of Marius claimed for Sulla the 
merit of bringing the war to a close by obtain- 
ing possession of the person of Jugurtha. Mean- 
time Italy was threatened by a vast horde of 
barbarians, who had migrated from the north 
of Germany. The two leading nations of which 
they consisted were called Cimbri and Teutoni, 
the former of whom are supposed to have been 
Celts, and the latter Gauls. To these two great 
races were added the Ambrones, and some of 
the Swiss tribes, such as the Tigurini. The 
whole host is said to have contained three hund- 
red thousand fighting men, besides a much 
larger number of women and children. They 
had defeated one Roman army after another, 
and it appeared that nothing could check their 



progress. The utmost alarm prevailed through- 
out Italy ; all party quarrels were hushed. 
Every one felt that Marius was the only man 
capable of saving the state, and he was accord- 
ingly elected consul a second time during his 
absence in Africa. Marius entered Rome in 
triumph on the first of January, 104, the first 
day of his second consulship. Meanwhile, the 
threatened danger was for a while averted. In- 
stead of crossing the Alps, the Cimbri marched 
into Spain, which they ravaged for the next two 
or three years. But as the return of the bar- 
barians was constantly expected, Marius was 
elected consul a third time in 103, and a fourth 
time in 102. In the latter of these years the 
Cimbri returned into Gaul. The barbarians 
now divided their forces. The Cimbri marched 
round the northern foot of the Alps, in order to 
enter Italy by the northeast, crossing the Tyro- 
lese Alps by the defiles of Tridentum (now 
Trent). The Teutoni and Ambrones, on the 
other hand, marched against Marius, who had 
taken up a position in a fortified camp on the 
Rhone. The decisive battle was fought near 
Aquae Sextiae (now Aix). The carnage was 
dreadful. The whole nation was annihilated, 
for those who did not fall in the battle put an 
end to their own lives. The Cimbri, meantime, 
had forced their way into Italy. Marius was 
elected consul a fifth time (101), and joined the 
proconsul Catulus in the north of Italy. The 
two generals gained a great victory over the 
enemy on a plain called the Campi Raudii, near 
Vercellae (now Vercelli). The Cimbri met with 
the same fate as the Teutoni ; the whole nation 
was destroyed. Marius was received at Rome 
with unprecedented honors. He was hailed as 
the saviour of the state ; his name was coupled 
with the gods in the libations and at banquets, 
and he received the title of third founder of 
Rome. Hitherto the career of Marius had been 
a glorious one ; but the remainder of his life is 
full of horrors, and brings out the worst features- 
of his character. In order to secure the con- 
sulship the sixth time, he entered into close con- 
nection with two of the worst demagogues that 
ever appeared at Rome, Saturninus and Glaucia. 
He gained his object, and was consul a sixth 
time in 100. In this year he drove into exile 
his old enemy Metellus ; and shortly afterward, 
when Saturninus and Glaucia took up arms 
against the state, Marius crushed the insurrec 
tion by command of the senate. Vid. Saturni- 
nus. His conduct in this affair was greatly 
blamed by the people, who looked upon him as 
a traitor to his former friends. For the next 
few years Marius took little part in public affairs. 
He possessed none of the qualifications which 
were necessary to maintain influence in the 
state during a time of peace, being an unletter- 
ed soldier, rude in manners, and arrogant in con- 
duct. The Social war again called him into 
active service (90). He served as legate of the 
consul P. Rutilius Lupus ; and after the latter 
had fallen in battle, he defeated the Marsi in 
two successive engagements. Marius was now 
sixty-seven, and his body had grown stout and 
unwieldy ; but he was still as greedy of honor 
and distinction as he had ever been. He had 
set his heart upon obtaining the command of 
the war against Mithradates, which the senate 

479 



MARIUS. 



MARMARICA. 



had bestowed upon the consul Sulla at the end 
of the Social war (88). In order to gain his ob- 
ject, Marius allied himself to the tribune P. 
Sulpicius Rufus, who brought forward a law for 
distributing the Italian allies, who had just ob- 
tained the Roman franchise, among all the Ro- 
man tribes. As those new citizens greatly ex- 
ceeded the old citizens in number, they would, 
of course, be able to carry whatever they pleased 
in the comitia. The law was carried, notwith- 
standing the violent opposition of the consuls ; 
and the tribes, in which the new citizens now 
had the majority, appointed Marius to the com- 
mand of the war against Mithradates. Sulla 
fled to his army, which was stationed at Nola ; 
and when Marius sent thither two military trib- 
unes to take the command of the troops, Sulla 
not only refused to surrender the command, but 
marched upon Rome at the head of his army. 
Marius was now 7 obliged to take to flight. After 
wandering along the coast of Latium, and en- 
countering terrible sufferings and privations, 
which he bore with unflinching fortitude, he 
was at length taken prisoner in the marshes 
formed by the River Liris, near Minturnae. The 
magistrates of this place resolved to put him to 
death, in accordance with a command which 
Sulla had sent to all the towns in Italy. A 
Gallic or Cimbrian soldier undertook to carry j 
their sentence into effect, and with a drawn 
sword entered the apartment where Marius was 
confined. The part of the room in which Ma- 
rius lay was in the shade ; and to the frightened 
barbarian the eyes of Marius seemed to dart out 
lire, and from the darkness a terrible voice ex- | 
claimed, " Man, durst thou murder C. Marius 1 ?" 
The barbarian immediately threw down his 
sword, and rushed out of the house- Straight- 
way there was a revulsion of feeling among the 
inhabitants of Minturnae. They got ready a 
ship, and placed Marius on board. He reached 
Africa in safety, and landed at Carthage ; but 
he had scarcely put his foot on shore before the 
Roman governor sent an officer to bid him leave 
the country. This last blow almost unmanned 
Marius ; his only reply was, " Tell the prae- 
tor that you have seen C. Marius a fugitive sit- 
ting on the ruins of Carthage." Soon after- 
ward Marius was joined by his son, and they 
took refuge in the island of Cercina. During 
this time a revolution had taken place at Rome, 
in consequence of which Marius was enabled 
to return to Italy. The consul Cinna (87), who 
belonged to the Marian party, had been driven 
out of Rome by his colleague Octavius, and had 
subsequently been deprived by the senate of the 
consulate. Cinna collected an army, and re- 
solved to recover his honors by force of arms. 
As soon as Marius heard of these changes, he 
left Africa, and joined Cinna in Italy. Marius 
and Cinna now laid siege to Rome. The failure 
of provisions compelled the senate to yield, and 
Marius and Cinna entered Rome as conquerors. 
The most frightful scenes followed. The guards 
of Marius stabbed every one whom he did not 
salute, and the streets ran with the blood of the 
noblest of the Roman aristocracy. Among the 
victims of his vengeance were the great orator 
M. Antonius and his former colleague Q. Catu- 
lus. Without going through the form of an 
election, Marius and Cinna named themselves 
480 



consuls for the following year (86). But he did 
not long enjoy the honor : he was now in his 
seventy-first year ; his body was worn out by 
the fatigues and sufferings he had recently un- 
dergone ; and on the eighteenth day of his con- 
sulship he died of an attack of pleurisy, after 
seven days' illness. — 2. C, the son of the pre- 
ceding, but only by adoption. He followed in 
the footsteps of his father, and was equally dis- 
tinguished by merciless severity against his 
enemies. He was consul in 82, when he was 
twenty-seven years of age. In this year he 
was defeated by Sulla near Sacriportus on the 
frontiers of Latium, whereupon he took refuge 
in the strongly-fortified town of Praeneste. 
Here he was besieged for some time ; but after 
Sulla's great victory at the Colline gate of Rome 
over Pontius Telesinus, Marius put an end to 
his own life, after making an unsuccessful at- 
tempt to escape. — 3. The false Marius. Vid. 
Amatius. — [4. M. Gratidienus Marius, son of 
M. Gratidius, but adopted by one of the Maria 
gens, probably a brother of the celebrated Ma- 
rius : he was a popular speaker, and in high 
favor with the people. During the proscrip- 
tions of Sulla he was killed by Catiline in a 
brutal manner, and his head was carried in tri- 
umph through the city.] — 5. M. Aurelius Ma- 
rius, one of the thirty tyrants, was the fourth 
of the usurpers who in succession ruled Gaul, 
in defiance of Galiienus. He reigned only two 
or three days, but there are coins of his extant. 
— 6. Marius Celsus. Vid. Celsus. — 7. Mari- 
us Maximus, a Roman historian, who is repeat- 
edly cited by the Augustan historians. He 
probably flourished under Alexander Severus, 
and appears to have written the biographies of 
the Roman emperors, beginning with Trajan 
and ending with Elagabalus. — 8. Marius Mer- 
cator, an ecclesiastical writer, distinguished as 
a zealous antagonist of the Pelagians and the 
Nestorians. He appears to have commenced 
his literary career during the pontificate of Zosi- 
mus, A.D. 418, at Rome, and he afterward re- 
paired to Constantinople. Mercator seems un- 
doubtedly to have been a layman, but we are 
ignorant of every circumstance connected with 
his origin and personal history. The works of 
Mercator refer exclusively to the Pelagian and 
Nestorian heresies, and consist, for the most 
part, of passages extracted and translated from 
the chief Greek authorities. The best edition 
is by Baluze, Par., 1684. 

Marmarica (q MapfiapLK7] : Map/napidat : now 
eastern part of Tripoli and northwestern part of 
Egypt), a district of Northern Africa, between 
Cyrenaica and Egypt, but by some ancient ge- 
ographers reckoned as a part of Cyrenaica, and 
by others as a part of Egypt ; while others, 
again, call only the western part of it, from the 
borders of Cyrenaica to the Catabathmus Mag- 
nus, by the name of Marmarica, and the east- 
ern part, from the Catabathmus Magnus to the 
Sinus Plinthinetes, Libyae Nomos. Inland it 
extended as far as the Oasis of Ammon. It 
was, for the most part, a sandy desert, inter- 
sected with low ranges of hills. Its inhabit- 
ants were called by the general name of Mar- 
maridae. Their chief tribes were the Adyr- 
machidae and Giligamma2 on the coast, and the 
Nasamones and Augilae in the interior. 



M ARMARIUM. 



MARS I. 



MarmarTom (Mapfidptov: Ua^uupiog: now 
Mar mart), a place on the southwestern coast 
of Eubcea, with a temple of Apollo Marmanus, 
and celebrated marble quarries, which belonged 
to Carystus. 

Maro, Virgimcjs. Vid. Virgilius. 
Maroboouus, the Latinized form of the Ger- 
man Marboo, king of the Marcomanni, was a 
Suevian by birth, and was born about B.C. 18. 
He was sent in his boyhood with other host- 
ages to Rome, where he attracted the notice 
of Augustus, and received a liberal education. 
After his return to his native country he suc- 
ceeded in establishing a powerful kingdom in 
central Germany, along the northern bank of 
the Danube, from Regensberg nearly to the bor- 
ders of Hungary, and which stretched far into 
the interior. His power excited the jealousy 
of Augustus, who had determined to send a for- 
midable army to invade his dominions ; but the 
revolt of the Pannonians and Dalmatians (A.D. 
6) prevented the emperor from carrying his de- 
sign into effect. Maroboduus eventually be- 
came an object of suspicion to the other Ger- 
man tribes, and was at length expelled from 
his dominions by Catualda, a chief of the Go- 
thones, about A.D. 19. He took refuge in Italy, 
where Tiberius allowed him to remain, and he 
passed the remainder of his life at Ravenna. 
He died in 35, at the age of fifty-three years. 

Maron (Mupov). 1. Son of Evanthes, and 
grandson of Bacchus (Dionysus) and Ariadne, 
priest of Apollo at Maronea in Thrace. He was 
the hero of sweet wine, and is mentioned 
among the companions of Bacchus (Dionysus). 
— [2. One of the brave Spartan band who fought 
and fell with Leonidas at Thermopylae.] 

Maronea (Mapuveca : MapoveiTne : now Ma- 
rogna), a town on the southern coast of Thrace, 
situated on the northern bank of the Lake Is- 
maris and on the River Sthenas, more anciently 
called Ortagurea. It belonged originally to the 
Cicones, but afterward received colonists from 
Chios. It was celebrated for its excellent wine, 
which even Homer mentions. 

Marpessa (Maprcnaaa), daughter of Evenus 
and Alcippe. For details, vid. Idas. 

Marpessa (UdpTT7]aaa), a mountain in Paros, 
from which the celebrated Parian marble was 
obtained. Hence Virgil (Mn., vi., 471) speaks 
of Marpesia cautes. 

[Marpessus (MdpTrrjaaoc), a city of Troas, be- 
longing to the territory of Lampsacus, the na- 
tive city of one of the Sibyls ] 

MarrucIni, a brave and warlike people in 
Italy of the Sabellian race, occupying a narrow 
slip of country along the right bank of the River 
Aternus, and bounded on the north by the Ves- 
ting on the west by the Peligni and Marsi, on 
the south by the Frentani, and on the east by 
the Adriatic Sea. Their chief town was Teate, 
and at the mouth of the Aternus they possess- 
ed, in common with the Vestini, the sea-port 
Aternum. Along with the Marsi, Peligni, and 
the other Sabellian tribes, they fought against 
Rome ; and, together with them, they submit- 
ted to the Romans in B.C. 304, and concluded 
a peace with the republic. 

Marruvium or MaruvIum. 1. (Now S. Ben- 
tdetto), the chief town of the Marsi (who are 
therefore called gens Maruvia, Virg., Mn.. vii., 
31 



750), situated on the eastern bank of the Lake 
Fucinus, and on the road between Corfinium 
and Alba Fucentia. — 2. (Now Morro), an an- 
cient town of the Aborigines in the country of 
the Sabines, not to be confounded with the Mar- 
sic Marruvium. 

Mars, an ancient Roman god, who was at an 
early period identified by the Romans with the 
Greek Ares, or the god delighting in bloody 
war. Vid. Ares. The name of the god in the 
Sabine and Oscan was Mamers ; and Mars it- 
self is a contraction of Mavers or Mavors. Next 
to Jupiter, Mars enjoyed the highest honors at 
Rome. He is frequently designated as Father 
Mars, whence the forms Marspitcr and Maspitcr, 
analogous to Jupiter. Jupiter, Mars, and Qui- 
rinus were the three tutelary divinities of Rome, 
to each of whom King Numa appointed a fla- 
men. He was worshipped at Rome as the god 
of war, and war itself was frequently designat- 
ed by the name of Mars. His priests, the Salii, 
danced in full armor, and the place dedicated 
to warlike exercises was called after his name 
(Campus Martius). But, being the father of the 
Romans, Mars was also the protector of the 
most honorable pursuit, i. c, agriculture ; and. 
under the name of Silvanus, he was worship 
ped as the guardian of cattle. Mars was also 
identified with Quirinus, who was the deity 
watching over the Roman citizens in their civil 
capacity as Quirites. Thus Mars appears un- 
der three aspects. As the warlike god, he was 
called Gradivus ; as the rustic god, he w 7 as call- 
ed Silvanus ; while, in his relation to the state, 
he bore the name of Quirinus. His wife was 
called Neria or Neriene, the feminine of Nero, 
which in the Sabine language signified " strong." 
The wolf and the woodpecker (picas) were sa- 
cred to Mars. Numerous temples were dedicat- 
ed to him at Rome, the most important of which 
was that outside the Porta Capena, on the Ap- 
pian road, and that of Mars Ultor, which was 
built by Augustus in the forum. 

[Marsacii, a people in Gallia Belgica, on one 
of the islands formed by the Rhine, which first 
became known to the Romans through the war 
with Civilis.] 

Marsi. 1. A brave and warlike people of the 
Sabellian race, dwelt in the centre of Italy, in 
the high land surrounded by the mountains of 
the Apennines, in which the Lake Fucinus is 
situated. Along with their neighbors the Pe- 
ligni, Marrucini, &c., they concluded a peace 
with Rome, B.C. 304. Their bravery was pro- 
verbial ; and they were the prime movers of 
the celebrated war waged against Rome by the 
Socii or Italian allies in order to obtain the Ro- 
man franchise, and which is known by the name 
of the Marsic or Social war. Their chief town 
was Marruvium. The Marsi appear to have 
been acquainted with the medicinal properties 
of several of the plants growing upon their 
mountains, and to have employed them as rem- 
edies against the bites of serpents, and in other 
cases. Hence they were regarded as magi- 
cians, and were said to be descended from a 
son of Circe. Others, again, derived their ori- 
gin from the Phrygian Marsyas simply on ac- 
count of the resemblance of the name. — 2. A 
people in Germany, appear to have dwelt orig 
inally on both banks of the Ems, and to have 

481 



MARSIGNI. 



MARTIALIS. 



been only a tribe of the Cherusci, although Tac- J titles of which are given by Suidas. — 3. Of 
itus makes them one of the most ancient tribes i Philippi, commonly called the younger, to dis- 
in Germany. They joined the Cherusci in the ' tinguish him from the preceding, was also a 
war against the Romans, which terminated in ! Greek historian. The period at which he flour- 
the defeat of Varus, but they were subsequently ' ished is uncertain : the earliest writers by whom 
driven into the interior of the country by Ger- he is cited are Pliny and Athenaeus. 
manicus. Marsyas (Mapava?). 1. A small and rapid 

Marsigxi, a people in the southeast of Ger- river of Phrygia, a tributary of the Maeander, 
many, of Suevic extraction. j took its rise, according to Xenophon, in the pal- 

Marsus, Domitius, a Roman poet of the Au- ace of the Persian kings at Celaenae, beneath the 
gustan age. He wrote poems of various kinds, Acropolis, and fell into the Maeander outside of 
but his epigrams were the most celebrated of j the city. Pliny, however, states that its source 
his productions. Hence he is frequently men- ; was in the valley called Aulocrene, about ten 
tioned by Martial, who speaks of him in terms , miles from Apamea Cibotus (which city was on 
of the highest admiration. He wrote a beauti- 1 or near the site of Celaenae), and that after a 
ful epitaph on Tibullus, which has come down ' subterraneous course it first came out to light 
to us. ! at Apamea. Colonel Leake reconciles these 

Marsyas (Mapora?). 1. A mythological per- statements by the natural explanation that the 
sonage, connected with the earliest period of ; place where the river first broke forth from its 
Greek music. He is variously called the son subterraneous course was regarded as its true 
of Hyagnis, or of CEagrus. or of Olympus. ; origin. Tradition ascribed its name to the fa- 
Some make him a satyr, "others a peasant. All ble of Marsyas. — 2. (Now Chinar-Chai), a con- 
agree in placing him in Phrygia. The follow- siderable river of Caria, having its source in the 
ingis the outline of his story : Minerva (Athena) district called Idrias, flowing northwest and 
having, while playing the flute, seen the reflec- north through the middle of Caria, past Stra- 
tion of herself in water, and observed the dis- tonicea and Alabanda, and falling into the south- 
tortion of her features, threw away the instru- ern side of the Maeander nearly opposite to 
ment in disgust. It was picked up by Marsyas, Tralles. — 3. In Syria, a small tributary of the 
who no sooner began to blow through it, than Orontes. into which it falls on the eastern side, 
the flute, having once been inspired by the near Apamea. — 4. A name given to the exten- 
breath of a goddess, emitted of its own accord ; sive plain in Syria through which the upper 
the most beautiful strains. Elated by his sue- ! course of the Orontes flows, lying between the 
cess, Marsyas was rash enough to challenge j ranges of Casius and Lebanon, and reaching 
Apollo to a musical contest, the conditions of \ from Apamea on the north to Laodicea ad Liba- 
which were that the victor should do what he ; num on the south. 

pleased with the vanquished. The Muses, or, Martialis. 1. M. Valerius, the epigram- 
according to others, the Nysaeans, were the ' matic poet, was born at Bilbilis in Spain in the 
umpires. Apollo played upon the cithara, and third year of Claudius, A.D. 43. He came to 
Marsyas upon the flute ; and it was not till the i Rome in the thirteenth year of Nero, 66 ; and 
former added his voice to the music of his lyre ; after residing in the metropolis thirty -five years, 
that the contest was decided in his favor. As he returned to the place of his birth in the third 
a just punishment for the presumption of Mar- ] year of Trajan, 100. He lived there for upward 
syas, Apollo bound him to a tree, and flayed : of three years at least, on the property of his 
him alive. His blood was the source of the ' wife, a lady named Marcella, whom he seems 
River Marsyas, and Apollo hung up his skin in to have married after his return to Bilbilis. His 
the cave out of which that river flows. His death can not have taken place before 104. His 
flutes (for, according to some, the instrument fame was extended, and his books were eagerly 
on which he played was the double flute) were sought for, not only in the city, but also in Gaul, 
carried by the River Marsyas into the Maean- ; Germany, and Britain : he secured the patron- 
der, and again emerging in the Asopus, were ! age of the emperors Titus and Domitian, ob- 
thrown on land by it In the Sicyonian territory, : tained by his influence the freedom of the state 
and were dedicated to Apollo in his temple at : for several of his friends, and received for him- 
Sicyon. The fable evidently refers to the strug- ; self, although apparently without family, the 
gle between the citharcedic and aulcedic styles privileges accorded to those who were the fa- 
of music, of which the former was connected thers of three children (jus trium liberorum), to- 
with the worship of Apollo among the Dorians, gether with the rank of tribunus and the rights 
and the latter with the orgiastic rites of Cybele of the equestrian order. His circumstances ap- 
in Phrygia. In the fora of ancient cities there pear to have been easy during his residence at 
was frequently placed a statue of Marsyas, , Rome, for he had a mansion in the city whose 
which was probably intended to hold forth an : situation he describes, and a suburban villa near 
example of the severe punishment of arrogant Nomentum, to which he frequently alludes with 
presumption. The statue of Marsyas in the pride. The extant works of Martial consist of 
forum of Rome is well known by the allusions a collection of short poems, all included under 
of Horace (Sat., i., 6, 120), Juvenal (ix., 1,2), j the general appellation Epigrammata, upward 
and Martial (ii., 64. 7). — 2. A Greek historian, I of fifteen hundred in number, divided into four- 
was the son of Periander, a native of Pella in j teen books. Those which form the two last 
Macedonia, a contemporary of Alexander, with j books, usually distinguished respectively as Xe- 
whom he is said to have been educated. His j nia and Apophoreta, amounting to three hund- 
principal work was a history of Macedonia, in j red and fifty, consist of distichs, descriptive of 
ten books, from the earliest times to the wars ' a vast variety of small objects, chiefly articles 
of Alexander. He also WTOte other works, the of food or clothing, such as were usually sent 



MARTIALIS. 



MASINISSA, 



as presents among friends during the Saturna- 
lia, and on other festive occasions. In addition 
to the ahove, nearly all the printed copies in- 
clude thirty-three epigrams, forming a book 
apart from the rest, which has been commonly 
known as Liber de Spectacidis, because the con- j 
tents relate to the shows exhibited by Titus | 
and Domitian, but there is no ancient authority | 
for the title. The different books were collect- j 
ed and published by the author, sometimes sin- 
gly and sometimes several at one time. The j 
Liber de S ;lI »d the nrst nine Dook s of j 

the regular series involve a great number of 
historical allusions, extending from the games 
of Titus (80) down to the return of Domitian 
from the Sarmatian expedition in January, 94. 
All these books were composed at Rome ex- 
cept the third, which was written during a tour 
in Gallia Togata. The tenth book was publish- 
ed twice : the first edition was given hastily to 
the world; the second, that which we now read 
(x.,2), celebrates the arrival of Trajan at Rome, 
after his accession to the throne (99). The elev- 
enth book seems to have been published at 
Rome early in 100, and at the close of the year 
he returned to Bilbilis. After keeping silence 
for three years (xii., procem.), the twelfth book 
was dispatched from Bilbilis to Rome (xii., 3, 
18), and must therefore be assigned to 104. 
Books xiii. and xiv., Xcnia and Apophoreta, 
were written chiefly under Domitian, although 
the composition may have been spread over 
the holidays of many years. It is well known 
that the w r ord Epigram, which originally denoted 
simply an inscription, was, in process of time, 
applied to any brief metrical effusion, what- 
ever the subject might be, or whatever the 
form under which it was presented. Martial, 
however, first placed the epigram upon the nar- 
row basis which it now occupies, and from his 
time the term has been in a great measure re- 
stricted to denote a short poem, in which all 
the thoughts and expressions converge to one 
sharp point, which forms the termination of the 
piece. Martial's epigrams are distinguished by 
singular fertility of imagination, prodigious flow 
of wit, and delicate felicity of language ; and 
from no source do we derive more copious in- 
formation on the national customs and social 
habits of the Romans during the first century 
of the empire. But, however much we may 
admire the genius of the author, we feel no re- 
spect for the character of the man. The servil- 
ity of adulation with which he loads Domitian, 
proves that he was a courtier of the lowest 
class ; and his works are defiled by the most 
cold-blooded filth, too clearly denoting habitual 
impurity of thought, combined with habitual im- 
purity of expression. The best edition is by 
Schneidewinn, Grem., 1842. — 2. Gargilius, a 
Roman historian, and a contemporary of Alex- 
ander Severus, who is cited by Vopiscus. There 
is extant a short fragment on veterinary sur- 
gery bearing the name of Gargilius Martialis ; 
and Angelo Mai discovered on a palimpsest in 
the royal library at Naples part of a work De 
Hortis, also ascribed to Gargilius Martialis ; 
but whether Gargilius Martialis the horticul- 
turist, and Gargilius Martialis the veterinarian, 
are all, or any two of them, the same, or all dif- 
ferent personages, can not be determined. 



[Martianus. Vid. Marcianus.] 

Martinianus, was elevated to the dignity of 
Caesar by Licinius when he was making prep- 
arations for the last struggle against Constan- 
tine. After the defeat of Licinius, Martinianus 
was put to death by Constantine, A.D. 323. 

Martius Campus. Vid. Campus Martius. 

Martyropolis (MaprvpoTToTiig : now MeiaFar- 
ckin), a city of Sophene, in Armenia Major, on 
the River Nymphus, a tributary of the Tigris ; 
under Justinian, a strong fortress, and the res- 
idence of the first Dux Armeniae. 

Marullus, C. Epidius, tribune of the plebs 
B.C. 44, removed, in conjunction with his col- 
league L. Caesetius Flavus, the diadem which 
had been placed upon the statue of C. Julius 
Caesar, and attempted to bring to trial the per- 
sons who had saluted the dictator as king. Cae- 
sar, in consequence, deprived him of the tribu- 
nate, and expelled him from the senate. 

[Marus (now Marosch), mentioned by Tac- 
itus as a tributary of the Danube on the north, 
probably the same as the Marisus.] 

Maruvxum. Vid. Marruvium. 

[Masada (Mdaada), a fortress on the shore of 
the Dead Sea, built by Jonathan Maccabaeus, 
and afterward greatly strengthened by Herod, 
as a place of refuge for himself. It fell into the 
hands of the Romans after the capture of Jeru- 
salem, the garrison having devoted themselves 
to self-destruction.] 

Mascas (hldcjKac, Maonuc : now Wady-el-Se- 
ba), an eastern tributary of the Euphrates in 
Mesopotamia, mentioned only byXenophon (An- 
ab., i., 5), who describes it as surrounding the 
city of Corsote, and as being thirty-five para- 
sangs from the Chaboras. It appears to be the 
same river as the Saocoras of Ptolemy. 

Mases (Mdarjc : Maar/Ttoc), a town on the 
southern coast of Argolis, the harbor of Her- 
mione. 

Masinissa (Macaavdaarjc), king of the Nu- 
midians, was the son of Gala, king of the Mas- 
sylians, the easternmost of the two great tribes 
into which the Numidians were at that time di- 
vided ; but he was brought up at Carthage, 
where he appears to have received an educa- 
tion superior to that usual among his country- 
men. In B.C. 213 the Carthaginians persuaded 
Gala to declare war against Syphax, king of 
the neighboring tribe of the Massaesylians, who 
had lately entered into an alliance with Rome, 
Masinissa was appointed by his father to com- 
mand the invading force, with which he attack- 
ed and totally defeated Syphax. In the next 
year (212) Masinissa crossed over into Spain, 
and supported the Carthaginian generals there 
with a large body of Numidian horse. He 
fought on the side of the Carthaginians for 
some years ; but after their great defeat by 
Scipio in 206, he secretly promised the latter to 
support the Romans as soon as they should 
send an army into Africa. In his desertion of 
the Carthaginians he is said to have been also 
actuated by resentment against Hasdrubal, who 
had previously betrothed to him his beautiful 
daughter Sophonisba, but violated his engage- 
ment in order to bestow her hand upon Syphax. 
During the absence of Masinissa in Spain his 
father Gala had died, and the throne had been 
seized by a usurper ; but Masinissa, on his re- 

483 



MASISTES. 



MASSICYTUS. 



turn, soon expelled the usurper and obtained 
possession of the kingdom. He was now at- 
tacked by Syphax and the Carthaginians, who 
were anxious to crush him before he could re- 
ceive assistance from Rome. He was repeat- 
edly defeated by Syphax and his generals, and 
with difficulty escaped falling into the hands of 
his enemies. But the arrival of Scipio in Af- 
rica (204) soon changed the posture of affairs. 
He instantly joined the Roman general, and ren- 
dered the most important services to him dur- 
ing the remainder of the war. He took a prom- 
inent part in the defeat of the combined forces 
of Syphax and Hasdrubal, and, in conjunction 
with Laelius, he reduced Cirta, the capital of 
Syphax. Among the captives that fell into 
their hands on this occasion was Sophonisba, 
the wife of Syphax, and the same who had been 
formerly promised in marriage to Masinissa 
himself. The story of his hasty marriage with 
her, and its tragical termination, is related else- 
where. Vid. Sophonisba. In the decisive bat- 
tle of Zama (202), Masinissa commanded the 
cavalry of the right wing, and contributed in no 
small degree to the successful result of the day. 
On the conclusion of the final peace between 
Rome and Carthage, he was rewarded with the 
greater part of the territories which had be- 
longed to Syphax, in addition to his hereditary 
dominions. For the next fifty years Masinissa 
reigned in peace, though constantly making ag- 
gressions upon the Carthaginian territory. At 
lengthen 150, he declared open war against Car- 
thage, and these hostilities led to the outbreak 
of the third Punic war. Masinissa died in the 
second year of the war, 148. On his death-bed 
lie had sent for Scipio Africanus the younger, 
at that time serving in Africa as a military trib- 
une, but he expired before his arrival, leaving 
it to the young officer to settle the affairs of his 
kingdom. He died at the advanced age of nine- 
ty, having retained in an extraordinary degree 
his bodily strength and activity to the last, so 
that in the war against the Carthaginians, only 
two years before, he not only commanded his 
army in person, but was able to go through all 
his military exercises with the agility and vig- 
or of a young man. His character has been ex- 
tolled by the Roman writers far beyond his true 
merits. He possessed, indeed, unconquerable 
energy and fortitude ; but he was faithless to 
the Carthaginians as soon as fortune began to 
turn against them ; and though he afterward 
continued steady to the cause of the Romans, 
it was because he found it uniformly his inter- 
est to do so. He was the father of a very nu- 
merous family ; but it appears that three only 
of his legitimate sons survived him, Micipsa, 
Mastanabal, and Gulussa. Between these three 
the kingdom was portioned out by Scipio, ac- 
cording to the dying directions of the old king. 

[Masistes (Maaiarng), son of Darius and 
Atossa, accompanied his brother Xerxes in his 
expedition against Greece.] 

[Masistius (MaoioTios), commander of the 
cavalry in the army of Xerxes in the invasion 
of Greece, distinguished for his bravery and 
commanding appearance ; he was slain in a 
skirmish before the battle of PlatEeae : the 
Greeks, says Herodotus (ix , 20), called him 
Macistius (MaKianog).] 
484 



Masius Mons (to Mdcuov opog : now Karajck 
Dagh), a mountain chain in the north of Meso- 
potamia, between the upper course of the Ti- 
gris and the Euphrates, running from the main 
chain of the Taurus southeast along the border 
of Mygdonia. 

Maso, C. Papirius, consul B.C. 231, carried 
on war against the Corsicans, whom he sub- 
dued ; and from the booty obtained in this war, 
he dedicated a temple to Fons. Maso was the 
maternal grandfather of Scipio Africanus the 
younger, his daughter Papiria marrying ^mil- 
ius Paulus. 

[Maspii (hldoxLoi), mentioned by Herodotus 
as one of the most distinguished races of the 
Persian nation.] 

Massa, B^bius or Bebius, was accused by 
Pliny the younger and Herennius Senecio of 
plundering the province of Bastica, of which he 
had been governor, A D. 93. He was condemn- 
ed, but escaped punishment by the favor of Do- 
mitian ; and from this time he became one of 
the informers and favorites of the tyrant. 

[Massa (Mdcca) or Masasat (MaaaauT). 1. A 
river on the west coast of Libya Interior, north- 
ward of the stream Daradus. — 2. M. Veternen- 
sis, a city of Etruria, northeast of Populonium 
and northwest of Rusellae, perhaps the modern 
Massa.] 

Mass^esyli or -n. Vid. Mauretania, Nu- 

MIDIA. 

Massaga (to Muaaaya), the capital city of the 
Indian people Assacenu. 

Massaget^e (MaaaaysTai), a wild and warlike 
people of Central Asia, in Scythia intra Imaum, 
north of the Jaxartes (the Araxes of Herodo- 
tus) and the Sea of Aral, and on the peninsu- 
la between this lake and the Caspian. Their 
country corresponds to that of the Kirghiz Tar- 
tars in the north of Independent Tartary. Some 
of the ancient geographers give them a greater 
extent toward the southeast, and Herodotus ap- 
pears to include under the name all the nomad 
tribes of Asia east of the Caspian. They ap- 
pear to have been of the Turkoman race ; their 
manners and customs resembled those of the 
Scythians in general ; but they had some pecu- 
liarities, such as the killing and eating of their 
aged people. Their chief appearance in an- 
cient history is in connection with the expedi- 
tion undertaken against them by Cyrus the 
Great, in which Cyrus was defeated and slain. 
Vid. Cyrus. 

[Massala, a city of the Homeritae, on the 
southern coast of Arabia Felix.] 

[Massalioticum Ostium. Vid. Rhodanus.] 

Massani (Macaavot), a people of India intra 
Gangem, on the lower course of the Indus, near 
the island of Pattalene. 

[Massicus, an Etrurian prince, who came with 
one thousand men from Clusium and Cosa to 
the aid of iEneas in his war with Turnus in 
Italy.] 

Massicus Mons, a mountain in the northwest 
of Campania, near the frontiers of Latium, cel- 
ebrated for its excellent wine, the produce of 
the vineyards on the southern slope of the 
mountain. The celebrated Falernian wine came 
from the eastern side of this mountain. 

Massicytus or Massicytes (Maoucvrng), one 
of the principal mountain chains of Lycia. 



MASSILIA. 



MATRON A. 



Massilia {UiaaaaXta : Maoaaluurnc, Massili- 
ensis: now Marseilles), a Greek city in Gallia 
Narbonensis, on the coast of the Mediterranean, 
in the country of the Salyes. It was situated 
on a promontory, which was connected with 
the main land by a narrow isthmus, and was 
washed on three sides by the sea. Its excel- 
lent harbor, called Lacydon, was formed by a 
small inlet oi the sea, about half a mile long and 
a quarter oi a mile broad. This harbor had only 
a narrow opening, and before it lay an island 
where ships bad good anchorage. Massilia was 
founded by the Phocaeans of Asia Minor about 
B.C. 600, and soon became a very flourishing 
city. It extended its dominion over the barba- 
rous tribes in its neighborhood, and planted sev- 
eral colonies on the coast of Gaul and Spain, 
such as Antipolis, Nic^ea, and Emporium. Its 
naval power and commercial greatness soon 
excited the jealousy of the Carthaginians, who 
made war upon the city, but the Massilians not 
only maintained their independence, but defeat- 
ed the Carthaginians in a sea-fight. At an early 
period they cultivated the friendship of the Ro- 
mans, to whom they always continued faithful 
allies. Accordingly, when the southeast corner 
of Gaul was made a Roman province, the Ro- 
mans allowed Massilia to retain its independ- 
ence and its own constitution. This constitu- 
tion was aristocratic. The city was governed 
by a senate of six hundred persons called Timu- 
chi. From these were selected fifteen presi- 
dents, who formed a sort of committee for car- 
Tying on the ordinary business of the govern- 
ment, and three of these were intrusted with 
the executive power. The inhabitants retain- 
ed the religious rites of their mother country, 
and they cultivated with especial reverence the 
worship of the Ephesian Artemis or Diana. 
Massilia was for many centuries one of the 
most important commercial cities in the an- 
cient world. In the civil war between Caesar 
and Pompey (B.C. 49) it espoused the cause of 
the latter, but after a protracted siege, in which 
it lost its fleet, it was obliged to submit to Cae- 
sar. From the effects of this blow it never fully 
recovered. Its inhabitants had long paid atten- 
tion to literature and philosophy ; and under 
the early emperors it became one of the chief 
seats of learning, to which the sons of many il- 
lustrious Romans resorted to complete their 
studies. The modern Marseilles occupies the 
site of the ancient town, but contains no re- 
mains of ancient buildings. 

Massiva. 1 A Numidian, grandson of Gala, 
king of the Massylians, and nephew of Masinis- 
£a, whom he accompanied into Spain. — 2. Son 
of Gulussa, and grandson of Masinissa, was as- 
sassinated at Rome by order of Jugurtha be- 
cause he had put in his claim to the kingdom of 
Numidia. 

[Massuorada, a son of Masinissa, king of Nu- 
midia, by a concubine. Vid. Dakar.] 

Massurius Sabinus. Vid. Sabinus. 

Massyli or -ii. Vid. Mauritania, Numidia. 

Mastanabal or Manastabal, the youngest of 
the three legitimate sons of Masinissa, between 
whom the kingdom of Numidia was divided by 
Scipio after the death of the aged king (B.C. 
148). He died before his brother Micipsa, and 
left two sons, Jugurtha and Gauda. 



Mastaura (tu MdcTavpa : now ruins of Mas- 
taura-Kalcsi), a city of Lydia, on the borders of 
Caria, near Nysa. 

[Mastor (Mucrrwp). 1. Father of Lycophron 
of Cythera. — 2. Father of the diviner Hali- 
therses, mentioned in the Odyssey.] 

Mastramela, a town on the southern coast 
of Gallia Narbonensis, east of the Rhone, and 
a lake of the same name, called by Mela Avat- 
icorurn stagnum. 

Mastusia. 1. The southwest point of the 
Thracian Chersonesus, opposite Sigeum.— 2. A 
mountain of Lydia, on the southern slope of 
which Smyrna lay. 

Maternus, Curiatius, a Roman rhetorician 
and tragic poet, one of the speakers in the Dia- 
logus de Oratoribus ascribed to Tacitus. 

Maternus Firmicus. Vid. Firmicus. 

Matho. 1. One of the leaders of the Cartha- 
ginian mercenaries in their war against Car- 
thage, after the conclusion of the first Punic 
war, B.C. 241. He was eventually taken pris- 
oner and put to death. — 2. A pompous, bluster- 
ing advocate, ridiculed by Juvenal and Martial. 

Matho, Pomponius. 1. M'., consul B.C. 233, 
carried on war against the Sardinians, whom 
he defeated. In 217 he was magister equitum, 
in 216 praetor, and in 215 propraetor in Cisal- 
pine Gaul. — 2. M., brother of the preceding, 
consul 231, also carried on war against the Sar- 
dinians. He was likewise praetor in 217. He 
died in 204. — 3. M., probably son of No. 2, aedile 
206, and praetor 204, with Sicily as his province. 

Matiana (MaTLavr], Mariavol, -tjvt], -Tjvof., He- 
rod.), the southwesternmost district of Media 
Atropatene, along the mountains separating 
Media from Assyria, which were also called 
Matiani. The great salt lake of Spaura (Mart- 
avrj H/ivt} : now Lake of Urmi) was in this dis- 
trict. Herodotus also mentions a people on the 
Halys in Asia Minor by the name of Matieni. 

Matinus, a mountain in Apulia running out 
into the sea, was one of the offshoots of Mount 
Garganus, and is frequently mentioned by Hor- 
ace in consequence of his being a native of 
Apulia. 

Matisco (now Macon), a town of the yEdui 
in Gallia Lugdunensis, on the Arar, and on the 
road from Lugdunum to Augustodunum. 

Matius Calvena, C, a Roman eques, and a 
friend of Caesar and Cicero. After Caesar's 
death he espoused the side of Octavianus, with 
whom he became very intimate. [This is prob- 
ably the same C. Matius who translated the 
Iliad into Latin verse, and was the author of 
several other works. Matius also wrote " Mim- 
iambi," which were as celebrated as his trans- 
lation of the Iliad, and paid great attention to 
economics and agriculture. He also wrote a 
work on the whole art and science of cookery, 
in three books, entitled respectively Cocus, Ce- 
tarius, Salmagarius. The fragments are given 
by Bothe, Poet. Seen. hat. Vet., vol. vi., p. 265- 
268 ; and by Zell, Stuttgard, 1829.] 

Matron {Mdrpo)v) y of Pitana, a celebrated wri- 
ter of parodies upon Homer, probably lived a 
little before the time of Philip of Macedon. 

Matrona (now Maine), a river in Gaul, which 
formed the boundary between Gallia Lugdunen- 
sis and Belgica, and which falls into the Se- 
quana a little south of Paris. 

485 



MATTIACi. 



MAUSOLUS. 



Matti'aci. a people in Germany, who dwelt on 
the eastern bank of the Rhine, between the 
Main and the Lahn, and were a branch of the 
Chatti. They were subdued by the Romans, 
who, in the reign of Claudius, had fortresses 
and silver mines in their country. After the 
death of Nero they revolted against the Ro- 
mans, and took part with the Chatti and other 
German tribes in the siege of Moguntiacum. 
From this time they disappear from history ; 
and their country was subsequently inhabited 
by the Alemanni. Their chief towns were 
Aquae Mattiacae (now Wiesbaden), and Mattia- 
cum (now Marburg), which must not be con- 
founded with Mattium, the capital of the Chatti. 

Mattiom (now Maden), the chief town of the 
Chatti, situated on the Adrana (now Eder), was 
destroyed by Germanicus. 

Matuta, commonly called Mater Matuta, is 
usually considered as the goddess of the dawn 
of morning, and her name is considered to be 
connected with maturus or matutinus. It seems, 
however, to be well attested that Matuta was 
only a surname of Juno ; and it is probable that 
the name is connected with mater, so that Ma- 
ter Matuta is an analogous expression with 
Hostus Hostilius, Faunus Fatuus, Aius Locuti- 
us. and others. Her festival, the Matralia, was I 
celebrated on the 11th of June {vid. Diet, of Ant., 
art. Matralia). The Romans identified Matuta | 
with the Greek Leucothea. A temple was dedi- J 
cated to Matuta at Rome by King Servius, and 
was restored by the dictator Camillus, after the 
taking of Veil There was also a temple of 
Matuta at Satrieum. 

Mauretania or Mauritania (ij Mavpovaia : 
Mavpovaioc, Mavpoi, Mauri), the westernmost of 
the principal divisions of Northern Africa, lay 
between the Atlantic on the west, the Mediter- 
ranean on the north, Numidia on the east, and 
Gaetulia on the south ; but the districts em- 
braced under the names of Mauretania and Nu- 
midia respectively were of very different extent 
at different periods. The earliest known in- 
habitants of all Northern Africa west of the 
Syrtes were the Gsetulians, who were displaced \ 
and driven inland by tribes of Asiatic origin, j 
who are found, in the earliest historical ac- 
counts, settled along the northern coast under j 
various names ; their chief tribes being the j 
Mauri or Maurusii, west of the River Mafva or 
Malucha (now Muluia or Mohalou) ; thence the I 
Massaesylii to (or nearly to) the River Ampsaga 
(now Wady-el-Kebir), and the Massylii between 
the Ampsaga and the Tusca (now Wady-Zain), 
the western boundary of the Carthaginian ter- j 
ritory. Of these people, the Mauri, who pos- 
sessed a greater breadth of fertile country be- ! 
tween the Atlas and the coasts, seem to have 
applied themselves more to the settled pursuits 
of agriculture than their kindred neighbors on 
the east, whose unsettled warlike habits were 
moreover confirmed by their greater exposure 
to the intrusions of 'the Phoenician settlers. 
Hence arose a difference, which the Greeks j 
marked by applying the general name of Nojera- j 
Seg to the tribes between the Malva and the I 
Tusca ; whence carne the Roman names of j 
Numidia for the district, and Numidae for its 
people. Vid. Numidia. Thus Mauretania was j 
at first only the country west of the Malva. and I 
436 



corresponded to the later district of Mauretania 
Tingitana, and to the modern empire of Ma- 
rocco, except that the latter extends further 
south ; the ancient boundary on the south was 
the Atlas. The Romans first became acquaint- 
ed with the country during the war with Jugur- 
tha, B.C. 106 ; of their relations with it till it 
became a Roman province, about 33, an account 
is given under Bocchus. During this period 
the kingdom of Mauretania had been increased 
by the addition of the western part of Numidia, 
as far as Saldse, which Julius Caesar bestowed 
on Bogud, as a reward for his services in the 
African war. A new arrangement was made 
about 25, when Augustus gave Mauretania to 
Juba II., in exchange for his paternal kingdom 
of Numidia. Upon the murder of Juba's son, 
Ptolemaeus, by Caligula (A.D. 40), Mauretania 
became finally a Roman province, and was for- 
mally constituted as such by Claudius, who 
added to it nearly half of what was still left of 
Numidia, namely, as far as the Ampsaga, and 
divided it into two parts, of which the western 
was called Tingitana, from its capital Tingis 
(now Tangier), and the eastern Ceesariensis, 
from its capital Julia Caesarea (now Zershell), 
the boundary between them being the River 
Malva, the old limit of the kingdom of Boc- 
chus I. The latter corresponded to the west- 
ern and central part of the modern regency (and 
now French colony) of Algiers. These '• Mau- 
retanias duae" were governed by an equestrian 
procurator. In the later division of the empire 
under Diocletian and Constantine, the eastern 
part of M. Caesariensis, from Saldee to the Amp- 
saga, was erected into a new T province, and call- 
ed M. Sitifensis, from the inland town of Sitifi 
(now Setif) ; at the same time, the western 
province, M. Tingitana, seems to have been 
placed under the same government as Spain, so 
that we still find mention of the " Mauretaniae 
duae," meaning now, however, Caesariensis and 
Sitifensis. From A.D. 429 to 534 Mauretania. 
was in the hands of the Vandals, and in 650 
and the following years it was conquered by the 
Arabs. Its ancient inhabitants still exist as 
powerful tribes in Marocco and Algier, under 
the names of Berbers, Schillus, Kalyles, and Tua- 
riks. Its chief physical features are described 
under Africa and Atlas. Under the later Ro- 
man emperors it was remarkable for the great 
number of its episcopal sees. 

Mauri. Vid. Mauretania. 

Mauricianus, Junius, a Roman jurist, lived 
under Antoninus Pius (A.D. 138-161). His 
works are cited a few times in the Digest. 

Mauricus, Junius, an intimate friend of Pliny, 
was banished by Domitian, but recalled from ex- 
ile by Nerva. 

Mauritania. Vid. Mauretania. 

Maurus, Terentianus. Vid. Terentianus. 

Maurusii. Vid. Mauretania. 

Maus5lus (Mavco/.oc or yiavaauAo^), king of 
Caria, was the eldest son of Hecatomnus, whom 
he succeeded in the sovereigntv B.C. 377. In 
362 he took part in the general revolt of the 
satraps against Artaxerxes Mnemon, and avail- 
ed himself of that opportunity to extend hib 
dominions. In 358 he joined with the ixhodi- 
ans and others in the war waged by them 
against the Athenians, known by the namo of 



MAYORS. 



MAXIMINUS. 



the Social war. He died in 353, leaving no 
children, and was succeeded by his wife and 
sister Artemisia. The extravagant grief of the 
latter for his death, and the honors she paid to 
his memory— especially by the erection of the 
costly monument, which was called from him 
the Mausoleum— are related elsewhere. Vid. 
Artemisia. 

Mavors. Vtd. Mars. 

Maxentius, Roman emperor A.D. 306-312, 
whose full name was M. Aurelius Valerius 
Maxentius. He was the son of Maximianus 
and Eutropia, and received in marriage the 
daughter of Galerius ; but he was passed over 
in the division of the empire which followed the 
abdication of his father and Diocletian in A.D. 
305. Maxentius, however, did not tamely ac- 
quiesce in this arrangement, and, being support- 
ed by the praetorian troops, who had been re- 
cently deprived of their exclusive privileges, he 
was proclaimed emperor at Rome in 306. He 
summoned his father, Maximianus, from his re- 
tirement in Lueania, who again assumed the 
purple. The military abilities of Maximianus 
were of great service to his son, who was of 
indolent and dissolute habits. Maximianus 
compelled the Caesar Severus, who had march- 
ed upon Rome, to retreat in haste to Ravenna, 
■and soon afterward put the latter to death when 
he had treacherously got him into his power 
(307). The Emperor Galerius now marched in 
person against Rome, but Maximianus compel- 
led him likewise to retreat. Maxentius, relieved 
from these imminent dangers, proceeded to dis- 
entangle himself from the control which his 
father sought to exercise, and succeeded in 
driving him from his court. Soon afterward 
Maxentius crossed over to Africa, which he rav- 
aged with fire and sword, because it had sub- 
mitted to the independent authority of a certain 
Alexander. Upon his return to Rome Maxen- 
tius openly aspired to dominion over all the 
Western provinces ; and soon afterward de- 
clared w r ar against Constantine, alleging, as a 
pretext, that the latter had put to death his 
father Maximianus. He began to make prepa- 
rations to pass into Gaul ; but Constantine an- 
ticipated his movements, and invaded Italy. 
The struggle was brought to a close by the de- 
feat of Maxentius at Saxa Rubra, near Rome, 
October 27th, 312. Maxentius tried to escape 
over the Milvian bridge into Rome, but perished 
in the river. Maxentius is represented by all 
historians as a monster of rapacity, cruelty, and 
lust. The only favored class was the military, 
upon whom he depended for safety ; and in or- 
der to secure their devotion and to gratify his 
own passions, all his other subjects were made 
the victims of the most revolting licentiousness, 
and ruined by the most grinding exactions. 

Maxilua, a town in Hispania Baetica, where 
bricks were made so light as to swim upon wa- I 
ter. Vid. Calkntum. 

Maxima C.v.sariensis. Vid. Britannia, p. 
149, b. 

Maximi.vnoi'olis, previously called Porsul/e, 
a town in Thrace, on the Via Egnatia, east of 
Abdera, probably the same place as the town 
called Mosynopolis (UocwovttoXic) by the By- 
zantine writers. 

Maximunopous (Maft/z/avot'xoZ,^:: in the Old 



Testament, Hadad Rimmon), a city of Palestine, 
in the valley of Megiddo, a little to the south- 
west of Megiddo. 

Maximianus. I. Roman emperor A.D. 286- 
305, whose full name was M. Aurelius Vale- 
rius Maximianus. He was born of humble pa 
rents in Pannonia, and had acquired such fame 
by his services in the army, that Diocletian se- 
lected this rough soldier for his colleague, as 
one whose abilities were likely to prove valua- 
ble in the disturbed state of public affairs, and 
accordingly created him first Caesar (285), and 
then Augustus (286), conferring at the same 
time the honorary appellation of Herculius, while 
he himself assumed that of Jovius. The sub- 
sequent history of Maximian has been fully de- 
tailed in former articles. Vid. Diocletianus, 
Constantinus I., Maxentius. It is sufficient 
to relate here, that after having been reluctant- 
ly compelled to abdicate, at Milan (305), he was 
again invested with the imperial title by his son 
Maxentius, in the following year (306), to whom 
he rendered the most important services in the 
war with Severus and Galerius. Having been 
expelled from Rome shortly afterward by his 
son, he took refuge in Gaul with Constantine, 
to whom he had previously given his daughter 
Fausta in marriage. Here he again attempted 
to resume the imperial crown, but was easily 
deposed by Constantine (308). Two years aft- 
erward, he endeavored to induce his daughter 
Fausta to destroy her husband, and was, in con- 
sequence, compelled by Constantine to put an 
end to his own life. — II., Roman emperor A.D. 
305-311, usually called Galerius. His full 
name was Galerius Valerius Maximianus. 
He was born near Sardica in Dacia, and was 
the son of a shepherd. He rose from the ranks 
to the highest commands in the army, and was 
appointed Caesar by Diocletian, along with Con- 
stantius Chlorus, in 292. At the same time he 
was adopted by Diocletian, whose daughter Va- 
leria he received in marriage, and was intrust- 
ed with the command of Illyria and Thrace. 
In 297 he undertook an expedition against the 
Persian monarch Narses, in which he was un- 
successful, but in the following year (298) he 
defeated Narses with great slaughter, and com- 
pelled him to conclude a peace. Upon the ab- 
dication of Diocletian and Maximian (305), Ga- 
lerius became Augustus or emperor. In 307 he 
made an unsuccessful attempt to recover Italy, 
which had owned the authority of the usurper 
Maxentius. Vid. Maxentius. He died in 311, 
of the disgusting disease known in modern 
times by the name of morbus pediculosus. He 
was a cruel persecutor of the Christians ; and 
it was at his instigation that Diocletian issued 
the fatal ordinance (303), which for so many 
years deluged the world with innocent blood. 

Maximinus. I., Roman emperor A.D. 235- 
238, whose full name was C. Julius Verus Max- 
iminus. He was born in a village on the con- 
fines of Thrace, of barbarian parentage, his father 
being a Goth, and his mother a German from 
the tribe of the Alani. Brought up as a shep- 
herd, he attracted the attention of Septimius 
Severus by his gigantic stature and marvellous 
feats of strength, and was permitted to enter the 
army. He eventually rose to the highest rank 
in the service ; and on the murder of Alexander 

487 



MAXIMUS. 



MAXIMUS. 



Severus by the mutinous troops in Gaul (235), 
he was proclaimed emperor. He immediately 
bestowed the title of Caesar on his son Maxi- 
mus. During the three years of his reign he 
carried on war against the Germans with suc- 
cess ; but his government was characterized by 
a degree of oppression and sanguinary excess 
hitherto unexampled. The Roman world be- 
came at length tired of this monster. The 
senate and the provinces gladly acknowledged 
the two Gordiani, who had been proclaimed em- 
perors in Africa ; and after their death the 
senate itself proclaimed Maximus and Balbinus 
emperors (238). As soon as Maximinus heard 
of the elevation of the Gordians, he hastened 
from his winter-quarters at Sirmium. Having 
crossed the Alps, he laid siege to Aquileia, and 
was there slain by his own soldiers, along with 
his son Maximus, in April. The most extraor- 
dinary tales are related of the physical powers 
of Maximinus, which seem to have been almost 
incredible. His height exceeded eight feet. 
The circumference of his thumb was equal to 
that of a woman's wrist, so that the bracelet of 
his wife served him for a ring. It is said that 
he was able single-handed to drag a loaded 
wagon, could with his fist knock out the grin- 
ders, and with a kick break the leg of a horse ; 
while his appetite was such, that in one day he 
could eat forty pounds of meat, and drink an 
amphora of wine. — II., Roman emperor 305- 
314, originally called Daza, and subsequently 
Galerius Valerius Maximinus. He was the 
nephew of Galerius by a sister, and in early life 
followed the occupation of a shepherd in his na- 
tive Illyria. Having entered the army, he rose 
to the highest rank in the service ; and upon 
the abdication of Diocletian in 305, he was 
adopted by Galerius, and received the title of 
Caesar. In 308 Galerius gave him the title of 
Augustus ; and on the death of the latter in 311, 
Maximinus and Licinius divided the East be- 
tween them. In 313 Maximinus attacked the 
dominions of Licinius, who had gone to Milan 
for the purpose of receiving in marriage the 
sister of Constantine. He was, however, de- 
feated by Licinius near Heraclea, and fled to 
Tarsus, where he soon after died. Maximinus 
possessed no military talents. He owed his 
elevation to his family connection. He sur- 
passed all his contemporaries in the profligacy 
of his private life, in the general cruelty of his 
administration, and in the furious hatred with 
which he persecuted the Christians. 

Maximus. I. Of Ephesus or Smyrna, one of 
the teachers of the Emperor Julian, to whom he 
was introduced by iEdesius. Maximus was a 
philosopher of the New Platonic school, and, 
like many others of that school, both believed 
in and practiced magic. It is said that Julian, 
through his persuasion, was induced to abjure 
Christianity. On the accession of Julian, Max- 
imus was held in high honor at the court, and 
accompanied the emperor on his fatal expedi- 
tion against the Persians, which he had proph- 
esied would be successful. In 364 he was ac- 
cused of having caused by sorcery the illness 
of the Emperors Valens and Valentinian, and 
was thrown into prison, where he was exposed 
to cruel tortures. He owed his liberation to 
the philosopher Themistius. In 371 Maximus 
488 



was accused of taking part in a conspiracy 
against Valens, and was put to death. — 2. Of 
Epirus, or perhaps of Byzantium, was also an 
instructor of the Emperor Julian in philosophy 
and heathen theology. He wrote in Greek, De 
insolubilibus Oppositionibus, published by H. Ste- 
phanus, Paris, 1554, appended to the edition of 
Dionysius of Halicarnassus, as well as other 
works. 

Maximus, Fabius. 1. Q. Fabius Maximus 
Rullianus, was the son of M. Fabius Ambus- 
tus, consul B.C. 360. Fabius was master of the 
horse to the dictator L. Papirius Cursor in 325, 
whose anger he incurred by giving battle to the 
Samnites during the dictator's absence, and 
contrary to his orders. Victory availed Fabius 
nothing in exculpation. A hasty flight to Rome, 
where the senate, the people, and his aged 
father interceded for him with Papirius, barely 
rescued his life, but could not avert his degra- 
dation from office. In 322 Fabius obtained his 
first consulship. It was the second year of the 
second Samnite war, and Fabius was the most 
eminent of the Roman generals in that long and 
arduous struggle for the empire of Italy. Yet 
nearly all authentic traces are lost of the seat 
and circumstances of his numerous campaigns. 
His defeats have been suppressed or extenuat- 
ed, and the achievements of others ascribed to 
him alone. In 315 he was dictator, and was 
completely defeated by the Samnites at Lautulae. 
In 310 he was consul for the second time, and 
carried on the war against the Etruscans. In 
308 he was consul a third time, and is said to 
have defeated the Samnites and Umbrians. He 
was censor in 304, when he seems to have con- 
fined the libertini to the four city tribes, and to 
have increased the political importance of the 
equites. In 297 he was consul for the fifth time, 
and in 296 for the sixth time. In the latter 
year he commanded at the great battle of Sen- 
tinum, when the combined armies of the Sam- 
nites, Gauls, Etruscans, and Umbrians were 
defeated by the Romans. — 2. Q. Fabius Maxi- 
mus Gurges, or the Glutton, from the dissolute- 
ness of his youth, son of the last. His mature 
manhood atoned for his early irregularities. 
He was consul 292, and was completely defeat- 
ed by the Pentrian Samnites. He escaped deg- 
radation from the consulate only through his 
father's offer to serve as his lieutenant for the 
remainder of the war. In a second battle the 
consul retrieved his reputation, and was re- 
warded with a triumph, of which the most re- 
markable feature was old Fabius riding beside 
his son's chariot. He was consul the second 
time 276. Shortly afterward he went as lega- 
tus from the senate to Ptolemy Philadelphus, 
king of Egypt. He was consul a third time, 
265. — 3. Q. Fabius Maximus, with the agnomens 
Verrucosus, from a wart on his upper lip, Ovi- 
cula, or the Lamb, from the mildness or apathy 
of his temper, and Cunctator, from his caution 
in war, was grandson of Fabius Gurges. He 
was consul for the first time 233, when Liguria 
was his province ; censor 230 ; consul a sec- 
ond time 228 ; opposed the agrarian law of C. 
Flaminius 227 ; was dictator for holding the 
comitia in 221 ; and in 218 was legatus from 
the senate to Carthage, to demand reparation 
for the attack on Saguntum. In 217, immedi- 



MAXIMUS, MAGNUS CLEMENS. 



MAZiEUS. 



ately after the defeat at Thrasymenus, Fabius 
was appointed dictator. From this period, so 
long as the war with Hannibal was merely de- 
fensive, Fabius became the leading man at 
Rome. On taking the field he laid down a sim- 
ple and immutable plan of action. He avoided 
all direct encounter with the enemy ; moved 
his camp from highland to highland, where the 
Numidian horse and Spanish infantry could not 
follow him ; watched Hannibal's movements 
with unrelaxing vigilance, and cut off his strag- 
glers and foragers. His inclosure of Hannibal 
in one of the upland valleys between Cales and 
the Vulturnus, and the Carthaginian's adroit 
escape by driving oxen with blazing fagots 
fixed to their horns up the hill-sides, are well- 
known facts. But at Rome and in his own 
camp the caution of Fabius was misinterpreted ; 
and the people, in consequence, divided the com- 
mand between him and M. Minucius Rufus, his 
master of the horse. Minucius was speedily 
entrapped, and would have been destroyed by 
Hannibal had not Fabius generously hastened 
to his rescue. Fabius was consul for the third 
time in 215, and for the fourth time in 214. In 
213 he served as legatus to his own son, Q. 
Fabius, consul in that year, and an anecdote is 
preserved which exemplifies the strictness of 
the Roman discipline. On entering the camp 
at Suessula, Fabius advanced on horseback to 
greet his son. He was passing the lictors when 
the consul sternly bade him dismount. " My 
son," exclaimed the elder Fabius, alighting, " I 
wished to see whether you would remember 
that you were consul." Fabius was consul for 
the fifth time in 209, in which year he retook 
Tarentum. In the closing years of the second 
Punic war Fabius appears to less advantage. 
The war had become aggressive under a new 
race of generals. Fabius disapproved of the 
new tactics ; he dreaded the political suprem- 
acy of Scipio, and was his uncompromising op- 
ponent in his scheme of invading Africa. He 
died in 203. — 4. Q. Fabius Maximus, elder son 
of the preceding, was praetor 214, and consul 
213. He was legatus to the consul M. Livius 
Salinator 207. He died soon after this period, 
and his funeral oration was pronounced by his 
father. — 5. Q. Fabius Maximus ^Emilianus, was 
by birth the eldest son of L. ^Emilius Paulus, 
the conqueror of Perseus, and was adopted by 
No. 3. Fabius served under his father (iEmil- 
ius) in the Macedonian war, 168, and was dis- 
patched by him to Rome with the news of his 
victory at Pydna. He was praetor in Sicily 149 
-148, and consul in 145. Spain was his prov- 
ince, where he encountered, and at length de- 
feated Viriathus. Fabius was the pupil and 
patron of the historian Polybius. — 6. Q. Fabius 
Maximus Allobrogicus, son of the last. He 
was consul 121 ; and he derived his surname 
from the victory which he gained in this year 
over the Allobroges and their ally, Bituitus, 
king of the Arverni in Gaul. He was censor in 
108. He was an orator and a man of letters. 
— 7. Q. Fabius Maximus Servilianus, was 
adopted from the gens Servilia by No. 5. He 
"was uterine brother of Cn. Servilius Caepio, 
consul in 141. He himself was consul in 142, 
"when he carried on war with Viriathus. 

Maximi 8, M ignus Clemens, Roman emperor 



A D. 3S3-388, in Gaul, Britain, and Spain, was 
a native of Spain. He was proclaimed emperor 
by the legions in Britain in 383, and forthwith 
crossed over to Gaul to oppose Gratian, who 
was defeated by Maximus, and was shortly aft- 
erward put to death. Thcodosius found it ex- 
pedient to recognize Maximus as emperor of 
Gaul, Britain, and Spain, in order to secure 
Valentinian in the possession of Italy. Maxi- 
mus, however, aspired to the undivided empire 
of the West, and accordingly, in 387, he invaded 
Italy at the head of a formidable army. Valen- 
tinian was unable to resist him, and fled to The- 
odosius in the East. Theodosius forthwith pre- 
pared to avenge his colleague. In 388 he forced 
his way through the Noric Alps, which had been 
guarded by the troops of Maximus, and shortly 
afterward took the city of Aquileia by storm, 
and there put Maximus to death. Victor, the 
son of Maximus, was defeated and slain in 
Gaul by Arbogates, the general of Theodosius. 

Maximus, Petronius, Roman emperor A.D. 
455, belonged to a noble Roman family, and en- 
joyed some of the highest offices of state under 
Honorius and Valentinian III. Inconsequence 
of the violence offered to his wife by Valentin- 
ian, Maximus formed a conspiracy against this 
emperor, who was assassinated, and Maximus 
himself proclaimed emperor in his stead. His 
reign, however, lasted only two or three months. 
Having forced Eudoxia, the widow of Valentin- 
ian, to marry him, she resolved to avenge the 
death of her former husband, and accordingly 
Genseric was invited to invade Italy. When 
Genseric landed at the mouth of the Tiber, 
Maximus prepared to fly from Rome, but was 
slain by a band of Burgundian mercenaries, 
commanded by some old officers of Valentinian. 

Maximus Planudes. Vxd. Planudes. 

Maximus Tyrius, a native of Tyre, a Greek 
rhetorician and Platonic philosopher, lived dur- 
ing the reigns of the Antonines and of Corn- 
modus. Some writers suppose that he was one 
of the tutors of M. Aurelius ; but it is more 
probable that he was a different person from 
Claudius Maximus, the Stoic, who was the 
tutor of this emperor. Maximus Tyrius ap- 
pears to have spent the greater part of his life 
in Greece, but he visited Rome once or twice. 
There are extant forty-one Dissertations (Ata- 
Aefetc or AdyoO of Maximus Tyrius on theolog- 
ical, ethical, and other philosophical subjects, 
written in an easy and pleasing style, but not 
characterized by much depth of thought. The 
best edition is by Reiske, Lips., 1774-5, 2 vols. 
8vo. 

Maximus, Valerius. Vid. Valerius. 
Maxula. Vid. Adis. 

Maxyes (Muft'ec), a people of Northern Af- 
rica, on the coast of the Lesser Syrtis, on the 
western bank of the River Triton, w r ho claimed 
descent from the Trojans. They allowed their 
hair to grow only on the left side of the head, 
and they painted their bodies with vermilion - r 
customs still preserved by some tribes in the 
same regions. 

Mazaca. Vid. C^esarea, No. 1. 

[MAZiEus (Ma£afoc). 1. Satrap of Cilicia, 
who, with Belesys, satrap of Syria, made head 
against the revolted Phoenicians in the reign of 
Ochus, while the latter was preparing to march, 

489 



MAZARA. 



MEDIA. 



against them. — 2. A Persian officer under Da- 
rius, sent to guard the passage of the Euphrates 
on the approach of Alexander the Great ; he 
behaved subsequently with great bravery at the 
battle of Gaugamela, in which he commanded 
the Persian cavalry. After the flight of Darius 
he retired to Babylon, but surrendered himself 
*o Alexander, who appointed him satrap of 
Babylon B.C. 331.] 

Mazara (Ma£dpa: bla^apaiog : now Mazzara), 
a town on the western coast of Sicily, situated 
on a river of the same name, between Lily- 
basum and Selinus, and founded by the latter 
city, was taken by the Romans in the first Punic 
war. 

[Mazares (M<a>/T), a Median officer in the 
service of Cyrus the Great ; he compelled the 
Lydians to submit to the terms imposed on them 
by Cyrus at the suggestion of Croesus, and re- 
duced and enslaved the city of Priene.] 

Mazices (MaCfcec), a people of Northern Af- 
rica, in Mauretania Caesariensis, on the southern 
slope of Mount Zalacus. They, as well as the 
Maxyes, are thought to be the ancestors of the 
Amazirghs. 

[Mecisteus (Mtjklctsvc). 1. A son of Talaus 
and Lysimache, brother of Adrastus, and father 
of Euryalus of Thebes. — 2. A son of Echius, 
and one of the companions of Teucer at Troy, 
was slain by Polydamas.] 

Mecyberna (M.rjKv6epva : M.r}K.v6epvalo<; : now 
Molivo), a town of Macedonia in Chalcidice, at 
the head of the Toronaic Gulf, east of Olynthus, 
of which it was the sea-port. From this town 
part of the Toronaic Gulf was subsequently 
called Sinus Mecybernaeus. 

Medaba (Mqdada), a city of Perasa in Pales- 
tine. 

MedIma, Medma, or Mesma, a Greek town on 
the western coast of Bruttium, founded by the 
Locrians, with a celebrated fountain and a har- 
bor called Emporium. 

Medaura, Ad Medera, or Amedera (ruins at 
Ayedrah), a flourishing city of Northern Africa, 
on the borders of Numidia and Byzacena, be- 
tween Lares and Theveste ; a Roman colony, 
and the birth-place of Appuleius. 

Medea (MrjdsLa), daughter of^Eetes, king of 
Colchis, by the Oceanid Idyia, or, according to 
others, by Hecate, the daughter of Perses. She 
was celebrated for her skill in magic. The prin- 
cipal parts of her story are given under Absyr- 
tus, Argonauts, and Jason. It is sufficient to 
state here that, when Jason came to Colchis to 
fetch the golden fleece, she fell in love with the 
hero, assisted him in accomplishing the object 
for which he had visited Colchis, and afterward 
fled with him as his wife to Greece ; that, hav- 
ing been deserted by Jason for the youthful 
daughter of Creon, king of Corinth, she took 
fearful vengeance upon her faithless spouse by 
murdering the two children which she had had 
by him, and by destroying his young wife by a 
poisoned garment ; and that she then fled to 
Athens in a chariot drawn by winged dragons. 
So far her story has been related elsewhere. 
At Athens she is said to have married King 
.Egeus, or to have been beloved by Sisyphus. 
Jupiter (Zeus) himself is said to have sued for 
her, but in vain, because Medea dreaded the 
anger of Juno (Hera) ; and the latter rewarded 
490 



her by promising immortality to her children. 
Her children are, according to some accounts, 
Mermerus, Pheres, or Thessalus, Alcimenes, 
and Tisander ; according to others, she had 
seven sons and seven daughters, while others 
mention only two children, Medus (some call 
him Polyxenus) and Eriopis, or one son Argus. 
Respecting her flight from Corinth there are 
different traditions. Some say, as we remark- 
ed above, that she fled to Athens, and married 
^Egeus, but when it was discovered that she 
had laid snares for Theseus, she escaped and 
went to Asia, the inhabitanis of which were 
called after her Medes. Others relate that she 
first fled from Corinth to Hercules at Thebes, 
who had promised her his assistance while yet 
in Colchis, in case of Jason being unfaithful to 
her. She cured Hercules, who was seized with 
madness ; and, as he could not afford her the 
assistance he had promised, she went to Athens. 
She is said to have given birth to her son Me- 
dus after her arrival in Asia, where she had 
married a king ; whereas others state that her 
son Medus accompanied her from Athens to 
Colchis, where her son slew Perses, and re- 
stored her father iEetes to his kingdom. The 
restoration of ^Eetes, however, is attributed by 
some to Jason, who accompanied Medea to 
Colchis. At length Medea is said to have be- 
come immortal, to have been honored with di- 

i vine worship, and to have married Achilles in 

' Elysium. 

Medeon (Mefocjv : MeSeuviog). 1. Or Medion 
(now Katuna), a town in the interior of Acar- 
nania. near the road which led from Limnaea 
to Stratos. — 2. A town on the coast of Phocis. 
near Anticyra, destroyed in the sacred war, and 
1 never rebuilt. — 3. An ancient town in Bceotia, 
mentioned by Homer, situated at the foot of 
Mount Phoenicus, near Onchestus and the Lake 
! Copais. — 4. A town of the Labeates in Dalma- 
: tia, near Scodra. 

Media (Jj Mvdia : Mijdog, Medus), an import- 
ant country of Western Asia, occupying the ex- 
; treme west of the great table-land of Iran, and 
I lying between Armenia on the north and north- 
j west, Assyria and Susiana on the west and 
southwest, Persis on the south, the great des- 
I ert of Aria on the east, and Parthia, Hyrcania, 
j and the Caspian on the northeast. Its bounda- 
I ries were, on the north the Araxes, on the west 
! and southwest the range of mountains called 
Zagros and Parachoatras (now Mountains of 
! Kurdistan and Louristan), which divided it from 
' the Tigris and Euphrates valley, on the east 
j the desert, and on the northeast the Caspii 
j Montes (now Elburz Mountains), the country be- 
I tween which and the Caspian, though reckoned 
| as a part of Media, was possessed by the Gelae, 
Mardi, and other independent tribes. Media thus 
| corresponded nearly to the modern province of 
j Irak-Ajemi. It was for the most part a fertile 
j country, producing wine, figs, oranges, and cit- 
rons, and honey, and supporting an excellent 
breed of horses. It was well peopled, and was 
altogether one of the most important provinces 
of the ancient Persian empire. After the Mac- 
edonian conquest it was divided into two parts. 
Great Media (?) fieyaKn blvdia) and Atropatene 
Vid. Atropatene. The earliest history of Me- 
dia is involved in much obscuritv. Herodotus 



MEDIAE MURUS 



MEDOX. 



and Ctesias (in Diodorus) give different chro- , 
nologies fur its early kings. Ctesias makes Ar- 
baces the founder of the monarchy, about B.C. 
842, and reckons eight kings from him to the 
overthrow of the kingdom by Cyrus. Herodo- 
tus reckons only four kings of Media, namely, 
I. Deioces, B.C. 710-657; 2. Phraortes, 657- 
635 ; 3. Cyaxares, 635-595 ; 5. Astvages, 595- 
560. The last king was dethroned by a revolu- 
tion, which transferred the supremacy to the 
Persians, who had formerly been the subordinate 
people in the united Medo-Persian empire. Vid. 
Cyrus. The Medes made more than one at- 
tempt to regain their supremacy ; the usurpa- 
tion of theMagian Pseudo-Smerdis was no doubt 
such an attempt (vid. Magi) ; and another oc- 
curred in the reign of Darius II., when the 
Medes revolted, but were soon subdued (B.C. 
408). With the rest of the Persian empire, 
Media fell under the power of Alexander ; it 
next formed a part of the kingdom of the Se- 
leucida?, from whom it was conquered by the 
Parthians in the second century B.C., from which 
time it belonged to the Parthian, and then to 
the later Persian empire. The people of Me- 
dia were a branch of the Indo-Germanic fam- 
ily, and nearly allied to the Persians ; their lan- 
guage was a dialect of the Zend, and their re- 
ligion the Magian. They called themselves Arii, 
which, like the native name of the Persians 
(Artaei), means noble. They were divided, ac- 
cording to Herodotus, into six tribes, the Buzae, | 
Parataceni, Struchates, Arizanti, Budii, and j 
Magi. In the early period of their history they 
were eminent warriors, especially as horse- 
archers ; but the long prevalence of peace, j 
wealth, and luxury reduced them to a by-word ! 
for effeminacy. It is important to notice the I 
use of the names Medus and Medi by the Ro- 
man poets for the nations of Asia east of the J 
Tigris in general, and the Parthians in partic- j 
ular. 

Mediae Murus (to Mijdiac kclXov/xevov telxoc), j 
an artificial wall which ran from the Euphrates j 
to the Tigris, at the point where they approach j 
nearest, a little above 33° north latitude, and i 
divided Mesopotamia from Babylonia. It is de- 
scribed by X^nophon (Anab., ii., 4) as being 
twenty parasangs long, one hundred feet high, J 
and twenty thick, and as built of baked bricks, j 
cemented with asphalt. Its erection was as- j 
cribed to Semiramis, and hence it was also \ 
called to 'Le/j.ipu/j.t.doi; (UiiTd'xtOfia. 

Mediolanum (Mediolanensis}, more frequent- | 
ly called by Greek writers Mediolanium (Mfdw- 
?.dvLov), the name of several cities founded by 
the Celts. 1. (Now Milan), the capital of the 
Insubres in Gallia Transpadana, was situated 
in an extensive plain between the rivers Tici- j 
nus and Addua. It was taken by the Romans i 
B.C. 222, and afterward became both a muni- i 
cipium and a colony. On the new division of 
the empire made by Diocletian, it became the I 
residence of his colleague Maximianus, and con- ; 
tinued to be the usual residence of the emper- 
ors of the West till the irruption of Attila, who ; 
took and plundered the town, induced them to ' 
transfer the seat of government to the more \ 
strongly-fortified town of Ravenna. Mediola- \ 
nura was at this time one of the first cities of j 
the empire ; it possessed an imperial mint, and 



was the seat of an archbishopric. It is cele- 
brated in ecclesiastical history as the see of St. 
Ambrose. On the fall of the Western empire, 
it became the residence of Theodoric the Great 
and- the capital of the Ostrogothic kingdom, and 
surpassed even Rome itself in populousness 
and prosperity. It received a fearful blow in 
A.D. 539, when, in consequence of having sided 
with Belisarius, it was taken by the Goths un- 
der Vitiges, a great part of it destroyed, and its 
inhabitants put to the sword. It, however, grad- 
ually recovered from the effects of this blow, 
and was a place of importance under the Lom- 
bards, whose capital, however, was Pavia. The 
modern Milan contains no remains of antiquity, 
with the exception pf sixteen handsome fluted 
pillars near the Church of S. Lorenzo. — 2. 
(Now Saintes), a town of the Santones in Aqui- 
tania, northeast of the mouth of the Garumna ; 
subsequently called Santones after the people, 
whence its modern name. — 3. (Now Chateau 
Meillan), a town of the Bituriges Cubi in Aqui- 
tania, northeast of the town last mentioned. — 
4. (Now Evreux), a town of the Aulerci Ebu- 
rovices in the north of Gallia Lugdunensis, 
south of the Sequana, on the road from Rotom- 
agus to Lutetia Parisiorum ; subsequently call- 
ed Civitas Ebroicorum, whence its modern 
name. — 5. A town of the Segusiani in the south 
of Gallia Lugdunensis.— 6. A town in Gallia 
Belgica, on the road from Colonia Trajana to 
Colonia Agrippina. 

Mediomatrici, a people in the southeast of 
Gallia Belgica, on the Mosella, south of the Tre- 
viri. Their territory originally extended to the 
Rhine, but in the time of Augustus they had 
been driven from the banks of this river by the 
Vangiones, Nemetes, and other German tribes. 
Their chief town was Divodurum (now Metz). 

Mediterranecjm Mare. Vid. Internum Mare. 

Meditrina, a Roman divinity of the art of 
healing, in whose honor the festival of the Med- 
itrinalia was celebrated in the month of Octo- 
ber. (Vid. Diet, of Ant., art. Meditrinalia.) 

[Medius (M.rj5ioe), son of Onythemis, a native 
of Larissa in Thessaly, and a friend of Alexan- 
der the Great, whom he accompanied in his ex- 
pedition into India. After the death of Alex- 
ander he espoused the side of Antigonus, and 
was one of his most useful and successful naval 
officers.] 

Medma. Vid. Medama. 

Medoacus or Meduacus, a river in Venetia, in 
the north of Italy, formed by the union of two 
rivers, the Medoacus Major (now Brenta) and 
Medoacus Minor (now Bacchiglione), which falls 
into the Adriatic Sea near Edron, the harbor of 
Patavium. 

Medobriga (now Marvao, on the frontiers of 
Portugal), a town in Lusitania, on the road from 
Emerita to Scalabis. 

Medocus. Vid. Amadocus. 

Medon (Miduv). 1. Son of Oileus, and broth- 
er of the lesser Ajax, fought against Troy, and 
was slain by /Eneas. — 2. Son of Codrus. Vid. 
Codrus. — [3. A herald in the house of Ulysses, 
in the suite of the suitors, disclosed to Penelope 
the danger of her son Telemachus, and was on 
this account preserved by the latter when the 
suitors were slain. — 4. Son of Pylades andElec- 
tra. — 5. A Lacedagmonian statuary, brother of 

491 



MEDULI. 



MEGARA. 



Dorycleidas, and the disciple of Dipcenus and 
Scyllis, made the gold and ivory statue of Mi- 
nerva (Athena) in the Heraeum at Olympia.] 

Meduli, a people in Aquitania, on the coast of 
the ocean, south of the mouth of the Garumna. 
in the modern Mcdoc. There were excellent 
oysters found on their shores 

Medulli, a people on the eastern frontier of 
Gallia Narbonensis and in the Maritime Alps, 
in whose country the Druentia (now Durance) 
and Duria (now Doria Minor) took their rise. 

MedullIa (Medulllnus : now St. Angelo), a 
colony of Alba, in the land of the Sabines, was 
situated between the Tiber and the Anio, in 
the neighborhood of Corniculum and Ameriola. 
Tarquinius Priscus incorporated their territory 
with the Roman state. 

Medullinus, Furius, an ancient patrician 
family at Rome, the members of which held the 
highest offices of state in the early times of the 
republic. 

Medullus, a mountain in Hispania Tarraco- 
nensis, near the Minius. 

Medus, a son of Medea. Vid. Medea. 

Medus (M^dof : now Farwar or Schamior), a 
small river of Persis, flowing from the confines 
of Media and falling into the Araxes (now Bend- 
Emir) near Persepolis. 

Medusa. Vid. Gorgones. 

Megabaztjs or Megabyzus. 1. One of the 
seven Persian nobles who conspired against the 
magian Smerdis, B.C. 521. Darius left him be- 
hind with an army in Europe when he himself 
recrossed the Hellespont on his return from 
Scythia, 506. Megabazus subdued Perinthus 
and the other cities on the Hellespont and along 
the coast of Thrace. — 2. Son of Zopyrus, and 
grandson of the above, was one of the com- 
manders in the army of Xerxes, 480. He after- 
ward commanded the army sent against the 
Athenians in Egypt, 458. 

Megacles (MeyaK?.ric). 1. A name borne by 
several of the Athenian family of the Alcmag- 
onidas. The most important of these was the 
Megacles who put to death Cylon and his ad- 
herents after they had taken refuge at the altar 
of Minerva (Athena), B.C. 612. Vid. Cylon. 
— [2. Son of Alcmaeon, son-in-law of Clisthenes, 
leader of the Alcmaeonidae in the time of Solon. 
At first he was opposed to Pisistratus, and ex- 
pelled him from Athens ; but afterward he be- 
came reconciled to him, gave him his daughter 
Coesyra in marriage, and assisted in his resto- 
ration to Athens. "Pisistratus not having treat- 
ed his wife in a proper manner, Megacles re- 
sented the affront, and again drove the former 
out of Athens : with the aid of large sums from 
the Thebans and other states, Pisistratus again 
raised an army, defeated his opponents, and 
drove Megacles and the partisans of the Alc- 
maeonidae into exile.] — 3. A Syracusan, brother 
of Dion, and brother-in-law of the elder Dio- 
nysius. He accompanied Dion in his flight from 
Syracuse, 358, and afterward returned with him 
to Sicily. 

Megjera. Vid. ErinwyeS. 

Megalia or MegXris, a small island in the 
Tyrrhene Sea, opposite Neapolis. 

Megalopolis (jj MeyaAjj tz6?,ic, M.eya?.6~oAic_ : 
yLeya?.orro?u7?ie). 1. (Now Sinano or Sinanu), 
the most recent but the most important of the 
492 



I cities of Arcadia, was founded on the advice of 
Epaminondas, after the battle of Leuctra, B.C. 
371, and was formed out of the inhabitants of 
thirty- eight villages. It was situated in the 
district Maenalia, near the frontiers of Messe- 
nia, on the River Helisson, which flowed through 
the city, dividing it into nearly two equal parts. 
It stood on the site of the ancient town Ores- 
tion or Orestia, was fifty stadia (six miles in 
circumference, and contained, when it was be- 
sieged by Polysperchon, about fifteen thousand 
men capable of bearing arms, which would give 
us a population of about seventy thousand in- 
habitants. Megalopolis was for a time subject 
to the Macedonians, but soon after the death 
of Alexander the Great it was governed by a 
series of native tyrants, the last of whom, Lyd- 
iades, voluntarily resigned the government and 
united the city to the Achaean league, B.C. 234. 
It became, in consequence, opposed to Sparta, 
and was taken and plundered by Cleomenes, 
who either killed or drove into banishment all 
its inhabitants, and destroyed a great part of the 
city, 222. After the battle of Sellasia in the 
following year it was restored by Philopcemen. 
i who again collected its inhabitants, but it never 
I recovered its former prosperity, and gradually 
j sunk into insignificance. Philopcemen and the 
1 historian Polybius were natives of Megalopolis, 
j The ruins of its theatre, once the largest in 
; Greece, are the only remains of the ancient 
! town to be seen in the village of Sinano. — 2. A 
j town in Caria. Vid. Aphrodisias. — 3. A town 
in Pontus. Vid. Sebastia. — 4. A town in the 
! north of Africa, was a Carthaginian city in the 
I interior of Byzacena, in a beautiful situation ; 
it was taken and destroyed by the troops of 
! Agathocles. 

Meganira (Meydvetpa), wife of Celeus, usu- 
\ ally called Metanir.a. 

[Meganitas (Meyavtrac), a small river of 
! Achaia, in the territory of ^Egium, flows into 
! the sea west of that city.] 

Megapenthes (Meycnrevd-nc). l.SonofPrce- 
tus, father of Anaxagoras and Iphianira, and 
I king of Argos. He exchanged his dominion for 
; that of Perseus, so that the latter received 
i Tiryns instead of Argos. — 2. Ston of Menelaus 
I by an iEtolian slave, Pieris or Teridae. Mene- 
; laus brought about a marriage between Mega- 
! penthes and a daughter of Alector. According 
I to a Rhodian tradition, Megapenthes, after the 
i death of his father, expelled Helen from Argos. 
j who thereupon fled to Polyxo at Rhodes. 

[Megaphernes {Meyadepvvq), a Persian satrap 
put to death by Cyrus on the charge of having 
1 conspired against that prince.] 

Megara (Msyapa), daughter of Creon, king of 
Thebes, and wife of Hercules. Vid. p. 356, b. 
Megara (ru Meyapa, in Lat. Megara, -ae, and 
: pi. Megara, -orum : Msyapsvc, Megarensis). 1. 

(Now Megara), the capital of Megaris, was sit- 
! uated eight stadia (one mile) from the sea op- 
j posite the island Salamis, about twenty-six 
; miles from Athens and thirty-one miles from 
! Corinth. It consisted of three parts: 1. The 
I ancient Pelasgian citadel, called Caria, said to 
1 have been built by Car, the son of Phoroneus, 
[ which was situated on a hill northwest of the 
later city. This citadel contained the ancient 
I and celebrated Megaron (uiyapov) or temple of 



MEGARA. 



MEGISTIAS. 



Ceres (Demeter), from which the town is sup- 
posed to have derived its name. 2. The mod- 
ern citadel, situated on a lower hill to the south- 
west of the preceding, and called Alcathous, 
from its reputed founder Alcathous, son of Pe- 
lops. 3. The town properly so called, situated 
at the foot of the two citadels, said to have been 
founded by the Pelopidae under Alcathous, and 
i subsequently enlarged by a Doric colony under 
Alethes and Athemenes at the time of Codrus. 
: It appears to have been originally called Polich- 
' ne (YIoMxvti). The town contained many public 
buildings, which are described at length by Pau- 
' sanias. Its sea-port was Nistza (Niaata), which 
was connected with Megara by two walls, eight 
i stadia in length, built by the Athenians when 
; they had possession of Megara, B.C. 461-445. 
Nisaea is said to have been built by Nisus, the 
son of Pandion ; and the inhabitants of Megara 
, are sometimes called Nisaean Megarians {oi 
> yicaiot Meyapslg) to distinguish them from the 
Hyblaean Megarians (oi "T6?,alot Meyapetc) in 
Sicily. In front of Nisaea lay the small island 
Minoa (Mivua), which added greatly to the secu- 
rity of the harbor. In the most ancient times 
Megara and the surrounding country was inhab- 
ited by Leleges. It subsequently became an- 
nexed to Attica ; and Megaris formed one of 
the four ancient divisions of Attica. It was 
next conquered by the Dorians, and was for a 
time subject to Corinth ; but it finally asserted 
its independence, and rapidly became a wealthy 
and powerful city. To none of these events 
can any date be assigned with certainty. Its 
power at an early period is attested by the flour- 
ishing colonies which it founded, of which Se- 
iymbria, Chalcedon, and Byzantium, and the 
Hyblaean Megara in Sicily, were the most im- 
portant. Its navy was a match for that of 
Athens, with which it contested the island of 
Salamis ; and it was not till after a long strug- 
gle that the Athenians succeeded in obtaining 
possession of this island. The government was 
originally an aristocracy, as in most of the Doric 
cities ; but Theagenes, who put himself at the 
head of the popular party, obtained the supreme 
power about B.C. 620. Theagenes was after- 
ward expelled, and a democratical form of 
government established. After the Persian 
wars, Megara was for some time at war with 
Corinth, and was thus led to form an alliance 
with Athens, and to receive an Athenian gar- 
rison into the city, 461 ; but the oligarchical 
party having got the upper hand, the Athenians 
were expelled, 441. Megara is not often men- 
ioned after this period. It was taken and its 
walls destroyed by Demetrius Poliorcetes ; it 
was taken again by the Romans under Q. Me- 
tellus ; and in the time of Augustus it had ceas- 
ed to be a place of importance. Megara is cel- 
ebrated in the history of philosophy as the seat 
of a philosophical school, usually called the Me- 
garian, which was founded by Euclid, a native 
of the city, and a disciple of Socrates. Vid. 
Euclides, No. 2. There are no remains of any 
importance of the ancient city of Megara. — 2. A 
town in Sicily, on the eastern coast, north of 
Syracuse, founded by Dorians from Megara in 
Greece, B.C. 728, on the site of a small town 
Hybla, and hence called Megara Hybl^ea, and 
its inhabitants Megarenses Hyblaei (Meyapetg 



'YSXaiot). From the time of Gelon it belonged 
to Syracuse. It was taken and plundered by 
the Romans in the second Punic war, and from 
that time sunk into insignificance, but it is still 
mentioned by Cicero under the name of Megaris. 

Megareus (Meyapei'c), son of Onchestus, also 
called a son of Neptune (Poseidon) and CEnope, 
of Hippomenes, of Apollo, or of J2geus. He 
was a brother of Abrote, the wife of Nisus, king 
of Megara, and the father of Evippus, Timalcus, 
Hippomenes, and Evaschme. Megara is said to 
have derived its name from him. 

Megaris (77 Meyaptg or ij MsyaptKri, sc. yij), a 
small district in Greece, between the Corinthian 
and Saronic gulfs, originally reckoned part of 
Hellas proper, but subsequently included in the 
Peloponnesus. It was bounded on the north 
by Bceotia, on the east and northeast by Attica, 
and on the south by the territory of Corinth. 
It contained about seven hundred and twenty 
square miles. The country was very mount- 
ainous ; and its only plain was the one in which 
the city of Megara was situated. It was sep- 
arated from Bceotia by Mount Cithaeron, and 
from Attica by the mountains called the Horns 
(tu Kipara), on account of their two projecting 
summits. The CEnean Mountains extended 
through the greater part of the country, and 
formed its southern boundary toward Corinth. 
There are two roads through these mountains 
from Corinth, one called the Scironian pass, 
which ran along the Saronic Gulf, passed by 
Crommyon and Megara, and was the direct road 
from Corinth to Athens ; the other ran along the 
Corinthian Gulf, passed by Geranea and Pegae, 
and was the road from Corinth into Bceotia. 
The only town of importance in Megaris was 
its capital Megara. Vid. Megara. 

Megasthenes (MeyaadsvTjg), a Greek writer, 
who was sent by Seleucus Nicator as ambassa- 
dor to Sandracottus, king of the Prasii, where 
he resided some time. He wrote a work on 
India, in four books, entitled Indica (ra '\v6ik&), 
to which later Greek writers were chiefly in- 
debted for their accounts of the country. [The 
fragments of Megasthenes have been collected 
by Schwanbeck, Megasth. Fragm., &c, Bonn, 
1846 ; and by Miiller, Hist. Grac. Fragm., voL 
ii., p. 397-439.] 

Meges (Meyr/c), son of Phyleus, and grandson 
of Augeas, was one of the suitors of Helen, and 
led his bands from Dulichium and the Echina- 
des against Troy. 

Megiddo (Mayeddco, Mayedu : now Lejjun ?), 
a considerable city of Palestine, on the River 
Kishon, in a valley of the same name, which 
formed a part of the great plain of Jezreel or 
Esdraelon, on the. confines of Galilee and Sama- 
ria. It was a residence of the Canaanitish 
kings before the conquest of Palestine by the 
Jews. It was fortified by Solomon. It was 
probably the same place which was called Legio 
under the Romans. 

[Megista (MeyioTT}), an island on the coast of 
Lycia, between Rhodes and the Chelidonian isl- 
ands, with a city of the same name, which, ac- 
cording to Strabo, was also called Cisthene. 
Vid. Cisthene, No. 2.] 

Megistani, a people of Armenia, in the dis- 
trict of Sophene, near the Euphrates.] 

[Megistias (MeYtoTiag) of Acarnania, cf the 

493 



MELA. 



MELANIPPE. 



race of Melampus, a celebrated seer, fought and 
fell at the battle of Thermopylae.] 

Mela, river. Vid. Mella. 

Mela, Fabius, a Roman jurist, who is often 
cited in the Digest, probably lived m the time 
of Antoninus Pius. 

Mela or Mella. M. Axn^us, the youngest 
son of M. Annaeus Seneca the rhetorician, and 
brother of L. Seneca the philosopher, and Gallio. 
By his wife Acilia he had at least one son, the 
celebrated Lucan. After Lucan's death, A.D. 
65, Mela laid claim to his property ; and as he 
was rich, he was accused of being privy to 
Piso's conspiracy, and anticipated a certain sen- 
tence by suicide. 

Mela, Pompoxics, the first Roman author 
w T ho composed a formal treatise upon Geogra- 
phy, was a native of Spain, and probably flour- 
ished under the Emperor Claudius. His work 
is entitled De Situ Orbis Libri III. It contains 
a brief description of the whole world as known 
to the Romans. The text is often corrupt, but 
the style is simple, and the Latinity is pure ; 
and although every thing is compressed within 
the narrowest limits, we find the monotony of 
the catalogue occasionally diversified by ani- 
mated and pleasing pictures. The best edition 
is by Tzschucke, seven parts, 8vo, Lips., 1807. 

Mel^xa Acra (}} 'M&aiva aupa). 1. (Now 
Kara Burnu, which means the same as the 
Greek name, i. e., the Black Cape), the north- 
western promontory of the great peninsula of 
Ionia : formed by Mount Mimas ; celebrated for 
the millstones hewn from it. — 2. (Now Cape 
San Nicolo), the northwestern promontory of 
the island of Chios. — 3. (Now Kara Burnu), a 
promontory of Bithynia, a little east of the Bos- 
porus, between the rivers Rhebas and Artanes ; 
also called Kallvaxpov and Tiidvviac anpov. 

Mel.s:x-*: (Me/.aLvai : MeAaiveuc). 1. Or Me- 
l.exe^ (Me/.aiveat), a town in the west of Ar- 
cadia, on the Alpheus, northwest of Buphagium, 
and southeast of Hersaa. — 2. A demus in Attica, 
on the frontiers of Bceotia, belonging to the tribe 
Antiochis. 

Melambium (MeXufj.6Lov), a town of Thessaly 
in Pelasgiotis, belonging to the territory of Sco- 
tussa. 

Melampus (Me?,d i u~ovg). 1. Son of Amythaon 
by Idomene, or, according to others, by Aglaia 
or Rhodope, and a brother of Bias. He was 
looked upon by the ancients as the first mortal 
who had been endowed with prophetic powers, 
as the person who first practiced the medical 
art, and who established the worship of Bac- 
chus (Dionysus) in Greece. He is said to have 
been married to Iphianassa (others call her 
Iphianira or Cyrianassa), by whom he became 
the father of Mantius and Antiphates. Abas, 
Bias.Manto, and Pronoe are also named by some 
writers as his children. Before his house there 
stood an oak tree containing a serpent's nest. 
The old serpents were killed by his servants, 
but Melampus took care of the young ones and 
fed them carefully. One day, when he was 
asleep, they cleaned his ears with their tongues. 
On his waking, he perceived, to his astonish- 
ment, that he now understood the language of 
birds, and that with their assistance he could 
foretell the future. In addition to this, he ac- 
quired the power of prophesying from the vic- 
494 



tims that were offered to the gods ; and, after 
! having an interview with Apollo on the banks 
j of the Alpheus, he became a most renowned 
I soothsayer. During his residence at Pylos his 
j brother Bias was one of the suitors for the hand 
I of Pero, the daughter of Neleus. The latter 
! promised his daughter to the man who should 
| bring him the oxen of Iphiclus, which were 
guarded by a dog whom neither man nor animal 
! could approach. Melampus undertook the task 
I of procuring the oxen for his brother, although 
i he knew that the thief would be caught and 
kept in imprisonment for a year, after which he 
was to come into possession of the oxen. 
Things turned out as he had said ; Melampus 
was thrown into prison, and in his captivity he 
learned from the wood- worms that the building 
in which he was imprisoned would soon break 
down. He accordingly demanded to be let out, 
and as Phylacus and Iphiclus thus became ac- 
quainted with his prophetic powers, they asked 
him in what manner Iphiclus, who had no chil- 
dren, was to become father. Melampus, on the 
suggestion of a vulture, advised Iphiclus to take 
the rust from the knife with which Phylacus 
had once cut Lis son, and drink it in water dur- 
ing ten days. This was done, and Iphiclus be- 
came the father of Podarces. Melampus now 
received the oxen as a reward for his good 
services, drove them to Pylos, and thus gained 
Pero for his brother. Afterward Melampus ob- 
tained possession of a third of the kingdom of 
Argos in the following manner : In the reigrr 
of Anaxagoras, king of Argos, the women of 
the kingdom were seized with madness, and 
roamed about the country in a frantic state. 
Melampus cured them of their phrensy, on con- 
dition that he and his brother Bias should re- 
ceive an equal share with Anaxagoras in the 
kingdom of Argos. Melampus and Bias mar- 
ried the two daughters of Proetus, and ruled 
over two thirds of Argos. — 2. The author of two 
little Greek works still extant, entitled Divinatio 
ex palpitationc and De N<zvis Oleaceis in Corpore. 
He lived probably in the third century B.C. at 
Alexandrea. Both the works are full of super- 
stitions and absurdities. Edited by Franz in- 
his Scriptores Physiognomic Veteres, Altenburg, 
1780. 

Melaxchl^xi (Ne?.ayxZatvoL), a people in the 
north of Sarmatia Asiatica, about the upper 
course of the River Tana'is (now Don), resem- 
bling the Scythians in manners, though of a 
different race. Their Greek name was derived 
from their dark clothing. 

[Melaxdept2e (Ne?Mvdi-Tat) or Melaxditje 
(M.e?,av6lTai), a people of Thrace, in the mount- 
ains northwest of Byzantium, along the coast of 
the Pontus Euxinus.] 

[Melaxeus (MeXavevc). 1. Son of Apollo, 
king of the Dryopes, was a famous archer ; he 
obtained from Perieres, king of Messenia, a 
town which he named after his wife CEchalia — 
2. Father of Amphimedon in Ithaca.] 

Melaxippe {lsUlavL~-v). 1. Daughter of Chi- 
ron, also called Evippe. Being with child by 
^Eolus, she fled to Mount Pelion ; and in order 
that her condition might not become known, she 
prayed to be metamorphosed into a mare. Di- 
ana (Artemis) granted her prayer, and in the 
form of a horse she was placed among the stars. 



MELANIPPIDES. 



MELEAGER. 



Another account describes her metamorphosis 
as a punishment for having despised Diana (Ar- 
temis), or for having divulged the counsels of 
the gods.— [2. A queen of the Amazons, taken 
captive by Hercules ; she obtained her freedom 
by surrendering her girdle to the hero. 

Melanippides (Melavmmdric), of Melos, a cel- 
ebrated lyric poet in the department of the dithy- 
ramb. He flourished about B.C. 440, and lived 
for some time at the court of Perdiccas, of Ma- 
cedonia, and there died. His high reputation 
as a poet is intimated by Xenophon, who makes 
Aristodemus give him the first place among 
dithyrambic poets, by the side of Homer, Soph- 
ocles, Polycletus, and Zeuxis, as the chief mas- 
ters in their respective arts ; and by Plutarch, 
who mentions him, with Simonides and Eurip- 
ides, as among the most distinguished masters 
of music. Several verses of his poetry are still 
preserved. Vid. Bergk, Poet. Lyr. Grcec, p. 847- 
850. Some writers, following the authority of 
Suidas, make two poets of this name. 

Melanippus (MeluvLTtnoc). 1. Son of Astacus 
of Thebes, who, in the attack of the Seven on 
his native city, slew Tydeus and Mecisteus. 
His tomb was shown in 'the neighborhood of 
Thebes, on the road to Chalcis.— [2. A Trojan, 
slain by Teucer. — 3. Another Trojan warrior, 
son of Hicetaon, slain by Antilochus. — 4. An- 
other Trojan warrior, slain by Patroclus. — 5. A 
son of Theseus and Perigune, gained the prize 
in running at the games celebrated by the Epig- 
oni after the capture of Thebes.] 

Melanog^etuli. Vid. G^etulia. 

Melanthius (Mehuvdioc). 1. Also called Me- 
lantheus, son of Dolius, was a goat-herd of 
Ulysses, who sided with the suitors of Penelope, 
and was killed by Ulysses.— 2. An Athenian 
tragic poet, of whom little is known beyond the 
attacks made on him by Aristophanes and the 
other comic poets. The most important pas- 
sage respecting him is in the Peace of Aristoph- 
anes (796, &c). He was celebrated for his 
wit, of which several specimens are preserved 
by Plutarch. — 3. Or Melanthus, an eminent 
Greek painter of the Sicyonian school, was con- 
temporary with Apelles (B.C. 332), with whom 
he studied under Pamphilus. He was one of 
the best colorists of all the Greek painters. — 
[4. Leader of the twenty ships sent by the Athe- 
nians to the aid of Aristagoras of Miletus in his 
revolt against the Persian government.] 

Melanthius (MeAaVfliof, now probably Melet- 
Irma), a river of Pontus, in Asia Minor, east 
of the Promontorium Jasonium ; the boundary 
between Pontus Polemoniacus and Pontus Cap- 
padocius. 

[Melantho (lie Aavdu), daughter of Dolius, 
sister of the goat-herd Melanthius (vid. Melan- 
thius), female attendant upon Penelope, was 
put to death by Ulysses because »he had aided 
the suitors.] 

Melanthus or Melanthius (MiXavdoc). 1. 
One of the Nelidae, and king of Messenia, whence 
he was driven out by the Heraclidae, on their 
conquest of the Peloponnesus ; and, following 
the instructions of the Delphic oracle, took 
refuge in Attica. In a war between the Athe- 
nians and Boeotians, Xanthus, the Boeotian king, 
challenged Thymoetes, king of Athens and the 
last of the Thesidae, to single combat. Thy- 



mcetes declined the challenge on the ground of 
age and infirmity. So ran the story, which 
strove afterward to disguise the violent change 
of dynasty ; and Melanthus undertook it on 
condition of being rewarded with the throne in 
the event of success. He slew Xanthus, and 
became king, to the exclusion of the Thesidae 
According to Pausanias, the conqueror of Xan- 
thus was Andropompus, the father of Melan- 
thus ; according to Aristotle, it was Codrus, 
his son.— [2. One of the Tyrrhenian pirates, 
who wished to carry off Bacchus (Dionysus), 
but were changed into dolphins.] 

[Melas (MeAaf). 1. A son of Phrixus and 
Chalciope, married Euryclea. by whom he be- 
came father of Hyperes. — 2. A son of Porthaon 
and Euryte, and brother of CEneus.] 

Melas (M&ac), the name of several rivers, 
whose waters were of a dark color. 1. (Now 
Maurc Nero or Mauro Potamo), a small river in 
Boeotia, which rises seven stadia north of Or- 
chomenus, becomes navigable almost from its 
source, flows between Orchomenus and Asple- 
don, and loses the greater part of its waters 
in the marshes connected with Lake Copais. 
A small portion of its waters fell in ancient 
times into the River Cephisus. — 2. A river of 
Thessaly, in the district Malis, flows near Hera- 
clea and Trachis, and falls into the Maliac Gulf. 
— 3. A river of Thessaly in Phthiotis, falls into 
the Apidanus. — 4. A river of Thrace, flows first 
southwest, then northwest, and falls north of 
Cardia into the Melas Sinus. — 5. A river in the 
northeast of Sicily, which flows into the sea be- 
tween Mylae and Naulochus, through excellent- 
meadows, in which the oxen of the sun are 
said to have fed. — 6. (Now Manaugat- Su), a 
navigable river, fifty stadia (five geographical 
miles) east of Side, was the boundary between 
Pamphylia and Cilicia. — 7. (Now Kara-Su, i. e., 
the Black River), in Cappadocia, rises in Mount 
Argaeus, flows past Mazaca, and, after forming 
a succession of morasses, falls into the Halys r 
and not (as Strabo says) into the Euphrates. 

Melas Sinus (M&ac koIttoc : now Gulf of 
Saros), a gulf of the ^Egaean Sea, between the 
coast of Thrace on the northwest and the Thra- 
cian Chersonesus on the southeast, into which 
the River Melas flows. 

Meldi or Meld^s, a people in Gallia Lugdu- 
nensis, on the borders of Belgica, and upon the 
River Sequana (now Seine), in whose territory 
Caesar built forty ships for his expedition against 
Britain. 

Meleager (Meteaypog). 1. Son of CEneus 
and Althaea, the daughter of Thestius, husband 
of Cleopatra, and father of Polydora. Others 
call him a son of Mars (Ares) and Althaea. He 
was one of the most famous iEtolian heroes of 
Calydon, and distinguished himself by his skill 
in throwing the javelin. He took part in the 
Argonautic expedition. On his return home, 
the fields of Calydon were laid waste by a mon- 
strous boar, which Diana (Artemis) had sent 
against the country as a punishment, because 
CEneus, the king of the place, once neglected 
to offer up a sacrifice to the goddess. No one 
dared encounter the terrible animal, till at length 
Meleager, with a band of other heroes, went out 
to hunt the boar. He slew the animal ; but the 
Calydonians and Curetes quarrelled about the 

495 



MELES. 



MELISSA. 



head and hide, and at length waged open war ; 
against each other. The Calydonians were | 
always victorious, so long as Meleager went 
out with them. But when his mother Althaea j 
pronounced a curse upon him, enraged at the ! 
death of her brother who had fallen in the fight, 
Meleager stayed at home with his wife Cleopa- i 
tra. The Curetes now began to press Calydon 
very hard. It was in vain'that the old men of j 
the town made him the most brilliant promises ' 
if he would again join in the fight, and that his 
father, his sisters, and his mother supplicated j 
him. At length, however, he yielded to the 
prayers of his wife Cleopatra : he put the Cu- 
retes to flight, but he never returned home, for | 
the Erinnys, who had heard the curse of his 
mother, overtook him. Such is the more an- 
cient form of the legend, as we find it in Homer. 
(//., ix., 527, seq.) In the later traditions Me- 
leager collects the heroes from all parts of 
Greece to join him in the hunt. Among others 
was the fair maiden Atalanta ; but the heroes 
refused to hunt with her, until Meleager, who 
was in love with her, overcame their opposition, j 
Atalanta gave the animal the first wound, which 
was at length slain by Meleager. He present- 
ed the hide to Atalanta, but the sons of Thes- 
tius took it from her, whereupon Meleager in a J 
rage slew them. This, however, was the cause j 
of his own death, which came to pass in the I 
following way. When he was seven days old 
the Mcera appeared, declaring that the boy | 
would die as soon as the piece of wood which j 
was burning on the hearth should be consumed, j 
Althaea, upon hearingthis, extinguished the fire- j 
brand, and concealed it in a chest. Meleager 
himself became invulnerable ; but after he had 
killed the brothers of his mother, she lighted : 
the piece of wood, and Meleager died. Althaea, j 
too late repenting of what she had done, put an : 
end to her life ; and Cleopatra died of grief, j 
The sisters of Meleager wept unceasingly after j 
his death, until Diana (Artemis) changed them ' 
into Guinea-hens {^eaypideg), which were j 
transferred to the island of Leros. Even in 
this condition they mourned during a certain I 
part of the year for their brother. Two of 
them, Gorge and Deianira, through the media- 
tion of Bacchus (Dionysus), were not meta- 
morphosed.— 2. Son of Neoptolemus, a Mace- 
donian officer in the service of Alexander the 
Great. After the death of Alexander the Great j 
(B.C. 323) Meleager resisted the claims of Per- 
diccas to the regency, and was eventually asso- ; 
ciated with the latter in this office. Shortly 
afterward, however, he was put to death by ' 
order of Perdiccas. — [3. Commander of a squad- 1 
ron of cavalry in the army of Alexander the 
Great at the battle of Arbela. He was after- | 
ward slain in an insurrection against the offi- | 
cers left by Antigonus in the government of | 
Media.] — 4. Son of Eufoates, the celebrated 
writer and collector of epigrams, was a native ! 
of Gadara in Palestine, and lived about B.C. i 
€0. There are one hundred and thirty-one of 
his epigrams in the Greek Anthology, written i 
in a good Greek style, though somewhat affect- 
ed, and distinguished by sophistic acumen and I 
amatory fancy. An account of his collection of I 
epigrams is given under Planudes. 

[Me les (MeAT/f/), a small stream of Ionia flow- 1 
496 



ing by Smyrna, on the banks of which Homer 
is said to have been born ; (according to anoth 
er account, he composed his poems in a grot- 
to at its source) and hence was called Mele- 
sigenes {^LelyaLyevrjc:) : from this also was de- 
rived the phrase Meletea charta in Tibullus. 
Another account makes Meles, the god of this 
stream, to have been the father of Homer.] 

[Mblesander (Me?iTjaav6poc;), an Athenian 
general, who was sent out with six ships in the 
year 430 B.C. against Caria and Lycia; fell in 
battle in Lycia.] 

[Melesippus (hle/.TiGLTT-og), a Lacedaemonian, 
one of the ambassadors sent to Athens B.C. 
432, and again the next year to demand the 
restoration of the independence of the Greek 
states, but without success.] 

Meletus or Melitus (MeA??TOf : Me?arof), an 
obscure tragic poet, but notorious as one of the 
accusers of Socrates, was an Athenian, of the 
Pitthean demus. He is represented by Plato 
and Aristophanes and their scholiasts as a frigid 
and licentious poet, and a worthless and profli- 
gate man. In the accusation of Socrates it was 
Meletus who laid the indictment before the 
archon Basileus ; but, in reality, he was the 
most insignificant of the accusers ; and, accord- 
ing to one account, he was bribed by Anytus 
and Lycon to take part in the affair. Soon after 
the death of Socrates, the Athenians repented 
of their injustice, and Meletus was stoned to 
death as one of the authors of their folly. 

Melia (Me/ia), a nymph, daughter of Oceanus, 
became by Inachus the mother of Phoroneus 
and iEgialeus or Pegeus ; and by Silenus the 
mother of the centaur Pholus ; and by Nep- 
tune (Poseidon) of Amycus. She was carried 
off by Apollo, and became by him the mother 
of Ismenius and of the seer Tenerus. She was 
worshipped in the Ismenium, the sanctuary of 
Apollo, near Thebes. In the plural form, the 
Melia or Meliades (MeAlai, MeAmdef) are the 
nymphs who, along with the Gigantes and 
Erinnyes, sprang from the drops of blood that 
fell from Ccelus (Uranus) and were received by 
Terra (Gaea). The nymphs that nursed Jupiter 
(Zeus) are likewise called Meliae. 

Meliboea (Me?u6ota: Me2,i6oevg). 1. A town 
on the coast of Thessaly, in Magnesia, between 
Mount Ossa and Mount Pelion, is said to have 
been built by Magnes, and to have been named 
Melibcea in honor of his wife. It is mentioned 
by Homer as belonging to the dominions of 
Philoctetes, who is hence called by Virgil ( 2£n., 
iii., 401) dux Melibaus. It was celebrated for 
its purple dye. (Lucret., ii., 499 ; Virg., Mn., 
v., 251.) — 2. A small island at the mouth of the 
River Orontes, in Syria. 

Melicertes. Vid. Paljemon. 

[Melinophagi (Me?iivo(j>dyot, " Millet-eaters'"), 
a Thracian people on the coast of Salmydessus, 
whom the Greeks named after their chief article 
of food, not knowing their real name ] 

Melissa (M.e?uacra). 1. A nymph said to have 
discovered the use of honey, and from whom 
bees were believed to have received their name 
(n&Lcaai). There can be no doubt, however, 
that the name really came from /zeAt, honey, 
and was hence given to nymphs. According 
to some traditions, bees were nymphs meta- 
morphosed. Hence the nymphs who fed the 



MELISSA. 



MELOS. 



jnfant Jupiter (Zeus) with honey are called Me- 
lissa— 2. The name of priestesses in general, 
but more especially of the priestesses of Ceres 
(Demeter), Proserpina (Persephone), Apollo, 
and Diana (Artemis).— 3. Wife of Periander, 
tyrant of Corinth, and daughter of Procles, 
tyrant of Epidaurus, was slain by her husband. 
Vid. Periandkr 

[Melissa (Ma«r<ra), a village in the eastern 
part of Phrygia Magna, between Synnada and 
Metropolis, with the tomb of Alcibiades, where, 
at Hadrian's order, a statue was erected to 
him of Parian marble and sacrifices annually 
offered.] 

Melissus (miiooor). 1. Of Samos, a Greek 
philosopher, the son of Ithagenes, was, accord- 
ing to the common account, the commander of 
the fleet opposed to Pericles, B.C. 440. But he 
is not mentioned by Thucydides, and ought 
probably to be placed much earlier, as he is said 
to have been connected with Heraclitus, and 
to have been a disciple of Parmenides. It ap- 
pears from the fragments of his work, which 
was written in prose, and in the Ionic dialect, 
that he adopted the doctrines of the Eleatics. 
— 2. A Latin grammarian and a comic poet, 
was a freedman of Maecenas, and was intrusted 
by Augustus with the arrangement of the li- 
brary in the portico of Octavia. 

Melita or Melite (MeXirn : MeXiralor, Meli- 
tensis). 1. (Now Malta), an island in the Medi- 
terranean Sea, situated fifty-eight miles from 
the nearest point of Sicily, and one hundred 
and seventy-nine miles from the nearest point 
of Africa. Its greatest length is seventeen 
miles and a quarter, and its greatest breadth 
nine miles and a quarter. The island was first 
colonized by the Phoenicians, who used it as a 
place of refuge for their ships, on account of its 
excellent harbors. It afterward passed into the 
hands of the Carthaginians, but was taken pos- 
session of by the Romans in the second Punic 
war, and annexed to the province of Sicily. 
The Romans, however, appear to have neglect- 
ed the island, and it is mentioned by Cicero as ! 
a frequent resort of pirates. It contained a | 
town of the same name, founded by the Cartha- 
ginians, and two celebrated temples, one of 
Juno on a promontory near the town, and an- 
other of Hercules in the southeast of the island. 
It is celebrated in sacred history as the island 
on which the Apostle Paul was shipwrecked ; 
though some writers erroneously suppose that ! 
the apostle was shipwrecked on the island of j 
the same name off the Illyrian coast. The in- j 
habitants manufactured fine cloth, which was 
in much request at Rome. They also exported 
a considerable quantity of honey ; and from 
this island, according to some authorities, came 
the catuli Mclilctr, the favorite lap-dogs of the 
Roman ladies, though other writers make them 
come from the island off the Illyrian coast.— 2. 
(Now Melcda), a small island in the Adriatic 
Sea, off the coast of Illyria (Dalmatia), north- j 
west of Epidaurus. — 3. A demus in Attica, j 
which also formed part of the city of Athens, 1 
was situated south of the inner Ceramicus, and 
probably included the hill of the Museum. It 
was said to have derived its name from a nymph 
Melite, with whom Hercules was in love, and j 
it therefore contained a temple of this god. I 
32 



One of the gates of Athens was called the Me 
litian gate, because it led to this demus. Vid. 
p. 122, b. — 4. A lake in ^Etolia, near the mouth 
of the Achelous, belonging to the territory of 
the town GEniadae. 

Melit/Ea, Melitea, or Melitia (Me?ura£a, 
MeAcreia, MeTiiTia: MeTicratevc), a town ofThes- 
saly, in Phthiotis, on the northern slope of 
Mount Othrys, and near the River Enipeus. It 
is said to have been called Pyrrha in more an- 
cient times, and the sepulchre of Hellen was 
shown in its market-place. 

Melite (Me^trn). 1. A nymph, one of the 
Nereides, a daughter of Nereus and Doris. — [2. 
A Naiad, daughter of the river-god iEgaeus, be- 
came by Hercules mother of Hyllus, in the 
land of the Phaeacians.] 

Melitene (Melirrjvri), a district of Armenia 
Minor, between the Anti-Taurus and the Eu- 
phrates, celebrated for its fertility, and espe- 
cially for its fruit-trees, oil, and wine. It pos- 
sessed no great town until the first century of 
our era, when a city, also called Melitene (now 
Malatiyah) was built on a tributary of the Eu- 
phrates, and near that river itself, probably on 
the site of a very ancient fort. This became 
a place of considerable importance ; the centre 
of several roads ; the station, under Titus, of 
the twelfth legion ; and, in the later division of 
the provinces, the capital of Armenia Secunda. 
In AD. 577 it was the scene of a victory gain- 
ed by the Romans over the Persians under 
Chosroes I. 

Melito (MeTiiTov), a Christian writer of con- 
siderable eminence, was bishop of Sardes in the 
reign of M. Aurelius, to whom he presented an 
Apology for the Christians. Of his numerous 
works only fragments are extant. 

Mella or Mela (now Mella), a river in Gallia 
Transpadana, which flows by Brixia and falls 
into the Ollius (now Oglio). 

Mellaria. 1. A town of the Bastuli in His- 
pania Baetica, between Belon and Calpe, on the 
road from Gades to Malaca. — 2. A town in the 
same province, considerably north of the for 
mer, on the road from Corduba to Emerita. 

Melodunum (now Melun), a town of the Se- 
nones in Gallia Lugdunensis, on an island of 
the Sequana (now Seine), and on the road from 
Agendicum to Lutetia Parisiorum. 

Melos (MtjIoc : UriXcog : now Milo), an isl- 
and in the ^Egean Sea, and the most westerly 
of the group of the Cyclades, whence it was 
called Zephyria by Aristotle. It is about sev- 
enty miles north of the coast of Crete, and six- 
ty-five east of the coast of Peloponnesus. Its 
length is about fourteen miles from east to 
west, and its breadth about eight miles. It con- 
tains on the north a deep bay, which forms an 
excellent harbor, and on which was situated a 
town, bearing the same name as the island. 
The island is of volcanic origin ; it contains hot 
springs, and mines of sulphur and alum. Its 
soil is very fertile, and it produced in antiquity, 
as it does at present, abundance of corn, oil, 
wine, &c. It was first colonized by the Phoe- 
nicians, who are said to have called it Byblus 
or Byblis, after the Phoenician town Byblus. It 
was afterward colonized by Lacedaemonians, or 
at least by Dorians ; and consequently in the 
Peloponnesian war it embraced the side of 

497 



MELPOMENE. 



MEMNON. 



Sparta. In B.C. 426 the Athenians made an 
unsuccessful attack upon the island; but in 416 
they obtained possession of the town after a 
siege of several months, whereupon they killed 
all the adult males, sold the women and chil- 
dren as slaves, and peopled the island by an 
Athenian colony. Melos was the birth-place of 
Diagoras, the atheist, whence Aristophanes calls 
Socrates also the Melian. 

Melpomene (Mefaofievij), i. e. % the singing 
goddess, one of the nine Muses, who presided 
over Tragedy. Vid. Mus^e. 

[Melpum (now Mclza), a city of Gallia Trans- 
padana, in the territory of thelnsubres.] 

[Melsus (now Narcea), a small stream in the 
territory of the Astures, in Hispania Tarraco- 
nensis, flowing into the Oceanus Cantabricus, 
west of Flavionovia.] 

Memini, a people in Gallia Narbonensis, on 
the western bank of the Druentia, whose chief 
town was Carpentoracte (now Carpentras). 

Memmia Gens, a plebeian house at Rome, 
whose members do not occur in history before 

B. C. 173, but who pretended to be descended 
from the Trojan Mnestheus. (Virg., JEn., v. 
117.) 

Memmius. 1. C, tribune of the plebs B.C. 
Ill, was an ardent opponent of the oligarchical 
party at R,ome during the Jugurthme war. 
Among the nobles impeached by Memmius 
were L. Calpurnius Bestia and M. iEmilius 
Scaurus. Memmius was slain by the mob of 
Saturninus and Glaucia, while a candidate for 
the consulship in 100. — 2. C. Memmius Gemel- 
lus, tribune of the plebs 66, curule sedile 60, 
and praetor 58. He belonged at that time to 
the Senatorian party, since he impeached P. 
Vatinius, opposed P. Clodius, and was vehe- 
ment in his invectives against Julius Caesar. 
But before he competed for the consulship, 54, 
he had been reconciled to Caesar, who support- 
ed him with all his interest. Memmius, how- 
ever, again offended Caesar by revealing a cer- 
tain coalition with his opponents at the comitia. 
He was impeached for ambitus, and, receiving 
no aid from Caesar, withdrew from Rome to 
Mytilene, where he was living in the year of 
Cicero's proconsulate. Memmius married Faus- 
ta, a daughter of the dictator Sulla, whom he 
divorced after having by her at least one son, 

C. Memmius. Vid. No. 3. He was eminent both 
in literature and in eloquence. Lucretius ded- 
icated his poem, De Rerum Natura, to him. He 
was a man of profligate character, and wrote 
indecent poems. — 3. C. Memmius, son of the 
preceding, was tribune of the plebs 54, when 
he prosecuted A. Gabinius for malversation in 
his province of Syria, and Domitius Calvinus 
for ambitus at his consular comitia. Memmius 
■was step-son of T. Annius Milo, who married 
his mother Fausta after her divorce. He was 
consul suffectus 34.-4. P. Memmius Regulus, 
consul suffectus A.D. 31, afterward praefect of 
Macedonia and Achaia. He was the husband 
of Lollia Paulina, and was compelled by Caligu- 
la to divorce her. 

Memnon (Me/ivuv). 1. The beautiful son of 
Tithonus and Eos (Aurora), and brother of Ema- 
thion. He is rarely mentioned by Homer, and 
must be regarded essentially as a post-Homeric 
hero. According to these later traditions, he 
498 



was a prince of the ^Ethiopians, who came to 
the assistance of his uncle Priam, for Tithonus 
and Priam were half-brothers, being both sons 
of Laomedon by different mothers. Respecting 
his expedition to Troy there are different le- 
gends. According to some, Memnon the ^Ethi- 
opian first went to Egypt, thence to Susa, and 
thence to Troy. At Susa, which had been found- 
ed by Tithonus, Memnon built the acropolis, 
which was called after him the Memnonium. 
According to others, Tithonus was the govern- 
or of a Persian province and the favorite of 
Teutamus ; and Memnon obtained the com- 
mand of a large host of ^Ethiopians and Susans 
to succor Priam. Memnon came to the war 
in armor made for him by Vulcan (Hephaestus). 
He slew Antilochus, the son of Nestor, but was 
himself slain by Achilles after a long and fierce 
combat. While the two heroes were fighting, 
Jupiter (Zeus) weighed their fates, and the scale 
containing Memnon's sank. His mother was 
inconsolable at his death. She wept for him 
every morning ; and the dew-drops of the morn- 
ing are the tears of Aurora (Eos). To soothe 
the grief of his mother, Jupiter (Zeus) caused 
a number of birds to issue out of the funeral 
pile, on which the body of Memnon was burn- 
ing, which, after flying thrice around the burn- 
ing pile, divided into two separate bodies, which 
fought so fiercely that half of them fell down 
upon the ashes of the hero, and thus formed a 
funeral sacrifice for him. These birds were 
called Memnojiides, and, according to a story 
current on the Hellespont, they visited every 
year the tomb of the hero. At the entreaties 
of Aurora (Eos), Jupiter (Zeus) conferred im- 
mortality upon Memnon. At a comparatively 
late period, the Greeks gave the name of Mem- 
non to the colossal statue in the neighborhood 
of Thebes, which was said to give forth a sound 
like the snapping asunder of a chord when it 
was struck by the first rays of the rising sun. 
Although the Greeks gave this name to the 
statue, they were well aware that the Egyptians 
did not call the statue Memnon, but Amenophis. 
This figure w T as made of black stone, in a sit- 
ting posture, with its feet close together, and the 
hands leaning on the seat. Several very in- 
genious conjectures have been propounded re- 
specting the alleged meaning of the so-called 
statue of Memnon. Some have asserted that 
it served for astronomical purposes, and others 
that it had reference to the mystic worship of 
the sun and light, but there can be little doubt 
that the statue represented nothing else than 
the Egyptian king Amenophis. — 2. A native of 
Rhodes, joined Artabazus, satrap of Lower 
Phrygia, who had married his sister, in his re- 
volt against Darius Ochus. When fortune de- 
serted the insurgents, they fled to the court of 
Philip. Mentor, the brother of Memnon, being 
high in favor with Darius, interceded on behalf 
of Artabazus and Memnon, who were pardoned 
and again received into favor. On the death 
of Mentor, Memnon, who possessed great mili- 
tary skill and experience, succeeded him in his 
authority, which extended over all the western 
coast of Asia Minor (about B.C. 336). When 
Alexander invaded Asia, Memnon defended 
Halicarnassus against Alexander until it was 
no longer possible to hold out ; he then collect- 



MEMNONIUM. 



MENANDER. 



ed an army and a fleet, with the design of carry- j of the Pharaohs ; the temple-palace of the god- 
ing the war into Greece, but died at Mytilene in ; bull Apis ; the temple of Serapis, with its ave- 
333, before be could carry his plan into execu- j nue of sphinxes, now covered by the sand of the 
tion. His death was an irreparable loss to the j desert ; and the temple of Vulcan (Hephaestus), 
Persian cause, for several Greek states were j the Egyptian Phtha, of whose worship Memphis 
prepared to join him had he carried the war into ! was the chief seat. The ruins of this temple, 
Greece.— 3. A native of Heraclea Pontica, wrote and of other buildings, still cover a large por- 



a large work on the history of that city. Of how 
many books it consisted, we do not know. Pho- 
tius had read from the ninth to the sixteenth 
inclusive, of which portion he has made a tol- 
erably copious abstract. The first eight books 
he had not read, and he speaks of other books 
after the sixteenth. The ninth book began with 
an account of the tyrant Clearchus, the disciple 
of Plato and Isocrates, and the sixteenth book 



tion of the plain between the Nile and the west- 
ern range of hills which skirt its valley. 

Menjenum or Men.* (Menenius, Cic.,Menani- 
nus, Plin., but on coins Meneenus : now Minco), 
a town on the eastern coast of Sicily, south of 
Hybla, the birth-place and residence of the Si- 
celian chief Ducetius, who was long a formida- 
ble enemy of the Greek cities in Sicily. Vid. 
Ducetius. On his fall the town lost all its im- 



came down to the time of Julius Caesar, after j portance. 



the latter had obtained the supreme power 
The work was probably written in the time of j 
Augustus, and certainly not later than the time 
of Hadrian or the Antonines. The Excerpta ! 
of Photius are published separately by Orelli, j 
Lips., 1816. 

Memnonium and -ia (Mepvoveiov, Mefcvoveta), 
were names applied by the Greeks to certain 
very ancient buildings and monuments in Egypt 
and Asia, which they supposed to have been 
erected by or in honor of Memnon. 1. The 
most celebrated of these was a great temple at 
Thebes, described by Strabo, and commonly 
identified by modern travellers with the mag- 
nificent ruins of the temple of Remeses the 



Menalippus. Vid. Mklanippus. 
Menandeb (M.evavdpoc), of Athens, the most 
distinguished poet of the New Comedy, was 
the son ofDiopithes and Hegesistrate, and flour- 
ished in the time of the successors of Alexan- 
der. He was born B.C. 342. His father, Dio- 
pithes, commanded the Athenian forces on the 
Hellespont in the year of his son's birth. Alex- 
is, the comic poet, was the uncle of Menander 
on the father's side ; and w r e may naturally sup- 
pose that the young Menander derived from his 
uncle his taste for the comic drama, and was 
instructed by him in its rules of composition. 
His character must have been greatly influenced 
by his intimacy w 7 ith Theophrastus and Epicu- 



Great, at Western Thebes, or, as it is usually | rus, of whom the former was his teacher and 
called, the tomb of Osymandyas, from its agree- I the latter his intimate friend. His taste and 
ment with the description of that monument giv- : sympathies were altogether with the philosophy 
en by Diodorus. There are, however, strong j of Epicurus ; and in an epigram he declared 
grounds for supposing that the true Memnoni- j that "as Themistocles rescued Greece from 
um, described by Strabo, stood behind the two ■ slavery, so Epicurus from unreason." From 
colossal sitting statu* i on the plain of Thebes, i Theophrastus, on the other hand, he must have 
one of which is clearly the vocal statue of Mem- j derived much of that skill in the discrimination 



non, and that it has entirely disappeared. — 2 
Vid. Abydos, No. 2. — 3. The citadel of Susa was 



of character which we so much admire in the 
Charactcres of the philosopher, and which form- 



so called, and its erection was ascribed to the ed the great charm of the comedies of Menan- 



Memnon who appears in the legends of the Tro 
jan war; but there is no reason to suppose that 
this connection of Memnon with the Persian cap- 
ital existed before the Persian conquest of Egypt. 

Memphis (Mefi(j>t£, Mev<p : in the Old Testament, 
Moph : MefiQiTTjc, Memphites : now ruins at Men/ 
and Metraheiviy), a great city of Egypt, second 
in importance only to Thebes, after the fall of 
which it became the capital of the whole country, 
a position which it had previously shared with 
Thebes. It was of unknown antiquity, its found- 
ation being ascribed to Menes. It stood on the 
left (western) bank of the Nile, about ten miles 
above the Pyramids of Jizeh, near the northern 
limit of the Heptanomis, or Middle Egypt, a 
nome of which (M^rr/c) was named after the 
city. It was connected by canals with the lakes 
of Mceris and Mareotis, and was the great centre 
of the commerce of Egypt until the Persian con- 
quest (B.C. 524), when Cambyses partially de- 
stroyed the city. After the foundation of Alex- 
andra it sank into insignificance, and was final- 
ly destroyed at the Arab conquest in the sev- 
enth century. In the time of its splendor it is 
said to have been one hundred and fifty stadia 
in circumference, and half a day's journey in 
every direction. Of the splendid buildings with 
which it was adorned, the chief were the palace 



der. His master's attention to external ele- 
gance and comfort he not only imitated, but, as 
was natural in a man of an elegant person, a 
joyous spirit, and a serene and easy temper, he 
carried it to the extreme of luxury and effem- 
inacy. The moral character of Menander is de- 
fended by modern writers against the asper- 
sions of Suidas and others. Thus much is cer- 
tain, that his comedies contain nothing offens- 
ive, at least to the taste of his own and the fol- 
lowing ages, none of the purest, it must be ad- 
mitted, as they were frequently acted at private 
banquets. Of the actual events of his life we 
know but little. He enjoyed the friendship of 
Demetrius Phalereus, whose attention was first 
drawn to him by admiration of his works. Ptol- 
emy, the son of Lagus, was also one of his ad- 
mirers ; and he invited the poet to his court at 
Alexandrea, but Menander seems to have de- 
clined the proffered honor. He died at Athens 
B.C. 291, at the age of 52, and is said to have 
been drowned while swimming in the harbor of 
Piraeus. Notwithstanding Menander's fame as 
a poet, his public dramatic career was not emi- 
nently successful; for, though he composed up- 
ward of one hundred comedies, he gained the 
prize only eight times. His preference for ele- 
gant exhibitions of character above coarse jest- 

499 



MENANDER. 



MENEDEMUS. 



ing may have been the reason why he was not 
si/great a favorite with the common people as 
his principal rival, Philemon, who is said, more- 
over, to have used unfair means of gaining 
popularity. Menander appears to have borne 
the popular neglect very lightly, in the con- 
sciousness of his superiority; and once when 
he happened to meet Philemon, he is said to 
have asked him, " Pray, Philemon, do not you 
blush when you gain a victory over me 1" The 
neglect of Menander's contemporaries has been 
amply compensated by his posthumous fame. 
His comedies retained their place on the stage 
down to the time of Plutarch, and the unani- 
mous consent of antiquity placed him at the 
head of the New Comedy, and on an equality 
with the great masters of the various kinds of 
poetry. His comedies were imitated by the Ro- 
man dramatists, particularly by Terence, who 
was little more than a translator of Menander. 
But we can not form, from any one play of Ter- 
ence, a fair notion of the corresponding play of 
Menander, as the Roman poet frequently com- 
pressed two of Menander's plays into one. It 
was this mixing up of different plays that Ca?- 
sar pointed to by the phrase dimidiate Menan- 
der, in the epigram which he wrote upon Ter- 
ence. Of Menander's comedies only fragments 
are extant. The best edition of them is by Mei- 
neke, in his Fragmenta Comicorum Grcecorurn, 
Berol., 1841. 

[Menander (MevavSpog). 1. An Athenian of- 
ficer in the Sicilian expedition, associated in the 
supreme command with Nicias, toward the end 
of the year B.C. 414 : he afterward served with 
Alcibiades against Pharnabazus, and was one 
of the commanders at the disastrous battle of 
iEgos potami. — 2. King of Baetria, was one of 
the most powerful of all the Greek rulers of 
that country, and one of those who made the 
most extensive conquests in India, reaching be- 
yond the Hypanis or Sutledj.—Z. Surnamed Pro- 
tector, a Greek writer of Byzantium in the latter 
half of the sixth century. He wrote a history 
of the Eastern empire from A.D. 559 to 582 in 
eight books, of which considerable extracts 
have been preserved in the " Eclogae Legation- 
um" attributed to Constantinus Porphyrogeni- 
tus Edited by BekkerandNiebuhr, Bonn, 1830.] 

MenapIa (MevcnTLa), a city of Bactriana, on 
the River Zariaspis. 

MenapIi, a powerful people in the north of 
Gallia Belgica, originally dwelt on both banks 
of the Rhine, but were afterward driven out of 
their possessions on the right bank by the Usi- 
petes and Tenchteri, and inhabited only the left 
bank near its mouth, and west of the Mosa. 
Their country was covered with forests and 
swamps. They had a fortress on the Mosa 
called Castellum Menapiorum (now Kessel). 

Menas (Mtfvaf). also called Menodorus (Mtj- 
vodopoc) by Appian, a freedman of Pompey the 
Great, was one of the principal commanders of 
the fleet of Sextus Pompey in his war against 
Octavianus and Antony, B.C. 40. In 39 he 
tried in vain to dissuade his master from con- 
cluding a peace with Octavianus and Antony ; 
and, at an entertainment given to them by Sex- 
tus on board his ship at Misenum, Menas sug- 
gested to him to cut the cables of the vessel, 
and, running it out to sea, dispatch both his 
500 



rivals. The treacherous proposal, however, was 
rejected by Pompey. On the breaking out of 
the war again in 38, Menas deserted Pompey 
and went over to Octavianus. In 36 he return- 
ed to his old master's service ; but in the course 
of the same year he again played the deserter, 
and joined Octavianus. In 35 he accompanied 
Octavianus in the Pannonian campaign, and 
was slain at the siege of Siscia. x\ccording to 
the old scholiasts, this Menas is the person so 
vehemently attacked by Horace in his fourth 
epode. This statement has been called in ques- 
tion by many modern commentators ; but their 
arguments are far from satisfactory. 

Mende or Mendje (Mivdn, Mevdaloc), a town 
on the western coast of the Macedonian penin- 
sula Pellene and on the Thermaic Gulf, was a 
colony of the Eretrians, and was celebrated for 
its wine. It was for some time a place of con- 
siderable ' importance, but was ruined by the 
foundation of Cassandrea. 

Mendes (Mevd-nc : MevdijffLo^: ruins nearilfa- 
tarieh), a considerable city of the Delta of Egypt, 
on the southern side of the Lake of Tanis (now 
Menzaleh), and on the bank of one of the lesser 
arms of the Nile, named after it Mevdrjoiov aro,ua' 
the chief seat of the worship of Mendes. 

Menecles (MevEnhx). 1. Of Barce in Cy- 
rene, an historian of uncertain date. — 2. Of Ala- 
banda, a celebrated rhetorician. He and his 
brother Hierocles taught rhetoric at Rhodes, 
where the orator M. Antonius heard them, about 
B.C. 94. 

Menecrates (MeveKparnc). 1. A Syracusan 
physician at the court of Philip, king of Mace- 
don, B C. 359-336. He made himself ridicu 
lous by calling himself " Jupiter," and assuming 
divine honors. There is a tale that he was in- 
vited one day by Philip to a magnificent enter- 
tainment, where the other guests were sump- 
tuously fed, while he himself had nothing but 
incense and libations, as not being subject to 
the human infirmity of hunger. He was at first 
pleased with his reception, but afterward per- 
ceiving the joke, and finding that no more sub- 
stantial food was offered him, he left the party 
in disgust. — 2. Tiberius Claudius Menecra- 
tes, a physician mentioned by Galen, composed 
more than one hundred and fifty medical works, 
of which only a few fragments remain. 

Menedemus (Mei>edn/j,<>s), a Greek philosopher, 
was a native of Eretria, and, though of noble 
birth, was poor, and worked for a livelihood 
either as a builder or as a tent-maker. Accord- 
ing to one story, he seized the opportunity af- 
forded by his being sent on some military serv- 
ice to Megara to hear Plato, and abandoned 
the army to addict himself to philosophy ; but 
it may be questioned whether he was old enough 
to have heard Plato before the death of the 
latter. According to another story, he and his 
friend Asclepiades got their livelihood as millers, 
working during the night, that they might have 
leisure for philosophy in the day. The two 
friends afterward became disciples of Stilpo at 
Megara. From Megara they went to Elis, and 
placed themselves under the instruction of 
some disciples of Phaedo. On his return to 
Eretria Menedemus established a school of phi- 
losophy, which was called the Eretrian. He 
did not, however, confine himself to philosophi- 



MENELAI. 



MENESTHEUS. 



cal pursuits, but took an active part in the polit- 
ical affairs of his native city, and came to be 
the leading man in the state. He went on vari- 
ous embassies to Lysimachus, Demetrius, and 
others ; but, being suspected of the treacherous 
intention of betraying Eretria into the power of 
Antigonus, he quitted his native city secretly, 
and took refuge with Antigonus in Asia. Here 
he starved himself to death in the seventy-fourth 
year of his age, probably about B.C. 277. Of 
the philosophy of Menedemus little is known, 
except that it closely resembled that of the Me- 
garian school. Vtd. Euclides, No. 2. 

M ENEL.il Or -US, PoRTUS (Mf^AatOf UfiTjV, 

Meve'Aaof : now Marsa-Toubrouk, or Ras-el- 
Milhr ?), an ancient city on the coast of Mar- 
marica, in Northern Africa, founded, according 
to tradition, by Menelaus. It is remarkable in 
history as the place where Agesilaus died. 

Menelaium (Mevehuov), a mountain in La- 
conia, southeast of Sparta, near Therapne, on 
which the heroum of Menelaus was situated, the 
foundations of which temple were discovered 
in the year 1834. 

Menelaus (MevD.aoc, Mev&sus, or MeveAac). 
I. Son of Plisthenes or Atreus, and younger 
brother of Agamemnon. His early life is re- 
lated under Agamemnon. He was king of La- 
cedasmon, and married to the beautiful Helen, 
by whom he became the father of Hermione. 
When Helen had been carried off by Paris, Men- 
elaus and Ulysses sailed to Troy in order to 
demand her restitution. Menelaus was hospi- 
tably treated by Antenor, but the journey was 
of no avail; and the Trojan Antimachus even 
advised his fellow-citizens to kill Menelaus and 
Ulysses. Thereupon Menelaus and his brother 
Agamemnon resolved to march against Troy 
with all the forces that Greece could muster. 
Agamemnon was chosen the commander-in- 
chief. In the Trojan war Menelaus was under 
the special protection of Juno (Hera) and Mi- 
nerva (Athena), and distinguished himself by 
his bravery in battle. Me killed many illustri- 
ous Trojans, and would have slain Paris also 
in single combat, had not the latter been carried 
off by Venus (Aphrodite) in a cloud. Menelaus 
was one of the heroes concealed in the wooden 
horse ; and as soon as Troy was taken, he and 
Ulysses hastened to the house of Deiphobus, 
who had married Helen after the death of Paris, 
and put him to death in a barbarous manner. 
Menelaus is said to have been secretly intro- 
duced into the chamber of Deiphobus by Helen, 
who thus became reconciled to her former hus- 
band. He was among the first that sailed away 
from Troy, accompanied by his wife Helen and 
Nestor ; but he was eight years wandering about 
the shores of the Mediterranean before he 
reached home. lie arrived at Sparta on the 
very day on which Orestes was engaged in 
burying Clytaemnestra and ^gisthus. Hence- 
forward he lived with Helen at Sparta in peace 
and wealth, and his palace shone in its splendor 
like the sun or the moon. When Telemachus 
visited Sparta to inquire after his father, Mene- 
laus was solemnizing the marriage of his daugh- 
ter Hermione with Neoptolemus, and of his son 
Megapenthes with a daughter of Alector. In 
the Homeric poems Menelaus is described as a 
man of an athletic figure; he spoke little, but 



what he said was always impressive ; he was 
brave and courageous, but milder than Aga- 
memnon, intelligent and hospitable. Accord- 
ing to the prophecy of Proteus in the Odyssey, 
Menelaus and Plelen were not to die, but the 
gods were to conduct them to Elysium. Ac- 
cording to a later tradition, he and Helen went 
to the Taurians, where they were sacrificed by 
Iphigenia to Diana (Artemis). Menelaus was 
worshipped as a hero at Therapne, where his 
tomb and that of Helen were shown. Respect- 
ing the tale that Helen never went to Troy, but 
was detained in Egypt, vid. Helena.-— 2. Son 
of Lagus, and brother of Ptolemy Soter, held 
possession of Cyprus for his brother, but was 
defeated and driven out of the island by Deme- 
trius Poliorcetes, B.C. 306.— 3. A Greek mathe- 
matician, a native of Alexandrea, the author of 
an extant treatise in three books, on the Sphere. 
He made some astronomical observations at 
Rome in the first year of the Emperor Trajan, 
A.D. 98. 

Menelaus (Mfi^Aaoc), a city of Lower Egypt, 
! on the Canopic branch of the Nile, named after 
the brother of Ptolemy the son of Lagus. It 
was made the capital of the district between 
the lakes of Moeris and Mareotis (vo/ioc Msve- 

Menenius Lanatus. 1. Agrippa, consul B.C. 
503, conquered the Sabines. It was owing to 
his mediation that the first great rupture be- 
tween the patricians and plebeians, when the 
latter seceded to the Sacred Mount, was brought 
to a happy and peaceful termination in 493 , 
and it was upon this occasion he is said to have 
I related to the plebeians his well-known fable 
I of the belly and its members. — 2. T., consul 
! 477, was defeated by the Etruscans. He had 
previously allowed the Fabii to be destroyed by 
the Etruscans, although he might have assisted 
them with his army. For this act of treachery- 
he was brought to trial by the tribunes and con 
demned to pay a fine. He took his punishment 
so much to heart, that he shut himself up in 
his house and died of grief. 

Menes (M.7/vt]c), first king of Egypt, according 
to the traditions of the Egyptians themselves. 
Herodotus records of him that he built Mem- 
phis on a piece of ground which he had rescued 
from the river by turning it from its former 
course, and erected therein a magnificent tem- 
I pie to Hephcestus (Phthah). Diodorus tells us 
that he introduced into Egypt the worship of 
I the gods aiid the practice of sacrifices, as well 
; as a more elegant and luxurious style of living. 
1 That he was a conqueror, like other founders 
| of kingdoms, we learn from an extract from 
\ Manetho preserved by Eusebius. By Marsham 
; and others he has been identified with the Miz- 
| raim of Scripture. According to some accounts 
j he was killed by a hippopotamus. 

Menesthei Portus (now Puerto de S. Maria), 
i a harbor in Hispania Baetica, not far from Gades, 
j with an oracle of Menestheus, who is said in 
! some legends to have settled in Spain. 

[Menesthes (MsveaOrjc), a Greek warrior at 
! the siege of Troy, slain by Hector.] 

Menestheus (MeveadEvg). 1. Son of Peteus, 
j an Athenian king, who led the Athenians against 
| T roy, and surpassed all other mortals in arrang- 
i ing the war-steeds and men for battle. With 

501 



MENESTHIUS. 



MENTOR. 



the assistance of the Tyndarids, he is said to I 
have driven Theseus from his kingdom. — 2. Son j 
of Iphicrates, the famous Athenian general, by j 
the daughter of Cotys, king of Thrace. He j 
married the daughter of Timotheus ; and in j 
356 was chosen commander in the Social war, I 
his father and his father-in-law being appointed 
to aid him with their counsel and experience, j 
They were all three impeached by their col- I 
league, Chares, for alleged misconduct and t 
treachery in the campaign ; but Iphicrates and j 
Menestheus were acquitted. 

[Menesthics (Mevsadiog). 1. Son of Are!- 
thous, king of Arne in Boeotia, was slain by Par- j 
is. — 2. Son of Sperchlus or of Borus and Poly- i 
dora, nephew of Achilles, a leader of the Myr- j 
midons before Troy.] 

[Me nest rat us ( N.£v£<5TpaTo<; ), a sculptor, I 
whose Hercules and Hecate were greatly ad- 
mired. The latter stood in the opisthodomus | 
of the temple of Diana (Artemis) at Ephesus, \ 
and was made of marble of such brilliancy that J 
it was necessary to warn beholders to shade j 
their eyes, says Pliny.] 

[Menexexus (Mevitjevog ), an Athenian, son of j 
Demophon, was a disciple of Socrates, and is 
introduced by Plato as one of the interlocutors j 
in the dialogues Lysis and Menexenus.] 

Meninx or Lotophagitis, afterward Girba 
(M^vtyf, AuTooaylrig, Acoroddyuv vrjooQ : now j 
Jerbah), a considerable island, close to the coast j 
of Africa Propria, at the southeastern extremity I 
of the Lesser Syrtis, with two cities, Meninx 1 
(now Menaz) on the northeast, and Girba, or j 
Gerra, on the southwest. It was the birth-place \ 
of the emperors Vibius Gallus and Volusianus. 

Menippe (MeviTT-n), daughter of Orion and 
sister of Metioche. These two sisters put them- \ 
selves to death of their own accord in order to j 
propitiate the two Erinnyes, who had visited ; 
Aonia with a plague. They were metamorph- ; 
osed by Proserpina (Persephone) and Pluto j 
(Hades) into comets, and the Aonians erected I 
to them a sanctuary near Orchomenos. 

Menippus (M.evL?nTog). 1. A cynic philosopher, | 
and originally a slave, was a native of Gadara ! 
in Ccele-Syria. He seems to have been a hear- 
er of Diogenes, and flourished about B.C. 60. 
He amassed great wealth as a usurer (Tjfispoda- 
vetGT?jg), but was cheated out of it all, and com- 
mitted suicide. We are told that he wrote noth- j 
ing serious, but that his books were full of jests; j 
whence it would appear that he was one of : 
those cynic philosophers who threw all their i 
teaching into a satirical form. In this charac- j 
ter he is several times introduced by Lucian. \ 
His works are now entirely lost ; but we have I 
considerable fragments of Varro's Satura Me- \ 
nippecE, written in imitation of Menippus. — [2. 
Of Stratonice, a Carian by birth, was the most ; 
accomplished orator of his time in all Asia. 
Cbero, who heard him, puts him almost on a 
level with the Attic orators. — 3. Of Pergamus, ! 
a geographer, lived in the time of Augustus, and 
wrote a U-epi-KAovr ~fjg kvrdg ■d-akdrTTjc, of which 
an abridgment was made by Marciarius, and of 
which some fragments are preserved. Vid. 
Marcianus.] 

Mknnis, a city of Adiabene, in Assyria, only 
mentioned by Curtius (v., l). 

[Menooorus (Wrjvodopor). Vid. Menas.] 
502 



Menodotus (Mrjvodoroc), a physician of Nico- 
media in Bithynia, who was a pupil of Antio- 
chus of Laodicea, and tutor to Herodotus of 
Tarsus ; he belonged to the medical sect of the 
Empirici, and lived probably about the begin- 
ning of the second century after Christ. 

Menceceus (Mevoifcevc). 1. A Theban, grand- 
son of Pentheus, and father of Hipponome, Jo- 
casta, and Creon. — 2. Grandson of the former, 
and son of Creon. He put an end to his life 
because Tiresias had declared that his death 
would bring victory to his country, when the 
seven Argive heroes marched against Thebes. 
His tomb was shown at Thebes near the Nei- 
tian gate. 

[Mencetes. 1. Pilot of the ship of Gyas, who 
threw him overboard for having delayed his ves- 
sel in the race at the celebration of the games 
in honor of Anchises. — 2. An Arcadian who 
fought on the side of .Eneas in Italy, and was 
slain by Turnus.] 

Mencetius (Mevo'iTicg). 1. Son of Iapetus 
and Clymene or Asia, and brother of Atlas, 
Prometheus, and Epimetheus. He was killed 
by Jupiter (Zeus) with a flash of lightning in 
the battle with the Titans, and was hurled Into 
Tartarus. — 2. Son of Actor and JEgina, hus- 
band of Polymele or Sthenele, and father of Pa- 
troclus, who is hence called Mcn&tiades. After 
Patroclus had slain the son of Amphidamas. 
Mencetius fled with him to Peleus in Phthia, 
and had him educated there. 

[Mexox (Mevwv). 1. A Trojan warrior slain 
by Leonteus. — 2. A citizen of Pharsalus in 
Thessaly, who aided the Athenians at Eion 
with twelve talents and two hundred horsemen 
raised by himself from his own penestae, and 
was rewarded for these services with the free- 
dom of the city.]— -3. AThessalian adventurer, 
was one of the generals of the Greek mercena- 
ries in the army of Cyrus the Younger when 
the latter marched into Upper Asia against his 
brother Artaxerxes, B.C. 401. After the death 
of Cyrus he was apprehended along with the 
other Greek generals by Tissaphernes, and was 
put to death by lingering tortures, which lasted 
for a whole year. His character is drawn in, 
the blackest colors by Xenophon. He is the 
same as the Menon introduced in the dialogue 
of Plato, which bears his name. 

Mens, a personification of mind, worshipped 
by the Romans. She had a sanctuary on the 
Capitol ; and the object of her worship was, 
that the citizens might always be guided by a 
right spirit. 

[Mentes (Mivnjg). 1. Leader of the Cicones, 
under whose form Apollo encouraged Hector to 
prevent Menelaus carrying off the armor of 
Euphorbus. — 2. Son of Anchialus, leader of the 
Taphians, guest-friend of Ulysses. Minerva as- 
sumed his form when she appeared to Telem- 
: achus to arouse him to go in search of the ab- 
1 sent Uiysses ] 

Mentesa (Mentesanus). 1. Surnamed Bas- 
tia, a town of the Oretani in Hispania Tarraco- 
I nensis, on the road from Castulo to Carthago 
j Nova.— 2. A small town of the Bastuli in the 
I south of Hispania Bajtica. 

Mentor (Mevrwp). 1. Son of Alcimus, and 
a faithful friend of Ulysses, [to whom the latter 
confided the supervision of his household when 



MENTORES. 



MEROE. 



setting out for Troy. Minerva assumed his 
form to give instructions to the young Telem- 
achus, and accompanied him as Mentor to the 
court of Nestor.— 2. Father of Imbrius of Caria, 
who fought on the side of the Trojans, is called 
by Homer " rich in horses."]— 3. A Greek of 
Rhodes, who, with his brother Memnon, ren- 
dered active assistance to Artabazus. When 
the latter found himself compelled to take ref- 
uge at the court of Philip, Mentor entered the 
service of Nectanabis, king of Egypt. He was 
sent to the assistance of Tennes, king of Sidon, 
in his revolt against Darius Ochus ; and when 
Tennes went over to the Persians, Mentor was 
taken into the service of Darius. He rose rap- 
idly in the favor of Darius, and eventually re- 
ceived a satrapy, including all the western 
coast of Asia Minor. His influence with Da- 
rius enabled him to procure the pardon of his 
brother Memnon. He died in possession of his 
satrapy, and was succeeded by his brother Mem- 
non. Vid. Memnon. — 4. The most celebrated 
silver-chaser among the Greeks, who must have 
flourished before B.C. 356. His works were 
vases and cups, which were most highly prized 
by the Romans. 

[Mentores (Mevropgf), a people on the coast 
of Liburnia, in the district Mentorice (Mevro- 
piKi'i) ; they also possessed the islands situated 
on this coast in the Adriatic calied " Insulae 
Mentorides" (Mcvropideg), now probably Veglia, 
Arbe, Cher so, &c] 

[Menyllus (MtvivJnr). 1. A Macedonian, ap- 
pointed to command the Macedonian garrison 
in Munychia after the Lamiac war, B.C. 322. 
He was a just man, and on friendly terms with 
Phocion. He was replaced by Nicanor, B.C. 
319, on the death of Antipater. — 2. Of Alaban- 
da, ambassador to Rome in B.C. 162, from Ptol- 
emy VI. Philometor. to plead his cause against 
his younger brother Physcon : his mission, how- 
ever, was unsuccessful. While at Rome, he, 
with Polybius, aided in effecting the escape of 
the Syrian prince Demetrius.] 

Mekcurii Promontorium. Vid. Herm^ecjm. 

Mercurius, a Roman divinity of commerce 
and gain. The character of the god is clear 
from his name, which is connected with merx 
and mercari. A temple was built to him as 
early as B.C. 495, near the Circus Maximus ; 
an altar of the god existed near the Porta Ca- 
pena, by the side of a well ; and in later times 
a temple seems to have been built on the same 
spot. Under the name of the ill-willed (malcv- 
olus), he had a statue in what was called the 
vicus sobrius, or the sober street, in which no 
shops were allowed to be kept, and milk was 
offered to him there instead of wine. This 
statue had a purse in its hand, to indicate his 
functions. His festival was celebrated on the 
twenty-fifth of May, and chiefly by merchants, 
who also visited the well near the Porta Cape- 
na, to which magic powers were ascribed ; and 
with water from that well they used to sprinkle 
themselves and their merchandise, that they 
might be purified, and yield a large profit. The 
Romans of later times identified Mercurius, the 
patron of merchants and tradespeople, with the 
Greek Hermes, and transferred all the attri- 
butes and myths of the latter to the former. The 
Fetialcs r however, never recognized the iden- 



tity, and, instead of the caduceus, used a sacred 
( branch as the emblem of peace. The resem- 
blance between Mercurius and Hermes is in- 
; deed very slight, and their identification is a 
proof of the thoughtless manner in which the 
j Romans acted in this respect. Vid. Hermes. 

Mercurius Trismegistus. Vid. Hermes 
| Trismegistus. 

Meriones (MripLovrx), a Cretan hero, son of 
Molus, who, conjointly with Idomeneus, led the 
! Cretans in eighty ships against Troy. He was 
| one of the bravest heroes in the Trojan war, 
| and usually acted together with his friend Ido- 
meneus. Later traditions relate that on his 
\ way homeward he was thrown on the coast of 
' Sicily, where he was received by the Cretans 
1 who had settled there ; whereas, according to 
! others, he returned safely to Crete, and was 
buried and worshipped as a hero, together with 
Idomeneus, at Cnosus. 
I Mermerus (Mipuepoc). 1. Son of Jason and 
j Medea, also called Macareus or Mormorus, was 
j murdered, together with his brother Pheres, by 
his mother at Corinth.— 2. Son of Pheres, and 
j grandson of Jason and Medea. — [3. A Trojan, 
j slain by Antilochus.— 4. A Centaur, slain at the 
| nuptials of Pirithous.] 

Mermessus or Myrmessus (Mcpfiqvaoc, Mvp- 
\ /.itjgooc), also written Marmessus and Marpes- 
! sus, a town of Mysia, in the territory of Lamp- 
I sacus, not far from Polichna, the native place 
: of a sibyl. 

[Mermnad.e (Mepuvddai), a Lydian family, 
which, on the murder of Candaules by Gyges, 
succeeded the Heraclidas on the throne of Lyd- 
ia, and held it for five generations, about 716- 
i 546 B.C. The sovereigns of this family were 
Gyges, Ardys, Sadyattes, Alyattes, and Crce- 
sus.] 

Merobaudes, Flavius, a general and a poet, 
whose merits are recorded in an inscription on 
1 the base of a statue dug up in the Ulpian forum 
| at Rome in the year 1812 or 1813. We learn 
! from the inscription that the statue was erect- 
, ed in A.D. 435. Some fragments of the poems 
' of Merobaudes were discovered by Niebuhr 
i upon a palimpsest belonging to the monastery 
j of St. Gall, and w^ere published by him at Bonn., 
j 1823, [and again in 1824; they are also print- 
j ed in a volume of the Corpus Script. Byzant, 
! with Corippus, edited by Bekker, Bonn, 1836.] 
j Meroe (Meporj : now ports of Nubia and Sen- 
J nar). the island, so called, and almost an isl- 
j and in reality, formed by the rivers Astapus 
! (now Blue Nile) and Astaboras (now Atbarah), 
and the portion of the Nile between their 
; mouths, was a district of ^Ethiopia. Its capital, 
also called Meroe, stood near the northern point 
of the island, on the eastern bank of the Nile, 
below the modern Shendy, where the plain, near 
the village of Assour, is covered with ruins of 
temples, pyramids, and other works in a style 
closely resembling the Egyptian. Standing in 
a fertile district, rich in timber and minerals, 
at the foot of the highlands of Abyssinia, and at 
the junction of two great rivers, Meroe became, 
, at a very early period, a chief emporium for the 
trade between Egypt, Northern Africa, iEthi- 
; opia, Arabia, and India, and the capital of a 
powerful state. The government was a hie- 
rarchical monarchy, entirely in the hands of a 

503 



MEROM LACUS. 



MESPILA. 



ruling caste of priests, who chose a king from 
among themselves, bound him to govern accord- 
ing to their laws, and put him to death when 
they chose ; until King Ergamenes (about B.C. 
300) threw off the yoke of the priests, whom 
he massacred, and converted his kingdom into 
an absolute monarchy. The priests of Meroe 
were closely connected in origin and customs 
with those of Egypt ; and, according to some 
traditions, the latter sprang from the former, 
and they from India; but the settlement of this 
point involves an important ethnical question, 
which lies beyond the limits of this book. For 
further details respecting the kingdom of Meroe, 
-eid. /Ethiopia. Meroe had a celebrated oracle 
of Ammon. 

Merom Lacus. Vid. Semechonitis- 

Merope (Mep6~7]). 1. One of the Heliades or 
sisters of Phaethon — 2. Daughter of Atlas, one 
of the Pleiades, and wife of Sisyphus of Corinth, 
by whom she became the mother of Glaucus. 
In the constellation of the Pleiades she is the 
seventh and the least visible star, because she 
is ashamed of having had intercourse with a 
mortal man. — 3. Daughter of Cypselus, wife of 
Cresphontes, and mother of iEpytus. For de- 
tails, vid. iEpYTus. 

Merops (Mepoip). 1. King of the island of 
Cos, husband of the nymph Ethemea, and fa- 
ther of Eumelus. His wife was killed by Diana 
(Artemis) because she had neglected to worship 
that goddess. Merops, in order to rejoin his 
■wife, wished to make away with himself, but 
Juno (Hera) changed him into an eagle, whom 
she placed among the stars. — 2. King of the 
-Ethiopians, by whose wife, Clymene, Helios 
became the father of Phaethon. — 3. King of 
Rhyndacus, on the Hellespont, also called Ma- 
car or Macareus, was a celebrated soothsayer, 
and father of Clite, Arisbe, Amphius, and Adras- 
tus. — [4. A Trojan, companion of iEneas, slain 
by Turnus in Italy.] 

Merula, L. Cornelius, was flamen dialis, 
and, on the deposition of L. Cinna in B.C. 87, 
was elected consul in his place. On the cap- 
ture of Rome by Marius and Cinna at the close 
of the same year, Merula put an end to his own 
life in order to escape the hands of the execu- 
tioner. 

Mesambria {MeaafiSpiT] : now Bushehr), a pen- 
insula on the coast of Persis, near the River 
Padargus. 

Meschela (MeaxeXa : probably near Bonah), 
a large city on the coast of Northern Africa, 
said to have been founded by Greeks returning 
from the Trojan war. It was taken by Euma- 
chus, the lieutenant of Agathocles. 

MESEMBRiA(Mec-??,u6p£a, Herod. MecrafxBptT] : Me- 
cnfi6piav6c_). 1. (Now Missivria or Messuri), a 
celebrated town of Thrace on the Pontus Eux- 
inus, and at the foot of Mount Haemus, founded 
by the inhabitants of Chalcedon and Byzanti- 
um in the time of Darius Hystaspis, and hence 
called a colony of Megara, since those two 
towns were founded by the Megarians. — 2. A 
town in Thrace, but of much less importance, 
on the coast of the ^Egean Sea, and in the ter- 
ritory of the Cicones. near the mouth of the 
Lissus, and the most westerly of the Samothra- 
cian settlements on the main land. 

Mesene (Mecr77V77, i. e., Midland), a name given 
504 



to that part of Babylonia which consisted of the 
great island formed by the Euphrates, the Ti- 
gris, and the Royal Canal, and contained, there- 
fore, the greater part of Babylonia. 

Mesoa or Messoa. Vid. Sparta. 

Mesogis. Vid. Messogis. 

Mesomedes {M.eco[ir)dris), a lyric and epigram- 
matic poet under Hadrian and the Antonines, 
was a native of Crete, and a freedman of Ha- 
drian, whose favorite Antinous he celebrated in 
a poem. A salary, which he had received from 
Hadrian, was diminished by Antoninus Pius. 
Three poems of his are preserved in the Greek 
Anthology. 

Mesopotamia (MeGo~orafj.La, Meat} ruu Trora- 
fiuv : in the Old Testament, Aram Naharaim. 
i. e., Syria between the Rivers : LXX., M.sao~oTCt- 
/Lt'ia Xvpiag : now Al-Jesira, i. e., The Island), a 
district of Western Asia, named from its posi- 
tion between the Euphrates and the Tigris, of 
which rivers the former divided it from Syria 
and Arabia on the west, the latter from Assyria 
on the east : on the north it was separated from 
Armenia by a branch of the Taurus, called Ma- 
sius, and on the south from Babylonia by the 
Median Wall. The name was first used by the 
Greeks in the time of the Seleucidae. In earlier 
times the country was reckoned a part, some- 
times of Syria, and sometimes of Assyria. Nor 
in the division of the Persian empire was it 
recognized as a distinct country, but it belonged 
to the satrapy of Babylonia. Excepting the 
mountainous region on the north and north- 
east, formed by the chain of Masius, and its 
prolongation parallel to the Tigris, the country 
formed a vast plain, broken by few hills, well 
watered by rivers and canals, and very fertile, 
except in the southern part, which was more 
like the Arabian Desert on the opposite side of 
the Euphrates. Besides corn, and fruits, and 
spices (e. g., the araomum), it produced fine tim- 
ber and supported large herds of cattle ; in the 
southern, or desert part, there were numerous 
wild animals, such as wild asses, gazelles, os- 
triches, and lions. Its chief mineral products 
were naphtha and jet. The northern part of 
Mesopotamia was divided into the districts of 
Mygdonia and Osroene. It belonged success- 
ively to the Assyrian, Babylonian, Persian, 
Macedonian, Syro-Grecian, Parthian, and later 
Persian empires. In a wider sense, the name 
is sometimes applied to the whole country be- 
tween the Euphrates and the Tigris. 

Mespila (tj Msa~L?,a : ruins at Kouyounpk, 
opposite to Mosul, Layard : others give differ- 
ent sites for it), a city of Assyria, on the east- 
ern side of the Tigris, which Xenophon (Anab.. 
iii., 4) mentions as having been formerly a great 
city, inhabited by Medes, but in his time fallen 
to decay. It had a wall six parasangs in cir- 
cuit, composed of two parts, namely, a base fif- 
ty feet thick and fifty high, of polished stone, 
full of shells (the limestone of the country), 
upon which was built a brick wall fifty feet 
thick and one hundred high. It had served, ac- 
cording to tradition, as the refuge for the Me- 
dian queen when the Persians overthrew the 
empire of the Medes, and it resisted all the ef- 
forts of the Persian king to take it, until a thun- 
der storm frightened the inhabitants into a sur- 
render. 



MESSA. 



MESSALA. 



Messa (Miooa, M£ogt} : now Mezapo), a town 
and harbor in Laconia, near Taenarum Promon- 
torium. 

Messabatene or -ice (Meo<ja6aT7}VTj, Meaca- 
tariKT]: Meaaafjurat), a small district on the 
southeastern margin of the Tigris and Eu- 
phrates valley, on the borders of Media, Persis, 
and Susiana, reckoned sometimes to Persis and 
sometimes to Susiana. The name seems to be 
derived from the mountain passes in the dis- 
trict. 

Messala or Messalla, the name of a distin- 
guished famiiy of the Valeria gens at Rome. 
They appear for the first time on the consular 
Fasti in B.C. 263, and for the last in A.D. 506. 
1. M'. Valerius Maximus Corvinus Messala, 
was consul B.C. 263, and, in conjunction with 
his colleague M. Otacilius, carried on the war 
with success against the Carthaginians in Sic- 
ily. The two consuls concluded a peace with 
Hieron. In consequence of his relieving Mes- 
sana, he obtained the cognomen of Messala. ! 
His triumph was distinguished by two remark- j 
able monuments of his victory — by a pictorial 
representation of a battle with the Sicilian and j 
Punic armies, which he placed in the Curia j 
Hostilia, and by a sun-dial (horologium), from j 
the booty of Catana, which was set up on a col- I 
umn behind the rostra in the forum. Messala 
was censor in 252. — 2. M. Valerius Messala, 
consul 226. — 3. M. Valerius Messala, praetor 
peregrinus 194, and consul 188, when he had 
the province of Liguria. — 4. M. Valerius Mes- 
sala, consul 161, and censor 154.— 5. M. Vale- 
rius Messala Niger, praetor 6*, consul 61, 
and censor 55. He belonged to the aristocrati- \ 
cal party. He married a sister of the orator Q. j 
Hortensius, by whom he had at least one son. \ 
— 6. M. Valerius Messala, son of the preced- 
ing ; consul 53 ; belonged, like his father, to 
the aristocratical party ; but in consequence, 
probably, of his enmity to Pompey, he joined 
Caesar in the civil war, and served under him 
in Africa. He was in high repute for his skill 
in augury, on which science he wrote. — 7. M. 
Valerius Messala Corvinus, son of the pre- 
ceding, was partly educated at Athens, where 
probably began his intimacy with Horace and 
L. Bibulus. After Caesar's death (44) he joined 
the republican party, and attached himself espe- 
cially to Cassius, whom, long after, when he 
had become the friend of Augustus, he was ac- 
customed to call " my general." Messala was 
proscribed ; but since his kinsmen proved his 
absence from Rome at the time of Caesar's as- 
sassination, the triumvirs erased his name from 
the list, and offered him security for his person 
and property. Messala, however, rejected their | 
offers, followed Cassius into Asia, and at Phi- 
lippi, in the first day's battle, turned Augustus's 
flank, stormed his camp, and narrowly missed 
taking him prisoner. After the death of Brutus 
and Cassius. Messala, with a numerous body 
of fugitives, took refuge in the island of Tha- 
sos. His followers, though defeated, were not 
disorganized, and offered him the command. 
But he induced them to accept honorable terms 
from Antony, to whom he attached himself un- 
til Cleopatra's influence made his ruin certain 
and easy to be foreseen. Messala then again 
changed his party, and served Augustus effect- 



ively in Sicily, 36 ; against the Salassians, a 
mountain tribe lying between the Graian and 
the Pennine Alps, 34; and at Actium, 31. A 
decree of the senate had abrogated Antony's 
consulship for 31, and Messala was appointed 
to the vacant place. He was proconsul of Aqui- 
tania in 28-27, and obtained a triumph for his 
reduction of that province. Shortly before or 
immediately after his administration of Aquita- 
nia, Messala held a prefecture in Asia Minor. 
He was deputed by the senate, probably in 30, 
to greet Augustus with the title of " Pater 
Patriae ;" and the opening of his address on that 
occasion is preserved by Suetonius. During 
the disturbances at the comitia in 27, Augustus 
nominated Messala to the revived office of war- 
den of the city ; but he resigned it in a few 
days. Messala soon afterward withdrew from 
all public employments except his augurship, 
to which Augustus had specially appointed him, 
although, at the time of his admission, there 
was no vacancy in the augural college. About 
two years before his death, which happened 
about the middle of Augustus's reign, B.C. 3 to 
A.D. 3, Messala's memory failed him, and he 
often could not recall his own name. His tomb 
was of remarkable splendor. Messala was as 
much distinguished in the literary as in the po- 
litical world of Rome. He was a patron of 
learning and the arts, and was himself an his- 
torian, a poet, a grammarian, and an orator. 
He wrote commentaries on the civil wars after 
Caesar's death, and a genealogical w r ork, Dc 
Romanis Familiis. The treatise, however, Dc 
Progenie Augusti, which sometimes accompa- 
nies Eutropius and the minor Roman historians, 
is the forgery of a much later age. Messala's 
poems were of a satirical or even licentious 
character. His writings as a grammarian were 
numerous and minute, comprising treatises on 
collocation and lexicography, and on the pow- 
ers and uses of single letters. His eloquence 
reflected the character of his age. More smooth 
and correct than vigorous or original, he per- 
suaded rather than convinced, and conciliated 
rather than persuaded. His health was feeble, 
and the procemia of his speeches generally plead- 
ed indisposition and solicited indulgence. He 
mostly took the defendant's side, and was fre- 
quently associated in causes with C. Asinius 
Pollio. He recommended and practiced trans- 
lation from the Greek orators ; and his version 
of the Phryne of Hyperides was thought to ex- 
hibit remarkable skill in either language. His 
political eminence, the wealth he inherited or 
acquired in the civil wars, and the favor of An- 
tony and Augustus, rendered Messala one of 
the principal persons of his age, and an effective 
patron of its literature. His friendship for Hor- 
ace and his intimacy with Tibullus are well 
known. In the elegies of the latter poet, the 
name of Messala is continually introduced. 
The dedication of the Ciris, a doubtful w r ork, is 
not sufficient proof of his friendship with Vir- 
gil ; but the companion of l! Plotius and Varius, 
of Maecenas and Octavius" (Hor., Sat., i., 10, 
81), can not well have been unknown to the 
author of the Eclogues and Georgics. He di- 
rected Ovid's early studies (ex Pont., iv., 16), 
and Tiberius sought his acquaintance in early 
manhood, and took him for his model in elo- 

505 



MESSALINA. 



MESS AN A. 



quence. — 8. M. Valerius Messala Barbatus 
Appianus, was consul B.C. 12, and died in his 
year of office. He was the father (or grand- 
father) of the Empress Messalina. — 9. L. Vale- 
rius Messala Volesus, consul A.D. 5, and aft- 
erward proconsul of Asia, where his cruelties 
drew on him the anger of Augustus and a con- 
demnatory decree from the senate. — 10. L. Vip- 
?taxjs Messala, legionary tribune in Vespa- 
sian's army, A.D. 70, was brother of Aquilius 
Regulus, the notorious delator in Domitian's 
reign. He is one of Tacitus's authorities for 
the history of the civil war after Galba's death, 
and a principal interlocutor in the dialogue Dc 
Oratoribus ascribed to Tacitus. 

Messalina. 1. Statilia, grand-daughter of T. 
Statilius Taurus, consul A.D. 11, was the third 
wife of the Emperor Nero, who married her in 
A.D. 66. She had previously espoused Atticus 
Vestinus, whom Nero put to death without ac- 
cusation or trial, merely that he might marry 
Messalina. — 2. Valeria, daughter of M. Vale- 
rius Messala Barbatus and of Domitia Lepida, 
was the third wife of the Emperor Claudius. 
She married Claudius, to whom she was previ- 
ously related, before his accession to the em- 
pire. Her profligacy and licentiousness were 
notorious ; and the absence of virtue was not 
concealed by a lingering sense of shame or even 
by a specious veil of decorum. She was as 
cruel as she was profligate ; and many mem- 
bers of the most illustrious families of Rome 
were sacrificed to her fears or her hatred. She 
long exercised an unbounded empire over her 
weak husband, who alone was ignorant of her 
infidelities. For some time she was supported 
in her career of crime by the freedmen of Clau- 
dius ; but when Narcissus, the most powerful 
of the emperor's freedmen, perceived that he 
should probably fall a victim to Messalina's in- 
trigues, he determined to get rid of her. The 
insane folly of Messalina furnished the means 
of her own destruction. Having conceived a 
violent passion for a handsome Roman youth, 
C. Silius, she publicly married him, with all the 
rites of a legal connubium, during the absence 
of Claudius at Ostia, A.D. 48. Narcissus per- 
suaded the emperor that Silius and Messalina 
would not have dared such an outrage had they 
not determined also to deprive him of empire 
and life. Claudius wavered long, and at length 
Narcissus himself issued Messalina's death- 
warrant. She was put to death by a tribune of 
the guards in the gardens of Lucullus. 

[Messalinus,M. Valerius Catullus, govern- 
or of the Libyan Pentapolis in the reigns of 
Vespasian and Titus, where he treated the Jew- 
ish provincials with extreme cruelty : he was 
afterward a delator under Domitian.] 

Me s sana {Isieacdva Dor., Meaar/vn : Meacrdvcog : 
now Messina), a celebrated town on the north- 
eastern coast of Sicily, on the straps separat- 
ing Italy from this island, which are here about 
four miles bi oad. The Romans called the town 
Messana, according to its Doric pronunciation, 
but Messenc was its more usual name among 
the Greeks. It was originally a town of the 
Siceli, and was called Zancle (Zd>%^), or a 
sickle, on account of the shape of Its harbor, 
which is formed by a singular curve of sand 
and shells. The first Greek colenists were, 
506 



according to Thucydides, pirates from the Chal- 
cidian town of Cumee in Italy, who were joined 
by Chalcidians from Eubcea, and, according to 
Strabo, by Naxians ; but these two accounts 
are not contradictory, for since Naxos in Sicily 
was also a colony from Chalcis, we may easily 
suppose that the Naxians joined the other Chal- 
cidians in the foundation of the town. Zancle 
soon became so powerful that it founded the 
town of Himera, about B.C. 648. After the 
capture of Miletus by the Persians, the inhabit- 
ants of Zancle invited the Ionians, who had 
been expelled from their native country, to set- 
tle on their "beautiful coast" (nalri uhttj, He- 
rod., vi., 22), and a number of Samians and 
other Ionic Greeks accepted their offer. On 
landing in the south of Italy, they were per- 
suaded by Anaxilas, tyrant of Rhegium, to take 
possession of Zancle during the absence of 
Scythes, the tyrant of the city, who was en- 
gaged in the siege of some other Sicilian town. 
But their treachery was soon punished ; for 
Anaxilas himself shortly afterward drove the 
Samians out of Zancle, and made himself mas- 
ter of the town, the name of which he changed 
into Messana or Messenc, both because he was 
himself a Messenian, and because he transfer- 
red to the place a body of Messenians from 
Rhegium. Anaxilas died 476 ; and, about ten 
3 r ears afterward (466), his sons were driven out 
of Messana and Rhegium, and republican gov- 
ernments established in these cities. Messana 
now enjoyed great prosperity for several years, 
and, in consequence of its excellent harbor and 
advantageoul position, it became a place of 
great commercial importance. But in 396 it 
was taken by the Carthaginians, who destroyed 
the town because they saw that they should 
be unable to maintain so distant a possession 
against the power of Dionysius of Syracuse. 
Dionysius began to rebuild it in the same year, 
and, besides collecting the remains of the for- 
mer population, he added a number of Locrians, 
Messenians, and others, so that its inhabitants 
were of a very mixed kind. After the banish- 
ment of the younger Dionysius, Messana was 
for a short time free, but it fell into the power 
of Agathocles about 312. Among the merce- 
naries of this tyrant were a number of Mamer- 
tini, an Oscan people from Campania, who had 
been sent from home under the protection of 
the god Mamers or Mars to seek their fortune 
in other lands. These Mamertini were quar- 
tered in Messana ; and, after the death of 
Agathocles (282), they made themselves mas- 
ters of the town, killed the male inhabitants, 
and took possession of their wives, their chil- 
dren, and their property. The town was now 
called Mamertina, and the inhabitants Mamer- 
tini ; but its ancient name of Messana continu- 
ed to be in more general use. The new in- 
habitants could not lay aside their old predatory 
habits, and, in consequence, became involved 
in a war with Hieron of Syracuse, who defeat- 
ed them in several battles, and would probably 
have conquered the town had not the Cartha- 
ginians come in to the aid of the Mamertini, 
and, under the pretext of assisting them, taken 
possession of their citadel. The Mamertini 
had, at the same time, applied to the Romans 
for help, who gladly availed themselves of the 



MESSAPIA. 



MESSENIA. 



opportunity to obtain a footing in Sicily. Thus 
Messana was the immediate cause of the first 
Punic war, 264. The Mamertini expelled the 
Carthaginian garrison, and received the Ro- 
mans, in whose power Messana remained till 
the latest times. There are scarcely any re- 
mains of the ancient city at Messina. 

MessapU (MefTffaTrm). 1. The Greek name 
of Calabria —2. (Now Messagna), a town in 
Calabria, between Uria and Brundisium. 

MessapIum (to MeoouTuov opoc), a mountain 
in Bceotia, on the eastern coast, near the town 
Anthedon, from which Messapus is said to have 
sailed to the south of Italy. 

Messapus (Meccarrog), a Boeotian, from whom 
Messapia, in the south of Italy, was believed to 
have derived its name. 

[Messe (Me<T<r?/, now Massa), a town and har- 
bor of Laconia, nearTajnarum Promontorium.] 

[Messeis (MLeaaTiU). 1. A celebrated fountain 
in Pherae in Thessaly.— 2. A fountain near The- 
rapne in Laconia.] 

Messene (MeccTivTi), daughter of Triopas, and 
wife of Polycaon, whom she induced to take 
possession of the country which was called after 
her, Messenia. She is also said to have intro- 
duced there the worship of Jupiter (Zeus) and 
the mysteries of the great goddess of Eleusis. 

Messene (Mecafivq : Ne<j<rf}vt,os). 1. (Now 
Mavromati), the later capital of Messenia, was 
founded by Epaminondas B.C. 369, and com- 
pleted and fortified within the space of eighty- 
five days. It was situated at the foot of the 
steep hill of Ithomc, which was so celebrated 
as a fortress in the history of the Messenian 
wars, and which now formed the acropolis of 
the new city. Messene was one of the most 
strongly fortified cities of Greece. It was sur- 
rounded by massive walls built entirely of stone, 
and flanked with numerous towers. There are 
still considerable remains of some of these 
towers, as well as the foundations of the walls, 
and of several public buildings. Tbey are de- 
scribed by a modern traveller as "built of the 
most regular kind of masonry, and formed of 
large stones fitted together with great accura- 
cy.'" The northern gate of the city is also ex- 
tant, and opens into a circular court, sixty-two 
feet in diameter. The city was supplied with 
water from a fountain called Clepsydra, which 
is still a fine spring, from which the modern 
village of Mavromati derives its name, meaning 
Black Spring, or. literally. Black Eye. — 2. Vid. 
Messana. 

Messeni\ (Mr<TG7/Wa : Meca^viof), a country 
in Peloponnesus, bounded on the east by Laco- 
nia, on the north by Elis and Arcadia, and on 
the south and west by the sea. It was sepa- 
rated from Laconia by Mount Taygetus ; but 
part of the western slope of Taygetus belonged 
to Laconia ; and it is difficult to determine the 
exact boundaries between the two countries, as 
they were different at different periods. In the 
most ancient times the River Nedon formed the 
boundary between Messenia and Laconia to- 
ward the sea ; but Pausanias places the frontier 
line further east, at a woody hollow called Chceri- 
ns, twenty stadia south of Abia. The River Ne- 
da formed the northern boundary between Mes- 
senia and Elis. The area of Messenia is about 
one thousand one hundred and sixty-two square 



miles. It was for the most part a mountainous 
country, and contained only two plains of any 
extent, in the north the plain of Stenyclerus, and 
in the south a still larger plain, through which 
the Pamisus flowed, and which was called Ma- 
caria or the Blessed, on account of its great 
fertility. There were, however, many smaller 
valleys among the mountains ; and the country 
was much less rugged and far more productive 
than the neighboring Laconia. Hence Messe- 
nia is described by Pausanias as the most fer- 
tile country in Peloponnesus ; and it is praised, 
by Euripides on account of its climate, which 
was neither too cold in winter nor too hot in 
summer. The most ancient inhabitants of Mes- 
senia were Leleges, intermingled with Argives. 
According to tradition, Polycaon, the younger 
son of Lelex, married the Argive Messene, a 
daughter of Triopas, and. named the country 
Messene in honor of his wife. This is the name 
by which it is called in Homer, who does not 
use the form Messenia. Five generations aft- 
erward iEolians settled in the country, under 
the guidance of Perieres, a son of iEolus. His 
son Aphareus gave a home to Neleus, who had 
been driven out of Thessaly, and who founded 
the town of Pylos, which became the capital of 
an independent sovereignty. For a long time 
there was properly no Messenian kingdom. The 
western part of the land belonged to the domin- 
ions of the Neleid princes of Pylos, of w T hom 
Nestor was the most celebrated, and the east- 
ern to the Lacedaemonian monarchy. Thus it 
appears to have remained till the conquest of 
Peloponnesus by the Dorians, when Messenia 
fell to the share of Cresphontes, who destroyed 
the kingdom of Pylos, and united the whole 
country under his sway. The ruling class were 
now Dorians, and they continued to speak the 
purest Doric down to the latest times. The 
I Spartans soon coveted the more fertile territory 
; of their brother Dorians ; and after many dis- 
| putes between the two nations, and various in- 
! roads into each other's territories, open war at 
: length broke out. This war, called the first 
j Messenian war, lasted twenty years, B.C. 743- 
! 723 ; and notwithstanding the gallant resist- 
! ance of the Messenian king, Aristodemus, the 
i Messenians were obliged to submit to the Spar- 
i tans after the capture of their fortress Ithome. 
! and to become their subjects. Vid. Akistode- 
I mus. After bearing the yoke thirty-eight years, 
i the Messenians again took up arms under their 
| heroic leader Aristomenes. Vid. Aristomenes. 
i The second Messenian war lasted seventeen 
j years, B.C. 685-668, and terminated with the 
I conquest of Ira and the complete subjugation 
of the country. Most of the Messenians emi 
grated to foreign countries, and those who re 
tnained behind were reduced to the condition 
of Helots or serfs. In this state they remained 
till 464, when the Messenians and other Helots 
I took advantage of the devastation occasioned 
by the great earthquake at Sparta, to rise against 
their oppressors. This third Messenian war 
lasted ten years, 464-455, and ended by the 
Messenians surrendering Ithome to the Spar- 
tans on condition of their being allowed a free 
departure from Peloponnesus. They settled at 
Naupactus on the Corinthian Gulf opposite Pe- 
loponnesus, which town the Athenians had late- 

507 



MESSENIACUS SINUS. 



METAURUS. 



ly taken from the Locri Ozolae, and gladly 
granted to such deadly enemies of Sparta. At 
the conclusion of the Peloponnesian war (404), 
the unfortunate Messenians were obliged to 
leave Naupactus and take refuge in Italy, Sicily, 
and other countries ; but when the supremacy 
of Sparta was overthrown by the battle of Leuc- 
tra, Epaminondas resolved to restore the inde- 
pendence of Messenia. He accordingly gath- 
ered together the Messenian exiles from the 
various lands in which they were scattered ; 
and in the summer of 369 he founded the town 
of Messene at the foot of Mount Ithome. Vid. 
Messene. Messenia was never again subdued 
by the Spartans, and it maintained its independ- 
ence till the conquest of the Achaeans and the 
rest of Greece by the Romans, 146. 

[Messeniacus Sinus ( MecroyviaKbc k6?>ttoc, 
now Gulf of Coron), a large gulf or bay, wash- 
ing the southern shore of Messenia, and extend- 
ing from the promontory Acritas on the west 
to the promontory Thyrides on the east, or, ac- 
cording to others, to Cape Taenarus ; the north- 
ern part was also called Coronaeus from the city 
Corone, and its southern Asinaeus from the city 
Asine, though Strabo makes this another appel- 
lation for the whole gulf] 

[Messius, C, was tribune of the plebs in B.C. 
56, when he brought in a bill for Cicero's recall 
from exile. In the same year the Messian law, 
by the same tribune, assigned extraordinary 
powers to Cn. Pompey. Cicero defended Mes- 
sius when he was recalled from a legatio, and 
attacked by the Caesarian party. Messius aft- 
erward appears as an adherent of Caesar's, 
whose troops he introduced into Acilla, a town 
in Africa.] 

[Messius Cicirrhus, an ugly and disfigured 
Oscan, whose wordy war with the runaway 
slave Sarmentus is humorously described by 
Horace in his Brundisian journey (Sat., i., 5, 
49-69).] 

[Messius Vectius, a Volscian, who, in B.C. 
431, distinguished himself in battle against the 
Romans.] 

[Mesthles (Meadhvc), son of Pylaemenes and 
the nymph Gygaea, leader of the Maeonians, 
came with his brother Antiphus to the aid of 
the Trojans.] 

Mestleta (Meor?,7/Ta), a city of Iberia, in 
Asia, probably on the River Cyrus. 

[Mestor {MrjOTup). 1. Son of Perseus and 
Andromeda, and father of Hippothoe. — 2. One 
of the sons of Priam.] 

Mestra (hlricrpa), daughter of Erysichthon, 
and grand-daughter of Triopas, whence she is 
called Triopels by Ovid. She was sold by her 
hungry father, that he might obtain the means 
of satisfying his hunger. In order to escape 
from slavery, she prayed to Neptune (Poseidon), 
who loved her, and who conferred upon her the 
power of metamorphosing herself whenever 
she was sold. 

Mesyla, a town of Pontus, in Asia Minor, on 
the road from Tavium to Comana. 
[Metabum. Vid. Metapontum.] 
[Metabus {Mira6og). l. Son of Sisyphus, 
from whom the town of Metapontum in Italy 
was believed to have derived its name. — 2. Vid. 
Camilla.] 

IMetagenes (Msrayhrjc). 1. An Athenian 
508 



comic poet of the old comedy, contemporary 
with Aristophanes : the few fragments remain- 
ing of his plays are given by Meineke, Fragm. 

Comic. Grcec. , vol. i., p. 424-427, edit, minor. 

2. An architect, son of Chersiphron. Vid. Cher- 
siphron. — 3. An Athenian architect in the time 
of Pericles, was engaged with Coroebus and 
Ictinus and Xenocles in the erection of the 
great temple at Eleusis.] 

Metagonitis (Merayuvlric : MerayuviTai, Me- 
tagonitae), a name applied to the northern coast 
of Mauretania Tingitana (now Morocco), be- 
tween the Fretum Gaditanum and the River 
Mulucha ; derived probably from the Cartha- 
ginian colonies (fierayuvia) settled along it. 
There was at some point of this coast a prom- 
ontory called Metagonium or Metagonites, prob- 
ably the same as Russadir (now Rasud-Dir, or 
Capo Tres Foveas.) 
Metagonium. Vid. Metagonitis. 
Metallinum or MetellInum (Metallinensis : 
now Medellin), a Roman colony in Lusitania on 
the Anas, not far from Augusta Emerita. 
Metanira (Merdveipa), wife of Celeus, and 
| mother of Triptolemus, received Ceres (Deme- 
! ter) on her arrival in Attica. Pausanias calls 
! her Meganaera. For details, vid. Celeus. 

Metaphrastes, Symeon (Lv/lieuv 6 MeTCKppdo- 
| tt)c), a celebrated Byzantine writer, lived in the 
: ninth and tenth centuries, and held many high 
offices at the Byzantine court. His surname 
Metaphrastes was given to him on account of 
• his having composed a celebrated paraphrase 
I of the lives of the saints. Besides his other 
j works, he wrote a Byzantine history, entitled 
Annates, beginning with the Emperor Leo Ar- 
I menus, A.D. 813, and finishing with Romanus, 
! the son of Constantine Porphyrogenitus, 963. 
| Edited by Bekker, Bonn, 1838. 
i MetapontIum, called Metapontum by the Ro- 
j mans (MerairovTiov : Me-aTrovrtoc, Metapontl- 
nus : now Torre di Mare), a celebrated Greek 
city in the south of Italy, on the Tarentine Gulf, 



j and on the eastern coast of Lucania, is said to 
j have been originally called Metabum (Merafov). 
i There were various traditions respecting its 
i foundation, all of which point to its high anti- 
I quity, but from which we can not gather any 
| certain information on the subject. It is said 
1 to have been afterward destroyed by the Sam- 
' nites, and to have been repeopled by a colony 
• of Achaeans, who had been invited for that pur- 
) pose by the inhabitants of Sybaris. Hence it is 
I called by Livy an Achaean town, and is regard- 
! ed by some writers as a colony from Sybaris. 
\ It fell into the hands of the Romans with the 
i other Greek cities in the south of Italy in the 
i war against Pyrrhus, but it revolted to Han- 
nibal after the battle of Cannae. From the time 
| of the second Punic war it disappears from his- 
tory, and was in ruins in the time of Pausanias. 

[Metaris yEsTUARiUM (Meraplg ricxvcic, now 
The Wash), an estuary on the eastern coast of 
1 Britannia Romana, between the mouths of the 
; Tamesa and the Abus.] 
I Metaurum. Vid. Metaurus, No. 2. 
j Metaurus. 1. (Now Metaro), a small river 
in fimbria, flowing into the Adriatic Sea, but 
i rendered memorable by the defeat and death of 
Hasdrubal, the brother of Hannihal, on its banks, 
j B.C. 207.— 2. (Now Marro), a river on the east- 



METE LIS. 



METELLUS. 



em coast of Bruttium. at whose mouth was the J 
town ot Metaurum. 

[Mete lis (Mer^ic, now probably Fouah), a 
place in Lower E^ypt, between the Bolbitene 
and Sebennytic mouths of the Nile, capital of 
the Metelites Nomos (Mer^'r^f No^of).] 

METELLA. Vid. C-ECILIA. 

Metellus, a distinguished plebeian family 
of the Cascilia gens at Rome. 1. L. Cecilius 
Metellus, consul B.C. 251, carried on the war 
in Sicily against the Carthaginians. In the fol- 
lowing year he gained a great victory over Has- 
drubaf, the Carthaginian general. The ele- 
phants which he took in this battle were exhib- 
ited in his triumph at Rome. Metellus was 
consul a second time in 249, and was elected 
pontifex maximus in 243, and held this dignity 
for twenty-two years. He must, therefore, 
have died shortly before the commencement of 
the second Punic war. In 241 he rescued the 
Palladium when the temple of Vesta was on 
fire, but lost his sight in consequence. He was 
dictator in 224, for the purpose of holding the 
comitia. — 2. Q. C-ecilius Metellus, son of the 
preceding, was plebeian aedile 209, curule sedile 
208, served in the army of the consul Claudius 
Nero 207, and was one of the legates sent to 
Rome to convey the joyful news of the defeat 
and death of Hasdrubal ; and was consul with 
L. Veturius Philo, 206. In his consulship he 
and his colleague carried on the war against 
Hannibal in Bruttium, where he remained as 
proconsul during the following year. In 205 he 
was dictator for the purpose of holding the co- 
mitia. Metellus survived the second Punic 
war many years, and was employed in several 
public commissions. — 3. Q. Cecilius Metellus 
Macedonicus, son of the last, was praetor 148, 
and carried on war in Macedonia against the 
usurper Andriscus, whom he defeated and took 
prisoner. He next turned his arms against the 
Achaeans, whom he defeated at the beginning 
of 146. On his return to Rome in 146, he tri- 
umphed, and received the surname of Mace- 
donicus. Metellus was consul in 143, and re- 
ceived the province of Nearer Spain, where he 
carried on the war with success for two years 
against the Celtiberi. He was succeeded by 
Q. Pompeius in 141. Metellus was censor 131. 
He died 115, full of years and honors. He is 
frequently quoted by the ancient writers as an 
extraordinary instance of human felicity. He 
had filled all the highest offices of the state 
with reputation and glory, and was carried to 
the funeral pile by four sons, three of whom 
had obtained the consulship in his lifetime, while 
the fourth was a candidate for the office at the 
time of his death.— 4. L. Cecilius Metellus 
Calvus, brother of the last, consul 142. — 5. Q. 
C^ecihus Metellus Balearicus, eldest son of 
No. 3, was consul 123, when he subdued the in- 
habitants of the Balearic islands, and received, 
in consequence, the surname of Balearicus. He 
was censor 120. — 6. L. Cecilius Metellus 
Diadematus, second son of No. 3, has been fre- 
quently confounded with Metellus Dalmaticus, 
consul 119 (No. 9). Metellus Diadematus re- 
ceived the latter surname from his wearing for 
a long time a bandage round his forehead, in 
consequence of an ulcer. He was consul 117. 
—7. M. Cecilius Metellus, third son of No. 



3. was consul 115, the year in which his father 
died. In 114 he was sent into Sardinia as pro- 
consul, and suppressed an insurrection in the 
island, in consequence of which he obtained a 
triumph in 113 on the same day as his brother 
Caprarius.— 8. C. Cecilius Metellus Capra- 
rius, fourth son of No. 3. The origin of his 
surname is quite uncertain. He was consul 
113, and carried on war in Macedonia against 
the Thracians, whom he subdued. He obtain- 
ed a triumph, in consequence, in the same year 
and on the same day with his brother Marcus. 
He was censor 102 with his cousin Metellus 
Numidicus.— 9. L. Cecilius Metellus Dal- 
maticus, elder son of No. 4, and frequently con- 
founded, as has been already remarked, with 
Diadematus (No. 6), was consul 119, when he 
subdued the Dalmatians, and obtained, in con- 
sequence, the surname Dalmaticus. He was 
censor with Cn. Domitius Ahenobarbus in 115, 
and he was also pontifex maximus. He was 
alive in 100, when he is mentioned as one of 
the senators of high rank who took up arms 
against Saturninus. — 10 Q. C^ecilius Metellus 
Numidicus, younger son of No. 4, was one of 
the most distinguished members of his family. 
The character of Metellus stood very high 
among his contemporaries ; in an age of grow- 
ing corruption his personal integrity remained 
unsullied ; and he was distinguished for his 
abilities in war and peace. He was one of the 
chief leaders of the aristocratical party at Rome 
He was consul 109, and carried on the war 
against Jugurtha in Numidia with great suc- 
cess. Vid. Jugurtha. He remained in Numid- 
ia during the following year as proconsul ; but, 
as he was unable to bring the war to a conclu- 
sion, his legate C. Marius industriously circu- 
lated reports in the camp and the city that Me- 
tellus designedly protracted the war for the pur- 
pose of continuing in the command. These 
rumors had the desired effect. Marius was 
raised to the consulship, Numidia was assigned 
to him as his province, and Metellus saw the 
honor of finishing the war snatched from his 
grasp. Vid. Marius. On his return to Rome 
in 107 he was received with the greatest honor. 
He celebrated a splendid triumph, and received 
the surname of Numidicus. In 102 he was 
censor with his cousin Metellus Caprarius. In 
100 the tribune Saturninus and Marius resolved 
to ruin Metellus. Saturninus proposed an agra- 
rian law, to which he added the clause that the 
senate should swear obedience to it within five 
days after its enactment, and that whosoever 
should refuse to do so should be expelled the 
senate, and pay a heavy fine. Metellus refused 
to take the oath, and was therefore expelled 
the senate ; but Saturninus, not content with 
this, brought forward a bill to punish him with 
exile. The friends of Metellus were ready to 
take up arms in his defence ; but Metellus quit- 
ted the city, and retired to Rhodes, where he 
bore his misfortune with great calmness. He 
was, however, recalled to Rome in the follow- 
ing year (99) on the proposition of the tribune 
Q. Calidius. The orations of Metellus are spoken 
of with praise by Cicero, and they continued to 
be read with admiration in the time of Fronto. 
— 11. Q. C^ecilius Metellus Nepos, son of 
Balearicus (No. 5), and grandson of Macedoni- 

509 



METELLUS. 



METELLUS. 



cus (No. 3), appears to have received the sur- 
name of Nepos because he was the eldest 
grandson of the latter. Metellus Nepos exert- 
ed himself in obtaining the recall of his kins- 
man Metellus Numidicus from banishment in 
99, and was consul in 98 with T. Didius. In 
this year the two consuls carried the lex Cae- 
cilia Didia. — 12. Q. C^ecilius Metellus Pius, 
son of Numidicus (No. 10), received the sur- 
name of Pius on account of the love which he 
displayed for his father when he besought the 
people to recall him from banishment in 99. 
He was praetor 89, and was one of the com- 
manders in the Marsic or Social war. He was 
still in arms in 87, prosecuting the war against 
the Samnites, when Marius landed in Italy and 
joined the consul Cinna. The senate, in alarm, 
summoned Metellus to Rome ; but, as he was un- 
able to defend the city against Marius and Cinna, 
he crossed over to Africa. After remaining in 
Africa three years, he returned to Italy and 
joined Sulla, who also returned to Italy in 83. 
In the war which followed against the Marian 
party, Metellus was one of the most success- 
ful of Sulla's generals, and gained several im- 
portant victories both in Umbria and in Cis- 
alpine Gaul. In 80, Metellus was consul with 
Sulla himself ; and in the following year (79) 
he went as proconsul into Spain, in order to 
prosecute the war against Sertorius, who ad- 
hered to the Marian party. Here he remained 
for the next eight years, and found it so diffi- 
cult to obtain any advantages over Sertorius, 
that the senate sent Pompey to his assistance 
with proconsular power and another army. Ser- 
torius, however, was a match for them both, 
and would probably have continued to defy all 
the efforts of Metellus and Pompey, if he had 
not been murdered by Perperna and his friends 
in 72. Vid. Sertorius. Metellus was pontifex 
maximus, and, as he was succeeded in this dig- 
nity by Julius Caesar in 63, he must have died 
either in this year or at the end of the preced- 
ing. — 13. Q. CLecilius Metellus Celer, elder 
son of Nepos (No. 11). In 66 he served as leg- 
ate in the army of Pompey in Asia, and was 
praetor in 63, the year in which Cicero was con- 
sul. During his year of office he afforded warm 
and efficient support to the aristocratical party. 
He prevented the condemnation of C. Rabirius 
by removing the military flag from the Janicu- 
lum. He co-operated with Cicero in opposing 
the schemes of Catiline ; and, when the latter 
left the city to make war upon the republic, Me- 
tellus had the charge of the Picentine and Se- 
nonian districts. By blocking up the passes he 
prevented Catiline from crossing the Apennines 
and penetrating into Gaul, and thus compelled 
him to turn round and face Antonius, who was 
marching against him from Etruria. In the fol- 
lowing year, 62, Metellus went with the title of 
proconsul into the province of Cisalpine Gaul, 
which Cicero had relinquished because he was 
unwilling to leave the city. In 60 Metellus was 
consul with L. Afranius, and opposed all the ef- 
iorts of his colleague to obtain the ratification 
of Pompey's acts in Asia, and an assignment of 
lands for his soldiers. He died in 59, and it 
was suspected that he had been poisoned by his 
wife Clodia, with whom he lived on the most 
unhappy terms, and who was a woman of the 
510 



utmost profligacy.— 14. Q. C^ecilius Metellus 
Nepos, younger son of the elder Nepos (No. 11). 
He served as legate of Pompey in the war against 
the pirates and in Asia from 67 to 64. He re- 
turned to Rome in 63 in order to become a can- 
didate for the tribunate, that he might thereby 
favor the views of Pompey. His election was 
opposed by the aristocracy, but without success. 
His year of office was a stormy one. One of 
his first acts in entering upon his office on the 
tenth of December, 63, was a violent attack 
upon Cicero. He maintained that the man who 
had condemned Roman citizens without a hear- 
ing ought not to be heard himself, and accord- 
ingly prevented Cicero from addressing the peo- 
ple on the last day of his consulship, and only 
| allowed him to take the usual oath, whereupon 
I Cicero swore that he had saved the state. In 
the following year (62) Metellus brought for- 
ward a bill to summon Pompey, with his army, 
j to Rome, in order to restore peace, but, on the 
day on which the bill was to be read, the two 
i parties came to open blows, and Metellus was 
! obliged to take to flight. He repaired to Pom- 
| pey, with whom he returned to Rome in 61. He 
i was praetor in 60, and consul in 57 with P. 
| Lentulus Spinther. Notwithstanding his pre- 
j vious enmity with Cicero, he did not oppose his 
recall from exile. In 56 Metellus administered 
the province of Nearer Spain, where he carried 
on war against the Vaccaei. He died in 55. 
Metellus did not adhere strictly to the political 
principles of his family. He did not support 
the aristocracy like his brother ; nor, on the 
other hand, can he be said to have been a lead- 
er of the democracy. He was, in fact, little 
more than a servant of Pompey, and, according 
to his bidding, at one time opposed and at an- 
other supported Cicero. — 15. Q. C^ecilius Me- 
tellus Pius Scipio, the adopted son of Metel- 
lus Pius (No. 12). He was the son of P. Scipio 
Nasica, praetor 94. Hence his name is given 
in various forms. Sometimes he is called P. 
Scipio Nasica, sometimes Q. Metellus Scipio. 
and sometimes simply Scipio or Metellus. He 
was tribune of the plebs in 59, and was a can- 
didate for the consulship along with Plautius 
Hypsaeus and Milo in 53. He was supported 
by the Clodian mob, since he was opposed to 
Milo, but, in consequence of the disturbances 
in the city, the comitia could not be held for the 
election of consuls. After the murder of Clo- 
dius at the beginning of 52, Pompey was elect- 
ed sole consul. In the course of the same year 
Pompey married Cornelia, the daughter of Scip- 
io, and on the first of August he made his fa- 
ther-in-law his colleague in the consulship. 
Scipio showed his gratitude by using every ef- 
fort to destroy the power of Caesar and strength- 
en that of Pompey. He took an active part in 
all the proceedings which led to the breaking 
out of the civil war in 49, and, in the division 
of the provinces, made among the Pompeian 
party, he obtained Syria, to which he hastened 
without delay. After plundering the province 
in the most unmerciful manner, he crossed over 
into Greece in 48 to join Pompey. He com- 
manded the centre of the Pompeian army at the 
battle of Pharsalia. After the loss of the battle 
he fled, first to Corcyra and then to Africa, 
where he received the chief command of the 



METHANA. 



METIS. 



Pompeian troops. He was defeated by Caesar 
at the decisive battle of Thapsus in 46. He at- 
tempted to escape by sea, but his squadron hav- 
ing been overpowered by P. Sittius, he put an 
end to his own life. Metellus Scipio never ex- 
hibited any proofs of striking abilities either in 
war or in peace. In public he showed himself 
cruel, vindictive, and oppressive ; in private he 
was mean, avaricious, and licentious, even be- 
yond most of his contemporaries.— 16. Q. C^e- 
cilius Metellus Cbeticus, was consul 69, and 
carried on war against Crete, which he subdued 
in the course of three years. He returned to 
Rome in 66, but was unable to obtain a triumph 
in consequence of the opposition of Pompey, to 
whom he had refused to surrender his com- 
mand in Crete, which Pompey had claimed in 
virtue of the Gabinian law, which had given him 
the supreme command in the whole of the Med- 
iterranean. Metellus, however, would not re- 
linquish his claim to a triumph, and according- 
ly resolved to wait in the neighborhood of the 
city till more favorable circumstances. He was 
still before the city in 63, when the conspiracy 
of Catiline broke out. He was sent into Apu- 
lia to prevent an apprehended rising of the 
slaves ; and in the following year, 62, after the 
death of Catiline, he was at length permitted to 
make his triumphal entrance into Rome, and 
received the surname of Creticus. Metellus, as 
was to be expected, joined the aristocracy in 
their opposition to Pompey, and succeeded in 
preventing the latter from obtaining the ratifi- 
cation of his acts in Asia. — 17. L. C^ecilius 
Metellus, brother of the last, was praetor 71, 
and as propraetor succeeded Verres in the gov- 
ernment of Sicily in 70. He defeated the pi- 
rates, and compelled them to leave the island. 
His administration is praised by Cicero ; but he 
nevertheless attempted, in conjunction with his 
brothers, to shield Verres from justice. He 
was consul 68 with Q. Marcius Rex, but died 
at the beginning of the year. — 18. M. Cecilius 
Metellus. brother of the two last, was praetor 
69, in the same year that his eldest brother was 
consul. The lot gave him the presidency in 
the court de pccuniis repctundis, and Verres was 
very anxious that his trial should come on be- 
fore Metellus. — 19. L. C^ecilius Metellus 
Creticus, was tribune of the plebs 49, and a 
warm supporter of the aristocracy. He did not 
fly from Rome with Pompey and the rest of his 
party ; and he attempted to prevent Caesar from 
taking possession of the sacred treasury, and 
only gave way upon being threatened with death. 

Methana. Vid. Methone, No. 4. 

Metharme (Meddp/j.7]), daughter of King Pyg- 
malion, and wife of Cinyras. Vid. Cinyras. 

[Methodius (MeOodioc), surnamed Patarensis, 
and sometimes Eubulus or Eubulius, success- 
ively bishop of Olympus and Patara in Lycia, 
and Tyre in Phoenicia, lived in the third, and 
died at the beginning of the fourth century. He 
was a man of great learning and exemplary pi- 
ety ; and wrote several works, most of which 
are extant, and were published collectively by 
Combefis, Paris, 1644, folio.] 

[Methon (Me0ov), a kinsman of Orpheus, from 
whom the Thracian town of Methone was be- 
lieved to have derived its name.] 

Methone (M.e6vvij : Meduvalog). 1. Or Mo- 



thone (Moduvij : now Modon), a town at the 
southwest corner of Messenia, with an excel- 
lent harbor, protected from the sea by a reef of 
rocks, of which the largest was called Mothon. 
The ancients regarded Methone as the Pedasus 
of Homer. After the conquest of Messenia it 
became one of the Lacedaemonian harbors, and 
is mentioned as such in the Peloponnesian war. 
1 The Emperor Trajan conferred several privi- 
leges upon the city.— 2. ( Eleuthcrokhori), a Greek 
town in Macedonia, on the Thermaic Gulf, forty 
stadia northeast of Pydna, was founded by the 
Eretrians, and is celebrated from Philip having 
lost an eye at the siege of the place. After its 
capture by Philip it was destroyed, but was sub- 
sequently rebuilt, and is mentioned by Strabo 
as one of the towns of Macedonia. — 3. A town 
in Thessaly mentioned by Homer, but does not 
occur in historical times. The ancients placed 
it in Magnesia. — 4. Or Methana (Midava : now 
Methana or Mitonc), an ancient town in Argo- 
lis, situated on a peninsula of the same name, 
opposite the island of ^Egina. The peninsula 
runs a considerable way into the sea, and is 
connected with the main land by a narrow isth- 
mus, lying between the towns of Trcezen and 
Epidaurus. The town of Methana lay at the 
foot of a mountain of volcanic origin. 

MethSra (Midopa, Modovpa 57 tuv Qetiv : now 
Matra, the sacred city of Krishna), a city of In- 
dia intra Gangem, on the River Jomanes (now 
Jumna), in the territory of the Surasenae, a 
tribe subject to the Prasii. It was a great seat 
of the worship of the Indian god whom the 
Greeks identified with Hercules. 

[Methydrium (Medvdpcov), a small town of 
Arcadia, on the road from Olympia to Orcho- 
menus, deriving its name from the circumstance 
of its being built on a steep cliff between the wa- 
ters of Malcetas and Mylaon.] 

Methymna (J] TArjdvfiva, Mtdvfiva, the former 
generally in the best writers ; also on coins the 
iEolic form M.a6v/.iva : MrjOvfivaloc, Medvfivaloc ■ 
now Molivo), the second city of Lesbos, stood at 
the northern extremity of the island, and had a 
good harbor. It was the birthplace of the mu- 
sician and dithyrambic poet Arion, and of the 
historian Hellanicus. The celebrated Lesbian 
wine grew in its neighborhood. In the Pelo- 
ponnesian war it remained faithful to Athens, 
even during the great Lesbian revolt {vid. Myti- 
lene) : afterward it was sacked by the Spartans 
(B.C. 406), and never quite recovered its pros- 
perity. 

[Metiochus (Mrj-ioxoc). 1. Son of Miltiades. 
! captured by the Phoenicians, and taken to the 
Persian court. Darius did him no injury, but 
conferred many favors on him, and gave him a 
Persian lady in marriage, by whom he had chil- 
dren, who were held in estimation among the 
Persians. — 2. An Athenian orator, a contem- 
porary and friend of Pericles, for whom he often 
spoke in the assembly at Athens.] 

Metion (Mnrluv), son of Erechtheus and 
Praxithea, and husband of Alcippe. His sons, 
the Metionidae, expelled their cousin Pandion 
from his kingdom of Athens, but were them- 
selves afterward expelled by the sons of Pan- 
dion. 

Metis (M^nc), the personification of pru- 
dence, is described as a daughter of Oceanus 

511 



METISCUS. 



METULUM. 



and Tethys, and the first wife of Jupiter (Zeus). 
Afraid lest she should give birth to a child wiser 
and more powerful than himself, Jupiter (Zeus) 
devoured her in the first month of her pregnan- 
cy. Afterward he gave birth to Minerva (Athe- ! 
na), who sprang from his head. Vid. p. 120, b. 

[Metiscus, charioteer of Turnus, ejected from 
his place by Juturna, who guided the chariot 
herself, when Turnus was about to engage in 
single combat with ^neas.] 

Metius. Vid. Mettius. 

Metox (Mfc'rwr), an astronomer of Athens, 
who, in conjunction with Euctemojt, introduced 
the cycle of nineteen years, by which he ad- 
justed the course of the sun and moon, since ; 
he had observed that two hundred and thirty- 
five lunar months correspond very nearly to 
nineteen solar years. The commencement of j 
this cycle has been placed B.C. 432. We have 
no details of Meton's life, with the exception 
that his father's name was Pausanias, and that 
he feigned insanity to avoid sailing for Sicily 
in the ill-fated expedition of which he is stated 
to have had an evil presentiment. 

[Metope (MeTum/). 1. A daughter of the 
Arcadian river-god Ladon, was married to Aso- 
pus, and became the mother of Thebe. — 2. Wife 
of the river- god Sangarius, and mother of Hec- 
uba, the wife of Priam.] 

[Metopcs (M4r&wrof)„ a Pythagorean of Meta- 
pontum ; author of a work on virtue, some ex- 
tracts from which have been preserved by Sto- 
baeus, and are given among the Pythagorean 
fragments in Gale's Opuscula Mythologica ] 

[Metrobius (Me-pofooc), an actor who per- 
formed in women's parts, a great favorite of the 
dictator Sulla.] 

?nIetr5dorus (M^rpddwpoc). 1. Of Cos, son 
of Epicharmus, and grandson of Thyrsus. Like 
several of that family, he addicted himself partly 
to the study of the Pythagorean philosophy, 
partly to the science of medicine. He wrote a 
treatise upon the works of Epicharmus. He 
flourished about B.C. 460. — 2. Of Lampsacus, a 
contemporary and friend of Anaxagoras. He 
wrote on Homer, the leading feature of his sys- 
tem of interpretation being that the deities and 
stories in Homer were to be understood as alle- 
gorical modes of representing physical powers 
and phenomena. He died 464. — 3. Of Chios, 
a disciple of Democritus, or, according to other 
accounts, of Nessus of Chios, flourished about 
330. He was a philosopher of considerable rep- 
utation, and professed the doctrines of the skep- 
tics in their fullest sense. He also studied, if 
he did not practice, medicine, on which he wrote 
a good deal. He was the instructor of Hippoc- 
rates and Anaxarchus. — 4. A native of Lamp- 
sacus or Athens, was the most distinguished of 
the disciples of Epicurus, with whom he lived 
on terms of the closest friendship. He died 
277, in the fifty-third year of his age, seven 
years before Epicurus, who would have appoint- 
ed him his successor had he survived him. 
The philosophy of Metrodorus appears to have 
been of a more grossly sensual kind than that 
of Epicurus. Perfect happiness, according to 
Cicero's account, he made to consist in having 
a well-constituted body. He found fault with 
bis brother Timocrates for not admitting that 
the belly was the test and measure of everv 
512 



thing that pertained to a happy life. He wa? 
the author of several works quoted by the an- 
cient writers. — 5. Of Scepsis, a philosopher, who 
was raised to a position of great influence and 
trust by Mithradates Eupator, being appointed 
supreme judge without appeal even to the king. 
Subsequently he was led to desert his allegi- 
ance, when sent by Mithradates on an embassy 
to Tigranes, king of Armenia. Tigranes sent 
him back to Mithradates, but he died on the 
road. According to some accounts, he was dis- 
patched by order of the king; according to 
others, he died of disease. He is frequently 
mentioned by Cicero ; he seems to have been 
particularly celebrated for his powers of mem- 
ory. In consequence of his hostility to the Ro- 
mans, he was surnamed the Roman-hater.— 6. 
Of Stratonice in Caria, was at first a disciple 
of the school of Epicurus, but afterward at- 
tached himself to Carneades. He flourished 
about 110. 

[Metrophanes (JslrjTpowvric), a general of 
Mithradates the Great, who sent him with an 
[ army into Greece to support Archelaus, B.C. 
87. He reduced Euboea and some other places, 
j but was defeated by the Roman general Brut- 
\ tius Sura.] 

Metropolis (MnTpo7ro?ug). 1. The most an- 
j cient capital of Phrygia, but in historical times 
i an inconsiderable place. Its position is doubt- 
! ful. Some identify it with Afioum-Kara-Hisar 
' near the centre of Great Phrygia, which agrees 
well enough with the position of the Campus 
Metropolitanus of Livy (xxxviii., 15), while 
others find it in the- ruins at Pismesh-Kalessi in 
i the north of Phrygia, and suppose a second 
: Metropolis in the south as that to which the 
; Campus Metropolitanus belonged. — 2. In Lydia 
! (ruins at Turbali), a city in the plain of the 
', Cayster, between Ephesus and Smyrna, one 
I hundred and twenty stadia from the former, and 
| two hundred from the latter. There were other 
i cities of Asia so called, but they are either un- 
important, or better known by other names, 
; such as Ancyra, Bostra, Caesarea in Palestine, 
Edessa, and others. — 3. (Now Kastri), a town 
of Thessaly in Histiaeotis, near the Peneus, and 
: between Gomphi and Pharsalus, formed by the 
i union of several small towns, to which Ithome 
j also belonged. — 4. A town of Acarnania in the 
- district Amphilochia, between the Ambracian 
! Gulf and the River Achelous. 

Metroum, afterward Aulia (Mnrpwov, on coins 
i M^rpof, Av?.ia, A.v7.aLa), a city of Bithynia. 

Mettius or Metius. 1. Curtius. Vid. Cur- 
| tius. — 2. FuffetIus, dictator of Alba in the 
reign of Tullus Hostilius, third king of Rome. 
! After the combat between the Horatii and 
Curiatii had determined the supremacy of the 
Romans, Mettius was summoned to aid them 
in a war with Fidenae and the Yeientines. On 
the field of battle Mettius drew off his Albans 
j to the hills, and awaited the issue of the battle. 
On the following day the Albans were all de- 
prived of their arms, and Mettius himself, as 
the punishment of his treachery, was torn asun- 
; der by chariots driven in opposite directions. 
Metulum, the chief town of the Iapydes in 
Illyricum, was near the frontiers of Liburnia, 
and was situated on two peaks of a steep mount- 
ain. Augustus nearly lost his life in reduc- 



MEVANIA. 



MIDIAS. 



mg this place, the inhabitants of which fought 
against him with the most desperate courage. 

Mbtania (Mevanas, atis : now Bevagna), an 
ancient city in the interior of Umbria, on the 
River Tinea, was situated on the road from 
Rome to Ancona, in a very fertile country, and 
was celebrated for its breed of beautiful white 
oxen. It was a strongly-fortified place, though 
its walls were built only of brick. According 
to some accounts, Propertius was a native of 
this place. 

Mezentiu.s {Meotv-ioc), king of the Tyrrhe- 
nians or Etruscans, at Caere or Agylla, was ex- 
pelled by his subjects on account of his cruelty, 
and took refuge with Turnus, king of the Rutu- 
lians, whom he assisted in the war against 
-Eneas and the Trojans. Mezentius and his 
son Lausus were slain in battle by JUneas. 
This is the account of Virgil. Livy and Dionys- 
ins, however, say nothing about the expulsion 
of Mezentius from Caere, but represent him as 
an ally of Turnus, and relate that JEneas dis- 
appeared during the battle against the Rutu- 
lians and Etruscans at Lanuvium. Dionysius 
adds that Ascanius was besieged by Mezentius 
and Lausus ; that the besieged in a sally by 
night slew Lausus, and then concluded a peace 
with Mezentius, who from henceforth continu- 
ed to be their ally. 

[Miccion (Mikkcuv), a painter, mentioned by 
Lucian as a disciple of Zeuxis.] 

Micipsa (MiKiipag), king of Numidia, the eld- 
est of the sons of Masinissa. After the death 
of the latter (B.C. 148), the sovereign power 
was divided by Scipio between Micipsa and his 
two brothers, Gulussa and Mastanabal, in such 
a manner that the possession of Cirta, the cap- 
ital of Numidia, together with the financial ad- 
ministration of the kingdom, fell to the share 
of Micipsa. It was not long, however, before 
the death of both his brothers left him in pos- 
session of the undivided sovereignty of Numid- 
ia, which he held from that time without in- 
terruption till his death. He died in 118, leav- 
ing the kingdom to his two sons, Adherbal and 
Hiempsal, and their adopted brother Jugurtha. 

Micon (MUov), of Athens, son of Phanochus, 
was a very distinguished painter and statuary, 
contemporary with Polygnotus, about B C. 460. 

[Micythus (MUvdos), son of Choerus, was at 
first a slave in the service of Anaxilas, tyrant 
of Rhegium, but gradually rose to so high a 
place in the confidence of his master, that the 
latter, at his death (B C. 476), left him guardian 
of his infant sons, and regent until they attain- 
ed their majority. He discharged his duty, and 
at the proper time resigned the sovereignty into 
the hands of the young princes, set out for { 
Greece, and settled at Tegea, where he resided | 
for the rest of his life.] 

Midaeum (MuJdf lov), a city of Phrygia Epiete- 
tus, between Dorylaeum and Pessinus ; the place 
where SexUis Pompeius was captured by the 
troops of Antony, B.C. 35. 

Midas (Mtctacj, son of Gordius and Cybele, is 
said (o have been a wealthy but effeminate king 
of Phrygia, a pupil of Orpheus, and a great 
patron of the worship of Bacchus (Dionysus). 
His wealth is alluded to in a story connected 
with his childhood, for it is said that while a 
child, ants carried grains of wheat into his 
33 



mouth, to indicate that one day he should be 
the richest of all mortals. Midas was intro- 
duced into the Satyric drama of the Greeks, 
and was represented with the ears of a satyr, 
which were afterward lengthened into the ears 
of an ass. He is said to have built the town 
of Ancyra, and as king of Phrygia he is called 
Berecynthius hero.? (Ov., Met., xi., 106). There 
are several stories connected with Midas, of 
which the following are the "most celebrated. 
1. Silenus, the companion and teacher of Bac- 
chus (Dionysus), had gone astray in a state of 
intoxication, and was caught by country people 
in the rose gardens of Midas. He was bound 
with wreaths of flowers and led before the king. 
These gardens were in Macedonia, near Mount 
Bermion or Bromion, where Midas was king 
of the Briges, with whom he afterward emi- 
grated to Asia, where their name was changed 
into Phryges. Midas received Silenus kindly : 
and, after treating him with hospitality, he led 
him back to Bacchus (Dionysus), who allowed 
Midas to ask a favor of him. Midas, in his folly, 
desired that all things which he touched should 
be changed into gold. The request was grant- 
ed ; but as even the food whic-h he touched be- 
came gold, he implored the god to take his favor 
back. Bacchus (Dionysus) accordingly ordered 
him to bathe in the source of Pactolus, near 
Mount Tmolus. This bath saved Midas, but 
the river from that time had an abundance of 
gold in its sand — 2. Midas, who was himself 
related to the race of Satyrs, once had a visit 
from a Satyr, who indulged in all kinds of jokes 
at the king's expense. Thereupon Midas mix- 
ed wine in a well ; and when the Satyr had 
drank of it, he fell asleep and was caught. This 
well of Midas was at different times assigned 
to different localities. Xenophon {Anab., i., 2, 
§ 13) places it in the neighborhood of Thym- 
brium and Tyraeum, and Pausanias at Ancyra. — 
3. Once, when Pan and Apollo were engaged in 
a musical contest on the flute and lyre, Midas 
was chosen to decide between them. The king 
decided in favor of Pan, whereupon Apollo 
changed his ears into those of an ass. Midas 
contrived to conceal them under his Phrygian 
cap, but the servant who used to cut his hair 
discovered them. The secret so much harassed 
this man, that, as he could not betray it to a 
human being, he dug a hole in the earth, and 
whispered into it, " King Midas has ass's ears." 
He then filled the hole up again, and his heart 
was relieved. But on the "same spot a reed 
grew up, which in its whispers betrayed the 
secret. Midas is said to have killed himself by 
drinking the blood of an ox. 

Midea or Midea (M'()em, Widen : Mideurr/s), a 
town in Argolis, of uncertain site, is said to 
have been originally called Persepolis, because 
it had been fortified by Perseus. It was de- 
stroyed by the Argives. 

MlDIANITiE Vvi. MaDIaN'T.E. 

Midi as ( Mf ifiiag). an Athenian of Wealth and 
influence, was a violent enemy of Demo.-ihenes 
the orator. In B C 351 Midias as>aulted De- 
mosthenes when he was discharging the duties 
of Choregus. during the celebration of the great 
Dionysia. Demosthenes brought an accusation 
against Midias : but the speech which he wrote 
for the occasion, and which is extant, was never 

513 



MIEZA. 



MILO. 



delivered, since Demosthenes dropped the ac- 
cusation in consequence of his receiving the 
sum of thirty minae. 

Mieza (Miefa : Mts&vc), a town of Macedonia 
in Emathia, southwest of Pella, and not far from 
the frontiers of Thessaly. 

[Migonium (M.iy6viov), a place in or near the 
island Cranae in Laconia, where Venus (Aph- 
rodite), hence called Migonitis (Miyovins), had 
a temple.] 

MilInion (Nlei?Mvtav), son of Amphidamas, 
and husband of Atalanta. For details, vid. At a- 

LANTA. 

MiletopSlis (NLifajTSiroAig : now Muhalich or 
Hamamli ? ruins), a city of Mysia, in Asia Minor, 
at the confluence of the River Rhyndacus and 
Macestus, and somewhat east of the lake which 
was named after it, Lacus Miletopolitis (Mt?^- 
rono?uric "Xifivj) : now Lake of Maniyas). This 
lake, which was also called Artynia, lies some 
miles west of the larger lake of Apollonia (now 
Abullionte). 

Miletopolis. Vid. Borystiiexes. 

Miletus (M.l?j]toc), son of Apollo and Aria of 
Crete. Being beloved by Minos and Sarpedon, 
he attached himself to the latter, and fled from 
Minos to Asia, where he built the city of Mile- 
tus. Ovid {Met., ix., 442) calls him a son of 
Apollo and Dei'one, and hence Dei'onides. 

Miletus {Mi?^Tog, Dor. Mi'Aaror : Mifajcioc, 
and on inscriptions, MeiTirjcioc : Milesius). 1 . One 
of the greatest cities of Asia Minor, belonged 
territorially to Caria and politically to Ionia, 
being the southernmost of the twelve cities of 
the Ionian confederacy. It is mentioned by 
Homer as a Carian city ; and one of its early 
names, LelegeTs, is a sign that the Leleges also 
formed a part of its population. Its first Greek 
colonists were said to have been Cretans who 
were expelled by Minos ; the next were led to 
it by Neleus at the time of the so-called Ionic 
migration. Its name was derived from the 
mythical leader of the Cretan colonists, Mile- 
tus : it was also called Pityusa {Uirvovaa) and 
Anactoria {WvaKTopia). The city stood upon 
the southern headland of the Sinus Latmicus, 
opposite to the mouth of the Maeander, and pos- 
sessed four distinct harbors, protected by a 
group of islets, called Lade, Dromiscus, and 
Perne. The city wall inclosed two distinct 
towns, called the outer and the inner ; the lat- 
ter, which was also called Old Miletus, stood 
upon an eminence overhanging the sea, and 
was of great strength. Its territory extended 
on both sides of the Majander, as far apparently 
as the promontories of Mycale on the north and 
Posidium on the south. It was rich in flocks ; 
and the city was celebrated for its woollen fab- 
Tics, the Milesia vellera. At a very early period 
it became a great maritime state, extending its 
commerce throughout the Mediterranean, and 
even beyond the Pillars of Hercules, but more 
especially in the direction of the Euxine, along 
the shore of which the Milesians planted sev- 
eral important colonies, such as Cyzicus, Si- 
nope, Abydos, Istropolis, Tomi, Olbia or Borys- 
thenes, Apollonia, Odessus, and Panticapa;um. 
Naueratis in Egypt was also a colony of Mile- 
tus. It also occupies a high place in the early 
history of Greek literature, as the birth-place 
of the philosophers Thales, Anaximander, and 
514 



j Anaximenes, and of the historians Cadmus and 
Hecatasus. After the rise of the Lydian mon- 
archy, Miletus, by its naval strength, resisted 
the attacks of Alyattes and Sadyattes for eleven 
years, but fell before Crcesus, whose success 
may perhaps be ascribed to the intestine fac- 
tions which for a long time weakened the city. 
With the rest of Ionia, it was conquered by 
Harpagus, the general of Cyrus, in B.C. 557; 
and under the dominion of the Persians it still 
retained its prosperity till the great Ionian re- 
volt, of which Miletus was the centre {vid. 
Aristagoras, HisTiiEus), and after the suppres- 
sion of which it was destroyed by the Persians 
(B.C. 494). It recovered sufficient importance 
to oppose a vain resistance to Alexander the 
Great, which brought upon it a second ruin. 
Under the Roman empire it still appears as a 
place of some consequence, until its final de- 
struction by the Turks. Its ruins are difficult 
to discover, on account of the great change 
I made in the coast by the River Maeander. Vid. 
! Meander. They are usually supposed to be 
S those at the wretched village of Palatia, on the 
j southern bank of the Mendereh, a little above 
its present mouth ; but Forbiger has shown 
I that these are more probably the ruins of Myus, 
j and that those of Miletus are buried in a lake 
' formed by the Mendereh at the foot of Mount 
' Latmus. — [2. A city of Crete, not far from Lyc- 
j tos, whence the first settlers of the Ionian Mile- 
! tus are said to have come.] 
j Milichus, a Phoenician god, represented as 
I the son of a satyr and of the nymph Myrlce, and 
j with horns on his head. (Sil Ital., iii., 103.) 

Milichus (Me/Ai^of), a small river in Achaia, 
j which flowed by the town of Patrse, and is said 
■ to have been originally called Amilickus {'A/iit- 
! 2-tx°c) on account of the human victims sacri- 
: ficcd on its banks to Diana (Artemis). 
I [Milichus, a freedman of Flavius Sca?vinus, 
| gave Nero the first information of Piso's con- 
| spiracy in A D. 66. Milichus was liberally re- 
| warded by the emperor, and assumed the sur- 
i name of Soter or the Preserver.] 

Milo or Milox {MiAtjv). 1. Of Crotona, son 
j of Diotimus, an athlete, famous for his extraor- 
dinary bodily strength. He was six times vic- 
tor in wrestling at the Olympic games, and as 
often at the Pythian ; but, having entered the 
lists at Olympia a seventh time, he was worsted 
by the superior agility of his adversary. By 
these successes he obtained great distinction 
among his countrymen, so that he was even ap- 
pointed to command the army which defeated 
the Sybarites, B.C. 511. Many stories are re- 
lated by ancient writers of Milo's extraordinary 
feats of strength ; such as his carrying a heifer 
of four years old on his shoulders through the 
stadium at Olympia, and afterward eating the 
whole of it in a single day. The mode of his 
death is thus related : as he was passing through 
a forest when enfeebled by age, he saw the 
trunk of a tree which had been partially split 
open by woodcutters, and attempted to rend it 
further, but the wood closed upon his hands, and 
thus held him fast, in which state he was attack- 
ed and devoured by wolves. — 2. A general in 
the service of Pyrrhus, king of Epirus, who sent 
him forward with a body of troops to garrison, 
the citadel of Tarentum previous to his owp 



MILO. 



MI I/HADES. 



arrival in Italy. When Pyrrhus finally quitted 
that country and withdrew into Epirus, he still 
left Milo in charge of the citadel of Tarentum, 
together with his son Helenus.— [3. Of Bercea, 
an officer in the army of Perseus, with which 
he opposed the Roman consul P. Licinius Cras- 
susB C. 171. He is mentioned again as holding 
an important command under Perseus, just be- 
fore the battle of Pydna, B.C. 166. He after- 
ward proved a traitor, and surrendered the for- 
tress of Beroea into the hands of the Roman 
general Paullus /Emilius.] — 4. T. Annius Milo 
Papinianus, was the son of C. Papius Celsus 
and Annia, and was adopted by his maternal 
'grandfather T. Annius Luscus. He was born 
at Lanuvium, of which place he was in B.C. 53 
dictator or chief magistrate. Milo was a man 
of a daring and unscrupulous character ; and as 
he was deeply in debt, he resolved to obtain a 
wealthy province. For this purpose he con- 
nected himself with the aristocracy. As tribune 
of the plebs, B C. 57, he took an active part in 
obtaining Cicero's recall from exile, and from 
this time he carried on a fierce and memorable 
contest with P. Clodius. In 53 Milo was can- 
didate for the consulship, and Clodius for the 
praetorship of the ensuing year. Each of the 
candidates kept a gang of gladiators, and there 
were frequent combats between the rival ruf- 
fians in the streets of Rome. At length, on the 
twentieth of January, 52, Milo and Clodius met 
apparently by accident at Bovillae on the Appian 
road. An affray ensued between their follow- 
ers, in which Clodius was slain. At Rome such 
tumults followed upon the burial of Clodius, that 
Pompey was appointed sole consul in order to 
restore order to the state. Pompey immediate- 
ly brought forward various laws in connection 
with the late disturbances. As soon as these 
were passed, Milo was formally accused. All 
Pompey's influence was directed against him ; 
but Milo was not without hope, since the higher 
aristocracy, from jealousy of Pompey, supported 
him, and Cicero undertook his defence. His 
trial opened on the fourth of April, 52. He was 
impeached on three counts — de Vi, de Ambitu, 
or bribery, and de Sodaliliis, or illegal interfer- 
ence with the freedom of elections. L. Domi- 
tius Ahenobarbus, a consular, was appointed 
quaesitor by a special law of Pompey's, and all 
Rome and thousands of spectators from Italy 
thronged the forum and its avenues. But Milo's 
chances of acquittal were wholly marred by the 
virulence of his adversaries, who insulted and 
obstructed the witnesses, the process, and the 
conductors of the defence. Pompey availed 
himself of these disorders to line the forum and 
its encompassing hills with soldiers. Cicero 
was intimidated, and Milo was condemned. 
Had he even been acquitted on the first count, 
de Vi, the two other charges of bribery and con- 
spiracy awaited him. He therefore went into 
exile. Cicero, who could not deliver, re-wrote 
and expanded the defence of Milo — the extant 
oration — and sent it to him at Marseilles. Milo 
remarked, •« I am glad this was not spoken, 
since I must have been acquitted, and then had 
never known the delicate flavor of these Mar- 
seilles mullets." Caesar refused to recall Milo 
from exile in 49, when he permitted many of 
the other exiles to return. In the following 



I year (48), M. Caelius, the praetor, had, during 
\ Caesar's absence, promulgated a bill for the ad- 
i justment of debts. Needing desperate allies, 
: Caelius accordingly invited Milo to Italy, as the 
; fittest tool for his purposes. At the head of a 
band of criminals and run-away slaves, Miloap- 
' peared in the south of Italy, but was opposed by 
j the praetor Q. Pedius, and slain under the walls 
j of an obscure fort in the district of Thurii. Milo. 
j in 57, married Fausta, a daughter of the dicta- 
! tor Sulla. She proved a faithless wife, and Sal- 
i lust, the historian, was soundly scourged by 
j Milo for an intrigue with her. 

[Miltas (Mt'Arac), a Thessalian, a contempa- 
i rary of Plato, spoken of by Plutarch as a seer, 
j and a follower of the Platonic philosophy : he 
i served in the army of Dion against Dionysius 
| the younger, and encouraged the troops whea 
| alarmed by an eclipse.] 

Miltiades (Mi/lriu(5?7c). 1- Son of Cypselusy 
was a man of considerable distinction in Athens 
in the time of Pisistratus. The Doloncians, a 
Thracian tribe dwelling in the Chersonesus, 
being hard pressed in war by the Absinthians r 
j applied to the Delphic oracle for advice, and 
| were directed to admit a colony led by the man 
who should be the first to entertain them after 
they left the temple. This was Militiades, who, 
eager to escape from the rule of Pisistratus, 
gladly took the lead of a colony under the sanc- 
j tion of the oracle, and became tyrant of the 
j Chersonesus, which he fortified by a wall built 
! across its isthmus. In a war with the people 
J of Lampsacus he was taken prisoner, but was 
set at liberty on the demand of Crcesus. He 
died without leaving any children, and his sov- 
ereignty passed into the hands of Stesagoras.. 
j the son of his half-brother Cimon. Sacrifices 
! and games were instituted in his honor, in which 
no Lampsacene was suffered to take part. — 2. 
Son of Cimon and brother of Stesagoras, be- 
J came tyrant of the Chersonesus on the death 
i of the latter, being sent out by Pisistratus from 
j Athens to take possession of the vacant inherit- 
ance. By a stratagem he got the chief men of 
the Chersonesus into his power and threw them 
into prison, and took a force of mercenaries into 
his pay. In order to strengthen his position 
still more, he married Hegesipyla, the daughter 
of a Thracian prince named Olorus. He joined 
Darius Hystaspis on his expedition against the 
Scythians, and was left with the other Greeks 
in charge of the bridge over the Danube. When 
the appointed time had expired, and Darius had 
not returned, Miltiades recommended the Greeks 
to destroy the bridge and leave Darius to his 
j fate. Some time after the expedition of Darius?, 
j an inroad of the Scythians drove Miltiades from 
! his possessions ; but after the enemy had re- 
j tired, the Doloncians brought him back. It ar>- 
I pears to have been between this period and his 
' withdrawal to Athens that Miltiades conquered 
; and expelled the Pelasgian inhabitants of Lenv 
nos and Imbros, and subjected the islands to the 
\ dominion of Attica. Lemnos and Imbros be- 
j longed to the Persian dominions ; and it is prob- 
able that this encroachment on the Persian pos- 
| sessions was the cause which drew upon Mil- 
! tiades the hostility of Darius, and led him to flj 
j from the Chersonesus when the Phoenician 
! fleet approached after the subjugation of Ionia. 

515 



MILTO. 



MINERVA. 



Miltiades reached Athens in safety, but his eld- 
est son Metiochus fell into the hands of the 
Persians. At Athens Miltiades was arraigned, 
as being amenable to the penalties enacted 
against tyranny, but was acquitted. When At- 
tica was threatened with invasion by the Per- 
sians under Datis and Artaphernes, Miltiades 
was chosen one of the ten generals. Miltiades, 
by his arguments, induced the polemarch Callim- 
achus to give the casting vote in favor of risk- 
ing a battle with the enemy, the opinions of the j 
ten generals being equally divided. Miltiades 
waited till his turn came, and then drew his 
army up in battle array on the ever-memorable 
field of Marathon. VM, Marathon, After the 
defeat of the Persians Miltiades endeavored to 
urge the Athenians to measures of retaliation, 
and induced them to intrust to him an arma- 
ment of seventy ships, without knowing the 
purpose for which they were designed. He pro- 
ceeded to attack the island of Paros, for the 
purpose of gratifying a private enmity. His 
attacks, however, were unsuccessful ; and after 
receiving a dangerous hurt in the leg while 
penetrating into a sacred inclosure on some 
superstitious errand, he was compelled to raise 
the siege and return to Athens, where he was 
impeached by Xanthippus for having deceived 
the people. His wound had turned into a gan- 
grene, and being unable to plead his cause in 
person, he was brought into court on a couch, 
his brother Tisagoras conducting his defence 
for him. He was condemned ; but on the 
ground of his services to the state, the penalty 
was commuted to a fine of fifty talents, the 
cost of the equipment of the armament. Being 
unable to pay this, he was thrown into pris- 
on, where he not long after died of his wound. 
The fine was subsequently paid by his son Ci- 
mon. 

[Milto (MtZrcj), the name of the favorite mis- 
tress of Cyrus, afterward called Aspasia. Vid. 
Asp asia, No. 2.] 

[Miltocythes (M.l?~okv6t]c\ a Thracian offi- 
cer in the army of the younger Cyrus, who, 
after the death of Cyrus, abandoned the Greeks 
and went over with about thirty cavalry and 
three hundred infantry to the side of the king ] 

Milvius Pons. Vid. Roma. 

Milyas (?) Mrtvuc : MMai, Milyae), was orig- 
inally the name of all Lycia ; but it was after- 
ward applied to the high table-land in the north 
of Lycia, between the Cadmus and the Taurus, 
and extending considerably into Pisidia. Its 
people seem to have been the descendants of J 
the original inhabitants of Lycia. It contained 
a city of the same name. After the defeat of 
Antiochus the Great, the Romans gave it to Eu- 
menes, king of Pergamus, but its real govern- 
ment seems to have been in the hands of Pisid- 
ian princes. 

Mimallon (NkpaTbTtav), pi. Mimallones, the 
Macedonian name of the Bacchantes, or, accord- ■ 
ing to others, of Bacchic Amazons Ovid ( Ars 
Am., i., 541) uses the form Mimallonides. 

Mimas (Mt/j.ag) l. A giant, said to have been ! 
killed by Mars (Ares), or by Jupiter (Zeus), with 
a flash of lightning. The island of Prochyte, 
near Sicily, was believed to rest upon his body. 
— [2. Son of ^Eolus, king of JSolis, and father 
of Hippotes.— 3. Son of Amycus and Theano, i 
516 



was born on the same night as Paris, went with 
^Eneas to Italy, where he was slain by Mezen- 
tius. — 4. A Bebrycian, slain by Pollux during 
the Argonautic expedition ] 

[Mimas Mons (Mifiae). 1. A mountain chain 
of Ionia, a branch of Mount Tmolus. extending 
toward the sea, and forming the three promon- 
tories Coryceum (now Koraka), Argennurn (now 
Cape Blanc), and Melaena (now Kara Burnu).— 
2. A mountain chain of Thrace, which unites 
itself with Mount Rhodope, mentioned only by 
Silius Italicus.] 

Mimnermus (Mi/zvep/iog), a celebrated elegiac 
poet, was generally called a Colophon ian, but 
was properly a native of Smyrna, and was de- 
scended from those Colophonians who recon- 
quered Smyrna from the ^Eolians. He flourish- 
ed from about B C. 634 to 600. He was a con- 
temporary of Solon, who, in an extant fragment 
of one of his poems, addresses him as still living. 
Only a few fragments of the compositions of 
Mimnermus have come down to us. They be- 
long chiefly to a poem entitled Nanno, and are 
addressed to the flute-player of that name. The 
compositions of Mimnermus form an epoch in 
the history of elegiac poetry. Before his time 
the elegy had been devoted chiefly either to 
warlike or national, or to convivial and joyous 
subjects. Archilochus had, indeed, occasion- 
ally employed the elegy for strains of lamenta- 
tion, but Mimnermus was the first who system- 
atically made it the vehicle for plaintive, mourn- 
ful, and erotic strains. The instability of human 
happiness, the helplessness of man, the cares 
and miseries to which life is exposed, the brief 
season that man has to enjoy himself in, the 
wretchedness of old age. are plaintively dwelt 
upon by him, while love is held u^as the only 
consolation that men possess, life not being 
worth having when it can no longer be enjoyed. 
The latter topic was most frequently dwelt 
upon, and as an erotic poet he was held in high 
estimation in antiquity. (Hor., Epist., ii., 2, 
100.) The fragments are published separately 
by Bach, Lips., 1826. 

Min^i (Mtvaioi), one of the chief communi- 
ties of Arabia, dwelt on the western coast of 
Arabia Felix, and in the interior of the penin- 
sula, and carried on a large trade in spices, in- 
cense, and the other products of the land. 

MLvas Sabbatha (Meivnc 1n6arda), a fort in 
Babylonia, built in the time of the later Roman 
empire, on the site of Seleucia, which the Ro- 
mans had destroyed. 

Mincius (Mincio). a river in Gallia Transpa- 
dana, flows through the Lake Benacus (now La- 
go di Garda), and falls into the Po a little be- 
low Mantua. 

Mindarus (MiVr5apnc), a Lacedaemonian, suc- 
ceeded Astyochus in the command of the Lace- 
daemonian fleet, B C. 411 He was defeated 
and slain in battle by the Athenians near Cyz- 
icus in the following year 

Minerva, called Athena by the Greeks. The 
Greek goddess is spoken of in a separate arti- 
cle. Vid. Athena Minerva was one of the 
great Roman divinities Her name seems to be 
of the same root as mens ; and she is accord- 
ingly the thinking, calculating, and inventive 
power personified. Jupiter was ihe fir . uno 
the second, and Minerva the third in i 



MINERV.E ARX. 



MINOS. 



ber of the Capitoline divinities. Tarquin, the 
son of Demaratus, was believed to have united 
the three divinities in one common temple, and 
hence, when repasts were prepared for the gods, 
these three always went together. She was the 
daughter of Jupiter, and is said to have some- 
times wielded the thunderbolts of her father. 
As Minerva was a virgin divinity, and her fa- 
ther the supreme god, the Romans easily iden- 
tified her with the Greek Athena, and accord- 
ingly all the attributes of Athena were gradual- 
ly transferred to the Roman Minerva. But we 
confine ourselves at present to those which were 
peculiar to the Roman goddess. Being a maid- 
en goddess, her sacrifices consisted of calves 
which had not borne the yoke. She is said 
to have invented numbers ; and it is added 
that the law respecting the driving in of the 
annual nail was for this reason attached to the 
temple of Minerva. She was worshipped as 
the patroness of all the arts and trades, and 
at her festival she was particularly invoked by 
all who desired to distinguish themselves in any 
art or craft, such as painting, poetry, the art of 
teaching, medicine, dyeing, spinning, weaving, 
and the like. This character of the goddess 
may be perceived also from the proverbs "to do 
a thing pingui Minerva,'''' i. c, to do a thing in 
an awkward or clumsy manner ; and sus Miner- 
vam, of a stupid person who presumed to set 
right an intelligent one. Minerva, however, 
was the patroness, not only of females, on 
whom she conferred skill in sewing, spinning, 
weaving, &c, but she also guided men in the 
dangers of war, where victory is gained by 
cunning, prudence, courage, and perseverance. 
Hence she was represented with a helmet, 
shield, and a coat of mail; and the booty made 
in war was frequently dedicated to her. Miner- 
va was further believed to be the inventor of 
musical instruments, especially wind instru- 
ments, the use of which was very important in 
religious worship, and which were accordingly 
subjected to a sort of purification every year on 
the last day of the festival of Minerva. This 
festival lasted five days, from the nineteenth 
to the twenty-third of March, and was called 
Qumquatrus, because it began on the fifth day 
after the ides of the month. This number of 
days was not accidental, for we are told that 
the number five was sacred to Minerva. The 
most ancient temple of Minerva at Rome was | 
probably that on the Capitol ; another existed j 
on the Aventine, and she had a chapel at the I 
foot of the Caelian Hill, where she bore the sur- ! 
name of Capta. 

Minerv/E Arx or MiNBRviBfai. (now Castro), a j 
hill on the coast of Calabria, where .Eneas is 
said to have landed. 

Minerva: Promontokium (now Punta della \ 
Campanclla or della Minerva), a rocky promon- I 
tory in Campania, running out a long way into 
the sea, six miles southeast of Surrentum, on 
Whose summit was a temple of Minerva, which 
was said to have been built by Ulysses, and ; 
which was still standing in the time of Seneca, j 
Here the Sirens are reported to have dwelt. 
The Greeks regarded it as the northwestern | 
boundary of CEnotria. 

Minio (now Mignone), a small river in Etru- ! 
ria, which rises near Satrium, and falls into the j 



Tyrrhene Sea between Graviscse and Centum 
Cellar. 

Minius (now Minho), a river in the north- 
west of Spain, rises in the Cantabrian Mount- 
ains in the north of Gallaecia, and falls into the 
ocean. It was also called Baenis, and derived 
its name of Minius from the minium or vermil- 
ion carried down by its waters. 

Mi no a (Mivwo.). 1. A small island in the 
Saronic Gulf, off the coast of Megaris, and op- 
posite a promontory of the same name, was 
united to the main land by a bridge, and form- 
ed, with the promontory, the harbor of Nisaea. 
Vid. p. 493. — 2. A town on the eastern coast of 
Laconia, and on a promontory of the same name, 
northeast of Epidaurus Limera. — 3. A town on 
the western part of the northern coast of Crete, 
between the promontories Drepanum and Psa- 
cum. — 4. A town on the eastern part of the 
northern coast of Crete, belonging to the terri- 
tory of Lyctus, and situated on the narrowest 
part of the island. — 5. A town in Sicily. Vid. 
Heraclea Minoa. 

[MiNo'iDEs Insulje (MivuMsc N^croi), small 
islands in the southern part of the ^Egean, form- 
ing a portion of the Cyclades, just north of 
Crete.] 

Minos (Mfvwf). 1. Son of Jupiter (Zeus) and 
Europa, brother of Rhadamanthys, was the king 
and legislator of Crete. After his death he be- 
came one of the judges of the shades in Hades, 
He was the father of Deucalion and Ariadne ; 
and, according to Apollodorus, the brother of 
Sarpedon. Some traditions relate that Minos 
married Itone, daughter of Lyctius, by whom 
he had a son, Lycastus, and that the latter be- 
came, by Ida, the daughter of Corybas, the fa- 
ther of another Minos. But it should be ob- 
served that Homer and Hesiod know only of 
one Minos, the ruler of Cnosus, and the son 
and friend of Jupiter (Zeus), and that they re- 
late nearly the same things about him which 
later traditions assign to a second Minos, the 
grandson of the former. In this case, as in 
many other mythical traditions, a rationalistic 
criticism attempted to solve contradictions and 
difficulties in the stories about a person by as- 
suming that the contradictory accounts must 
refer to two different personages. — 2. Grand- 
son of the former, and a son of Lycastus and 
Ida, was likewise a king and lawgiver of Crete. 
He is described as the husband of Pasiphae, a 
daughter of Helios ; and as the father of Ca- 
treus, Deucalion, Glaucus, Androgeos, Acalle, 
Xenodice, Ariadne, and Phaedra. After the 
death of Asterius, Minos aimed at the suprem- 
acy of Crete, and declared that it was destined 
to him by the gods; in proof of which, he assert- 
ed that the gods always answered his prayers. 
Accordingly, as he was offering up a sacrifice 
to Neptune (Poseidon), he prayed that a bull 
might come forth from the sea, and promised to 
sacrifice the animal. The bull appeared, and 
Minos became king of Crete. (Others say that 
Minos disputed the government with his broth- 
er Sarpedon, and conquered.) But Minos, who 
admired the beauty of the bull, did not sacrifice 
him, and substituted another in his place. Nep- 
tune (Poseidon) therefore rendered the bull fu- 
rious, and made Pasiphae conceive a passion 
for the animal. Daedalus enabled Pasiphae to 

517 



MINOTAURUS. 



MINYAS. 



gratify her passion, and she became by the bull 
the mother of the Minotaurus, a monster with 
a human body and a bull's head, or, according 
to others, with a bull's body and a human head. 
The monster was kept in the labyrinth at Cno- 
sus, constructed by Daedalus. Daedalus fled 
from Crete to escape the wrath of Minos, and 
took refuge in Sicily. Minos followed him to 
Sicily, and was there slain by Cocalus and his 
daughters. Minos is further said to have di- 
vided Crete into three parts, and to have ruled 
nine years. The Cretans traced their legal and 
political institutions to Minos. He is said to 
have been instructed in the art of law-giving by 
Jupiter (Zeus) himself; and the Spartan Ly- 
curgus was believed to have taken the legisla- 
tion of Minos as his model. In his time Crete 
was a powerful maritime state ; and Minos not 
only checked the piratical pursuits of his con- 
temporaries, but made himself master of the 
Greek islands of the -Egean. The most an- 
-eient legends describe Minos as a just and wise 
law-giver, whereas the later accounts repre- 
sent him as an unjust and cruel tyrant. In or- 
der to avenge the wrong done to his son (vid. 
Androgeos) at Athens, he made war against 
the Athenians and Megarians. He subdued 
Megara, and compelled the Athenians either 
every year or every nine years to send him as 
a tribute seven youths and seven maidens, who 
were devoured in the labyrinth by the Minotau- 
rus. The monster was slain by Theseus. 

Minotaurus. Vid. Minos. 

Mi xt ha (M.ivdfj), a daughter of Cocytus, be- 
loved by Hades, was metamorphosed by Ceres 
(Demeter) or Proserpina (Persephone) into a 
plant called after her mintha, or mint. In the 
aeighborhood of Pylos there was a hill called 
after her, and at its foot there was a temple of 
Pluto (Hades), and a grove of Ceres (Demeter). 

Mi nth e (Mcvdij : now Vunuka), a mountain 
of Elis in Triphylia, near Pylos. 

Minturnje (Minturnensis : now Trajcila), an 
important tow r n in Latium, on the frontiers of 
Campania, was situated on the Appia Via, and 
on both banks of the Liris, and near the mouth 
•of this river. It was an ancient town of the 
Ausones or Aurunci, but surrendered to the Ro- 
mans of its own accord, and received a Pcoman 
colony B.C. 296. It was subsequently recol- 
onized by Julius Caesar. In its neighborhood 
was a grove sacred to the nymph Marica. and 
also extensive marshes (Paludcs Minturnensis), 
formed by the overflowing of the River Liris. 
in which Marius was taken prisoner. Vid. p. 
480, a. The neighborhood of Minturnae pro- 
duced good wine. There are the ruins of an 
amphitheatre and of an aqueduct at the modern 
Trajctia. 

[Minucia, one of the vestal priestesses in 
B.C. 337. Her passion for gay attire made her 
conduct suspected. On inquiry, suspicion was 
justified, and Minucia was buried alive.] 

Minccianls (YuvovKiavoc). 1. A Greek rhet- 
orician, was a contemporary of the celebrated 
■rhetorician Hermogenes ofTarsus (flourished 
A.D. 170), with whom he was at variance. — 2. 
An Athenian, the son of Nicagoras, was also a 
Greek rhetorician, and lived "in the reion of 
Gallicnns (A.D. 260-268). He was the author 
of several rhetorical works, and a portion of his 
518 



j Tex v V fo-rofjixri is extant, and is published in the 
! ninth volume of Walz's Rhetorcs Graci. 
Mindcics Augurinus. Vid. Adgurinos. 
Minucius Basilus. Vid. Basilus. 
Minucius Rufus. 1. M., consul B C. 221. 
| when he carried on war against the Istrians 
I In 217 he was magister equitum to the dictator 
| Q. Fabius Maximus. The cautious policy of 
; Fabius displeased Minucius ; and accordingly, 
: when Fabius was called away to Rome, Minu- 
! cius disobeyed foe positive commands of the 
| dictator, and risked a battle with a portion of 
j Hannibal's troops. He w T as fortunate enough 
! to gain a victory ; in consequence of which, he 
I became so popular at Rome that a bill was pass- 
j ed giving him equal military power with the 
j dictator. The Roman army was now divided, 
and each portion encamped separately under its 
I own general. Anxious for distinction, Minu- 
! cius eagerly accepted a battle which was offer- 
I ed him by Hannibal, but was defeated, and his 
troops were only saved from total destruction 
| by the timely arrival of Fabius with all his forces. 
Thereupon Minucius generously acknowledged 
his error, gave up his separate command, and 
placed himself again under the authority of the 
dictator. He fell at the battle of Cannae in 
the following year. — 2. Q., plebeian eedile 201, 
praetor 200, and consul 197, when he carried on 
war against the Boii with success. In 189 he 
i was one of the ten commissioners sent into 
: Asia after the conquest of Antiochus the Great ; 
j and in 183 he was one of the three ambassadors 
; sent into Gaul. — 3. M., praetor 197. — 4: M., trib- 
j une of the plebs 121, brought forward a bill to 
! repeal the laws of C. Gracchus. This Marcus 
, Minucius and his brother Quintus are mention- 
i ed as arbiters between the inhabitants of Genua 
| and the Viturii, in a very interesting inscrip- 
| tion which w 7 as discovered in the year 1506, 
j about ten miles from the modern city of Genoa. 
! — 5. Q., consul 110, obtained Macedonia as his 
j province, carried on war with success against 
the barbarians in Thrace, and triumphed on his 
j return to Rome. He perpetuated the memory 
! of his triumph by building the Porticus Minu- 
I cia, near the Circus Flaminius. 

Minucius Felix. Vid. Felix. 
; MiNYiE (Mtvvai), an ancient Greek race, who 
j originally dwelt in Thessaly. lolcos, in Thes- 
I saly, was one of their most ancient seats. Their 
i ancestal hero, Minyas, is said to have migrated 
\ from Thessaly into the north of Boeotia, and 
j there to have established the empire of the 
Minyae, with the capital of Orchomenos. Vid. 
; Orchomenos. As the greater part of the Argo- 
' nauts w r ere descended from the Minyae, they 
' are themselves called Minyae. The descend- 
| ants of the Argonauts founded a colony in Lem- 
I nos called Minyae. Thence they proceeded to 
I Elis Triphylia. and to the island of Thera. . 

Miny as (Mivvag), son of Chryses, and the an- 
; cestral hero of the race of the Minyae. The ac- 
I counts of his genealogy vary very much in the 
different traditions, for some call him a son 
' of Orchomenus or Eteocles,. others of Neptune 
iToseidon), Aleus, Mars (Ares), Sisyphus, or 
; Halmus. He is further called the husband of 
Trito^enia, Clytodora, or Phanosyra. Orchome- 
nus, Presbon, Athamas, Diochthondas, Eteocly 
I menc, Periclymene, Leucippe, Arsinoe, and Al 



MIROBRIGA. 

cathoi': or Alcithoe, are mentioned as his chil- 
dren. His tomb was shown at Orchomenos in 
Bceotia. A daughter of Minyas was called 

Minyetas (-iuUs) or Mineis (-Uis). Vid. Ov., Met., 
iv., 1, 32. 

MirobkUja. I. A town of the Celtici in Lu- 
sitania, on the coast of the ocean.— 2. A Ro- 
man municipium in the territory of the Turduli, 
in Hispania Baetica, on the road from Emerita 
to Caesaraugusta. 

Misenum (now Punta di Miseno), a promon- 
tory in Campania, south of Cumae, said to have 
derived its name from Misenus, the companion 
and trumpeter of iEneas, who was drowned and 
buried here. The bay formed by this promon- 
tory was converted by Augustus into an excel- 
lent harbor, and was made the principal station 
of the Roman fleet on the Tyrrhene Sea. A 
town sprung up around the harbor, and here the 
admiral of the fleet usually resided. The in- 
habitants were called Misenates and Misenen- 
ses. The Roman nobles had previously built 
villas on the coast. Here was the villa of C. 
Marius, which was purchased by Lucullus, and 
which afterward passed into the hands of the 
Emperor Tiberius, who died at this place. 

[Misexus (Miayvoc). 1. A companion of Ulys- I 
ses.— 2. Pilot of the fleet of JGneas ; according j 
to Virgil, at first a companion and trumpeter of | 
Hector, afterward followed ^Eneas to Italy. Vid. j 
Misenum.] 

Misitheus, the father-in-law of the Emperor j 
Gordian HI., who married his daughter Sabinia ! 
Tranquillina in A.D. 241. Misitheus was a man j 
of learning, virtue, and ability. He was ap- ' 
pointed by his son-in-law praefect of the praeto- 
rians, and effected many important reforms in j 
the royal household. He accompanied Gordian ! 
in his expedition against the Persians, whom he j 
defeated ; but in the course of this war he was j 
out off either by disease or by the treachery of j 
his successor Philippus, 243. 

MlTHKADATES OF MlTII RID ATE S (Mi0pa0aT>/f 01* j 

MidptddTijg ), a common name among the Modes \ 
and Persians, derived from Mitra or Mithra, the j 
Persian name for the sun, and the root da, sig- j 
nifying " to give." Mithradates would there- j 
fore mean, " given by the sun." [The form \ 
Mithradates, which is found on coins, is more j 
correct than Mithridates, though the latter is , 
the usual one in Greek writers.] 1. I. King, I 
or, more properly, satrap of Pontus. was son of ! 
Ariobarzanes L, and was succeeded by Ariobar- 
xanes II., about B.C. 363. The kings of Pontus 
claimed to be lineally descended from one of 
the seven Persians who had conspired against 
the Magi, and who was subsequently establish- 
ed by Darius Hystaspis in the government of j 
the countries bordering on the Euxine Sea. 
Very little is known of their history until after 
the fall of the Persian empire. — 2. II. King of 
Pontus (337-302), succeeded his father Ariobar- 
zanes II., and was the founder of the independ- 
ent kingdom of Pontus. After the death of 
Alexander the Great, he was for a time subject 
to Antigonus ; but during the war between the 
successors of Alexander, he succeeded in es- . 
tablishing his independence. He died at the 
age of 84.-3. III. King of Pontus (302-266), 
son and .successor of the preceding. He en- 
larged his paternal dominions by the aequisi- 



MITHRADATES. 

tion of great part of Cappadocia and Paphlago- 
nia. He was succeeded by his son Ariobar- 
zanes III.— 4 IV. King of Pontus (about 240- 
190), son and successor of Ariobarzanes IIT. 
He gave his daughter Laodice in marriage to 
Antiochus III. He was succeeded by his son 
Pharnaces I.— 5. V. King of Pontus (about 156- 
120), surnamed Euergetes, son and successor 
of Pharnaces I. He was the first of the kings 
of Pontus who made an alliance with the Ro- 
mans, whom he assisted in the third Punic war 
and in the war against Aristonicus (131-129). 
He was assassinated at Sinope by a conspiracy 
among his own immediate attendants. — 6. VI. 
King of Pontus (120-63), surnamed Eupator, 
also Dionysus, but more commonly the Great, 
was the son and successor of the. preceding, 
and was only eleven years old at the period of 
his accession. We have very imperfect infor- 
mation concerning the earlier years of his reign, 
and much of what has been transmitted to us 
wears a very suspicious aspect. We are told 
that immediately on ascending the throne he 
found himself assailed by the designs of his 
guardians, but that he succeeded in eluding all 
their machinations, partly by displaying a cour- 
age and address in warlike exercises beyond 
his years, partly by the use of antidotes against 
poison, to which he began thus early to accus- 
tom himself. In order to evade the designs 
against his life, he also devoted much of his 
time to hunting, and took refuge in the remot- 
est and most unfrequented regions, under pre- 
tence of pursuing the pleasures of the chase. 
Whatever truth there may be in these accounts, 
it is certain that when he attained to manhood 
he was not only endowed with consummate 
skill in all martial exercises, and possessed of 
a bodily frame inured to all hardships, as well 
as a spirit to brave every danger, but his nat- 
urally vigorous intellect had been improved by 
careful culture. As a boy, he had been brought 
up at Sinope, where he had probably received 
the elements of a Greek education ; and so 
powerful was his memory, that he is said to 
have learned not less than twenty-five langua- 
ges, and to have been able, in the days of his 
greatest power, to transact business with the 
deputies of every tribe subject to his rule in, 
their own peculiar dialect. The first steps of 
his career were marked by blood. He is said 
to have murdered his mother, to whom a share 
in the royal authority had been left by Mithra- 
dates Euergetes ; and this was followed by the 
assassination of his brother. In the early part 
of his reign he subdued the barbarian tribes be- 
tween the Euxine and the confines of Armenia, 
including the whole of Colchis and the province 
called Lesser Armenia, and even extended his 
conquests beyond the Caucasus. He assisted 
Parisades, king of the Bosporus, against the 
Sarmatians and Roxolani, and rendered the 
whole of the Tauric Chersonese tributary to his 
kingdom. After the death of Parisades, the 
kingdom of Bosporus itself was incorporated 
with his dominions. He was now in posses- 
sion of such great power that he began to deem 
himself equal to a contest with Rome itself. 
Many causes of dissension had already arisen 
between them, but Mithradates had hitherto 
submitted to the mandates of Rome. Even 

519 



MITHRADATES. 



MITHRADATES. 



after expelling Ariobarzanes from Cappadocia, 
and Nicomedes from Bithynia in 90, he offered 
no resistance to the Romans when they re- 
stored these monarchs to their kingdom. But 
when Nicomedes, urged by the Roman legates, 
invaded the territories of Mithradates, the lat- 
ter made preparations for immediate hostilities. 
His success was rapid and striking. In 88 he 
drove Ariobarzanes out of Cappadocia, and Nic- 
omedes out of Bithynia, defeated the Roman 
generals who had supported the latter, made 
himself master of Phrygia and Galatia, and at 
last of the Roman province of Asia. During 
the winter he issued the sanguinary order to 
all the cities of Asia to put to death, on the 
same day, all the Roman and Italian citizens 
who were to be found within their walls So 
hateful had the Romans rendered themselves, 
that these commands were obeyed with alac- 
rity by almost all the cities of Asia, and eighty 
thousand Romans and Italians are said to have 
perished in this fearful massacre. Meantime 
Sulla had received the command of the war 
against Mithradates, and crossed over into 
Greece in 87. Mithradates, however, had re- 
solved not to await the Romans in Asia, but had 
already sent his general Archelaus into Greece 
at the head of a powerful army. The war proved 
unfavorable to the king. Archelaus was twice 
defeated by Sulla with immense loss nearChae- 
Tonea, and Orchomenos in Bceotia (86). About 
the same time Mithradates was himself defeat- 
ed in Asia by Fimbria. Vid. Fimbria. These 
disasters led him to sue for peace, which Sulla 
was willing to grant, because he was anxious 
to return to Italy, which was entirely in the 
hands of his enemies. Mithradates consented 
to abandon all his conquests in Asia, to pay a 
sum of two thousand talents, and to surrender 
to the Romans a fleet of seventy ships. Thus 
terminated the first Mithradatic war (84). Short- 
ly afterward Murena, who had been left in com- 
mand of Asia by Sulla, invaded the dominions 
of Mithradates (83), under the flimsy pretext 
that the king had not yet evacuated the whole 
of Cappadocia. In the following year (82) Mu- 
rena renewed his hostile incursions, but was 
defeated by Mithradates on the banks of the 
River Halys. But shortly afterward Murena 
received peremptory orders from Sulla to de- 
sist from hostilities ; in consequence of which, 
peace was again restored. This is usually call- 
ed the second Mithradatic war. Mithradates, 
however, was well aware that the peace be- 
tween him and Rome was in fact a mere sus- 
pension of hostilities, and that the republic would 
never suffer the massacre of her citizens in Asia 
to remain ultimately unpunished. No formal 
treaty was ever concluded between Mithradates 
and the Roman senate ; and the king had in vain 
endeavored to obtain the ratification of the 
terms agreed on between him and Sulla. The 
death of Nicomedes III., king of Bithynia, at 
the beginning of 7-1, brought matters to a crisis. 
That monarch left his dominions by will to the 
Roman people ; and Bithynia was accordinglv 
declared a Roman province ; but Mithradates 
asserted that the late king had left a legitimate 
son by his wife Nysa, whose pretensions he im- 
mediately prepared to support by his arms. He 
had employed the last few vears in forming a 
520 



powerful army, armed and disciplined in the Ro- 
man manner ; and he now took the field with 
I one hundred and twenty thousand foot soldiers, 
| sixteen thousand horse, and a vast number of 
| barbarian auxiliaries. This was the commence- 
I ment of the third Mithradatic war. The two 
• Roman consuls, Lucullus and Cotta, were un- 
i able to oppose his first irruption. He traversed 
j Bithynia without encountering any resistance ; 
and when at length Cotta ventured to give him 
battle under the walls of Chalcedon, the consul 
was totally defeated both by sea and land. Mith- 
radates then proceeded to lay si^ge to Cyzicus 
j both by sea and land. Lucullus marched to the 
j relief of the city, cut off the king's supplies, and 
eventually compelled him to raise the siege 
! early in 73. On his retreat Mithradates suf- 
| fered great loss, and eventually took refuge ir, 
| Pontus. Hither Lucullus followed him in the 
next year. The new army which the king had 
j collected Was entirely defeated by the Roman 
: general ; and Mithradates, despairing of oppos- 
ing the further progress of Lucullus, took ref- 
uge in the dominions of his son-in-law Tigranes, 
i the king of Armenia. Tigranes at first showed 
I no disposition to attempt the restoration of his 
j father-in-law ; but being offended at the haugh- 
! ty conduct of Appius Claudius, whom Lucullus 
! had sent to demand the surrender of Mithra- 
dates, the Armenian king not only refused this 
request, but determined to prepare for war with 
the Romans. Accordingly, in 69, Lucullus 
marched into Armenia, defeated Tigranes and 
Mithradates near Tigranocerta, and in the next 
year (68) again defeated the allied monarchs 
\ near Artaxata. The Roman general then turned 
\ aside into Mesopotamia, and laid siege to Nis- 
ibis. Here the Roman soldiers broke out into 
: open mutiny, and demanded to be led home , 
j and Lucullus was obliged to raise the siege, and 
! return to Asia Minor. Meanwhile Mithradates 
' had taken advantage of the absence of Lucul- 
I lus to invade Pontus at the head of a large 
army. He defeated Fabius and Triarius, to 
[ whom the defence of Pontus had been commit- 
' ted ; and when Lucullus returned to Pontus, 
j he was unable to resume the offensive in con- 
\ sequence of the mutinous spirit of his own sol- 
diers. Mithradates was thus able, before the 
' close of 67, to regain possession of the greater 
i part of his hereditary dominions. In the fol- 
lowing year (66) the conduct of the war was in- 
\ trusted to Pompey. Hostilities were resumed 
with greater vigor than ever. Mithradates was 
' obliged to retire before the Romans, but was sur- 
prised and defeated by Pompey ; and as Tigra- 
| nes now refused to admit him into his own do- 
, minions, he resolved to plunge with his small 
army into the heart of Colchis, and thence make 
j his way to the Palus Mseotis and the Cimme- 
| rian Bosporus. Arduous as this enterprise ap- 
peared, it was successfully accomplished ; and 
he at length established himself without oppo- 
sition at Panticapaeum, the capital of Bosporus 
1 He had now nothing to fear from the pursuit of 
Pompey, who turned his arms first against Ti- 
granes, and afterward against Syria. Unable 
to obtain peace from Pompey, except he would 
come in person to make his submission, Mith- 
radates conceived the daring project of march- 
ing round the northern and western coasts of 



MITHRADATIS. 



MNESILOCHUS. 



the Euxine, through the wild tribes of the Sar- 
matians and Getae, and having gathered round 
his standard all these barbarous nations, to pen- 
etrate into Italy itself. But meanwhile disaf- 
fection had made rapid progress among his fol- 
lowers. His son Pharnaces at length openly re- 
belled against him. He was joined both by the 
whole army and the citizens of Panticapamm, 
who unanimously proclaimed him king ; and 
Mithradates who had taken refuge in a strong 
tower, saw that no choice remained to him but 
death or captivity. Hereupon he took poison, 
which he constantly carried with him ; but his 
constitution had been so long inured to antidotes 
that it did not produce the desired effect, and he 
was compelled to call in the assistance of one of 
his Gaulish mercenaries to dispatch him with 
his sword. He died in 63. His body was sent 
by Pharnaces to Pompey at Amisus, as a token 
of his submission ; but the conqueror caused it 
to be interred with regal honors in the sepul- 
chre of his forefathers at Sinope. He was sixty- 
eight or sixty-nine years old at the time of his 
death, and had reigned fifty-seven years, of 
which twenty-five had been occupied, with only 
a few brief intervals, in one continued struggle 
against the Roman power. The estimation in 
which he was held by his adversaries is the 
strongest testimony to his great abilities : Cice- 
ro calls him the greatest of all kings after Alex- 
ander, and in another passage says that he was 
a more formidable opponent than any other 
monarch whom the Roman arms had yet en- 
countered. — 7. Kings of Parthia. Vid. Arsa- 
ces, 6, 9, 13. — 8. Of Pergamus, son of Menodo- 
tus ; but his mother having had an amour with 
Mithradates the Great, he was generally looked 
upon as in reality the son of that monarch. I 
The king himself bestowed great care on his 
education ; and he appears as early as 64 to 
have exercised the chief control over the affairs 
of his native city. At a subsequent period he 
served under Julius Caesar in the Alexandrean 
war (48) ; and after the defeat of Pharnaces in 
the following year (47), Caesar bestowed upon 
Mithradates the kingdom of the Bosporus, and 
also the tetrarchy of the Galatians. But the 
kingdorN of the Bosporus still remained to be 
won, for Asander, who had revolted against 
Pharnaces, was, in fact, master of the whole 
country, and Mithradates having attempted to 
expel Asander, was defeated and slain. 

Mithradatis Regio (Nlidptddrov z^pa), a dis- 
trict of Sarmat ia Asiatica, on the western side 
of the River Rha (now Wolga), so called be- 
cause it was the place of refuge of the last 
Mithradates, in the reign of Claudius. 

Mithras (Mtdpap), the god of the sun among 
the Persians. About the time of the Roman 
emperors his worship was introduced at Rome, 
and thence spread over all parts of the empire. 
The god is commonly represented as a hand- I 
some youth, wearing the Phrygian cap and at- j 
tire, and kneeling on a bull which is thrown on 
the ground, and whose throat he is cutting. 
The bull is at the same time attacked by a dog, \ 
a serpent, and a scorpion. This group appears ! 
frequently among ancient works of art, and a j 
fine specimen is preserved in the British Mu- j 
seum. 

fMiTHRiDATiUM (Midpiddnov), a mountain for- j 



tress in the territory of the Trocmi, on the bor- 
ders of Galatia and Pontus ] 

[Mith robarzanes ( MiBpoGap&vTjc ). 1. Fa- 
ther in-law of Datames, whom he joined in his 
revolt from the Persian king, but afterward 
having deserted with his troops, he was slain 
by Datames— 2. General of the Cappadocian 
forces in the Persian army at the battle of the 
Granicus, where he lost his life.— 3 A general 
of Tigranes, was sent to oppose the Romans 
under Lucullus, but was defeated and slain by 
them] 

[Mitvs, a river of Macedonia, north of the 
Haliacmon, emptied into the Thermaicus Sinus.] 

Mitylene. Vid. Mytilene. 

[Mnasalcas (Mvaod2.Ka<;), an epigrammatic 
poet of Sicyonia, under whose name eighteen 
epigrams are given in Brunck's Analecta. His 
date is uncertain.] 

Mnaseas (Mvaoeac), of Patara in Lycia, not 
of Patrae in Achaia, was a pupil of Eratosthe- 
nes, and a grammarian of considerable celeb- 
rity. He wrote two works, one of a chorograph- 
ical description, entitled Periplus (UepiTT?.ovc) y 
and the other a collection of oracles given at 
Delphi. 

[Mnasippus (Mvuannror), a Spartan naval com- 
mander ; led the Spartan fleet of sixty ships 
against Corcyra, B.C. 373. He was at first suc- 
cessful, but, having relaxed hi? vigilance, he 
was defeated and slain by the Corcyreans.] 

Mneme (MvTjfiT}), i. e., memory, one of the 
three Muses who were in early times worship- 
ped at Ascra in Boeotia. There seems to have 
been also a tradition that Mneme was the moth- 
er of the Muses, for Ovid {Met., v., 268) calls 
them Mnemonides ; unless this be only an 
abridged form for the daughters of Mnemosyne 
Vid. Mus.e. 

Mnemosyne (Mv7] fioovvrj), i. c, memory, daugh- 
ter of Uranus, and one of the Titanides, became 
by Jupiter (Zeus) the mother of *he Muses. 

Mnesarchus (MvTjaapxoc ). 1. Son of Eu- 
phron or Euthyphron, and father of Pythagoras. 
He was generally believed not to have been of 
purely Greek origin. According to some ac- 
counts, he belonged to the Tyrrhenians of Lern- 
nos and Imbros, and is said to have been an 
engraver of rings. According to other accounts, 
the name of the father of Pythagoras was Mar- 
macus, whose father Hippasus came from Phlius. 
— 2. Grandson of the preceding, and son of Py- 
thagoras and Theano. According to some ac- 
counts he succeeded Arista3us as president of 
the Pythagorean school. — 3. A Stoic philoso- 
pher, a disciple of Panaetius, flourished about 
B.C. 110, and taught at Athens. Among his 
pupils was Antiochus of Ascalon. 

Mnesicles (M.vrj(wc?w ). one of the great Athe- 
nian artists of the age of Pericles, was the archi- 
tect of the Propylaa of the Acropolis, the build- 
ing of which occupied five years, B.C. 437-433. 
It is said that, during the progress of the work, 
he fell from the summit of the building, and 
was supposed to be mortally injured, but was 
cured by a herb which Minerva (Athena) show- 
ed to Pericles in a dream. 

[Mnesilochus (Mv7}Gi?.oxor). 1. One of the 
thirty tyrants at Athens.— 2. Son of Euripides 
by Choerile, whose father was also called Mne- 
silochus, is said to have been an actor ; he is 

521 



MNESIMACHUS. 



MGER^B. 



said also to have aided Euripides in the com- 
position of his tragedies ] 

[Mxesimachus (Mvijoifuixog), a comic poet of 
ihe middle comedy, some fragments of whose 
plays are still extant, and are given by Meineke, 
Fragm. Comic. Gr&c, vol. ii., p. 787-793, edit, 
minor.] 

[Mnesithides (Mvijadddrje), one of the thirty 
tyrants at Athens ] 

Mnesitheus (MvrjGtdeoc), a physician, was a 
native of Athens, and lived probably in the 
fourth century B.C., as he is quoted by the 
comic poet Alexis. He enjoyed a great repu- 
tation, and is frequently mentioned by Galen 
and others. 

Mnester (Mv?;ar^p), a celebrated pantomime 
actor in the reigns of Caligula and Claudius, 
was also one of the lovers of the Empress Mes- j 
salina, and was put to death upon the ruin of 
the latter. 

Mnestheus, a Trojan, who accompanied j 
.Eneas to Italy, and is said to have been the an- j 
cestral hero of the Memmii. 

[M nevis (Mi/emc), the name of the sacred 
bull worshipped at Heliopolis. Vid. Heliopo- 
us, No. 2] 

Moabitis (ModSlng, Mo£a : MaaCirai, Moabi- 
tae : in the Old Testament, Moab, for both coun- 
try and people), a district of Arabia Petraea, j 
east of the Dead Sea, from the River Anion 
(now Wady-el-Mojib, the boundary between Pal- \ 
ostine and Arabia) on the north, to Zoar, near i 
the south end of the Dead Sea, on the south, j 
between the Amorites on the north, the Midi- j 
anites on the east, and the Edomites on the 
south, that is, before the Israelitish conquest of j 
Canaan. At an earlier period, the country of 
Moab had extended northward, beyond the 
northern end of the Dead Sea, and along the ! 
eastern bank of the Jordan, as far as the River \ 
Jabbok, but it had been wrested from them by ! 
the Amorites. The plains east of the Jordan ! 
were, however, still called the plains of Moab. 
The Moabites were left undisturbed by the Is- j 
raelites on their march to Canaan : but Balak, 
king of Moab, through fear of the Israelites, did j 
what he could to harm them, first by his vain j 
attempt to induce the prophet Balaam to curse j 
the people whom a divine impulse forced him i 
to bless, and then by seducing them to worship J 
Baal-Peor. Hence the hereditary enmity be- 
tween the Israelites and Moabites, and the ! 
threatenings denounced against Moab by the | 
Hebrew prophets. In the time of the Judges j 
they subdued the southern part of the Jewish 
territory, with the assistance of the Ammonites 
and Amalekites, and held it for eighteen years 
(Judges, iii., 12, foil.). They were conquered 
by David, after the partition of whose kingdom ; 
they belonged to the kingdom of Israel. They 
revolted after the death of Ahab (B.C. 896), and 
appear to have become virtually independent ; 
and after the ten tribes had been carried into 
captivity, the Moabites seem to have recovered 
xhe northern part of their original territory. 
They were subdued by Nebuchadnezzar, with 
ether nations bordering on Palestine, very soon 
after the Babylonian conquest of Judaea, after 
which they scarcely appear as a distinct nation, 
out, after a few references to them, they disap- 
pear in the general name of the Arabians-. The 
522 



name Moabitis, however, was still applied to the 
district of Arabia, between the Arnon (the south- 
ern frontier of Peraea, or Palestine east of the 
Jordan), and the Nabathaei, in the mountains of 
Seir. The Moabites were a kindred race with 
the Hebrews, being descended from Moab, the 
son of Lot. They worshipped Baal-Peor and 
Chemosh with most licentious rites, and they 
sometimes offered human sacrifices. Their 
government was monarchical. They were orig- 
inally a pastoral people ; but the excessive fer- 
tility of their country, which is a mountainous 
tract intersected with rich valleys and numer- 
ous streams, led them to diligence and success 
in agriculture. The frequent ruins of towns 
and traces of paved roads, which still cover the 
face of the country, show how populous and 
prosperous it was. The chief city, Ar or Rab- 
bath-Moab, afterward Areopolis (now ruins at 
Rabba), was about twenty-five miles south of 
the Arnon. 

[Moagetes, tyrant of the Cibyrates, in Upper 
Phrygia, made himself conspicuous by his en- 
mity to Rome during the war with Antiochus 
the Great, for which he was condemned by the 
consul Manlius Vulso to pay a heavy fine ] 

[Moca (Mo/ca, now Mocha), a city of Arabia 
Petraea, which, under the Roman supremacy, 
was regarded as a holy city, and had its own 
laws ; coins of this city of the time of the An- 
tonines and Septimius Severus are still extant.] 
Modestinus, HerennIus, a Roman jurist, and 
a pupil of Ulpian, flourished in the reigns of Al- 
exander Severus. Maximinus, and the Gordians, 
A.D. 222-244. He taught law to the younger 
Maximinus. Though Modestinus is the latest 
of the great Roman jurists, he ranks among the 
most distinguished. There are three hundred 
and forty-five excerpts in the Digest from his 
writings, the titles of which show the extent 
and variety of his labors. 

Modestus, a military writer, the author of a 
Libellus de Vocabulis Rei Militaris, addressed to 
the Emperor Tacit us, A.D. 275. It is very brief t 
and presents no features of interest. Printed, 
in all the chief collections of Scriptores de Re 
Militari. 

Modicia (now Monza), a town in Gallia Trans- 
padana, on the River Lambrus, north of Medio- 
lanum (now Milan), where Theodoric built a 
palace, and Theodolinda, queen of the Lango- 
bards, a splendid church, which still contains 
many of the precious gifts of this queen. 
I Modin (Modeiv, -eciv, or ie'lv), a little village 
l on a mountain north of Lydda or Diospolis, on. 
the extreme northwest of Judaea, celebrated as 
the native place of the Maccabaean family. Its 
exact site is uncertain. 

Mcenos, Mcenis, M^enus, or Menus (now 
! Main), a river in Germany, which rises in the 
Sudeti Montes, flows through the territory of 
the Hermunduri and the Agri decumates of the 
Romans, and falls into the Rhine opposite Mo- 
gontiacum. 

! Mcer.e (Molpai), called Parc^e by the Ro- 
mans, the Fates. Mara properly signifies "a 
j share," and as a personification "the deity who 
I assigns to every man his fate or his share." 
Homer usually speaks of one Mcera, and only 
once mentions the Mcerce in the plural (//., xxiv., 
i 29). In his poems Mcera is fate personified, 



MCESIA. 



which, at the birth of man, spins out the thread 
of his future life, follows his steps, and directs 
the consequences of his actions according to 
the counsel of the cods. But the personifica- 
tion of his Mcrra is not complete ; for he men- 
tions no particular appearance of the goddess, 
no attributes, and no parentage. His Moera is 
therefore quite synonymous with Msa (Alaa). 
In Hesiod the personification of the Mcerae is 
complete. He calls them daughters of Jupiter 
(Zeus) and Themis, and makes them three in 
number, viz., Clotho, or the spinning fate ; | 
Lachesis, or the one who assigns to man his 
fate; and Atropos, or the fate that can not be 
avoided. Later writers differ in their genealogy 
of the Mcerae from that of Hesiod ; thus they 
are called children of Erebus and Night, of Sat- 
urn (Cronos) and Night, of Terra (Ge) and Oce- 
anus, or lastly of Ananke or Necessity. The 
character and nature of the Moerae are different- 
ly described at different times and by different 
authors. Sometimes they appear as divinities 
of fate in the strict sense of the term, and some- 
times only as allegorical divinities of the dura- 
tion of human life. In the former character 
they take care that the fate assigned to every 
being by eternal laws may take its course with- 
out obstruction ; and Jupiter (Zeus), as well as 
the other gods and men, must submit to them. 
They assign to the Erinnyes, who inflict the 
punishment for evil deeds, their proper func- 
tions ; and with them they direct fate accord- 
ing to the laws of necessity, whence they are 
sometimes called the sisters of the Erinnyes. 
These grave and mighty goddesses were repre- 
sented by the earliest artists with staffs or seep- j 
tres, the symbol of dominion. The Moerae, as 
the divinities of the duration of human life, 
which is determined by the two points of birth 
and of death, are conceived either as goddesses 
of birth or as goddesses of death, and hence 
their number was two, as at Delphi, and was 
subsequently increased to three. The distribu- 
tion of the functions among the three was not 
strictly observed, for we sometimes find all 
three described as spinning, although this should 
be the function of Clotho alone, who is, more- 
over, often mentioned alone as the representa- 
tive of all As goddesses of birth, who spin 
the thread of the beginning of life, xand even 
prophesy the fate of the newly born, they are 
mentioned along with Ilithyia, who is called 
their companion. The symbol with which they, 
or rather Clotho alone, are represented to in- 
dicate this function, is a spindle, and the idea 
implied in it was carried out so far, that some- 
times we read of their breaking or cutting off 
the thread when life is to end. Being goddess- j 
es of fate, they must necessarily know the fu- j 
ture, which at times they reveal, and thus be- 
come prophetic divinities. As goddesses of I 
death, they appear together with the Keres and 
(he infernal Erinnyes, with whom they are even 
confounded. For the same reason they, along 
with the Charites, lead Persephone out of the 
lower world into the regions of light. The va- 
rious epithets which poets apply to the Mcerae 
generally refer to the severity, inflexibility, and ! 
sternness of fate. They had sanctuaries in \ 
many parts of Greece. The poets sometimes 
describe them as aged and hideous women, and i 



even as lame, to indicate the slow march of 
fate ; but in works of art they are represented 
as grave maidens, with different attributes, viz., 
Clotho with a spindle or a roll (the book of fate) ; 
Lachesis pointing with a staff to the globe ; and 
Atropos with a pair of scales, or a sun-dial, or 
a cutting instrument. 

Mceris or Myris (Mofptf, Mup*c), a king of 
Egypt, who, Herodotus tells us, reigned some 
nine hundred years before his own visit to that 
country, which seems to have been about B.C. 
450. We hear of Moeris that he formed the 
lake known by his name, and joined it by a 
canal to the Nile, in order to receive the waters 
of the river when they were superabundant, and 
to supply the defect when they did not rise suf- 
ficiently. In the lake he built two pyramids, on 
each of which was a stone statue, seated on a 
throne, and intended to represent himself and 
his wife. 

Mceris (Moijtuc), commonly called Moeris At- 
ticista, a distinguished grammarian, the author 
of a work still extant, entitled Assets 'Arrtjco/, 
though the title varies somewhat in different 
manuscripts. Of the personal history of the 
author nothing is known. He is conjectured to 
have lived about the end of the second century 
after Christ. His treatise is a sort of compar- 
ison of the Attic with other Greek dialects, 
consisting of a list of Attic words and expres- 
sions, which are illustrated by those of other 
dialects, especially the common Greek. Edited 
by Pierson, Lugd. Bat., 1759 ; [reprinted with 
some additions by Koch, Lips., 1831 : and by 
Bekker with Harpocration, Berlin, 1833.] 

Mceris Lacus (Mocpiog or Molpidog 7u[iv)] : 
now Birkct-el-Keroun), a great lake on the west- 
ern side of the Nile, in Middle Egypt, used for 
the reception and subsequent distribution of a 
part of the overflow of the Nile. It was believ- 
ed by the ancients to have been dug by King 
Moeris ; but it is really a natural, and not an 
artificial lake. 

Mcero (Moipu) or Myro (Mupw), a poetess 
of Byzantium, wife of Andromachus, surnamed 
Philologus, and mother of the grammarian and 
tragic poet Homerus, lived about B.C. 300. 
She wrote epic, elegiac, and lyric poems. 

Mcerocles (MoipoKXijg), an Athenian orator, 
a native of Salamis, was a contemporary of De- 
mosthenes, and, like him, an opponent of Philip 
and Alexander. 

Moesia, called by the Greeks Mysia (Mvafat, 
also M. ij h Evpuirr), to distinguish it from My- 
sia in Asia), a country Of Europe, was bounded 
on the south by Mount Haemus, which separated 
it from Thrace, and by Mount Orbelus and Scor- 
dus, which separated it from Macedonia, on the 
west by Mount Scordus and the rivers Drinus 
and Savus, which separated it from Illyricum 
and Pannonia, on the north by the Danube, 
which separated it from Dacia, and on the east 
by the Pontus Euxinus, thus corresponding to 
the present Scrvia and Bulgaria. This country 
was subdued in the reign of Augustus, but does 
not appear to have been formally constituted a 
Roman province till the commencement of the 
reign of Tiberius. It was originally only one 
province, but was afterward formed into two 
provinces (probably after the conquest of Dacia 
by Trajan), called Mcczia Superior and Mocsia 

523 



MOGONTIACUM. 



MONA. 



Inferior, the former being the western, and the 
latter the eastern half of the country, and sepa- 
rated from each other by the River Cebrus or 
Ciabrus, a tributary of the Danube. When Au- 
relian surrendered Dacia to the barbarians, and 
removed the inhabitants of that province to the 
south of the Danube, the middle part of Moesia 
was called Dacia Aureliani ; and this new prov- 
ince was divided into Dacia Ripensis, the district 
along the Danube, and Dacia Interior, the district 
south of the latter as far as the frontiers of Ma- 
cedonia. In the reign ofValens, some of the 
Goths crossed the Danube and settled in Moesia. 
These Goths are sometimes called Mceso-Goths, 
and it was for their use that Ulphilas translated 
the Scriptures into Gothic about the middle of 
the fourth century. The original inhabitants 
of the country, called Mcesi by the Romans, and 
Mysi (Mvcoi) by the Greeks, were a Thracian 
race, and. were divided into several tribes, such 
as the Triballi, Peucini, &c. 

Mogontiacum, Moguntiacum, or Magontia- 
oum (now Mainz or Mayence), a town on the j 
left bank of the Rhine, opposite the mouth of j 
the River Mcenus (now Main), was situated in i 
the territory of the Vangiones, and was subse- 
quently the capital of the province of Germania I 
Prima. It was a Roman municipium, and was 
founded, or at least enlarged and fortified, by ; 
Drusus. It was always occupied by a strong 
Roman garrison, and continued to the downfall 
of the empire to be one of the chief Roman for- j 
tresses on the Rhine. 

Molione. Vid. Molioxes. 

Molioxes or Molionid.e (Mo?uovsc, Mo?uove, 1 
MoTunvldat), that is, Eurytus and Cteatus, so j 
called after their mother Molione. They are j 
also called Actorida or Actoribne ('AnTopiuvs), 
after their reputed father Actor, the husband 
of Molione, though they were generally regard- 
ed as the sons of Neptune (Poseidon). Ac- 
cording to a late tradition, they were born out 
of an egg ; and it is further stated that their 
bodies grew together, so that they had only one 
body, but two heads, four arms, and four legs. 
Homer mentions none of these extraordinary 
circumstances ; and, according to him, the Mo- 
liones, when yet boys, took part in an expedi- 
tion of the Epeans against Neleus and the Pyli- 
ans. They are represented as nephews of Au- 
geas, king of the Epeans. When Hercules 
marched against 1 Augeas, the latter intrusted 
the conduct of the war to the Moliones ; but, 
as Hercules was taken ill, he concluded peace 
with Augeas, whereupon his army was attacked 
and defeated by the Molionidee. In order to 
take vengeance, he afterward slew them near 
Cleonee, on the frontiers of Argolis, when they 
had been sent from Elis to sacrifice at the Isth- 
mian games on behalf of the town. The Mo- 
liones are mentioned as conquerors of Nestor 
in the chariot race, and as having taken part in 
the Calydonian hunt. Cteatus was the father 
of Amphimachus by Theronice, and Eurytus of 
Thalpius by Theraphone. Their sons, Amphim- 
achus and Thalpius, led the Epeans to Troy. 

Molo, surname of Apollonius, the rhetorician 
of PJiodes. Vid. Apollonius, No. 2. 

MoLOCHATH. Vid. MULUCHA. 

[Molois (Mo?i6eic), a little river in Bceotia, 
near Plateeee. on the banks of which stood a 
524 



temple of the Eleusinian Ceres, alluded to in 
the description of the battle of Plataeae ] 

[Molorchus (M6?.opxog), the mythical found- 
er of Molorchia, near Nemea, entertained Her- 
cules when he went against the Nemean lion.] 
Molossi (MoXocooi), a people in Epirus, who 
inhabited a narrow slip of country, called after 
them Molossia (MoXoaala) or Molossis, which 
extended from the Aous, along the western 
bank of the Arachthus, as far as the Ambracian 
Gulf. The Molossi were a Greek people, who 
claimed descent from Molossus, the son of Pyr- 
rhus (Neoptolemus) and Andromache, and are 
said to have emigrated from Thessaly into 
Epirus, under the guidance of Pyrrhus himself. 
In their new abodes they intermingled with the 
original inhabitants of the land and with the 
neighboring Illyrian tribes, in consequence of 
which they w r ere regarded by the other Greeks 
as half barbarians. They were, however, by 
far the most powerful people in Epirus, and 
their kings gradually extended their dominion 
over the whole of the country. The first of 
their kings, who took the title of King of Epi- 
rus, was Alexander, who perished in Italy B.C. 
326. Vid. Epiros. The ancient capital of the 
Molossi was Passaron, but Ambracia afterward 
became their chief town, and the residence of 
their kings. The Molossian hounds were cele- 
brated in antiquity, and were much prized fox- 
hunting. 

[Molossus (MoTiovgoc), son of Pyrrhus and 
Andromache. Vid. Molossi.] 

[Molpadia (M.o?iiradia), an Amazon, slew- An- 
tiope, another Amazon, who had married The- 
seus, and was herself slain by Theseus.] 

[Molus (M6/Lof), son of Deucalion, and fathe2 
of Meriones (Horn ): according to a Cretan 
legend, son of Minos, and brother of Deuca- 
lion.] 

Molycrium (MolvKpeiov, also Mo?LVKpeia, Mo- 
Avupla : N.o7.VKpioc, M.o?,VKpievc, MoAvKpainc), a 
town in the most southerly part of ^Etolia, at 
the entrance of the Corinthian Gulf, gave the 
name of Rhium Molycrium {'Piov Molvupmv) to 
the neighboring promontory of Antirrhium. It 
was founded by the Corinthians, but was after- 
ward taken possession of by the iEtolians. 

Momemphis (Muueuoic : now Panouf-Khct, 01 
Miinouf-el- Seffli, i. e., Lower Memphis), the cap- 
ital of the Nomos Momernphites in Lowe: 
E<jypt, stood on the eastern side of the Lake 
Mareotis. 

Mom us (Mdi/zoc), the god of mockery and cen- 
sure, is not mentioned by Homer, but is called 
in Hesiod the son of Night. Thus he is said to 
have censured in the man formed by Vulcan 
(Hephsestus), that a little door had not been left 
in his breast, so as to enable one to look into 
his secret thoughts. 
' Mona (now Anglesey), an island off the coast 
I of the Ordovices in Britain, was one of the 
1 chief seats of the Druids. It was invaded by 
j Suetonius Paulinas A.D. 61, and was conquer- 
! ed by Agricola, 78. Csesar (B. G., v., 13) er- 
i roneously describes this island as half way be- 
| tween Britannia on ! Hibernia. Hence it has 
! been supposed by some critics that the Mon::. 
i of Caesar is the Isle of Man ; but it is more 
I probable that he received a false report respect- 
I ingr the real position of Mona, especially since 



MOX.ESES. 



MORGANTIUM. 



all other ancient writers give the name of Mona 
to the Isle of Anglesey, and the name of the 
latter island is likely to have been mentioned 
to Caesar on account of its celebrity in connec- 
tion with the Druids. 

Mon^ses. I. A Parthian general, mentioned 
by Horace (Cam., iii., 6, 9), is probably the 
same as Surenas, the general of Orodes, who 
defeated Crassus.— 2. A Parthian noble, who 
deserted to Antony and urged him to invade 
Parthia, but soon afterward returned to the 
Parthian king Phraates.— 3. A general of the 
Parthian king, Vologeses I., in the reign of 
Nero. 

Monapia or Monarina (now Isle of Man), an 
island between Britannia and Hibernia. 

Monda or Munda (now Mondego), a river on 
the western coast of Spain, which flows into 
the ocean between the Tagus and Durius. 

Moneta, a surname of Juno among the Ro- 
mans, by which she was characterized as the 
protectress of money. Under this name she 
had a temple on the Capitoline, in which there 
was at the same time the mint, just as the pub- 
lic treasury was in the temple of Saturn. The 
temple had been vowed by the dictator L. Furius 
in a battle against the Aurunci, and was erect- 
ed on the spot where the house of M. Manlius 
Capitolinus had stood. Moneta signifies the 
mint; but some writers found such a meaning 
too plain. Thus Livius Andronicus used Moneta 
as a translation of Mnemosyne (Mvypoovvy), and 
thus made her the mother of the Muses or Ca- 
menee. Cicero relates that, during an earth- 
quake, a voice was heard issuing from the tem- 
ple of Juno on the Capitol, and admonishing 
(monens) that a pregnant sow should be sacri- 
ficed. A somewhat more probable reason for 
the name is given by Suidas, though he assigns 
it to too late a time. In the war with Pyrrhus 
and the Tarentines, he says, the Romans, being 
in want of money, prayed to Juno, and were 
told by the goddess that money would not be 
wanting to them so long as they would fight 
with the arms of justice. As the Romans by 
experience found the truth of the words of Juno, 
they called her Juno Moneta. Her festival was 
celebrated on the first of June. 

Monima (MovifiT}), a Greek woman, either of 
Stratonicea, in Ionia, or of Miletus, was the 
wife of Mithradates, but was put to death by 
order of this monarch when he fled into Arme- 
nia, B.C. 72. 

Moivrcci Portus, also Herculis Monceci 
Portus (now Monaco), a port-town on the coast 
of Liguria, between Nicaea and Aibium Inteme- 
lium, founded by the Massilians, was situated 
on a promontory (hence the arz Monocci of Virg., 
JEn , vi., 801). and possessed a temple of Her- 
cules Moncecus, from whom the place derived 
its name. The harbor, though small and ex- 
posed to the southeastern wind, was of import- 
ance, as it was the only one on this part of the 
coast of Liguria. 

Montanus, Curtius, was exiled by Nero A. D. 
67, but was soon afterward recalled at his fa- 
ther's petition. On the accession of Vespasian, 
he vehemently attacked in the senate the noto- 
rious delator Aquilius Regulus. If the same 
person with the Curtius Montanus satirized by I 
Juvenal (iv., 107, 131 ; xi., 34), Montanus in I 



j later life sullied the fair reputation he enjoyeu 
in youth ; for Juvenal describes him as a corpu- 
lent epicure, a parasite of Domitian, and a hack- 
neyed declaimer. 

[Montanus, Julius, a versifier of some re- 
pute in the reign of Tiberius, and one of the 
emperor's private friends.] 

Montanus, Voltienus, an orator and declaim- 
er in the reign of Tiberius. From his propen- 
sity to refine upon thought and diction, he was 
named the " Ovid" of the rhetorical schools. 
He was convicted on a charge of majestas, and 
died an exile in the Balearic islands, A.D. 25. 

Mopsia or Mopsopia, an ancient name of Pam- 
phylia, derived from Mopsus, the mythical lead- 
er of certain Greeks who were supposed to have 
settled in Pamphylia, as also in Cilicia and 
Syria, after the Trojan war, and whose name 
appears more than once in the geographical 
names in Cilicia. ( Vid. e. g. Mopsucrene, Mop- 

SUESTIA.) 

Mopsiuji (MoiIjiov : Moipioc), a town of Thes- 
saly in Pelasgiotis, situated on a hill of the 
same name, between Tempe and Larissa. 

Mopsucrene (Morbov Kpijvy or xpf/vac, i. e., the 
Spring of Mopsus), a city of Cilicia Campestris, 
on the southern slope of the Taurus, and twelve 
Roman miles from Tarsus, was the place where 
the Emperor Constantius died, A.D. 364. 

Mopsuestia (Moipov kcria, MoijjoveoTia, i.e., 
the Hearth of Mopsus, also Motpov ttoTilc and 
Moipoc : Motbedryc : Mamistra, in the Middle 
Ages : now Messis), an important city of Cilicia 
Campestris, on both banks of the River Pyr- 
amus, twelve Roman miles from its mouth, on 
the road from Tarsus to Issus, in the beautiful 
plain called to "'h.lfjlov xedlov, was a civitus li- 
bera under the Romans. The two parts of the 
city were connected by a handsome bridge built 
by Constantius over the Pyramus. In ecclesi- 
astical history, it is notable as the birth-place 
of Theodore of Mopsuestia. 

Mopsus (Mdipoc). I. Son of Ampyx or Am- 
pycus by the nymph Chloris. Being a seer, he 
was also called a son of Apollo by Himantis. 
He was one of the Lapithae of CEchalia or Ti- 
taeron (Thessaly), and took part in the combat 
at the wedding of Pirithous. He was one of 
the Calydonian hunters, and also one of the 
Argonauts, and was a famous prophet among 
the Argonauts. He died in Libya of the bite 
of a snake, and was buried there by the Argo- 
nauts. He was afterward worshipped as an 
oracular hero. — 2. Son of Apollo and Manto, the 
daughter of Tiresias, and also a celebrated seer. 
He contended in prophecy with Calchas at Col- 
ophon, and showed himself superior to the lat- 
t ter in prophetic power. Vid. Calchas. He 
was believed to have founded Mallos in Cilicia, 
in conjunction with the seer Amphilochus. A 
dispute arose between the two seers respecting 
the possession of the town, and both fell in 
combat by each other's hand. Mopsus had an 
oracle at Mallos, which existed as late as the 
time of Strabo. 

MORGANTIUM, MoRGANTINA, MuRGANTIA, MoR- 

gentia (NlopyuvTiov, MopyavTt'vy ■ Mopyaurivoc f 
Murgentinus), a town in Sicily founded by the 
Morgetes, after they had been driven out of 
Italy by the CEnotrians. According to Livy 
(xxiv., 27), this city was situated on" the east- 

525 



MORGETES. 



MOSELLA. 



ern coast, probably at the mouth of the Symae- 
thus ; but, according to other writers, it was 
situated in the interior of the island, southeast 
of Agyrium, and near the Symaethus. The 
neighboring country produced good wine. 

Morgetes (hlopyrjTer), an ancient people in 
the south of Italy. According to Strabo they 
dwelt in the neighborhood of Rhegium, but, be- 
ing driven out of Italy by the CEnotrians, cross- 
eof over to Sicily, and there founded the town 
of Morgantiura. According to Dionysius of 
Halicarnassus, Morges was the successor of 
the (Enotrian king Italus, and hospitably re- 
ceived Siculus, who had been driven out of Lati- 
um by the Aborigines, in consequence of which 
the earlier CEnotrians were called Italietes, Mor- 
getes, and Siculi. According to this account, 
the Morgetes ought to be regarded as a branch 
of the CEnotrians. 

Mori a or Morija (Nupiov opog), a mountain 
of Judaea, within the city of Jerusalem, on the 
summit of which the temple was built. Vid. 
Jerusalem. 

[MORICAMBE iEsTUARIUM {MopiKUfiSr] e|?£«S*?)i 

now Morecambe Bay), an estuary or bay on the 
western coast of Britannia.] 

Morime.ve Q^opiuevT]), the northwestern dis- 
trict of Cappadocia, on the banks of the Halys. 
assigned under the Romans to Galatia. Its 
meadows were entirely devoted to the feeding 
of cattle. 

Morini, a people in Gallia Belgica, west of 
the Nervii and Menapii, and the most northerly 
people in all Gaul, whence Virgil calls them 
extremi hominum (Mn., viii., 727). They dwelt 
on the coast, opposite Britain, and at the nar- 
rowest part of the channel between Gaul and 
Britain, which is hence sometimes called Fre- 
tum Morinorum or Morimim. They were a brave 
and warlike people. Their country was cov- 
ered with woods and marshes. Their princi- 
pal town was Gesoriacum. 

[Moritasgus, brother of Cavarinus, king of 
the Senones at the arrival of Cssar in Gaul.] 

Morius (Mupioc), a small river in Bceotia, a 
southern tributary of the Cephisus, at the foot 
of Mount Thurion, near Chaeronea. 

Mormo (Mopuw, also Mopu.o7.vKT], Moppo/b/c- 
eiov), a female spectre, with which the Greeks 
used to frighten children. 

Morpheus (Moppet-;), the son of Sleep, and 
the god of dreams. The name signifies the 
fashioner or moulder, because he shaped or 
formed the dreams which appeared to the 
sleeper. 

Mors, called Thanatos (Qdvaroc) by the 
Greeks, the god of death. In the Homeric po- 
ems Death does not appear as a distinct divin- 
ity, though he is described as the brother of 
Sleep, together with whom he carries the body 
of Sarpedon from the field of battle to the coun- 
try of the Lycians. In Hesiod he is a son of 
Night and a brother of Ker and Sleep, and 
Death and Sleep reside in the lower world. In 
the Alcestis of Euripides, where Death comes 
upon the stage, he appears as an austere priest 
of Hades in a dark robe and with the sacrificial 
sword, with which he cuts off a lock of a dying 
person, and devotes it to the lower world. On 
the whole, later poets describe Death as a sad 
or terrific being (Horat., Carm., i., 4, 13 ; Sat., 
526 



ii., 1. 57) ; but the best artists of the Greeks, 
avoiding any thing that might be displeasing; 
abandoned the idea suggested to them by the 
poets, and represented Death under a more 
pleasing aspect. On the chest of Cypselus,. 
Night was represented with two boys, one black 
and the other white ; and at Sparta there were 
statues of both Death and Sleep. Both were 
usually represented as slumbering youths, or as 
genii with torches turned upside down. There 
are traces of sacrifices having been offered 
to Death, but no temples are mentioned any 
where. 

[Morsimus (Mopcr^of), son of Philocles, and 
brother of Melanthius, a tragic poet, who, as 
well as his brother, was made the object of the 
bitterest attacks of Aristophanes, on account 
of both his dull and lifeless poetry and his de- 
based character.] 

Morychus (Mopi'^of), a tragic poet, a con- 
temporary of Aristophanes, noted especially for 
his gluttony and effeminacy. 

[Morys (Mopvf), son of Hippotion, a Phrygi- 
an, slain by Meriones at the siege of Troy.] 

Mosa (now Maas or Mcuse), a river in Gallia 
Belgica. rises in Mount Vogesus, in the terri- 
tory of the Lingones, flows first northeast and. 
then northwest, and falls into the Vahalis or 
western branch of the Rhine. 

Moscha (Mdo^c : now Muscat), an important 
sea-port on the northeastern coast of Arabia 
Felix, northwest of Syagrus, the easternmost 
promontory of the peninsula (now Ras el-Had) • 
a chief emporium for the trade between India 
and Arabia. 

Moschi (Mo^-oi), a people of Asia, whose ter- 
ritory (?) Mojvt.v?;, Moschorurn Tractus) formed 
originally the southern part of Colchis, but, at 
the time of Augustus, was divided between Col- 
chis, Iberia, and Armenia. 

Moschici Montes or -icus Mons (t« Mogx ( - 
kcl bpr) : now Mcsjidi), a range of mountains ex- 
tending south and southwest from the main 
chain of the Caucasus to that of the Anti-Tau- 
rus, and forming the boundary between Colchis 
and Iberia: named after the Moschi, who dwelt 
among them. Though lofty, they were well 
wooded to the summit, and their lower slopes 
were planted with vines. 

Moschion (Mo^twf), a Greek physician, the 
author of a short Greek treatise " On Female 
Diseases," is supposed to have lived in the be- 
ginning of the second century after Christ. The 
work is edited by Dewez, Vienn., 1793. 

Mosckus (Mocxoc), of Syracuse, a gramma- 
rian and bucolic poet, lived about B.C. 250. 
Suidas says that he was acquainted with Aris- 
tarchus. According to this statement, his date 
ought to be placed later; but he calls himself a 
pupil of Bion in the idyl in which he bewails 
the death of the latter. " Vid. Biox. There are 
four of his idyls extant. He writes with ele- 
gance and liveliness; but he is inferior to Bion. 
and comes still further behind Theocritus. His. 
style labors under an excess of polish and or- 
nament. For editions, vid. Bion, [and add, by 
Hermann, Leipzig, 1849.] 

Mosella (now r Mosel or Moselle), a river in 
Gallia Belgica, rises in Mount Vogesus, flows 
northeast through the territories of the Treviri, 
and falls into the Rhine at Conffuentes (now 



MOSTENI. 



MUMMIUS. 



Coblcnz). This river forms the subject of a de- 
scriptive poem by Ausonius. 

MOSTKNI (MOGTTIVOI, MoOTlVd, MoVOTT/VTJ, Mu<T- 

rfjvv), a city of Lydia, in the Hyrcanian plain, 
goutheast of Thyatira, was one of the cities of 
Asia Minor destroyed by the great earthquake 
of A.D. 17. Its coins are numerous. 

Mosychlis. Vid. Lemnos. 

Mosynosci (MocvvoiKOi, MoocvvotKOi), or Mo- 
syni or Mossyni (Moavvot, NLoocvvoi), a people 
on the northern coast of Asia Minor, in Pontus, 
east of the Chalybes and the city of Cerasus, 
celebrated for their warlike spirit and savage 
customs, which are described by Xenophon 
(Anab., iv., 4 ; v., 4). Their name was derived 
from the conical wooden houses in which they 
dwelt. Their government was very curious : 
a king chosen by them was strictly guarded in 
a house higher than the rest, and maintained at 
the public cost ; but as soon as he displeased 
the commons, they literally stopped the sup- 
plies, and starved him to death. 

Mothone. Vid. Methone. 

Motuca (MoTovKa : Mutycensis : now Modi- 
ea), a town in the south of Sicily, west of the 
promontory Pachynus and near the sources of 
the River Motychanus (now Fiume di Ragusa). 
Since both Cicero and Pliny call the inhabit- 
ants Mutycenses, it is probable that Mutyca is 
the more correct form of the name. This town 
must not be confounded with the more cele- 
brated Motya. 

Motya (Morv?/ : Mo-vaiog), an ancient town 
in the northwest of Sicily, situated on a small 
island (now Isola di Mezzo) only six stadia from 
the coast, with which it was connected by a 
mole. It was founded by the Phoenicians in the 
territory of the Ely mi. It possessed a good 
harbor, and was in early times one of the most 
flourishing cities of Sicily. It afterward passed 
into the hands of the Carthaginians, was taken 
from them by Dionysius of Syracuse, and was 
finally captured by the Carthaginian general 
Himilco, who transplanted all its inhabitants to 
the town of Lilybaeum, which he had founded 
in its neighborhood B.C., 497. From this time 
it disappears from history. 

Motychanus. Vid. Motuca. 

Mucia, daughter of Q. Mucius Scaevola, the 
augur, consul B.C. 95, was married to Cn. Pom- 
pey, by whom she had two sons, Cneius and 
Sextus, and a daughter, Pompeia. She was di- 
vorced by Pompey in 62. She next married M. 
iEmilius Scaurus, a step-son of the dictator 
Sulla. In 39 Mucia went to Sicily to mediate 
between her son Sextus Pompey and Augustus. 
She was living at the time of the battle of Ac- 
tium, 31. Augustus treated her with great re- 
spect. 

Mucianus. 1. P. Licinius Ckassus Dives 
Mucianus, was the son of P. Mucius Scaevola, 
and was adopted by P. Licinius Crassus Dives. 
He was consul B.C. 131, and carried on the war 
against Aristonicus in Asia, but was defeated 
by the latter. He succeeded Scipio Nasica as 
pontifex maximus. He was distinguished both 
as an orator and a lawyer. — 2. Licinius Mucia- 
wus, three times consul, in A.D. 52, 70, and 75. 
On Nero's death in 68, Mucianus had the com- 
mand of the province of Syria, and he rendered 
efficient aid to Vespasian when the latter re- 



solved to seize the imperial throne. As sooq 
as Vespasian was proclaimed emperor, Mucia- 
nus set out for Europe to oppose Vitellius ; but 
the Vitellians were entirely defeated by Anto- 
nius Primus (vid. Primus), before Mucianus en- 
tered Italy. Antonius, however, had to sur- 
render all power into the hands of Mucianus, 
upon the arrival of the latter at Rome. Mucia- 
nus was an orator and a historian. His pow- 
ers of oratory are greatly praised by Tacitus. 
He made a collection of the speeches of the re- 
publican period, which he published in eleven 
books of Acta and three of Epistolce. The sub- 
ject of his history is not mentioned, but it ap- 
pears to have treated chiefly of the East. 

Mucius SciEvoLA. Vid. Scaevola. 

Mugilla (Mugillanus), a town in Latium, near 
Corioli, from which a family of the Papirii prob- 
ably derived their name Mugillanus. 

Mulciber, a surname of Vulcan, which seems 
to have been given to him as an euphemism, that 
he might not consume the habitations and prop- 
erty of men, but might kindly aid them in their 
pursuits. It occurs frequently in the Latin 
poets. 

[Mulius (Mov/uoe). I. Son-in-law of Augeas, 
and husband of Agamede, slain by Nestor. — 2. 
Name of two noble Trojans, of whom one was- 
slain by Patroclus, the other by Achilles. — 3. 
Herald and attendant of the suitor Amphino- 
mus of Dulichium.] 

Mulucha, Malva, or Molochath (MdAo^atf ; 
now Wad el Mvlwia, or Mohalou, or Sourb-ou- 
Herb), the largest river of Mauretania, rising in 
the Atlas, and flowing north by east into the 
Gulf of Melillah, has been successively the 
boundary between the Mauri and the Massae- 
sylii, Mauretania and Numidia, Mauretania Tin- 
gitana and Mauretania Caesariensis, Marocco 
and Algier. Compare Mauretania. 

Mummius. 1. L., tribune of the plebs B.C. 
187, and praetor 177. — 2. L., surnamed Achai- 
cus, son of the last, was praetor 154, when he 
carried on the war successfully in further Spain 
against the Lusitanians. He was consul in 146, 
when he won for himself the surname of Acha- 
icus by the conquest of Greece and the estab- 
lishment of the Roman province of Achaia. 
After defeating the army of the Achaean league 
at the Isthmus of Corinth, he entered Corinth 
without opposition. The city was burned, razed, 
and abandoned to pillage ; the native Corinth- 
ians were sold for slaves, and the rarest speci- 
mens of Grecian art were given up to the 
rapacity of an ignorant conqueror. Polybius 
the historian saw Roman soldiers playing at 
draughts upon the far-famed picture of Bacchus 
(Dionysus) by Aristides ; and Mummius him- 
self was so unconscious of the real value of 
his prize, that he sold the rarer works of paint- 
ing, sculpture, and carving to the King of Per- 
gamus, and exacted securities from the masters 
of vessels who conveyed the remainder to Italy 
to replace by equivalents any picture or statue 
lost or injured in the passage. He remained in 
Greece during the greater part of 145 with the 
title of proconsul. He arranged the fiscal and 
municipal constitution of the newly-acquired 
province, and won the confidence and esteem 
of the provincials by his integrity, justice, and 
equanimity. He triumphed in 145. He was 

527 



MUNATIUS PLANCUS 



MURGIS. 



censor in 142 with Scipio Africanus the youn- 
ger. The political opinions of Mummius in- 
clined to the popular side — 3. Sp.. brother of 
the preceding, and his legatus at Corinth in 
146-145. was an intimate friend of the younger 
Scipio Africanus. In political opinions Spurius 
was opposed to his brother Lucius, and was a 
high aristocrat. He composed ethical and satir- 
ical tpistles, which were extant in Cicero's age, 
and were probably in the style which Horace 
afterward cultivated so successfully. 

Munatius Plancus. Vid. Plancus. 

Munda. 1. A Roman colony and an important 
town in Hispania Bsetica, situated on a small 
river, and celebrated on account of two battles 
fought in its neighborhood, the victory of Cn. 
Scipio over the Carthaginians in B C. 216, and 
the important victory of Julius Caesar over the 
sons of Pompey in 45. The town had fallen 
into decay as early as the time of Pliny. The 
site of the ancient town is usually supposed to 
he the modern village of Monda, southwest of 
Malaga ; but Munda was more probably in the 
neighborhood of Cordova, and there are ruins 
of ancient walls and towers between Martos, 
Alcandete, Espejo, and Baena which are con- 
jectured to be the remains of Munda. — 2. A 
river. Vid. Monda. 

Munychia (Mnwvxt(i)> a hill in the peninsula 
of Piraeus, which formed the citadel of the ports 
of Athens. It was strongly fortified, and is fre- 
quently mentioned in Athenian history. At its 
foot lay the harbor of Munychia, one of the 
three harbors in the peninsula of Piraeus, forti- 
fied by Themistoeles. The names of these 
three harbors were Piraeus, Zea, and Munychia. 
The last was the smallest and the most easter- 
ly of the three, and is called at the present day 
Phanari : Zea was situated between Piraeus and 
Munychia. Most topographers have erroneous- 
ly supposed Phanari to be Phaleron, and Zea to 
be Munychia. The entrance to the harbor of 
Munychia was very narrow, and could be closed 
by a chain. The hill of Munychia contained 
several public buildings. Of these the most 
important were, (1.) A temple of Diana (Arte- 
mis) Munychia, in which persons accused of 
crimes against, the state took refuge : (2 ) The J 
Bendideum, the sanctuary of the Thracian Ar- | 
temis Bendis, in whose honor the festival of 
the Bend idea was celebrated : (3.) The theat re 
on the northwestern slope of the hill, in which I 
the assemblies of the people were sometimes j 
held 

Murcia. Murtea, or Murtia, a surname of | 
Venus at Rome, where she had a chapel in the 
circus, with a statue. This surname, which is 
said to be the same as Myrlea (from myrtus, a 
myrtle), was believed to indicate the fondness 
of the goddess for the myrtle tree. In ancient 
times there is said to have been a myrtle grove 
in the front of her chapel at the foot of the 
Aventine. 

Muroiis, L. Statius, was Caesar's legatus 
B.C. 48, and praetor 45. He went into Syria 
after his year of office expired ; and after Cae- 
sar's death became an active supporter of the 
republican party Cassias appointed him pre- 
fect of the fleet. After the ruin of the republi- 
can party at Philippi in 42, Murcus went over 
to Sextus Pompey in Sicily. Here he was as- 1 
52S 



sassinated by Pompey's order at the instigation 
of his freedman Menas, to whom Murcus had 
borne himself loftily. 

Murena, Licinius. The name Murena, which 
is the proper way of writing the word, not Mu- 
raena, is said to have been given in consequence 
of one of the family having a great liking for 
the lamprey (murena), and building tanks (viva- 
ria) for them. LP., a man of some literary 
knowledge, lost his life in the wars of Marius 
and Sulla, B.C. 82—2 L., brother of the pre- 
ceding, served under Sulla in Greece, in the 
Mithradatic war. After Sulla had made peace 
with Mithradates (84), Murena was left as pro- 
praetor in Asia. Anxious for distinction, Mure- 
na sought a quarrel with Mithradates ; and after 
carrying on the war for two years, was at length 
compelled by the strict orders of Sulla to stop 
hostilities. Vid. p. 520, a. Murena returned 
to Rome, and had a triumph in 81. He proba- 
bly died soon after. — 3. L., son of the last, 
served under his father in the second Mithra- 
datic war, and also under Lucullus in the third. 
Mithradatic war. In 65 he was praetor, in 64 
propraetor of Gallia Cisalpina, and in 63 was 
elected consul with D. Junius Silanus. Servius 
Sulpicius, an unsuccessful candidate, instituted 
a prosecution against Murena for bribery (am- 
bitus), and he was supported in the matter by 
M. Porcius Cato, Cn. Postumius, and Servius 
Sulpicius the younger. Murena was defended 
by Q. Hortensius, M. Tullius Cicero, who was 
then consul, and M. Licinius Crassus. The 
speech of Cicero, which is extant, was deliver- 
ed in the latter part of November. The orator 
handled his subject skillfully, by making merry 
with the formulae and the practice of the law- 
yers, to which class Sulpicius belonged, and 
with the paradoxes of the Stoics, to which sect 
Cato had attached himself. Murena was ac- 
quitted, and was consul in the following year, 
62. — 4. A. Terentius Varro Murena, probably 
the son of the preceding, was adopted by A. Te- 
rentius Varro, whose name he took, according 
to the custom in such cases. In the civil wars 
he is said to have lost his property, and C. Pro- 
culeius, a Roman eques, is said to have given 
him a share of his own property. This Procu- 
leins is called the brother of Varro, but, if we 
take the words of Horace literally (Carm., ii., 
2), Proculeius had more than one brother. It 
is conjectured that this Proculeius was a son 
of the brother of No. 3, who had been adopted 
by one Proculeius. This would make Procu- 
leius the cousin of Varro. It was common 
enough among the Romans to call cousins by 
the name of brothers (frater patruclis and frater). 
In 25 Murena subdued the Salassi in the Alps, 
and founded the town of Augusta (now Aosta) in 
their territory. He was consul sufTectus in 23. 
In 22 he was involved in the conspiracy of Fan- 
nius Caepio, and was condemned to death and 
executed, notwithstanding the intercession of 
Proculeius and Terentia, the sister of Murena. 
Horace (Carm., ii., 10) addresses Murena by the 
name of Licinius, and probably intended to give 
him some advice as to being more cautious in 
his speech and conduct. 

MuRGANTIA. 1. Vid. MORGANTII'M. — 2. A 

town in Samnium of uncertain site. 
Murgis. a town in Hispania Baetica, on the 



MURIDUNUM. 



MUS/E. 



frontiers of Tarraconensis, and on the road from 
Acci to Malaga. 

Muriounum or Moridunum (now Dorchester), 
called Dunium by Ptolemy, the capital of the 
Durotriges in the south of Britain. At Dorches- 
ter there are remains of the walls and the am- 
phitheatre of the ancient town. 

[Mukranus. a companion of Turnus, slain by 
iEneas in Italv.] 

Mursa or MuusTa (now Esseck, capital of Sla- 
vonian an important town in Pannonia Inferior, 
situated on the Dravus, not far from its junction 
with the Danube, was a Roman colony founded 
by the Emperor Hadrian, and was the residence 
of the governor of Lower Pannonia HereMag- 
nentius was defeated by Constantius II., A.D. 
351. 

Mursella, or Mursa Minor, a town in Pan- 
nonia Inferior, only ten miles west of the great 
Mursa. 

Mus, Dbcius. Vid. Decius. 

Musa, Antoxius, a celebrated physician at 
Rome about the beginning of the Christian era. 
He was brother to Euphorbus, the physician to 
King Juba, and was himself the physician to the 
Emperor Augustus. He had been originally a 
slave. When the emperor was seriously ill, and 
had been made worse by a hot regimen and 
treatment, B.C. 23, Antonius Musa succeeded 
in restoring him to health by means of cold 
bathing and cooling drinks, for which service 
he received from Augustus and the senate a 
large sum of money and the permission to wear 
a gold ring, and also had a statue erected in his 
honor near that of .*Esculapius by public sub- 
scription. He seems to have been attached to 
this mode of treatment, to which Horace alludes 
(Epist , i., 15, 3), but failed when he applied it j 
to the case of M. Marcellus, who died under his j 
care a few months after the recovery of Au- 
gustus, 23. He wrote several pharmaceutical \ 
works, which are frequently quoted by Galen, 
but of which nothing except a few fragments 
remain. There are, however, two short Latin 
medical works ascribed to Antonius Musa, but 
these are universally considered to be spurious. 

Musa or Mqza (Movaa, M.ov£a : now probably i 
Moushid, north of Mokha), a celebrated port of 
Arabia Felix, on the western coast, near its 
southern extremity, or, in other words, on the 
eastern shore of the Red Sea, near the Straits 
of Bab-el- Mandcb. 

Mus^e {Mnvoat), the Muses, were, according 
to the earliest writers, the inspiring goddesses 
of song, and, according to later notions, divini- 
ties presiding over the different kinds of poetry, 
and over the arts and sciences. They were 
originally regarded as the nymphs of inspiring 
wells, near which they were worshipped, and 
they bore different names in different places, 
until the Thraco-Bcfiotian worship of the nine 
Muses spread from Boeotia over other parts of 
Greece, and ultimately became generally estab- 
lished. 1. Genealogy of the Muses. The most 
common notion was that they were the daugh- 
ters of Jupiter (Zeus) and Mnemosyne, and born 
in Pieria, at t-he foot of Mount Olympus. Some 
call them the daughters of Ccelus (Uranus) and 
Terra (Gaea), and others daughters of Pierus 
and Antiope, or of Apollo, or of Jupiter (Zeus) 
and Plusia, or of Jupiter (Zeus) and Moneta, 
34 



probably a mere translation of Mnemosyne or 
Mneme, whence they are called Mnemonides, or 
of Jupiter (Zeus) and Minerva, or, lastly, of 
^Ether and Terra (Gaea).— 2 Number of the Mu- 
ses. Originally there were three Muses wor- 
shipped on Mount Helicon in Bceotia, namely, 
Mclete (meditation), Mneme (memory), and Aoide 
(song). Three Muses also were recognized at 
Sicyon and at Delphi. As daughters of Jupiter 
(Zeus) and Plusia we find mention of four Mu- 
ses, viz., Thelxmoe (the heart delighting), Aoide 
(song), Arche (beginning), and Melete. Some 
accounts, in which they are called daughters of 
Pierus, mention seven Muses, viz., Nilo, Tri- 
tone, Asopo, Heptapora, Achclois, Tipoplo, and 
Rhodia ; and others, lastly, mention eight, which 
is also said to have been the number recognized 
at Athens. At length, however, the number 
nine became established throughout all Greece. 
Homer sometimes mentions Musa only in the 
singular, and sometimes Musae in the plural, and 
once only he speaks of nine Muses, though with- 
out mentioning any of their names. Hesiod is 
the first who states the names of all the nine, 
and these nine names became the usual ones. 
They are Clio, Euterpe, Thalia, Melpomene, 
Terpsichore, Erato, Polymnia or Polyhymnia, 
Urania, and Calliope. — 3. Nature and character 
of the Muses. In Homer's poems, they are the 
goddesses of song and poetry, and live in Olym- 
pus. There they sing the festive songs at the 
repast of the immortals. They bring before the 
mind of the mortal poet the events which he 
has to relate, and confer upon him the gift of 
song. The earliest poets in their invocation of 
the Muse or Muses were perfectly sincere, and 
actually believed in their being inspired by the 
goddesses ; but in later times the invocation of 
the Muses was a mere formal imitation of the 
early poets. Thamyris, who presumed to excel 
the Muses, was deprived by them of the gift 
they had bestowed on him, and punished with 
blindness. The Sirens, who likewise ventured 
upon a contest with them, were deprived of the 
feathers of their wings, and the Muses put them 
on their own persons as ornaments. The nine 
daughters of Pierus, who presumed to rival the 
Muses, were metamorphosed into birds. Since 
poets and bards derived their power from the 
Muses, they are frequently called either their 
disciples or sons. Thus Linus is called a son. 
of Amphimarus and Urania, or of Apollo and 
Calliope, or Terpsichore ; Hyacinthus a son of 
Pierus and Clio ; Orpheus a son of Calliope or 
Clio, and Thamyris a son of Erato. These and 
a few others are the cases in which the Muses 
are described as mothers ; but the more gener- 
al idea was, that, like other nymphs, they were 
virgin divinities. Being goddesses of song, 
they were naturally connected with Apollo, the 
god of the lyre, who, like them, instructs the 
bards, and is mentioned along with them even 
by Homer. In later times Apollo is placed in 
very close connection with the Muses, for he 
is described as the leader of the choir of the 
Muses by the surname Musagetes (MovaayeTvc). 
A further feature in the character of the Muses 
is their prophetic power, which belongs to them, 
partly because they were regarded as inspiring 
nymphs, and partly because of their connection 
with the prophetic god of Delphi. Hence they 

529 



MUSiEUS. 



MUTINES. 



instructed, for example, Aristeeus in the art of 
prophecy. As the Muses loved to dwell on 
Mount Helicon, they were naturally associated 
with Bacchus (Dionysus) and dramatic poetry, 
and hence they are described as the compan- 
ions, playmates, or nurses of Bacchus (Diony- 
sus). The worship of the Muses points origi- 
nally to Thrace and Pieria about Mount Olym- 
pus, whence it was introduced into Bceotia ; and 
the names of mountains, grottoes, and wells, 
connected with their worship in the north, were 
likewise transferred to the south. Near Mount 
Helicon, Ephialtes and Otus are said to have 
offered the first sacrifices to them. In the same 
place there was a sanctuary with their statues, 
the sacred wells Aganippe and Hippocrene, and 
on Mount. Libethrion, which is connected with 
Helicon, there was a sacred grotto of the Mu- 
ses. Pierus, a Macedonian, is said to have 
been the first who introduced the worship of 
the nine Muses, from Thrace to Thespise, at the 
foot of Mount Helicon. There they had a tem- 
ple and statues, and the Thespians celebrated a 
solemn festival of the Muses on Mount Helicon, 
called Musca. Mount Parnassus was likewise 
sacred to them, with the Castalian spring, near 
which they had a temple. The sacrifices offer- 
ed to the Muses consisted of libations of water 
or milk, and of honey. The various surnames 
by which they are designated by the poets are 
for the most part derived from the places which 
were sacred to them or in which they were 
worshipped, while some are descriptive of the 
sweetness of their songs. — 4. Representations of 
the Muses in works of art. In the most ancient 
works of art we find only three Muses, and their 
attributes are musical instruments, such as the 
flute, the lyre, or the barbiton. Later artists 
gave to each of the nine sisters different attri- 
butes as well as different attitudes. 1. Calliope, 
the Muse of epic poetry, appears with a tablet 
and stylus, and sometimes with a roll of paper ; 
2. Clio, the Muse of history, appears in a sitting 
attitude, with an open roll of paper, or an open 
chest of books ; 3. Euterpe, the Muse of lyric 
poetry, with a flute ; 4. Melpomene, the Muse of 
tragedy, with a tragic mask, the club of Hercu- 
les, or a sword ; her head is surrounded with 
vine leaves, and she wears the cothurnus ; 5. 
Terpsichore, the Muse of choral dance and song, 
appears with the lyre and the plectrum ; 6. Era- 
to, the Muse of erotic poetry and mimic imita- 
tion, sometimes also has the lyre ; 7. Polymnia 
or Polyhymnia, the Muse of the sublime hymn, 
usually appears without any attribute, in a pen- 
sive or meditating attitude ; 8. Urania, the Muse 
of astronomy, with a staff pointing to a globe ; 
9. Thalia, the Muse of comedy and of merry or 
idyllic poetry, appears with a comic mask, a 
shepherd's staff, or a wreath of ivy. Some- 
times the Muses are seen with feathers on their 
heads, alluding to their contest with the Sirens. 

Mus^eus (Movaalog). 1. A semi-mythological 
personage, to be classed with Olen, Orpheus, and 
Pamphus. He was regarded as the author of 
various poetical compositions, especially as con- 
nected with the mystic rites of Ceres (Demeter) 
at Eleusis, over which the legend represented 
him as presiding in the time of Hercules. He 
was reputed to belong to the family of the Eu- 
molpidse, being the son of Eumolpus and Selene. 



In other variations of the myth he was less def- 
initely called a Thracian. According to other 
legends, he was the son of Orpheus, of whom 
he was generally considered as the imitator and 
disciple. Some accounts gave him a wife De 
ioce and a son Eumolpus. There was a tradi- 
tion that the Museum in Piraeus bore that name 
from having been the place where Musaeus was 
buried. Among the numerous compositions at- 
tributed to him by the ancients, the most cele- 
brated were his Oracles. Onomacritus, in the 
time of the Pisistratida?, made it his business 
to collect and arrange the oracles that passed 
under the name of Musajus, and was banished 
by Hipparchus for interpolating in the collection 
oracles of his own making. — 2. A grammarian f 
the author of the celebrated poem on the loves 
of Hero and Leander. Nothing is known of 
the personal history of the writer ; but it is 
certain that the poem is a late production. 
Some critics suppose that the author did not 
live earlier than the fifth century of our era. 
Edited by Passow, Lips., 1810 ; and by Schae- 
fer, Lips., 1825. 

Musagktes. Vid. Mvsm. 

Musonius Rufus, C, a celebrated Stoic phi- 
losopher, was the son of a Roman eques, and 
was banished by Nero to the island of Gyaros 
in A.D. 66, under the pretext of his having been 
privy to the conspiracy of Piso. He returned 
from exile on the accession of Galba, and seems 
to have been held in high estimation by Vespa- 
sian, as he was allowed to remain at Rome 
when the other philosophers were banished 
from the city. Musonius wrote various philo- 
sophical works, all of which have perished. 

Musti (Modern), a town in the Carthaginian 
territory (Zeugitana), near the River Bagradas ? 
on the road. from Carthage to Sicca Veneria. 
Here Regulus killed an enormous serpent. 

Muthul, a river of Numidia, the boundary 
between the kingdoms of Jugurtha and Adher- 
bal. It is probably the same as the Rubrica- 

TUS. 

[Mutilum, a fortified place in Gallia Cispa- 
dana, between the rivers Gabellus and Scul- 
tenna, answering probably to the modern Mc- 
dolo.'] 

Mutilus, C. Papius, one of the principal Sarn - 
nite generals in the Marsic war, B C 90-89. 

Mutina (Mutinensis : now Modena), an im- 
portant town in Gallia Cispadana, on the high 
road from Mediolanum to the south of Italy, 
was originally a Celtic town, and was the first 
place" which the Romans took away from the 
Boii. It is mentioned at the beginning of the 
second Punic war (B.C. 218) under the name 
of Motina, as a fortified place inhabited by the 
Romans ; but it was not till 183 that it was 
made a Roman colony. Mutina is celebrated 
in the history of the civil war after Caesar's 
death. Decimus Brutus was besieged here by 
M. Antonius from December, 44, to April, 43 ; 
and under its walls the battles were fought in 
which the consuls Hirtius and Pansa perished. 
Hence this war was called the Bellum Mutt- 
nense. The best wool in all Italy came from 
the neighborhood of Mutina. 

[Mutines (Movrivac, or Mvttovoc, Polyb.), a 
Lybio-Phcenician, an active and able officer of 
Hannibal, selected by him to take command in 



MTJTUNUS 



MYGDON. 



Sicily after the death of Hippocrates. He prov- 
ed a source of great annoyance to the Romans, 
and baffled all their efforts to capture or subdue 
him ; but at length, having been superseded 
through the jealousy of Hanno, he betrayed 
Agrigentum into the hands of the Romans, who 
rewarded him with the rights of citizenship, 
and bestowed other honors on him.] 

M0tun'ls or Mltixl-s, was among the Ro- 
mans the same as the phallus, orPriapus, among 
the Greeks, and was believed to be the most 
powerful averter of demons, and of all evil that 
resulted from pride, boastfufness, and the like. 
[Mutyca. Vid. Motuca.] 
[Muziris (MovCiptg or Mwfyvpir : now Mird- 
jan), a port of the district Limyrica, on the 
west coast of India intra Gangem, five hundred 
stadia (fifty geographical miles) east of Tyndis, 
where vessels usually landed.] 

Mycale (Mvku?i?7 : now Samsun), a mountain 
in the south of Ionia in Asia Minor, north of 
the mouth of the Maeander. It forms the west- 
ern extremity of Mount Messogis, and runs far 
out into the sea, opposite to Samos, forming a 
sharp promontory, which was called Mycale or 
Trogilium (Tpuyiltov, Tpoyvliov : now Cape S. 
Maria). This cape and the southeast promon- 
tory of Samos (Posidoniurn) overlap one an- 
other, and the two tongues of land are separat- 
ed by a strait only seven stadia (little more than 
three fourths of a mile) in width, which is re- 
nowned in Greek history as the scene of the 
victory gained over the Persian fleet by Leo- 
tychides and Xanthippus, B.C. 479. There 
seems to have been a city of the same name 
on or near the promontory. On the northern 
side of the promontory, near Priene, was the 
great temple of Neptune (Poseidon), which was 
the place of meeting for the Panionic festival 
and Amphictyony. 

Mycalessus (MvKahjaaug : Mvnahr/Gaioc), an 
ancient and important city in Boeotia, mention- 
ed by Homer, was situated on the road from 
Aulis to Thebes. In B.C. 413 some Thracian 
mercenaries in the pay of Athens surprised and 
sacked the town, and butchered the inhabitants. 
From this blow it never recovered, and was in 
ruins in the time of Pausanias. It possessed a 
celebrated temple of Ceres (Demeter), who was 
hence surnamed Mycalessia. 

Mycenae, sometimes Mycene (Nvtc/jvat, Mu- 
KTjvri : MvKTjvaiog : now Karvata), an ancient 
town in Argolis, about, six miles northeast of 
Argos, is situated on a hill at the head of a nar- 
row valley, and is hence described by Homer 
as " in a recess (uvx<?) of the Argive land :" 
hence the etymology of the name. Mycenae is 
said to have been founded by Perseus, and was 
subsequently the favorite residence of the Pe- 
lopidae. During the reign of Agamemnon it 
was regarded as the first city in all Greece, 
but after the conquest of Peloponnesus by the 
Dorians it ceased to be a place of importance. 
It still, however, continued an independent town 
till B.C. 468, when it was attacked by the Ar- 
rives, whose hatred the Mycenaeans are said to 
have incurred by the part they took in the Per- 
sian war in favor of the Greek cause. The 
massive walls of Mycenae resisted all the at- 
tacks of the Argives ; but the inhabitants were 
at length compelled by famine to abandon their 



town. They effected their escape without a 
; surrender, and took refuge, some at Cleonae, 
j some in Achaia, and others in Macedonia. My- 
cenae was now destroyed by the Argives and 
| was never rebuilt ; but there are still numerous 
remains of the ancient city, which, on account 
of their antiquity and grandeur, are some of 
the most interesting in all Greece. Of these 
the most remarkahle are the subterranean vault, 
commonly called the "Treasury of Atreus," but 
which was more probably a sepulchre, and the 
Gate of Lions, so called from two lions sculp- 
tured over the gate. 

Mycene QAvutjvtj), daughter of Inachus and 
wife of Arestor, from whom the town of My- 
cenae was believed to have derived its name : 
the true etymology of the name is given above. 

Mycerinus or Mecherinus (MvKsplvo^, Me^e- 
plvos), son of Cheops, king of Egypt, succeeded 
his uncle Chephren on the throne. His con- 
duct formed a strong contrast to that of his fa- 
ther and uncle, being as mild and just as theirs 
had been tyrannical. On the death of his daugh- 
ter, he placed her corpse within the hollow body 
of a wooden cow, which was covered with gold. 
Herodotus tells us that it was still to be seen 
at SaTs in his time. We further hear of My- 
cerinus that, being warned by an oracle that he 
should die at the end of six years, because he 
had been a gentle ruler and had not wreaked 
the vengeance of the gods on Egypt, he gave 
himself up to revelry, and strove to double his 
allotted time by turning night into day. He 
began to build a pyramid, but died before it 
was finished. It was smaller than those of 
Cheops and Chephren, and, according to Herod- 
otus, was wrongly ascribed by some to the 
Greek hetaera Rhodopis. 

[Mychus (Uvxosh a harbor in the east of 
Phocis, on the Crissaean Gulf, probably the mod- 
ern Zalitza.] 

[Myci (Uvkoi), a people of Asia, belonging to 
the fourteenth satrapy of the Persian empire.] 

Myconus (MvKovog : Mvicovior : now Mycono), 
a small island in the ^Egean Sea, one of the 
Cyclades, southeast of Tenos and east of Delos, 
never attained any importance in history, but is 
celebrated in mythology as one of the places 
where the giants were defeated by Hercules. 
The island was poor and unproductive, and its 
inhabitants were rapacious. It contained two 
towns, a promontory called Pkorbia, and a 
mountain named Dimasius. The large num- 
ber of bald persons in this island was consid- 
ered worthy of record by several ancient writ- 
ers. 

[Mydox (MvScjv). 1. Son of Atymnius, char- 
ioteer of Pylaemenes, a Trojan warrior, slain by 
Antilochus.— 2. Another Trojan warrior, slain 
by Achilles.] 

[Myecphorites Nomos (MvEK<j>opiT7}<; vop.6$), 
a tract of Lower Egypt, opposite the city of 
Bubastis, on an island, and probably so called 
from a city Myecphoris.] 

Mygdon (Mi)yck)i;). 1. Son of Acmon, a Phryg- 
ian king, who fought with Otreus and Priam 
against the Amazons, and from whom some of 
the Phrygians are said to have been called Myg- 
donians. He had a son Corcebus, who is hence 
called Mygdonidcs. — [2. King of the Behrycians, 
brother of Amycus, slain by Hercules when on 

531 



MYGDONIA. 



MYRINA. 



his expedition after the girdle of the Amazon ; My on or Myoxia (Mwwv, Mvovm : Uvovevg). 
ffippolyte.] a town of the Locri Ozolae. situated on a con- 

Mygdonia (Mvydovia: Mvydovec). 1- A dis- j siderable height thirty stadia from Amphissa- 
trict in the east of Macedonia, bordering on the j and in one of the passes which led from^Etolia 
Thermaic Gulf and the Chalcidic peninsula. | into Phocis. 

Its people were of Thracian origin. — 2. A dis- j Myonnesus (yivovvijooc : now Cape Hypsili), 
trict in the north of Asia Minor, between Mount a promontory of Ionia, with a town and a little 
Olympus and the coast, in the east of Mysia and ; island of the same name, south of Teos and 
the west of Bithynia, named after the Thracian : west of Lebedus, and forming the northern 
people Mygdones, who formed a settlement headland of the Gulf of Ephesus. Here the 
here, but were afterward subdued by the Bi- i Romans, under the praetor L. ^Emilius, gained 
thyni. — 3. The northeastern district of Mesopo- j a great naval victory over Antiochus the Great, • 
tatnia, between Mount Masius and the Chabo- I B.C. 190. 

ras, which divided it from Osroene. From its j Mvos Hormos (6 Mvbc opixoc, i.e., Mouse-port, 
great fertility, ir was also called Anthemusia : or, as others render it, Muscle-port, for five is 
{\\v8efj.oviLa). The name of Mygdonia was first j also the Greek for muscle, and this shell-fish is 
introduced after the Macedonian conquests : in . very common on the western coast of the Red 
the passage of Xenophon (Anab., iv.. 3), some- ; Sea), afterward Veneris Portus ('Appodirj^ 
times cited to prove the contrary, the true read- j bpuuc), an important sea-port town of Upper 
ing is ~Mapi)6vioL, not Mvydovioi. I Egypt, built by Ptolemy II. Philadelphus on a 

[Mygdomus (yivydovioc : now probably Jakh- ' promontory of the same name, six or seven 
jakhah), an eastern tributary of the Chaboras, j days' journey from Coptos. Some of the best 
flowing by the walls of Nisibis Vid. Aborrhas.] modern geographers identify the port with Kos- 

Myia (Mffa), daughter of Pythagoras and seir (latitude 26° 10'), which is still an import- 
Theano, and wife of Milo of Crotona. A let- ant port of the Red Sea, and the place of em- 
ter, addressed to a certain Phyllis, is extant barkation for the caravan to Mecca. Kosseir 
under her name. j lies due east of Coptos, and is connected with 

Myl^: (M.v/ml : Mv/.aioc, TAvXatrnf). 1. (Now j it by a valley, which contains traces of an an- 
Mdazzo), a town on the eastern part of the j cient road, and which still forms the route of 
northern coast of Sicily, situated on a promon- i the Mecca caravan. At the village of Abu- 
tory running out far into the sea, with a harbor ' Shaar, near Kosseir, are extensive ruins, which 
and a citadel. It was founded by Zancle (Mes- , are supposed to be the remains of the town of 
sana), and continued subject to the latter city, j Myos Hormos. Others, however, place it a 
It was offMylae that Agrippa defeated the fleet ; degree further north, in latitude 27° 10', oppo- 
of Sextus Pompeius, B.C. 36. — 2. A town of : site the Jaffatine islands. 

Thessaly, in Magnesia, of uncertain site. Myka or Myron (tu and ?) Mvpa, ij Mvpov : 

Mylasa or Mylassa (tu Mv?.aca, MvXaaoa : Mvpevc: now Myra, Grk., Dembre, Turk., ruins), 
"BLvXaGEve : now Melasso, ruins), a very ancient one of the chief cities of Lycia, and, under the 
-and flourishing inland city of Caria, lay eighty later Roman empire, the capital of the province, 
stadia (eight geographical miles) from the coast was built on a rock twenty stadia (two geo- 
at the Gulf of Iassus, in a fertile plain, on and graphical miles) from the sea, and had a port 
aX the foot of an isolated rock of beautiful white called Andriaca (' AvdpiaK7j). St. Paul touched 
marble, which furnished the material for the j here on his voyage as a prisoner to Rome, and 
splendid temples and other public buildings of ! the passage where this is mentioned (Acts, 
the city. The most important of these build- ! xxvii., 5, 6) affords incidental proof that the 
ings was the great national temple of Jupiter ; place was then an important sea-port. There 
(Zeus) Carius or Osagon. Vid. Caria. Mylasa ; are still magnificent ruins of the city, in great 
was the birth-place and capital of Hecatomnus. 1 part hewn out of the rock. 
Under the Romans it was made a free city. In ! [Myrcinus (Mvpscvoc), a small city and for- 
the civil wars it was taken and partly destroy- j tress of Thrace, on the Strymon, founded by 
ed by Labienus. Its remains are very exten- j the Milesian Histiseus, with the consent of Da- 
sive, and the ruins of the temp] Q of Jupiter rius, as the capital of a small principality in 
(Zeus) are supposed to have been found on the these regions : it fell, however, into the hands 
rock which formed the Acropolis of the ancient j of the Edoni, who made it their capital and the 
city. j residence of their princes ] 

Myndus 0&vv6og : Mvvdioc : now probably j Myriandrus (Mvpiavdpoc), a Phoenician col- 
Port Gumishlu, ruins), a Dorian colony on the ony in Syria, on the eastern side of the Gulf 
coast of Caria, in Asia Minor, founded by set- \ of Issus. a day's journey from the Cilician 
tiers from Trcezene, probably on the site of an Ga^es. It probably stood a little south of Alex- 
old town of the Leleges, which continued to andrea, at a spot where there are ruins. He- 
exist under the name of Palasmyndus. Myn- i rodotus calls the Gulf of Issus 6 ^lapiavdmoe 
-■dus stood at the western extremity of the same ; ko?-oc, a name evidently derived from this 
peninsula on which Halicarnassus stood. It ' place, with a slight variation of form, 
was not one of the cities of the Dorian Hexapo- ! Myricus (MvpiKovc), a city on the coast of 
lis, but never became a place of much import- | Troas, opposite to Tenedos. 
ance. Myrina (o Mvplva, or ^Ivpiva, Mvpivva, Mv- 

[Mynes (yivvTjg), son of Euenus of Lyrnessus, j pivrj : Mvpivaiog). 1 (Now Sandarlik?). a very 
husband of Briseis, slain by Achilles, who car- i ancient and strongly fortified city on the west- 
jried off captive his beautiful widow, ihe occa- ; ern coast of Mysia, founded, according to my th- 
sion of the quarrel between him and Agamem- ical tradition, by Myrinus or by the Amazon 
Jion ] , Myrina, and colonized bv the .Eolians, of whose 

532 



MYRINA. 



MYRTIS. 



confederacy it formed a member. It was also 
called Smyrna, and, under the Roman empire, 
Sebastopolis : it was made by the Romans a 
civitas libera. It was destroyed by earthquakes 
under Tiberius and Trajan, but each time re- 
built. It was the birth-place of the epigram- 
matic poet Agathias.— 2. Vid. Lemnos. 

[Myrina (Mvpiva), an Amazon, said to have 
given name to the city Myrina, No. 1 : she is 
mentioned in the Iliad (ii., 814).] 

Myrlea (M0pA«a : Mvpfcdvoc : ruins at Ama- 
poli, a little distance inland from Mudanieh), a 
city of Bithynia, not far from Prusa, founded by 
the Colophonians, and almost rebuilt by Prusias 
I., who called it Apamea after his wife. The 
Romans colonized it under Julius Caesar and 
Augustus. 

Myrmecides (MvpprjKidric), a sculptor and en- 
graver, of Miletus or Athens, is generally men- 
tioned in connection with Callicrates, like whom 
he was celebrated for the minuteness of his 
works. Vid. Callicrates. His works in ivory 
are so small that they could scarcely be seen 
without placing them on black hair. 

Myrmecium (MvpfiTjKiov), a Scythian or Cim- 
merian town of the Chersonesus Taurica, sit- 
uated on a promontory of the same name at the 
narrowest part of the Bosporus, opposite the 
Achilleum in Asia. 

Myrmidon (Mvpuiduv), son of Jupiter (Zeus) 
and Eurymedusa, daughter of Clitos, whom Ju- 
piter (Zeus) deceived in the disguise of an ant. 
Her son was for this reason called Myrmidon 
(from pvpfiT)^, an ant), and was regarded as the 
ancestor of the Myrmidons in Thessaly. He 
was married to Pisidice, by whom he became 
the father of Antiphus and Actor. 

Myrmidones (M»p/«(Wvec), an Achaean race in 
Phthiotis in Thessaly, whom Achilles ruled over, 
and who accompanied this hero to Troy. They 
are said to have inhabited originally the island 
of iEgina, and to have emigrated with Peleus 
into Thessaly ; but modern critics, on the con- 
trary, suppose that a colony of them emigrated 
from Thessaly into /Egina. The Myrmidones 
disappear from history at a later period. The 
ancients derived their name either from a myth- 
ical ancestor Myrmidon, or from the ants (/nvp- 
firjKec) in ^Egina, which were fabled to have 
been metamorphosed into men in the time of 
vEacus. Vid. .'Eacus. 

[Myro (Mupo). Vid. Mcero.] 

Myron (Mvpuv). 1. Tyrant of Sicyon, the 
father of Aristonymus, and grandfather of Clis- 
thenes. He gained the victory at Olympia in 
the chariot-race in B.C. 648 — 2. One of the 
most celebrated of the Greek statuaries, and 
also a sculptor and engraver, was born at Eleu- 
therae, in Bceotia, about 480. He is also call- 
ed an Athenian, because Eleutherae had been 
admitted to the Athenian franchise. He was 
the disciple of Ageladas, the fellow-disciple of 
Polycletus, and a younger contemporary of 
Phidias. He flourished about 431, the time of 
the beginning of the Peloponnesian war. The 
chief characteristic of Myron seems to have 
been his power of expressing a great variety 
of forms Not. content with the human figure 
in its most difficult and momentary attitudes, 
he directed his art toward various other ani- 
mals, and he seems to have been the first great 



artist who did so. His great works were near- 
ly all in bronze. The most celebrated of his 
statues were his Discobolus and his Cow. Of 
his Discobolus there are several marble copies in 
existence. It is true that we can not prove by 
testimony that any of these alleged copies were 
really taken from Myron's work, or from imita- 
tions of it ; but the resemblance between them, 
the fame of the original, and the well-known 
frequency of the practice of making such mar- 
ble copies of celebrated bronzes, all concur to- 
put the question beyond reasonable doubt. Of 
these copies we possess one in the Townley 
Gallery of the British Museum, which was 
found in the grounds of Hadrian's Tiburtine 
Villa in 1791. The Cow of Myron appears to- 
have been a perfect work of its kind. It was 
celebrated in many popular verses, and the 
Greek Anthology still contains no less than 
thirty- six epigrams upon it. The Cow was rep- 
resented as lowing, and the statue was placed 
on a marble base, in the centre of the largest 
open place in Athens, where it still stood in the 
time of Cicero. In the time of Pausanias it 
was no longer there ; it must have been re- 
moved to Rome, where it was still to be seen 
in the temple of Peace in the time of Pro- 
copius. — 3. Of Priene, the author of an histor- 
ical account of the first Messenian w r ar, proba- 
j bly lived not earlier than the third century B.C. 

Myronides (Mvpuvtd7]c), a skillful and suc- 
cessful Athenian general. In B.C. 457 he de- 
feated the Corinthians who had invaded Me* 
; garis, and in 456 he defeated the Boeotians at 
! CEnophyta. 

Myrriia (Mv/ipo) or Smyrna, daughter of Gin- 
yras and mother of Adonis. For details-, vid- 
Adonis. 

Myrrhinus (ttvppivovg : Mvfijiivovcioc), a d'e- 
j mus on the eastern coast of Attica, belonging 

to the tribe Pandionis, a little south of the prom- 
j ontory Cynosura. It is said to have been built 
I by a hero Colaenus, and it contained a temple 
| of Diana (Artemis) Colaenis. 

Myrsilus (Mvpat/.of). 1. Vid. Candaules. — 
j 2. A Greek historical writer of uncertain date, 
j a native of Lesbos, from whom Dronysius of 

Halicarnassus borrowed a part of his account 

of the Pelasgians. 

Myrsinus. Vid. Myrtuxtium. 
! Myrtilis, a town of the Turdetani, on the 

Anas in Lusitania, possessing the Jus Latii. 
j Myrtilus (Mi/pnAoc), son of Mercury (Her- 
I mes) by Cleobule, Clytia, Phaethusa, or Myrto. 
| He was the charioteer of OEnomaus, king of 
! Elis, whom he betrayed when Pelops contend- 
' ed with his master in the chariot-race. He was 
| afterward thrown into the sea by Pelops near 
J Geraestus in Eubcea ; and that part of the 
' iEgean is said to have thenceforth been called 
' after him the Myrtoan Sea. Vid. G^nomacs, 

Pelops. At the moment he expired he pro- 
! nounced a curse upon the house of Pelops, 
J which was henceforward tormented by the 
J Erinnyes. His father placed him among the 
j stars as auriga. 

Myrtis (Mvpnc), a lyric poetess, a native of 
i Anthedon in Boeotia. She was reported to have 
i been the instructress of Pindar, and to have 
j contended with him for the palm of superiority 
i This is alluded to in an oxtant fragment of Co- 

533 



MYRTO. 



MYSIA. 



rinna. There vveve statues in honor of her in 
various parts of Greece. 

[Mvbto (MvpTu). 1. Daughter of Aristides, 
the grandson of Aristides the Just, married, ac- 
cording to one account, hy Socrates while Xan- 
thippe was living. Boeckh thinks she was his 
first wife.— 2. Vid. Myrtoum Mare.] 

Myrtoum Maiie (tu Mvprtiov x&ayog), the 
part of the yEgean Sea south of Euhoea, Atti- 
ca, and Argolis, which derived its name from 
the small island Myrtus, though others suppose 
it to come from Myrtilus, whom Pelops threw 
into this sea, or from the maiden Myrto. 

Myrtuntium (MvpTovvriov : Mvprovaioc), call- 
ed Myrsinus (Mvpatvog) in Homer, a town of the 
Epeans in Elis, on the road from Elis to Dyme. 

Myrtus. Vid. Myrtoum Mare. 

Mys (Mi)f), an artist in the toreutic depart- 
ment, engraved the battle of the Lapitha? and 
the Centaurs and other figures on the shield of 
Phidias's colossal bronze statue of Minerva 
(Athena) Promachos in the Acropolis of Ath- 
ens. He is mentioned as one of the most dis- 
tinguished engravers by several ancient writers. 

Myscelus (Mvoke'Aoc or Mu<7/ce/Uof), a native 
of Achaia, and, according to Ovid (Metam., xv., 
1), an Heraclid, and the son of an Argive named 
Alemon. He founded Croton in Italy, B.C. 710, 
in accordance with the Delphic oracle. The or- 
acle had commanded him to build a city where 
he should find rain with fine weather. For a 
long time he thought it impossible to fulfill the 
command of the oracle, till at length he found 
in Italy a beautiful woman in tears ; whereupon 
he perceived that the oracle was accomplished, 
and straightway founded Croton on the spot. 

Mysi (Mvaol), one of the Thracian tribes who 
seem to have crossed over from Europe into 
Asia Minor before recorded history begins. 
They appear to be the same people as the Mcesi 
(in Creek also Mvooc), on the banks of the Dan- 
ube. Vid. Mossia. They stand in close con- 
nection with the Teucri. These two communi- 
ties appear to have moved from the banks of 
the Strymon to the southeast of Thrace, forc- 
ing the Bithyni over the Thracian Bosporus 
into Asia, and then to have crossed over into 
Asia themselves, by way of the Thracian Bos- 
porus, and to have settled on the southeastern 
shore of the Propontis, as far west as the River 
Rhyndacus (the rest of the Asiatic coast of the 
Propontis and the Hellespont being occupied by 
Phrygians), and also in the eastern and south- 
ern parts of the district afterward called Mysia, 
in the mountains called Olympus and Temnus, 
and on the southern side of Ida. The Teu- 
crians obtained a permanent footing also on the 
northern side of Ida, in the Troad. Being after- 
ward driven westward over the Rhyndacus by 
the Bithynians, and hemmed in on the west and 
north by the yEolian colonies, the Mysians may 
be regarded as about shut up within the ranges 
of Ida and Olympus on the north and northeast, 
and Temnus on the south. They were a sim- 
ple pastoral people, low in the scale of civiliza- 
tion. Their language and religion bore a strong 
resemblance to those of their neighbors, the 
Phrygians and Lydians, who were of the same 
Thracian origin as themselves, and hence arose 
the error, which is found in Herodotus, of de- 
riving them directly from the Lydians. 
534 



Mysia (?) Mvata, poet. Mval^ ala : Mvnof, My- 
sus and Mysius: now Chan Karasi, the north- 
western district of Anadoli), a district of Asia 
Minor, called, also, the Asiatic Mysia (Mvaia i t 
'Acrmvr}), in contradistinction to Mcesia on the 
banks of the Danube. Originally it meant of 
course the territory of the Mysi, but in the 
usual division of Asia Minor, as settled under 
Augustus, it occupied the whole of the north- 
western corner of the peninsula, between the 
Hellespont on the northwest ; the Propontis on 
the north ; the River Rhyndacus and Mount 
Olympus on the east, which divided it from By- 
thynia and Phrygia ; Mount Temnus, and an 
imaginary line drawn from Temnus to the 
southern side of the Elaitic Gulf on the south, 
where it bordered upon Lydia, and the ^Egean 
Sea on the west. It was subdivided into five 
parts : (1.) Mysia Minor (M. r] fwcpa), along the 
northern coast. (2.) Mysia Major (M. ij p.e- 
yalri), the southeastern inland region, with a 
small portion of the coast between the Troad 
and the iEolic settlements about the Elaitic 
Gulf. (3.) Troas (t) Tpudg), the northwestern 
angle, between the iEgean and Hellespont, and 
the southern coast along the foot of Ida. (4.) 
^Eolis or jEolia (rj kiol'it; or Alo2.ca), the south- 
ern part of the western coast, around the Ela- 
*itic Gulf, where the chief cities of the ^Eolian 
confederacy were planted, but applied in a wider 
sense to the western coast in general. And (5.) 
Teutiirania (tj TevOpavla), the southwestern an- 
gle, between Temnus and the borders of Lydia, 
where, in very early times, Teuthras was said 
to have established a Mysian kingdom, which 
was early subdued by the kings of Lydia ; this 
part was also called Pergamene, from the cel- 
ebrated city of Pergamus, which stood in it. 
This account applies to the time of the early 
Roman empire ; the extent of Mysia, and its 
subdivisions, varied greatly at other times. In 
the heroic ages we find the great Teucrian mon- 
archy of Troy in the northwest of the country, 
and the Phrygians along the Hellespont ; as to 
the Mysians, who appear as allies of the Tro- 
jans, it is not clear whether they are Europeans 
or Asiatics. The Mysia of the legends respect- 
ing Telephus is theTeuthranian kingdom in the 
south, only with a wider extent than the later 
I Teuthrania. Under the Persian empire, the 
j northwestern portion, which, was still occupied 
| in part by Phrygians, but chiefly by ^Eolian set- 
! tlements, was called Phrygia Minor, and by the 
I Greeks Hellespontus. Mysia was the region 
south of the chain of Ida, and both formed, 
with Lydia, the second satrapy. In the division 
of the empire of Alexander the Great, Mysia 
fell, with Thrace, to the share of Lysimachus, 
B.C. 311, after whose defeat and death, in 281, 
it became a part of the Greco-Syrian kingdom, 
! with the exception of the southwestern portion, 
I where Philetaerus founded the kingdom of Per- 
! gamus (280), to which kingdom the whole of 
Mysia was assigned, together with Lydia, Phryg- 
ia, Caria, Lycia, Pisidia, and Pamphylia, after 
the defeat of Antiochus the Great by the Ro- 
mans in 190. With the rest of the kingdom of 
Pergamus, Mysia fell to the Romans in 133 by 
| the bequest of Attalus III., and formed part of 
j the province of Asia. Under the later empire 
| Mysia formed a separate proconsular province. 



MYSIUS. 



NABATiEI. 



under the name of Hellespontns. The country 
was for the most part mountainous, its chief 
chains being those of Ida, Olympus, and Tem- 
■ncs, which are terminal branches of the north- 
western part of the Taurus chain, and the union 
of which forms the elevated land of southeastern 
Mysia. Their prolongations into the sea form 
several important bays and capes ; namely, 
among the former, the great Gulf of Adramyt- 
tium (now Adramytti), which cuts off Lesbos 
from the continent, and the Sinus Elai'ticus 
(now Gulf of Chandeli) ; and, among the latter, 
Sigeum (now Cape Ycnichen) and Lectum (now 
Cape Baba), at the northwestern and southwest- 
ern extremities of the Troad, and Cane (now 
Cape Coloni) and Hydria (now Fokia), the north- 
ern and southern headlands of the Ela'itic Gulf. 
Its rivers are numerous; some of them consider- 
able, in proportion to the size of the country, and 
some of first-rate importance in history and po- 
etry s the chief of them, beginning on the east, 
were Rhyndacus and Macestus, Tarsius, 2Ese- 
pus, Granicus, Rhodius, Simois, and Scaman- 
oer, Satnois, Evenus, and Caicus. The tribes 
of the country, besides the general appellations 
mentioned above, were known by the following 
distinctive names : the Olympieni or Olympeni 
CQhjumrjvol, ^O^vfj.TTTjvoc), in the district of Olyrn- 
pene, at the foot of Mount Olympus ; next to 
them, on the south and west, and occupying the 
greater part of Mysia Proper, the Abretteni. who 
had a native divinity called by the Greeks Zsvg 
' Mperrriv6<: ; the Trimenthuritae, the Penta- 
demltae, and the Mysomacedones, all in the re- 
gion of Mount Temnus. 

MysIus (now Bergama), a tributary of the 
River Caicus in Mysia, or rather the upper part 
of the Caicus itself, had its source in Mount 
Temnus. 

Myson (Mvcrwv), of Chense, a village either in 
Laconia or on Mount 02ta, is enumerated by 
Plato as one of the seven sages, in place of 
Periander. 

Mystia, a town in the southeast of Bruttium, 
a little above the Promontorium Cocintum. 

MrrifjENB or Mitylene (IIvtlItjvt], MiTvhfjvn : 
the former is the ancient form, and the one usu- 
ally found on coins and inscriptions ; the latter 
is sometimes found on inscriptions, and is the 
commoner form in MSS. : Mvt Levator, Mityle- 
-132US : Mylilcnc or Metelin), the chief city of 
Lesbos, stood on the eastern side of the island 
opposite the coast of Lesbos, upon a promontory 
which was once an island, and both sides of 
which formed excellent harbors. Its first foun- 
dation is ascribed to Carians and Pelasgians. 
It was early colonized by the ^Eolians. Vid. 
Lesbos. Important hints respecting its politi- 
cal history are furnished by the fragments of 
ihe poetry of Alcanis, whence (and from other 
sources) it seems that, after the rule and over- 
throw of a series of tyrants, the city was nearly 
ruined by the bitter hatred and conflicts of the \ 
factions of the nobles and the people, till Pitta- 
tjus was appointed to a sort of dictatorship, and 
the nobles were expelled. Vid. Alcjeus, Pit- 
tacus. Meanwhile, the city had grown to great 
importance as a naval power, and had founded 
colonies on the coasts of Mysia and Thrace. At 
the beginning of the seventh century B.C , the j 
possession of one of these colonies, Sigeum at j 



the mouth of the Hellespont, was disputed in 
war between the Mytilenaeans and Athenians, 
and assigned to the latter by the award of Peri- 
ander, tyrant of Corinth. Among the other col- 
onies of Mytilene were Achilleum, Assos, An- 
tandrus, &c. Mytilene submitted to the Per- 
sians after the conquest of Ionia and ^Eolis, and 
furnished contingents to the expeditions of 
Cambyses against Egypt and of Darius against 
Scythia. It was active in the Ionian revolt, 
after the failure of which it again became sub- 
ject to Persia, and took part in the expedition 
of Xerxes against Greece. After the Persian 
war it formed an alliance with Athens, and re- 
mained one of the most important members of 
the Athenian confederacy, retaining its inde- 
pendence till the fourth year of the Peloponne- 
sian war, B.C. 428, when it headed a revolt of 
the greater part of Lesbos, the progress and 
suppression of which forms one of the most in- 
teresting episodes in the history of the Pelopon- 
nesian war. (Vid. the Histories of Greece.) 
This event destroyed the power of Mytilene. 
Its subsequent fortunes can not be related in 
detail here. It fell under the power of the Ro- 
mans after the Mithradatic war. Respecting 
its important position in Greek literary history, 
vid. Lesbos. 

Mytti stratum. Vid. Amestratus. 
Myus (Mvovc : Mvovatog : ruins at Palatia) f 
the least city of the Ionian confederacy, stood 
in Caria, on the southern side of the Maeander, 
thirty stadia from its mouth, and very near Mi- 
letus. Its original site was probably at the 
mouth of the river ; but its site gradually be- 
came an unhealthy marsh ; and by the time of 
Augustus it was so deserted by its inhabitants 
that the few who remained were reckoned as 
citizens of Miletus. 

N. 

Naarda (NadpSa), a town of Babylonia, 
chiefly inhabited by Jews, and with a Jewish 
academy. 

Naarmalcha or Nahrmalcha (Naap{id?>x a Ct 
Nap/zd/ljaf, i. e., the King's Canal: 6 PaoiketoQ 
rcoTa(i6^T] (3acri?.LK7j dtupv^, flumen regium : Nahr- 
al-Malk or Ne Gruel Melek), the greatest of the 
canals connecting the Euphrates and the Tigris, 
was situated near the northern limit of Babylo- 
nia, a little south of the Median Wall, in latitude 
33° 5' about. Its formation was ascribed to a 
governor named Gobares. It was repaired upon 
the building of Seleucia at its junction with the 
Tigris by Seleucus Nicator, and again under the 
Roman emperors Trajan, Severus, and Julian. 
Nabalia. Vid. Navalia. 
Nabarzanes (lSa6ap^dvrjc), a Persian, conspir- 
ed along with Bessus, against Darius, the last 
king of Persia. He was pardoned by Alex- 
ander. 

Nabat^ei, Nabath.e (NaSaralot, Na6drai : in 
the Old Testament, Nebaioth), an Arabian peo- 
ple, descended from the eldest son of Ishmael, 
had their original abodes in the northwestern 
part of the Arabian peninsula, east and south- 
east of the Moabites and Edomites, who dwelt 
; on the east of the Dead Sea and in the mount- 
| ains reaching from it to the Persian Gulf. In. 
\ the changes effected among the tribes of these 

535 



NABIS. 



NAEVIUS. 



regions by the Babylonian conquest of Judaea, 
the Nabathaeans extended west into the Sina- 
jtic peninsula and the territory of the Edomites, 
while the latter took possession of the south of 
Judaea (vid. Idcm^ei) ; and hence the Nabathae- 
ans of Greek and Roman history occupied near- 
ly the whole of Arabia Petraea, along the north- 
eastern coast of the Red Sea, on both sides of 
the ^Elanitic Gulf, and in the Idumaean Mount- 
ains (Mountains of Seir), where they had their 
celebrated rock-hewn capital, Petra. At first 
they were a roving pastoral people ; but, as their 
position gave them the command of the trade 
between Arabia and the west, they prosecuted 
that trade with great energy, establishing reg- 
ular caravans between Leuce Come, a port of 
the Red Sea, in the northwestern part of Ara- 
bia, and the port of Rhinocolura (now El-Arish) 
on the Mediterranean, upon the frontiers of Pal- 
estine and Egypt. Sustained by this traffic, a 
powerful monarchy grew up, which resisted all 
the attacks of the Greek kings of Syria, and 
which, sometimes at least, extended its power 
as far north as Syria. Thus, in the reign of 
Caligula, even after the Nabathaeans had nom- 
inally submitted to Rome, we find even Damas- 
cus in possession of an ethnarch of " Aretas the 
king," i. e., of the Nabathaean Arabs : the usual 
names of these kings were Aretas and Obodas. 
Under Augustus the Nabathaeans are found, as 
nominal subjects of the Roman empire, assist- 
ing iElius Gallus in his expedition into Arabia 
Felix, through which, and through the journey 
of Athenodorus to Petra, Strabo derived import- 
ant information. Under Trajan the Nabathae- 
ans were conquered by A. Cornelius Palma, and 
Arabia Petraea became a Roman province, A.D. 
105-107. In the fourth century it was consid- 
ered a part of Palestine, and formed the diocese 
of a metropolitan, whose see was at Petra. The 
Mohammedan conquest finally overthrew the 
power of the Nabathaeans, which had been long 
declining ; their country soon became a haunt 
of the wandering Arabs of the Desert, and their 
very name disappeared. 

Nabis (NdStg), succeeded in making himself 
tyrant of Lacedaemon on the death of Machani- 
das, B.C. 207. He carried the licence of tyran- 
ny to the furthest possible extent. All persons 
possessed of property were subjected to inces- 
sant exactions, and the most cruel tortures if 
they did not succeed in satisfying his rapacity. 
One of his engines of torture resembled the 
maiden of more recent times ; it was a figure 
resembling his wife Apega, so constructed as to 
clasp the victim and pierce him to death with 
the nails with which the arms and bosom of the 
figure were studded. The money which he got 
by these means and by the plunder of the tem- 
ples enabled him to raise a large body of mer- 
cenaries, whom he selected from among the 
most abandoned and reckless villains. With 
these forces he was able to extend his sway 
over a considerable part of Peloponnesus ; but 
his further progress was checked by Flamininus, 
who, after a short campaign, compelled him to 
sue for peace (195). The tyrant, however, was 
allowed to retain the sovereignty of Sparta, and 
soon after the departure of Flamininus from 
Greece he resumed hostilities. He was oppos- 
ed by Philopoemen, the general of the Achaean 



| league ; and though Nabis met at first with 
some success, he was eventually defeated by 
Philopoemen, and was soon afterward assassin- 

j ated by some ^Etolians who had been sent to 

! his assistance (192). 

Nabonassar (NaSovdaapoc), king of Babylon, 
| whose accession to the throne was fixed upon 
! by the Babylonian astronomers as the era from 
! which they began their calculations. This era 
j is called the Era of Nabonassar. It commenced 
on the twenty-sixth of February, B.C. 747. 
Nabrissa or Nebrissa (now Lebrija), sur- 
i named Veneria, a town of the Turdetani in His- 
■ pania Baetica, near the mouth of the Baetis. 

Nacolia (Na/co?t£ta or -ia, or NaKuTteia : now 
| Sidighasi), a town of Phrygia Epictetus, on the 
! western bank of the River Thymbrius, between 
! Dorylaeum and Cotyaeum, was the place where 
the Emperor Valens defeated his rival Proco- 
1 pius, A.D. 366. 

[N^ebis or Nebis (Nf,6ic, now Neyva), a river 
i on the western coast of Hispania Tarraconert- 
| sis, between the Durius and the Minius ] 
| N^enia, i. e., a dirge or lamentation, chanted 
j at funerals, was personified at Rome and wor- 
; shipped as a goddess. She had a chapel outside 
j the walls of the city, near the porta Virninalis. 

N^evius, Cn , an ancient Roman poet, of 
| whose life few particulars have been recorded 
j He was probably a native of Campania, and was 
' born somewhere between B.C. 274 and 264. 
I He appears to have come to Rome early, and 
| he produced his first play in 235. He was at- 
tached to the plebeian party ; and, with the 
licence of the old Attic comedy, he made the 
S stage a vehicle for his attacks upon the aristo- 
i cracy. He attacked Scipio and the Metelli ; but 
he was indicted by Q Metellus and throw T n into 
! prison, to which circumstance Plautus alludes 
I in his Miles Gloriosus (ii., 2, 56). While in 
I prison he composed two plays, the Hariolus and 
! Leon, in which he recanted his previous imputa- 
I tions, and thereby obtained his release through 
| the tribunes of the people. His repentance, 
i however, did not last long, and he was soou 
j compelled to expiate a new offence by exile 
j He retired to Utica ; and it was here, probably, 
j that he wrote his poem on the first Punic war ; 
! and here it is certain that he died, either in 204 
j or 202. Naevius was both an epic and a dra- 
| matic poet. Of his epic poem on the first Pu- 
| nic war a few fragments are still extant. It 
j was written in the old Saturnian metre ; for 
[ Ennius, who introduced the hexameter among 
J the Romans, was not brought to Rome till after 
! the banishment of Naevius. The poem appears 
j to have opened with the story of ^Eneas's flight 
i from Troy, his visit to Carthage and amour with 
| Dido, together with other legends connected 
j with the early history both of Carthage and 4 of 
j Rome. It was extensively copied both by En- 
i nius and Virgil. The latter author took many 
! passages from it, particularly the description 
| of the storm in the first /Enel'd, the speech with 
j which iEneas consoles his companions, and the 
| address of Venus to Jupiter. His dramatic 
| writings comprised both tragedies and come- 
I dies, most of which were taken from the Greek 
; Even in the Augustan age Naevius was still a 
| favorite with the admirers of the genuine old 
school of Roman poetry, and the lines of Hor- 



N/EVIUS SERTORIUS MACHO. 



NARMALCHA. 



ace (Ep. y ii., 1, 53) show that his works, if not 
so much read as formerly, were still fresh in 
the memories of men. The best edition of the 
fragments of Naevius is by Klussman, 8vo, Jena, 
1843. 

Njevius Skktorius Macro. Vid. Macro. 

[Nagaka tSa)apa), a city of the district of 
Goryaea in India intra Gangem, near the con- 
fluence of the Cophen and Choaspes ; the same, 
probably, as Nysa. Vid. Nysa, No. 1.] 

Nauarvali, a tribe of the Lygii in Germany, 
probably dwelt on the banks of the Vistula. In 
their country was a grove sacred to the wor- 
ship of two divinities called Alces, whom Tac- 
itus compares with Castor and Pollux. 

Nahrmalcha. Vid. Naarmalcha. 

Naiades. Vid. Nymfr^e. 

Nain {Naiv : now Nain), a city of Galilee, 
south of Mount Tabor. {Luke, vii., 11.) 

Naisus, Naissus, or N^esus (Na'iaoc, Naiacoc, 
Naicooc : now Nissa), an important town of 
Upper Mcesia, situated on an eastern tributary 
of the Margus, and celebrated as the birth-place 
of Constantine the Great. It was enlarged and 
beautified by Constantine, was destroyed by 
Attila, but was rebuilt and fortified by Justin- 
ian. 

[Namadus (Nu/mdoc or ISaiiadrjc, now the Ner- 
buddah), a considerable river of India intra Gan- 
gem, rising in Mons Vindius, and emptying into 
the Sinus Barygazenus.] 

Namnet^: or Namnetes, a people on the west- 
ern coast of Gallia Lugdunensis, on the north- 
ern bank of the Liger, which separated them 
from Aquitania. Their chief town was Condi- 
Yincum, afterward Namnetes (now Nantes). 

Namusa, Aufidius, a Roman jurist, one of 
the numerous pupils of Servius Sulpicius. 

Nantuat^e or Nantuates, a people in the 
southeast of Gallia Belgica, between the Rhoda- 
ous and the Rhenus.and at the eastern extrem- 
ity of the Lacus Lemanus. 

Nap^eje. Vid. Nymph^e. 

Naparis, a northern tributary of the Danube : 
its modern name is uncertain. 

Napata (NdiraTa : probably ruins at El-Kab, 
at the great bend of the Nile to the southwest, 
between the fourth and fifth cataracts), the cap- 
ital of an ^Ethiopian kingdom north of that of 
Meroe, was the southernmost point reached by 
Petronius, under Augustus. Its sovereigns 
were females, bearing the title of Candace ; 
and through a minister of one of them, Chris- 
tianity was introduced into ^Ethiopia in the 
apostolic age {Acts, viii., 27). This custom of 
female government has been continued to our 
own times in the neighboring kingdom of Sken- 
iy. In the reign of Nero, Napata was only a 
small town. 

Napoca or Napuca (Napocensis or Napucen- 
sis), a Roman colony in Dacia, on the high road 
leading through the country between Patavissa 
and Optatiana. 

Nar (now Neva), a river in central Italy, rises 
in Mount Fiscellus, on the frontiers of Umbria 
and Picenutn, Mows in a southwesterly direction, 
forming the boundary between Umbria and the 
land of the Sabini, and after receiving the Veli- 
nus (now Vclino) and Tolenus (now Turano), 
and passing by Interamna and Narnia, falls into 
the Tiber not far from Ocriculum. It was cel- 



ebrated for its sulphureous waters and white 
color {sulphurca Nar albus aqua, Virg., Mn., vii., 
517). 

Naraggara {Napjtyapa : ruins at the modern 
Kassir Jebir), one of the most important inland 
cities of Numidia, between Thagura and Sicca 
Veneria, was the scene of Scipio's celebrated 
interview with Hannibal before the battle of 
Zama. 

Narbo Martius, at a later time Narbona 
(Narbonensis : now Narbonne), a town in the 
south of Gaul, and the capital of the Roman 
province of Gallia Narbonensis, was situated 
on the River Atax (now Aude), also called Nar- 
bo, and at the head of the Lake Rubresus or 
Rubrensis (also called Narbonitis), which was- 
connected with the sea by a canal. By this 
means the town, which was twelve miles from 
the coast, was made a sea-port. It was a very 
ancient place, and is supposed to have been 
originally called Atax. It was made a Roman 
colony by the consul Q. Marcius or Martius, 
B.C. 118, and hence received the surname Mar- 
tius ; and it was the first colony founded by the 
Romans in Gaul. Julius Caesar also settled 
here the veterans of the tenth legion, whence it 
received the name of Colonia Decumanorum 
It was a handsome and populous town, the res- 
idence of the Roman governor of the province, 
and a place of great commercial importance 
The coast was celebrated for its excellent oys- 
ters. There are scarcely any vestiges of the 
ancient town, but there are still remains of the 
canal. 

Narbonensis Gallia. Vid. Gallia. 

Narcissus {NdpKiaooc). 1. A beautiful youth,, 
son of the river-god Cephisus and the nymph 
Liriope of Thespiae. He was wholly inaccess- 
ible to the feeling of love ; and the nymph 
Echo, who was enamored of him, died of grief 
Vid. Echo. One of his rejected lovers, how- 
ever, prayed to Nemesis to punish him for his 
unfeeling heart. Nemesis accordingly caused 
Narcissus to see his own image reflected in a 
fountain, and to become enamored of it. But, 
as he could not approach this object, he grad- 
ually pined away, and his corpse was meta- 
morphosed into the flower which bears his 
name. — 2. A freedman and secretary of the 
Emperor Claudius, over whom he possessed un- 
bounded influence. He long connived at the 
irregularities of Messalina; but, fearing that 
the empress meditated his death, he betrayed 
to Claudius her marriage with C. Silius, and 
obtained the order for her execution, A D. 48. 
After the murder of Claudius, Narcissus was 
put to death by command of Agrippina, 54. He 
had amassed an enormous fortune, amounting, 
it is said, to 400,000,000 sesterces, a little over 
$13,500,000 of our money.— 3. A celebrated ath- 
lete, who strangled the Emperor Commodus, 
192. He was afterward exposed to the lions 
by the Emperor Severus. 

Narisci, a small but brave people in the 
south of Germany, of the Suevic race, dwelt 
west of the Marcomanni and east of the Her- 
munduri, and extended from the Sudeti Monies 
on the north to the Danube on the south, thus 
inhabiting part of the Upper Palatinate and the 
country of the Fichtelgebirge. 

Narmalcha. Vid. Naarmalcha. 

537 



NARNIA. 



NAUPACTUS. 



Narnia (Narniensis : now Narni), a town in 
Umbria, situated on a lofty hill on the southern 
bank of the River Nar, originally called Nequi- 
num, was made a Roman colony B.C. 299, when 
its name was changed into Narnia, after the 
river. This town was strongly fortified by na- 
ture, being accessible only on the eastern and 
western sides. On the western side it could j 
imly be approached by a very lofty bridge which ; 
Augustus built over the river. 

Naro, sometimes Nar (now Narenta), a river 
in Dalmatia,*which rises in Mount Albius, and 
falls into the Adriatic Sea. 

Narona, a Roman colony in Dalmatia, situa- 
ted on the River Naro, some miles from the sea, j 
and on the road to Dyrrhachium. 

Narses, king of Persia. Vid. Sassanid.e. 

Narses (NapoT/c), a celebrated general and j 
statesman in the reign of Justinian, was a eu- j 
nuch. He put an end to the Gothic dominion j 
in Italy by two brilliant campaigns, A.D. 552, j 
553, and annexed Italy again to the Byzantine ; 
empire. He was rewarded by Justinian with i 
the government of the country, which he held 
for many years. He was deprived of this office 
by Justin, the successor of Justinian, where- j 
upon he invited the Langobards to invade Italy. I 
His invitation was eagerly accepted by their j 
Icing Alboin ; but it is said that Narses soon | 
after repented of his conduct, and died of grief ! 
at Rome shortly after the Langobards had cross- : 
ed the Alps (568). Narses was ninety-five years I 
of age at the time of his death. 

Narthacium (Napddfciov), a town in Thessa- 
ly, on Mount Narthacius, southwest of Phar- ; 
salus. 

Naryx, also Narycus or Narycium (Ndpuf, i 
Napvxnc, ~NapvKiov : JSapvKioc, Napvualoc : now | 
Talanda or Talanti), a town of the Locri Opun- | 
tii on the Eubcean Sea, the reputed birth-place \ 
of Ajax, son of Oileus, who is hence called Na- 
rycius hcros. Since Locri Epizephyrii, in the 
south of Italy, claimed to be a colony from Na- 
ryx in Greece, we find the town of Locri called 
Narycia by the poets, and the pitch of Bruttium 
also named Narycia. 

Nasamones (Nacafitivec), a powerful but sav- 
age Libyan people, who dwelt originally on the 
shores of the Great Syrtis, but were driven in- 
land by the Greek settlers of Cyrenaica, and aft- 
erward by the Romans. An interesting account 
of their manners and customs is given by Herod- 
otus (iv., 172), who also tells (ii.,32) a curious 
story respecting an expedition beyond the Lib- 
yan Desert, undertaken by five Nasamonian 
youths, the result of which was certain import- 
ant information concerning the interior of Af- 
rica. Vid. Nigeir. 

Nasica, Scipio. Vid. Scipio. 

Nasidienus, a wealthy (beatus) Roman, who 
gave a supper to Maecenas, which Horace rid- 
icules in the eighth satire of his second book. 
It appears from v. 58 that Rufus was the cog- 
nomen of Nasidienus. 

Nasidius, Q. or L., was sent by Pompey, in J 
B.C. 49, with a fleet of sixteen ships to relieve ; 
Massilia when it was besieged by D. Brutus. He 
was defeated by Brutus, and fled to Africa, where j 
he bad the command of the Pompeian fleet. He j 
served in Sicily under Sextus Pompey, whom i 
he deserted in 35. He joined Antonv, and com- ' 
538 



manded part of his fleet in the war with Octa- 

vianus, 31. 

Naso, Ovidius. Vid. Ovidius. 

[Nastes (Nd<T-?7c), son of Nomion. leader of 
the Carians before Troy.] 

[Nasua, one of the leaders of the Suevi in 
their irruption into Gaul about the time of Cae- 
sar's arrival in that country ] 

Nascjs or Nesus. Vid. (Eniad^e. 

[Natho (Nadu), a nomos of Lower Egypt 
probably the same as the one called Neovr by 
Ptolemy, between the Busiritic and Bubastic 
mouths of the Nile.] 

Natiso (now Natisone), a small river in Vene- 
tia, in the north of Italy, which flows by Aqui- 
leia, and falls into the Sinus Tergestinus. 

Natta or Nacca, " a fuller," the name of an 
ancient family of the Pinaria gens. The Natta 
satirized by Horace {Sat, i., 6, 124) for his dirty 
meanness was probably a member of the noble 
Pinarian family, and therefore attacked by the 
poet for such conduct. 

[Naubolus (Nav6o/,oc), king of Tanagra, one 
of the Argonauts, father of Iphitus, who is 
hence called NavSo/Udrjc in Homer.] 

[Nauclides (Navn/*eidT}c, Dor. -eidac). 1. A 
Plataean, the leader of the faction who invited 
and opened the gates for the Thebans who seized 
upon Plataeae B.C. 431.— 2. One of the two Spar- 
tan ephors sent with the king Pausanias into 
Attica, B.C. 403, at the time when the Athe- 
nians were hard pressed by Lysander ; he cor- 
dially co-operated with Pausanias for defeating 
the designs of Lysander.] 

Naucrates (NavKpaTijg), of Erythrae, a Greek 
rhetorician, and a disciple of Isocrates, is men- 
tioned among the orators who competed (B.C. 
352) for the prize offered by Artemisia for the 
best funeral oration delivered over Mausolus. 

Naucratis (Navtcparic : NavKpari-yg : ruins 
at the modern Sa-el-Hadjar), a city in the Delta 
of Egypt, in the Nomus of Sa'/s, on the eastern 
bank of the Canopic branch of the Nile, which 
was hence called also Naucraticum Ostium. 
It was a colony of the Milesians, founded prob- 
ably in the reign of Amasis, about B.C. 550, and 
remained a pure Greek city. It was the only 
place in Egypt where Greeks were permitted to 
settle and trade. After the Greek and Roman 
conquests it continued a place of great prosper- 
ity and luxury, and was celebrated for its wor- 
ship of Aphrodite. It was the birth-place of 
Athenaeus, Lyceas, Phylarchus, Polycharmus, 
and Julius Pollux. 

Naucydes (NavKv6r/c), an Argive statuary, 
son of Mothon, and brother and teacher of Pol- 
ycletus II. of Argos, flourished B.C. 420. 

Naulochus (Nav'/.oxos ), that is, a place where 
ships can anchor. 1. A naval station on the 
eastern part of the northern coast of Sicily, be- 
tween Mylae and the promontory Pelorus : [it 
was between Mylae and Naulochus that Sextus 
Pompey was defeated by the fleet of Octavia- 
nus under Agrippa.] — 2. A small island ofFCrete, 
near the promontory Sammonium. — 3. A naval 
station belonging to Mesembria in Thrace. 

Naumachius (Navfiuxioc), a Gnomic poet, of 
uncertain age, some of whose verses are pre- 
served by Stobaeus. 

Naupactds (NavTraKToc : ISiaviruKrtor : now 
Lepanto), an ancient and strongly-fortified town 



NAUPLIA. 



NAXOS. 



of the Locri Ozolat, near the promontory Antir- 
rhium, possessing the largest and best harbor 
on the whole of the northern coast of the Co- 
rinthian Gulf. It is said to have derived its 
name from the Heraelidae having here built the 
fleet with which they crossed over to the Pel- 
oponnesus. After the Persian wars it fell into 
the power of the Athenians, who settled here 
the Messenians who had been compelled to 
leave their country at the end of the third Mes- 
senian war, B.C. 455 ; and during the Pelopon- 
nesian war it was the head-quarters of the 
Athenians in all their operations against the 
west of Greece. At the end of the Peloponne- 
sian war the Messenians were obliged to leave 
Naupactus, which passed into the hands first of 
the Locrians and afterward of the Achaeans. 
It was given by Philip, with the greater part of 
the Locrian territory, to ^Etolia, but it was again 
assigned to Locris by the Romans. 

Nauplia (NavTr?Ua : ~Nav7r?.ievc : now Nau- 
plia), the port of Argos, situated on the Saronic 
Gulf, was never a place of importance in an- 
tiquity, and was in ruins in the time of Pausa- 
nias. The inhabitants had been expelled by 
the Argives as early as the second Messenian 
war on suspicion of favoring the Spartans, who, 
in consequence, settled them, at Methone in 
Messenia. At the present day Nauplia is one of 
the most important cities in Greece. 

Nauplius (Natf7rA<of). 1. Of Argos, son of 
Neptune (Poseidon) and Amymone, a famous 
navigator, and the founder of the town of Nau- 
plia. — 2. Son of Clytoneus, was one of the Ar- 
gonauts, and a descendant of the preceding. — 3. 
King of Euboea, and father of Palamedes, GSax. 
and Nausimedon, by Clymene. Catreus had 
given his daughter Clymene and her sister Ai»- 
rope to Nauplius to be carried to a foreign land ; 
but Nauplius married Clymene, and gave Aerope 
to Plisthenes. who became by her the father of 
Agamemnon and Menelaus. His son Palamedes 
had been condemned to death by the Greeks 
during the siege of Troy ; and as Nauplius con- 
sidered his condemnation to be an act of in- 
justice, he watched for the return of the Greeks, 
and as they approached the coast of Eubcea he 
lighted torches on the dangerous promontory of 
Caphareus. The sailors, thus misguided, suf- 
fered shipwreck, and perished in the waves or 
by the sword of Nauplius. 

Nauportus (now Ober or Upper Laibach), an 
ancient and important commercial town of the 
Taurisci, situated on the River Nauportus (now 
Laiback), a tributary of the Savus, in Pannonia 
Superior. The town fell into decay after the 
foundation of .Emona (now Laibach), which was 
only fifteen miles from it. The name of Nau- 
portus is said to have been derived from the 
Argonauts having sailed up the Danube and the 
Savus to this place, and here built the town ; 
and it is added that they afterward carried their 
ships across the Alps to the Adriatic Sea, where 
they again embarked. This legend, like many 
others, probably owes its origin to a piece of 
bad etymology." 

Nausicaa (SavviKua), daughter of Alcinous, 
king of the Phaeacians, and Arete, who con- 
ducted Ulysses to the court of her father when 
he was shipwrecked on the coast. 

[Nausicles (SavGLK/Sjr), one of the more in- 



fluential popular leaders of Athens in the time 
of Philip, leader of an army sent by the Athe- 
nians to aid the Phocians ; at first on friendly- 
terms with JEschines, but afterward battling on 
the side of the patriots, and after the disaster 
of Chaeronea, stepping into the place of Demos- 
thenes.] 

Nausithous (Navcidooc), son of Neptune (Po- 
seidon) and Peribcea, the daughter of Euryme- 
don, was the father of Alcinous and Rhexenor, 
and king of the Phaeacians, whom he led from 
Hyperia in Thrinacia to the island of Scheria, 
in order to escape from the Cyclopes. 

[Naustathmus (NavcTadfiog). 1. A port-town 
on the eastern coast of Sicily, north ofPromon- 
torium Pachynum. — 2. A port-town on the 
Pontus Euxinus, or, rather, on a salt lake join- 
ed to the sea (now Hamamli Ghieul). — 3. A 
port in Cyrenaica, between Erythrum and Apol- 
lonia.] 

Nautaca (Navrana : now NaJcsheb or Kesh), 
a city of Sogdiana, near the Oxus, toward the 
eastern part of its course. 

Nautes. Vid. Nautia Gens. 

Nautia Gens, an ancient patrician gens, 
claimed to be descended from Nautes, one of 
the companions of /Eneas, who was said to 
have brought with him the Palladium from 
Troy, which was placed under the care of the 
Nautii at Rome. The Nautii, all of whom were 
surnat^ed Rutili, frequently held the highest of- 
fices of state in the early times of the republic, 
but, like many of the other ancient gentes, they 
disappear from history about the time of the 
Samnite wars. 

Nava (now Nahe), a western tributary of the 
Rhine in Gaul, which falls into the Rhine at the 
modern Bingcn. 

NavalIa or Nabalia, a river on the northern 
coast of Germany, mentioned by Tacitus, prob- 
ably the eastern arm of the Rhine. 

Navius, Axtus, a renowned augur in the time 
of Tarquinius Priscus. This king proposed to 
double the number of the equestrian centuries, 
and to name the three new ones after himself 
and two of his friends, but was opposed by Na- 
vius because Romulus had originally arranged 
the equites under the sanction of the auspices, 
and consequently no alteration could be made 
in them without the same sanction. The tale 
then goes on to say that Tarquinius thereupon 
commanded him to divine whether what he was 
thinking of in his mind could be done, and that 
when Navius, after consulting the heavens, de- 
clared that it could, the king held out a whet- 
stone and a razor to cut it with. Navius im- 
mediately cut it. His statue was placed in the 
comitium, on the steps of the senate-house, the 
place where the miracle had been wrought, and 
beside the statue the whetstone was preserved. 
Attus Navius seems to be the best orthography, 
making Attus an old pragnomen, though we fre- 
quently find the name written Attius. 

Naxos (Jsd;oc. : Ndfiof). 1. (Now Naxia), an 
island in the J3gean Sea, and the largest of the 
Cyclades, is situated nearly half way between 
the coasts of Greece and Asia Minor. It is 
about eighteen miles in length and twelve in 
breadth. It was very fertile in antiquity, as it 
is in the present day, producing an abundance 
of corn, wine, oil. and fruit. It was especially 

539 



NAXUANA. 



NEAPOLIS. 



celebrated for its wine, and hence plays a prom- 
inent part in the legends about Bacchus (Dio- 
nysus). Here the god is said to have found 
Ariadne after she had been deserted by The- 
seus. The marble of the island was also much 
prized, and was considered equal to the Parian, j 
Naxos is frequently called Dia {Ma) by the 
poets, which was one of its ancient names. It 
was likewise called Strongyle {Zrpoyyvlrj) on 
account of its round shape, and Dwnysias {Ato- ! 
vvau'ig) from its connection with the worship of 
Dionysus (Bacchus). It is said to have been ! 
originally inhabited by Thracians and then by 
Carians, and to have derived its name from a 
Carian chief, Naxos. In the historical age it 
was inhabited by Ionians, who had emigrated 
from Athens. Naxos was conquered by Pisis- 
tratus, who established Lygdamis as tyrant of j 
the island about B.C. 540. The Persians in 
501 attempted, at the suggestion of Aristagoras, 
to subdue Naxos ; and upon the failure of their 
attempt, Aristagoras, fearing punishment, in- 
duced the Ionian cities to revolt from Persia. 
In 490 the Persians, under Datis and Artapher- 
rtes, conquered Naxos, and reduced the inhabit- 
ants to slavery. The Naxians recovered their 
independence after the battle of Salamis (480). 
They were the first of the allied states whom 
ihe Athenians reduced to subjection (471), after 
which time they are rarely mentioned in his- 
tory. The chief town of the island \*%s also 
called Naxos ; and we also have mention of the 
small towns of Trageea and Lestadae. — 2. A 
Greek city on the eastern coast of Sicily, south 
of Mount Taurus, was founded B.C. 735 by the 
Chalcidians of Eubcea, and was the first Greek 
colony established in the island. It grew so 
rapidly in power that in only five or six years 
after its foundation it sent colonies to Catana 
and Leontini. It was for a time subject to 
Hieronymus, tyrant of Gela ; but it soon recov- 
ered its independence, carried on a successful 
war against Messana, and was subsequently 
an ally of the Athenians against Syracuse. In 
403 the town was taken by Dionysius of Syra- 
cuse and destroyed. Nearly fifty years after- 
ward (353) the remains of the Naxians scatter- 
ed over Sicily were collected by Andromachus, 
and a new city was founded on Mount Taurus, 
to which the name of Tauromenium was given. 
Vid. Tauromexhjm. 

Naxcana {Natjovava : now Nakshivan), a city 
of Armenia Major, on the Araxes, near the con- 
fines of Media. 

Nazareth, Nazara (~Sa^ap?d, or -er, or -a : 
~SaZapaioc, Nc^opatoc, Nazarenus, Nazareus : 
now en-Xasirah), a city of Palestine, in Galilee, 
south of Cana. on a hill in the midst of the 
range of mountains north of the plain of Es- 
draelon. 

[Nazarics, a Latin rhetorician, who taught 
eloquence at Bordeaux in the first half of the 
fourth century A.D. He was author of a pane- 
gyric on Constantine, delivered before the Cae- 
sars Crispus and Constantine, which is pub- 
lished in the Panegyrici Vctcrcs.] 

Nazianzus CSaZiav&c : 'SQ^av^voc), a city of 
Cappadocia, on the road from ArchelaTs to Ty- 
ana, celebrated as the diocese of the Father of 
the Church, Gregory Nazianzen. Its site is 
doubtful. | 
510 



Nejera CStaipa), the name of several nymphs, 
and also of several maidens mentioned by the 

poets. 

Ne^tkcs (Siaidoc : now Xicto), a river in 
Bruttium, in the south of Italy, falling into the 
Tarentine Gulf a little north of Croton. Here 
the captive Trojan women are said to have 
burned the ships of the Greeks. 

[Nealces, a friend of Turnus, slew Saliua 
in the wars between Turnus and iEneas in 
Italy.] 

Nealces (NedAK^f), a painter who flourished 
in the time of Aratus, B.C. 245. 

Neandria (Neuvdpeta : Heavdpelc, pi.), a town 
of the Troad. upon the Hellespont, probably an 
^Eolian colony. By the time of Augustus it had 
disappeared. 

Neanthes (Nedvdrjc), of Cyzicus, lived about 
B.C. 241, and was a disciple of the Milesian Phi- 
liscus, who himself had been a disciple of Isoc- 
rates. He was a voluminous writer, principally 
of history. 

Neapolis (ISedrro/.t^ : N ea7:o7.hrjc, Neapolita- 
nus). I. In Europe. 1. (Now Xapoli or Naples), 
a city in Campania in Italy, on the western 
slope of Mount Vesuvius and on the River Se- 
bethus, was founded by the Chalcidians of Cu- 
mae, on the site of an ancient place called Par- 
thenope (Ilap9ev6~7]), after the Siren of that 
name. Hence we find the town called Parthen- 
ope by Virgil and Ovid. The year of the foun- 
dation of Neapolis is not recorded. It was call- 
ed the "New City," because it was regarded 
simply as a new quarter of the neighboring city 
of Cumae. When the town is first mentioned 
in Roman history, it consisted of two parts, di- 
vided from each other by a wall, and called re- 
spectively Palasopolis and Neapolis. This divi- 
sion probably arose after the capture of Cumae 
by the Samnites, when a large number of the 
Cumaeans took refuge in the city they had 
founded ; whereupon the old quarter was called 
Palasopolis, and the new quarter, built to accom- 
modate the new inhabitants, was named Neapo- 
lis. There has been a dispute respecting the 
site of these two quarters ; but it is probable 
that Palasopolis was situated on the western 
side, near the harbor, and Neapolis on the east- 
ern side, near the River Sebethus. In B.C. 
327 the town was taken by the Samnites, and in 
290 it passed into the hands of the Romans, 
who allowed it. however, to retain its Greek 
constitution. At a later period it became a 
municipium, and finally a Roman colony. Under 
the Romans the two quarters of the city were 
united, and the name of Palasopolis disappeared. 
It continued to be a prosperous and nourishing 
place till the time of the empire ; and its beau- 
tiful scenery, and the luxurious life of its Greek 
population, made it a favorite residence with 
many of the Romans. In the reign of Titus 
the city was destroyed by an earthquake, but 
was rebuilt by this emperor in the Roman style. 
The modern city of Naples does not stand on 
exactly the same site as Neapolis. The ancient 
city extended further east than the modern city, 
since the former was situated on the Sebethus, 
whereas the latter does not reach so far as the 
Fiumc dclla Madalcna ; but the modern city, on 
the other hand, extends further north and west 
than the ancient one, since the island of Mega- 



NEARCHUS. 



NECTANABIS. 



ris, on which the Castel del Oco now stands, 
was situated in ancient times between Pausily- 
pum and Neapolis. In the neighborhood of 
Neapolis there were warm baths, the celebrated 
villa of Lucullus, and the villa Pausilypi or Pau- 
silypum, bequeathed by Vedius Pollio to Au- 
gustus, and which has given its name to the 
celebrated grotto of Posilippo between Naples 
and Puzzuoli, at the entrance of which the tomb 
of Y'irgil is still shown.— 2. A part of Syracuse. 
Via. Syracuse — 3. (Now Napoli), a town on 
the western coast of the island of Sardinia, 
celebrated for its warm baths.— 4. (Now Ka- 
vallo), a sea-port town in Thrace, subsequently 
Macedonia adjecta, on the Strymonic Gulf, be- 
tween the Strymon and Nessus. — II. In Asia 
and Africa. 1. (Now Scala Nuova, or near it), 
a small Ionian city on the coast of Lydia, north 
of Mycale and southwest of Ephesus. The 
Ephesians, to whom it at first belonged, ex- 
changed it with the Samians for Marathesium. 
— 2, 3. Two towns of Caria, the one near Har- 
pasa, the other on the coast, perhaps the new- 
town of Myndus. — 4. (Ruins at Tutinekl), in 
Pisidia, south of Antioch ; afterward reckoned 
to Galatia. — 5. In Palestine, the Sychem or 
Sychar of Scripture (Svgqu, Su^dp, Zenifia, 
Joseph. : now Nablous), one of the most ancient 
cities of Samaria, stood in the narrow valley 
between Mounts Ebal and Gerizim, and was the 
religious capital of the Samaritans, whose tem- 
ple was built upon Mount Gerizim. This tem- 
ple was destroyed by John Hyrcanus, B.C. 129. 
Its full name, under the Romans, was Flavia 
Neapolis. It was the birth-place of Justin Mar- 
tyr. — 6. A small town of Babylonia, on the 
western bank of the Euphrates, opposite to the 
opening of the King's Canal. — 7. In Egypt. Vid. 
Cjeue. — 8. In Northern Africa, on the western 
coast of the Great Syrtis, by some identified 
with Leptis Magna, by others with the modern 
Tripoli. — 9. (Now Nabal), a very ancient Phoe- 
nician colony, on the eastern coast of Zeugi- 
tana, near the northern extremity of the great 
gulf which was called after it Sinus Neapoli- 
tanus (now Gulf of Hammamct). Under the Ro- 
mans it was a libera civitas, and, according to 
Ptolemy, a colony. 

Nearchus (Nmp^oc). 1. A distinguished friend 
and officer of Alexander, was a native of Crete, 
but settled at Amphipolis. He appears to have 
occupied a prominent position at the court of 
Philip, by whom he was banished for participat- 
ing in the intrigues of Alexander. After the 
death of Philip he was recalled, and treated 
with the utmost distinction by Alexander. He 
accompanied the king to Asia ; and in B.C. 325, 
he was intrusted by Alexander with the com- 
mand of the fleet which he had caused to be 
constructed on the Hydaspes Upon reaching 
the mouth of the Indus, Alexander resolved to 
send round his ships by sea from thence to the 
Persian Gulf, and he gladly accepted the offer 
of Nearchus to undertake the command of the 
fleet during this long and perilous navigation. 
Nearchus set out on the twenty-first of Sep- 
tember, 326, and arrived at Susa in safety in 
February, 325. He was rewarded with a crown 
of gold for his distinguished services, and, at 
the same time, obtained in marriage a daughter 
of the Rhodian Mentor and of Barsine, to whom 



Alexander himself had been previously mar 
ried. In the division of the provinces after the 
death of Alexander, he received the govern- 
ment of Lycia and Pamphylia, which he held as 
subordinate to Antigonus. In 317 he accom- 
panied Antigonus in his march against Eume- 
nes, and in 314 he is mentioned again as one 
of the generals of Antigonus. Nearchus left a 
history of the voyage, the substance of which 
has been preserved to us by Arrian, who has 
derived from it the whole of the latter part of 
his "Indica." — [2. A Pythagorean philosopher 
of Tarentum ; he adhered to the Roman cause 
in the second Punic war, notwithstanding the 
defection of his countrymen, and was on friend- 
ly terms with Cato the censor, who lived in his 
house after the recapture of Tarentum by Fa- 
bius Maximus, B C. 209 ] 

Nebo, a mountain of Palestine, on the east- 
ern side of the Jordan, opposite to Jericho, was 
in the southern part of the range called Abarim. 
It was on a summit of this mountain, called 
Pisgah, that Moses died. 

[Nebrissa. Vid. Nabrissa.] 

Nebrodes Montes, the principal chain of 
mountains in Sicily, running through the whole 
of the island, and a continuation of the Apen- 
nines. 

Neco or Necho (Nekgjc, Nex^c, ~Neko.vc, Ne- 
%auc, Nexau), son of Psammetichus, whom he 
succeeded on the throne of Egypt in B.C. 617. 
His reign was marked by considerable energy 
and enterprise. He began to dig the canal in- 
tended to connect the Nile with the Arabian 
Gulf ; but he desisted from the work, according 
to Herodotus, on being warned by an oracle that 
he was constructing it only for the use of the 
barbarian invader But the greatest and most 
interesting enterprise with which his name is 
connected is the circumnavigation of Africa by 
the Phoenicians in his service, who set sail 
from the Arabian Gulf, and, accomplishing the 
voyage in somewhat more than two years, en- 
tered the Mediterranean, and returned to Egypt 
through the Straits of Gibraltar. His military- 
expeditions were distinguished at first by bril- 
liant success, which was followed, however, by 
the most rapid and signal reverses. On his 
march against the Babylonians and Medes, whose 
joint forces had recently destroyed Nineveh, he 
was met at Magdolus (Megiddo) by Josiah, king 
of Judah, who was a vassal of Babylon. In the 
battle which ensued, Josiah was defeated and 
mortally wounded, and Necho advanced to the 
Euphrates, where he conquered the Babylonians, 
and took Carchemish or Circesium, where he 
appears to have established a garrison. Af-er 
the battle at Megiddo he took the town of Cad- 
ytis, probably Jerusalem. In 606 Nebuchad- 
nezzar attacked Carchemish, defeated Necho, 
and would appear also to have invaded Egypt 
itself. In 601 Necho died, after a reign of six- 
teen years, and was succeeded by his son Psam- 
mis or Psammuthis. 

Nectanabis, Nectanebus, or Nectanebes 
(NeKTuvaOic, NektuvsSoc, NeKTav£&7]c). 1. King 
of Egypt, the first of the three sovereigns of t lie 
Sebennite dynasty, succeeded Nepheriu-s on the 
throne about B.C 374, and in the following year 
successfully resisted the invasion of the Persian 
force under Pharnabazus and Iphicrates. He 

541 



NED A 



NEMESIS. 



died after a reign of ten years, and was sue- j 
eeeded by Tachos. — 2. The nephew of Tachos, \ 
deprived the latter of the sovereignty in 361, j 
with the assistance of Agesilaus. For some i 
time he defeated all the attempts of Artaxerxes ! 
III. (Ochus) to recover Egypt, but he was at ; 
length defeated himself, and, despairing of mak- j 
ing any further resistance, he fled to ^Ethiopia, i 
350. Nectanabis was the third king of the Se- | 
bennite dynasty, and the. last native sovereign '; 
who ever ruled in Egypt. 

Neda (Neda : now Buzz), a river in Pelopon- j 
nesus, rises in Arcadia in Mount Cerausion, a j 
'branch of Mount Lycaeus, and falls into the j 
Ionian Sea after forming the boundary between | 
Arcadia and Messenia, and between Messenia J 
and Elis. 

Negra or Negrana (ru Niypava : now El- J 
Nokra, north of Mareb), a city of Arabia Felix, ! 
destroyed by zEiius Gallus. 

[Neium (N^iov). Vid. Ithaca.] 

Neleus (N^Zet'c). 1. Son of Tyro, the daugh- : 
ter of Salmoneus. Neptune (Poseidon) once I 
visited Tyro in the form of the river-god Enip- 
ens, and she became by him the mother of Pelias ' 
and Neleus. To conceal her shame, she exposed 
the two boys, but they were found and reared by ! 
some countrymen. They subsequently learned j 
their parentage ; and after the death of Creth- ! 
eus, king of Iolcos, who had married their moth- ] 
er, they seized the throne of Iolcos, excluding I 
JEson, the son of Cretheus and Tyro ; but Pelias i 
soon afterward expelled his brother, and thus J 
became sole king : thereupon Neleus went with j 
Melampus and Bias to Pylos, which his uncle j 
Aphareus gave to him, and of which he thus be- j 
came king. Several towns of this name claim- ! 
ed the honor of being the city of Neleus or of his j 
son Nestor, such as Pylos in Messenia, Pylos in j 
Elis, and Pylos in Triphylia ; the last of which j 
is probably the one mentioned by Homer in con- ! 
nection with Neleus and Nestor. Neleus was j 
married to Chloris, a daughter of Amphion of \ 
Orchomenos, according to Homer, and a Theban j 
woman according to others. By her he became j 
the father of Nestor, Chromius, Periclymenus, j 
and Pero, though he had in all twelve sons, j 
When Hercules had killed Iphitus, he went to I 
Neleus to be purified ; but Neleus, who was a ! 
friend of Eurytus, the father of Iphitus, refused j 
to grant the request of Hercules. In order to I 
take vengeance, Hercules afterward marched j 
against Pylos, and slew all the sons of Neleus, ! 
with the exception of Nestor : some l&ter writ- ! 
ers add that Neleus himself was also killed. ] 
Neleus was now attacked, and his dominions ! 
plundered by Augeas, king of the Epeans ; but j 
the attacks of the latter were repelled by Nes- ; 
tor. The descendants of Neleus, the Nelida?, j 
were eventually expelled from their kingdom by j 
the Heraclidae, and migrated for the most part ! 
to Athens. — 2. The younger son of Codrus, dis- | 
puted the right of his elder brother Medon to the j 
crown on account of his lameness, and when the ■ 
Delphic oracle declared in favor of Medon, he I 
placed himself at the head of the colonists who | 
migrated to Ionia, and himself founded Miletus. 
His son iEpytus headed the colonists who set- 
tled in Priene. Another son headed a body of 
settlers who re-enforced the inhabitants of Ia- 
3us, after they had lost a great number of their 



citizens in a war with the Carians — 3. Of Scep- 
sis, the son of Coriscus, was a disciple of Aris- 
totle and Theophrastus. the latter of whom be- 
queathed to him his library, and appointed hirr 
one of his executors. The history of the writ- 
ings of Aristotle, as connected with Neleus and 
his heirs, is related elsewhere (p. 102, b). 

Nelides, Neleiades, and Neleius (Nj^ettJiTf,. 
HhpttyZtttfyfj Nrj^iog), patronymics of Neleus, by 
which either Nestor, the son of Neleus, or An- 
tilochus, his grandson, is designated. 

Nemacsus (Nemausensis : now Nismes), one 
of the most important towns of Gallia Narbo- 
nensis, was the capital of the Arecomici and a 
Roman colony. It was situated inland east of 
the Rhone, on the high road from Italy to Spain, 
and on the southern slope of Mons Cevenna. It 
was celebrated as the place from which the fam- 
ily of the Antonines came. Though rarely men- 
tioned by ancient writers, the Roman remains 
at Nismes, which are some of the most perfect 
north of the Alps, prove that the ancient Ne- 
mausus was a large and flourishing city. Of 
these remains the most important are the am- 
phitheatre, the Maison Carree, a name given to a 
beautiful Corinthian temple, and the magnificent 
aqueduct, now called Pont da Gard, consisting 
of three rows of arches, raised one above the 
other, and one hundred and eighty feet in height. 

Nemea (Neuea, Ion. Ne/i&y), a valley in Argo- 
lis, between Cleonee and Phlius, celebrated in 
mythical story as the place where Hercules slew 
the Nemean lion. Vid. p. 356, b. In this val- 
ley there was a splendid temple of Jupiter (Zeus) 
Nemeus surrounded by a sacred grove, in which 
the Nemean games were celebrated every other 
year. Vid. Diet, of Antiq., art. Nemea. 

Nemesianus, M. Aurelius Olympius, a Ro- 
man poet, probably a native of Africa, flourished 
at the court of the Emperor Cams (A.D. 283), 
carried off the prize in all the poetical contests 
of the day, and was esteemed second to the 
youthful prince Numerianus alone, who honored 
him so far as to permit him to dispute, and to 
yield to him the palm of verse. We are told that 
Nemesianus was the author of poems upon fish- 
ing, hunting, and aquatics, all of which have per- 
ished with the exception of a fragment of the 
Cynegetica, extending to three hundred and 
twenty-five hexameter lines, which, in so far as 
neatness and purity of expression are concern- 
ed, in some degree justifies the admiration of 
his contemporaries. The best edition of this 
fragment is by Stern, published along with Gra- 
tius Faliscus, Hal. Sax., 1832. 

Nemesis (Ni/teotg), a Greek goddess, is most 
commonly described as a daughter of Night, 
though some call her a daughter of Erebus or 
of Oceanus. She is a personification of the mor- 
al reverence for law, of the natural fear of com- 
mitting a culpable action, and hence of con- 
science. In later writers, as Herodotus and 
Pindar, Nemesis measures out happiness and 
unhappiness to mortals ; and he who is blessed 
with too many or too frequent gifts of fortune, 
is visited by her with losses and sufferings, in 
order that he may become humble. This notion 
arose from a belief that the gods were envious 
of excessive human happiness. Nemesis was 
thus a check upon extravagant favors conferred 
upon man by Tyche or Fortune ; and from this 



NEMESIUS. 



NEOPTOLEMUS. 



idea lastly arose that of her being an avenging 
and punishing fate, who, like Justice (Dike) and 
theErinnves, sooner or later overtakes the reck- 
less sinne'i She is frequently mentioned under 
the surnames ol Adrastia(t??rf. Adrastia, No. 2), 
and Rhamnusia or Rhamnusis, the latter of 
which she derived from the town of Rhamnus 
in Attica, where she had a celebrated sanctua- 
ry. She was usually represented in works of 
art as a virgin divinity : in the more ancient 
works she seems to have resembled Aphrodite 
(Venus), whereas in the later ones she was more 
grave and serious. But there is an allegorical 
tradition that Zeus (Jupiter) begot by Nemesis 
at Rhamnus an egg, which Leda found, and from 
which Helena and the Dioscuri sprang, whence 
Helena herself is called Rhamnusis. 

Nemesius {Nefiiotog), the author of a Greek 
treatise On the Nature of Man, is called bishop 
of Emesa, in Syria, and probably lived at the end 
of the fourth or beginning of the fifth century 
after Christ. His treatise is an interesting phil- 
osophical work, which has generally been highly 
praised by all who have read it. Edited by Mat- 
thaei, Hala?, 8vo, 1802. 

Nemetacum. Vid. Nemetocenna. 

Nemetes or Nemet^e, a people in Gallia Bel- 
gica, on the Rhine, whose chief town was No- 
viomagus, subsequently Nemetse (now Speyer or 
Spires). 

Nemetocenn a or Nemetacum (now Arras), the 
chief town of the Atrebates in Gallia Belgica, 
subsequentlyAtrebati, whence its modern name. 

Nemorensis Lacus. Vid. Aricia. 

Nemossus. Vid. Akverni. 

Neobule. Vid. Archilochus. 

Ne6c^esarea(N eoKaicapeia: NeonaicapEvr,Tse- 
ocsesariensis). I. (Now Niksar), the capital, un- 
der the Roman empire, of Pontus Polemonia- 
cus, in Asia Minor, stood on the River Lycus, 
sixty-three Roman miles east of Amasia. It 
was a splendid city, and is famous in ecclesi- 
astical history for the council held there in A.D. 
314. — 2. (Now Kul 'at- en-Nejurl ruins), a fortress 
established by Justinian, on the Euphrates, in 
the district of Syria called Chalybonitis. 

Neon (NeW : Ncuvioc, Newvruof), an ancient 
town in Phocis at the eastern foot of Mount Ti- 
thorea, a branch of Mount Parnassus, was eighty 
stadia from Delphi across the mountains. Neon 
was destroyed by the Persians under Xerxes, but 
was subsequently rebuilt, and named Tithorea 
(Tidopea, : TiOopevc) after the mountain on which 
it was situated. The new town, however, was 
not on exactly the same site as the ancient one. 
Tithorea was situated at the modern Velitza, and 
Neon at Palea-Fiva, between four and five miles 
north of Velitza. Tithorea was destroyed in the 
Sacred war, and was again rebuilt, but remained 
an unimportant, though fortified place. 

NeontIchos (Ntov relxoc, i. e., Nciv Wall). 1. 
(Now Ainadsjik), one of the twelve cities of JE,o- 
lis, on the coast of Mysia, in Asia Minor, stood 
on the northern side of the Hermus, on the slope 
of Mount Sardene, thirty stadia inland fromLa- 
rissa. One tradition makes it older than Cyme ; 
but the more probable account is that it was built 
by the JEolians of Cyme as a fortress against the 
Pelasgians of Larissa. — 2. A fort on the coast of 
Thrace, near the Chersonesus. 

Neoptolemus (Neo-To'/.efioc). 1. Also called 



Pyrrhus, son of Achilles and Deidamla, the 
daughter of Lycomedes ; according to some, he 
was a son of Achilles and Iphigenia, and after 
the sacrifice of his mother was carried by his 
father to the island of Scyros. The name of 
Pyrrhus is said to have been given to him by 
Lycomedes because he had fair (nvp'pos) hair, or 
because Achilles, while disguised as a girl, had 
borne the name of Pyrrha. He was called Ne- 
optolemus, that is, young or late warrior, either 
because he had fought in early youth, or be- 
cause he had come late to Troy.. -From his fa- 
ther he is sometimes called Achillides, and from 
his grandfather or great-grandfather, Petides and 
JEacides. Neoptolemus was brought up in Scy- 
ros in the palace of Lycomedes, and was fetched 
from thence by Ulysses to join the Greeks in the 
war against Troy, because it had been prophe- 
sied by Helenus that Neoptolemus and Philoc- 
tetes were necessary for the capture of Troy. 
At Troy Neoptolemus showed himself worthy 
of his great father. He was one of the heroes 
concealed in the wooden horse. At the capture 
of the city he killed Priam at the sacred hearth 
of Jupiter (Zeus), and sacrificed Polyxena to the 
spirit of his father. When the Trojan captives 
were distributed among the conquerors, An- 
dromache, the widow of Hector, was given to 
Neoptolemus, and by her he became the father 
of Molossus, Pielus, Pergamus, and Amphialus 
Respecting his return from Troy and the subse- 
quent events of his life, the traditions differ 
It is related that Neoptolemus returned home by 
land, because he had been forewarned by Hele- 
nus of the dangers which the Greeks would have 
to encounter at sea. According to Homer, Ne- 
optolemus lived in Phthia, the kingdom of his 
father, and here he married Hermione, w'horn 
her father Menelaus sent to him from Sparta, 
According to others, Neoptolemus himself went 
to Sparta to receive Hermione, because he had 
heard a report that she was betrothed to Ores- 
tes. Most writers relate that he abandoned his 
native kingdom of Phthia, and settled in Epirus, 
where he became t he ancestor of the Molossian 
kings. Shortly after his marriage with Hermi- 
one, Neoptolemus went to Delphi, where he was 
murdered ; but the reason of his visiting Del- 
phi, as well as the person by whom he was slain, 
are differently related. Some say he went to 
plunder the temple of Apollo, others to present 
part of the Trojan booty as an offering to the 
god, and others, again, to consult the god about 
the means of obtaining children by Hermione. 
Some relate that he was slain at the instigation 
of Orestes, who was angry at being deprived of 
Hermione, 'and others, by the priest of the tem- 
ple, or by Macheereus, the son of Daetas. His 
body was buried at Delphi, and he was wor- 
shipped there as a hero.— 2. I. King of Epirus, 
was son of Alcetas L, and father of Alexander 
I v and of Olympias, the mother of Alexander 
the Great. Neoptolemus reigned in conjunc- 
tion with his brother Arymbas or Arrybas till 
his death, aboutB.C. 360— 3. II. King of Epirus, 
son of Alexander L, and grandson of the preced- 
ing. At his father's death in 326 he was prob- 
ably a mere infant, and his pretensions to the 
throne were passed over in favor of JEacides. 
It was not till 302 that the Epirots, taking ad- 
vantage of the absence of Pyrrhus, the son of 

543 



NEPETE. 



NEREIS. 



.lEacides, rose in insurrection against hirn, and 
set up Neoptolemus in his stead. The latter 
reigned for the space of six years, but was 
obliged to share the throne with Pyrrhus in 296. 
He was shortly afterward assassinated by Pyr- 
rhus.— 4. A Macedonian officer of Alexander the 
Great, after whose death he obtained the gov- 
ernment of Armenia. In 321 he revolted from 
Perdiccas, and joined Craterus, but he was de- 
feated by Eumenes, and was slain in battle by 
the hands of the latter.— 5. A general of Mith- 
radates, and brother of Archelaus. — 6. An Athe- 
nian tragedian, who performed at the games at 
which Philip of Macedon was slain, 336. — 7. Of 
Paros, a Greek grammarian of uncertain date, 
wrote several works quoted byAthenaus and 
the scholiasts. 

Nepete, Nepe or Nepet (Nepesinus : now 
Nepi), an ancient town of Etruria, but not one 
of the twelve cities, was situated near the saltus 
Ciminius, and was regarded as one of the keys 
and gates of Etruria {clausira portceque Etruria, 
Liv.,vi.,9). It appears as an ally of the Ro- 
mans at an early period, soon after the capture 
of Rome by the Gauls, and was subsequently 
made a Roman colony. There are still remains 
at Nepi of the walls of the ancient city. 

Nepkele (Neoi/ 77), wife of Athamas, and moth- 
er of Phrixus and Helle. Hence Helle is called 
Nephelcis by Ovid. For details, vid. Athamas. 

Nephelis (Nfpc?.iV), a small town and promon- 
tory on the coast of Cilicia Aspera, between 
Anemurium and Antiochia. 

Nepheris CSeoepic), a fortified town in the 
immediate neighborhood of Carthage, on a rock 
near the coast. 

Nepos, Cornelius, the contemporary and 
friend of Cicero, Atticus, and Catullus, was 
probably a native of Verona, or of some neigh- 
boring village, and died during the reign of Au- 
gustus. No other particulars with regard to 
his personal history have been transmitted to 
us. H^ is known to have written the following 
pieces, all of which are now lost: 1. Chronica, 
an Epitome of Universal History, probably in 
three books, to which Catullus appears to allude 
in dedicating his poems to Cornelius Nepos. 
2. Exemplorum Libri, probably a collection of 
remarkable sayings and doings. 3. De Viris 
Illvstribus, perhaps the same work as the pre- 
ceding, quoted under a different title. 4. Vita 
Ciceronis. 5. Epistola ad Gxceronem. 6. De 
Hisioricis. There is still extant a work entitled 
Vita Exccllcntium Imperatorurn, containing biog- 
raphies of several distinguished commanders, 
which is supposed by many critics to have been 
the production of Cornelius Nepos. In all MSS., 
however, this work is ascribed to an unknown 
/Emilius Probus, living under Theodosius at 
the end of the fourth century of the Christian 
era, with the exception, however, of the life of 
Atticus, and the fragment of a life of Cato the 
Censor, which are expressly attributed to Cor- 
nelius Nepos. These two lives may safely be 
assigned to Cornelius Nepos ; but the Latinity 
of the other biographies is such that we can not 
suppose them to have been written by a learned 
contemporary of Cicero. At the same time, 
their style presents a striking contrast to the 
meretricious finery of the later empire ; and 
hence it may be conjectured that Probus abridcr- 
544 



ed the work of Nepos, and that the biographies, 
as they now exist, are in reality epitomes of 
lives actually written by Nepos. The most use- 
ful editions of these lives are by Van Staveren, 
8vo, Lugd. Bat., 1773 ; by Tzschucke, 8vo, Got- 
ting., 1804 ; by Bremi, 8vo, Zurich, 1820 ; and 
by Roth, Basil., 8vo, 1841. 

Nepos, Julius, last emperor but one of the 
West, A.D. 474-475, was raised to the throne 
by Leo, the emperor of the East. Nepos easily 
deposed Glycerius, who was regarded at Con- 
stantinople as a usurper {vid. Glycerius) ; but 
he was in his turn deposed in the next year by 
Orestes, who proclaimed his son Romulus. Ne- 
pos fled into Dalmatia, where he was killed in 
480. 

Nepotianus, Flavius Popilius, son of Eutro- 
pia, the half-sister of Constantine the Great, 
was proclaimed emperor at Rome in A.D. 350, 
but was slain by Marcellinus, the general of the 
usurper Magnentius, after a reign of twenty- 
eight days. 

Neptunus, called Poseidon by the Greeks. 
The Greek god is spoken of in a separate arti- 
cle. Vid. Poseidon. Neptunus was the chief 
marine divinity of the Romans. As the early 
Romans were not a maritime people, the marine 
divinities are rarely mentioned, and we scarcely 
know with certainty what day in the year was 
set apart as the festival of Neptunus, though it 
seems to have been the twenty-third of July 
(X Kal. Sext.). His temple stood in the Cam- 
pus Martius, not far from the septa. At his fes- 
tival the people formed tents (umbra) of the 
branches of trees, in which they enjoyed them- 
selves in feasting and drinking. Vid. Diet, of 
Ant., art. Neptunalia. When a Roman com- 
mander set sail with a fleet, he first offered up 
a sacrifice to Neptunus, which was thrown into 
the sea. In the Roman poets Neptunus is com- 
pletely identified with the Greek Poseidon, and 
accordingly, all the attributes of the latter are 
transferred by them to the former. 

[Nequinum, earlier name of Namia. Vid. 
Naenia.] 

Neratius Pp.iscus, a Roman jurist, who lived 
under Trajan and Hadrian. It is said that Tra- 
jan sometimes had the design of making Ne- 
ratius his successor in place of Hadrian. He 
enjoyed a high reputation under Hadrian, and 
was one of his consiliarii. His works are cited 
in the Digest. 

Nereis or Nereis (Stjocic, in Horn. N^pj/fc), 
a daughter of Nereus and Doris, and used espe- 
cially in the plural, Nereides (UsTjpsUec, N^p^f- 
6ec), to indicate the fifty daughters of Nereus 
and Doris. The Nereides were the marine 
nymphs of the Mediterranean, in contradistinc- 
tion from the Naiades, or the nymphs of fresh 
water, and the Oceanides, or the nymphs of the 
great ocean. Their names are not the same in 
all writers ; one of the most celebrated was 
Thetis, the mother of Achilles. They are de- 
scribed as lovely divinities, dwelling with their 
father at the bottom of the sea, and were be- 
lieved to be propitious to all sailors, and espe- 
cially to the Argonauts. They were worshipped 
in several parts of Greece, but more especially 
in sea-port towns. The epithets given them by 
the poets refer partly to their beauty and partly 
to their place of abode. They are frequently 



NEREIS. 



NERO. 



represented in works of art, and commonly as 
youthful, beautiful, and naked maidens ; and 
they arc often grouped with Tritons and other 
marine beings. Sometimes they appear on 
gems as half maidens and half fishes. 

[Nereis (N>///f), daughter of Pyrrhus I., 
king of Epirus, and wife of Gelon of Syracuse, 
to whom she bore Hieronymus : she was the 
last surviving descendant of the royal house of 
the JSacidaj.] 

Nkreius. a name given by the poets to a 
descendant of Ncreus, such as Phocus and 
Achilles. 

Neretum or Neritum (Neretinus : now Nar- 
bo), a town of the Salontini in Calabria, in the 
south of Italy. 

Nereus (Ntfpeuf), son of Oceanus (Pontus) 
and Terra (Ga?a), and husband of Doris, by 
whom he became the father of the fifty Nerei- 
des. He is described as the wise and unerring 
old man of the sea, at the bottom of which he 
dwelt. His empire is the Mediterranean, or 
more particularly the iEgean Sea, whence he is 
sometimes called the JEgean. He was believ- 
ed, like other marine divinities, to have the 
power of prophesying the future and of appear- 
ing to mortals in different shapes ; and in the I 
story of Hercules he acts a prominent part, just 
as Proteus in the story of Menelaus, and Glaucus 
in that of the Argonauts. Virgil {Mn., ii., 418) 
mentions the trident as his attribute, and the 
epithets given him by the poets refer to his old 
age, his kindliness, and his trustworthy knowl- 
edge of the future. In works of art, Nereus, 
like other sea-gods, is represented with pointed 
sea-weeds taking the place of hair in the eye- 
brows, the chin, and the breast. 

Nericus. Vid. Leucas. 

Nerine, equivalent to Nereis, a daughter of 
Nereus. Vid. Nereis. 

Nerio, Neriene, or Nerienis. Vid. Mars. 

Neritum, a mountain in Ithaca. Vid. Ithaca. 

Neritus, a small rocky island near Ithaca, 
erroneously supposed bv some to be Ithaca it- 
self. 

[Neritus (Nr/pLroc), a son of Pterelaus in 
Ithaca, from whom Mount Neritum was said to 
have derived its name.] 

Nerium, also called Celticum (now Cape<Fin- 
isterre), a promontory in the northwest corner 
of Spain, and in the territory of the Nerii, a 
tribe of the Celtic Artabri, whence the promon- 
tory is also called Artabrum. 

Nero, Claudius. Nero is said to have sig- 
nified "brave" in the Sabine tongue. 1. Tib., 
one of the four sons of Appius Claudius Caecus, 
censor B.C. 312, from whom all the Claudii Ne- 
rones were descended. — 2. C, a celebrated gen- 
eral in the second Punic war. He was praetor 
212, and was sent into Spain to oppose Hasdru- 
bal, who eluded his attack, and he was succeed- 
ed by Scipio Africanus. Nero was consul in 
207 with M. Livius Salinator. Nero marched 
into the south of Italy against Hannibal, whom 
he defeated. He then marched into the north 
of Italy, effected a junction with his colleague 
M. Livius in Picenum, and proceeded to crush 
Hasdruhal before his brother Hannibal could 
come to his assistance. Hasdrubal was defeat- 
ed and slain on the River Metaurus. This great 
battle, which probably saved Rome, gave a lus- 
35 



tre to the name of Nero, and consecrated it 
among the recollections of the Romans. 

Quid debea6, o Roma, Neronihus, 
Testis Metaurum thimen et Hasdrubal 
Devictus. Ilorut., Carm., iv., 4. 

Nero was censor 204, with M. Livius — 3. Tib., 
praetor 204, with Sardinia for his province ; and 
consul 202, when he obtained Africa as his prov- 
ince, but his fleet suffered so much at sea that 
he was unable to join Scipio in Africa. — 4. Tib., 
served under Pompey in the war against the 
pirates, B.C 67. He is probably the Tiberius 
Nero who recommended that the members of 
the conspiracy of Catiline, who had been seized, 
should be kept confined till Catiline was put 
down.— 5. Tib., father of the Emperor Tiberius, 
was probably the son of the last. He served as 
quaestor under Caesar (48) in the Alexandrine 
war. He sided with L. Antonius in the war of 
Perusia (41) ; and when this town surrendered, 
he passed over to Sextus Pompey in Sicily, and 
subsequently to M. Antony in Achaea. On a 
reconciliation being effected between Antony 
and Octavianus at the close of the year (40), he 
returned with his wife to Rome. Livia, who 
possessed great beauty, excited the passion of 
Octavianus, to whom she was surrendered by 
her husband, being then six months gone with 
child of her second son Drusus. Nero died 
shortly after, and left Octavianus the tutor of 
his two sons. 

Nero. 1. Roman emperor A.D. 54-68, was 
the son of Cn. Domitius Ahenobarbus, and of 
Agrippina, daughter of Germanicus Caesar, and 
sister of Caligula. Nero's original name was 
L. Domitius Ahenobarbus, but after the marriage 
of his mother with her uncle, t he Emperor Clau- 
dius, he was adopted by Claudius (A.D. 50), and 
was called Nero Claudius Ccesar Drusus Ger- 
manicus. Nero was born at Antiurn on the fif- 
teenth of December, A D. 37. Shortly after his 
adoption by Claudius, Nero, being then sixteen 
years of age, married Octavia, the daughter of 
Claudius and Messalina (53). Among his early 
instructors was Seneca. Nero had some tal- 
ent and taste. He was fond of the arts, and 
made verses ; but he was indolent and given to 
pleasure, and had no inclination for laborious 
studies. On the death of Claudius (54), Agrip- 
pina secured the succession for her son, to the 
exclusion of Britannicus, the son of Claudius. 
His mother wished to govern in the name of 
her son, and her ambition was the cause of 
Nero's first crime. Jealousy thus arose be- 
tween Nero and his mother, which soon broke 
out into a quarrel, and Agrippina threatened to 
join Britannicus and raise him to his father's 
place ; whereupon Nero caused Britannicus to 
be poisoned, at an entertainment where Agrip- 
pina and Octavia were present (55). During 
the early part of Nero's reign, the government 
of Rome was in the hands of Seneca, and of 
Burrhus, the praefect of the praetorians, who 
opposed the ambitious designs of Agrippina. 
Meantime the young emperor indulged his licen- 
tious inclinations without restraint. He neg- 
lected his wife for the beautiful but dissoh te 
Poppaea Sabina, the wife of Otho. This aban- 
doned woman aspired to become the emperor's 
wife ; but since she had no hopes of sueceedincr 
in her design while Agrippina lived, she used 

545 



NERO. 



NERVA, COCCEIUS. 



all her arts to urge Nero to put his mother to j 
death. Accordingly, in 59, Agrippina was as- 
sassinated hy Nero's order, with the approba- 
tion at least of Seneca and Burrhus, who saw 
that the time was come for the destruction 
either of the mother or the son. Though Nero 
had no longer any one to oppose him, he felt 
the punishment of his guilty conscience, and 
said that he was haunted by his mother's spec- 
tre. He attempted to drown his reflections in 
fresh riot, in which he was encouraged by a 
band of flatterers. He did not, however, imme- 
diately marry Poppsea, being probably restrain- 
ed by fear of Burrhus and Seneca. But the 
death of Burrhus in 62, and the retirement of 
Seneca from public affairs, which immediately 
followed, left Nero more at liberty. Accord- 
ingly, he divorced his wife Octavia, and in eigh- 
teen days married Poppsea. Not satisfied with 
putting away his wife, he falsely charged her 
with adultery, and banished her to the' island of 
Pandataria, where she was shortly after put to 
death. In 64 the great fire at Rome happened. 
Its origin is uncertain, for it is hardly credible 
that the city was fired by Nero's order, as some 
ancient writers assert. Out of the fourteen 
regiones into which Rome was divided, three 
were totally destroyed, and in seven others 
only a few half-burned houses remained. The 
emperor set about rebuilding the city on an 
improved plan, with wider streets. He found 
money for his purposes by acts of oppression 
and violence, and even temples were robbed of 
their wealth. With these means he began to 
erect his sumptuous golden palace, on a scale 
of magnitude and splendor which almost sur- 
passes°belief. The vestibule contained a colos- 
sal statue of himself one hundred and twenty 
feet high. The odium of the conflagration, 
which the emperor could not remove from him- 
self, he tried to throw on the Christians, who 
were then numerous in Rome, and many of 
them were put to a cruel death. The tyranny 
of Nero at last (65) led to the organization of a 
formidable conspiracy against him, usually call- 
ed Piso's conspiracy, from the name of one of 
the principal accomplices. The plot was dis- 
covered, and many distinguished persons were 
put to death, among whom was Piso himself, 
the poet Lucan, and the philosopher Seneca, 
though the latter appears to have taken no part 
in the plot. In the same year, Poppsea died of 
a kick which her brutal husband gave her in a 
fit of passion when she was with child. Nero 
now married Statilia Messallina. The history of 
the remainder of Nero's reign is a catalogue of 
his crimes. Virtue in any form was the object 
of his fear ; and almost every month was mark- 
ed by the execution or banishment of some dis- 
tinguished man. Among his other victims were 
Thrasea Psetus and Barea Soranus, both men of 
high rank, but of spotless integrity. In 67 Nero 
paid a visit to Greece, and took part in the con- 
tests of both the Olympic and Pythian games. 
He commenced a canal across the Isthmus of 
Corinth, but the works were afterward sus- 
pended by his own orders. While in Greece he 
sent orders to put to death his faithful general 
Domitius Corbulo, which the old soldier antici- 
pated by stabbing himself. The Roman world 
had long been tired of its oppressor ; and the 
546 



storm at length broke out in Gaul, where Juliua 
Vindex, the governor, openly raised the stand- 
ard of revolt. His example was followed bv 
Galba, who was governor of Hispania Tarra- 
conensis. Galba was proclaimed emperor by 
his troops, but he only assumed the title of lega- 
tus of the senate and the Roman people. Soon 
after the3e news reached Fvome, Sabinus, who 
was praefectus prastorio along with Tigellinus, 
persuaded the troops to proclaim Galba. Nerd 
was immediately deserted. He escaped from 
the palace at night with a few freedmen, and 
made his way to a house about four miles from 
Rome, which belonged to his freedman Phaon. 
Here he gave himself a mortal wound when he 
heard the trampling of the horses on which his 
pursuers were mounted. The centurion, on en- 
tering, attempted to stop the flow of blood, but 
Nero saying, " It is too late. Is this your fidel- 
ity V expired with a horrid stare. Nero's prog- 
ress in crime is easily traced, and the lesson is 
worth reading. Without a good education, and 
with no talent for his high station, he was placed 
in a position of danger from the first. He was 
sensual, and fond of idle display, and then he 
became greedy of money to satisfy his expens- 
es ; he was timid, and, by consequence, he be- 
came cruel when he anticipated danger ; and, 
like other murderers, his first crime, the poi- 
soning of Britannicus, made him capable of an- 
other. But, contemptible and cruel as he was, 
there are many persons who, in the same situa- 
tion, might run the same guilty career. He was 
only in his thirty-first year when he died, and 
he had held the supreme power for eighteen 
years and eight months. He was the last of 
the descendants of Julia, the sister of the dic- 
tator Caesar. The most important external 
events in the reign of Nero were the conquest 
of Armenia by Domitius Corbulo (vid. Corbulo), 
and the insurrection of the Britons under Boa- 
dicea, which was quelled by Suetonius Pauli- 
nus. Vid. Paulinus. — 2. Eldest son of Ger- 
manicus and Agrippina, fell a victim to the am- 
bition of Sejanus, who resolved to get rid of the 
sons of Germanicus in order to obtain the im- 
perial throne for himself. Drusus, the brother 
of Nero, was persuaded to second the designs 
of Sejanus, in hopes that the death of his elder 
brother would secure him the succession to the 
throne. There was no difficulty in exciting the 
jealousy of Tiberius ; and, accordingly, in A.D. 
29, Nero was declared an enemy of the state, 
was removed to the island of Pontia, and was 
there either starved to death or perished by his 
own hands. 

Nertobriga. 1. (Now Valera la Vieja), a 
town in Hispania Baetica, with the surname 
Concordia Julia, probably the same place which 
Polybius calls (xxxv., 2) Ercobrica ('Ep«66p4- 
ko). — 2. (Now Almuna), a town of the Celtiben 
in Hispania Tarraconensis, on the road from 
Emerita to Cassaraugusta. 

Nerulum, a fortified place in Lueania, on the 
Via Popilia. 

[Nerusii (Nepovcuoi.), a people among the Al- 
pes Maritimae in Gallia Narbonensis, on the 
coast : their capital was Vintium (Ovivriov).] 

Nerva, Cocceius. 1. M., consul B.C. 36 f 
brought about the reconciliation between M. 
Antonius and Octavianus, 40, and m the same 



NERVII. 



N'ESTUS. 



as the Cocceius mentioned by Horace (Sat., i., 
5, 28).— 2. M., probably the son of the preced- 
ing, and grandfather of the Emperor Nerva. 
He was consul A.D. 22. In 33 he resolutely 
starved himself to death, notwithstanding the 
entreaties of Tiberius, whose constant compan- 
ion he was. He was a celebrated jurist, and 
is often mentioned in the Digest.— 3. M., the 
son of the last, and probably father of the em- 
peror, was also a celebrated jurist, and is often 
cited in the Digest under the name of Nerva 
Filius. — 4. M., Roman emperor A.D. 96-98, 
was born at Nwnia, in Umbria, A.D. 32. He 
was consul with Vespasian 71, and with Domi- 
tian 90. On the assassination of Domitian in 
September, 96, Nerva, who had probably been 
privy to the conspiracy, was declared emperor 
at Rome by the people and the soldiers, and his 
administration at once restored tranquillity to 
the state. He stopped proceedings against those 
who had been accused of treason (majestas), 
and allowed many exiled persons to return to 
Rome. The class of informers were suppress- 
ed by penalties, and some were put to death. 
At the commencement of his reign, Nerva 
swore that he would put no senator to death ; 
and he kept his word, even when a conspiracy 
had been formed against his life by Calpurnius 
Crassus. Though Nerva was virtuous and hu- 
mane, he did not possess much energy and vig- 
or; and his feebleness was shown by a mutiny 
of the Praetorian soldiers. The soldiers de- 
manded the punishment of the assassins of Do- 
mitian, which the emperor refused. Though 
his body was feeble, his will was strong, and 
he offered them his own neck, and declared his 
readiness to die. However, it appears that the 
soldiers effected their purpose, and Nerva was 
obliged to put Petronius Secundus and Parthe- 
nius to death, or to permit them to be massa- 
cred by the soldiers. Nerva felt his weakness, 
but he showed his noble character and his good 
sense by appointing as his successor a man who 
possessed both vigor and ability to direct pub- 
lic affairs. He adopted as his son and success- 
or, without any regard to his own kin, M. Ul- 
pius Trajanus, who was then at the head of an 
army in Germany. Nerva died suddenly on the 
twenty-seventh of January, A.D. 98, at the age 
of sixty-five years. 

Nervh, a powerful and warlike people in 
Gallia Belgica, whose territory extended from 
the River Sabis (now Sambre) to the ocean, and 
part of which was covered by the wood Ardu- 
enna. They were divided into several smaller 
tribes, the Centrones, Grudii, Levaci, Pleu- 
moxii, and Geiduni. In B.C. 58 they were de- 
feated by Ceesar with such slaughter that out 
of sixty thousand men capable of bearing arms 
only five hundred were left. 

Nesactium, a town in Istria, on the River 
Arsia, taken by the Romans B.C. 177. 

[Nes^ea (Nrjoair], Horn ), a Nereid, a com- 
panion of the nymph Cyrene ] 

Nesis (now Nisita), a small island off the 
coast of Campania, between Puteoli and Neapo- 
lis, and opposite Mount Pausilypus. This isl- 
and was a favorite residence of some of the Ro- 
man nobles. 

[Nesos (now Neso), a small city in the north- 
ern part of Eubcea.] 



i NessOnis (Xcgguvic), a lake in Thessaly, a 
j little south of the River Pcneus, and northeast 
of Larissa, is in summer merely a swamp, but 
in winter is not only full of water, but even 
overflows.its banks. Nessonis and the neigh- 
boring Lake Brebcis were regarded by the an- 
cients as remains of the vast lake which was 
supposed to have covered the whole of Thes- 
saly till an outlet was made for its waters 
through the rocks of Tempe. 

Nessus (Maoog), a centaur, who carried De- 
ianira across the River Evenus, but, attempting 
to run away with her, was shot by Hercules 
with a poisoned arrow, which afterward be- 
came the cause of the death of Hercules. Vid. 
p. 359, a. 

[Nessus (Niccog). Vid. Nestits.] 

Nestor (Nsarop), king of Pylos, son of Nel- 
eusand Chloris, husband of Eurydicc, and father 
of Pisidice, Polycaste, Perseus, Stratius, Are- 
tus, Echephron, Pisistratus, Antilochus, and 
Thrasymedes. Some relate that, after the 
death of Eurydice, Nestor married Anaxibia, 
the daughter of Atreus, and sister of Agamem- 
non ; but this Anaxibia is elsewhere described 
as the wife of Strophius and the mother of Py- 
lades. When Hercules invaded the country of 
Neleus and slew his sons, Nestor alone was 
spared, either because he was absent from Py- 
los, or because he had taken no part in carrying 
off from Hercules the oxen of Geryones. In 
his youth and early manhood Nestor was a dis- 
tinguished warrior. He defeated both the Ar- 
cadians and Eleans. He took part in the fight 
of the Lapithss against the Centaurs, and he is 
mentioned among the Calydonian hunters and 
the Argonauts. Although far advanced in age, 
he sailed with the other Greek heroes against 
Troy. Having ruled over three generations of 
men, his advice and authority were deemed 
equal to that of the immortal gods, and he was 
renowned for his wisdom, his justice, and his 
knowledge of war. After the fall of Troy he 
returned home, and arrived safely in Pylos, 
where Jupiter (Zeus) granted to him the full 
enjoyment of old age, surrounded by intelligent 
and brave sons. Various towns in Peloponne- 
sus, of the name of Pylos, laid claim to being 
the city of Nestor. On this point, vid. p. 542, a. 

[Nestor (Necrrwp), an academic philosopher, 
preceptor ofMarcellus, son ofOctavia.] 

Nestorides (N«:<yrop/J?7f), i. e., a son of Nes- 
tor, as Antilochus and Pisistratus. 

Nestorius, a celebrated Haeresiarch, was ap- 
pointed patriarch of Constantinople A.D. 428, 
but, in consequence of his heresy, was deposed 
at the council of Ephesus, 431. His great op- 
ponent was Cyril. Nestorius was subsequent- 
ly banished to one of the oases in Egypt, and 
he died in exile probably before 450. Nestorius 
carefully distinguished between the divine and 
human nature attributed to Christ, and refused 
to give to the Virgin Mary the title of Thcoto- 
cus (QeoroKog), or "Mother of God." The opin- 
ions of Nestorius are still maintained by the 
Nestorian Christians. 

Nestcjs, sometimes Nessus (Neorof : nowr 
called Mesto by the Greeks, Karasu by the 
Turks), a river in Thrace, which rises in Mount 
Rhodope, flows southeast, and falls into the 
xEgean Sea west of Abdera and opposite the 

547 



NESUS. 



NICANOR. 



island of Thasos. The Nestus formed the east- 
em boundary of Macedonia from the time of 
Philip and Alexander the Great. 

Nesus. Vtd. CEyixDJE. 

Netum (Netlnus : now Noto Anjtiqua, near 
Noto), a town in Sicily, southwest of Syracuse, 
and a dependency of the latter. 

Necri (NeOpoi, ^Evpoi), a people of Sarmatia 
Europa3a, whom Herodotus describes as not 
of Scythian race, though they followed Scyth- 
ian customs. Having been driven out from 
their earlier abodes by a plague of serpents, 
they settled to the northwest of the sources of 
the Tyras (now Dniester). They were esteem- 
ed skillful in enchantment. 

Neyirnum. Vtd. Noviodunum, No. 2. 

Nic^a (Niuata : NtA'a^vc, Nwaevc, Nicaeen- 
sis, Nicensis). 1. (Ruins at Iznik), one of the 
most celebrated cities of Asia, stood on the 
eastern side of the Lake Ascania (now Iznik) 
in Bithynia. Its site appears to have been oc- 
cupied in very ancient times by a town called 
Attaea, and afterward by a settlement of the 
Bottiaeans, called Ancore or Helicore, which 
was destroyed by the Mysians. Not long after 
the death of Alexander the Great, Antigonus 
built on the same spot a city which he named 
after himself, Antigonea ; but Lysimachus soon 
after changed the name into Nicaea, in honor of 
his wife. Under the kings of Bithynia it was 
often the royal residence, and it long disputed 
with Nicomedia the rank of capital of Bithynia. 
The Roman emperors bestowed upon it numer- 
ous honors and benefits, which are recorded on 
its coins. Its position at the junction of sev- 
eral of the chief roads leading through Asia Mi- 
nor to Constantinople made it the centre of a 
large traffic. It is very famous in ecclesiastical 
history as the seat of the great oecumenical 
council which Constantine convoked in A.D. 
325, chiefly for the decision of the Arian con- 
troversy, and which drew up the Nicene Creed; 
that is to say, the first part of the well-known 
creed so called, the latter part of which was 
added by the Council of Constantinople in the 
year 381. The Council of Nice (as we com- 
monly call it) also settled the time of keeping 
Easter. A second council, held here in 787, 
decided in favor of the worship of images. In 
the very year of the great council, Nicaea was 
overthrown by an earthquake, but it was re- 
stored by the Emperor Yalens in 36S. Under 
the later emperors of the East, Nicaea long 
served as the bulwark of Constantinople against 
the Arabs and Turks : it was taken by the Sel- 
juks in 1078, and became the capital of the Sul- 
tan Soliman ; it was retaken by the First Cru- 
saders in 1097. After the taking of Constan- 
tinople by the Venetians and the Franks, and 
the foundation of the Latin empire there in 
1204, the Greek emperor, Theodorus Lascaris. 
made Nicaea the capital of a separate kingdom, 
in which his followers maintained themselves 
with various success against the Latins of Con- 
stantinople on the one side, and the Seljuks of 
Iconium on the other, and in 1261 regained 
Constantinople. At length, in 1330, Nicaea was 
finally taken by Orchan, the son of the founder 
of the Ottoman empire, Othman. Jzmk, the 
modern Nicaea, is a poor village of about one 
hundred houses ; but the double walls of the 
548 



ancient city still remain almost complete, ex- 
hibiting four large and two small gates. There 
are also the remains of the two moles which 
formed the harbor on the lake, of an aqueduct, 
of the theatre, and of the gymnasium ; in this 
last edifice, we are told, there was a point from 
which all the four gates were visible, so great 
was the regularity with which the city was 
built, — 2. (Now Nilab), a city of India, on the 
borders of the Paropamisadae, on the west of 
the River Cophen. — 3. (Now probably ruins at 
Darapoor), a city of India, on the River Hydas- 
pes (now Jelum), built by Alexander to com- 
memorate his victory over Porus.— 4. A fort- 
ress of the Epicnemidian Locrians on the sea, 
near the Pass of Thermopylae, which it com- 
manded. From its important position, it is 
often mentioned in the wars of Greece with 
Macedonia and with the Romans. In the for- 
mer, its betrayal to Philip by the Thracian dy- 
nast Phalaecus led to the termination of the Sa- 
cred war, B.C. 346 ; and after various changes, 
it is found, at the time of the wars with Rome, 
in the hands of the zEtolians. — 5. In Ulyria. 
Vid. Nicia. — 6. An ancient name of Mariana in 
Corsica. — 7. (Now JSfizza, Nice), a city on the 
coast of Liguria, a little east of the River Var; 
a colony of Massilia, and subject to that city ; 
hence it was considered as belonging to Gaul, 
though it was just beyond the frontier. It first 
became important as a stronghold of the Chris- 
tian religion, which was preached there by Na- 
zarius at an early period. 

Nicander (NiKavdpos). 1. King of Sparta, 
son of Charilaus, and father of Theopompus, 
reigned about B C. 809-770.— 2. A Greek poet, 
grammarian, and physician, was a native of 
Claros, near Colophon in Ionia, whence he is 
frequently called a Colophonian. He succeeded 
his father as one of the hereditary priests of 
Apollo Clarius. He appears to have flourished 
about B.C. 185-135. Of the numerous worka 
of Nicander only two poems are extant, one 
entitled Theriaca (Qnpiaxa), which consists of 
nearly one thousand hexameter lines, and treats 
of venomous animals and the wounds inflicted 
by them, and another entitled Alcxipharmaca 
('AleZidupficiKa), which consists of more than 
six hundred hexameter lines, and treats of poi- 
sons and their antidotes. Among the ancients, 
his authority in all matters relating to toxicol- 
ogy seems to have been considered high. His 
works are frequently quoted by Pliny, Galen, 
and other ancient writers. His style is harsh 
and obscure ; and his works are now scarcely 
ever read as poems, and are only consulted by 
those who are interested in points of zoological 
and medical antiquities. The best edition is by 
Schneider, who published the Alexipharmaca in 
1792, Halae, and the Theriaca in 1816, Lips. 

Nicanor (Ni/vuvwp). 1. Son of Parmenion, a 
distinguished officer in the service of Alexan- 
der, died during the king's advance into Bac- 
tria, B.C. 330 — 2. A Macedonian officer, who, 
in the division of the provinces after the death 
of Perdiccas (321), obtained the government of 
Cappadocia. He attached himself to the party 
of Antigonus, who made him governor of Media 
and the adjoining provinces, which he continu- 
ed to hold until 312, when he was deprived of 
them by Seleucus. — 3. A Macedonian officei 



NICARCHUS. 



NICIAS. 



under Cassander, by whom he was secretly dis- 
patched, immediately on the death of Antipater, 
319, to take the command of the Macedoni- 
an garrison at Munychia. Nicanor arrived at 
Athens before the news of Antipater's death, 
and thus readily obtained possession of the 
fortress. Soon afterward he surprised the Pi- 
raeus also, and placed both fortresses in the 
hands of Cassander on the arrival of the latter 
in Attica in 318. Nicanor was afterward dis- 
patched by Cassander with a fleet to the Hel- 
lespont, where he gained a victory over the ad- 
miral of Polysperchon. On his return to Athens 
he incurred the suspicion of Cassander, and 
was put to death — [4. Surnamed the Elephant, 
a general under Philip V. of Macedonia, who 
invaded Attica with an army just before the 
breaking out of the war between Philip and the 
Romans, B C. 200 : he also commanded the rear- 
guard of Philip's army at the battle of Cynos- 
cephalae, B.C. 197.— 5. Son of Patroclus, sent 
by Lysias, the regent of Syria during the ab- 
sence of Antiochus IV., to reduce the revolted 
Jews. He was completely defeated and slain 
by Judas Maccabaeus, B.C. 165.— 6. Aristotle's 
adopted son, destined by the philosopher to be 
his son-in-law. — 7. A celebrated grammarian, 
lived during the reign of Hadrian, A.D. 127. 
His labors were chiefly devoted to punctuation, 
and hence he was nicknamed ^TLypariac.^ 

Nicarchus (Nlicapxoc). [1. An Arcadian offi- 
cer in the Greek army of the younger Cyrus : 
after the defeat and death of Cyrus, he aban- 
doned the Greeks, and went over to the Per- 
sians with about twenty of his men.] — 2. The 
author of thirty-eight epigrams in the Greek 
Anthology, appears to have lived at Rome near 
«he beginning of the second century of the 
Christian era. 

Nicator, Seleocus. Vid. Seleccus. 

Nice (NUtj), called Victoria by the Romans, 
the goddess of victory, is described as a daugh- 
ter of Pallas and Styx, and as a sister of Zelus 
(zeal), Cratos (strength), and Bia (force). When 
Jupiter (Zeus) commenced fighting against the 
Titans, and called upon the gods for assistance, 
Nice and her two sisters were the first who 
came forward, and Jupiter (Zeus) was so pleas- 
ed with their readiness, that he caused them 
ever after to live with him in Olympus. Nice 
had a celebrated temple on the acropolis of 
Athens, which is still extant and in excellent 
preservation. She is often seen represented in 
ancient works of art. especially with other di- 
vinities, such as Jupiter (Zeus) and Minerva 
(Athena), and with conquering heroes whose 
horses she guides. In her appearance she re- 
sembles Minerva (Athena), but has wings, and 
carries a palm or a wreath, and is engaged in 
raising a trophy, or in inscribing the victory of 
the conqueror on a shield. 

Nice thorium (~StKij66piov). 1. (Now Rakkah), 
a fortified town of Mesopotamia, on the Eu- 
phrates, near the mouth of the River Bilecha 
(now el Bclikh), and due south of Edessa, built 
by order of Alexander, and probably completed 
under Seleucus. It is doubtless the same place 
as the Calm mobs or Callinicum (Ko.a?uvikoc 
or -ov), the fortifications of which were repaired 
by Justinian. Its name was again changed to 
laHMPropoLis, when it was adorned with fresh 



j buildings by the Emperor Leo.— 2. A fortress 
! on the Propontis, belonging to the territory of 

Pergamus. 

Nicephorius (TsiKT/tpopioc), a river of Armenia 
Major, on which Tigranes built his residence 
Tigranocerta. It was a tributary of the Up- 
per Tigris ; probably identical with the Cev- 
trites, or a small tributary of it. 

NlCEPHORUS (NlK71(j)6p0C). 1. CaLLISTUS XaN- 

thopulus, the author of the Ecclesiastical His- 
tory, was born in the latter part of the thir- 
teenth century, and died about 1450. His Ec- 
clesiastical History was originally in twenty- 
three books, of which there are eighteen ex- 
tant, extending from the birth of Christ down 
to the death of the tyrant Phocas in 610. Al- 
j though Nicephorus compiled from the works 
j of his predecessors, he entirely remodelled his 
| materials, and his style is vastly superior to 
I that of his contemporaries. Edited by Ducaeus, 
j Paris, 1630, 2 vols, folio.— 2. Gregoras. Vid. 
j Gregoras. — 3. Patriarch a, originally the no- 
tary or chief secretary of state to the Emperor 
Constantine V. Copronymus, subsequently re- 
tired into a convent, and was raised to the pa- 
triarchate of Constantinople in 806. He was 
! deposed in 815, and died in 828. Several of 
his works have come down to us, of which the 
most important is entitled Breviarium Histori- 
cum, a Byzantine history, extending from 602 
to 770. This is one of the best works of the 
J Byzantine period. Edited by Petavius, Paris, 
I 1616, [and by Bekker, Bonn, 1837]. 
i Nicer (now Ncckar), a river in Germany fall- 
ing into the Rhine at the modern Mannheim. 

Niceratus (Nucr/pa-oc). 1. Father of Nicias, 
the celebrated Athenian general. — 2. Son of 
Nicias, put to death by the thirty tyrants, to 
j whom his great wealth was no doubt a tempta- 
tion. — 3. A Greek writer on plants, one of the 
followers of Asclepiades of Bithynia. 

Nicetas (NtKT/rac). 1. Acominatus, also call- 
ed Choniates, because he was a native of 
Chonas, formerly Colossas, in Phrygia, one of 
the most important Byzantine historians, lived 
in the latter half of the twelfth and the former 
half of the thirteenth centuries. He held im- 
portant public offices at Constantinople, and 
was present at the capture of the city by the 
Latins in 1204, of which he has given us a faith- 
ful description. He escaped to Nicaea, where 
he died about 1216. The history of Nicetas 
consists of ten distinct works, each of which 
contains one or more books, of which there are 
twenty-one, giving the history of the emperors 
from 1118 to 1206. The best edition is by 
Bekker, Bonn, 1835. — 2. Eugenianus, lived 
probably toward the end of the twelfth cen- 
tury, and wrote "The History of the Lives of 
Drusilla and Charicles," which is the worst of 
all the Greek romances that have come down 
to us. It was published for the first time by 
Boissonade, Paris, 1819, 2 vols. 

Nigia (now Enza ?), a tributary of the Po in 
Gallia Cisaipina. 

[Nigia, a place on the borders of Macedonia 
i and Illyria, between Lychnidus and Heraclea, 
| the same as Nicaea, No. 5.] 

Nicias (Nuafof). 1. A celebrated Athenian 
! general during the Peloponnesian war, was the 
j son of Niceratus, from whom he inherited a 

549 



NfCIAS. 



NICOCLES. 



large fui tune. His property was valued at one j 
hundred talents. From this cause, combined ; 
with his unambitious character, and his aver- j 
sion to all dangerous innovations, he was natu- | 
rally brought into connection with the aristo- i 
cratical portion of his fellow-citizens. He was 
several times associated with Pericles as strat- ; 
egus, and his great prudence and high charac- j 
ter gained for him considerable influence. On 
the death of Pericles he came forward more j 
openly as the opponent of Cleon, and the other 
demagogues of Athens; but, from his military j 
reputation, the mildness of his character, and j 
the liberal use which he made of his great j 
wealth., he was looked upon with respect by all j 
classes of the citizens. His timidity led him ! 
to buy off the attacks of the .sycophants. He J 
was a man of strong religious feeling, and Ar- 
istophanes ridicules him in the Equiics for his j 
timidity and superstition. His characteristic 
caution was the distinguishing feature of his 
military career ; and his military operations j 
were almost always successful. He frequently j 
commanded the Athenian armies during the j 
earlier years of the Peloponnesian war. After j 
the death of Cleon (B.C. 422) he exerted all his j 
influence to bring about a peace, which was j 
concluded in the following year (421). For the j 
next few years Nicias used all his efforts to in- 
duce the Athenians to preserve the peace, and ; 
was constantly opposed by Alcibiades, who had 
now become the leader of the popular party. 
In 415 the Athenians resolved on sending their 
great expedition to Sicily, and appointed Nicias 
with Alcibiades and Lamachus to the command. 
Nicias disapproved of the expedition altogeth- 
er, and did all that he could to divert the Atheni- 
ans from this course. But his representations 
produced no effect, and he set sail for Sicily 
with his colleagues. Alcibiades was soon aft- 
erward recalled (vid. Alcibiades), and the sole 
command was thus virtually left in the hands 
of Nicias. His early operations were attended 
with success. He defeated the Syracusans in 
the autumn, and employed the winter in se- 
curing the co-operation of several of the Greek 
cities, and of the Siculian tribes in the island. 
In the spring of next year he renewed his at- 
tacks upon Syracuse ; he succeeded in seizing 
on Epipola, and commenced the circumvalla- 
tion of Syracuse. About this time Lamachus 
was slain in a skirmish under the walls. All 
the attempts of the Syracusans to stop the cir- 
cumvallation failed. The works were nearly 
completed, and the doom of Syracuse seemed 
sealed, when Gylippus, the Spartan, arrived in 
Sicily. Vid. Gylippus. The tide of success 
now turned, and Nicias found himself obliged 
to send to Athens for re-enforcernents, and re- 
quested, at the same time, that another com- 
mander might be sent to supply his place, as 
his feeble health rendered him unequal to the j 
discharge of his duties. The Athenians voted I 
re enforcements, which were placed under the t 
command of Demosthenes and Eurymedon ; but j 
they would not allow Nicias to resign his com- | 
mand. Demosthenes, upon his arrival in Sicily ! 
(413), made a vigorous effort to recover Epipo- j 
las, which the Athenians had lost. He was j 
nearly successful, but was finally driven back 
with severe loss. Demosthenes now deemed ' 
550 



any further attempts against the city hopeless, 
and therefore proposed to abandon the siege 
and return to Athens. To this Nicias would 
not consent. He professed to stand in dread 
of the Athenians at home : but he appears tc 
have had reasons for believing that a party 
among the Syracusans themselves were likely, 
in no long time, to facilitate the reduction of 
the city. But meantime fresh succors arrived 
for the Syracusans ; sickness was making rav- 
ages amongjhe Athenian troops, and at length 
Nicias himself saw the necessity of retreating. 
Secret orders were given that every thing 
should be in readiness for departure, when an 
eclipse of the moon happened. The credulous 
superstition of Nicias led to the total destruc- 
tion of the Athenian armament. The sooth- 
sayers interpreted the event as an injunction 
from the gods that they should not retreat be- 
fore the next full moon, and Nicias resolutely 
determined to abide by their decision. The 
Syracusans resolved to bring the enemy to an 
engagement, and, in a decisive naval battle, 
defeated the Athenians. They were now mas- 
ters of the harbor, and the Athenians were re- 
duced to the necessity of making a desperate 
effort to escape. The Athenians were again 
decisively defeated ; and having thus lost their 
fleet, they were obliged to retreat by land. 
The} 7 were pursued by the enemy, and were 
finally compelled to surrender. Both Nicias 
and Demosthenes were put to death by the 
Syracusans. — 2. The physician of Pyrrhus, king 
of Epirus, who offered to the Roman consul to 
poison the king for a certain reward. Fabricius 
not only rejected his base offer with indigna- 
tion, but immediately sent him back to Pyrrhus 
with notice of his treachery. He is sometimes, 
but erroneously, called Cineas. — 3. A Coan 
grammarian, who lived at Rome in the time 
of Cicero, with whom he was intimate. — 4. A 
celebrated Athenian painter, flourished about 
B.C. 320. He was the most distinguished dis- 
ciple of Euphranor. His works seem to have 
been ail painted in encaustic. One of his great- 
est paintings was a representation of the infer- 
nal regions'as described by Homer. He refus- 
ed to sell this picture to Ptolemy, although the 
price offered for it was sixty talents. 

[Nicippe (N//cjtz-^). 1. A daughter of Pelops. 
and the wife of Sthenelus. — 2. A daughter of 
Thespius, the mother of Antimachus by Her- 
cules.] 

[Nicippus (Slkl-ttcc). 1. A native of Cos. 
who finally made himself tyrant of the island. — 
2. One of the ephors of the Messenians in B.C. 

220.] 

Nicochares (Sixoxupw), an Athenian poet 
of the Old Comedy, the son of Philonides, was 
contemporary with Aristophanes. [The frag- 
ments of his comedies are collected inMeineke's 
Fragm. Comic. Grccc. vol. i., p. 465-468, edit, 
minor.] 

Nicoc lls (Nikokmjc). 1. King of Salamis in 
Cyprus, son of Evagoras. whom he succeeded 
B*C. 374. Isocrates addressed him a long pan- 
egyric upon his father's virtues, for which Nic- 
ocles rewarded the orator with the magnificent 
present of twenty talents. Scarcely any par- 
ticulars are known of the reign of Nicocles 
He is said to have perished by a violent death. 



NICOCRATES. 



NICOMEDES. 



but neither the period nor circumstances of this 
„ event arc recorded — 2. Prince or ruler of Pa- 
phos, in Cyprus, during the period which fol- 
lowed the death of Alexander. He was at first 
one of those who took part with Ptolemy against 
Antigonus ; but, having subsequently entered 
into secret negotiations with Antigonus, he was 
compelled by Ptolemy to put an end to his own 
life, B.C. 310 — 3. Tyrant of Sicyon, was de- 
posed by Aratus, after a reign of only four 
months, B.C. 251.— [4. Of Soli, an officer in the 
army of Alexander the Great —5. An Athenian, 
put to death with his friend Phocion, B C. 318. 
As he had always been a warm friend to him, 
he begged of Phocion, as a last favor, to be al- 
lowed to drink the poison before his illustrious 
friend, a request which Phocion unwillingly 
conceded.] 

[Njgocbatbs (NiKoicpd-ijr). 1. A native of 
Cyprus, collected an extensive library at a very 
early period.— 2. Archon of Athens, B.C. 333.] 

Nicocreox (^ScicoKpeuv), king of Salamis. in 
Cyprus, at the time of Alexander's expedition 
into Asia. After the death of Alexander he 
took part with Ptolemy against Antigonus, and 
was intrusted by Ptolemy with the chief com- 
mand over the whole island. Nicocreon is said 
to have ordered the philosopher Anaxarchus to 
be pounded to death in a stone mortar, in re- 
venge for an insult which the latter had offered 
the king when he visited Alexander at Tyre. 

Nicolaus Chalcocondyles. Vid. Chalco- 

.'JONDYLES. 

Nicolaus Damascenes, a Greckhistorian, and 
an intimate friend both of Herod the Great and 
of Augustus. He was, as his name indicates, a 
native of Damascus, and a son of Antipater and 
Stratonice. He received an excellent educa- 
tion, and he carried on his philosophical studies 
in common with Herod, at whose court he re- 
sided. In B.C. 13 he accompanied Herod on a 
visit to Augustus at Rome, on which occasion 
Augustus made Nicolaus a present of the finest 
fruit of the palm-tree, which the emperor called 
Nicolai — a name by which it continued to be 
known down to the Middle Ages. Nicolaus rose 
so high in the favor of Augustus that he was 
on more than one occasion of great service to 
Herod, when the emperor was incensed against 
the latter. Nicolaus wrote a large number of 
works, of which the most important were, 1. A 
life of himself, of which a considerable portion 
is 6till extant. 2. A universal history, which 
consisted of one hundred and forty-four books, 
of which we have only a few fragments. 3. A life 
of Augustus, from which we have some extracts 
made by command of Constantine Porphyrogen- 
itus. He also wrote commentaries on Aris- 
totle, and other philosophical works, and was 
the author of several tragedies and comedies : 
Stobaeus has preserved a fragment of one of his 
eomedies, extending to forty-four lines. The 
best edition of his fragments is by Orelli, Lips., 
1004. 

Nicomachcs (KtKOfiaxog). 1. Father of Aris- 
totle. Vid. p. 100, a. — 2 Son of Aristotle by the 
slave Herpyllis. He was himself a philosopher, 
and wrote some philosophical works. A portion 
of Aristotle's writings bears the name of Nico- 
machcan Ethics, but why we can not tell ; wheth- 
er the father so named them, as a memorial of 



his affection for his young son, or whether they 
derived their title from being afterward edited 
and commented on by Nicomachus. — 3. Called 
Gcrasenvs, from his native place, Gerasa in 
Arabia, was a Pythagorean, and the writer of a 
life of Pythagoras, now lost. His date is infer- 
red from his mention of Thrasyllus, who lived 
under Tiberius. He wrote on arithmetic and 
music ; and two of his works on these subjects 
are still extant. The work on arithmetic was 
printed byWechel, Paris, 1538; also, after the 
Theologumcna Ariihmeticce, attributed to Iambli- 
chus, Lips., 1817. The work on music was 
printed by Meursius, in his collection, Lugd. Bat., 
1616, and in the collection of Meibornius? Amst., 
1652. — 4. Of Thebes, a celebrated painter, was 
the elder brother and teacher of the great painter 
Aristides. He flourished B.C. 360, and onward. 
He was an elder contemporary of Apelles and 
Protogenes. He is frequently mentioned by the 
ancient writers in terms of the highest praise. 
Cicero says that in his works, as well as in 
those ofEchion, Protogenes, and Apelles, every 
thing was already perfect. (Brutus, 18.) 

Nicomedes (NiicoiiTjd?ic). 1. L King of Bithyn- 
ia, was the eldest son of Zipoetes, whom he 
succeeded, B.C. 278. With the assistance of 
the Gauls, whom he invited into Asia, he de- 
feated and put to death his brother Zipoetes, who 
had for some time held the independent sover- 
eignty of a considerable part of Bithynia. The 
rest of his reign appears to have been undis- 
turbed, and under his sway Bithynia rose to a 
high degree of power and prosperity. He found- 
ed the city of Nicomedia, which he made the 
capital of his kingdom. The length of his reign 
is uncertain, but he probably died about 250. 
He was succeeded by his son Zielas. — 2. II. 
Surnamed Epiphanes, king of Bithynia, reigned 
B.C. 149-91. He was the son and successor of 
Prusias II., and fourth in descent from the pre- 
ceding. He was brought up at Rome, where he 
succeeded in gaining the favor of the senate. 
Prusias, in consequence, became jealous of his 
son, and sent secret instructions for his assas- 
sination. The plot was revealed to Nicomedes, 
who thereupon returned to Asia, and declared 
open war against his father. Prusias was de- 
serted by his subjects, and was put to death by 
order of his son, 149. Of the long and tranquil 
reign of Nicomedes, few events have been trans- 
mitted to us. He courted the friendship of the 
Romans, whom he assisted in the war against 
Aristonicus, 131. He subsequently obtained 
I possession of Paphlagonia, and attempted to 
gain Cappadocia, by marrying Laodice, the wid- 
ow of Ariarathes VI. He was, however, ex- 
pelled from Cappadocia by Mithradates ; and he 
was also compelled by the Romans to abandon 
Paphlagonia, when they deprived Mithradates 
of Cappadocia. — 3. III. Surnamed Philopator. 
king of Bithynia (91-74), son and successor of 
Nicomedes II. Immediately after his accession 
he was expelled by Mithradates, who set up 
against him his brother Socrates ; but he was 
I restored by the Romans in the following year 
i (90). At the instigation of the Romans, Nico- 
i medes now proceeded to attack the dominions 
I of Mithradates, who expelled him a second time 
! from his kingdom (88). This was the immedi- 
I ate occasion of the first Mithradatic war: at the 

551 



NICOMEDIA. 



NIGIER. 



conclusion of which (84) Nicoraedes was again 
reinstated in his kingdom. He reigned nearly 
ten years after this second restoration. He died 
at the beginning of 74, and having no children, 
by his will bequeathed his kingdom to the Ro- 
man people. 

Nicomedia (SiKouijdeia : NiKOfirfdeve, fern. N*- 
xopr/dicoa : now ruins at Izmid or Iznikmid), a 
celebrated city of Bithynia. in Asia Minor, built 
by King Nicomedes I. "(B.C. 264), at the north- 
eastern corner of the Sinus Astacenus (now 
Gulf of Izmid : compare Astacus). It was the 
chief residence of the kings of Bithynia, and it 
60on became one of the most splendid cities of 
the then known world. Under the Romans it 
was a colony, and a favorite residence of sev- 
eral of the later emperors, especially of Diocle- 
tian and Constantine the Great. Though re- 
peatedly injured by earthquakes, it was always 
restored by the munificence of the emperors. 
Like its neighbor and rival, Nic^ea, it occupies 
an important place in the wars against the 
Turks ; but it is still more memorable in his- 
tory as the scene of Hannibal's death. It was 
ihe birth-place of the historian Arrian. 

[ft icon (Nikuv). I. A Tarentine, who be- 
trayed his native city to Hannibal during the 
second Punic war, B.C. 212. The Romans hav- 
ing subsequently taken Tarentum by surprise, 
Nicon fell bravely fighting in defence of the 
city. — 2. A leader of the Cilician pirates, who 
was taken prisoner by P. Servilius Isauricus. — 
3. A comic poet, probably of the new comedy : 
a fragment of one of his comedies is given by 
Meineke, Fragm. Comic. Grcec, vol. ii., p. 1176, 
edit, minor. — 4. An architect and geometri- 
cian of Pergamus in Mysia, the father of the 
physician Galen : he was a learned and accom- 
plished man, and superintended in person the 
education of his distinguished son.] 

Nicoxia or Niconium, a town in Scythia, on 
the right bank of the Tyras (now Dniester). 

NIcophox and Nicophron (NikoQuv, N*/c6- 
vpuv), an Athenian comic poet, son of Theron, 
and a contemporary of Aristophanes at the close 
of his career. [The fragments of his comedies 
are collected by Meineke, Fragm. Comic. Grcec, 
vol. i., p. 468-472, edit, minor ] 

Nicopolis (Nin6~o?ug : TSikotzo/Ut7)c, Nicopo- 
litanus). 1. (Ruins at Paleoprcvyza), a city at 
the southwestern extremity of Epirus, on the 
point of land which forms the northern side of 
the entrance to the Gulf of Ambracia, opposite 
to Actium. It was built by Augustus in memory 
of the battle of Actium, and was peopled from 
Ambracia, Anactorium, and other neighboring 
cities, and also with settlers from JEtolia. Au- 
gustus also built a temple of Apollo on a neigh- 
boring hill, and founded games in honor of the 
god, which were held every fifth year. The 
city was received into the Amphictyonic league 
in place of the Dolopes. It is spoken of both as 
a libera civitas and as a colony. It had a con- 
siderable commerce and extensive fisheries. It 
was made the capital of Epirus by Constantine, 
and its buildings were restored both by Julian 
and by Justinian. — 2. (Now Nicopoli), a city of 
McEsia Inferior, on the Danube, built by Trajan 
in memory of a victory over the Dacians, and 
celebrated as the scene of the great defeat of the 
Hungarians and Franks by the Sultan Bajazet, 



I on the 28th of September, 1396.— 3. (Now Err- 
j derez T or Devrigni ?), a city of Armenia Minor, 
I on or near the Lycus, and not far from the 
sources of the Halys, founded by Pompey on the 
spot where he gained his first victory over Mith- 
radates : a flourishing place in the time of Au- 
gustus : restored by Justinian. — 4. A city in the 
northeastern corner of Cilicia, near the junction 
of the Taurus and Amanus. — [5. Or Emmaus, 
a city of Palestine. Vid. Emmaus.] — 6. (Now 
Kars, Kiassera, or Cczsars Castle, ruins), a city 
of Lower Egypt, about two or three miles east 
of Alexandrea, on the canal between Alexan- 
j drea and Canopus, was built by Augustus in 
j memory of his last victory over Antonius 
! Here also, as at Nicopolis opposite to Actium. 
! Augustus founded a temple of Apollo, with 
; games every fifth year. Not being mentioned 
| after the time of the first Caesars, it would seem 
j to have become a mere suburb of Alexandrea. 

[NlCOSTRATE (NlKGGTpdTT]). Vid. CaMENjE.] 

[Nicostratus (ISiKoc-paroe). 1. An Athenian 
| general, son of Diitrephes, was a colleague of 
! Nicias at the capture of Cythera ; fell in battle 
against Agis near Mantinea. — 2. An Argive, 
possessed extraordinary strength of body, and 
was distinguished also for prudence in council ; 
was sent by the Argives with a body of three 
thousand men to aid the Persian king Darius 
Ochus against Egypt.] 

Nicostratus (Ni/cocrrparoc)- 1. The youngest 
of the three sons of Aristophanes, was himself 
a comic poet. His plays belonged both to they 
middle and the new comedy. [The fragments 
of his comedies are collected by Meineke, Fragm 
Comic. GrcEc, vol. i., p. 632-640, edit, minor. — 
2. A tragic actor, flourished before B.C. 420.] 

[Nicotera, a city of Bruttium, on a mountain 
not far from the sea, on the road leading from 
Capua to the Fretum Siculum, between Vibo and 
Malliae.] 

Nigeir, Nigir, or Nigris (Xiyeip, TScyip, a 
compounded form of the word Geir or Gir, which 
seems to be a native African term for a river in 
general), changed, by a confusion which was the 
more easily made on account of the color of the 
people of the region, into the Latin word Niger, 
a great river of ^Ethiopia Interior, which mod- 
ern usage has identified with the river called 
Joli-ba (i. e., Great River) and Quorra (or, rather, 
Kowara), in Western Africa. As early as the 
time of Herodotus, we find an authentic state- 
ment concerning a river of the interior of Libya, 
which is evidently identical both with the Nigeir 
of most of the ancient geographers, and with 
the Quorra. He tells us (ii., 32) that five young 
men of the Nasamones, a Libyan people on the 
Great Syrtis, on the northern coast of Africa, 
started to explore the desert parts of Libya ; 
that, after orossing the inhabited part, and the 
region of the wild beasts, they journeyed many 
days through the Desert toward the west, till 
they came to a plain where fruit-trees grew; 
and as they ate the fruit, they were seized by 
some little black men, whose language they 
could not understand, who led them through 
great marshes to a city, inhabited by the same 
sort oflittleblackmen.who were all enchanters; 
and a great river flowed by the city from west 
to east, and in it there were crocodiles. He- 
1 rodotus, like his informants, inferred from the 



NIGER, C. PESCENNIUS. 



NILUS. 



eour3e of the river, and from the crocodiles in 
it, that it was the Nile ; but it can hardly be 
any river but the Quorra ; and that the city was 
Timbuctoo is far more probable than not. The 
opinion that the Niger was a western branch 
of the Nile prevailed very generally in ancient 
times, but by no means universally. Pliny gives 
the same account in a very confused manner, 
and makes the Nigris (as he calls it) the bound- 
ary between Northern Africa and ^Ethiopia. 
Ptolemy, however, who evidently had new 
sources of information respecting the interior of 
Africa, makes the Nigeir rise not far from its 
real source (allowing for the imperfect observa- 
tions op which his numerical latitudes and longi- 
tudes are founded), and follow a direction not 
very different from what that of the Joli-ba and 
Quorra would be, if we suppose that the Zirmi, 
Koji, and Yeo form an unbroken communication 
between the Quorra and the Lake Tchad. But 
Ptolemy adds, what the most recent discoveries 
render a very remarkable statement, that a 
branch of the Nigeir communicates with the 
Lake Libya (AlCvij), which he places in 16° 30' 
north latitude, and 35° east longitude (z. e., from 
the Fortunate Islands = 17° from Greenwich). 
This is almost exactly the position of Lake Tchad ; 
and, if the Tchadda really flows out of this lake, 
it will represent the branch of the Nigeir spoken 
of by Ptolemy, whose informants, however, seem 
to have inverted the direction of its stream. It 
is further remarkable that Ptolemy places on the 
Nigeir a city named Thamondocana in the exact 
position of Timbuctoo, and that the length of the 
river, computed from his position, agrees very 
nearly with its real length. The error of con- 
necting the Niger and" the Nile revived after 
the time of Ptolemy, and has only been ex- 
ploded by very recent discoveries. 

Niger, C. Pescennics, was governor of Syria 
during the latter part of the reign ofCommodus, 
on whose death he was saluted emperor by the 
legions in the East, A.D. 193 ; but in the follow - 
ing year he was defeated and put to death by 
Septimius Severus. Many anecdotes have been 
preserved of the firmness with which Niger 
enforced the most rigid discipline among his 
troops ; but he preserved his popularity by the 
impartiality which he displayed, and by the ex- 
ample of frugality, temperance, and hardy en- 
durance of toil which he exhibited in his own 
person. 

NioiR.v (Ntytipa, Ptol. : now Jcnneh 1), a city 
on the northern side of the River Nigeir, and the 
capital of the Niorit<-t.. 

NigriTuE or-ETEs (Siyplrat, yiyptrai AWio-nec, 
XiypTjTcc), the northernmost of the ^Ethiopian 
(i. e., Negro) communities of Central Africa, 
dwelt about the Nigeir, in the great plain of 
Soudan. 

Nigritis Laous {Ntypini 7Uftvr)), a lake in the 
interior of Africa, out of which Ptolemy repre- 
sents the River Nigeir as flowing. He places it 
about at the true source of the Nigeir (i. e., the 
Joli-ba); but it is not yet discovered whether 
the river has its source in a lake. Some mod- 
ern geographers identify it with the Lake Debo, 
southwest of Timbuctoo. 

Nilupolis or Nilus (Ncmov tcu/uc, NetAof), a 
city of the Heptanomis, or Middle Egypt, in the 
Nomos Heracleopolites, was built on an island 



in the Nile, twenty geographical miles northeast 
of Heracleopolis. There was a temple here in 
which, as throughout Egypt, the River Nile was 
worshipped as a god. 

Nilus (o NelXnc, derived probably from a word 
which still exists in the old dialects of India, 
Nilas, i. e., black, and sometimes called Me?.ar 
by the Greeks : Nei?j)c occurs first in Hesiod ; 
Homer calls the river AcyvKroc : now Nile, 
Arab. Bahr-Nil, or simply Bahr, i. e., the River : 
the modern names of its upper course, in Nubia 
and Abyssinia, are various). This river, one 
of the most important in the world, flows through 
a channel which forms a sort of cleft extending 
north and south through the high rocky and 
sandy land of Northeastern Africa. Its west- 
ern or main branch has not yet been traced to 
its source, but it has been followed up to a point 
in 4° 42' north latitude, and 30° 58' east longi- 
tude, where it is a rapid mountain stream, run- 
ning at the rate of six knots an hour over a 
rocky bed, free from alluvial soil. After a course 
in the general direction of north-northeast a» 
far as a place called Khartum, in 15° 34' north 
latitude, and 32° 30' east longitude, this river, 
which is called the Bahr-el-Abiad, i. e., White 
River, receives another large river, the Bahr- 
el-Azrck, i. e., Blue River, the sources of which 
are in the highlands of Abyssinia, about 11° 
north latitude, and 37° east longitude : this is 
the middle branch of the Nile system, the As- 
tapus of the ancients. The third, or eastern 
branch, called Tacazze, the Astaboras of the 
ancients, rises also in the highlands of Abys- 
sinia, in about 11° 40' north latitude, and 39° 
40' east longitude, and joins the Nile (i. e., the 
main stream formed by the union of the Abiad 
and the Azrek), in 17° 45' north latitude, and 
about 34° 5' east longitude s the point of junc- 
tion was the apex of the island of Meroe. Here 
the united river is about two miles broad. 
Hence it flows through Nubia, in a magnificent 
rocky valley, falling over six cataracts, the 
northernmost of which, called the First cataract 
(L e., to a person going up the river), is and has 
alw T ays been the southern boundary of Egypt. 
Of its course from this point to its junction 
with the Mediterranean, a sufficient general de- 
scription has been given under JEgyptus (p. 
17, a.). The branches into which it parted at the 
southern point of the Delta were, in ancient 
times, three in number, and these again parted 
into seven, of which, Herodotus tells us, five 
were natural and two artificial. These seven 
mouths were nearly all named from cities which 
stood upon them : they were called, proceeding 
from east to west, the Pelusiac, the Tanitic or 
SaTtic, the Mendesian, the Phatnitic, or Path- 
metic, or Bucolic, the Sebennytic, the Bolbitic or 
Bolbitine, and the Canobic or Canopic. Through 
the alterations caused by the alluvial deposits 
of the river, they have now all shifted their po- 
sitions, or dwindled into little channels, except 
two, and these are much diminished ; namely, 
the Damiat mouth on the east, and the Rosetta, 
mouth on the west. Of the canals connected 
with the Nile in the Delta, the most celebrated 
were the Canobic, which connected the Canobic 
mouth with the Lake Mareotis and with Alex- 
andra, and that of Ptolemy (afterward called 
! that of Trajan), which connected the Nile at the 

553 



NILUS. 



NINUS. 



beginning of the Delta with the Bay of Hero- 
5polis at the head of the Red Sea : the forma- 
tion of the latter is ascribed to KingNecho, and 
its repair and improvement successively to Da- 
rius the son of Hystaspes, Ptolemy Philadel- 
phus, and Trajan. That the Delta, and, indeed, 
the whole alluvial soil of Egypt has been creat- 
ed by the Nile, can not be doubted ; but the 
present small rate of deposit proves that the 
formation must have been made long before the 
historical period. The periodical rise of the 
river has been spoken of under ^Egyptus. It 
is caused by the tropical rains on the highlands 
in which it rises. The best ancient accounts, 
preserved by Ptolemy, place its source in a 
range of mountains in Central Africa, called 
the Mountains of the Moon ; and the most re- 
cent information points to a range of mount- 
ains a little north of the equator, called Jebcl- 
d-Kumri, or the Blue Mountain, as containing 
the probable sources of the Bakr Abiad. The 
ancient Egyptians deified the Nile, and took the 
utmost care to preserve its water from pollu- 
tion. 

[Nilus (NetAof), the god of the River Nile 
in Egypt, said to have been a son of Oceanus 
and Tethys, and father of Memphis and Chione. 
Pindar calls him a son of Saturn (Cronus).] 

Ninus, the reputed founder of the city of 
Minus or Nineveh. An account of his exploits 
is given under Semiramis, his wife, whose name 
was more celebrated. Vid. Semiramis. 

Ninus, Ninive (Nivoc, less correctly Nlvoe : 
in the Old Testament, Nineveh, LXX. Nivsvrj, 
IStvevi : ~Nlvioc, Ninivltse, pi.), the capital of the 
great Assyrian monarchy, and one of the most 
ancient cities in the world, stood on the east- 
ern side of the Tigris, at the upper part of its 
course, in the district of Aturia. The accounts 
of its foundation and history are as various as 
those respecting the Assyrian monarchy in gen- 
eral. Vid. Assyria. The Greek and Roman 
writers ascribe its foundation to Ninus ; but in 
the book of Genesis (x., 11) we are told, imme- 
diately after the 'mention of the kingdom of 
Nimrod and his foundation of Babel and other 
cities in Shinar (a. e., Babylon), that " out of 
that land went forth Asshur" (or otherwise, 
M he — i. e., Nimrod— went forth into Assyria"), 
**■ and builded Nineveh." There is no further 
mention of Nineveh in Scripture till the reign 
of Jeroboam II., about B.C. 825, when the proph- 
et Jonah was commissioned to preach repent- 
ance to its inhabitants. It is then described as 
" an exceeding great city, of three days' jour- 
ney," and as containing " more than one hund- 
red and twenty thousand persons that can not 
discern between their right hand and their left 
hand," which, if this phrase refers to children, 
would represent a population of six hundred 
thousand souls. The other passages, in which 
the Hebrew prophets denounce ruin against it, 
bear witness to its size, wealth, and luxury, and 
the latest of them (Zcph., ii., 13) is dated only 
a few years before the final destruction of the 
city, which was effected by the Medes and 
Babylonians about B.C. 606. It is said by 
Strabo to have been larger than Babylon, and 
Diodorus describes it as an oblong quadrangle 
of one hundred and fifty stadia by ninety, mak- 
ing the circuit of the walls four hundred and 
554. 



eighty stadia (more than fifty-five statute miles) : 
if so, the city was twice as large as London to- 
gether with its suburbs. In judging of these 
statements, not only must allowance be made 
for the immense space occupied by palaces and 
temples, but also for the Oriental mode of build- 
ing a city, so as to include large gardens and 
other open spaces within the walls. The walls 
of Nineveh are described as one hundred feet 
high, and thick enough to allow three chariots 
to pass each other on them ; with fifteen hund- 
red towers, two hundred feet in height. The 
city is said to have been entirely destroyed by 
fire when it was taken by the Medes and Baby- 
lonians, about B.C. 606 ; and frequent allusions 
occur to its desolate state. Under the Roman 
empire, however, we again meet with a city 
Nineve, in the district of Adiabene, mentioned 
by Tacitus, and again by Ammianus Marcel- 
linus, and a mediaeval historian of the thirteenth 
century mentions a fort of the same name ; but 
statements like these must refer to some later 
place built among or near the ruins of the an- 
cient Nineveh. Thus, of all the great cities of 
the world, none was thought to have been more 
utterly lost than the capital of the most ancient 
of the great monarchies. Tradition pointed out 
a few shapeless mounds opposite Mosul, on the 
Upper Tigris, as all that remained of Nineveh ; 
and a few fragments of masonry were occasion- 
ally dug up there, and elsewhere in Assyria, 
bearing inscriptions in an almost unknown char- 
acter, called, from its shape, cuneiform or ar- 
row-headed. Within the last ten years, how- 
ever, those shapeless mounds have been shown 
to contain the remains of great palaces, on the 
walls of which the scenes of Assyrian life and 
the records of Assyrian conquests are sculp- 
tured ; while the efforts which had long been 
made to decipher the cuneiform inscriptions 
found in Persia and Babylonia, as well as As- 
syria, have been so far successful as to make it 
probable that we may soon read the records of 
Assyrian history from her own monuments. It 
is as yet premature to form definite conclusions: 
to any great extent. The results of Major 
Rawlinson's study of the cuneiform inscriptions 
of Assyria are only in process of publication. 
The excavations conducted by Dr. Layard and 
M. Botta have brought to light the sculptured 
remains of immense palaces, not only at the 
traditional site of Nineveh, namely, Kouyunjik 
and Nebbi-Yunus, opposite to Mosul, and at 
Khorsabad, about ten miles to the north-north- 
east, but also in a mound eighteen miles lower 
down the river, in the tongue of land between 
the Tigris and the Great Zab, which still bears 
the name ofNimroud; and it is clear that their 
remains belong to different periods, embracing 
the records of two distinct dynasties, extending 
over several generations, none of which can be 
later than B.C. 606, while some of them prob- 
ably belong to a period at least as ancient as 
the thirteenth, and perhaps even the fifteenth 
century B.C. There are other mounds of ruins 
as yet unexplored. Which of these ruins cor- 
respond to the true site of Nineveh, or whether 
(as Dr. Layard suggests) that vast city may 
have extended all the way along the Tigris from 
Kouyunjik to Nimroud, and to a corresponding 
breadth northeast of the river, as far as Khor- 



NINYAS. 



NISUS. 



sabad, are questions still under discussion. 
Meanwhile, the study of the monuments and 
inscriptions thus discovered must soon throw- 
fresh light on the whole subject. Some splen- 
did fragments of sculpture, obtained by Dr. Lay- 
ard from JS'imroud, are now to be seen in the 
British Museum. 

Ninyas (Nivvar), son ofNinus and Semira- 
mis. Vid. Semiramis. 

NroBE (Ni66n). 1. Daughter of Phoroneus, 
and by Zeus the mother of Argus and Pelasgus. 
—2. Daughter of Tantalus by the Pleiad Tay- 
gete or the Hyad Dione. She was the sister 
of Pelops, and the wife of Amphion, king of 
Thebes, by whom she became the mother of 
six sons and six daughters. Being proud of the 
number of her children, she deemed herself su- 
perior to Latona (Lcto), who had given birth to 
only two children. Apollo and Diana (Arte- 
mis), indignant at such presumption, slew all 
her children with their arrows. For nine days 
their bodies lay in their blood without any one 
burying them, for Jupiter (Zeus) had changed 
the people into stones ; but on the tenth day 
the gods themselves buried them. Niobe her- 
self, who had gone to Mount Sipylus, was met- 
amorphosed into stone, and even thus contin- 
ued to feel the misfortune with which the gods 
had visited her. This is the Homeric story, 
which later writers have greatly modified and 
enlarged. The number and names of the chil- 
dren of Niobe vary very much in the different 
accounts ; for while Homer states that their 
number was twelve, Hcsiod and others men- 
tioned twenty, Aleman only six, Sappho eight- 
een, and Herodotus four ; but the most common- 
ly received number in laier times appears to have 
been fourteen, namely, seven sons and seven 
daughters. According to Homer, all the chil- i 
dren of Niobe fell by the arrows of Apollo and 
Diana (Artemis); but later writers state that 
one of her sons, Amphion or Amyclas, and one 
of her daughters, Melibosa, were saved, but that 
Melibaia, having turned pale with terror at the 
sight of her dying brothers and sisters, was 
afterward called Chloris. The time and place 
at which the children of Niobe were destroyed 
are likewise stated differently. According to 
Horner, they perished in their mother's house. 
According to Ovid, the sons were slain while 
they were engaged in gymnastic exercises in a 
plain near Thebes, and the daughters during the 
funeral of their brothers. Others, again, trans- 
fer the scene to Lydia, or make Niobe, after the 
death of her children, go from Thebes to Lydia, 
to her father Tantalus on Mount Sipylus, where 
Jupiter (Zeus), at her own request, metamorph- 
osed her into a stone, which during the sum- 
mer always shed tears. In the time of Pau- 
sanias people still fancied they could see the 
petrified figure of Niobe on Mount Sipylus. The 
tomb of the children of Niobe, however, was 
shown at Thebes. The story of Niobe and her 
children was frequently taken as a subject by 
ancient artists. One of the most celebrated of 
the ancient works of art still extant is the group 
of Niobe and her children, which filled the pedi- 
ment of the temple of Apollo Sosianus at Rome, 
and which was discovered at Rome in the year 
1583. This group is now at Florence, and con- 
sists of the mother, who holds her youngest 



daughter on her knees, and thirteen statue* 
of her sons and daughters, besides a figure 
usually called the paedagogus of the children. 
The Romans themselves were uncertain wheth- 
er the group was the work of Scopas or Praxit- 
eles. 

Nip hates (6 N£<£u~?/r, i. e., Snow-mountain : 
now Balan), a mountain chain of Armenia, form- 
ing an eastern prolongation of the Taurus from 
where it is crossed by the Euphrates toward 
the Lake of Van, before reaching which it turns 
to the south, and approaches the Tigris below 
Tigranocerta ; thus surrounding on the north 
and east the basin of the highest course of the 
Tigris (which is inclosed on the south and 
southwest by Mount Masius), and dividing it 
from the valley of the Arsanias (now Murad) or 
southern branch of the Euphrates. The con- 
tinuation of Mount Niphates to the southeast, 
along the eastern margin of the Tigris valley, 
is formed by the mountains of the Carduchi 
(now Mountains of Kurdistan). 

[Niphates (Ni<j>uTrjc), one of the Persian gen- 
erals at the battle of the Granicus.] 

Nireus (Nipsvg), son of Charopus and Aglaia, 
was, next to Achilles, the handsomest among 
the Greeks at Troy. He came from the island 
of Syme (between llhodes and Cnidus). Later 
writers relate that he was slain by Eurypylus 
or ^Eneas. 

[Nisa or Nissa. Vid. Nysa.] 
NisiEA. Vid. Megara. 

Nis.^ea, Nis^i, Nis^-us Campus (Niaaia, Ni- 
oaZoi,rb NioaLov iredluv), these names are found 
in the Greek and Roman writers used for vari- 
ous places on the south and southeast of the 
Caspian : thus one writer mentions a city Nisaea 
in Margiana, and another a people Nisaei in 
j the north of Aria ; but most apply the term Ni- 
seean Plain to a plain in the north of Great Me- 
dia, near Rhagae, the pasture ground of a great 
number of horses of the finest breed, which sup- 
plied the studs of the king and nobles of Persia. 
It seems not unlikely that this breed of horses 
was called Nisaean from their original home in 
Margiana (a district famous for its horses), and 
that the Nisaean plain received its name from 
the horses kept in it. 

Nisibis (NiatCig : ^Lat6i]v6g). I. Also Antio- 
chia Mygdonije (in the Old Testament, Aram 
Zoba 1 ruins near Nisibin), a celebrated city of 
Mesopotamia, and the capital of the district of 
Mygdonia, stood on the River Mygdonius (now 
Nahr-al-Huali), thirty-seven Roman milessouth- 
west of Tigranocerta, in a very fertile district. 
It was the centre of a considerable trade, and 
was of great importance as a military post. In 
the successive wars between the Romans and 
Tigranes, the Parthians, and the Persians, it 
was several times taken and retaken, until at 
last it fell into the hands of the Persians in the 
reign of Jovian.— 2. A city of Aria, at the foot 
of Mount Paropamisus. 

Nisus (Nraoc). 1. King of Megara, was son 
of Pandion and Pylia, brother of ^Egeus, Pallas, 
and Lycus, and husband of Abrote, by whom he 
became the father of Scylla. When Megara 
was besieged by Minos, Scylla, who had fallen 
in love with Minos, pulled out the purple or 
j golden hair which grew on the top of her fa- 
! ther's head, and on which his life depended- 

555 



NISYRUS. 



NOBILIOR, FULVIUS. 



Nisus thereupon died, and Minos obtained pos- 
session of the city. Minos, however, was so 
horrified at the conduct of the unnatural daugh- 
ter, that he ordered Scylla to be fastened to the 
poop of his ship, and afterward drowned her in 
the Saronic Gulf. According to others, Minos 
left Megara in disgust ; Scylla leaped into the 
sea, and swam after his ship ; but her father, 
who had been changed into a sea-eagle (halia- 
etus), pounced down upon her, whereupon she 
was metamorphosed into either a fish or a bird 
called Ciris. Scylla, the daughter of Nisus, is 
sometimes confounded by the poets with Scylla, 
the daughter ofPhorcus. Hence the latter is 
sometimes erroneously called Niseia Virgo, and 
Niseis. Vid. Scylla. Nisaea, the port town 
of Megara, is supposed to have derived its name 
from Nisus, and the promontory of Scyllaeum 
from his daughter. — 2. Son of Hyrtacus, and a 
friend of Euryalus. The two friends accom- 
panied .-Eneas to Italy, and perished in a night 
attack against the Rutulian camp. — [3. A noble 
Dulichian, son of Aretus, and one of the suitors 
of Penelope.] 

Nisvrus (NiGvpoc : now Nikero), a small isl- 
and in the Carpathian Sea, a little distance off 
the promontory of Caria called Triopium, of a 
round form, eighty stadia (eight geographical 
miles) in circuit, and composed of lofty rocks, 
the highest being two hundred and twenty-seven 
feet high. Its volcanic nature gave rise to the 
fable respecting its origin, that Neptune (Posei- 
don) tore it off the neighboring island of Cos to 
hurl it upon the giant Polybotes. It w r as cele- 
brated for its warm springs, wine, and mill- 
stones. Its capital, of the same name, stood on 
the northwest of the island, where considerable 
ruins of its Acropolis remain. Its first inhabit- 
ants are said to have been Carians ; but already 
in the heroic age it had received a Dorian popu- 
lation, like other islands near it, with which it is 
mentioned by Homer as sending troops to the 
Greeks. It received other Dorian settlements 
in the historical age. At the time of the Per- 
sian war, it belonged to the Carian queen Arte- 
misia ; it next became a tributary ally of Athens : 
though transferred to the Spartan alliance by the 
issue of the Peloponnesian war, it was recovered 
for Athens by the victory at Cnidus, B C. 394. 
Aft er the victory of the Romans over Antiochus 
the Great, it was assigned to Rhodes, and, with 
the rest of the Rhodian republic, was united to 
the Roman empire about B.C. 70. 

[Nitetis (Nm/ric); a daughter of A pries, the 
Egyptian king, who was driven from his throne 
by Amasis ; Cambyses having demanded of 
Amasis his daughter in marriage, the latter sent 
to him Nitetis, having passed her off as his own 
daughter. Another account, referred to by 
Herodotus as incorrect, makes Cyrus to have 
sought Nitetis in marriage, and to have been by 
her the father of Cambyses ] 

Nitiobriges, a Celtic people in Gallia Aqui- 
tanica, between the Garumna and the Liger. 
whose fighting force consisted of five thousand 
men. Their chief town was Aginnum (now 
Agen). 

Nitocris (NiVu/cpi?). 1. A queen of Babylon, 
mentioned by Herodotus, who ascribes to her 
many important works at Babylon and its vicin- 
ity. It is supposed by most modern writers 
556 



I that she was the wife of Nebuchadnezzar, and 
j the mother or grandmother of Labynetus or Bel- 
! shazzar, the last king of Babylon. — 2. A queen 
| of Egypt, was elected to the sovereignty in place 
i of her brother, whom the Egyptians had killed, 
j In order to take revenge upon the murderers of 
j her brother, she built a very long chamber under 
I ground, and when it was finished invited to a 
j banquet in it those of the Egyptians who had 
! had a principal share in the murder. While 
they were engaged in the banquet, she let in 
upon them the waters of the Nile by means of 
a large concealed pipe, and drowned f hem all, 
and then, in order to escape punishment, threw 
herself into a chamber full of ashes. This is 
the account of Herodotus. We learn from other 
authorities that she was a celebrated personage 
in Egyptian legends. She is said to have built 
the third pyramid, by which we are to under- 
stand that she finished the third pyramid, which 
had been commenced by Mycerinus. Modern 
writers make her the last sovereign of the sixth 
dynasty, and state that she reigned six years in 
place of her murdered husband (not her brother, 
as Herodotus states), whose name was Menthu- 
ophis. The latter is supposed to be the son or 
i grandson of the Moeris of the Greeks and Ro- 
i mans. 

i Nitric, Nitrarije (Ntrprnt, IStirpia, Nirpaiai : 
! now Birket-el-Duarah), the celebrated natron 
lakes in Lower Egypt, which lay in a valley on 
the southwestern margin of the Delta, and gave 
to the surrounding district the name ofStTpiunc 
or the N«//6r ^irpturng, and to the inhabitants, 
whose chief occupation was the extraction of 
j the natron from the lakes, the name ofNtrpturai. 
j This district was the chief seat of the worship 
I of Serapis, and the only place in Egypt where 
sheep were sacrificed. 

[Nivaria (i. e., Snow Island, now probably 
Teneriffe), one of the Fortunatse Insula, q. v.] 

Nixi Dn, a general term, applied by the Ro- 
mans to those divinities who were believed to 
assist women in child-birth. 
[Noas. Vid. Noes.] 

Nobilior, Fulvius, plebeians. This family 
was originally called P^etinus, and the name of 
Nobilior was first assumed by No. 1, to indicate 
that he was more noble than any others of this 
name. 1. Ser., consul B.C 255, with M. ^EmiN 
ius Paulus, about the middle of the first Punic- 
war. The two consuls were sent to Africa, to 
bring off the survivors of the army of Regulus, 
On their way to Africa they gained a naval vic- 
tory over the Carthaginians ; but on their re- 
turn to Italy they were wre cked off the coast 
of Sicily, and most of their ships were destroy- 
ed — 2. M., grandson of the preceding, curule 
I ffidile 195, praetor 193. when he defeated the 
Celtiberi in Spain, and took the town of Tole- 
tum ; and consul 1S9, when he received the con- 
J duct of the war against the ^Etolians. He took 
j the town of Ambracia, and compelled the ./Eto- 
lians to sue for peace. On his return to Rome 
in 187, he celebrated a most splendid triumph. 
In 179 he was censor with M. ^Emilius Lepidus, 
the pontifex maximus. Fulvius Nobilior had a 
taste for literature and art ; he was a patron of 
I the poet Ennius, who accompanied him in his 
; ^Etolian campaign ; and he belonged to that 
I party among the Roman nobles who were intro 



NCEGA. 



NORBA. 



ducing into tho city a taste for Greek literature 
and refinement. He was, therefore, attacked t}y 
Cato the censor.who made merry with his name, 
calling him mobilior instead of nobilior. Fulvi- 
us, in his censorship, erected a temple to Her- 
cules and the Muses in the Circus Flaminius, as 
an indication that the state ought to cultivate 
the liberal arts ; and he adorned it with the 
paintings and statues which he had brought 
from G°recce upon his conquest of ^Etolia. — 

3. M., son of No. 2, tribune of the plebs 171 ; 
curule sedile 16(5, the year in which the Andria 
of Terence was performed; and consul 159. — 

4. Q., also son of No. 2, consul 1 53, when he had 
the conduct of the war against the Celtiberi in 
Spain, by whom he was defeated with great loss. 
He was censor in 1 36. He inherited his father's 
love for literature : he presented the poet En- 
nius with the Roman franchise when he was a 
triumvir for founding a colony. 

[Ncega (Noi'ya), a maritime city of the 
Astures in Hispania Tarraconensis, on the 
River Melsus. and on the borders of the Can- 
tabri.] 

[Noemon. 1. A Lycian warrior, slain by Ulys- 
ses before Troy. — 2. Son of Phronius, an Ithacan, 
who gave his vessel to Telemachus for his in- 
tended voyage in search of Ulysses.— 3. A Tro- 
jan warrior, companion of iEneas in Italy, slain 
by Turnus.] 

[Noes (Nd^, Hdt ), or Noas (Val. Flacc), a 
southern tributary of the Ister in Thrace.] 

Nola (Nolanus : now Nolo.), one of the most 
ancient towns in Campania, twenty-one Roman 
miles southeast of Capua, on the road from that 
place to Nuceria, was founded by the Ausoni- 
ans, but afterward fell into the hands of the 
Tyrrheni (Etruscans), whence some writers call 
it an Etruscan city. In B C. 327, Nola was suf- 
ficiently powerful to send two thousand soldiers 
to the assistance of Neapolis. In 313 the town 
was taken by the Romans. It remained faith- 
ful to the Romans even after the battle of Can- 
nae, when the other Campanian towns revolted 
to Hannibal; and it was allowed, in consequence, 
to retain its own constitution as an ally of the 
Romans. In the Social war it fell into the 
hands of the confederates, and when taken by 
Sulla it was burned to the ground by the Sam- 
nite garrison. It was afterward rebuilt, and 
was made a Roman colony by Vespasian. The 
Emperor Augustus died at Nola. In the neigh- 
borhood of the town some of the most beautiful 
Campanian vasps have been found in modern 
times. According to an ecclesiastical tradition, 
church bells were invented at Nola, and were 
hence called Campana. 

[NoMADES. Vlli. NuMIDIA.] 

Nomentanus, mentioned by Horace as pro- 
verbially noted for extravagance and a riotous 
mode of living. The scholiasts tell us that his 
full name was L. Cassius Nomentanus. 

Nomentum (Nomentanus : now La Mentana), 
originally a Latin town founded by Alba, but 
subsequently a Sabine town, fourteen (Roman) 
miles from Rome, from which the ViaNomen- 
tana (more anciently Via Ficulensis) and the 
Porta Nmncntana at Rome derived their name. 
The neighborhood of the town was celebrated 
for its wine. 

Nomia (rd No^to), a mountain in Arcadia, on 



the frontiers ofLaconia, is said to have derived 
its name from a nymph Nomia. 

[Nomion (Nofttuv), ofCaria, father of Amphi- 
machus and Nastes, who led the Carians to the 
Trojan war.] 

NomIus (Ndfxiog), a surname of divinities pro- 
tecting the pastures and shepherds, such as 
Apollo, Pan, Mercury (Hermes), and Aristaeus. 

Nonacris (Navatcpig : NcjvaKptMTrjr, Novanpi- 
evc), a town in the north of Arcadia, northwest 
of Pheneus, was surrounded by lofty mountains, 
in which the River Styx took its origin. The 
town is said to have derived its name from No- 
nacris, the wife of Lycaon. From this town 
Mercury (Hermes) is called Nonacriates, Evan- 
der Nonacrius, Atalanta Nonacria, and Callisto 
Nonacrina Virgo, in the general sense of Ar- 
cadian. 

Nonius Marcellus. Vid. Marcellus. 

Nonius Sufenas. Vid. Sufenas. • 

[Nonnosus (Novvocos), a Byzantine historian, 
and ambassador, sent on an embassy to the 
^Ethiopians, Saracens, &c, by the Emperor Jus- 
tinian I. ; on his return he wrote an account of 
his embassy, of which an abridgment was made 
by Photius, and still exists ; edited by Niebuhr 
and Bekker, with Dexippus, Eunapius, &c. 
Bonn, 1829.] 

Nonnus (Nowoc). 1, A Greek poet, was a 
native of Panopolis in Egypt, and lived in the 
sixth century of the Christian era. Respecting 
his life nothing is known, except that he was a 
Christian. He is the author of an enormous 
epic poem, which has come down to us under 
the name of Dionysiaca or Bassarica (AiovvactKa 
or BaGcapiKa), and which consists of forty-eight 
books. The work has no literary merit ; the 
style is bombastic and inflated ; and the inci- 
dents are patched together with little or no co 
herence. Edited by Graefe, Lips., 1819-1826, 
2 vols. 8vo. Nonnus also made a paraphrase 
of the gospel of St. John in hexameter verse, 
which is likewise extant. Edited by Heinsius, 
Lugd. Bat., 1627 : [and by Passow, Leipzig, 
1834.] — 2. Theophanes Nonnus, a Greek med- 
ical writer who lived in the tenth century after 
Christ. His work is entitled a " Compendium 
of the whole Medical art," and is compiled from 
previous writers. Edited by Bernard, Gothae et 
Amstel., 1794, 1795, 2 vols. 

Nora (ru Nwpa : Nupavoc, Norensis). 1. (Now 
Torre Forcadizo), one of the oldest cities of Sar- 
dinia, founded by Iberian settlers under Norax, 
stood on the coast of the Sinus Caralitanus, 
thirty-two Roman miles southwest of Caralis. — 
2. A mountain fortress of Cappadocia, on the 
borders of Lycaonia, on the northern side of the 
Taurus, noted for the siege sustained in it by 
Eumenes against Antigonus for a whole winter. 
In the time of Strabo, who calls it Nripoacoog, it 
was the treasury of Sisinas, a pretender to the 
throne of Cappadocia. 

[Norax (NwpaO, son of Mercury (Hermes) 
and Eurythea. Vid. Nora.] 

Norba (Norbanensis, Norbanus). 1. (Now 
Norma), a strongly fortified town in Latium, on 
the slope of the Volscian Mountains, and near 
the sources of the Nymphaeus, originally be- 
longed to the Latin and subsequently to the 
Volscian league. As early as B.C. 492 the Ro- 
mans founded a colony at Norba. It espoused 

557 



NORBANUS. 



NOVIODUNUM. 



the cause ofMarius in the civil war, and was 
destroyed by fire by its own inhabitants, when 
it was taken by one of Sulla's generals. There 
are still remains of polygonal walls, and a sub- 
terraneous passage at Norma. — 2. Surnamed 
Cj3esarea (now Alcantara), a Roman colony in 
Lusitania, on the left bank of the Tagus, north- 
west of Augusta Emerita. The bridge built by 
order of Trajan over the Tagus at this place is 
still extant. It is six hundred feet long by 
twenty-eight wide, and contains six arches. 

NorbInos, C, tribune of the plebs B.C. 95, 
when he accused Q. Servilius Ccepio of majes- 
tas, but was himself accused of the same crime 
in the following year, on account of disturbances 
which took place at the trial of Caepio. In 90 
or 89, Norbanus was prsetor in Sicily during the 
Marsic war ; and in the civil wars he espoused 
the Marian party. He was consul in 83, when he 
was defeated by Sulla near Capua. In the fol- 
lowing year, 82, he joined the consul Carbo in 
Cisalpine Gaul, but their united forces were en- 
tirely defeated by Metellus Pius. Norbanus es- 
caped from Italy and fled to Rhodes, where he 
put an end to his life, when his person was de- 
manded by Sulla. 

Norbanus Flaccus. Vid. Flaccus. 

Noreia (Nop7/eLa : now Ncumarkt in Styria), 
the ancient capital of the Taurisci or Norici in 
Noricum, from which the whole country proba- 
bly derived its name. It was situated in the 
centre of Noricum, a little south of the River 
Murius, and on the road from Virunum to Ovila- 
ba. It is celebrated as the place where Carbo 
was defeated by the Cimbri, B.C. 113. It was 
besieged by the Boii in the time of Julius Csesar. 
(Cses., B. G., i., 5.) 

Noricum, a Roman province south of the 
Danube, which probably derived its name from 
the town of Noreia, was bounded on the north 
by the Danube, on the west by Rsetia and Vin- 
delicia, on the east by Pannonia, and on the 
south by Pannonia and Italy. It was separated 
from Reetia and Vindelicia by the River iEnus 
(now Inn), from Pannonia on the east by Mons 
Cetius, and from Pannonia and Italy on the 
south by the River Savus, the Alpes Carnicae, 
and Mons Ocra. It thus corresponds to the 
greater part of Styria and Carinthia, and a part 
of Austria, Bavaria, and Salzburg. Noricum 
was a mountainous country, for it was not only 
surrounded on the south and east by mount- 
ains, but one of the main branches of the Alps, 
the Alpes Norici (in the neighborhood of Salz- 
burg), ran right through the province. In those 
mountains a large quantity of excellent iron 
was found ; and the Noric swords were cele- 
brated in antiquity. Gold also is said to have 
been found in the mountains in ancient times. 
The inhabitants of the country were Celts, di- 
vided into several tribes, of which the Taurisci, 
also called Norici, after their capital Noreia, 
were the most important. They were conquer- 
ed by the Romans toward the end of the reign 
of Augustus, after the subjugation of Raetia by 
Tiberius and Drusus, and their country was 
formed into a Roman province. In the later 
division of the Roman empire into smaller prov- 
inces, Noricum was formed into two provinces, { 
Noncnm Ripensc, along the bank of the Danube, 
and Noricum Mediterranean, separated from the 1 
558 



former by the mountains which divide Austria 
apd Styria : they both belonged to the diocese 
of Illyricum and the prefecture of Italy. 

Nortia or Nurtia, an Etruscan "divinity, 
worshipped at Volsinii. where a nail was driven 
every year into the wall of her temple, for the 
purpose of marking the number of years. 

Nossis, a Greek poetess, of Locri in Italy r 
lived about B.C. 310, and is the author of twelve 
epigrams of considerable beauty in the Greek 
Anthology. 

[Noticm (Sotiov). 1. The port of Colophon. 
Vid. Colophon. — 2. A city in the island Ca- 
lyd n a, which lay near Rhodes. — 3. (Now Missen 
Head), a promontory of Hibernia, the southwest 
point of the island.] 
Notus. Vid. Auster. 

NovarIa (Novarensis : now Novara), a towa 
in Gallia Transpadana, situated on a river of 
the same name (now Gogna), and on the road 
from Mediolanum to Vercellae, subsequently a 
Roman municipium. 

Novatianus, a heretic, who insisted upon the 
perpetual exclusion from the Church of all 
Christians who had falien away from the faith 
under the terrors of persecution. On the elec- 
tion of Cornelius to the see of Rome, A.D. 251, 
Novatianus was consecrated bishop of a rival 
party, but was condemned by the council held 
in the autumn of the same year. After a vain 
struggle to maintain his position, he was obliged 
to give way, and became the founder of a new- 
sect, who from him derived the name of Nova- 
tians. It should be observed that the individual 
who first proclaimed these doctrines was not 
Novatianus, but an African presbyter under 
Cyprian, named Novatus. Hence much con- 
fusion has arisen between Novatus and Novati- 
anus, who ought, however, to be carefully dis- 
tinguished. A few of the works of Novatianus 
are extant. The best edition of them is by 
Jackson, Lond., 1728. 

Novatus. Vid. Novatianus. 
Novensiles or Novensides Dii, Roman gods 
w^hose name is probably composed of nove and 
insidcs, and therefore signifies the new gods in 
opposition to the Indigetes, or old native divin- 
ities. It was customary among the Romans, 
after the conquest of a neighboring town, to 
carry its gods to Rome, and there establish their 
worship. 

Novesium (now Neuss), a fortified town of 
the Ubii on the Rhine, and on the road leading 
from Colonia Agrippina (now Cologne) to Cas- 
tra Vetera (now Xanten). The fortifications of 
this place were restored by Julian in A.D. 359. 

Noviodunum, a name given to many Celtic 
places from their being situated on a hill (dun). 
1. (Now Nouan), a town of the Bituriges Cubi 
in Gallia Aquitanica, east of their capital Avar- 
icum. — 2. (Now Nevers), a town of the ^Edui 
in Gallia Lugdunensis, on the road from Au- 
gustodunum to Lutetia, and at the confluence 
of the Niveris and the Liger, whence it was 
subsequently called Nevirnum, and thus ac- 
quired its modern name. — 3. A town of the 
Suessones in Gallia Belgica, probably the same 
as Augusta Suessonum. Vid. Augusta, No. 
6. — 4. (Now Nion), a town of the Helvetii in 
j Gallia Belgica, on the northern bank of the 
1 Lacus Lemanus, was made a Roman colony by 



NOVIOMAGUS. 



NUMENIUS. 



Julius Ceesar, B.C. 15, under the name of Colo- 
oia Equestris. — 5. (Now Isaczi), a fortress in 
Mcesia Inferior, on the Danube, near which Va 
lens built his bridge of boats across the Danube 
in his campaign against the Goths. 

Noviomauus or Nosomacus. 1. (Now Cas- 
telnan de Mcd<* >. a town of the Bituriges Vi- 
visci in Gallia Aquitanica, northwest of Burdi- 
gala.— 2. A town of the Tricastini in Gallia 
Narbonensis, probably the modern Nions, though 
some suppose it to be the same place as Au- 
gusta Tricastinorum (now Aouste).—3. (Now 
Spires), the capital of the Nemetes. Vid. Nkm- 
btes. — 4. (Now Neumagcn), a town of the Tre- 
viri in Gallia Belgica, on the Mosella.— 5. (Now 
Nimwegen), a town of the Batavi.— [6. (Ruins 
near Lisieux), a port of the Lexovii or Lexubii, 
a small community belonging to the Arecomici 
in Gallia Lugdunensis, between the Liger (now 
Loire) and Scquana (now Seine).] 

Novius, Q., a celebrated writer of Atellane 
plays, a contemporary of the dictator Sulla. 

Novum Comum. Vid. Comum. 

[Nox. Vid. Nyx.] 

Nuea Palus (Nov6a "ki[ivn : now probably L. 
Fittreh, in Bar Zaleh), a lake in Central Africa, 
receiving the great river Gir, according to Ptol- 
emy, who places it in 15° north latitude, and 
40° east longitude (=22° from Greenwich). 

Nvbje, Nub^ei (N<w6ai, NovdaZoi), an African 
people, who are found in two places, namely, 
about the Lake Nuba, and also on the banks of 
the Nile north of Meroe, that is, in the north 
central part of Nubia : the latter were govern- 
ed by princes of their own, independent of 
Meroe. By the reign of Diocletian they had 
advanced northward as far as the frontier of 
Egypt. 

Nuceria (Nucerlnus). 1. Surnamed Alfa- 
terna (now Noccra), a town in Campania, on 
the Sarnus (now Sarno), and on the Via Appia, 
southeast of Nola, and nine (Roman) miles from 
the coast, was taken by the Romans in the Sam- 
nite wars, and was again taken by Hannibal 
after the battle of Cannae, when it was burned 
to the ground. It was subsequently rebuilt, and 
both Augustus and Nero planted here colonies 
of veterans. Pompeii was used as the harbor 
of Nuceria. — 2. Surnamed Camellaria (now 
Noccra), a town in the interior of Umbria, on the 
Via Flaminia.— 3. (Now Luzzara), a small town 
in Gallia Cispadana, on the Po, northeast of 
Brixellum. — 4. A town in Apulia, more correctly 
called Luceria. 

[Nudium (Nwudiov), a settlement of the Minyae 
in Elis, early destroyed by the Eleans.] 

Nuithones, a people of Germany, dwelling 
on the right bank of the Albis (now Elbe), south- 
west of the Saxones, and north of the Lango- 
bardi, in the southeastern part of the modern 
Mecklenburg. 

Numa Marcius. 1. An intimate friend of 
Numa Pompilius. whom he is said to have ac- 
companied to Rome, where Numa made him 
the first pontifex maximus. .Marcius aspired 
to the kingly dignity on the death of Pompilius, 
and he starved himself to death on the election 
of Tullus Hostilius.— 2. Son of the preceding, 
is said to have married Pompilia, the daughter 
of Numa Pompilius, and to have become by her 
the father of Ancus Marcius. Numa Marcius 



was appointed by Tullus Hostilius praefectus 
urbi. 

Numa Pompilius, the second king of Rome, 
who belongs to legend and not to history. He 
was a native of Cures in the Sabine country, 
and was elected king one year after the death 
of Romulus, when the people became tired of 
the interregnum of the senate. He was re- 
nowned for his wisdom and his piety ; and it 
was generally believed that he had derived his 
knowledge from Pythagoras. His reign was 
long and peaceful, and he devoted his chief care 
to the establishment of religion among his rude 
subjects. He was instructed by the Camena 
Egeria, who visited him in a grove near Rome, 
and who honored him with her love. He was 
revered by the Romans as the author of their 
whole religious worship. It was he who first 
appointed the pontiffs, the augurs, the flamens, 
the virgins of Vesta, and the Salii. He found- 
ed the temple of Janus, which remained always 
shut during his reign. The length of his reign 
is stated differently. Livy makes it forty-three 
years ; Polybius and Cicero thirty-nine years. 
The sacred books of Numa, in which he pre- 
scribed all the religious rites and ceremonies, 
were said to have been buried near him in a 
separate tomb, and to have been discovered by 
accident five hundred years afterward, in B.C. 
181. They were carried to the city praetor 
Petilius, and were found to consist of twelve 
or seven books in Latin on ecclesiastical law, 
and the same number of books in Greek on 
philosophy : the latter were burned on the com- 
mand of the senate, but the former were care- 
fully preserved. The story of the discovery 
of these books is evidently a forgery ; and tho 
books, which were ascribed to Numa, and which, 
were extant at a later time, were evidently 
nothing more than works containing an account 
of the ceremonial of the Roman religion. 

Numana (now Umana Distrulta), a town in 
Picenum, on the road leading from Ancona to 
Aternum, along the coast, was founded by the 
Siculi, and was subsequently a municipium. 

Numantia (Numantlnus : ruins near Pucntc 
de Don Guarray), the capital of the Arevacee or 
Arevaci in Hispania Tarraconensis, and the 
most important town in all Celtiberia, was sit- 
uated near the sources of the Durius, on a small 
tributary of this river, and on the road leading 
from Asturica to Caesaraugusta. It was strong- 
ly fortified by nature, being built on a steep and 
precipitous, though not lofty hill, and accessible 
by only one path, which was defended by ditches- 
and palisades. It was twenty-four stadia in 
circumference, but was not surrounded by reg- 
ular walls, which the natural strength of its 
position rendered unnecessary. It was long 
the head-quarters of the Celtiberians in their 
wars with the Romans ; and its protracted siege 
and final destruction by Scipio Africanus the* 
younger (B.C. 133) is one of the most memor- 
able events in the early history of Spain. 

[Numanus Remulus, aRutulian warrior, broth- 
er-in law of Turnus, slain by Ascanius.] 

Numenius (ISnvfifjvtoc), of Apamea in Syria r 
a Pythagoreo-Platonic philosopher, who was 
highly esteemed by Plotinus and his school, as 
well as by Origen. He probably belongs to the 
age of the Antonines. His object was to trace 

559 



NUMERIANUS 



NUMITOR. 



the doctrines of Plato up to Pythagoras, and, at 
the same time, to show that they were not at 
variance with the dogmas and mysteries of the 
Brahmins, Jews, Magi, and Egyptians. Con- 
siderable fragments of his works have been 
preserved by Eusebius, in his Praparatio Evan- 
gelica. 

Numerianus, M. Adrelius, the younger of 
the two sons of the Emperor Carus, who ac- 
companied his father in the expedition against 
the Persians, A D. 283. After the death of his 
father, which happened in the same year, Nu- 
merianus was acknowledged as joint emperor 
with his brother Carinus. The army, alarmed 
by the fate of Carus, who was struck dead by 
lightning, compelled Numerianus to retreat to- 
ward Europe. During the greater part of the 
inarch, which lasted for eight months, he was 
confined to his litter by an affection of the eyes ; 
but the suspicions of the soldiers having become 
excited, they at length forced their way into the 
imperial tent, and discovered the dead body of 
their prince. Arrius A per, prefect of the prae- 
torians, and father-in-law of the deceased, was 
arraigned of the murder in a military council, 
held at Chalcedon, and, without being permit- 
ted to speak in his own defence, was stabbed 
to the heart by Diocletian, whom the troops had 
already proclaimed emperor. Vid. Diocleti- 
ancs. 

Noiicius or Numicus (now Nnmico), a small 
river in Lat.ium, flowing into the Tyrrhene Sea 
near Ardea, on the banks of which was the 
tomb of /Eneas, whom the inhabitants called 
Jupiter Indiges. 

[Numicids, Tib. 1. Tribune of the plebs B.C. 
320, was, with his colleague Q. Maelius, given 
over to the Samnites when the Romans resolv- 
ed not to adhere to the peace made at Caudium. 
"if a? colleague of Maelius is called by Livy L. 
Julius, and not Numicius. — 2. A person to 
whom Horace addresses the sixth epistle of his 
first book : otherwise unknown.] 

[Numida Plotius, a friend of Horace, who 
addresses to him one of his odes (bk. i., 36), 
to celebrate his safe arrival in Italy, after a 
campaign against the Cantabri in Spain.] 

Numidia (Nov/nidia, Tj Nofiadia and No/iadiKT/ : 
No^af, Numida, pi. "Nofiudec or Nn/uudec AlBvec, 
Niimidae : now Algier), a country of Northern 
Africa, which, in its original extent, was divid- 
ed from Mauretania on the west by the River 
Malva or Mulucha, and on the east from the 
territory of Carthage (afterward the Roman 
province of Africa) by the River Tusca : its 
northern boundary was the Mediterranean, and 
on the south it extended indefinitely toward the 
chain of the Great Atlas and the country of the 
Gaetuli. Intersected by the chain of the Less- 
er Atlas, and watered by the streams running 
down from it, it abounded in fine pastures, which 
were early taken possession of by wandering 
tribes of Asiatic origin, who, from their occu- 
pation as herdsmen, were called by the Greeks, 
here as elsewhere, Nnuddec, and this name was 
perpetuated in that of the country. A sufficient 
account of these tribes, and of their connection 
with their neighbors on the west, is given un- 
der Mauretania. The fertility of the country, 
inviting to agriculture, gradually gave a some- 
what more settled character to the people ; and, 



at their first appearance in Roman history, we 
[find their two great tribes, the Massylians and 
the Massaesylians, forming two monarchies, 
I which were united into one under Masinissa, 
I B.C. 201. For the historical details, vid. Mas- 
inissa. On Masinissa's death in 148, his king- 
dom was divided, by his dying directions, be- 
tween his three sons, Micipsa, Mastanabal, and 
Gulussa ; but it was soon reunited under Mi- 
cipsa, in consequence of the death of both his 
brothers. His death in 118 was speedily fol- 
lowed by the usurpation of Jugurtha, an ac- 
count of which and of the ensuing war with the 
Romans is given under Jugurtha. On the de- 
feat of Jugurtha in 106, the country became 
virtually subject to the Romans, but they per- 
mitted the family of Masinissa to govern it, with 
the royal title (vid. Hiempsal, No. 2 ; Juba, No. 
1), until B.C. 46, when Juba, who had espoused 
the cause of Pompey in the civil wars, was de- 
feated and dethroned by Julius Caesar, and 
Numidia was made a Roman province. It 
seems to have been about the same time or a 
little later, under Augustus, that the western 
part of the country was taken from Numidia 
and added to Mauretania, as far east as Saldae. 
In B.C. 30 Augustus restored Juba II. to his 
father's kingdom of Numidia ; but in B.C. 25 
he exchanged it for Mauretania, and Numidia, 
that is, the country between Saldae on the west 
and the Tusca on the east, became a Roman 
province. It was again diminished by near a 
half under Claudius (vid. Mauretania) ; and 
henceforth, until the Arab conquest, the sena- 
torial province of Numidia denotes the district 
between the River Ampsaga on the west and. 
the Tusca on the east ; its capital was Cirta 
(now Constantineh). The country, in its later 
restricted limits, is often distinguished by the 
name of New Numidia or Numidia Proper The 
Numidiansare celebrated in military history as 
furnishing the best light cavalry to the armies., 
first of Carthage, and afterward of Rome. 

[NuMimccrs,the agnomen ofQ.Metellusforhis 
success in Numidia. Vid. Metellus. No. 10.] 
Numidicus Sinus (Tsovfudinbc nohirog : now 
Bay of Storah), the great gulf east of Promon- 
torium Tretum (now Seven Capes), on the north 
of Numidia. 

[Numisianus (Nnvuictavoc), an eminent phy- 
sician at Corinth, whose lectures Galen attended 
about A.D. 150. having gone to Corinth for that 
purpose. He was, according to Galen, the most 
celebrated of all the pupils of Quintus. and dis- 
tinguished himself especially by his anatomical 
knowledge ] 

[Numisius. P. 1. One of the two chief magis- 
trates of the Latins, B.C. 340, and principal com- 
mander in the Latin war. — 2. C, praetor B.C. 
177, obtained Sicily as his province.— 3. T., of 
Tarquinii, was one of the ten commissioners 
sent into Macedonia B.C. 167, to regulate its 
affairs after its conquest by Paullus iEmilius. — 
4. N. Tiro, is branded by Cicero as one of the 
cut throats employed by M. Antonius the tri- 
umvir.] 

Numistro (Numistranus), a town in Lucania, 
near the frontiers of Apulia. 

Numitor. Vid. Romulus. 

[Numttor, son of Phorcus, a warrior in th« 
army of Turnus, wounded Achates.] 



NUMITORIUS. 



-NYMPHJ3UM. 



(NuMiTORirs, L. 1. One of the five tribunes 
ft st elected in the comitia tributa, B.C. 472. — 
2. P., the maternal uncle of Virginia, attempted 
to resist the iniquitous sentence of the decem- 
vir Appius Claudius, and was elected tribune of 
the plebs upon the expulsion of the decemvir, 
B.C. 449.-3. Q. Numitorius Pullus, of Fregel- 
la?, betrayed his native town to the Roman praj- 
tor L Opimius, B.C. 125, when it rose in revolt 
to obtain the Roman franchise.— 4. C, was a 
distinguished man of the aristocratical party, 
who was put to death by Marius and Cinna 
when they entered Rome at the close of B.C. 
88.] 

Nursia (Nurslnus : now Norcia). a town in the 
north of the land of the Sabines, situated near 
the sources of the Nar and amid the Apennines, 
whence it is called by Virgil (JEn., vii., 716) 
frigida Nursia. It was the birth-place of Ser- 
torius and of the mother of Vespasian. 

Nycteis (Nvariytc), that is, Antiope, daughter ! 
of Nycteus, and mother of Amphion and Zethus. 
Vid. Antiope, Nycteus. 

Nycteus (Nvktevc), son of Hyrieus by the 
nymph Clonia, and husband of Polyxo, by whom 
he became the father of Antiope; though, ac- 
cording to others, Antiope was the daughter of 
the river-god Asopus. Antiope was carried off 
byEpopeus.kingofSicyon ; whereupon Nycteus, 
who governed Thebes, as the guardian of Lab- 
dacus, invaded Sicyon with a Theban army. 
Nycteus was defeated, and being severely 
wounded, he was carried back to Thebes, where, 
previous to his death, he appointed his brother 
Lycus guardian of Labdacus, and at the same 
time required him to take vengeance on Epo- 
peus. Vid. Lycus. 

Nyctimene, daughter of Epopeus, king of Les 
bos, or, according to others, of Nycteus. Pur- 
sued and dishonored by her amorous father, she 
concealed herself in the shade of forests, where 
she was metamorphosed by Minerva (Athena) 
into an owl. 

Nymphs (Nvu<j>ai), the name of a numerous 
class of female divinities of a lower rank, though 
they are designated by the title of Olympian, are 
called to the meetings of the gods in Olympus, 
and are described as the daughters of Jupiter 
(Zeus). They may be divided into two great 
classes. The first class embraces those who 
were recognized in the worship of nature. The 
early Greeks saw in all the phenomena of or- 
dinary nature some manifestation of the deity: 
springs, rivers, grottoes, trees, and mountains, 
all seemed to them fraught with life, and all 
were only the visible embodiments of so many 
divine agents. The salutary and beneficent 
powers of nature were thus personified, and re- 
garded as so many divinities. The second class 
of nymphs are personifications of tribes, races, 
and states, such as Cyrene, and many others. 
I. The nymphs of the first class must again he 
subdivided into various species, according to the 
different parts of nature of which they are the 
representatives 1. Nymphs of the watery ele- 
ment. To these belong, first, the nymphs of the 
ocean, Oceanidcs ('tlKeavivat, 'tiKearifiec, vv/apai 
a^iat), who were regarded as the daughters of 
Oceanus ; and, next, the nymphs of the Mediter- 
ranean or inner sea, who were regarded as the 
daughters of Nereus, and hence were called 
36 



Nereides (Nnpetdec). The rivers were repre- 
sented by the Potameides (XloTapntdec), who, as 
local divinities, were named after their rivers, 
as Acheloides, Anigrrides, Ismenides, Amnisia- 
des, Pactolides. The nymphs of fresh water, 
whether of rivers, lakes, brooks, or springs, 
were also designated by the general name 
Naiades (Nrjidec), though they had, in addition, 
specific names (Kpnvaiai, Urjyalai, 'E2.eiov6p.oi, 
Aipvaridec, or Aipvudec). Even the rivers of 
the lower regions were described as having 
their nymphs ; hence we read of Nymphtz in- 
fernce paludis and Avernalcs. Many of these 
nymphs preside over waters or springs which 
were believed to inspire those who drank of 
them. The nymphs themselves were, there- 
fore, thought to be endowed with prophetic 
power, and to inspire men with the same, and 
to confer upon them the gift of poetry. Hence 
all persons in a state of rapture, such as seers, 
! poets, madmen, &c, were said to be caught by 
the nymphs (vvu<i>67>n-Toi, in Lat. lymphati, lym- 
phatici). As water is necessary to feed all veg- 
etation as well as all living beings, the water- 
nymphs frequently appear in connection with 
higher divinities, as, for example, with Apollo, 
the prophetic god and the protector of herds and 
flocks ; with Diana (Artemis), the huntress and 
the protectress of game, who was herself orig- 
inally an Arcadian nymph; with Mercury (Her- 
mes), the fructifying god of flocks ; with Bac- 
chus (Dionysus) ; and with Pan, the Sileni and 
Satyrs, whom they join in their Bacchic rev- 
els and dances. — 2. Nymphs of mountains and 
grottoes, called OreadesCOpeiddec, 'Opodeuviudeg), 
but sometimes also by names derived from 
the particular mountains they inhabited (e. g., 
Kidaipovidec, U.rjT'.Ludec, Kopvuiat). — 3. Nymphs 
of forests, groves, and glens, were believed some- 
times to appear to and frighten solitary travel- 
lers. They are designated by the names 'AA- 
GT}t5ec, 'TZnuooi, Av^uvcddeg, and Na-jraiat. — 
4. Nymphs of trees were believed to die together 
with the trees which had been their abode, and 
with which they had come into existence. They 
were called Dryades and Hamadryades (Apvddeg, 
' Auadpvddeg or 'Adpvddeg), from dpvg, which sig- 
nifies not only an oak, but any wild-growing 
lofty tree ; for the nymphs of fruit-trees were 
called Melidcs (MnTitdeg, also Mnltudeg, 'Empnte- 
dec., or 'ApaprjAidec). They seem to be of Ar- 
cadian origin, and never appear together with 
any of the great gods. II. The second class of 
nymphs, who were connected with certain races 
or localities (Nvpcpai xdovtai), usually have a 
name derived from the places with which they 
are associated, as Nysiades, Dodonides, Lem- 
niae. The sacrifices offered to nymphs usually 
consisted of goats, lambs, milk, and oil, but 
never of wine. They were worshipped in many 
parts of Greece, especially near springs, groves, 
and grottoes. They are represented in w T orks 
of art as beautiful maidens, either quite naked 
or only half covered. Later poets sometimes 
describe them as having sea-colored hair. 

NyMPHiEUM (NvfKpatw, i. e., Nymph's abode). 
1. A mountain, with perhaps a village, by the 
River Aous, near Apollonia, in Illyricum. — 
j 2 A port and promontory on the coast of Illyri- 
cum, three Roman miles from Lissus. — 3. (Now 
1 Cape Ghiorgi), the southwestern promontory ot 

561 



NYMPH. EL'S. 



OASIS. 



Acte or Athos, in Chalcidice. — 4. A sea-port j 
town of the Chersonesus Taurica (now Crimea), \ 
on the Cimmerian Bosporus, twenty-five stadia ! 
(two and a half geographical miles) from Panti- ! 
capaeum. — 5. A place on the coast of Bithynia, j 
thirty stadia (three geographical miles) west of i 
the mouth of the River Oxines. — 6. A place in J 
Cilicia, between Celenderis and Solog. 

Nymph^us (Nv/LKpQinc). 1. (Now Ninfa or j 
Nimpa), a small river of Latium, falling into the i 
sea above Astura ; of some note as contributing 
to the formation of the Pomptine Marshes. It 
now no longer reaches the sea, but falls into a 
little lake, called Lago di Monad. — 2. A harbor 
on the western side of the island of Sardinia, 
between the Promontorium Mercurii and the 
town of Tillium.— 3. Also called Nymphius (now 
Basilimfa), a small river of Sophene in Armenia, 
a tributary of the Upper Tigris, flowing from 
north to south past Martyropolis, in the valley 
between Mons Niphates and Mons Masius. 

Nymphidius Sabinds, commander of the prae- 
torian troops, together with Tigellinus, toward j 
the latter end of Nero's reign. On the death of j 
Nero, A.D. 68, he attempted to seize the throne, j 
but was murdered by the friends of Galba. 

Nymphis (Ni'u^f), son of Xenagoras. a native | 
of the Pontic Heraclea, lived about B.C. 250. | 
He was a person of distinction in his native j 
land, as well as a historical writer of some note. 
He wrote a work on Alexander and his suc- 
cessors in twenty-four books, and also a history 
of Heraclea in thirteen books. [The fragments 
of Nymphis are collected by J. C. Orelli in his 
edition of Memnon, Leipzig, 1816, p. 95-102, 
and by C. Muller, Fragm. Grac. Hist., vol. iii.. 
p. 12-16 ] 

Nymphodorus (Nv/MpSAupoc). 1. A Greek his- 
torian of Amphipolis, of uncertain date, the au- 
thor of a work on the Laws or Customs of Asia 
(Nofiifia 'Actac), vid. at end of No. 2. — 2. Of 
Syracuse, likewise a historian, seems to have 
lived about the time of Philip and Alexander the 
Great. He wrote aPeriplus of Asia, and a work 
on Sicily. [The fragments of these works are 
given by Muller, Fragm. Grac. Hist.,\o\. ii., p. 
375-381 ; Muller considers the existence of 
No. 1 doubtful, and adduces some arguments to 
show that these works are by one and the same 
author, viz., the Nymphodorus of Syracuse.] 

[Nymphodorus (Ntyz^orfwpof), a citizen of Ab- 
dera, whose sister married Sitalces, king of 
Thrace. The Athenians, who had previously 
regarded Nymphodorus as their enemy, made 
him their proxenus in B.C. 431, and, through 
his mediation, obtained the alliance of Sitalces. 
He also subsequently testified his friendship for i 
the Athenians by several other acts of kindness, 
and thus did them good service.] 

[Nysa or Nyssa (Ntftra or Nvcrcra). 1. A queen • 
-of Bithynia, wife of Nicomedes II., and mother j 
of Nicomedes III.— 2. A sister of Mithradates | 
the Great, who was taken prisoner by Lucullus 
at Cabira, and thus escaped the fate of the other 
sisters and wives of the king, who were put to j 
death shortly after at Pharnacia.— 3. A daughter 
of Mithradates the Great, who had been betrothed 
to the King of Cyprus, but accompanied her fa- 
ther in his flight to the kingdom of Bosporus, 
^here she ultimately shared his fate, putting an 
end to her life by poison, B.C. 63.] 
662 



Nysa or Nyssa (Nvtra, Ntwa), was the le- 
gendary scene of the nurture of Bacchus (Dio- 
nysus), whence the name was applied to sev- 
eral places which were sacred to that god. 
1. In India, in the district of Goryaea, at the 
northwestern corner of the Punjab, near the 
confluence of the Rivers Cophen and Choaspes r 
probably the same place as Nagara or Dionyso- 
polis (now Nagar or Naggar). Near it was a 
mountain of like name. — 2. A city or mountain 
in /Ethiopia. — 3. (Now Sultan- Hisar, ruins a lit- 
tle west of Nazeli), a city of Caria, on the south- 
ern slope of Mount Messogis, built on both sides 
of the ravine of the brook Eudon, which falls 
into the Maeander. It was said to have been 
named after the queen of one of the Antiochi, 
having been previously called Athymbra and 
Pythopolis. — 4. A city of Cappadocia, near the 
Halys, on the road from Caesarea to Ancyra \ 
the bishopric of St. Gregory of Nyssa. — 5. A 
town in Thrace, between the Rivers Nestus and 
Strymon. — 6. A town in Bceotia, near Mount 
Helicon. 

Nys^eus, Nysics, Nyseus, or Nysigexa, a 
surname of Bacchus (Dionysus), derived from. 
Nysa, a mountain or city (see above), where the 
god was said to have been brought up by nymphs. 

Nvseides or Nysiades, the nymphs of Nysa r 
who are said to have reared Bacchus (Dionysus), 
and whose names are Cissel's, Nysa, Erato, Eri- 
phia, Bromia, and Polyhymno. 

Nyx (Nu£), called Nox by the Romans, was a 
personification of Night. Homer calls her the 
subduer of gods and men, and relates that Jupi- 
ter (Zeus) himself stood in awe of her. In the 
ancient cosmogonies Night is one of the very 
first created beings, for she is described as th& 
daughter of Chaos, and the sister of Erebus, by 
whom she became the mother of ^Ether and 
Hemera. She is further said to have given birth,, 
without a husband, to Moros, the Keres, Thana- 
tos, Hypnos, Dreams, Momus, Oizys, the Hes- 
perides, Mcerae, Nemesis, and similar beings. 
In later poets, with whom she is merely the per- 
sonification of the darkness of night, she is 
sometimes described as a winged goddess, and 
sometimes as riding in a chariot, covered with 
a dark garment, and accompanied by the stars 
in her course. Her residence was in the dark- 
ness of Hades. 

°- ■' ' i 

Oanus ('ilavoc : now Frascolari), a small rive* 
on the southern coast of Sicily, near Camarina. 

[Oaracta ('OupaKra, 'OopuxOa, or Ovopo^da'- 
now Dsjisme or Khishnc, also Brokht), a large 
and fertile island lying off the coast of Carma- 
nia, in the Persian Gulf ; in it was found tha 
tomb of Erythras, from whom the Erythraean 
Sea was fabled to have been named.] 

Oarus ('Oapnc), a considerable river men- 
tioned by Herodotus as rising in the country of 
the Thyssagetae, and falling into the Palus Maeo- 
tis (now Sea of Azov) east of the Tanais (now 
Don). As there is no river which very well an- 
swers this description, Herodotus is supposed 
to refer to one of the eastern tributaries of tha 
Don, such as the Sal or the Manytrh. 

Oasis {'Oaac. Avaoic, and in later writers 
'Slavic) is the Greek form of an Egyptian word 



OASIS. 



OCCIA. 



(In Coptic ouahe, an inhabited place), which was 
used to denote an island in the sea of sand of the 
great Libyan Desert: the word has been adopted 
into our language. The Oases are depressions 
in the great table-land of Libya, preserved from 
the inroad of the shifting sands by steep hills of 
limestone round them, and watered by springs, 
which make them fertile and habitable. With 
the substitution of these springs for the Nile, 
they closely resemble that greater depression in 
the Libyan table-land, the Valley of Egypt. The i 
chief specific applications of the w T ord by the j 
ancient writers are to the two Oases on the j 
west of Egypt, which were taken possession of I 
by the Egyptians at an early period. 1. Oasis j 
Minor, the Lesser or Second Oasis {'Oaaic \ 
Mi/cpa, or 7/ dsvrepa : now Wah-cl- Bahrych or 
Wah-el-Behncsa), lay west of Oxyrynchus, and 
a good day's journey from the southwestern end j 
of the LakeMceris. It was reckoned as belong- ! 
ing to the Heptanomis, or Middle Egypt, and j 
formed a separate Nomos. — 2. Oasis Major, the ' 
Greater, Upper, or First Oasis ( v O. /neyu^Tj, t/ j 
■Kpurrj, h uvu"0. y and, in Herodotus, tto/Uc- *Oaci<; \ 
and vyaog Maxupuv, now Wah-el-Khargeh), is de- I 
scribed by Strabo as seven days' journey west j 
of Abydos. which applies to its northern end, as j 
it extends over more than 1£° of latitude. It j 
belonged to Upper Egypt, and, like the other, ! 
formed a distinct norae : these two nomes are j 
mentioned together as "duo Oasitae" (pi dvo i 
'Oaclrai). When the ancient writers use the ! 
word Oasis alone, the Greater Oasis must gen- 
erally be understood. The Greater Oasis con- 
tains considerable ruins of the ancient Egyp- 
tian and Roman periods. Between and near 
these were other Oases, about which we learn j 
little or nothing from the ancient writers, j 
though in one of them, the Wah-el-Gharbec or 
Wah-el-Dakhleh, three days west of the Greater I 
Oasis, there are the ruins of a Roman tern- ] 
pie, inscribed with the names of Nero and of j 
Titus. The Greater Oasis is about level with 
the valley of the Nile, the Lesser is about two 
hundred feet higher than the Nile, in nearly 
the same latitude. — 3. A still more celebrated 
Oasis than either of these was that called Am- 
mon, Hammox, Ammonium, Hammonis Oracu- 
lum, from its being a chief seat of the worship 
and oracle of the god Ammon. It was called 
by the Arabs in the Middle Ages Santariah, and 
now Siwah. It is about fifteen geographical 
miles long, and twelve wide : its chief town, 
Siwah, is in 29° 12' north latitude, and 26° 17' 
east longitude : its distance from Cairo is twelve 
days, and from the northern coast about one 
hundred and sixty statute miles : the ancients 
reckoned it twelve days from Memphis, and five 
days from Paraetonium on the northern coast. 
It was inhabited by various Libyan tribes, but 
the ruling people were a race kindred to the : 
^Ethiopians above Egypt, who, at a period of j 
unknown antiquity, had introduced, probably 
from Meroe, the worship of Ammon : the gov- 
ernment was monarchical. The Ammonians 
do not appear to have been subject to the old 
Egyptian monarchy. Cambyses, after conquer- 
ing Egypt in B.C. 525, sent an army against 
them, which was overwhelmed by the sands of 
the Desert. In B C 331, Alexander the Great 
■visited the oracle, which hailed him as the son 



of Jupiter (Zeus) Ammon. The oracle was also 
visited by Cato of Utica. Under the Ptolemies 
and the Romans it was subject to Egypt, and 
formed part of the Nomos Libya. The most re- 
markable objects in the Oasis, besides the tem- 
ple of Ammon, were the palace of the ancient 
kings, abundant springs of salt water fas well 
as fresh) from which salt was made, and a well, 
called Fons Solis, the water of which was cold 
at noon, and warm in the morning and evening. 
Considerable ruins of the temple of Ammon are 
still standing at the town of Siwah. In ancient 
timqs the Oasis had no town, but the inhabit- 
ants dwelt in scattered villages. — 4. In other 
parts of the Libyan Desert there were oases 
of which the ancients had some knowledge, but 
which they do not mention by the name of 
Oases, but by their specific names, such as 
Augila, Phazania, and others. 
Oaxes. Vid. Oaxus. 

Oaxus ("Oat-oc. : 'Oufrcf), called Axes CA£of) 
by Herodotus, a town in the interior of Crete, 
on the River Oaxes, and near Eleutherna, is 
said to have derived its name from Oaxes or 
Oaxus, who was, according to some accounts, 
a son oi Acacallis, the daughter of Minos, and, 
according to others, a son of Apollo by An- 
chiale. 

Obila (now Atila), a town of the Vettones, ia 
Hispania Tarraconensis. 

Oblivionis Flumen. V%d. Lim^ea. 

Obrimas (now Koja-Chai or Sandukii-Chai), 
an eastern tributary of the Mseander, in Phrygia. 

Obringa (now Aar), a western tributary of 
the Rhine, forming the boundary between Ger- 
mania Superior and Inferior. 

Obsequens, Julius, the name prefixed to a 
fragment entitled De Prodigiis or Prodigiorum 
Libellus, containing a record of the phenomena 
classed by the Romans under the general desig- 
nation of Prodigia or Ostenta. The series ex- 
tends in chronological order from the consul- 
ship of Scipio and Laelius, B.C. 190, to the con- 
sulship of Fabius and ^Elius, B.C. II. The 
materials are derived in a great measure from 
Livy, whose very words are frequently employ- 
ed. With regard to the compiler we know 
nothing. The style is tolerably pure, but does 
not belong to the Augustan age. The best edi- 
tions are by Scheffer, Amst., 1679 ; by Ouden- 
dorp, Lugd. Bat., 1720; [and by Kapp, Curiae 
Regn., 1772.] 

Obucola, Obucula, or Obulcula (now Mon- 
clova), a town in Hispania Baetica, on the road 
from Hispalis to Emerita and Corduba. 

Obulco (now Porcuna), surnamed Pontifi- 
cense, a Roman municipium in Hispania Bae- 
tica, three hundred stadia from Corduba. 

Ocalea ('£2/ca?.c'a, 'Qnalhi, also 'tin^eia, '£2/ca- 
Aeai : 'fl/caAruc), an ancient town in Bceotia, be- 
tween Haliartus and Alalcomenae, situated on. 
a river of the same name falling into the Lake 
Copais, and at the foot of the mountain Tilphu- 
sion. 

[Ocalea ('QKaleio), daughter of Mantineus, 
wife of Abas, and mother of Acrisius and Prce- 
tus.] 

[Occia, a vestal virgin, who died in the reign 
of Tiberius, A. D. 19, after discharging the duties 
of her priesthood for the long period of fifty- 
seven years ] 

563 



OCEANIDES. 



OCTAYIA. 



Oceanides. Vid. Nymphs. j opamisus (now Hindoo Koosh), according to 

OcEAXus('G/tMtv6f), in the oldest Greek poets, I Strabo, through Hyrcania, into the Caspian ; 
is the god of the water which was believed to I according to Pliny and Ptolemy, through Bac- 
surround the whole earth, and which was sup- ! tria, into the Oxus. Some suppose it to be 
posed to be the source of all the rivers and only another name for the Oxus. In the Pehlvi 
other waters of the world. This water-god, in dialect the word denotes a river in general, 
the Theogony of Hesiod, is the son of Heaven j [Ocnus, a son of Tiberis and Manto, and the 
and Earth (Ovpavoc and Tala), the husband of reputed founder of Mantua, which he is said to 
Tethys, and the father of all the river-gods and have named after his mother.] 
water-nymphs of the whole earth. He is in- j [Ocka fO/cpa), a branch of the Alps in Nori- 
troduced in person in the Prometheus of vEs- cum; according to Strabo, the lowest part of the 
chylus. As to the physical idea attached by the Carnic Alps, between Aquileia and Nauportus, 
early Greeks to the word, it seems that they over which a commercial road passed from Italy 
regarded the earth as a flat circle, which was en- i to the north.] 

compassed by a river perpetually flowing round . Ocriculum (Ocriculanus : ruins near Otrkoli), 
it, and this river was Oceanus. (This notion an important municipium in Umbria, situated on 
is ridiculed by Herodotus.) Out of and into : the Tiber, near its confluence with the Nar, and 
this river the sun and the stars were supposed ' on the Via Flaminia, leading from Rome to 
to rise and set ; and on its banks were the j Narnia, &c. There are ruins of an aqueduct, 
abodes of the dead. From this notion it natu- I an amphitheatre and temples near the modern 
rally resulted that, as geographical knowledge j Otrkoli. 

advanced, the name was applied to the great ; [Ocrixum Promontorium (now Cape Lizard), 
outer waters of the earth, in contradistinction ; Vid. Damxoxii.] 

to the inner seas, and especially to the Atlantic, \ Ocrisia or Oclisia, mother of Servius Tul- 
or the sea without the Pillars of Hercules lius. For details, vid. Tullius. 
e£j dulaTTa, Mare Exterius), as distinguished | [Octacilius. Vid. Otacilius.] 
from the Mediterranean, or the sea within that j Octavia. 1. Sister of the Emperor Augustus, 
limit {!] ev-be -duAa-Ta, Mare Internum) ; and was married first to C. Marcellus, consul, B.C. 
thus the Atlantic is often called simply Ocea- 50, and subsequently, upon the death of the 
nus. The epithet Atlantic 'Atauvtikv #a- latter, to Antony, the triumvir, in 40. This 
7,auaa, Herod., 6 'A. irovrog, Eurip. ; AtlantT- marriage was regarded as the harbinger of a 
cum Mare) was applied to it from the mythical lasting peace. Augustus was warmly attached 
position of Atlas being on its shores. The to his sister, and she possessed all the charms 
other great waters which were denoted by the and virtues likely to secure a lasting influence 
same term are described under their specific over the mind of a husband. Her beauty was 
names. ! universally allowed to be superior to that of 

Ocelis {'Oan/jq : now Ghela), a celebrated Cleopatra, and her virtue was such as to excite 
harbor and emporium at the southwestern point admiration in an age of growing licentiousness 
of Arabia Felix, just at the entrance to the Red and corruption. For a time Antony seemed to 
Sea. i forget Cleopatra ; but he soon became tired of 

Ocellus Lucanus, a Pythagorean philoso- his virtuous wife, and upon his return to the 
pher, was a native of some Greek city in Lu- East he forbade her to follow him. When at 
cania, but we have no particulars of his work, length the war broke out between Antony and 
We have still extant under his name a consid- Augustus, Octavia was divorced by her hus- 
erable fragment of a work, entitled, " On the band ; but, instead of resenting the insults she 
Nature of the Whole" {-Kept rye tov iravrbc had received from him, she brought up with 
<j>vaioc), written in the Ionic dialect; but it is care his children by Fulvia and Cleopatra. She 
much disputed whether it is a genuine work, died B.C. 11. Octavia had five children, three 
In this work the author maintains that the by Marcellus, a son and two daughters, and two 
whole (to -uv, or 6 koouoc) had no beginning, 1 by Antony, both daughters. Her son, M. Mar- 
and will have no end. Edited by Rudolphi, cellus, was adopted by Augustus, and was des- 
Lips., 1801-8 ; [and by Mullach, in the volume j tined to be his successor, but died in 23. Vid. 
entitled Aristotelis de Melisso, Xenophane et Marcellus, No. 9. The descendants of her 
Gorgia Disputationes, &c, et Ocelli Lucani, qui two daughters by Antonius successively ruled 
fertur, de universa natura libello, Berlin, 1846.] the Roman world. The elder of them marri- 

Ocelum. 1. A town in the northeast of Lu- ed L. Domitius Ahenobarbus, and became the 
sitania, between the Tagus and the Durius, | grandmother of the Emperor Nero ; theyoung- 
whose inhabitants, the Ocelenses, also bore the j er of them married Drusus, the brother of the 
name of Lancienses. — 2. (Now X) 'cello or Uxeau), Emperor Tiberius, and became the mother of 
a town in the Cottian Alps, was the last place the Emperor Claudius, and the grandmother of 
in Cisalpine Gaul before entering the territories j the Emperor Caligula. Vid. Antonia.— 2. The 
of King Cottius. | daughter of the Emperor Claudius, by his third 

Ocha ("O^), the highest mountain inEubcea, i wife, Valeria Messalina, was born about A.D. 
was in the south of the island, near Carystus, j 42. She was at first betrothed by Claudius to 
running out into the promontory Caphareus. j L. Silanus, who put an end to his life, as Agrip- 

[Ochesius ('O.p/crtof), an JEtolian prince, fa- ! pina had destined Octavia to be the wife of her 
ther of Periphas, who was slain in the Trojan j son, afterward the Emperor Nero. She was 
war ] married to Nero in A.D. 53, but was soon de- 

Ochus. Vid. Artaxerxes III. serted by her young and profligate husband for 

Ochus ("O^oc, *Q-x n s)- a great river of Central Poppaea Sabina. After living with the latter as 
Asia, flowing from the northern side of the Par- I his mistress for «*ome time, he resolved to re- 
564 



OCTAVIANUS. 



ODOACER. 



eognize her as his legal wife ; and accordingly, 
he divorced Octavia on the alleged ground of 
sterility, and then married Poppaja, A D. 62. 
Shortly afterward, Octavia was falsely accused 
of adultery, and was banished to the little lsl- j 
and of Pandataria, where she was put to death. 
Her untimely end excited general commisera- 
tion. Octavia is the heroine of a tragedy 
found among the works of Seneca, but the au- 
thor of which was more probably Curiatius Ma- 
ternus. 

Octavianus. Vii. Augustus. 

Octavius. 1. Cn., surnarned Rufus, qutes- 
tor about B.C. 230, may be regarded as the 
founder of the family. The Octavii originally 
came from the Volscian town of Velitra;, where 
a street and an altar bore the name of Octavius. 
—2. Cn., son of No. I, plebeian aedile 206, and 
praetor 205, when he obtained Sardinia as his 
province. He was actively employed during 
the remainder of the second Punic war, and he 
was present at the battle of Zama. — 3. Cn., son 
of No. 2, was praetor 168, and had the command 
of the fleet in the war against Perseus. He 
was consul 165. In 162 he was one of three 
ambassadors sent into Syria, but was assassin- 
ated at Laodicea by a Greek of the name of 
Leptines, at the instigation, as was supposed, 
of Lysias, the guardian of the young king An- 
tiochus V. A statue of Octavius was placed 
on the rostra at Rome, where it was in the time 
of Cicero. — 4. Cn., son of No. 3, consul 128. — 
5. M., perhaps younger son of No. 3, was the 
colleague of Tib. Gracchus in the tribunate of 
the plebs, 133, when he opposed his tribunitian ! 
veto to the passing of the agrarian law. He | 
was, in consequence, deposed from his office ! 
by Tib. Gracchus. — 6. Cn., a supporter of the ! 
aristocrat ical party, was consul 87 with L. 
Cornelius Cinna. After Sulla's departure from 
Italy, in order to carry on the war against Mith- 
radates, a vehement contest arose between the 
two consuls, which ended in the expulsion of 
Cinna from the city, and his being deprived of 
the consulship. Cinna soon afterward returned 
at the head of a powerful army, and accompa- 
nied by Marius. Rome was compelled to sur- 
render, and Octavius was one of the first vic- 
tims in the massacres that followed. His head 
was cut off and suspended on the rostra. — 7. 
L., son of No. 6, consul 75, died in 74, as pro- 
consul of Cilicia, and was succeeded in the com- 
mand of the province by L. Lucullus. — 8. Cn., 
grandson of No. 4, consul 76.-9. M., son of No. 
8, was curule aedile 50, along with M. Caelius. 
On the breaking out of the civil war in 49, Oc- 
tavius espoused the aristocratical party, and 
served as legate to M. Bibulus, who had the 
supreme command of the Pompeian fleet. After 
the battle of Pharsalia, Octavius sailed to Illyri- 
cum ; but, having been driven out of this coun- 
try (47) by Caesar's legates, he fled to Africa. 
He was present at the battle of Actium (31), 
when he commanded part of Antony's fleet. — 
10. C , younger son of No. 1, and the ancestor 
of Augustus, remained a simple Roman eques, 
without attempting to rise any higher in the 
state.— 1 1. C, son of No. 10, and great-grand- 
father of Augustus, lived in the time of the sec- 
ond Punic war. in which he served as tribune 
of the soldiers He was present at the battle 



of Cannaj (216), and was one of the few who 
survived the engagement. — 12. C, son of No. 
11, and grandfather of Augustus, lived quietly 
at his villa at Velitrae, without aspiring to the 
dignities of the Roman state. — 13. C, son of 
No. 12, and father of Augustus, was praetor 61, 
and in the following year succeeded C. Anto- 
nius in the government of Macedonia, which he 
administered with equal integrity and energy. 
He returned to Italy in 59, died the following 
year, 58, at Nola, in Campania, in the very 
same room in which Augustus afterward breath- 
ed his last. By his second wife Atia, Octavius 
had a daughter and a son, the latter of whom 
was subsequently the Emperor Augustus. Vid. 
Augustus. — 14. L., a legate of Pompey in the 
war against the pirates, 67, was sent by Pom- 
pey into Crete to supersede Q. Metellus in the 
command of the island ; but Metellus refused 
to surrender the command to him. Vid. Me- 
tellus, No. 16. 

Octavius Balbus. Vid. Balbus. 

Octoduuus (Octodurensis : now Martigny), a 
town of the Veragri in the country of the Hel- 
vetii, is situated in a valley surrounded by lofty 
mountains, and on the River Drance, near the 
spot where it flows into the Rhone. The an- 
cient town, like the modern one, was divided 
by the Drance into two parts. The inhabitants 
had the Jus Latii. 

Octogesa, a town of the Ilergetes in His- 
pania Tarraconensis, near the Iberus, probably 
south of the Sicoris. 

Octolophus, a place of uncertain site, in the 
north of Thessaly or the south of Macedonia. 

Ocypete. Vid. HabpyijE. 

Ocyroe C&KvpoT}). 1. One of the daughters 
of Oceanus and Tethys. — 2. Daughter of the 
centaur Chiron, possessed the gift of prophecy, 
and is said to have been changed into a mare. 

Odenathus, the ruler of Palmyra, checked the 
victorious career of the Persians after the de- 
feat and capture of Valerian, A.D. 260, and drove 
Sapor out of Syria. In return for these serv- 
ices, Gallienus bestowed upon Odenathus the 
title of Augustus. Odenathus was soon after- 
ward murdered by some of his relations, not 
without the consent, it is said, of his wife Ze- 
nobia, 266. He was succeeded by Zenobia. 

Odessus {'Odrjaacc: 'O^tjaair?]':, 'OdrjGOEvc). 1. 
(Now Varna), also called Odyssus and Odissus 
at a later time, a Greek town in Thracia (in the 
later Mcesia Inferior), on the Pontus Euxinus, 
nearly due east of Marcianopolis, was founded 
by the Milesians in the territory of the Crobyzi 
in the reign of Astyages, king of Media (B.C. 
594-559). The town possessed a good harbor, 
and carried on an extensive commerce. — 2. A 
sea-port in Sarmatia Europaea, on the north of 
the Pontus Euxinus and on the River Sangari- 
us, west of Olb'a and the mouth of the Borys- 
thenes. It was some distance northeast of the 
modern Odessa. 

[Odites. 1. A centaur, slain by Mopsus. — 2. 
An /Ethiopian, slain by Clymenus at the nup- 
tials of Perseus.] 

[Odius COScoc). 1. The leader of the Hali- 
zones, who were in alliance with the Trojans, 
was slain by Agamemnon before Troy. — 2. A 
herald in the camp of the Greeks before Troy.] 

Odoacer, usually called king of the Heruli, 

565 



ODOMANTICE. 



CEDIPUS. 



was the leader of the barbarians who overthrew 
the Western empire, A.D. 476. He took the 
title of king of Italy, and reigned till his power 
was overthrown by Theodoric, king of the Goths. 
Odoacer was defeated in three decisive battles 
by Theodoric (489-490), and then took refuge in 
Ravenna, where he was besieged for three years. 
He at last capitulated on condition that he and 
Theodoric should be joint kings of Italy ; but 
Odoacer was soon afterward murdered by his 
rival. 

OdomantTce ('Odo/mvTCKn), a district in the 
northeast of Macedonia, between the Strymon 
and the Nestus, inhabited by the Thracian tribe 
of the Odomanti or Odornantes. 

Odrys^i: ('Odpvaat), the most powerful people 
in Thrace, dwelt, according to Herodotus, on 
both sides of the River Artiscus, a tributary of 
the Hebrus, but also spread further west over 
the whole plain of the Hebrus. Soon after the 
Persian wars, Teres, king of the Odrysae, ob- 
tained the sovereignty over several of the other 
Thracian tribes, and extended his dominions as 
far as the Black Sea. He was succeeded by 
his son Sitalces, who became the master of al- 
most the whole of Thrace. His empire com- 
prised all the territory from Abdera to the 
mouths of the Danube, and from Byzantium to 
the sources of the Strymon ; and it is describ- 
ed by Thucydides as the greatest of all the 
kingdoms between the Ionian Gulf and the 
Euxine, both in revenue and opulence. Sital- 
ces assisted the Athenians in the Peloponne- 
sian war against Perdiccas, king of Macedonia. 
Vid. Sitalces. He died B.C. 424, and was suc- 
ceeded by his nephew Seuthes I. On the death 
of the latter, about the end of the Peloponnesian 
war, the power of the Odrysae declined. For 
the subsequent history of the Odrysae, vid. Thra- 
cia. 

[Odrysses COdpvGa?]g), a tributary of the 
Rhyndacus, in Mysia.] 

Odyssea COdvoosia), a town of Hispania Bae- 
tica, situated north of Abdera, amid the mount- 
ains of Turdetania, with a temple of Minerva 
(Athena), said to have been built by Odysseus 
(Ulysses). Its position is quite uncertain. Some 
of the ancients supposed it to be the same as 
Olisipo. 

Odysseus. Vid. Ulysses. 

GEa ('Ecjo, Ptol. : CEensis : ruins at Tripoli?), 
a city on the northern coast of Africa, in the 
Rogio Syrtica (i. c, between the Syrtes), was 
one of the three cities of the African Tripolis, 
and, under the Romans, a colony by the name 
of JElia Augusta Felix. It had a mixed popu- 
lation of Libyans and Sicilians. 

CEa (Ola), a town in the island of iEgina, 
twenty stadia from the capital. 

QEagrus or CEager (Oiaypoc), king of Thrace, 
was the father, by the muse Calliope, of Or- 
pheus and Linus. Hence the sisters of Orpheus 
are called (Eagrides, in the sense of the Muses. 
The adjective (Eagrius is also used by the poets 
as equivalent to "Thracian. Hence (Eagrius 
Hcemus, (Eagrius Hebrus, &C. 

CEanthe or CEanthia (Oidvdv, Oiuvdeia : Oiav- 
Qevs : now Galaxidhi), a town of the Locri Ozolae 
on the coast, near the entrance of the Crissaean 
Gulf. 

CEXso or GEasso (now Oyarzv.n), a town of 
566 



I the Vascones, on the northern coast of Hispania 
j Tarraconensis, situated on a promontory of the 
j same name, and on the River Magrada. 
j CEax (Oiaf), son of Nauplius and Clymene, 
: and brother of Palamedes and Nausimedon. 

[GEbalides, CEbalis. Vid. GEbalus.] 
I GEbalus {Ol6a2.oc). 1. Son of Cynortas, hus- 
band of Gorgophone, and father of Tyndareus, 
Pirene, and Arene, was king of Sparta, where he 
was afterward honored with a heroum. Ac- 
cording to others, he was son of Perieres and 
grandson of Cynortas, and was married to the 
| nymph Batea, by whom he had several children, 
j The patronymic (Ebalides is not only applied to 
j his descendants, but to the Spartans generally, 
j as Hyacinthus, Castor, Pollux, &c. The femi- 
I nine patronymic (Ebalis and the adjective (Eba- 
J lius are applied in the same way. Hence Helen 
is called by the poets (Ebalis and (Ebalia pellex ; 
I the city of Tarentum is termed (Ebalia arx, be- 
| cause it was founded by the Lacedaemonians ; 
i and since the Sabines were, according to one 
j tradition, a Lacedaemonian colony, we find the 
Sabine king Titus Tatius named (Ebaltus Titus, 
and the Sabine women (Ebalides matres. (Ov., 
Fast:, i., 260; iii., 230.)— 2. Son of Telon, by a 
nymph of the stream Sebethus, near Naples, 
! ruled in Campania. 

[CEbares (Ol6dp7]c). 1. A groom of Darius 
| Hystaspis, who by a stratagem secured the Per- 
j sian throne for his master, after the assassina- 
I tion of Smerdis. — 2. Son of Megabazus, was 
j viceroy of Dascyleum, in Bithynia, in the reign 
\ of Darius Hystaspis.] 

CEchalia (Oixa?da : Olxc'/.ievr, Oi^a/Uwr^e)- 
j 1. A town in Thessaly, on the Peneus, near 
j Tricca. — 2. A town in Thessaly, belonging to 
! the territory of Trachis. — 3. Atown inMessenia, 
I on the frontier of Arcadia, identified by Pau- 
! sanias with Carnasium, by Strabo with Anda- 
j nia. — 4. A town of Euboea, in the district Ere- 
I tria. The ancients were divided in opinion 
! which of these places was the residence of Eu- 
j rytus, whom Hercules defeated and slew. The 
original legend probably belonged to the Thes- 
! salian CEchalia, and was thence transferred to 
j the other towns. 

! GEcumenius (Ohovfievioc), bishop of Tricca, 
in Thessaly, a Greek commentator on various 
parts of the New Testament, probably flourished 
about A.D. 950. He has the reputation of a 
judicious commentator, careful in compilation, 
modest in offering his own judgment, and neat 
in expression. Most of his commentaries were 
published at Paris, 1631. 

OEdipus (OldtTvovg), son of Laius and Jocaste 
of Thebes. The tragic fate of this hero is more 
celebrated than that of any other legendary per- 
sonage, on account of the frequent use which 
the tragic poets have made of it. In their hands 
it underwent various changes and embellish- 
ments, hut the common story ran as follows : 
Laius, son of Labdacus, was king of Thebes, 
and husband of Jocaste, a daughter of Mence- 
ceus, and sister of Creon. An oracle had in- 
formed Laius that he was destined to perish by 
the hands of his own son. Accordingly, when 
Jocaste gave birth to a son, they pierced his 
feet, bound them together, and exposed the 
child on Mount Cithaeron. There he was found 
by a shepherd of King Polybus of Corinth, and 



(EDIPUS. 



CENIDES. 



was Mrtled from his swollen feetCEdipus. Hav- 
ing been carried to the palace, the king and his 
wife Merope (or Peribcea) brought him up as 
their own child. Once, however, CEdipus was 
taunted bv a Corinthian with not being the 
King's son, whereupon he proceeded to Delphi 
to consult the oracle. The oracle replied that 
he was destined to slay his father and commit 
incest with his mother. Thinking that Polybus 
was his father, he resolved not to return to 
Corinth ; but on his road between Delphi and 
Daulis he met his real father Laius. Poly- 
phontes, the charioteer of Laius, bade CEdipus 
make way for them, whereupon a scuffle en- 
sued, in which CEdipus slew both Laius and his 
charioteer. In the mean time, the celebrated 
Sphinx had appeared in the neighborhood of 
Thebes. Seated on a rock, she put a riddle to 
every Theban that passed by, and whoever was 
unable to solve it was killed by the monster. 
This calamity induced the Thebans to proclaim 
that whoever should deliver the country of the 
Sphinx should be made king, and should re- 
ceive Jocaste as his wife. CEdipus came for- 
ward, and when he approached the Sphinx she 
gave the riddle as follows : " A being with four 
feet has two feet and three feet, and only one 
voice ; but its feet vary, and when it has most 
it is weakest." CEdipus solved the riddle by 
saying that it was man, who in infancy crawls 
upon all fours, in manhood stands erect upon 
two feet, and in old age supports his tottering 
legs with a staff. The Sphinx, enraged at the 
solution of the riddle, thereupon threw herself 
down from the rock. CEdipus now obtained the 
kingdom of Thebes, and married his mother, by 
whom he became the father of Eteocles, Poly- 
nices, Antigone, and Ismene. In consequence 
of this incestuous alliance, of which no one was 
aware, the country of Thebes was visited by a 
plague. The oracle, on being consulted, or- 
dered that the murderer of Laius should be ex- 
pelled. CEdipus accordingly pronounced a sol- 
emn curse upon the unknown murderer, and 
declared him an exile ; but when he endeavored 
to discover him, he was informed by the seer 
Tiresias that he himself was both the parricide 
and the husband of his mother. Jocaste now 
hung herself, and CEdipus put out his own eyes. 
From this point traditions differ ; for, according 
to some, CEdipus in his blindness was expelled 
from Thebes by his sons and brother-in-law, Cre- 
on, who undertook the government, and he was 
accompanied by Antigone in his exile to Attica ; 
while, according to others, he was imprisoned by 
his sons at Thebes, in order that his disgrace 
might remain concealed from the eyes of the 
world. The father now cursed his sons, who 
agreed to rule over Thebes alternately, but be- 
came involved in a dispute, in consequence of 
which they fought in single combat, and slew 
each other. Hereupon Creon succeeded to the 
throne, and expelled CEdipus. After long wan- 
derings, CEdipus arrived in the grove of the Eu- 
menides, near Colonus, in Attica ; he was there 
honored by Theseus in his misfortune, and, ac- 
cording to an oracle, the Eumenides removed 
him from the earth, and no one was allowed to 
approach his tomb. According to Homer, CEdi- 
pus, tormented by the Erinnyes of his mother, 
continued to reign at Thebes after her death ; 



he fell in battle, and was honored at Thebes 
with funeral solemnities. 

[CEnanthe [Olvavdr]), mother of Ajjathocles, 
the infamous minister of Ptolemy Philopator, 
and of Agathoclea, through whom she possessed 
great influence with the king. After the ac- 
cession of Epiphanes, she, with her family, was 
given up to the multitude, and by them torn to 
pieces.] 

CEneon (Oheuv : Olveuvev^), a sea-port town 
of the Locri Ozola?, east of Naupactus. 

GEneus (Oivevc), son of Portheus, husband of 
Althaea, by whom he became the father of Ty- 
deus and Meleager, and was thus the grandfa- 
ther of Diomedes. He was king of Pleuron and 
Calydon in JEtoha. This is Homer's account; 
but, according to later authorities, he was the 
son of Porthaon and Euryte, and the father of 
Toxeus, whom he himself killed, Thyreus (Phe- 
reus), Clymenus, Periphas, Agelaus, Meleager, 
Gorge, Eurymede, Melanippe, Mothone, and 
Deianira. His second wife was Melanippe, the 
daughter of Hipponous, by whom he hadTydeus, 
according to some accounts ; though, according 
to others, Tydeus was his son by his own daugh- 
ter Gorge. He is said to have been deprived 
of his kingdom by the sons of his brother Agri- 
us, who imprisoned and ill used him. He was 
subsequently avenged by Diomedes, who slew 
Agrius and his sons, and restored the kingdom 
either to OEneus himself, or to his son-in-law 
Andraemon, as OEneus was too old. Diomedes 
took his grandfather with him to Peloponnesus, 
but some of the sons, who lay in ambush, slew 
the old man near the altar ofTelephus in Ar- 
cadia. Diomedes buried his body at Argos, and 
named the town of GEnoe after him. According 
to others, OEneus lived to extreme old age with 
Diomedes at Argos, and died a natural death. 
Homer knows nothing of all this ; he merely re- 
lates that OEneus once neglected to sacrifice to 
Diana (Artemis), in consequence of which she 
sent a monstrous boar into the territory of Ca- 
lydon, which was hunted by Meleager. The 
hero Bellerophon was hospitably entertained by 
GEneus, and received from him a costly girdle 
as a present. 

GEniadje {OlviddaL : now Trigardon or Trikh- 
ardo), an ancient town of Acarnania, situated 
on the Achelous, aear its mouth, and surrounded 
by marshes caused by the overflowing of the 
river, which thus protected it from hostile at- 
tacks. It was called in ancient times Ek vsiche 
(JEpvcixv), and its inhabitants Erysich^i ('Epv- 
oixalot) ; and it probably derived its later name 
from the mythical OEneus, the grandfather of 
Diomedes. Unlike the other cities of Acar- 
nania, CEniada? espoused the cause of the Spar- 
tans in the Peloponnesian war. At the time 
of Alexander the Great, the town was taken by 
the ^Etolians, who expelled the inhabitants ; but 
the Aetolians were expelled h? their turn by 
Philip V., king of Macedonia, who surrounded 
the place with strong fortifications. The Ro- 
mans restored the town to the Acarnanians. 
The fortress Nesus or Nasus, belonging to the 
territory of CEniadae, was situated in a small 
lake near CEniadae. 

OEnides, a patronymic from OEneus, and hence 
given to Meleager, the son of OEneus, and Dio- 
medes, the grandson of OEneus. 

567 



CENO. 



GENUSS^E. 



[CEno (O'tvu). Vid. Anius.] 

GEnoanda or CEneanda, a town ofAsiaMinor, 
in the northwest of Pisidia, or the district of 
Cabalia, subject to Cibyra. 

[CEnoatis (Oivuang), a surname of Diana (Ar- 
temis), who was worshipped in Argolic CEnoe, 
where a temple was said to have been built to 
her by Prcetus.] 

(Enobaras (Oivo6dpac), a tributary of the 
Orontes, flowing through the plain ofAntioch, 
in Syria. 

CEs6e(01v6ti: Oivoatos). 1. Ademus ofAttica, 
belonging to the tribe Hippothoontis, near Eleu- 
therae, on the frontiers of Bceotia, frequently 
mentioned in the Peloponnesian war. — 2. Ade- 
mus ofAttica, near Marathon, belonging to the 
tribe Aiantis, and also to the Tetrapolis. — 3. A 
fortress of the Corinthians, on the Corinthian 
Gulf, between the promontory Olmiae and the 
frontier of Megaris. — 4. A town in Argolis, on 
the Arcadian frontier, at the foot of Mount Ar- 
temisium. — 5. A town in Elis, near the mouth 
of the Selleis. — 6. A town in the island Icarus 
or Icaria. 

CEnomaus (Oivdfiaog). 1. King of Pisa in 
Elis, was son of Mars (Ares) and Harpinna, the 
daughter of Asopus, and husband of the Pleiad 
Sterope, by whom he became the father of Hip- 
podamia. According to others, he was a son 
of Mars (Ares) and Sterope, or a son of Alxion. 
An oracle had declared that he should perish by 
the hands of his son-in-law ; and as his horses 
were swifter than those of any other mortal, he 
declared that all who came forward as suitors 
for Hippodamia's hand should contend with him 
in the chariot-race ; that whoever conquered 
should receive her ; and that whoever was con- 
quered should suffer death. The race-course 
extended from Pisa to the altar of Neptune (Po- 
seidon), on the Corinthian Isthmus. The suitor 
started with Hippodamia in a chariot, and CEno- 
maus then hastened with his swift horses after 
the lovers. He had overtaken and slain many 
a suitor, when Pelops, the son of Tantalus, came 
to Pisa. Pelops bribed Myrtilus, the charioteer 
of CEnomaus, to take out the linch-pins from 
the wheels of his master's chariot, and he re- 
ceived from Neptune (Poseidon) a golden char- 
iot and most rapid horses. In the race which 
followed, the chariot of CEnomaus broke down, 
and he fell out and was killed. Thus Pelops 
obtained Hippodamia and the kingdom of Pisa. 
There are some variations in this story, such 
as that CEnomaus was himself in love with 
his daughter, and for this reason slew her lov- 
ers. Myrtilus also is said to have loved Hip- 
podamia, and, as she favored the suit of Pe- 
lops, she persuaded Myrtilus to take the linch- 
pins out of the wheels of her father's chariot. 
As CEnomaus was breathing his last, he pro- 
nounced a curse upon Myrtilus. This curse 
had its desired effect ■ for, as Pelops refused to 
give to Myrtilus the reward he had promised, 
or as Myrtilus had attempted to dishonor Hip- 
podamia, Pelops thrust him down from Cape 
Geraestus. Myrtilus, while dying, likewise pro- 
nounced a curse upon Pelops, which was the 
cause of all the calamities that afterward befell 
his house. The tomb of CEnomaus was shown 
on the River Cladeus in Elis. His house was 
destroyed by lightning, and only one pillar of it 



remained standing. — [2. A Trojan hero, sfein by 
Idomeneus before Troy. — 3. A Grecian hero, 
slain by Hector.] — 4. OfGadara, a Cynic philos- 
opher, who flourished in the reign of Hadrian 
or somewhat later, but before Porphyry. He 
wrote a work to expose the oracles, of which 
considerable fragments are preserved by Euse- 
bius. — 5. A tragic poet. Vid. Diogenes, No. 5. 
CEnone (Olv('jv7]), daughter of the river-god 

j Cebren, and wife of Paris, before he carried. 

; off Helen. Vid.. Paris. 

CEnone or CEnopia, the ancient name of 

j iEGINA. 

CEnophita (ra Oivoovra : now Inia), a town 
i in Bceotia, on the left bank of the Asopus, and 
' on the road from Tanagra to Oropus, memor- 
: able for the victory gained here by the Atheni- 

■ ans over the Boeotians, B.C. 456. 

j CEnopides (Oho-id7is ), of Chios, a distinguish- 
; ed astronomer and mathematician, perhaps a 

contemporary of Anaxagoras. CEnopides de- 
j rived most of his astronomical knowledge from 
; the priests and astronomers of Egypt, with 
\ whom he lived for some time. He obtained 
; from this source his knowledge of the obliquity 
I of the ecliptic, the discovery of which he is said 
j to have claimed. The length of the solar year 

was fixed by CEnopides at three hundred and 
: sixty-five days, and somewhat less than nine 
! hours. He is said to have discovered the 

■ twelfth and twenty-third propositions of the 
first book of Euclid, and the quadrature of the 

, meniscus. 

[CEnopia, ancient name of ^Egina. Vid. 

\ /Egina.] 

| CEnopion (Oivoirluv), son of Bacchus (Dio- 
' nysus) and husband of the nymph Helice, by 
| whom he became the father of Thalus. Euan- 
| thes, Melas, Salagus, Athamas, and Merope, 
Aerope or Haero. Some writers call CEnopion 
j a son of Rhadamanthys by Ariadne, and a 
! brother of Staphylus. From Crete he migrated 
! with his sons to Chios, which Rhadamanthys 
had assigned to him as his habitation. When 
king of Chios, the giant Orion sued for the 
! hand of his daughter Merope. As CEnopion re- 
; fused to give her to Orion, the latter violated 
Merope, whereupon CEnopion put out his eyes, 
and expelled him from the island. Orion went 
to Lemnos ; he was afterward cured of his 
blindness, and returned to Chios to take ven- 
geance on CEnopion. But the latter was not 
to be found in Chios, for his friends had con- 
cealed him in the earth, so that Orion, unable 
to discover him, went to Crete, 
j CEnotri, CEnotria. Vid. Italia. 

CEnotrides, two small islands in the Tyr- 
\ rhene Sea, off the coast of Lucania, and oppo- 
site the town of Elea or Velia and the mouth 
: of the Helos. 

i GEnotrop^. Vid. Anius. 

CEnotrus (Oivorpoc), youngest son of Ly- 
| caon, emigrated with a colony from Arcadia to 

Italy, and gave the name of CEnotria to the 
j district in which he settled. 

CEnus (Olvovc : now Kelesina), a river in La- 
| conia, rising on the frontier of Arcadia, and 

flowing into the Eurotas north of Sparta. 
! There was a town of the same name upon this 
{ river, celebrated for its wine. 
I CEnu&sje (Oivovocat, Oivoioai). 1. A group 



GEOBAZUS. 



OICLES. 



of islands lying off the southern point of Mes- 
senia, opposite to the port of Phcenicus : the 
two largest of them are now called Sapienza 
and Cabrera — 2. (Now Spalmadori or Egonuses), 
a group of five islands between Chios and the 
eoast of Asia Minor. 

[OEobazus {OioBafrg). I. A Persian, who, 
when Darius Hystaspis was on the point of 
marching from Susa on his Scythian expedi- 
tion, besought him to leave him one of his three 
sons, all of whom were in the army. Darius 
ordered them all three to be put to death.— 2. 
Father of Siromitres, who led the Paricanians 
in the Greek expedition of Xerxes. — 3. A noble 
Persian, who, when the Greek fleet appeared 
in the Hellespont after the battle of Mycale, 
fled from Cardia to Sestus ; he afterward fell 
into the hands of the Thracians, and was by 
them sacrified to their god Pleistorus.] 

[CEolycus (O'loIvkoc), a son of Theras of | 
Sparta, and brother of JEgeus, was honored at ; 
Sparta with a heroum.] 

GEonus (Oiuvoc), son of Licymnius of Midea | 
in Argolis, first victor at Olympia in the foot- ! 
race. He is said to have been killed at Sparta I 
by the sons of Hippocoon, but was avenged by I 
Hercules, whose kinsman he was, and was hon- 
ored with a monument near the temple of Her- 
cules. 

Oeroe C^lepoTj), an island in Boeotia, formed 
by the River Asopus, and opposite Plataeae. 

[GEsalces, brother of Gala, king of the Nu- 
inidian tribe of the Massylians, whom he suc- 
ceeded on the throne, according to the Numid- 
ian law of inheritance.] 

GEscus (now Isker or Eslccr), called Oscius 
COaKiog) by Thucydides, and Scius (2/aof) by j 
Herodotus, a river in Mcesia, which rises in j 
Mount Scomius according to Thucydides, or in ! 
Mount Rhodope according to Pliny, but in real- j 
ity on the western slope of Mount Haemus, and 
flows into the Danube near a town of the same 
name (now Orcszovitz). 

[GEstrymnides Insul-s, a group of islands 
rich in tin and copper, in the Sinus OEstrymni- 
cus ; probably the same with the Cassiterides 
{q.v ) on the coast of Britannia.] 

CEsyma (OiavfiT] : Oiavfialog), called JSsyma 
\\iavfi7j) by Homer (II., viii., 304), an ancient 
town in Thrace, between the Strymon and the 
•Nestus, a colony of the Thasians. 

QEta (OZr77, ru Olratuv oijpea : now Kata- 
vothra), a rugged pile of mountains in the south 
of Thessaly, an eastern branch of Mount Pin- 
dus, extended south of Mount Othrys along the 
southern bank of the Sperchius to the Maliac 
Gulf at Thermopylae, thus forming the northern 
barrier of Greece. Strabo and Livy give the 
name of Callidromus to the eastern part of 
GEta, an appellation which does not occur in 
Herodotus and the earlier writers. Respecting 
the pass of Mount GEta, vid. Thermopyl/E. 
GEta was celebrated in mythology as the mount- 
ain on which Hercules burned himself to death. 
From this mountain the south of Thessaly bor- 
dering on Phocis was called GEt.ua (Oiraia), 
and its inhabitants (Etmi (OiTaloi). 

GStyi.us (OZrvAof: Oirv2.iog : now Vitylo), 
also called Tylus (TvAof), an ancient town in 
Laconia, on the Messenian Gulf, south of Thal- 
ama, called after an Argive hero of this name. 



[GEum (Olov), a mountain fortress in eastern 
Locris, lying above Opus, destroyed by an 
earthquake.] 

Opella, a man of sound sense and of a 
straightforward character, whom Horace con- 
trasts with the Stoic quacks of his time. 

Ofella, Q. Lucretius, orignally belonged to 
the Marian party, but deserted to Sulla, who 
appointed him to the command of the army 
employed in the blockade of Prameste, B.C. 82, 
Ofella became a candidate for the consulship 
in the following year, although he had not yet 
been either quaestor or praetor, thus acting in 
defiance of one of Sulla's laws. He was, in 
consequence, put to death by Sulla's orders. 

Ofilius, a distinguished Roman jurist, was 
one of the pupils of Servius Sulpicius, and a 
friend of Cicero and Caesar. His works are 
often cited in the Digest. 

Oglasa (now Monte Christo), a small island 
off the coast of Etruria. 

Ogulnii, Q. and Cn., two brothers, tribunes 
of the plebs B.C. 300, carried a law by which 
the number of the pontiffs was increased from 
four to eight, and that of the augurs from four 
to nine, and which enacted that four of the 
pontiffs and five of the augurs should be taken 
from the plebs. Besides these eight pontiffs 
there was the pontifex maximus, who is gen- 
erally not included when the number of pontiffs 
is spoken of. 

Ogygia ('Slyvyia). 1. The mythical island of 
Calypso is placed by Homer in the navel or cen- 
tral point of the sea, far away from all lands. 
Later writers pretended to find it in the Ionian 
Sea, near the promontory Lacinium, in Brut- 
tium.— [2. Vid. Ogygus.] 

Ogygus or Ogyges (JSlyvyog ), sometimes call- 
ed a Boeotian autochthon, and sometimes son 
of Bceotus, and king of the Hectenes, is said 
to have been the first ruler of the territory of 
Thebes, which was called after him Ogygia. 
In his reign the waters of Lake Copais rose 
above its banks, and inundated the whole val- 
ley of Boeotia. This flood is usually called 
after him the Ogygian. The name of Ogygus 
is also connected with Attic story, for in Attica 
an Ogygian flood is likewise mentioned, and he 
is described as the father of the Attic hero 
Eleusis, and as the father of Daira, the daugh- 
ter of Oceanus. In the Boeotian tradition he 
was the father of Alalcomenia, Thelxinoea, and 
Aulis. Bacchus is called Ogygius deus because 
he is said to have been born at Thebes. 

Ogyris ("Qyvpis), an island of the Erythraean . 
Sea (now Indian Ocean), off the coast of Car- 
mania, at a distance of two thousand stadia 
(two hundred geographical miles), noted as the 
alleged burial-place of the ancient king Ery- 
thras ; but vid. Oaracta. 

Oicles or Oicleus ('OiViA^c. 'Oi'/cAevf), son of 
Antiphates, grandson of Melampus, and father 
of Amphiaraus, of Argos. He is also called a 
son of Amphiaraus, or a son of Mantius, the 
brother of Antiphates. Oicles accompanied 
Hercules on his expedition against Laomedon 
of Troy, and was there slain in battle. Ac- 
cording to other traditions, he returned home 
from the expedition, and dwelt in Aroadia, 
where he was visited by his grandson Alcmee- 
on and where his tomb was shown. 

569 



OILEUS. 



OLIZON. 



Oileus ('Oi'/.svc), son of Hodoedocus and Lao- 
nome, grandson of Cynus, and great-grandson 
of Opus, was a king of the Locrians, and mar- 
ried to Eriopis, by whom he became the father 
of Ajax, who is hence called Ollides, Oltiadcs, 
and Ajax Olid. OVleus was also the father of 
Medon by Rhene. He is mentioned among the 
Argonauts. 

[Olariox or Olarioxexsis Insula (now Olc- 
ron), an island in the Sinus Aquitanicus, on the 
west coast of Gallia.] 

Olba or Olbe (''O/1&7), an ancient inland city 
of Cilicia, in the mountains above Soloe, and 
between the Rivers Lamus and Cydnus. Its 
foundation was ascribed by mythical tradition 
to Ajax the son of Teucer, whose alleged de- 
scendants, the priests of the very ancient tem- 
ple of Jupiter (Zeus), once ruled over all Cilicia 
Aspera. In later times it belonged to Isauria, 
and was the see of a bishop. 

OlbIsa C07.6a.oa). 1. A city of Cilicia As- 
pera, at the foot of the Taurus, north of Seli- 
nus, and northwest of Caystrus ; not to be con- 
founded with Olba. — 2. A city in the southeast 
of Lycaonia, southwest of Cybistra, in the dis- 
trict called Antionhiana. — 3. A city in the north 
of Pisidia, between Pednelissus and Selge. 

Olbe. Vid. Olba. 

Olbia {'O/Xia). I, (Now probably Eoubes. 
near Hiercs), a colony of Massilia, on the coast 
of Gallia Narbonensis, on a hill called Olbianus, 
east of Telo Martius (now Toulon).— 2. (Now 
probably Terra Nova), a very ancient city, near 
the northern end of the eastern side of the isl- 
and of Sardinia, with the only good harbor on 
this coast, and therefore the usual landing- 
place for persons coming from Rome. A myth- 
ical tradition ascribed its foundation to the 
Thespiadas. — 3. In Bithynia. Vid. Astaccs. 
The Gulf of Astacus was also called from it 
Sinus Olbianus. — 4. A fortress on the western 
frontier of Pamphylia, on the coast, west of 
the River Catarrhactes ; not improbably on the 
same site as the later Attalia. — 5. Vid. Borys- 
thenes. 

[Olbius ('0?.6iag), a river in the north of Ar- 
cadia, near Pheneus, by the Arcadians also 
called Aroaxics.] 

Olcades, an ancient people in Hispania Tar- 
raconensis, north of Carthago Nova, near the 
sources of the Anas, in a part of the country 
afterward inhabited by the Oretani. They are 
mentioned only in the wars of the Carthaginians 
with the inhabitants of Spain. Hannibal trans- 
planted some of the Olcades to Africa. Their 
chief towns were Althaea and Carteia, the site 
of both of which is uncertain ; the latter place 
must not be confounded with the celebrated 
Carteia in Baetica. 

Olcinium (Olciniatse : now Dulcigno), an an- 
cient town on the coast of Ulyria, southwest 
of Scodra, belonging to the territory of Gentius. 

Olearus. Vid. Oliarus. 

Oleastrum. 1. A town of the Cosetani, in 
Hispania Tarraconensis, on the road from Der- 
tosa to Tarraco, probably the place from which 
the plumbum Oleastrense derived its name. — 2. 
A town in Hispania Baetica, near Gades. 

Olex ('Sl?.f,v), a mythical personage, who is 
represented as the earliest Greek lyric poet, 
and the first author of sacred hvmns in hex- 
570 



ameter verse. He is closely connected with 
the worship of Apollo, of whom, in one legend, 
he was made the prophet. His connection with 
Apollo is also marked by his being called Hy- 
perborean, and one of the establishes of or- 
acles, though the more common story made him 
a native of Lycia. He is said to have settled 
at Delos. His name seems to signify simply 
the flute-player. Of the ancient hymns which 
went under his name, Pausanias mentions those 
to Juno (Hera), to Achae'i'a, and to Ilithyia ; the 
last was in celebration of the birth of* Apollo 
and Diana (Artemis). 

[Olexia Rupes {'Q./.evia Trerpc), the Olenian 
rock mentioned in the Iliad (ii., 617) ; according 
to Strabo, the summit of Mount Scollis in Acha- 
ia, on the borders of Elis.J 

[Olexxils, one of the chief centurions plac- 
ed in command over the Frisii ; by his harshness 
he caused an insurrection of the people, from 
whose fury flight alone preserved him, B.C. 28.] 

Olexcs ('Qs.svog : '0,/Jvioc). 1. An ancient 
town in .Etolia, near New Pleuron, and at the 
foot of Mount Aracynthus, is mentioned by 
Homer, but was destroyed by the -Etolians at 
an early period.— 2. A town in Achaia, between 
Patrffi and Dyme, refused to join the Achaean 
league on its restoration in B.C. 2S0. In the 
time of Strabo the town was deserted. The 
goat Amalthaea, which suckled the infant Jupi- 
ter (Zeus), is called Olenia capella by the poets, 
either because the goat was supposed to have 
been born near the town of Olenus, and to have 
been subsequently transferred to Crete, or be- 
cause the nymph Amalthaea, to whom the goat 
belonged, was a daughter of Olenus. 

Olgassys {'O/.yaacvc : now Al-Gez Dagh), a 
lofty, steep, and rugged mountain chain of Asia 
Minor, extending nearly west and east through 
the east of Bithynia, and the centre of Paphla- 
gonia to the River Halys, nearly parallel to the 
chain of Olympus, of which it may be consid- 
ered as a branch. Numerous temples were 
built upon it by the Paphlagonians. 

Oliarus ('GAtapof, 'Q?Japoc : 'Q/.idpioc : now 
Antiparos), a small island in the iEgean Sea, 
one of the Cyclades, west of Paros, originally 
colonized by the Phoenicians, is celebrated in 
modern times for its stalactite grotto, which ie 
not mentioned by ancient writers. 

Oligyrtus ('O/.iyvproc), a fortress in the 
northeast of Arcadia, on a mountain of the same 
name, between Stymphalus and Caphyae. 

[Olixa (now probably Orne), a small river in 
the west of Gallia Lugdunensis, between the 
mouth of the Sequana and the promontory Go- 
basum, flowing through the territory of the Vi- 
ducasses.] 

OlisTpo (now Lisbon), a town in Lusitania, 
on the right bank of the Tagus, near its mouth, 
and a Roman municipium with the surname 

j Felicitas Julia. It was celebrated for its swift 

j horses. Its name is sometimes written Ulys- 

I sippo, because it was supposed by some to have 
been the town which Ulysses was said to have 
founded in Spain ; but the town to which this 

| legend referred was situated in the mountains 

I of Turdetania. 

Olizox {'O/.iCdv), a town of Thessaly, on the 

| coast of Magnesia and on the Pagasaean Gulf 

I mentioned by Homer. 



OLYMPICS. 



QtLius (now Oglio), a river in Gallia Trans- 
padana, lulls into the Po southwest of Mantua. 

[Ollios, T., the father of Poppsea Sahina, 
was put to death toward the end of the reign 
of Tiberius. J 

OlmLk ( O/.piai), a promontory in the terri- 
tory of Corinth, which separated the Corinthian 
and Alcyonian Gulfs. 

[Olmius (QXfieioc), a small river flowing from 
Helicon, which unites with the Permessus 
near Haliartus, and soon after falls into Lake 
Copais.] 

Oloossom ('Otooaauv: 'Olooocovios : now 
Elassona), a town of the Perrheebi in Thessaly, 
in the district of Hestiaeotis. Homer (II., ii., 
739) calls it " white," an epithet which it ob- 
tained, according to Strabo, from the whiteness 
of its soil. 

Olophvxus ('O/io^t'fof : 'OTioyvl-ioc.), a town 
of Macedonia, on the peninsula of Mount Athos. 

[Olorus or Orolus ('Olopog or "OpoTioc). 1. 
A king of Thrace, whose daughter, Hegesipyla, 
was married to Miltiades.— 2. Apparently grand- 
son of the above, and son of Hegesipyla, was 
probably the offspring of a second marriage con- 
tracted by her after the death of Miltiades. This 
Olorus was the father of Tkucydides.] 

Olp^e or OiiPE ("OIttcii, 'OAth? : 'Q?iTraloc.). 
1. (Row Arapi), a town of the Amphilochi, in 
Acarnania, on the Ambracian Gulf, northwest of 
Argos Amphilochicum. — 2. A town of the Locri 
Ozolaj. 

Qlurus ('OAovpof : 'Qs.ovpiac). 1. A town in 
Achaia, near Pellene, on the Sicyonian frontier. 
— 2. Also Oluris ("OXuvpic), called Dorium 
(A6piov) by Hom(!r, a town in Messenia, south 
of the River Neda. 

Olus CO/.ovc : 'Q/.ovvrLof), a town and harbor 
on the eastern coast of Crete, near the promon- 
tory of Zephyrium. 

Olybrius, Anicxus, Roman emperor A. D. 472. 
was raised to this dignity by Ricimer, who de- 
posed Anthemius. He died in the course of the 
same year, after a reign of three months and 
thirteen days. His successor was Glycerius. 

Olympene, and Olympeni or Olympieni ['Okvft- 
■xt}VT}, 'OXv/nTTjuoi, 'OXvfiiriijvot), the names of the 
district about the Mysian Olympus, and of its 
inhabitants. 

Olympia ('O/.v/zTia), the name of a small plain 
in Elis, in which the Olympic games were cele- 
brated. It was surrounded on the north and 
northeast by the mountains Cronion and Olym- 
pus, on the south by the River Alpheus, and on 
the west by the River Cladeus. In this plain 
was the sacred grove of Jupiter (Zeus), called 
Altis ("AAri?, an old Elean form of a?.coc, a 
grove), situated at the angle formed by the con- 
fluence of the rivers Alpheus and Cladeus, and 
three hundred stadia distant from the town of 
Pisa. The Altis and its immediate neighbor- 
hood were adorned with numerous temples, 
statues, and public buildings, to which the gen- 
eral appellation of Olympia was given ; but there 
was no town of this name. The Altis was sur- 
rounded by a wall. It contained the following 
temples : 1. The Olympieum, or temple of Jupi- 
ter (Zeus) Olympius, which was the most cele- 
brated of all the buildings at Olympia, and which 
contained the master-piece of Greek art, the co- 
lossal statue of Jupiter (Zeus) by Phidias. The 



statue was made of ivory and gold, and the god 
was represented as seated on a throne of cedar- 
Tvood, adorned with gold, ivory, ebony, and pre- 
cious stones. Vid. Phidias. 2. The Herceum, 
or temple of Hera (Juno), which contained the 
celebrated chest of Cypselus, and was situated 
north of the Olympieum. 3. The Metrbum, or 
temple of the Mother of the gods. The other 
public buildings in the Altis most worthy of no- 
tice were the Thesauri, or treasuries of the dif- 
ferent states which had sent dedicatory offer- 
ings to the Olympian Jupiter (Zeus), situated at 
the foot of Mount Cronion ; the Zanes, or statues 
of Jupiter (Zeus), which had been erected from 
fines imposed upon those who had been guilty 
of fraud or other irregularities in the Olympic 
contests, and which were placed on a stone plat- 
form near the Thesauri ; the Prytaneum, in 
which the Olympic victors dined after the con- 
tests had been brought to a close ; the Bouleu- 
terion, in which all the regulations relating to 
the games were made, and which contained a 
statue of Jupiter (Zeus) Horcius, before which 
the usual oaths were taken by the judges and 
the combatants ; the Philippeum, a circular build- 
ing of brick, surmounted with a dome, which 
was erected by Philip after the battle of Cha?- 
ronea, and which was situated near one of the 
gates of the Altis, close to the Prytaneum ; the 
Hippodamium, a sacred inclosure, erected in 
honor of Hippodamla ; the Pelopium, a sacred 
inclosure, erected in honor of Pelops. The two 
chief buildings outside the Altis were the Stadi- 
um, to the east of Mount Cronion, in which the 
gymnastic games were celebrated, andtheHip- 
podromus, a little southeast of the Stadium, in 
which the chariot-races took place. At the 
place which formed the connection between the 
Stadium and Hippodromus, the Hellanodicae, oi 
judges of the Olympic games, had their seats 
For details, vid. Diet, of Antiq., arts. Hippodro 
mus and Stadiusi. The Olympic games were 
celebrated from the earliest times in Greece, 
and their establishment was assigned to various 
mythical personages. There was an interval 
of four years between each celebration of the 
festival, which interval was called an Olympiad ; 
but the Olympiads were not employed as a 
chronological era till the victory of Corcebus in 
the foot-race, B.C. 776. An account of the 
Olympic games and of the Olympiads is given 
in the Diet, of Antiq., arts. Olympia and Olym- 
pias. 

Olympias i'Olvfimdg}. 1 . Wife of Philip II., 
king of Macedonia, and mother of Alexander the 
Great, was the daughter of Neoptolemus R, 
king of Epirus. She was married to Philip B.C. 
359. The numerous amours of Philip, and the 
passionate and jealous character of Olympias, 
occasioned frequent disputes between them ; 
and when Philip married Cleopatra, the niece 
of Attalus (337), Olympias withdrew from Mace- 
donia, and took refuge at the court of her brother 
Alexander, king of Epirus. It was generally 
believed that she lent her support to the assas- 
sination of Philip, 336 ; but it is hardly credible 
that she evinced her approbation of that deed 
in the open manner asserted by some writers. 
After the death of Philip she returned to Ma- 
cedonia, where she enjoyed great influence 
through the affection of Alexander. On the 

571 



OLYMPIODORUS. OLYMPUS. 

death of the latter (323) she withdrew from [Edited hy Fr. Creuzer. Frankfort, 1821-22. J 

Macedonia, where her enemy Antipater had j 4. An Aristotelic philosopher, the author of a 
the undisputed control of affairs, and took ref- j commentary on the Mcteorologica of Aristotle, 
age in Epirus. Here she continued to live, as ! which is still extant, lived at Alexandrea in the 
U were, in exile, until the death of Antipater , latter half of the sixth century after Christ. 
(319) presented a new opening to her ambition. • Like Simplicius, to whom, however, he is in- 
She gave her support to the new regent Poly- j ferior, he endeavors to reconcile Plato and Ar- 
spercbon, in opposition to Cassander, who had j istotle. 

formed an alliance with Eurydice the wife of ! [Olympiodorus ('0?.vfiKi66upog). l.AnAthe- 
Philip Arrhida;us, the nominal king of Mace- i nian general, commanded a body of three hund- 
donia. In 317, Olympias, resolving to ohtain ! red picked men at the battle of Plataeae, who 
the supreme power in Macedonia, invaded that j were engaged in a service from which all the 
country along with Polysperchon, defeated Eu- i other Greeks shrank — 2. An Athenian general, 
rydiee in battle, and put both her and her hus- j who, when Athens was attacked by Cassander, 
band to death. Olympias followed up her venge- j compelled the latter to withdraw his forces, 
anee by the execution of Nicanor, the brother ! He also subsequently rid the city of the Mace- 
of Cassander, as well as of one hundred of his ! donian garrison which Demetrius had stationed 
leading partisans among the Macedonian no- | there, and successfully defended Athens against 
bles. Cassander, who was at that time in the j Demetrius himself] 

Peloponnesus, hastened to turn his arms against j Olympius ('OXv/z-toc), the Olympian, occurs 
Macedonia. Olympias, on his approach, threw j as a surname of Jupiter (Zeus), Hercules, the 
herself (together with Roxana and the young j Muses (Olympiades), and, in general, of all the 
Alexander) into Pydna, where she was closely j gods who were believed to live in Olympus, in 
blockaded by Cassander throughout the winter, j contradistinction from the gods of the lower 
At length, in the spring of 316, she was com- i world. 

pelled to surrender to Cassander, who caused \ Olympius NemesiInus. Vid. Nemesianus. 
her to be put to death. Olympias was not with- j Olympus fOA^Trof), the name of two Greek 
out something of the grandeur and loftiness of j musicians, of whom one is mythical and the 
spirit which distinguished her son, but her un- other historical. 1. The elder Olympus belongs 
governable passions led her to acts of sanguin- to the mythical genealogy of Mysian and Phryg- 
ary cruelty that must forever disgrace her name, j ian flute-players — Hyagnis, Marsyas, Olympus 
— [2. Daughter of Pyrrhus L, king of Epirus, , — to each of whom the invention of the flute 
and wife of her brother Alexander II. After was ascribed, under whose names we have the 
his death she assumed the regency of the king- mythical representation of the contest between 
dom on behalf of her two sons, Pyrrhus and the Phrygian auletic and the Greek citharcedic 
Ptolemy ; and, in order to strengthen herself | music. Olympus was said to have been a na- 
against the ^Etolians, gave her daughter Phthia ' tive of Mysia, and to have lived before the Tro- 
in marriage to Demetrius II., king of Mace- : jan war. Olympus not unfrequently appears 
donia. When her sons had attained to man- ; on works of art as a boy, sometimes instructed 
hood, she resigned the sovereignty into the by Marsyas, and sometimes as witnessing and 
hands of Pyrrhus, but he did not long retain it; j lamenting his fate. — 2. The true Olympus wa3 
for both he and his brother Ptolemy were soon I a Phrygian, and perhaps belonged to a family 
removed by death, and Olympias was so deeply j of native musicians, since he was said to be de- 
affected by this double loss that she soon after ! scended from the first Olympus. He flourished 
died of grief] j about B.C. 660-620. Though a Phrygian by 

OlympIodorus ('0?.vfiTri66o)poc). I. A native j origin, Olympus must be reckoned among the 
of Thebes in Egypt, who lived in the fifth cen- j Greek musicians, for all the accounts make 
tury after Christ. He wrote a work in twenty- ; Greece the scene of his artistic activity ; and 
two books (entitled 'laropiKoi Aoyot), which com- ] he may be considered as having naturalized in 
prised the history of the Western empire under j Greece the music of the flute, which had previ- 
the reign of Honorius, from A.D. 407 to Octo- ously been almost peculiar to Phrygia. 
ber, A.D. 425. Olympiodorus took up the his- j [Olympus ("OZv/zTOf), the physician in ordi- 
tory from about the point at which Eunapius j nary to Cleopatra, queen of Egypt, aided her in 
had' ended. Vid. Eunapius. The original work \ committing suicide, B.C. 30, and afterward pub- 
of Olympiodorus is lost, but an abridgment of it lished an account of her death.] 
has been preserved by Photius. After the death | Olympus {"0?.i\uvog). I. In Europe. 1. (Grk 
of Honorius, Olympiodorus removed to Byzan- ' Elymbo, Turk. Semavat-Evi, i. e., Abode of the 
tium, to the court of the Emperor Theodosius. Celestials). The eastern part of the great chain 
Hierocles dedicated to this Olympiodorus his' of mountains which extends west and east from 
work on Providence and Fate. Vid. Hierocles. j the Acroceraunian promontory on the Adriatic 
Olympiodorus was a heathen. [The fragments j to the Thermaic Gulf, and which formed the 
of his history are published in the Byzantine northern boundary of ancient Greece proper 
Historians, with Dexippus, &c, by Niebuhr, In a wide sense, the name is sometimes applied 
Bonn, 1829.] — 2. A peripatetic philosopher, who j to all that part of this great chain which lies 
taught at Alexandrea, where Proclus was one east of the central range of Pindus, and which 
of his pupils. — 3. The last philosopher of celeb- | is usually called the Cambunian Mountains , 
rity in the Neo-Platonic school of Alexandrea. I but the more specific and ordinary use of the 
He lived in the first haif of the sixth century name Olympus is to denote the extreme eastern 
•after Christ, in the reign of the Emperor Jus- I part of the chain, which, striking off from the 
tinian. His life of Plato, and commentaries on Cambunian Mountains to the southeast, skirts 
several of Plato's dialogues, are still extant. ! the southern end of the slip of coast called 
572 



OLYNTHUS. 



OMBI. 



Pieria, and forms at its termination the north- 
ern wall of the Vale of Tempe. Its shape is 
that of a blunt cone, with its outline pictur- 
esquely broken by minor summits ; its height 
is about nine thousand seven hundred feet, and 
its chief summit is covered with perpetual snow. 
From its position as the boundary between 
Thessaly and Macedonia, it is sometimes reck- 
oned to the former, sometimes to the latter. 
In the Greek mythology, Olympus was the chief 
seat of the third dynasty of gods, of which 
Zeus (Jupiter) was the head. It was a really 
local conception with the early poets, to be un- 
derstood literally, and not metaphorically, that 
these gods 

" On the snowy top 
Of cold Olympus ruled the middle air, 
Their highest heaven." 

Indeed, if Homer uses either of the terms 
"OXv/h-koc and oipavog metaphorically, it is the 
latter that is a metaphor for the former. Even 
the fable of the giants scaling heaven must be 
understood in this sense ; not that they placed 
Pelion and Ossa upon the top of Olympus to 
reach the still higher heaven, but that lliey piled 
Pelion on the top of Ossa, and both on the low- 
er slopes of Olympus, to scale the summit of 
Olympus itself, the abode of the gods. Homer 
describes the gods as having their several pal- 
aces on the summit of Olympus ; as spending 
the day in the palace of Zeus (Jupiter), round 
whom they sit in solemn conclave, while the 
younger gods dance before them, and the Muses 
entertain them with the lyre and song. They 
are shut in from the view of men upon the earth 
by a wall of clouds, the gates of which are kept 
by the Hours. The same conceptions are found 
in Hesiod, and to a great extent in the later 
poets ; with whom, however, even as early as 
the lyric poets and the tragedians, the idea be- 
comes less material, and the real abode of the 
gods is gradually transferred from the summit 
of Olympus to the vault of heaven (i. e , the 
sky) itself. This latter is also the conception 
of the Roman poets, so far, at least, as any defi- 
nite idea can be framed out of their compound 
of Homer's language with later notions. — 2. A 
hill in Laconia, near Sellasia, overhanging the 
River CEnus. — 3. Another name for Mount Ly- 
caeus in Arcadia. — M. In Asia. 1. The Mysian 
Olympus ("OhvpTcoc 6 Mvoioc. : now Keshish 
Dagh, Ala Dagh, Ishik Dagh, and Kush-Dagh), 
a chain of lofty mountains in the northwest of 
Asia Minor, forming, with Ida, the western part 
of the northernmost line of the mountain sys- 
tem of that peninsula. It extends from west to 
east through the northeast of Mysia and the 
southwest of Bithynia, and thence, inclining a 
little northward, it first passes through the cen- 
tre of Bithynia, then forms the boundary be- 
tween Bithynia and Galatia, and then extends 
through the south of Paphlagonia to the River 
Halys. Beyond the Halys, the mountains in 
the north of Pontus form a continuation of the 
chain. — 2. (Now Yanar Dagh), a volcano on the 
eastern coast of Lycia, above the city of Phce- 
nicus (now Yanar). The names of the mount- 
ain and of the city are often interchanged. Vid. 
Phcenicus. 

Olynthus ('0?,vvftog : 'OXvvdioc: now 'Aio 
Mamas), a town of Macedonia in Chalcidice, at 



| the head of the Toronaic Gulf, and at a little 
distance from the coast, between the peninsulas 
of Pallene and Sithonia. It was the most im- 
portant of the Greek cities on the coast of Mac- 
edonia, though we have no record of its foun- 
dation. It afterward fell into the hands of the 
Thracian Bottiaei, when they were expelled from 
their own country by the Macedonians. Vid. 
Botti/ei. It was taken by Artabazus, one of 
the generals of Xerxes, who peopled it with. 
Chalcidians from Torone ; but it owed its great- 
ness to Perdiccas, who persuaded the inhabit- 
ants of many of the smaller towns in Chalci- 
dice to abandon their own abodes and settle 
in Olynthus. This happened about the com- 
mencement of the Peloponnesian war; and from 
this time Olynthus appears as a prosperous and 
flourishing town, with a population of five thou- 
sand inhabitants capable of bearing arms. It 
became the head of a confederacy of all the 
Greek towns in this part of Macedonia, and it 
long maintained its independence against the 
attacks of the Athenians, Spartans, and Mace- 
donians ; but in B.C. 379 it was compelled to 
submit to Sparta, after carrying on war with 
this state for four years. When the supremacy 
of Sparta was destroyed by the Thebans, Olyn- 
thus recovered its independence, and even re- 
ceived an accession of power from Philip, who 
was anxious to make Olynthus a counterpoise 
I to the influence of Athens in the north of the 
! Aegean. With this view Philip gave Olynthus 
| the territory of Potideea, after he had wrested 
this town from the Athenians in 356. But 
! when he had sufficiently consolidated his power 
' to be able to set at defiance both Olynthus and 
j Athens, he threw off the mask, and laid siege 
j to the former city. The Olynthians earnestly 
1 besought Athens for assistance, and were warm- 
j ly supported by Demosthenes in his Olynthiac 
i orations ; but as the Athenians did not render 
I the city any effectual assistance, it was taken 
i and destroyed by Philip, and all its inhabitants 
I sold as slaves (347). Olynthus was never re- 
! stored, and the remnants of its inhabitants 
| were at a later time transferred by Cassander 
| to Cassandrea. At the time of its prosperity 
Olynthus used the neighboring town of Mecy- 
berna as its sea-port. 

[Olynthus ( y O>*w6oc), a son of Hercules and 
Bolbe, from whom the town of Olynthus was 
believed to have received its name.] 

Omana or Omanum {"0/j.ava, "Ofiavav). 1. A 
celebrated port on the northeastern coast of 
Arabia Felix, a little above the easternmost 
point of the peninsula, Promoniorium Syagros 
(now Ras el Had), on a large gulf of the same 
name. The people of this part of Arabia were 
called Omanit/e ('Ofiuvlrai) or Omani, and the 
name is still preserved in that of the district, 
Oman. — 2. (Now probably Schaina), a sea-port 
town in the east of Carmania ; the chief em- 
porium on that coast for the trade between In- 
dia, Persia, and Arabia. 

Omanit^e and Omanum. Vid. Omana. 
Ombi (*0,u6oi : 'Outran ruins at Koum Om~ 
bou, i. e , Hill of Omhou), the last great city of 
Upper Egypt, except Syene, from which it was 
distant about thirty miles, stood on the eastern 
bank of the Ni e, in the Ombites Nomos, and 
was celebrated as one of the chief seats of the 

573 



OMPHALE. 



ONOMACRITUS. 



worship of the crocodile. Juvenal's fifteenth 
satire is founded on a religious war between 
the people of Ombi and those of Tentyra, who 
hated the crocodile ; but as Tentyra lies so 
much further down the Nile, with several in- 
tervening cities celebrated, as well as Ombi, for 
crocodile worship, critics have suspected an 
error in the names, and some have proposed to 
read Coptos or Copton for Ombos in v. 35. It 
seems, however, better to suppose that Juvenal 
used the name without reference to topograph- 
ical precision. Opposite to Ombi, on the left 
bank, was the town of Contra-Ombos. 

Omphale ('O/zoa/b?), daughter of the Lydian 
king Iardanus, and wife of Tmolus, after whose 
death she undertook the government herself. 
When Hercules, in consequence of the murder 
of Iphitus, was afflicted with a serious disease, 
and was informed by the oracle that he could 
only be cured by serving some one for wages 
for the space of three years, Mercury (Hermes) 
sold Hercules to Omphale. The hero became 
enamored of his mistress, and, to please her, 
he is said to have spun wool and put on the 
garments of a woman, while Omphale wore his 
lion's skin. She bore Hercules several chil- 
dren. 

[Omphalion ('Ofi$a?.tov), a painter, was orig- 
inally the slave, and afterward the disciple of 
Nicias, the son of Nicomedes. He painted the 
walls of the temple of Messene with figures of 
personages celebrated in the mythological le- 
gends of Messenia.] 

Omphalium ('0[z<pa?uov : 'Oupa?urrjg), a town 
in Crete, in the neighborhood of Cnosus. 

On. Vid. Heliopolis. 

[Onarcs ('Ovapog), a priest of Bacchus (Dio- 
nysus) in Naxos, whom, according to one ac- 
count, Ariadne married after she had been 
abandoned by Theseus.] 

Onatas {'Ovdrag). 1. Of JSgina, the son of 
Micon, was a distinguished statuary and painter, 
contemporary with Polygnotus, Ageladas, and 
Hegias. He flourished down to about B.C. 460, 
that is. in the age immediately preceding that 
of Phidias. — [2. A Pythagorean philosopher of 
Croton, who wrote a work, TLepi -&eov kcu &etov, 
some extracts from which are preserved by 
Sto*baeus.] 

Oncm ('OyKai), a village in Bceotia, near 
Thebes, from which one of the gates of Thebes 
derived its name ('OynaZai), and which contain- 
ed a sanctuary of Minerva (Athena), who was 
hence called Minerva (Athena) Onca. 

[Onceum ('Oyneiov), a place in Arcadia, on 
the banks of the Ladon, with a temple of Ceres 
(Demeter) Erinnys, said to have derived its 
name from Oncus, son of Apollo, its founder.] 

Onchesmus or Oxchismus ('Oyxyofwc, 'Oy- 
Xiafing -. now Orckido), a sea-port town of Epirus 
in Chaonia, opposite the western extremity of 
Corcyra. The ancients derived its name from 
Anchises, whence it is named by Dionysius the 
11 Harbor of Anchises" ^Xyx'taov lififiv). From 
this place Cicero calls the wind blowing from 
Epirus toward Italy Onchesmites. 

Onchestus COyxvoTog : 'OyxvcTtog). 1. An 
ancient town of Bceotia, said to have been found- 
ed by Onchestus, son of Neptune (Poseidon), 
was situated a little south of the Lake Copais, 
near Haliartus. It contained a celebrated tem- 
574 



j pie and grove of Neptune (Poseidon), and was 
the place of meeting of the Boeotian Amphic- 
tyony. The ruins of this town are still to be 
I seen on the southwestern slope of the mount- 
! ain Faga. — 2. A river in Thessaly, which rises 
in the neighborhood of Eretria, and flows by 
Cynoscephalae, and falls into the Lake Bcebeis. 
It is, perhaps, the same as the River Onochdnus 
('Ovoxuvog) mentioned by Herodotus. 

Onesicritcs COvrjoiKpiToc), a Greek historical 
writer, who accompanied Alexander on his cam- 
paigns in Asia, and wrote a history of them, 
which is frequently cited by later authors. He 
is called by some authorities a native of Asty- 
palaea, and by others of ^Egina. When Alexan- 
der constructed his fleet on the Hydaspes, he 
appointed Onesicritus chief pilot of the fleet, 
a post which he held not only during the de- 
scent of the Indus, but throughout the voyage 
j from the mouth of that river to the Persian 
; Gulf, which was conducted under the command 
j of Nearchus. Though an eye-witness of much 
! that he described, it appears that he intermixed 
| many fables and falsehoods with his narrative, 
so that he early fell into discredit as an au- 
! thority. 

j [Oxetor COvijrup). 1. Priest of the Idsean 
i Jove in Troy. — 2. Father of Phrontis, the helms- 
! man of Menelaus.] 
j Oxixgis or Orixgis. Vid. Orixgis. 
| Oxiros ("Ovetpog), the Dream-God, was a per- 
I sonification of dreams. According to Homer, 
j Dreams dwell on the dark shores of the west- 
| ern Oceanus, and the deceitful dreams come 
I through an ivory gate, while the true ones issue 
j from a gate made of horn. Hesiod calls dreams 
j the children of night ; and Ovid, who calls thera 
children of Sleep, mentions three of them by 
name, viz., Morpheus, Icelus or Phobetor, and 
Phantasus. Euripides called them sons of Gaea 
(Terra), and conceived them as genii with black 
wings. 

Oxoba, surnamed JSstuaria (now Huelva). 
1. A sea-port town of the Turdetani in Hispa- 
nia Baetica, between the mouths of the Btetis 
and Anas, on an aestuary formed by the River 
Luxia. There are remains of a Roman aque- 
i duct at Huelva. — [2. Another city of Baetica, in 
j the interior, near Corduba.] 

[Onochoxus COvoxwoe)- Vid. Onchestus,. 
No. 2.] 

} [Onomacles ('Ov0 ( ua/e?J7c), an Athenian gen- 
eral, sent with Phrynichus and Scironides, B.C. 
412, to besiege Miletus, but was driven off by 
the arrival of a Peloponnesian fleet : he was 
afterward sent to act against Chios. It was 
probably this same Onomacles who was one of 
the thirty tyrants, B.C. 404.] 

Oxomacritus COvofidapiToc), an Athenian, 
who occupies an interesting position in the his- 
tory of the early Greek religious poetry. Ho 
lived about B.C. 520-485. He enjoyed the pat- 
ronage of Hipparchus until he was detected by 
Lasus of Hermione (the ditbyrambic poet) in 
making an interpolation in an oracle of Musaeus, 
for which Hipparchus banished him. He seems 
to have gone into Persia, where the Pisistratids, 
after their expulsion from Athens, took him 
again into favor, and employed him to persuade 
Xerxes to engage in his expedition against 
Greece, by reciting to him all the ancient or- 



ONOMARCHUS. 



OPILIUS. 



acles which seemed to favor the attempt. It I 
appears that Onomacritus had made a collection 
and arrangement of the oracles ascribed to Mu- I 
earns. It is further stated that he made inter- 
polations in Homer as well as in Musaeus, and 
that he was the real author of some of the 
poems which went under the name of Orpheus. 

Onomarciius cOvo/jtapxoc), general of the 
Phocians in the Sacred war, succeeded his 
brother Philomelus in this command, B.C. 353. 
In the following year he was defeated in Thes- 
saly by Philip, and perished in attempting to 
reach by swimming the Athenian ships, which 
were lying off the shore. His body fell into the 
hands of Philip, who caused it t j be crucified 
as a punishment for his sacrilege. 

[Onomastus {'Ovbpaoroc), a confidential offi- 
cer of Philip V. of Macedon, for whom he held 
the government of the sea-coast of Thrace, and i 
whose instrument he was in many acts of op- 
pression and cruelty.] 

Onosander ('Ovoeav Spoc), the author of a cel- 
ebrated work on military tactics (entitled 2rpa- 
TrjyiKog loyoc), which is still extant. All sub- 
sequent Greek and Roman writers on the same 
aubject made this work their text book, and it 
is still held in considerable estimation. He 
appears to have lived about A.D. 50. In his 
style he imitated Xenophon with some success. 
Edited by Schwebel, Nurnberg, 1761 ; and by 
Corae, Paris, 1822. 

Onu-gnathus ("Oi'ou yvudoc. : now Elaphonisi), 
an island and a promontory on the southern 
coast of Laconia, west of Cape Malea. 

Onuphis ('Ovov<pig), the capital of the Nomos 
Onuphites in the t)elta of Egypt. It site is un- 
certain, hut it was probably near the middle of 
the Delta. 

[Onytes, a companion of /Eneas, slain by 
Turnus in Italy.] 

[Ophelestes ('0^f?.fffT7/f). 1. A Trojan war- 
rior, slain by Teucer. — 2. A Paeonian warrior 
in the Trojan ranks, slain by Achilles.] 

Ophelion ('Q<pf.?.iuv). an Athenian comic poet, 
probably of the Middle Comedy, B.C. 380. [The 
few fragments of his plays remaining are col- 
lected by Meineke, Fragin. Comic Graze, vol. 
ii., p. 687-8. edit, minor.] 

Ophellas COoOiXag), of Pella in Macedonia, 
was one of the generals of Alexander the Great, 
after whose death he followed the fortunes of 
Ptolemy. In B.C. 322 he conquered Cyrene 
for Ptolemy, of which city he held the govern- 
ment on behalf of the Egyptian king for some 
years. But soon after 3L3 he threw off his al- 
legiance to Ptolemy, and continued to govern 
Cyrene as an independent state for nearly five 
years. In 308 he formed an alliance with Agath- 
ocles, and marched against Carthage ; but he 
wa3 treacherously attacked by Agathocles near 
this city, and was slam. 

Ophkltes {'O0cXt7j^). 1. Also called Arche- 
horus. Vid. Archemorus. — 2. One of the Tyr- 
rhenian pirates, who attempted to carry off 
Bacchus (Dionysus), and were therefore met- 
amorphosed into dolphins. 

[Opheltius ('OQeXrioc). 1. A Trojan warri- 
or, slain by Euryalus. — 2. A Grecian warrior 
before Troy, slain by Hector.] 

[Ophiodes ( O^/w^f), an island of the Arab- 
Scus Sinus, lying off Berenice, on the coast of 



Egypt? very rich in topaz, and therefore called, 
by Pliny Tupazos ; now Zamargatl] 

Ophion CO(piuv). I. One of the oldest of the 
Titans, was married to Eurynome, with whom 
he ruled over Olympus, but, being conquered by 
Saturn (Cronos) and Rhea, he and Eurynome 
were thrown into Oceanus or Tartarus — 2. A 
giant, who perished in the battle with Jupiter 
(Zeus).— 3 Father of the centaur Amycus, who 
is hence called Ophwmdes. 

Ophionenses or Ophienses ('Oqioveic, 'Oti- 
tic), a people in the northeast of /Etolia. 

Ophir (in the Old Testament, LXX., lov^ip, 
Swpf'p, Sw^upa), a place frequently referred to 
in the Old Testament as proverbial for its gold, 
and to which Solomon, in conjunction with 
Hiram, king of Tyre, sent a fleet, which brought 
back gold, and sandal- wood, and precious stones. 
These ships were sent from Ezion-geber, at the 
head of the Red Sea, whence also King Jehosh- 
aphat built ships to go to Ophir for gold; but 
this voyage was stopped by a shipwreck. It is 
clear, therefore, that Ophir was on the shores 
of the Erythraeum Mare of the ancients, or our 
Indian Ocean. Among the most plausible con- 
jectures as to its site are, (1.) That it was on 
the coast of India, or a name for India itself. 
(2.) That it was on the coast of Arabia, in which 
case it is not necessary to suppose that Arabia 
furnished all the articles of commerce which 
were brought from Ophir, for Ophir may have 
been a great emporium of the Indian and Ara- 
bian trade. (3.) That it is not the name of any- 
specific place, but a general designation for the 
countries (or any of them) on the shores of the 
Indian Ocean, which supplied the chief articles 
of Indian and Arabian commerce. 

Ophis fO^c). 1. A river in Arcadia, which 
flowed by Mantinea. — [2. (Now Of?), a river of 
Pontus, which formed the boundary between 
the territory of the Tzani and Colchis ] 

Ophiusa or Ophiussa COdioeaca, 'Ooiovaaa^, 
'Odiovca, i. e., abounding in s?iakes). L Vid. 
PiTYUs.a:. — 2. Or Ophiussa (now perhaps Pala- 
nea), a town of European Scythia, on the left 
bank of the Tyras (now Dniester). — 3. A little 
island near Crete. — 4. (Now Afsia or Rabbi), a 
small island in the Propontis (now Sea of Mar- 
mara), offthe coast of Mysia, northwest of Cyz- 
icus, and southwest of Proconnesus. — 5. Vid. 
Rrodus. — 6. Vid. Tenos. 

[Ophlimus ("OqIl(jloc : now Kemer Dagh or 
Oktar Dagh,) a branch of Mount Paryadres, ia 
Pontus Proper, which, in connection with Lith- 
rus, northwest of Amasea, bounds the large and 
fertile district of Phanarcea ] 

Ophrynium ('Odpvveiov : now probably Fren- 
Kevi), a small town of the Troad, near the Lake 
of Pteleos, between Dardanus and Rhceteum, 
with a grove consecrated to Hector. 

Opici. Vid. Osci. 

Opilius Macrinus. Vid. Macrinus. 

Opilius, AurelIus, the freedman of an Epi- 
curean, taught at Rome, first philosophy, then 
rhetoric, and finally grammar. He gave up his 
school upon the condemnation of Rutilius Rufus 
(B.C. 92), whom he accompanied to Smyrna, 
and there the two friends grew old together ia 
the enjoyment of each other's society. He 
composed several learned works, one of which* 
named Mnsce, is referred to by A. Gellius. 

575 



OPIMIUS. 



OPS. 



Opimius. 1. Q., consul B.C. 154. when he 
subdued some of the Ligurian tribes north of 
the Alps, who had attacked Massilia. He was 
notorious in his youth for his riotous living. — 
2. L., son of the preceding, was praetor 125, in 
which year he took Fregellas, which had revolt- 
ed against the Romans. He belonged to the 
high aristocratical party, and was a violent op- 
ponent of C. Gracchus. He was consul in 121, 
and took the leading part in the proceedings 
which ended in the murder of Gracchus. Opim- 
ius and his party abused their victory most 
savagely, and are said to have killed more than 
three hundred persons. For details, vid. p. 334, 
a. In the following year (120) he was accused 
of having put Roman citizens to death without 
trial ; but he w T as defended by the consul C. 
Papirius Carbo, and was acquitted. In 112 he 
was at the head of the commission which was 
sent into Africa in order to divide the domin- 
ions of Micipsa between Jugurtha and Adher- 
bal, and was bribed by Jugurtha to assign to 
him the better part of the country. Three years 
after he was condemned under the law of the 
tribune C. Mamilius Limetanus, by which an 
inquiry was made into the conduct of all those 
who had received bribes from Jugurtha. Opim- 
ius went into exile to Dyrrhachium in Epirus, 
where he lived for some years, hated and in- 
sulted by the people, and where he eventually 
died in great poverty. He richly deserved his 
punishment, and met with a due recompense 
for his cruel and ferocious conduct toward C. 
Gracchus and his party. Cicero, on the con- 
trary, who, after his consulship, had identified 
himself with the aristocratical party, frequently 
laments the fate of Opimius. The year in which 
Opimius was consul (121) was remarkable for 
the extraordinary heat of the autumn, and thus 
the vintage of this year was of an unprecedent- 
ed quality. This wine long remained celebrated 
is the Vinum Opimianum, and was preserved for 
an almost incredible space of time. 

Opis ( 7 £2-ic), an important commercial city of 
Assyria, in the district of Apolloniatis, at the 
confluence of the Physcus (now Odorneh) with 
he Tigris ; not mentioned later than the Chris- 
tian era. 

Opitergium (Opiterglnus : now Oderzo), a Ro- 
man colony inVenetia, in the north of Italy, on 
the River Liquentia, near its source, and on 
the high road from Aquileia to Verona. In the 
Marcomannic war it was destroyed by the Qua- 
di, but it was rebuilt, and afterward belonged to 
the Exarchate. From it the neighboring mount- 
ains were called Monies Opitergini. 

[Opites CO-tuV^c.) a Greek warrior, slain by 
Hector in the Trojan war.] 

[Oppianicus, name of three persons, two of 
whom play a prominent part in the oration of 
Cicero for Cluentius. 1. Statius Albius Opp., 
accused by his step-son, A. Cluentius, of having 
attempted to procure his death by poisoning, B. 
C. 74 ; was condemned. — 2. Son of the preced- 
ing, accused Cluentius in B.C. 66 of three dis- 
tinct acts of poisoning. — 3. C. Oppianicus, broth- 
er of No. 1, said to have been poisoned by him.] 
Oppianus COintLavog), the author of two 
Greek hexameter poems still extant, one on 
fishing, entitled HaUeutica ('A/uevTind), and the 
otiicr on hunting, entitled Cyncgelica {Kvvrjye- 
576 



; tiku). Modern critics, however, have showu 
j that these two poems were written by two dif 
I ferent persons of this name. 1. The authoi of 
| the Haheutica, was born either at Corycus or at 
| Anazarba, in Cilicia, and flourished about A.D. 
| 180. The poem consists of about three thou- 
: sand five hundred hexameter lines, divided into 
I five books, of which the first two treat of the 
i natural history of fishes, and the other three of 
| the art of fishing. — 2. The author of the Cyne- 
| gctica, was a native of Apamea or Pella, in Syr- 
j ia, and flourished a little later than the other 
; Oppianus, about A.D. 206. His poem, which ia 
addressed to the Emperor Caracalla, consists 
of about two thousand one hundred hexameter 
lines, divided into four books. The best edition 
i of the two poems is by Schneider, Argent., 1776, 
and second edition, Lips., 1813. There is also a 
! prose paraphrase of a poem on hawking Cltjev- 
tikcl) attributed to Oppianus, but it is doubtful 
I to which of the two authors of this name it be- 
j longs. Some critics think that the work was 
! probably written by Dionysius. 
| Oppius. 1. C, tribune of the plebs B.C. 213, 
i carried a law to curtail the expenses and lux- 
| uries of the Roman women. It enacted that no 
1 woman should have more than half an ounce 
I of gold, nor wear a dress of different colors, nor 
j ride in a carriage in the city, or in any town, 
; or within a mile of it, unless on account of pub- 
j lie sacrifices. This law was repealed in 195, 
i notwithstanding the vehement opposition of the 
i elder Cato. — 2. Q., a Roman general in the Mith- 
I radatic w T ar, B.C. 88, fell into the hands ofMith- 
' radates, but was subsequently surrendered by 
! the latter to Sulla. — 3. C, an intimate friend of 
| C. Julius Caesar, whose private affairs he man- 
: aged in conjunction with Cornelius Balbus. Op- 
| pius w T as the author of several works, referred 
I to by the ancient writers, but all of which have 
I perished. The authorship of the histories of 
j the Alexandrine, African, and Spanish wars 
j was a disputed point as early as the time of 
I Suetonius, some assigning them to Oppius, and 
! others to Hirtius. But the similarity in style 
i and diction between the work on the Alexan- 
j drine war and the last book of the Commenta- 
| ries on the Gallic war leads to the conclusion 
i that the former, at all events, was the work of 
; Hirtius. The book on the African war was 
j probably written by Oppius. He also wrote the 
j lives of several distinguished Romans, such as 
| Scipio Africanus the elder, Marius, Pompey, 
' and probably Ceesar. 

Ops, a female Roman divinity of plenty and 
j fertility, as is indicated by her name, which is 
■; connected with opimus, opulentus, inops, and 
i copia. She was regarded as the wife of Sa- 
I turnus, and the protectress of every thing con- 
, nected with agriculture. Her abode was in the 
I earth, and hence those who invoked her used to 
touch the ground. Her worship was intimately 
connected with that of her husband Saturnus, 
for she had both temples and festivals in com- 
mon with him ; but she had likewise a separate 
sanctuary on the Capitol, and in the vicus ju- 
garius, not far from the temple of Saturnus, she 
had an altar in common with Ceres. The festi 
vals of Ops are called Opalia and Opiconsivia, 
from her surname Consiva, connected with the 
verb sercre, to sow. 



OPS. 



ORDESSUS. 



[Ops ( Q>p), son of Pisenor, and father ofEu- 
ryclea, the nurse of Telemachus.] 

Optatus. [1. A freedman of Tiberius Claudi- 
us, and praefectus classis, brought the scar (sca- 
ms) fish from the Carpathian Sea to the waters 
on the coast of Italy.]— 2. Bishop of Milevi in 
Numidia, flourished under the emperors Valen- 
tinian and Valens. He wrote a work, still ex- 
tant, against the errors of the Donatists, en- 
titled Dc Schismatc Donatistarum adversus Par- 
menianum. Edited by Dupin, Paris, fol., 1700. 

Opus ("OttoiV, contraction of 'OnSetc : '07r- 
vvvTiog). 1 . (Now Talanda or Talanti ?), the cap- 
ital of the Opuntian Locrians, was situated, ac- 
cording to Strabo, lifteen stadia (not quite two 
miles) from the sea. and sixty stadia from its 
harbor Cynos ; but, according to Livy, it was 
only one mile from the coast. It was the birth- 
place of Patroclus. The bay of the Euboean Sea, 
near this town, was called Opuntius Sinus. Vid. \ 
Locki.— 2 A small town in Elis. 

[Opus COkovc). 1. Son of Jupiter (Zeus) and 
Protogenia, was king of the Epeans and father 
of Cambyse —2 Son of Jupiter (Zeus) and 
Cambyse, step-son of Locrus, and grandson of 
No. 1 ; said to have given name to the Opuntii 
Locri.J 

Oka. 1. ("Opa), a city of Carmania, near the 
borders of Gedrosia. — 2. ( y £2pa), a city in the 
northwest of India, near the sources of the In- 
dus. 

Orje. Vid. Orit^e. 

Orbelus ("Op&jXoc), a mountain in the north- 
east of Macedonia, on the borders of Thrace, 
extends from iMount Rhodope along the Strymon 
to Mount Pangaeus. 

Orbii.ius Pupillus, a Roman grammarian 
and schoolmaster, best known to us from his 
having been the teacher of Horace, who gives 
him the epithet of plagosus from the severe 
floggings which his pupils received from him. 
<Hor., Ep., ii., 1, 71.) He was a native of Bene- 
ventum, and after serving as an apparitor of the 
magistrates, and also as a soldier in the army, 
he settled at Rome in the fiftieth year of his 
age, in the consulship of Cicero, B.C. 63. He 
lived nearly one hundred years, but had lost his 
memory long before his death. 

[Orbitanium, a city of Samnium, northwest 
of Beneventum] 

Orbona, a female Roman divinity, was in- 
voked by parents who had been deprived of 
their children and desired to have others, and 
also in dangerous maladies of children. 

Orcades Insula (now Orkney and Shetland 
Isles), a group of several small islands off the 
northern coast of Britain, with which the Ro- 
mans first became acquainted when Agricola 
sailed round the north of Britain. 

Orchomenus ('Opxo/ievof : 'Opxofiivioc). 1. 
(Now Scrim), an ancient, wealthy, and power- 
ful city of Boeotia, the capital of the Minyean 
empire in the ante-historical ages of Greece, ' 
and henc^ called by Homer the Minyean Orcho- i 
menus C^PX- tittvvewc). It was situated north- 
west of the Lake Copais, on the River Cephisus, { 
and was built on the slope of a hill, on the sum- j 
mit of which stood the acropolis. It is said to ! 
have been originally called Andreis ('Avdprjie), \ 
from Andreus. the son of Peneus, who emi- I 
grated from the Peneus in Thessaly ; to have j 
37 



been afterward called Phlcgya (Qteyva), from 
Phlegyas, a son of Mars (Ares) and Chryse ; 
and to have finally obtained its later name from 
Orchomenus, son of Jupiter (Zeus) or Eteocles 
and the Danaid Hesione, and father of Minyas 
This Orchomenus was regarded as the real 
founder of the Minyean empire, which, before 
the time of the Trojan war, extended over the 
whole of the west of Boeotia. The cities of 
Coronea, Haliartus, Lebedea, and Chaeronea 
were subject to it ; and even Thebes at one 
time was compelled to pay it tribute. It lost, 
however, much of its power after its capture by 
Hercules, but in the time of the Trojan war it 
still appears as a powerful city. Sixty years 
after the Trojan war it was taken by the Boeo- 
tians, its empire was completely destroyed, and 
it became a member of the Boeotian league. 
All this belongs to the mythical period. In°the 
historical age it continued to exist as an inde- 
pendent town till B.C. 367, when it was taken 
and destroyed by the Thebans, and its inhabit- 
ants murdered or sold as slaves. In order to 
weaken Thebes, it was rebuilt at the instiga- 
tion of the Athenians, but w T as soon destroyed 
again by the Thebans ; and although it was 
again restored by Philip in 338, it never re- 
covered its former prosperity ; and in the time 
of Strabo was in ruins. The most celebrated 
building in Orchomenus was the so-called treas- 
ury of Minyas, but which, like the similar monu- 
ment at Mycenae, was more probably a family 
vault of the ancient heroes of the place. It 
was a circular vault of massive masonry em- 
bedded in the hill, with an arched roof, and had 
a side door of entrance. The remains of this 
building are extant, and its form may still be 
traced, though the whole of the stone-work of 
the vault has disappeared. Orchomenus pos- 
sessed a very ancient temple of the Charites or 
Graces, and here was celebrated in the most 
ancient times a musical festival, which was fre- 
quented by poets and singers from all parts of 
the Hellenic world. There was a temple of 
Hercules seven stadia north of the town, near 
the sources of the River Melas. Orchomenus 
is memorable on account of the great victory 
which Sulla gained in its neighborhood over 
Archelaus, the general of Mithradates, B.C. 86. 
— 2. (Now Kalpaki), an ancient town of Arcadia, 
mentioned by Homer with the epithet tto^v/xt/^oc, 
to distinguish it from the Minyean Orchomenus, 
is said to have been founded by Orchomenus, 
son of Lycaon. It was situated on a hill north- 
west of Mantinea, and its territory included the 
towns of Methydrium, Theisoa,Teuthis, and the 
Tripolis. In the Peloponnesian war Orchome- 
nus sided with Sparta, and was taken by the 
Athenians. After the battle of Leuctra, the 
Orchomenians did not join the Arcadian con- 
federacy in consequence of its hatred against 
Mantinea. In the contests between the Achae- 
ans and ^Etolians, it was taken successively by 
Cleomenes and Antigonus Doson, but it event- 
ually became a member of the Achaean league. 
— 3. A town on the confines of Macedonia and 
Thessaly, and hence sometimes said to belong 
to the former, and sometimes to the latter coun- 
try. 

Orcus. Vid. Hades. 

Ordessus ('Owfytfcrof), a tributary of the Ister 

577 



ORDOVICES. 



ORETAXI. 



(now Danube) in Scythia, mentioned by Herodo- 
tus, but which can not be identified with any 
modern river. 

OrdovIces, a people in the west of Britain, 
opposite the island Mona (now Anglesey), occu- 
pying the northern portion of the modern Wales. 

Okeades. Vid. Nymph^e. 

[Oresbius {'Qpecfjioc), a Boeotian warrior in 
the Greek army before Troy, slain by Hector.] 

Orestze ('Opiarai), a people in the north of 
Epirus, on the borders of Macedonia, inhabiting 
the district named after them, Orestis or Ores- 
tias. They were originally independent, but 
were afterward subject to the Macedonian mon- 
archs. They were declared free by the Romans 
in their war with Philip. According to the le- 
gend, they derived their name from Orestes, 
who is said to have fled into this country after 
murdering his mother, and to have there found- 
ed the town of Argos Oresticum. 

Orestes ('Opean/f). 1. Son of Agamemnon 
and Clytaemnestra, and brother of Chrysothe- 
mis, Laodice (Electra), and Iphianassa (Iphi- 
genia). According to the Homeric account, 
Agamemnon, on his return from Troy, was mur- 
dered by yEgisthus and Clytaemnestra before he 
had an opportunity of seeing him. In the eighth 
year after his father's murder Orestes came 
from Athens to Mycenae and slew the murderer 
of his father. This simple story of Orestes has 
been enlarged and embellished in various ways 
by the tragic poets. Thus it is said that at the 
murder of Agamemnon it was intended to dis- 
patch Orestes also, but that by means of Elec- 
ira he was secretly carried to Strophius, king 
in Phocis, who was married to Anaxibia, the 
sister of Agamemnon. According to some, 
Orestes was saved by his nurse, who allowed 
jEgisthus to kill her own child, supposing it to 
be Orestes. In the house of Strophius, Ores- 
tes grew up with the king's son Pyiades, with 
whom he had formed that close and intimate 
friendship which has become proverbial. Being 
frequently reminded by messengers from Elec- 
tra of the necessity of avenging his father's 
death, he consulted the oracle of Delphi, which 
strengthened him in his plan. He therefore re- 
paired in secret to Argos. Here he pretended 
to be a messenger of Strophius, who had come 
to announce the death of Orestes, and brought 
the ashes of the deceased. After visiting his 
father's tomb, and sacrificing upon it a lock of 
his hair, he made himself known to his sister 
Electra, and soon afterward slew both ^Egis- 
thus and Clytaemnestra in the palace. Imme- 
diately after the murder of his mother he was 
seized with madness. He now fled from land 
to land, pursued by the Erinnyes of his mother. 
At length, by Apollo's advice, he took refuge 
with Minerva (Athena) at x\thens. The god- 
dess afforded him protection, and appointed the 
court of the Areopagus to decide his fate. The 
Erinnyes brought forward their accusation, and 
Orestes made the command of the Delphic or- 
acle his excuse. When the court voted, and 
was equally divided, Orestes was acquitted by 
the command of Minerva (Athena). According 
to another modification of the legend, Orestes 
consulted Apollo how he could be delivered from 
his madness and incessant wandering. The 
god advised him to go to Tauris in Scythia, and 
578 



i to fetch from that country the image of Diana 
(Artemis), which was believed to have fallen 
there from heaven, and to carry it to Athens. 
| Orestes and Pyiades accordingly went to Tau- 
| ris, where Thoas was king. On their arrival 
f they were seized by the natives, in order to be 
! sacrificed to Diana (Artemis), according to the 
| custom of the country. But Iphigenia, the 
I priestess of Diana (Artemis), was the sister of 
i Orestes, and, after recognizing each other, all 
three escaped with the statue of the goddess. 
I After his return to Peloponnesus, Orestes took 
! possession of his father's kingdom at Mycenae,, 
j which had been usurped by Aletes orMenelaus. 
j When Cylarabes of Argos died without leaving 
j any heir, Orestes became king of Argos also, 
i The Lacedaemonians likewise made him their 
! king of their own accord, because they prefer- 
| red him, the grandson of Tyndareus, to Nico- 
; stratus and Megapenthes, the sons ofMenelaus 
; by a slave. The Arcadians and Phocians in- 
I creased his power by allying themselves with 
j him. He married Hermione, the daughter of 
j Menelaus, and became by her the father of Tis- 
j amenus. The story of his marriage with Her- 
| mione, who had previously been married to 
i Neoptolemus, is related elsewhere. Vid. Hes- 
| mione, Neoptolemus. He died of the bite of 
I a snake in Arcadia, and his body, in accordance- 
I with an oracle, was afterward carried from Te- 
j gea to Sparta, and there buried ; his bones are 
! said to have been found, during a truce in a war 
j between the Lacedaemonians and Tegeatans, 
j under a blacksmith's shop in Tegea. — 2. Re- 
j gent of Italy during the short reign of his infant 
j son Romulus Augustulus, A.D. 475-476. He 
was born in Pannonia, and served for some 
j years under Attila ; after whose death he rose 
j to eminence at the Roman court Having been 
I intrusted with the command of an army by Ju- 
i lius Nepos, he deposed this emperor, and plac- 
ed his son Romulus Augustulus on the throne ;. 
but in the following year he was defeated by 
Odoacer and put to death. Vid. Odoacer. — 3. 
L. Aurelius Orestes, consul B.C. 126, receiv- 
ed Sardinia as his province, where he remain- 
ed upward of three years. C. Gracchus was 
quaestor to Orestes in Sardinia. — 4 Cn. Aufid- 
ius Orestes, originally belonged to the Aurelia 
gens, whence his surname of Orestes, and was 
adopted by Cn. Aufidius, the historian, when 
the latter was an old man. Orestes was conr 
sul 71 B.C. 

Oresteum, Orestheum, or Oresthasium('Op- 
egtelov, 'QptaQeiov, 'Opeoddaiov), a town in the 
south of Arcadia, in the district Masnalia, not 
far from Megalopolis. 

Orestias. 1. The country of the Orestae. 
Vid. Orest^e. — 2. A name frequently given 
by the Byzantine writers to Hadrianopolis in 
Thrace. 

Orestilla, Aurelia. Vid. Aurelia. 

[Orestis. Vid. Orestae. ] 
i Oretani, a powerful people in the southwest 
of Hispania Tarraconensis, bounded on the south 
by Baetica, on the north by the Carpetani, on the 
west by Lusitania, and on the east by the Bas- 
tetani ; their territory corresponded to the east- 
ern part of Granada, the whole of La Mancha, 
and the western part of Murcia. Their chief 
town was Castulo. 



OREUS. 



ORIGENES. 



Oreus ('flpeof : '8pet>w), a town jn the north ' 
of Eubcea, on the River Callas, at the foot of 
the mountain Telethrium, and in the district j 
Hestiaeotis, was itself originally called Hestiaea 
or Histiaea. After the Persian wars, Oreus, with i 
the rest of Eubcea, became subject to the Athe- 
nians ; but on the revolt of the island in B.C. 
445, Oreus was taken by Pericles, its inhabit- 
ants expelled, and their place supplied by two 
thousand Athenians. The site of Oreus made i 
it an important place, and its name frequently j 
occurs in the Grecian wars down to the disso- 
lution of the Achaean league. 

[Orfius, M. f a Roman eques, of the municip- 
ium of Atella, was a tribune of the soldiers in ; 
Caesar's army, whom Cicero strongly recom- j 
mended in B.C. 59 to his brother Quintus, who 
was then one of Caesar's legates.] 

Orgetorix, the noblest and richest among 
the Helvetii, formed a conspiracy to obtain the 
royal power B.C. 61, and persuaded his coun- 
trymen to emigrate from their own country. 
Two years were devoted to making the neces- 
sary preparations ; but the real designs of Or- 
getorix having meantime transpired, and the 
Helvetii having attempted to bring him to trial, 
he suddenly died, probably, as was suspected, 
by his own hands. 

Oribasius {'OpeiSilffioc or 'OpiGdaiog), an em- 
inent Greek medical writer, born about A.D. 
325, either at Sardis in Lydia, or at Pergamus 
in Mysia. He early acquired a great profes- 
sional reputation. He was an intimate friend 
of the Emperor Julian, with whom he became 
acquainted several years before Julian's acces- 
sion to the throne. He was almost the only 
person to whom Julian imparted the secret of 
his apostacy from Christianity. He accompa- 
nied Julian in his expedition against Persia, 
and was with him at the time of his death, 363. 
The succeeding emperors, Valentinian and Va- 
lens, confiscated the property of Oribasius, and 
banished him. He was afterward recalled from 
exile, and was alive at least as late as 395. Of 
the personal character of Oribasius we know 
little or nothing, but it is clear that he was much 
attached to paganism and to the heathen phi- 
losophy. He was an intimate friend of Euna- 
pius, who praises him very highly, and wrote 
an account of his life. We possess at present 
three works of Oribasius : 1. Collecta Medici- 
nalia (Zvvayuyal 'Iarpt/ccu), or sometimes Heb- 
domccontabiblos ('EC6o(iTiKovTd6iC?iOc), which was 
compiled at the command of Julian, when Ori- 
basius was still a young man. It contains but 
little original matter, but is very valuable on 
account of the numerous extracts from writers 
whose works are no longer extant. More than 
half of this work is now lost, and what remains 
is in some confusion. There is no complete 
edition of the work. 2. An abridgment (2vvo- 
ipig) of the former work, in nine books. It was 
written thirty years after the former. 3. Eu- 
jporista, or De facile Parabilibus (EvKopioTa), in j 
four books. Both this and the preceding work i 
were intended as manuals of the practice of 
medicine. 

Oricum or incus ('Slpiicov, "Qpctcoc: 'tlpiicioc.: 
now Ericho), an important Greek town on the 
coast of Illyria, near the Ceraunian Mountains 
and the frontiers of Epirus. According to tra- 



dition, it was founded by the Euboeans, who 
were cast here by a storm on their return from 
Troy ; but according to another legend, it was 
a Colchian colony. ° The town was strongly 
fortified, but its harbor was not very secure. 
It was destroyed in the civil wars, but was re- 
built by Herodes Atticus. The turpentine tree 
(tercbinlhus) grew in the neighborhood of Oricus. 

Origenes C&piy£V7is), usually called Origen, 
one of the most eminent of the early Christian 
writers, was born at Alexandrea A.D. 186. He 
received a careful education from his father, 
Leonides, who was a devout Christian ; and he 
subsequently became a pupil of Clement of Al- 
exandrea. His father having been put to death 
in the persecution of the Christians in the tenth 
year of Severus (202), Origen was reduced to 
destitution ; whereupon he became a teacher 
of grammar, and soon acquired a great reputa- 
tion. At the same time he gave instruction irt 
Christianity to several of the heathen ; and,, 
though only in his eighteenth year, he was ap- 
pointed to the office of catechist, which was 
vacant through the dispersion of the clergy con- 
sequent on the persecution. The young teach- 
er showed a zeal and self-denial beyond his 
years. Deeming his profession as teacher of 
grammar inconsistent with his sacred work, he 
gave it up ; and he lived on the merest pit- 
tance. His food and his periods of sleep were 
restricted within the narrowest limits ; and he 
performed a strange act of self-mutilation, in 
obedience to what he regarded as the recom- 
mendation of Christ. (Matth., xix., 12.) At a 
later time, however, he repudiated this literal 
understanding of our Lord's words. About 211 
or 212 Origen visited Rome, where he made, 
however, a very short stay. On his return to 
Alexandrea he continued to discharge his duties 
as catechist, and to pursue his biblical studies 
About 216 he paid a visit to Caesarea in Pales- 
tine, and about 230 he travelled into Greece. 
Shortly after his return to Alexandrea he had 
to encounter the open enmity of Demetrius, the 
bishop of the city. He was first deprived of his 
office of catechist, and was compelled to leave 
Alexandrea ; and Demetrius afterward procured 
his degradation from the priesthood and his ex- 
communication. The charges brought against 
him are not specified ; but his unpopularity ap- 
pears to have arisen from the obnoxious char- 
acter of some of his opinions, and was increas- 
ed by the circumstance that even in his lifetime 
his writings were seriously corrupted. Origen 
withdrew to Ceesarea in Palestine, where he was 
received with the greatest kindness. Among 
his pupils at this place was Gregory Thauma- 
turgus, who afterward became his panegyrist. 
In 235 Origen fled from Caesarea in Palestine, 
and took refuge at Caesarea in Cappadocia, 
where he remained concealed two years. It 
was subsequent to this that he undertook a sec- 
ond journey into Greece, the date of which is 
doubtful. In the Decian persecution (249-251), 
Origen was put to the torture ; but, though his 
life was spared, the sufferings which he under- 
went hastened his end. He died in 253 or 254, 
in his sixty-ninth year, at Tyre, in which city 
he was buried. The following are the most 
important of Origen's works: 1. The Hcxapla, 
which consisted of six copies of the Old Testa- 

579 



ORIGENES. 



ORION. 



raent, ranged in parallel columns. The first j 
column contained the Hebrew text in Hebrew . 
characters, the second the same text in Greek i 
characters, the third the version of Aquila, the \ 
fourth that of Symmachus, the fifth the Septua- ! 
gint, the sixth the version of Theodotion. Be- 
sides the compilation and arrangement of these 
versions, Origen added marginal notes, contain- | 
ing, among other things, an explanation of the i 
Hebrew names. Only fragments of this valu- 1 
able work are extant, the best edition of which ; 
is by Montfaucon, Paris, 1714. 2. Exegetical | 
works, which comprehend three classes: (1.) j 
Tomi, which Jerome renders Volumina, contain- 
ing ample commentaries, in which he gave full 
scope to his intellect. (2.) Scholia, brief notes 
on detached passages. (3.) Homilice, popular; 
expositions, chiefly delivered at Caesarea. In j 
his various expositions Origen sought to ex- j 
tract from the Sacred Writings their historical, J 
mystical or prophetical, and moral significance. 
His desire of finding continually a mystical 
sense led him frequently into the neglect of the \ 
historical sense, and even into the denial of its 
truth. This capital fault has at all times fur- | 
nished ground for depreciating his labors, and j 
has no doubt materially diminished their value: j 
it must not, however, be supposed that his de- I 
nial of the historical truth of the Sacred Writ- 
ings is more than occasional, or that it has been 
carried out to the full extent which some of his j 
accusers have charged upon him. 3. De Prin- 
cipiis (Ylepl upx&v). This work was the great 
object of attack with Origen's enemies, and the 
source from which they derived their chief evi- 
dence of his various alleged heresies. It was j 
divided into four books. Of this work some j 
important fragments are extant ; and the Latin 
version of Rufinus has come down to us entire ; 
but Rufinus took great liberties with the orig- j 
inal, and the unfaithfulness of his version is de- j 
rjounced in the strongest terms by Jerome. 4. 
Exhortatio ad Martyriv.m (Eif fiaprvpiov TTpoTpsn- 
TtKoc Aoyoc), or De Martyrio (Uepl paprvptov), 
written during the persecution under the Em- 
peror Maximin (235-238), and still extant. 5. 
Contra Celsum Libri VIII. (Kara KeXcov touol \ 
ri), still extant. In this important work Origen j 
defends the truth of Christianity against the j 
attacks of Celsus. Vid. Celsus. There is a 
valuable work entitled Philocalia (fyrtonalta), \ 
which is a compilation by Basil of Caesarea and j 
his friend Gregory of Nazianzus, made almost j 
exclusively from the writings of Origen, of j 
which many important fragments have been ; 
thus preserved. Few writers have exercised 
greater influence by the force of their intellect 
tmd the variety of their attainments than Origen, ! 
or have been the occasion of longer and more [ 
acrimonious disputes. Of his more distinctive ; 
tenets, several had reference to the doctrine of j 
the Trinity, to the subject of the incarnation, j 
and to the pre-existence of Christ's human soul, i 
which, as well as the pre-existence of other hu- 
man souls, he affirmed. He was charged, also, 
frith holding the corporeity of angels, and with | 
other errors as to angels and daemons. He held j 
the freedom of the human will, and ascribed to : 
man a nature less corrupt and depraved than ; 
was consistent with orthodox views of the op- j 
eration of divine grace. He held the doctrine j 
580 



of the universal restoration of the guilty, con- 
ceiving that the devil alone would suffer eternal 
punishment. The best edition of his works i^ 
by Delarue. Paris, 1733-1759, 4 vols. fol. ; [re- 
printed in 25 vols. 8vo, 1831-48, under the edi- 
torial care of Lommatsch ] 

[Orine COpeivrj, now Dahlafc, in the Gulf of 
Massaouah), an island of the Sinus Arabicus, off 
the coast of ^Ethiopia, in the Sinus Adulicus.] 

Oringis or Oningis, probably the same place 
as Aurinx, a wealthy town in Hispania Baetica, 
with silver mines, near Munda. 

Orion (JQpiuv), son of Hyrieus, of Hyria, in 
Bceotia, a handsome giant and hunter, said to 
have been called by the Boeotians Candaon. 
Once he came to Chios (Ophiusa), and fell in 
love with Aero or Merope, the daughter of 
CEnopion by the nymph Helice. He cleared 
the island from wild beasts, and brought the 
spoils of the chase as presents to his beloved ; 
but as GEnopion constantly deferred the mar- 
riage, Orion once when intoxicated offered vio- 
lence to the maiden. GEnopion now implored 
the assistance of Bacchus (Dionysus), who 
caused Orion to be thrown into a deep sleep by 
satyrs, in which state CEnopion deprived him 
of his sight. Being informed by an oracle that 
he should recover his sight if he would go to- 
ward the east and expose his eye-balls to the 
rays of the rising sun, Orion followed the sound 
of a Cyclops' hammer, went to Lemnos, where 
Vulcan (Hephaestus) gave to him Cedalion as 
his guide. Having recovered his sight, Orion 
returned to Chios to take vengeance on GEno- 
pion ; but, as the latter had been concealed by 
his friends, Orion was unable to find him, and 
then proceeded to Crete, where he lived as a 
hunter with Diana (Artemis). The cause of 
his death, which took place either in Crete or 
Chios, is differently stated. According to some, 
Eos (Aurora), who loved Orion for his beauty, 
carried him off, but as the gods were angry at 
this, Diana (Artemis) killed him with an arrow- 
in Ortygia. According to others, he was be- 
loved by Diana (Artemis), and Apollo, indig- 
nant at his sister's affection for him, asserted 
that she was unable to hit with her arrow a dis- 
tant point which he showed her in the sea. She 
thereupon took aim, and hit it, but the point 
was the head of Orion, who had been swim- 
ming in the sea. A third account, which Hor- 
ace follows (Carm., ii.,4, 72), states that he at- 
tempted to violate Artemis (Diana), and was 
killed by the goddess with one of her arrows. 
A fourth account, lastly, states that he boasted 
he would conquer every animal, and would clear 
the earth from all wild beasts ; but the earth 
sent forth a scorpion which destroyed him. J3s- 
culapius attempted to recall him to life, but was 
slain by Jupiter (Zeus) with a flash of lightning. 
The accounts of his parentage and birth-place 
vary in the different writers, for some call him 
a son of Neptune (Poseidon) and Euryale, and 
others say that he was born of the earth, or a 
son of GEnopion. He is further called a The- 
ban or Tanagraean, but probably because Hyria, 
his native place, sometimes belonged to Tana- 
gra and sometimes to Thebes. After his death 
Orion was placed among the stars, where he 
appears as a giant with a girdle, sword, a lion's 
skin, and a club. The constellation of Orion 



ORION. 



OROPUS. 



set at the commencement of November, at which ] 
time storms and rain were frequent ; hence he j 
is often called imbrifer, nimbosus, or aquosus. j 

Orion and Orus ('flpojv and 'fipof), names of j 
several ancient grammarians, who are frequent- 
ly confounded with each other. It appears, 
however, that we may distinguish three writ- 
ers of these names. 1. Orion, a Theban gram- 
marian, who taught at Caesarea in the fifth 
century after Christ, and is the author of a lex- 
icon, still extant, published by Sturz, Lips., 
1820.— 2. Orus, of Miletus, a grammarian, liv- 
ed in the second century after Christ, and was 
the author of the works mentioned by Suidas. 
—3. Orus, an Alexandrine grammarian, who 
taught at Constantinople not earlier than the 
middle of the fourth century after Christ. 

Orippo, a town in Hispania, on the road be- 
tween Gades and Hispalis. 

Orhve, HorIt-e, or Or^e ('^Ipurat, 'Qpai), a 
people of Gedrosia, who inhabited a district 
on the coast nearly two hundred miles long, 
abounding in wine, corn, rice, and palm-trees, 
the modern Urboo on the coast of Beloochistan. 
Some of the ancient writers assert that they 
were of Indian origin, while others say that, 
though they resembled the Indians in many of 
their customs, they spoke a different language. 

Orithyia ('OpeWvia). 1. Daughter ofErech- 
theus, king of Athens, and Praxithea. Once, 
as she had strayed beyond the River Ilissus, she 
was seized by Boreas and carried off to Thrace, 
where she bore to Boreas Cleopatra, Chione, 
Zetes, and Calais. — [2. One of the Nereids, | 
mentioned in Homer.] 

[Orius ("Opetoc), son of the Thessalian sor- 
ceress Mycale, one of the Lapithse, slain by 
Gryneus at the nuptials of Pirithous ] 

[Ormenium. Vid. Ormenus.] 

Ormenus COpfievos). 1. Son of Cercaphus, 
grandson of ^Eolus, and father of Amyntor, was 
believed to have founded the town of Ormeni- 
um, in Thessaly. From him Amyntor is some- 
times called Ormenidcs, and Astydamia, his 
grand-daughter, Ormenis. — [2. Name oftwo Tro- 
jan w r arriors, who were slain, the one by Teucer. 
the other by Polypcetes, in the Trojan war.] 

[Orminius Mons (now Derne jailasi ?), a range 
of mountains in the northeast of Bithynia, term- 
inating in Promontorium Posidium, on the coast.] 

OrnejE {'Opveai : 'OpveuTTjg), an ancient town 
an Argolis, near the frontiers of the territory of 
Phlius, and one hundred and twenty stadia from 
Argos. It was originally independent of Argos, 
but was subdued by the Argives in the Pelopon- 
nesian war, B.C. 415. 

Orneus t'Opvcvf), son of Erechtheus, father 
of Peteus, and grandfather of Menestheus ; from 
him the town of Orneee was believed to have 
derived its name. 

[Ornytus COpwToc). 1. An Arcadian hero, 
who led an army from Teuthis to join the Greeks 
against Troy, but during the stay at Aulis he 
had a quarrel with Agamemnon, and, in conse- 
quence, led his forces back. — 2. A Tyrrhenian, 
companion of ^Eneas in Italy, slain by Camilla.] 

Oroanda {'Qpoavda: 'Opoavdsvg, or -lkoq, Oro- 
andensis), a mountain city of Pisidia, southeast 
of Antiochia, from which the " Oroandicus trac- 
tus" obtained its name. 

OroI-^is ( OpQQTts; now Tab), the largest of 



the minor rivers which flow into the Persian 
Gulf, formed the boundary between Susiana and 
Persia. 

OrobLe ('OpnGiai), a town on the coast of 
Eubcea, not far from iEga?, with an oracle of 
Apollo. 

[Orobii, a Gallic people in Gallia Transpa- 
dana, in whose territory, according to Pliny, lay 
the cities Comum and Bergomum.] 

Orodes ('Opw<5>7f), the name of two kings of 
Parthia. Vid. Arsaces, No. 14, 17. 

Orcetes ('Opohiiq), a Persian, was made sa- 
trap of Sardis by Cyrus, which government he 
retained under Cambyses. In B.C. 522 he de- 
coyed Polycrates into his power by specious 
promises, and put him to death. But being sus- 
pected of aiming at the establishment of an in- 
dependent sovereignty, he was himself put to 
death by order of Darius. 

Orontes COpovTTjq). 1. (Now Nahr-el-Asyi, 
the largest river of Syria, has two chief sources 
in Ccelesyria, the one in the Antilibanus, the 
other further north, in the Libanus; flows north- 
east into a lake south of Emesa, and thence 
north past Epiphania and Apamea, till near An- 
tioch, where it suddenly sweeps round to the 
southwest, and falls into the sea at the foot of 
Mount Pieria. According to tradition, its ear- 
lier name was Typhon (Tu0wv),and it was call- 
ed Orontes from the person who first built a 
bridge over it. — 2. A mountain on the southern 
side of the Caspian, between Parthia and Hyr- 
cania. — 3. A people of Assyria, east of Gauga- 
mela. 

[Orontes (Opov-Tjg). 1 . A Lycian leader, an 
ally of the Trojans, accompanied iEneas after 
the fall of Troy, and perished by shipwreck. — 
2. Related to the Persian royal family, accom- 
panied the younger Cyrus against Artaxerxes, 
having been pardoned by Cyrus though he had 
revolted from him. He was again convicted of 
treason during the expedition, was tried by a 
court-martial, and condemned to death. His 
fate was never made public. — 3. A Persian, sa- 
trap of Armenia, married Rhodogune, the daugh- 
ter of Artaxerxes : he commanded one of the 
divisions of the king's army during the retreat 
of the ten thousand Greeks, and was a party to 
the treacherous massacre of the Greek gen- 
erals. He was afterward disgraced in conse- 
quence of mismanaging the war with Evagoras, 
and attempting to deprive Tiribazus of his com- 
mand and his army. Vid. Tiribazus. — 4. A 
descendant of Hydarnes (one of the seven con- 
spirators against Smerdis the Magian), is men- 
tioned by Strabo as the last Persian prince who 
reigned in Armenia before the division of the 
country by Antiochus the Great between two 
of his officers, Artaxias and Zariadris.] 

Oropus ('OpwTrof : 'Slpu-ioc : now Oropo), a 
town on the eastern frontiers of Bceotia and 
Attica, near the Euripus, originally belonged to 
the Boeotians, but was at an early time seized 
by the Athenians, and was long an object of 
contention between the two nations. At length, 
after being taken and retaken several times, it 
remained permanently in the hands of the Athe- 
nians, and is always reckoned by later writers 
as a town of Attica. Its sea-port was Delphin- 
ium, at the mouth of the Asopus, about one and 
a half miles from the town. 

581 



OROSIUS, PAULUS. 



ORPHEUS. 



Orosius, Paulus, a Spanish presbyter, a na- 
tive of Tarragona, flourished under Arcadius 
and Honorius. Having conceived a warm ad- 
miration for St. Augustine, he passed over into 
Africa about A.D. 413. After remaining in 
Africa about two years, Augustine sent him 
into Syria, to counteract the influence of Pela- 
gius, who had resided for some years in Pales- 
tine. Orosius found a warm friend in Jerome, 
but was unable to procure the condemnation of 
Pelagius, and was himself anathematized by 
John, bishop of Jerusalem, when he brought a 
formal charge against Pelagius. Orosius subse- 
quently returned to Africa, and there, it is believ- 
ed, died, but at what period is not known. The 
following works by Orosius are still extant. 1. 
Historiarum adversus Paganos Libri VII. , dedi- 
cated to St. Augustine, at whose suggestion the 
task was undertaken. The pagans having been 
accustomed to complain that the ruin of the 
Ptoman empire must be ascribed to the wrath 
of the ancient deities, whose worship had been 
abandoned, Orosius, upon his return from Pal- 
estine, composed this history to demonstrate 
that from the earliest epoch the world had been 
the scene of calamities as great as the Roman 
empire was then suffering. The work, which 
extends from the Creation down to A.D. 417, 
Is, with exception of the concluding portion, 
extracted from Justin, Eutropius, and inferior 
second-hand authorities. Edited by Havercamp, 
Lugd. Bat., 1738 and 1767. 2. Liber Apologeti- 
cus de Arbitrii Libertate, written in Palestine, 
A.D. 415, appended to the edition of the His- 
tory by Havercamp. 3. Commonitorium ad Au- 
gustinum, the earliest of the works of Orosius, 
composed soon after his first arrival in Africa. 

Orospeda or Ortospeda (now Sierra del Mun- 
io), the highest range of mountains in the cen- 
tre of Spain, began in the centre of Mount Idu- 
beda, ran first west and then south, and term- 
inated near Calpe at the Fretum Herculeum. 
It contained several silver mines, whence the 
part in which the Baetis rises was called Mount 
Argentarius, or the Silver Mountain. 

Orpheus fOp^euf), a mythical personage, 
was regarded by the Greeks as the most cele- 
brated of the early poets, who lived before the 
time of Homer. His name does not occur in 
the Homeric or Hesiodic poems, but it already 
had attained to great celebrity in the lyric pe- 
riod. There were numerous legends about Or- 
pheus, but the common story ran as follows : 
Orpheus, the son of GEagrus and Calliope, lived 
in Thrace at the period of the Argonauts, whom 
he accompanied in their expedition. Presented 
with the lyre by Apollo, and instructed by the 
Muses in its use, he enchanted with its music 
not only the wild beasts, but the trees and rocks 
upon Olympus, so that they moved from their 
places to follow the sound of his golden harp. 
The power of his music caused the Argonauts 
to seek his aid, which contributed materially to 
the success of their expedition : at the sound 
of his lyre the Argo glided down into the sea ; 
the Argonauts tore themselves away from the 
pleasures of Lemnos ; the Symplegades, or mov- 
ing rocks, which threatened to crush the ship 
between them, were fixed in their places ; and 
the Colchian dragon, which guarded the golden 
fleece, was lulled to sleep : other legends of 
582 



the same kind may be read in the Argonautica, 
which bears the name of Orpheus. After his 
return from the Argonautic expedition he took 
up his abode in a cave in Thrace, and employ- 
ed himself in the civilization of its wild inhabit- 
ants. There is also a legend of his having vis- 
ited Egypt. The legends respecting the loss 
and recovery of his wife, and his own death, 
are very various. His wife was a nymph named 
Agriope or Eurydice. In the older accounts 
the cause of her death is not referred to. The 
legend followed in the well-known passages of 
Virgil and Ovid, which ascribes the death of 
Eurydice to the bite of a serpent, is no doubt 
of high antiquity ; but the introduction of Aris- 
taeus into the legend can not be traced to any 
writer older than Virgil himself. He followed 
his lost wife into the abodes of Pluto (Hades), 
where the charms of his lyre suspended the 
torments of the damned, and won back his wife 
from the most inexorable of all deities ; but his 
prayer was only granted upon this condition, 
that he should not look back upon his restored 
wife till they had arrived in the upper world : 
at the very moment when they were about to 
pass the fatal bounds, the anxiety of love over- 
came the poet ; he looked round to see that 
Eurydice was following him, and he beheld her 
caught back into the infernal regions. His 
grief for the loss of Eurydice led him to treat 
with contempt the Thracian women, who, in re- 
venge, tore him to pieces under the excitement 
of their Bacchanalian orgies. After his death 
the Muses collected the fragments of his body, 
and buried them at Libethra, at the foot of 
Olympus, where the nightingale sang sweetly 
over his grave. His head was thrown into the 
Hebrus, down which it rolled to the sea, and 
was borne across to Lesbos, where the grave 
in which it was interred was shown at Antissa. 
His lyre was also said to have been carried to 
Lesbos ; and both traditions are simply poet- 
ical expressions of the historical fact that Les- 
bos was the first great seat of the music of the 
lyre : indeed, Antissa itself was the birth-place 
of Terpander, the earliest historical musician 
The astronomers taught that the lyre of Or- 
pheus was placed by Jupiter (Zeus) among the 
stars at the intercession of Apollo and the Mu- 
ses. In these legends there are some points 
which are sufficiently clear. The invention of 
music, in connection with the services of Apollo 
and the Muses, its first great application to the 
worship of the gods, which Orpheus is there- 
fore said to have introduced, its power over the 
passions, and the importance which the Greeks 
attached to the knowledge of it, as intimately 
allied with the very existence of all social ordei 
— are probably the chief elementary ideas of the 
whole legend. But then comes in one of the 
dark features of the Greek religion, in which 
the gods envy the advancement of man in 
knowledge and civilization, and severely punish 
any one who transgresses the bounds assigned 
to humanity. In a later age the conflict was 
no longer viewed as between the gods and man. 
but between the worshippers of different divin- 
ities ; and especially between Apollo, the sym- 
bol of pure intellect, and Bacchus (Dionysus), 
the deity of the senses ; hence Orpheus, the 
servant of Apollo, falls a victim to the jealousv 



ORPHIDIUS BENIGNUS. 



ORXINES. 



ef Bacchus (Dionysus), and the fury of his wor- 
shippers.— Orphic Societies and Mysteries. About 
the time of the first development of Greek phi- 
losophy, societies were formed, consisting of 
persons called the followers of Orpheus (oi 'Op- 
<piKol), who, under the pretended guidance of 
Orpheus, dedicated themselves to the worship 
of Bacchus (Dionysus). They performed the 
rites of a mystical worship, but instead of con- 
fining their notions to the initiated, they pub- 
lished them to others, and committed them to 
literary works. The Bacchus (Dionysus) to 
whose worship the Orphic rites were annexed, 
was Bacchus (Dionysus) Zagreus, closely con- 
nected with Ceres (Demeter) and Cora (Proser- 
pina). The Orphic legends and poems related 
in great part to this Bacchus (Dionysus), who 
was combined, as an infernal deity, with Pluto 
(Hades), and upon whom the Orphic theolo- 
gers founded their hopes of the purification and 
ultimate immortality of the soul. But their 
mode of celebrating this worship was very dif- 
ferent from the popular rites of Bacchus. The 
Orphic worshippers of Bacchus did not indulge 
in unrestrained pleasure and frantic enthusi- 
asm, but rather aimed at an ascetic purity of 
life and manners. All this part of the mythol- 
ogy of Orpheus, which connects him with Bac- 
chus (Dionysus), must be considered as a later 
invention, quite irreconcilable with the original 
legend, in which he is the servant of Apollo and 
the Muses : but it is almost hopeless to explain 
the transition. Many poems ascribed to Or- 
pheus were current as early as the time of the 
Pisistratids. Vid. Oxomacritus. They are oft- 
en quoted by Plato, and the allusions to them 
in later writers are very frequent. The extant 
poems, which bear the name of Orpheus, are 
the forgeries of Christian grammarians and 
philosophers of the Alexandrean school ; but 
among the fragments, which form a part of the 
collection, are some genuine remains of that 
Orphic poetry which was known to Plato, and 
which must be assigned to the period of Ono- 
macritus, or perhaps a little earlier. The Or- 
phic literature, which in this sense may be call- 
ed genuine, seems to have included Hymns, a 
Thcogony, Oracles, &c. The apocryphal pro- 
ductions which have come down to us are, 1. 
Argonautica, an epic poem in one thousand three 
hundred and eighty-four hexameters, giving an 
account of the expedition of the Argonauts. 2. 
Hymns, eighty-seven or eighty-eight in num- 
ber, in hexameters, evidently the productions 
of the Neo-Platonic school. 3. Lithica (Aidind), 
treats of properties of stones, both precious and 
common, and their uses in divination. 4. Frag- 
ments, chiefly of the Theogony. It is in this 
class that we find the genuine remains of the 
literature of the early Orphic theology, but in- 
termingled with others of a much later date. 
The best edition is by Hermann, Lips., 1805. 

[Orphidius Benignus, a legate of the Em- 
peror Otho, fell in the battle of Bedriacum against 
the troops of Vitellius, A.D. 69.] 

[Orsabaris ('Opaddapic), a daughter of Mith- 
radates the Great, taken prisoner by Pompey, 
and served to adorn his triumph, B.C. 61.] 

[OrseTs ('Opcrnic), a nymph, mother by Hel- 
len of ^Eolus, Dorus, and Xuthus.] 

[Orsilochus ('Opat/lo^of). 1. Son of the river- 



god Alpheus and of Telegone, father of Diocles, 
prince at Pherse, and guest friend of Ulysses. 
— 2. Son of Diocles, grandson of No. 1, accom- 
panied Agamemnon to the Trojan war, and was 
slain before Troy by .^Eneas. — 3. Son of Ido- 
meneus of Crete. — 4. A Trojan, who accom- 
panied iEneas to Italy ; he was slain by Ca- 
milla.] 

[Orthagoras {'Opdayopac). 1. A geograph- 
ical writer, whose age is uncertain : he wrote 
a work on India, and another concerning the 
Red Sea. — 2. A flute- player of Thebes ; accord- 
ing to Athenaeus, an instructor of Epaminondas 
in flute-playing.] 

[Orthe ("Opdri), a place in the Thessalian 
district Perrhaebia, mentioned in the second 
book of the Iliad ; supposed by Strabo to be the 
Acropolis of Phalanna.] 

Orthia ('Opdca, 'Opdlc, or 'Opduaia), a sur- 
name of the Diana (Artemis) who is also called 
Iphigenia or Lygodesma, and must be regarded 
as the goddess of the moon. Her worship was 
probably brought to Sparta from Lemnos. It 
was at the altar of Diana (Artemis) Orthia that 
Spartan boys had to undergo the flogging called 
diamastigosis. 

Orthosia ('Opdoola). 1. A city of Caria, on 
the Maeander, with a mountain of the same 
name, where the Rhodians defeated the Ca- 
rians, B.C. 167.— 2. (Now Ortosa), a city of 
Phcenice, south of the mouth of the Eleuthe- 
rus, and twelve Roman miles from Tripolis. 

Orthrus ( v Opdpoc), the two-headed dog of 
Geryones, who was begotten by Typhon and 
Echidna, and was slain by Hercules. Vid. p. 
358, a.] 

[Ortona (now Ortona a Mare), a port-town 
of the Frentani, according to the Itineraries on 
the road from Aternum to Histonium.] 

Ortospana or-UM {'OpToairava : now Cabull), 
a considerable city of the Paropamisadae, at 
the sources of a western tributary of the River 
Cogs, and at the junction of three roads, one 
leading north into Bactria, and the others south 
and east into India. It was also called Carura 
or Cabura. 

Ortygia ('Oprvyta). 1 . The ancient name of 
Delos. Since Diana (Artemis) and Apollo were 
born at Delos, the poets sometimes call the god- 
dess Ortygia, and give the name of Ortygice boves 
to the cattle pastured by Apollo. The ancients 
connected the name with Ortyx ("OprvZ), a quail. 
Vid. p. 435, b. — 2. An island near Syracuse. 
Vid. Syracuse.— 3. A grove near Ephesus, in 
which the Ephesians pretended that Apollo and 
Diana (Artemis) were born. Hence Propertius 
calls the Cayster, which flowed near Ephesus, 
Ortygius Cayster. 

[Ortygius, a Rutulian, one of the warriors 
on the side of Turnus in his wars with ^Eneas, 
slain by Caeneus.] 

Orus. Vid. Horus, Orion. 

[Orus ( ; £2pof), a Greek warrior before Troy, 
| slain by Hector.] 

[Orxines ('Optjivrjc) or Orsines, a noble and 
j wealthy Persian, who traced his descent from 
Cyrus. He was present, and commanded a 
portion of the troops at Gaugamela. At the 
death of Phrasaortes Orxines assumed the sa- 
trapy of Persis, which usurpation was over- 
looked by Alexander; but he was subsequently 

583 



OSCA. 



OSTRACINA. 



charged with sacrilege, and on this or some 
other ground was crucified by Alexander.] 

Osca. 1. (Now Huesca in Arragonia), an im- 
portant town of the Uergetes and a Roman col- 
ony in Hispania Tarraconensis, on the road from 
Tarraco to Ilerda, with silver mines ; whence 
Livy speaks of argentum Osciense, though these 
words may perhaps mean silver money coined 
at Osca. — 2. (West of Huescar in Granada), a 
town of the Turdetani in Hispania Baetica. 
Oscela. Vid. Lepontii. 
Osci or Opici ("Ogkoi, 'Ottikoi), one of the 
most ancient tribes of Italy, inhabited the cen- 
tre of the peninsula, from which they had driven 
out the Siculi. Their principal settlement was 



which separated it from Mygdonia on the east, 
and from the rest of Mesopotamia on the south • 
the Euphrates divided it on the west and north- 
west from the Syrian districts of Chalybonitis, 
Cyrrhestice, and Commagene ; and on the north 
it was separated by Mount Masius from Armenia 
Its name was said to be derived from Osro6s f 
an Arabian chieftain, who, in the time of the 
Seleucidae, established over it a petty principal- 
ity, with Edessa for its capital, which lasted till 
the reign of Caracalla, and respecting the his- 
tory of which, vid. Abgarus. 
[Osroes. Vid. Osroene.] 
Ossa {'Ooaa : now Kissavo, i. e., ivy-clad). 
A celebrated mountain in the north of Mag- 



in Campania, but we also find them in parts of nesia, in Thessaly, connected with Pelion on 
Latium and Samnium. They were subdued by | the southeast, and divided from Olympus on the 
the Sabines and Tyrrhenians, and disappeared ! northwest by the Vale of Tempe. It is one of 



from history at a comparatively early period. 
They were called in their own language Uskus. 



the highest mountains in Greece, but much less 
lofty than Olympus. It is mentioned by Homer 



They are identified by many writers with the i in the legend of the war of the Giants, respect- 
Ausones or Aurunci ; but others think that the j ing which, vid. Olympus. — [2. (Now Osa), a 
latter is a collective name for all the people 1 small river of Etruria, which empties into the 
dwelling in the plain, and that the Osci were a Tyrrhenian Sea between Promontorium Tela- 
branch of the Ausones. The Oscan language ; mon and the city of Cosa.] 



was closely connected with the other ancient 
Italian dialects, out of which the Latin language 
was formed ; and it continued to be spoken by 
the people of Campania long after the Oscans 
had disappeared as a separate people. A knowl- 
edge of it was preserved at Rome by the Fab- 
ulae Atellanae, which were a species of farce or 
comedy written in Oscan. 

Osi, a people in Germany, probably in the 
mountains between the sources of the Oder and 
the Gran, were, according to Tacitus, tributary 
to the Sarmatians, and spoke the Pannonian 
language. 

OsiCERDA. Vid. OSSIGERDA. 

[Osinius, king of Clusium, aided iEneas in his 
wars with Turnus in Italy.] 

Osiris ("Oaipic), the great Egyptian divinity, 
and husband of Isis. According to Herodotus, 
they were the only divinities who were wor- 
shipped by all the Egyptians. His Egyptian 
name is said to have been Hysiris, which is in- 
terpreted to mean " son of Isis," though some 
said that it meant " many-eyed." He is said to 
have been originally king of Egypt, and to have 



Osset, with the surname Constantia Julia, a 
town in Hispania Baetica, on the right bank of 
the Baetis, opposite Hispalis. 

Ossigerda or Osicerda (Ossigerdensis), a 
town of the Edetani in Hispania Tarraconen- 
sis, and a Roman municipium. 

Ossigi (now Maqviz), a town of the Turduli 
in Hispania Baetica, on the spot where the Bee- 
tis first enters Baetica. 

Ossonoba (now Estoy, north of Faro), a town 
j of the Turdetani in Lusitania, between the Ta- 
| gus and Anas. 

Osteodes CO<jTEC)dj]c vT/coc : now Alicur), an 
' island at some distance from the north coast of 
| Sicily, opposite the town of Soli. 

Ostia (Ostiensis : now Ostia,) a town at the 
mouth of the River Tiber, and the harbor of 
Rome, from which it was distant sixteen miles 
by land, was situated on the left bank of the left 
arm of the river. It was founded by Ancus 
Marcius, the fourth king of Rome, was a Roman 
colony, and eventually became an important and 
flourishing town. In the civil wars it was de- 
stroyed bv Marius, but it was soon rebuilt with 



reclaimed his subjects from a barbarous life by | greater splendor than before. The Emperor 



teaching them agriculture, and enacting wise 
laws. He afterward travelled into foreign 
lands, spreading wherever he went the bless- 
ings of civilization. On his return to Egypt he 
was murdered by his brother Typhon, who cut 
his body into pieces and threw them into the 
Nile. After a long search Isis discovered the 



Claudius constructed a new and better harbor 
on the right arm of the Tiber, which was en- 
larged and improved by Trajan. This new har- 
bor was called simply Portus Romanus or Portus 
Augusti, and around it there sprang up a flour- 
ishing town, also called Portus (the inhabitants 
Portuenses). The old town of Ostia, whose 



mangled remains of her husband, and with the ■ harbor had been already partly filled up by sand, 
assistance of her son Horus defeated Typhon, j now sank into insignificance, and only continued 



and recovered the sovereign power, which Ty- 
phon had usurped. Vid. Isis. 



to exist through its salt-works (salince), which 
had been established by Ancus Marcius. The 



[Osiris, a friend of Turnus, the king of the | ruins of Ostia are between two and three miles 



Rutuli, slain by the Trojan Thymbraeus.] 

Osismii, a people in Gallia Lugdunensis, at 
the northwestern extremity of the coast, and in 
the neighborhood of the modern Quimpcr and 
Brest. 

Osroene ('Oaporjvrj : 'OaporjvoL, pi. : now Pa- 
shalik ofOrfah), the westernmost of the two por- 
tions into which Northern Mesopotamia was di 



Tided by the River Chaboras (now Khabour), \ 
584 



i from the coast, as the sea has gradually receded 
in consequence of the accumulation of sand de- 
posited by the Tiber. 

Ostia Nili. Vid. Nilus. 
[Ostoriits Sabinus. Vid. Sabinus. ] 
Ostorius Scapula. T id. Scapula. 
Ostra (Ostranus), a town in Umbria, in the 
territory of the Senones. 



[Ostracina ('OarpaKLva), a city destitute Qt 



OTACILIUS CRASSUS, T. 



OTHRYS. 



water (<rrafyof avvdpoc), in Lower Egypt, east 
of the Nile, on the road from Rhinocorura to 
Pelusium, and not far from Lake Sirbonis.] 

Otacilius Crassus, T. h A Roman general 
during the second Punic war, was praetor B.C. 
217, and subsequently propraetor in Sicily. In 
215 he crossed over to Africa, and laid waste 
the Carthaginian coast. He was praetor for the 
second time, 214, and his command was pro- 
longed during the next three years. He died in 
Sicily, 211.— [2. Otacilius Crassus, one of 
Pompey's officers, had the command of the town 
of Lissus in Illyria, and cruelly murdered two 
hundred and twenty of Caesar's soldiers, who 
had surrendered to him on the promise that they 
should be uninjured. Shortly after this he aban- 
doned Lissus, and joined the main body of the 
Pompeian army ] 

Otacilius Pilitls, L„ a Roman rhetorician, 
vho opened a school at Rome B.C. 81, was 
originally a slave, but having exhibited talent 
and a love of literature, he was manumitted by 
his master. Cn. Pompeius Magnus was one of 
his pupils, and he wrote the history of Pompey, 
and of his father likewise. 

Otanes ('Otuvtic). 1. A Persian, son of Phar- 
naspes, was the first who suspected the impos- 
ture of Smerdis the Magian, and took the chief 
part in organizing the conspiracy against the 
pretender (B.C. 521). After the accession of 
Darius Hystaspis, he was placed in command 
of the Persian force which invaded Samos for 
the purpose of placing Syloson, brother of Poly- 
crates, in the government. — 2. A Persian, son 
of Sisamnes, succeeded Megabyzus (B.C. 506) in 
the command of the forces on the sea-coast, 
and took Byzantium, Chalcedon, Antandrus, and 
Lamponium, as well as the islands of Lemnos 
and Imbros. He was probably the same Otanes 
who is mentioned as a son-in-law of Darius Hys- 
taspis, and as a general employed against the 
revolted Ionians in 499. 

Otho, L. Roscics, tribune of the plebs B C. 
67, was a warm supporter of the aristocratical 
party. He opposed the proposal ofGabinius to 
bestow upon Pompey the command of the war 
against the pirates ; and in the same year he 
proposed and carried the law which gave to the 
equites a special place at the public spectacles, 
;n fourteen rows or seats (in quattuordecim gradi- 
bus sive ordimbus), next to the place of the sen- 
ators, which was in the orchestra. This law 
was very unpopular ; and in Cicero's consulship 
(63) there was such a riot occasioned by the ob- 
noxious measure that it required all his elo- 
quence to allay the agitation. 

Otho, Salvias. 1. ML, grandfather of the 
Emperor Otho, was descended from an ancient 
and noble family of the town of Ferentinum in 
Etruria. His father was a Roman eques ; his 
mother was of low origin, perhaps even a freed- 
woman. Through the influence of Livia Au- 
gusta, in whose house he had been brought up, 
Otho was made a Roman senator, and eventu- 
ally obtained the praetorship, but was not ad- 
vanced to any higher honor. — 2. L., son of the 
preceding, and father of the Emperor Otho, stood 
so high in the favor of Tiberius, and resembled 
this emperor so strongly in person, that it was 
supposed by most that he was his son. He was 
£onsul suffectus in A.D. 33 ; was afterward pro- 



' consul in Africa ; and in 42 was sent into Illyri- 
cum, where he restored discipline among the 
soldiers, who had lately rebelled against Clau- 
dius. At a later time he detected a conspiracy 
which had been formed against the life of Clau- 
dius. — 3. L., surnamed Titianus, elder son of 
No. 2, was consul 52, and proconsul in Asia 63, 
when he had Agricola for his quaestor. It is 
related to the honor of the latter that he was 
not corrupted by the example of his superior 
officer, who indulged in every kind of rapacity. 
On the death of Galba in January, 69, Titianus 
was a second time made consul, with his brother 
Otho, the emperor. On the death of the latter, 
he was pardoned by Vitellius. — 4. M., Roman 
emperor from January 15th to April 16th, A.D. 
69, was the younger son of No. 2. He was born 
in the early part of 32. He was of moderate 
stature, ill made in the legs, and had an effem- 
inate appearance. He was one of the compan- 
ions of Nero in his debaucheries ; but when the 
emperor took possession of his wife, the beauti- 
; ful but profligate Poppaea Sabina, Otho was sent 
! as governor to Lusitania, which he administered 
with credit during the last ten years of Nero's 
life. Otho attached himself to Galba when he 
revolted against Nero, in the hope of being 
adopted by him and succeeding to the empire. 
But when Galba adopted L. Piso on the 10th of 
January, 69, Otho formed a conspiracy against 
Galba, and was proclaimed emperor by the sol- 
diers at Rome, who put Galba to death. Mean- 
time Vitellius had been proclaimed emperor at 
Cologne by the German troops on the 3d of 
January, and his generals forthwith set out for 
Italy to place their master on the throne. When 
these news reached Otho, he marched into the 
north of Italy to oppose the generals of Vitellius. 
The fortune of war was at first in his favor. 
He defeated Caecina, the general of Vitellius, in 
more than one engagement ; but his army was 
subsequently defeated in a decisive battle near 
Bedriacum by the united forces of Caecina and 
Valens, whereupon he put an end to his own life 
at Brixellum, in the thirty-seventh year of his 
age. 

Othryades ('Odpvafiqg). 1. A patronymic 
given to Panthous or Panthus, the Trojan priest 
of Apollo, as the son of Othryas. — 2. ASpartan, 
one of the three hundred selected to fight with 
an equal number of Argives for the possession 
of Thyrea. Othryades was the only person 
who survived the battle, and was left for dead. 
He spoiled the dead bodies of the enemy, and 
remained at his post, while Alcenor and Chro- 

| mius, the two survivors of the Argive party. 

\ hastened home with the news of victory, sup- 

! posing that all their opponents had been slain. 
As the victory was claimed by both sides, a 
general battle ensued, in which the Argives 
were defeated. Othryades slew himself on the 
field, being ashamed to return to Sparta as the 
one survivor of her three hundred champions. 

[Othryoneus ('OBpvovevg), an ally of Priam, 
from Cabesus, was a suitor for the hand of Cas- 
sandra, Priam's daughter, and promised, in re- 
turn, to drive, the Greeks from before Troy ; but 
he was slain by Idomeneus ] 

Othrys ('Udpvc : [now Goura or Katavothry ? 
the highest summit Jtrako, according to Leake]), 

! a lofty range of mountains in the south of Thes- 

585 



OTREUS. 



OVIDIUS NASO, P. 



saiy, which extended from Mount Tymphres- 
tus, or the most southerly part of Pindus, to the 
eastern coast and the promontory between the 
Pagasaean Gulf and the northern point of Eu- 
bcea. It shut in the great Thessalian plain on 
the south. 

[Otreus ('Orpevc), king of Phrygia, whom 
Priam aided against the Amazons.] 

[Otris, a town of Babylonia, south of Baby- 
lon, above the marshes of the Euphrates.] 

[Otrcea ('Orpota), a city of Bithynia, above 
Lake Ascania, said to have derived its name 
from Otreus, probably the same as the town of 
Phrygia mentioned by Plutarch under the name 
of Otryae ('O-pvat) in his life of Lucullus.] 

[Otrynteus ('Orpvvrevc ), king of Hyde at the 
base of Mount Tmolus, father of Iphition by one 
of the nymphs.] 

Otus, and his brother Epiiialtes, are bet- 
ter known by their name of the Albtdcz. Vid. 
Aloeus.— [2. Of Cyllene. a Greek warrior at the 
siege of Troy, slain by Polydamas.] 

Ovidius Naso, P., the Roman poet, was born 
at Sulmo, in the country of the Peligni, on the 
20th of March, B.C. 43. He was descended from 
an ancient equestrian family, but possessing 
only moderate wealth. He, as well as his 
brother Lucius, who was exactly a year older 
than himself, was destined to be a pleader, and 
received a careful education to qualify him for 
that calling. He studied rhetoric under Arel- 
lius Fuscus and Porcius Latro, and attained to 
considerable proficiency in the art of declama- 
tion. But the bent of his genius showed itself 
very early. The hours which should have been 
spent in the study of jurisprudence were em- 
ployed in cultivating his poetical talent. The 
elder Seneca, who had heard him declaim, tells 
us that his oratory resembled a solutum carmen, 
and that any thing in the way of argument was 
irksome to him. His father denounced his fa- 
vorite pursuit as leading to inevitable poverty ; 
but the death of his brother, at the early age 
of twenty, probably served in some degree to 
mitigate his father's opposition, for the patri- 
mony which would have been scanty for two 
might amply suffice for one. Ovid's education 
was completed at Athens, where he made him- 
self thoroughly master of the Greek language. 
Afterward he travelled with the poet Macer in 
Asia and Sicily. It is a disputed point whether 
he ever actually practiced as an advocate after 
his return to Rome. The picture Ovid himself 
draws of his weak constitution and indolent 
temper prevents us from thinking that he ever 
followed his profession with perseverance, if 
indeed at all. The same causes deterred him 
from entering the senate, though he had put on 
the latus clavus when he assumed the toga viri- 
lism as being by birth entitled to aspire to the 
senatorial dignity. (Trist., iv., 10, 29.) He be- 
came, however, one of the Triumviri Capitales ; 
and he was subsequently made one of the Cen~ 
tumviri, or judges who tried testamentary and 
even criminal causes ; and in due time he was 
promoted to be one of the Decemviri, who as- 
sembled and presided over the court of the 
Centumviri. Such is all the account that can 
"be given of Ovid's business life. He married 
twice in early life at the desire of his parents, 
but he speedily divorced each of his wives in 
586 



succession. The restraint of a wife was irk- 
some to a man like Ovid, who was devoted to 
gallantry and licentious life. His chief mistress 
in the early part of his life was the one whom 
he celebrates in his poems under the name of 
Corinna. If we may believe the testimony of 
Sidonius Apollinaris, Corinna was no less a 
personage than Julia, the accomplished but 
abandoned daughter of Augustus. There are 
several passages in Ovid's Amores which ren- 
der the testimony of Sidonius highly probable. 
Thus it appears that his mistress was a mar- 
ried woman, of high rank, but profligate morals ; 
all which particulars will suit Julia. How long 
Ovid's connection with Corinna lasted there are 
no means of deciding ; but it probably ceased 
before his marriage with his third wife, whom 
he appears to have sincerely loved. We can 
hardly place his third marriage later than his 
thirtieth year, since a daughter, Perilla, was the 
fruit of it (Trist., iii., 7, 3), who was grown up 
and married at the time of his banishment. 
Perilla was twice married, and had a child by 
each husband. Ovid was a grandfather before 
he lost his father at the age of ninety ; soon 
after whose decease his mother also died. Till 
his fiftieth year Ovid continued to reside at 
Rome, where he had a house near the Capitol, 
occasionally taking a trip to his Pelignan farm. 
He not only enjoyed the friendship of a large 
circle of distinguished men, but the regard and 
favor of Augustus and the imperial family. But 
in A.D. 9 Ovid was suddenly commanded by an 
imperial edict to transport himself to Tomi, a 
town on the Euxine, near the mouths of the 
Danube, on the very border of the empire. He 
underwent no trial, and the sole reason for his 
banishment stated in the edict was his having 
published his poem on the Art of Love (Ars 
Amatoria). It was not, however, an exsilium, 
but a relegatio ; that is, he was not utterly cut 
off from all hope of return, nor did he lose his 
citizenship. The real cause of his banishment 
has long exercised the ingenuity of scholars. 
The publication of the Ars Amatoria was cer- 
tainly a mere pretext. The poem had been 
published nearly ten years previously ; and, 
moreover, whenever Ovid alludes to that, the 
ostensible cause, he invariably couples with it 
another which he mysteriously conceals. Ac- 
cording to some writers, the real cause was his 
intrigue with Julia. But this is sufficiently re- 
futed by the fact that Julia had been an exile 
since B.C. 2. Other writers suppose that he 
had been guilty of an intrigue with the younger 
Julia, the daughter of the elder one ; and the 
remarkable fact that the younger Julia was ban- 
ished in the same year with Ovid leads very 
strongly to the inference that his fate was in 
some way connected with hers. But Ovid states 
himself that his fault was an involuntary one ; 
and the great disparity of years between the 
poet and the younger Julia renders it improb- 
able that there had been an intrigue between 
them. He may more probably have become ac- 
quainted with Julia's profligacy by accident, 
and by his subsequent conduct, perhaps, for in- 
stance, by concealing it, have given offence to 
Livia, or Augustus, or both. Ovid draws an 
affecting picture of the miseries to which he 
was exposed in his place of exile. He rora- 



OVIDIUS NASO, P. 



OXLE. 



plains of the inhospitable soil, of the severity 
of the climate, and of the perils to which he 



this and the preceding work. Even the versi- 
fication is more slovenly, and some of the lines 



was exposed, when the barbarians plundered j very prosaic. 10. Ibis, a satire of between six 

hundred and seven hundred elegiac verses, also 
written in exile. The poet inveighs in it against 
an enemy who had traduced him. Though the 
variety of Ovid's imprecations displays learning 
and fancy, the piece leaves the impression of 
an impotent explosion of rage. The title and 
plan were borrowed from Callimachus. 11. 
Consolatio ad Liviam Augustam, is considered 
by most critics not to be genuine, though it is 
allowed on all hands to be not unworthy of 
Ovid's genius. 12. The Medicamina Faciei and 
Halieuticon are mere fragments, and their gen- 
uineness not altogether certain. Of his lost 
works, the most celebrated was his tragedy, 
Medea, of which only two lines remain. That 
Ovid possessed a great poetical genius is un- 
questionable, which makes it the more to be 
regretted that it was not always under the con- 
trol of a sound judgment. He possessed great 
vigor of fancy, warmth of coloring, and facility 
of composition. Ovidhas himself described how 
spontaneously his verses flowed ; but the facil- 
ity of composition possessed more charms for 
him than the irksome but indispensable labor 
of correction and retrenchment. Ovid was the 
first to depart from that pure and correct taste 
which characterizes the Greek poets, and their 
earlier Latin imitators. His writings abound 
with those false thoughts and frigid conceits 
libraries by command of Augustus. 4. Rcmedia I which we find so frequently in the Latin poets ; 
Amoris, in one book. 5. Nux, the elegiac com- I and in this respect he must be regarded as un- 
plaintof a nut-trcc. respecting the ill treatment S antique. The best edition of Ovid's complete 



the surrounding country, and insulted the very 
walls of Tomi. In the most abject terms he 
supplicated Augustus to change his place of 
banishment, and besought his friends to use 
their influence in his behalf. In the midst of 
all his misfortunes, he sought some relief m the 
exercise of his poetical talents. Not only did 
he finish his Fasti in his exile, besides writing 
the Ibis, the Tristia, Ex Fonto, &c, but he like- 
wise acquired the language of the Getas, in 
which he composed some poems in honor of 
Augustus. These he publicly recited, and they 
were received with tumultuous applause by the 
Tomita;. With his new fellow-citizens, indeed, 
he had succeeded in rendering himself highly 
popular, insomuch that they honored him with 
a decree, declaring him exempt from all public 
burdens. He died at Tomi in the sixtieth year 
of his age, A.D. 18. The following is a list of 
Ovid's works, arranged, as far as possible, in 
chronological order: 1. Amorum Libri III., the 
earliest of the poet's works. According to the 
epigram prefixed, the work, as we now possess 
it, is a second edition, revised and abridged, 
the former one having consisted of five books. 

2. Epistolce Hcrotdum, twenty-one in number. 

3. Ars Amatoria, or Dc Arte Amandi, written 
about B.C. 2. At the time of Ovid's banish- 
ment this poem was ejected from the public 



it receives from wayfarers, and even from its 
own master. 6. Mctamorphoscon Libri XV. 
This, the greatest of Ovid's poems in bulk and 
pretensions, appears to have been written be- 
tween the age of forty and fifty. It consists 
of such legends or fables as involved a trans- 
formation, from the Creation to the time of 
Julius Caesar, the last being that emperor's 
change into a star. It is thus a sort of cyclic- 
poem, made up of distinct episodes, but con- 
nected into one narrative thread with much 
skill. 7. Fastorum Libri XII., of which only 
the first six are extant. This work was incom- 
plete at the time of Ovid's banishment. In- 
deed, he had perhaps done little more than col- 
lect the materials for it ; for that the fourth 
book was written in Pontus appears from verse 



works is by Burmann, Amsterdam, 1727, 4 vols, 
j 4to. [Of the separate works, the most useful 
' editions are, the Metamorphoses, by Gierig (cura 
j Jahn), Leipzig, 1821-23, and by Loers, Leipzig, 
! 1S43 ; the Fasti, by Merkel, Berlin, 1841, and 
| by Keightley, London, 1848 ; the Tristia, by 
i Loers, Treves, 1839 ; Ars Amatoria (including 
; Hcroides, &c), by Jahn, Leipzig, 1828 ; the Hc- 
\ roides, by Loers, Cologne, 1829.] 
i [Oxatiikes ('Otjadprjc). 1. Youngest son of 
! Darius II. by Parysatis, brother of Artaxerxes 
', Mnemon, was treated with kindness by his 
I brother, and even admitted to unusual honors. 
— 2. Brother of Darius Codomannus, was dis- 
i tinguished for his bravery, and took a conspic- 
| uous part in the battle of Issus, B.C. 333. He 
! accompanied Darius in his flight, but was taken 



eighty-eighth. The Fasti is a sort of poetical j prisoner by Alexander, who treated him with 



Roman calendar, with its appropriate festivals 
and mythology, and the substance was probably 
taken in a great measure from the old Roman 



kindness, and gave him an honorable post about 
his own person.] 

Oxia Palus, is first mentioned distinctly by 



annalists. The work shows a good deal of i Ammianus Marcellinus as the name of the Sea 



learning, but it has been observed that Ovid 
makes frequent mistakes in his astronomy, from 
not understanding the books from which he took 
it. 8. Tristium Libri V., elegies written during 
the first four years of Ovid's banishment. They 
are chiefly made up of descriptions of his afflict- 
ed condition, and petitions for mercy. The 
tenth elegy of the fourth book is valuable, as 
containing many particulars of Ovid's life. 9. 



of Aral, which the ancients in general did not 
distinguish from the Caspian. When Ptolemy, 
however, speaks of the Oxiana Palus (rj 'O^a- 
avi] ?J[zv7]) as a small lake in the steppes of Sog- 
diana, he is perhaps following some vague ac- 
count of the separate existence of the Sea of 
Aral, and the same remark may be applied to 
Pliny's account that the source (instead of the 
termination) of the River Oxus was in a lake of 



Epistolarxim ex Ponto Libri IV., are also in the j the same name, 
elegiac metre, and much the same in substance I [OxLe ('Otjtiat, sc. vrjaoC), i. e., Insula, the 
as the Tristia, to which they were subsequent, j -&oat of Homer ; a group of islands at the mouth 
It must be confessed that age and misfortune j of the Achelous, belonging to the Echinadks 
seem to have damped Ovid's genius both in I Insula.] 

587 



OXIANI. 



PACHYMERES, GEORGIUS. 



Oxiani ('Qtjiavoi, Oi'Sttavoi), a people of Sog- 
diana, on the north of the Oxus. 

Oxii Montes (rd "£2fe£a, or Qitjeia, opn : now 
probably Ak-tagh), a range of mountains be- 
tween the Rivers Oxus and Jaxartes ; the north- 
ern boundary of Sogdiana toward Scythia. 

Oxus or Oaxus ('Ofof, "ftfof : now Jihoun or 
Amou), a great river of Central Asia, rose, ac- 
cording to some of the ancient geographers, on 
the northern side of the Paropamisus Mountains 
(now Hindoo- Koosk), and, according to others, in 
the Emodi Mountains, and flowed northwest, 
forming the boundary between Sogdiana on the 
north, and Bactria and Margiana on the south, 
and then, skirting the north of Hyrcania, it fell 
into the Caspian. The Jihoun now flows into the 
southwestern corner of the Sea of Aral ; but 
there are still distinct traces of a channel ex- 
tending in a southwestern direction from the 
Sea of Aral to the Caspian, by which at least a 
portion, and probably the whole, of the waters 
of the Oxus found their way into the Caspian ; 
and very probably the Sea of Aral itself was 
connected with the Caspian by this channel. 
The ancient geographers mention, as important 
Tributaries of the Oxus, the Ochcs, the Mar- 
gus, and the Bactrus, which are now inter- 
cepted by the sands of the Desert. The Oxus 
is a broad and rapid river, navigable through a 
considerable portion of its course. It formed, 
in ancient times, a channel of commercial in- 
tercourse between India and "Western Asia, 
goods being brought down it to the Caspian, 
and thence up the Cyrus and across Armenia 
into Asia Minor. It occupies also an important 
place in history, having been in nearly all ages 
the extreme boundary between the great mon- 
archies of Southwestern Asia and the hordes 
•which wander over the central steppes. Cyrus 
and Alexander both crossed it ; but the former 
effected no permanent conquests on its north- 
ern side ; and the conquests of the latter in 
Sogdiana, though for a time preserved under 
the Bactrian kings, were always regarded as 
lying beyond the limits of the civilized world, 
and were lost at the fall of the Bactrian king- 
dom. Herodotus does not mention the Oxus 
by name, but it is supposed to be the river 
which he calls Araxes. 

[Oxyartes ('Oftdpr?/f), or Oxartes ('Ofdp- 
tt]c), a Bactrian, father of Roxana, the wife of 
Alexander the Great. He was one of the chiefs 
who accompanied Bessus into Sogdiana. After 
the death of Bessus, he deposited his wife and 
daughters for safety in a rock fortress in Sog- 
diana, which was deemed impregnable, but 
which soon fell into the hands of Alexander. 
After the espousal of Alexander to Roxana, 
Oxyartes made his submission, and was treated 
with distinction by the conqueror, and was ap- 
pointed satrap of the province of Paropamisus, 
or India south of the Caucasus, which he con- 
tinued to hold after the death of Alexander, and 
probably to the period of his own death some 
years subsequently.] 

Oxyeii, a Ligurian people on the coast of 
Gallia Xarbonensis, west of the Alps, and be- 
tween the Flumen Argenteum (now Argens) 
and Antipolis (now Antibcs). They were neigh- 
bors of the Salluvii and Deciates. " 

Oxydbacje ('Osvdoduai). a warlike people of 
588 



India intra Gangem, in the Punjab, between the 
Rivers Hydaspes (now Jhelum) and Acesines 
(now Chenab), in whose capital Alexander was 
wounded. They called themselves descend- 
ants of Bacchus (Dionysus). 

Oxylus COfvAof), the leader of the Heraclidae 
in their invasion of Peloponnesus, and subse- 
quently king of Elis. Vid. p. 354, b. 

[Oxyntas ('O^vvTag), son of Jugurtha, was 
led captive, together with his father, before the 
triumphal car of Marius, B.C. 104 ; but his life 
was spared, and he was placed in custody at 
Venusia, where he remained till B.C. 90, when 
he was adorned with the insignia of royalty, to 
gather around him the Numidians in the service 
of the Roman general L. Caesar. The device 
proved successful, but the subsequent fate of 
Oxyntas is unknown.] 

Oxvrhynchus ('Otjvpvyxoc : ruins at Behne- 
seh), a city of Middle Egypt, on the western 
bank of the canal which runs parallel to the 
Nile on its western side (now Bahr Yussuf). It 
was the capital of the Nomos Oxyrhynchites, 
and the chief seat of the worship of the fish 
called oxyrynchus. 

[Ozene COfyvr/, now Uzen or Ougein), in the 
time of Ptolemy the capital of the kingdom La- 
rica, in India intra Gangem, and the residence 
of a prince who bore the title Tiascanus. It 
carried on an extensive traffic, exported onyxes, 
myrrh, and fine cotton stuff, and supplied the 
great commercial city Barygaza with all the 
necessaries of life.] 

Ozogardana, a city of Mesopotamia, on the 
Euphrates, the people of which preserved a lofty 
throne or chair of stone, which they called Tra- 
jan's judgment-seat. 



Pacaris. Vid. Hypacyris. 

[Pacarius Decimus, procurator of Corsica in 
A.D. 69. wished to send assistance to Vitellius, 
but was murdered by the inhabitants.] 

Pacatiana. Vid. Pheygia. 

Paccius or Paccids Antiochus, a physician 
about the beginning of the Christian era, who 
was a pupil of Philonides of Catana, and lived 
probably at Rome. He made a large fortune by 
the sale of a certain medicine of his own in ven- 
tion, the composition of which he kept a pro- 
found secret. At his death he left his prescrip- 
tion as a legacy to the Emperor Tiberius, who, 
in order to give it as wide a circulation as pos- 
sible, ordered a copy of it to be placed in all the 
public libraries. 

Paches (Udxm)y an Athenian general in the 
Peloponnesian war, took Mytilene and reduced 
Lesbos, B.C. 427. On his return to Athens he 
was brought to trial on some charge, and, per- 
ceiving his condemnation to be certain, drew 
his sword and stabbed himself in the presence 
of his judges. 

Pachymeres, GeorgIus, an important Byzan- 
tine writer, was born about A.D. 1242 at Xicaea, 
but spent the greater part of his life at Con- 
stantinople. He was a priest, and opposed the 
union of the Greek and Latin Churches. Pa- 
chymeres wrote several works, the most im- 
portant of which is a Byzantine History, contain- 
ing an account of the emperors Michael Palseo- 



PACHYNUS. 



PADUS. 



iogus and Andronicus Palseologus the elder, in 
thirteen books. The style is remarkably good 
and pure for the age. Edited by Possinus, 
Rome, 1666-1669, 2 vols, fol., and by Bekker, 
Bonn, 1835, 2 vols. 8vo. 

Pachynus or Pachvnum (now Capo Passaro), 
a promontory at the southeastern extremity ot 
Sicily, and one of the three promontories which 
aive to Sicily its triangular figure, the other two 
being Pelorum and Lilybaeum. By the side of 
Pachynus was a bay, which was used as a har- 
bor, and which is called by Cicero Portus Pa- 
:hyni (now Porto di Palo). 

[Pacianus, bishop of Barcelona, in Spain, 
nourished A.D. 370. He was renowned for his 
eloquence, and wrote several books, especially 
one against the Novatians. His works have 
been published by Tilius, Paris, 1538, and in the 
Biblioih. Patrum Maxima.] 

[Pacidh, two generals of the Pompeian party 
in Africa under Metellus Scipio, one of whom 
fell in the battle of Tegea, B.C. 46.] 

Pacilus, the name of a family of the patrician 
Furia gens, mentioned in the early history of 
the republic: [the most celebrated were, 1. C. 
Furius Pacilus Fcisus, consul B C. 441 with M\ 
Papirius Crassus, censor B.C. 435 with M. Ge- 
ganius Macerinus, and subsequently one of the 
consular tribunes in B.C. 426. — 2 C. Furius P., 
son of the preceding, consul B.C. 412 with Q. 
Fabius Vibulanus Ambustus — 3. C. Furius P., 
consul B.C. 251 with L. Caecilius Metellus in 
the first Punic war.] 

[Paconius, M. 1 . A Roman knight, violently 
dispossessed of his property by the tribune 
Clodius.— 2. M., a legatus of Silanus, procon- 
sul of Asia, was one of his accusers in A.D. 
22. Paconius was put to death by Tiberius on 
a charge of treason.] 

Pacorus (Ild/copof). 1. Son ofOrodes I., king 
of Parthia. His history is given under Arsaces, 
No. 14. — 2. King of Parthia. Vid. Arsaces, No. 
24. 

Pactolus (UaK-uAng : now Sarabat), a small 
but celebrated river of Lydia, rose on the north- 
ern side of Mount Tmolus, and flowed north 
past Sardis into the Hermus, which it joined 
thirty stadia below Sardis The golden sands 
of Pactolus have passed into a proverb. Lydia 
was long the California of the ancient world, its 
streams forming so many gold " washings ;" and 
hence the wealth of the Lydian kings, and the 
alleged origin of gold money in that country. 
But the supply of gold was only on the surface, 
and by the beginning of our era it was so far 
exhausted as not to repay the trouble of collect- 
ing it. 

Pactyas (UaKTvac), a Lydian, who, on the 
conquest of Sardis (B.C. 546), was charged by 
Cyrus with the collection of the revenue of the 
province. When Cyrus left Sardis on his re- 
turn to Ecbatana. Pactyas induced the Lydians 
ta revolt against Cyrus ; but when an army was 
sent against him, he first fled to Cyme, then to 
Mytilene, and eventually to Chios. He was sur- 
rendered by the Chians to the Persians. 

Pactye {UaKTVTj : now St. George), a town in 
the Thracian Chersonesus, on the Pmpontis. 
thirty-six stadia from Cardia, to which Alcibia- 
des retired when he was banished by the Athe- 
nians, B.C. 407. 



PactyIca (UaK7viK7/), the country ofthePac- 
tyes (U&KTvec), in the northwest of India, west 
of the Indus, and in the thirteenth satrapy of 
the Persian empire, is most probably the north- 
eastern part of Afghanistan, about Jellalabad. 

[Paculla, Annia or Mima, a Carnpanian 
woman, one of the chief agents in introducing 
the worship of Bacchus into Rome, B.C. 1S6 ] 

Pacuvius, M., one of the early Roman trage- 
dians, was born about B C. 220, at Brundisium, 
and is said to have been the son of the sister of 
Ennius. Pacuvius appears to have been brought 
up at Brundisium, but he afterward repaired to 
Rome. Here he devoted himself to painting 
and poetry, and obtained so much distinction in 
the former art, that a painting of his in the tem- 
ple of Hercules, in the forum boarium, was re- 
garded as only inferior to the celebrated paint- 
ing of Fabius Pictor. After living many years 
at Rome, for he was still there in his eightieth 
year, he returned to Brundisium on account of 
the failure of his health, and died in his native 
town, in the ninetieth year of his age, B.C 130. 
We have no further particulars of his life save 
that his talents gained him the friendship of 
Laelius, and that he lived on the most intimate 
terms with his younger rival Accius. Pacuvius 
was universally allowed by the ancient writers 
to have been one of the greatest of the Latin 
tragic poets. (Hor , Ep., ii., 1, 56.) He is es- 
pecially praised for the loftiness of his thoughts, 
the vigor of his language, and the extent of his 
knowledge. Hence we find the epithet doctus 
frequently applied to him. He was also a favor- 
ite with the people, with whom his verses con- 
tinued to be esteemed in the time of Julius Cae- 
sar. His tragedies were taken from the great 
Greek writers ; but he did not confine himself, 
like his predecessors, to a mere translation of 
the latter, but worked up his materials with 
more freedom and independent judgment. Some 
of the plays of Pacuvius were not based upon 
the Greek tragedies, but belonged to the class 
called Prcetextatce, in which the subjects were 
taken from Roman story. One of these was 
j entitled Paulus, which had as its hero L. vEmil- 
; ius Paulus, the conqueror of Perseus, king of 
! Macedonia. The fragments of Pacuvius are 
published by Bothe, Poet. Lat. Scemc. Fragm., 
Lips., 1834 

[Pad/ei (Ua^ntoi), a rude nomad tribe in 
Northwestern India (perhaps in the modern 
Mvltan or Ajrner), who not only ate raw flesh, 
hut also devoured the sick and old of their own 
people.] 

Padus (now Po), the chief river of Italy, whose 
name is said to have been of Celtic origin, and 

! to have been given it on account of the pine- 
trees (in Celtic padi) which grew on its banks. 

j In the Ligurian language it was called Bodcncus 
or Bodincus. Almost all later writers identified 
the Padus with the fabulous Eridanus, from 
which amber was obtained, and hence the Roman 

! poets frequently give the name of Eridanus to 
the Padus. The reason of this identification 
appears to have been, that the Phoenician ves- 
sels received at the mouths of the Padus the 
amber wlach had been transported by land from 
the coasts of the Baltic to those of the Adriatic. 
The Padus rises from two springs on the east- 
ern side of Mount Vesulus (now Monte Vzso) in 



PADUSA. 

the Alps, and flows w ith a general easterly di- ; 
rection through the great plain of Cisalpine Gaul, j 
which it divides into two parts, Gallia Cispa- j 
dana and Gallia Transpadana. It receives nu- I 
merous affluents, which drain the whole of this j 
vast plain, descending from the Alps on the 
north and the Apennines on the south. These I 
affluents, increased in the summer by the melt- [ 
ing of the snow on the mountains, frequently 
bring down such a large body of water as to 
cause the Padus to overflow its banks. The 
whole course of the river, including its wind- 
ings, is about four hundred and fifty miles. 
About twenty miles from the sea the river di- 
vides itself into two main branches, of which 
the northern one was called Padoa (now Maestra, 
Po Grande, or Po delle Fornaci), and the south- 
ern one Olana (now .Po d'Ariano) ; and each of 
these now falls into the Adriatic by several 
mouths. The ancient writers enumerate seven 
of these mouths, some of which were canals. 
They lay between Ravenna and Altinum, and 
bore the following names, according to Pliny, 
beginning with the southern and ending with 
the northern: 1. Padusa, also called Augusta 
Fossa, was a canal dug by Augustus, which con- { 
nected Ravenna with the Po. 2. Vatrenus, also 
called Eridanum Ostium or Spineticum Ostium j 
{now Po di Primaro), from the town of Spina at 
its mouth. 3. Ostium Caprasiae (now Porto In- 
terito di bclV Ochio). 4. Ostium Sagis (now Porto 
di Magnavacca). 5. Olane or Volane, the south- 
ern main branch of the river, mentioned above. 
6. Padoa, the northern main branch, subdivided 
into several small branches called Ostia Car- 
bonaria. 7. Fossae Philistinae, connecting the 
river, by means of the Tartarus, with the Athesis. 
Padusa. Vid. Padus. 

P^ean (Raiav, liairjtjv or Tlaiuv), that is, " the 
healing," is, according to Homer, the designa- 
tion of the physician of the Olympian gods, who 
heals, for example, the wounded Mars (Ares) 
and Pluto (Hades). After the time of Homer 
and Hesiod, the word Paan became a surname 
of iEsculapius, the god who had the power of 
healing. The name was, however, used also 
in the more general sense of deliverer from any 
evil or calamity, and was thus applied to Apollo 
and Thanatos, or Death, who are conceived as 
delivering men from the pains and sorrows of 
life. With regard to Apollo and Thanatos, how- 
ever, the name may at the same time contain an 
allusion to nateiv, to strike, since both are also 
regarded as destroyers. From Apollo himself 
the name Paean was transferred to the song 
dedicated to him, that is, to hymns chanted to 
Apollo for the purpose of averting an evil, and 
to warlike songs, which were sung before or 
during a battle. 

P^ania (Ylaiavia : Tlaiavuvg), a dermis in 
Attica, on the eastern slope of Mount Hymet- 
tus, belonging to the tribe Pandionis. It was 
the demus of the orator Demosthenes. 

[P^eanius (UaidvLoc), the author of a trans- 
lation of the history of Eutropius into Greek, 
whose age is uncertain, but who seems to have 
lived not long after Eutropius himself. The 
version is printed in Havercamp's and Verheyk's 
editions of Eutropius.] 

.Pjemani, a people of German origin in Gallia 
Belgica. 

590 



P.ERISADES. 

/ L ^ ^ 

Phones (Halovec), a powerful Thracian peo 
pie, who in early times were spread over a great 
part of Macedonia and Thrace. According to 
a legend preserved by Herodotus, they were of 
Teucrian origin ; and it is not impossible that 
they were a branch of the great Phrygian peo- 
ple, a portion of which seems to have settled in 
Europe. In Homer the Paeonians appear as 
allies of the Trojans, and are represented as 
having come from the River Axius. In histor- 
ical times they inhabited the whole of the north 
of Macedonia, from the frontiers of Illyria t& 
some little distance east of the River Strymon. 
Their country was called P^eonia (Tlaiovia). 
The Paeonians were divided into several tribes, 
independent of each other, and governed by 
their own chiefs, though at a later period they 
appear to have owned the authority of one king. 
The Paeonian tribes on the lower course of the 
Strymon were subdued by the Persians, B.C. 
513, and many of them were transplanted to- 
Phrygia ; but the tribes in the north of the 
country maintained their independence. They 
were long troublesome neighbors to the Mace- 
donian monarchs, whose territories they fre- 
quently invaded and plundered ; but they were 
eventually subdued by Philip, the father of Alex- 
ander the Great, who allowed them nevertheless 
to retain their own monarchs. They continued 
to be governed by their own kings till a much 
later period, and these kings were often virtu- 
ally independent of the Macedonian monarchy. 
Thus we read of their king Audoleon, whose 
daughter Pyrrhus married. After the conquest 
of Macedonia by the Romans, 168, the part of 
Paeonia east, of the Axius formed the second, 
and the part of Paeonia west of the Axius form 
ed the third of the four districts into which Ma 
cedonia was divided by the Romans. 

[PiEONiA (Tlaiovia). Vid. Phones.] 

[P^eon (Tlaiuv). Vid. P.ean ] 

P^eonius (Uauovtoc). 1. Of Ephesus. an arch- 
itect, probably lived between B.C. 420 and 380. 
In conjunction with Demetrius, he finally com- 
pleted the great temple of Diana (Artemis) at 
Ephesus, which Chersiphron had begun ; and, 
with Daphnis the Milesian, he began to build at 
Miletus a temple of Apollo, of the Ionic order. 
The latter was the famous Didymceum, or tem- 
ple of Apollo Didymus, the ruins of which are 
still to be seen near Miletus. The former tem- 
ple, in which the Branchidee had an oracle of 
Apollo, was burned at the capture of Miletus 
by the army of Darius, 498. The new temple, 
which was on a scale only inferior to that of 
Diana (Artemis), was never finished. — 2. Of 
Mende, in Thrace, a statuary and sculptor, flour- 
ished about 435. 

Tjeoplje (Uaion/Mi), a Paeonian people on the 
lower course of the Strymon and the Angites, 
who were subdued by the Persians, and trans- 
planted to Phrygia by order of Darius, B.C. 513. 
They returned to their native country with the 
help of Aristagoras, 500 ; and we find them set- 
tled north of Mount Pangaeus in the expedition 
of Xerxes, 480. 

P^erisades or Parisades (Ilaipioddne orTlcpi- 
aadris), the name of two kings of Bosporus. 1. 
Son of Leucon, succeeded his brother Spartacus 
B.C. 349, and reigned thirty-eight years. He 
continued the same friendly relations with the 



PJ3STANUS SINUS. 

Athenians which were begun by his father Leu- 
con.— 2. The last monarch of the first dynasty 
that ruled in Bosporus. The pressure of the 
Scythian tribes induced Paerisades to cede his 
sovereignty to Mithradates the Great. The date 
of this event can not be placed earlier than 112, 
nor later than 88. 

P^estanus Sinus. Vid. Pzestum. 

P^stum (Pacstanus), called PosidonIa (ELo- 
! attduvia : UoasiduviaTvg) originally, was a city 
in Lucania, situated between four and five miles 
southeast of the mouth of the Silarus, and near 
the bay which derived its name from the town 
{Uoa£id(JvidT?)g nu?-og, Paestanus Sinus: now 
Gulf of Salerno). Its origin is uncertain, but 
it was probably in existence before it was col- 
onized by the Sybarites about B.C. 524. It 
soon became a powerful and flourishing city ; 
but, after its capture by the Lucanians (between 
438 and 424), it gradually lost the characteris- 
tics of a Greek city, and its inhabitants at length 
ceased to speak the Greek language. Its an- 
cient name of Posidonia was probably changed 
into that of Paestum at this time. Under the 
supremacy of the Romans, who founded a Latin 
colony at Paestum about B.C. 274, the town 
gradually sank in importance ; and in the time 
of Augustus it is only mentioned on account of 
the beautiful roses grown in the neighborhood. 
The ruins of Paestum are striking and magnifi- 
cent. They consist of the remains of walls, 
of an amphitheatre, of two fine temples, and of 
another building. The two temples are in the 
1 Doric style, and are some of the most remark- 
able ruins of antiquity. 

P^esus (Tlaicog), a town in the Troad, men- 
tioned by Homer, but destroyed before the time 
of Strabo, its population having been transplant- 
ed to Lampsacus. Its site was on a river of 
the same name (now Beiram-Dcrc), between 
Lampsacus and Parium. 

P^etinus, the name of a family of the Fulvia 
gens, which was eventually superseded by the 
name of Nobilior. Vid. Nobilioe. 

P^tus, a cognomen in many Roman gentes, 
signified a person who had a slight cast in the 
eye. 

Paetus, ^Elius. 1. P., probably the son of 
Q. iElius Paetus, a pontifex, who fell in the bat- 
tle of Cannae. He was plebeian aedile B.C. 204, 
praetor 203, magister equitum 202, and consul 
201. In his consulship he fought a battle with 
the Boii, and made a treaty with the Ingauni 
Ligures. In 199 he was censor with P. Scipio 
Africanus. He afterward became an augur, 
and died 174, during a pestilence at Rome. He 
is mentioned as one of the Roman jurists. — 2. 
Sex., brother of the last, curule aedile 200, 
consul 198, and censor 193 with Cn. Cethegus. 
He was a jurist of eminence, and a prudent 
man, whence he got the cognomen Catus. He 
is described in a line of Ennius as 11 Egregie 
cordatus homo Catus ^Elius Sextus." He is 
enumerated among the old jurists who collect- 
ed or arranged the matter of law, which he did 
in a work entitled Tripartita or Jus JElianum. 
This was a work on the Twelve Tables, which 
contained the original text, an interpretation, 
and the Legis actio subjoined. It was probably 
the first commentary written on the Twelve 
Tables.— 3. Q.,son of No. 1, was elected augur 



PAGUS. 

174 in place of his father, and was consul 167, 
when he laid waste the territory of the Ligu- 
rians. 

Paetus, P. Auteonios, was elected consul for 
B.C. 65 with P. Cornelius Sulla j but he and 
Sulla were accused of bribery by L. Aurelius 
Cotta and L. Manlius Torquatus, and condemn- 
ed. Their election was accordingly declared 
void, and their accusers were chosen consuls 
in their stead. Enraged at his disappointment, 
Paetus conspired with Catiline to murder the 
consuls Cotta and Torquatus ; and this design 
is said to have been frustrated solely by the 
impatience of Catiline, who gave the signal pre- 
maturely before the whole of the conspirators 
had assembled. Vid. Catilina. Paetus after- 
ward took an active part in the Catilinarian con- 
spiracy, which broke out in Cicero's consulship, 
63. After the suppression of the conspiracy 
Paetus was brought to trial for the share he had 
had in it ; he was condemned, and went into 
exile to Epirus, where he w r as living when Cic- 
ero himself ^vent into banishment in 58. Cicero 
was then much alarmed lest Partus should make 
an attempt upon his life. 

P^tus, C. QassENNius, sometimes called C.-e- 
sonius, consul A.D. 61, was sent by Nero in 63 
to the assistance of Domitius Corbulo in Ar- 
menia. He was defeated by Vologeses, king 
of Parthia, and purchased peace of the Parthi- 
ans on the most disgraceful terms. After the 
accession of Vespasian he was appointed gov- 
ernor of Syria, and deprived Antiochus IV.,. 
king of Cornmagene, of his kingdom. 

Paetus Thrasea. Vid. Thrasea. 

Pagm or Peg^e {Rayai, Att. Uriyat : Uayalor : 
now Psatho), a town in Megaris, a colony from 
Megara, was situated at the eastern extremity 
of the Alcyonian Sea, and was the most im- 
portant town in the country after Megara. It 
possessed a good harbor. 

Pagas^e, called by the Romans PXgasa, -m 
(Hayaaat : now Volo), a town of Thessaly, on 
the coast of Magnesia, and on the bay called 
after it Sinus Pagas^us or Pagasicus (Haya- 
cnriKog Ko/.izog : now Gulf of Volo). It was the 
port of Iolcos, and afterward of Pherse, and is 
celebrated in mythology as the place where Ja- 
son built the ship Argo. Hence some of the an- 
cients derived its name from Tcr/yvvfii ; but others 
connected the name with the fountains (jr^yai) 
in the neighborhood. The adjective Pagasaus 
is applied to Jason on account of his building 
the ship Argo, and to Apollo because he had a 
sanctuary at Pagasse. The adjective is also 
used in the general sense of Thessalian : thus 
Alcestis, the wife of Admetus, is called by Ovid 
Pagascea conjuz. 

[Pagasus, a Trojan warrior, companion of 
-.Eneas, slain by Camilla in Italy.] 

Pagrje {Tldypai: now Pagras, Bagras, Bar- 
gas), a city of Syria, on the eastern side of 
Mount Amanus, at the foot of the pass called 
by Ptolemy the Syrian Gates, on the road be- 
tween Antioch and Alexandrea : the scene of 
the battle between Alexander Balas and Deme- 
trius Nicator, B.C. 145. 

Pagus (Udyog), a remarkable conical hill, from 
five hundred to six hundred feet high, a little 
north of Smyrna in Ionia. It was crowned with- 
a shrine of Nemesis, and had a celebrated spring. 

591 



PALJSMON. 



PAL.ESTINA. 



Paljemon (Tla7.aLp.uv). 1. Son of Athamas 
sndlno, was originally called Melicertes. When 
his mother, who was driven mad by Juno (Hera), 
had thrown herself, with her boy, into the sea. 
both were changed into marine divinities, Ino 
becoming Leucothea, and Melicertes Palcemon. 
For details, vid. Athamas. According to some. 
Melicertes, after his apotheosis, was called Glau- 
cus, whereas, according to another version, 
Glaucus is said to have leaped into the sea from 
his love of Melicertes. The body ofMelicertes, 
according to the common tradition, was washed 
by the waves, or carried by dolphins into the 
port Schcenus on the Corinthian isthmus, or to 
that spot on the coast where the altar of Palae- 
mon subsequently stood. There the body was 
found by his uncle Sisyphus, who ordered it to 
be carried to Corinth, and on the command of 
the Nereides he instituted the Isthmian games 
and sacrifices of black bulls in honor of the dei- 
fied Palasmon. In the island of Tenedos it is 
said that children were sacrificed to him, and 
the whole worship seems to have had something 
gloomy about it. The Romans identified Palae- 
mon with their own god Portunus or Portum- 
nus. Vid. Portcnus. — 2. Q. Remmics Pal^:- 
mon', a grammarian in the reigns of Tiberius, 
Caligula, and Claudius. He was a native of 
Vicentia (now Vicenza), in the north of Italy, 
and was originally a slave ; but having been 
manumitted, he opened a school at Rome, where 
he became the most celebrated grammarian of 
his time, though his moral character was in- 
famous. He is twice mentioned by Juvenal 
(vi., 451 ; vii., 251). He was the master of 
Quintilian. 

Pal^eopolis. Vid. Neapolis. 

[Pal^epaphus (lla/.ainaoog). Vid. Paphus.] 

[PaLjEph aeus (near the modern Kranovo or 
Ondoklari), a place in the Thessalian district 
Pelasgiotis, on the eastern declivity of Mount 
Chalcodonius] 

Pal^phatcs (Tlalaiqaroq). I. Of Athens, a 
mythical epic poet of the ante-Homeric period. 
The time at which he lived is uncertain, but he 
appears to have been usually placed after Phe- 
monoe {vid. Phemonoe), though some writers as- 
signed him even an earlier date. — 2. Of Paros 
or Priene, lived in the time of Artaxerxes. 
Suidas attributes to him the work " On Incred- 
ible Tales," spoken of below.— 3. Of Abydus, an 
historian, lived in the time of Alexander the 
Great, and is stated to have been loved by the 
philosopher Aristotle. — 4. An Egyptian or Athe- 
nian, and a grammarian. His most celebrated 
work was entitled Troica (Tpuina), which is 
frequently referred to by the ancient gramma- 
rians. There is extant a small work in fifty- 
one sections, entitled UaXai&aToc; Trepl a-toruv, 
or " Of Incredible Tales," giving a brief ac- 
count of some of the most celebrated Greek 
legends. It is an abstract of a much larger 
work, which is lost. It was to the original 
work to which Virgil refers ( Ciris, 88) : " Docta 
Palaephatia testatur voce papyrus." It is doubt- 
ful who was the author of this work ; but as he 
adopts the rationalistic interpretation of the 
myths, he must be looked upon as a disciple 
of Euemerus (vid. Evemerus). and may thus 
have been an Alexandrine Greek, and the 
same person as No. 4. The best edition is by 



Westermann, in the Myihographi Grctci, Bruns- 
wick, 1843. 

Pal^rcs (Tla?.aip6c : TLalaipevc), a town on. 
the coast of Acarnania, near Leucas. 

Pal^este (now Palasa), a town of Epirus, on 
the coast of Chaonia, and a little south of the 
Acroceraunian Mountains : here Caesar landed, 
his forces when he crossed over to Greece to 
carry on the war against Pompey. 

PaljEstina (Ha?.ai.oTiv7], i] ILa/MicTivn "Lvpiv : 
Ua?iaiaTLv6c, Palasstinus, and rarely Palasstin- 
ensis : now Palestine, or the Holy Land), is the 
Greek and Roman form of the Hebrew word 
which was used to denote the country of the 
Philistines, and which was extended to the 
whole country. In the Scriptures it is called 
Canaan, from Canaan, the son of Ham, whose 
descendants were its first inhabitants ; the Land 
of Israel, the Land of Promise, the Land op 
Jehovah, and the Holy Land. The Romans 
usually called it Judaea, extending to the whole 
country the name of its southern part. It was 
regarded by the Greeks and Romans as a part 
of Syria. Its extent is pretty well defined by 
natural boundaries, namely, the Mediterranean 
on the west ; the mountains of Lebanon on the 
north ; the Jordan and its lakes on the east, in 
the original extent of the country as defined in 
the Old Testament, but in the wider and usual 
extent of the country, the Arabian Desert was 
its boundary on the east ; and on the south and 
southwest, the deserts which stretch north of 
the head of the Red Sea as far as the Dead Sea 
and the Mediterranean : here it was separated 
from Egypt by the small stream called in Scrip- 
ture the River of Egypt (probably the brook El- 
Arish), which fell into the Mediterranean at 
Rhinocolura (now El-Arish), the frontier town 
of Egypt. The southern boundary of the ter- 
ritory east of Jordan was the River Arnon (now 
Wady-cl-Mojib). The extent of country within 
these limits was about eleven thousand square 
miles. The political boundaries varied at dif- 
ferent periods. By the covenant of God with 
Abraham (Gen., xv , 18), the whole land was 
given to his descendants, front the river of Egypt 
to the Euphrates ; but the Israelites never had 
the faith or courage to take permanent posses- 
sion of this their lot ; the nearest approach 
made to the realization of the promise was in 
the reigns of David and Solomon, when the con- 
quests of the former embraced a large part of 
Syria, and the latter built Tadmor (afterward 
Palmyra) in the Syrian Desert ; and, for a time, 
the Euphrates seems to have been the border 
of the kingdom on the northeast (vid. 2 Sam., 
viii., 3; 1 Chron., xviii., 3). On the west, 
again, the Israelites never had full possession 
of the Mediterranean coast, a strip of which, 
north of Mount Carmel, was always retained 
by the Phoenicians (vid. Phobnice) ; and another 
portion in the southwest was held by the Philis- 
tines, who were independent, except during 
brief intervals. On the south and east, again, 
portions of the land were frequently subjugated 
by the neighboring people of Amalek, Edom, 
Midian. Moab, Amnion, &c. On the north, ex- 
cept during the reigns of David and Solomon, 
Palestine ceased at the southern entrance of 
the valley of Ccelesyria, and at Mount Hermon in 
Antilibanus. In the physical formation of Pal- 



PALJESTINA. 



PAL.ESTINA. 



estine, the most remarkable feature u the de- 
pression which is formed by the valley of the 
Jordan and its lakes (vid. Jordanes), between 
which and the Mediterranean the country is in- 
tersected by mountains, chiefly connected with 
the Lebanon Bysiem, and running north and 
south. Between these ranges, and between 
i the central range and the western coast, are 
some comparatively extensive plains, such as 
i those of Esdraclon and Sharon, and several 
smaller vallevs ; in the south of the country 
the mountains gradually subside into the rocky 
! deserts of Arabia Petraea. The valleys and 
! slopes of the hills arc extremely fertile, and 
were much more so in ancient times, when the 
soil on the mountain sides was preserved by 
terraces, which arc now destroyed through neg- 
lect or wantonness. This division of the coun- 
try has only a few small rivers (besides mount- 
ain streams), which fall into the Mediterranean : 
the chief of them are the Belus, just south of 
Ptolemais (now Acre), the Kishon, flowing from 
- Mount Tabor, through the plain of Esdraelon, 
and falling into the Bay of Acre north of Mount 
Carmel, the Chorseus, north of Caesarea, the 
Kanah, west of Sebaste (Samaria), the Jarkon, 
j north of Joppa, the Eshcol, near Askelon, and 
the Besor, near Gaza. On the east of the Jor- 
dan, the land rises toward the rocky desert of 
I the Hauran (the ancient Auranitis), and the hills 
bordering the Syrian Desert, its lower portion, 
i near the river, forming rich pastures, watered 
by the eastern tributaries of the Jordan, the 
chief of which are the Hieromax, the Jabbok, 
I and the Arnon, the last flowing into the Dead 
f Sea. The earliest inhabitants of Palestine were 
. the several tribes of Canaanites. It is unneces- 
sary to recount in detail those events with 
\ which we are familiar through the sacred his- 
tory : the divine call of Abraham from Mesopo- 
tamia to live as a stranger in the land which 
; God promised to his descendants, and the story 
of his, and his son's, and his grandson's resi- 
dence in it till Israel and his family removed 
to Egypt : their return and conquest of the land 
of Canaan and of the portion of territory east 
of the Jordan, and the partition of the whole 
among the twelve tribes : the contests with the 
surrounding nations, and the government by 
judges, till the establishment of the monarchy 
under Saul : the conquests of David, the splen- 
: did reign of Solomon, and the division of the 
kingdom under Rehohoam into the kingdom of 
Israel, including two thirds of the country west 
I of Jordan, and all east of it, and the kingdom 
of Judah, including the southern portion which 
was left, between the Mediterranean on the 
I west, and the Dead Sea and a small extent of 
j Jordan on the east : and the histories of these 
[ two monarchies down to their overthrow by 
the Assyrians and Babylonians respectively. 
The former of ihese conquests made an import- 
ant change in the population of Palestine by 
j the removal of the greater part of the inhabit- 
ants of the kingdom of Israel, and the settle- 
ment in their place of heathen nations from 
other parts of the Assyrian empire, thus re- 
stricting the country occupied by the genuine 
Israelites within the limits of the kingdom of 
Judah. Hence the names of Judaea and Jews 
applied to the country and the people in their 
38 



subsequent history. Between these last and 
the mixed people of North Palestine a deadly 
enmity arose^ the natural dislike of the pure 
race of Israel to heathen foreigners being ag- 
gravated by the wrongs they suffered from them, 
especially at their return from the Babylonish 
captivity, and still more by the act of religious 
usurpation of which the remnant of the North- 
ern Israelites were guilty at a later period, in 
setting up a temple for themselves on Mount 
Gerizim. Vid. Samaria. The date assigned to 
the Assyrian conquest of the kingdom of Israel 
is B.C. 721. The remainder of the history of 
the kingdom of Judah (passing over its religious 
history, which is most important during this 
period) consists of alternate contests with, and 
submissions to, the kings of Assyria, Egypt, 
and Babylon, till the conquest, of the country 
I by Nebuchadnezzar and the removal of a part 
j of its people to Babylonia, in 598, and the de- 
struction of Jerusalem and the temple, after 
the rebellion of Zedekiah, in 588, when a still 
larger portion of the people were carried cap- 
tive to Babylon, while others escaped to Egypt 
In 584, during the siege of Tyre, Nebuchadnez- 
zar sent a further portion of the Jews into cap- 
tivity ; but there was still a considerable rem- 
nant left in the land, and (what is very import- 
ant) foreign settlers were not introduced ; so 
that, when Cyrus, after overthrowing the Baby- 
lonian empire, issued his edict for the return of 
the Jews to their own land (B.C. 536), there 
was no great obstacle to their quiet settlement 
in it. They experienced some trouble from the 
jealousy and attacks of the Samaritans,- and 
the changeful dispositions of the Persian court ; 
but at length, by the efforts of Zerubbabel and 
Joshua, and the preaching of Hagg&' and Zech- 
ariah, the new temple was finished and dedi- 
cated in 516, and Jerusalem was rebuilt. Fresh 
bands of Jewish exiles returned under Ezra, 
458, and Nehemiah, 445 ; and, between this time 
and that of the Macedonian conquest, Judaea 
was repeopled by the Jews, and through the 
tolerance of the Persian kings, it was governed 
virtually by the high-priests. In B.C. 332, after 
Alexander had taken Tyre and Gaza, he visited 
Jerusalem, and received the quiet submission 
of the Jews, paying the mpst marked respect 
to their religion. Under the successors of Alex- 
ander, Palestine belonged alternately to Egypt 
and Syria, the contest between whose kings for 
its possession are too complicated to recount 
here ; but its internal government seems to 
have been pretty much in the hands of the high- 
priests, until the tyranny of Antiochus Ef::ph- 
anes provoked the successful revolt under the 
Maccabees or Asmonaeans, whose history is 
given under Maccab^ei, and the history of the 
Idumaean dynasty, who succeeded them, is giv- 
en under Antipater, Herodes, and Arohelaus. 
The later Asmonaean princes had regained the 
whole of Palestine, including the districts of 
Judaea, Samaria, and Galilee (besides Iduinaea), 
west of the Jordan, and the several districts of 
Peraea, Batanea, Gaulonitis, Ituraea, and Trach- 
onitis or Auranitis, east of it ; and this was the 
extent of Herod's kingdom. But, from B.C. 
63, when Pompey took Jerusalem, the country 
was really subject to the Romans. At the death 
of Herod, his kingdom was divided between his 

593 



PALAMEDES. 



PALINURUM. 



sons as tetrarchs, under the sanction of Au- 
gustus, Archelaus receiving Judaea, Samaria, 
and Idumaea, Herod Antipas Galilee and Peraea, j 
and Philip Batanaea, Gaulonitis, and Trachon- 
itis ; all standing to the Roman empire in a re- j 
lation of virtual subjection, which successive 
events converted into an integral union. First, 
A.D. 7, Archelaus was deposed by Augustus, j 
and Judaea was placed under a Roman procura- J 
tor : next, about 31, Philip died, and his gov- | 
eminent was united to the province of Syria, and 
was in 37 again conferred on Herod Agrippa I., 
with the title of king, and with the addition of 
Abilene, the district round Damascus. In 39, 
Herod iVntipas was banished to Gaul, and his 
tetrarchy was added to the kingdom of Herod 
Agrippa ; and two years later he received from 
Claudius the government of Judaea and Samaria, 
and thus Palestine was reunited under a nom- 
inal king. On his death in 44, Palestine again 
became a part of the Roman province of Syria 
under the name of Judaea, which was governed 
by a procurator. The Jews were, how r ever, 
most turbulent subjects of the Roman empire, 
and at last they broke out into a general rebel- 
lion, which, after a most sanguinary war, was 
crushed by Vespasian and Titus ; and the latter 
took and destroyed Jerusalem in A.D. 70. Un- 
der Constantine, Palestine was divided afresh 
into the three provinces of P. Prima in the 
centre, P. Secunda in the north, and P. Tertia, 
the south of Judaea, with Idumaea. 

Palamedes {Tla7.ajiT}6r]g). 1. Son of Nauplius 
and Clymene. He joined the Greeks in their 
expedition against Troy; but Agamemnon, Dio- 
medes, and Ulysses, envious of his fame, caused 
a captive Phrygian to write to Palamedes a let- 
ter in the name of Priam, and bribed a servant 
of Palamedes to conceal the letter under his i 
master's bed. They then accused Palamedes of 
treachery; upon searching his tent, they found 
the letter which they themselves had dictated, 
and thereupon they caused him to be stoned to 
death. When Palamedes was led to death, he 
exclaimed, " Truth, 1 lament thee, for thou hast 
died even before me." According to some tra- 
ditions, it was Ulysses alone who hated and 
persecuted Palamedes. The cause of this ha- 
tred is also stated differently. According to 
some, Ulysses hated him because he had been 
compelled by him to join the Greeks against 
Troy ; according to others, because he had been 
severely censured by Palamedes for returning 
with empty hands from a foraging excursion 
into Thrace. The manner in which Palamedes 
perished is likewise related differently. Some 
say that Ulysses and Diomedes induced him to 
descend into a well, where they pretended they 
had discovered a treasure, and when he was 
below they cast stones upon him, and killed 
him ; others state that he was drowned by them 
while fishing ; and others, that he was killed by- 
Paris with an arrow. The place where he was 
killed is either Colonae in Troas, or in Tenedos. 
or at Geraestus. The story of Palamedes, which 
is not mentioned by Homer, seems to have been 
first related in the Cypria, and was afterward 
developed by the tragic poets, especially by Eu- 
ripides, and lastly by the sophists, who liked to 
look upon Palamedes as their pattern. The 
tragic poets and sophists describe him as a sage 



among the Greeks, and as a poet ; and he is 
said to have invented light-houses, measures, 
scales, the discus, dice, the alphabet, and the 
art of regulating sentinels. — 2. A Greek gram- 
marian, was a contemporary of Athenaeus, who 
introduces him as one of the speakers in his 
work. 

Palatixus Moxs. Vid. Roma. 
Palatium. Vid. Roma. 

Pale {lia/.Tj : TlaAelc, Ion. Tla/Jeg, Att. HaAfi$, 
in Polyb. Ilalaielc : ruins near Lixuri), one of 
the four cities of Cephallenia, situated on a 
height opposite Zacynthus. 

Pales, a Roman divinity of flocks and shep- 
herds, is described by some as a male, and by 
others as a female divinity. Hence some mod- 
ern writers have inferred that Pales was a com- 
bination of both sexes ; but such a monstrosity 
is altogether foreign to the religion of the Ro- 
mans. Some of the rites performed at the fes- 
tival of Pales, which was celebrated on the 21st 
of April, the birth-day of the city of Rome, 
would seem to indicate that the divinity was a 
female ; but, besides the express statements to 
the contrary, there are also other reasons for 
believing that Pales was a male divinity. The 
name seems to be connected with Palatinus, the 
centre of all the earliest legends of Rome, and 
the god himself was with the Romans the em- 
bodiment of the same idea as Pan among the 
Greeks. Respecting the festival of the Palilia, 
vid. Diet, of Antiq., s. v. 

[Palfurius Sura, one of the delators under 
Domitian, was son of a man of consular rank. 
He was expelled from the senate by Vespasian, 
and then applied himself to the study of the 
Stoic philosophy, and became distinguished for 
his eloquence. He was restored to the senate 
by Domitian, and became one of the informers 
for that emperor.] 

Palicaxus, Lollius. Vid. Lollius. 

[PalIce (TLa?aKT}), a city of Sicily, founded by 
Ducetius, southwest of Leontini, and having in 
its vicinity the famous lakes and the temple of 
the deities called Palici. It was in ruins in the 
time of Diodorus Siculus. Vid. Palici.] 

Palici {HclIlkoL), were Sicilian gods, twin 
sons of Jupiter (Zeus) and the nymph Thalia, 
the daughter of Vulcan (Hephaestus). Some- 
times they are called sons of Vulcan (Hephaes- 
tus) by .'Etna, the daughter of Oceanus. Thalia, 
from fear of Juno (Hera), prayed to be swallowed 
up by the earth ; her prayer was granted ; but 
in due time she sent forth from the earth twin 
boys, who, according to the absurd etymology 
of the ancients, were called Ua?uKoU from to 
Ka?.Lv Ueadai. They were worshipped in the 
neighborhood of Mount iEtna, near Palice, and 
in the earliest times human sacrifices were of- 
fered to them. Their sanctuary was an asylum 
for runaway slaves, and near it there gushed 
forth from the earth two sulphureous fountains, 
called Deilloi, or brothers of the Palici, at which 
solemn oaths were taken. The oaths were writ- 
ten on tablets, and thrown into one of the fount- 
ains ; if the tablet swam on the water, the oath 
was considered to be true ; but if it sank down, 
the oath was regarded as a perjury, and was be- 
lieved to be punished instantaneously by blind- 
ness or death. 

Palixurum (now Cape Palinuro), a promontory 



PALIURUS. 

on the western coast of Lueania, which was said 
to have derived its name from Palinurus, the 
son of Iasus, and pilot of the ship ofiEneas, 
who fell into the sea, and was murdered on the 
coast by the natives. 

[Paliurus {UaMwpoc), a town of Africa on 
the borders ol Cyrenaica and Marmarica, on a 
river of the same name ] 

[Palla (UaUa) or Palte (now probably Porto 
Polio), a city on the south coast of Corsica, at the 
termination of the Roman road running along 
the eastern coast ] 

Pallacopas (UaM.aKOTrae), a canal in Baby- 
lonia, cut from the Euphrates, at a point eight 
hundred stadia (eighty geographical miles) south 
of Babylon, westward to the edge of the Arabian 
Desert, where it lost itself in marshes. 

Palladas (Ualhldac), the author of a large 
number of epigrams in the Greek Anthology, 
was a pagan and an Alexandrean grammarian. 
He lived at the beginning of the fifth century of 
the Christian era, for in one of his epigrams he 
speaks of Hypatia, the daughter of Theon, as 
still alive. Hypatia was murdered in A D. 415. 

Palladium (TlaXhuhov), properly any image 
of Pallas Athena (Minerva), but generally ap- 
plied to an ancient image of this goddess, which 
was kept hidden and secret, and was revered as 
a pledge of the safety of the town where it ex- 
isted. Among these ancient images of Pallas 
none is more celebrated than the Trojan Palla- 
dium, concerning which there was the following 
tradition : Minerva (Athena) was brought up by 
| Triton ; and when his daughter Pallas and Mi- 
nerva (Athena) were once wrestling together 
for the sake of exercise, Jupiter (Zeus) inter- 
fered in the struggle, and suddenly held the 
aegis before the face of Pallas. Pallas, while 
looking up to Jupiter (Zeus), was wounded by 
Minerva (Athena), and died. Minerva (Athena), 
in her sorrow, caused an image of the maiden 
to be made, round which she hung the aegis. 
When Electra had come as a suppliant to the 
Palladium, Jupiter (Zeus) hurled it down from 
heaven upon the earth, because it had been sul- 
lied by the hands of one who was no longer a 
pure maiden. The image fell upon the earth at 
Troy when Ilus was just beginning to build the 
city. Ilus erected a sanctuary to it. Accord- 
ing to some, the image was dedicated by Elec- 
tra, and according to others, it was given by 
Jupiter (Zeus) to Dardanus. The image itself 
is said to have been three cubits in height, with 
its legs close together, and holding in its right 
hand a spear, and in the left a spindle and a 
distaff. This Palladium remained at Troy until 
Ulysses and Diomedcs contrived to carry it 
; away, because the city could not be taken so 
long as it was in the possession of that sacred 
treasure. According to some accounts, Troy 
contained two Palladia, one of which was car- 
ried off by Ulysses and Diomedes, while the 
other was conveyed by JEneas to Italy, or the 
one taken by the Greeks was a mere imitation, 
while that which ^Eneas brought to Italy was 
the genuine image. But this two-fold Palladium 
was probably a mere invention, to account for 
its existence in more than one place. Several 
towns both in Greece and Italy claimed the 
honor of possessing the genuine Trojan Palla- 
dium, as, lor example, Argos and Athens, where 



PALLADIUS. 

I it was believed that Demophon took it from 
Diomedes on his return from Troy. Vid. De- 
mophon. This Palladium at Athens, however, 
was different from another image of Pallas 
there, which was also called Palladium, and 
stood on the acropolis. In Italy the cities of 
Rome, Lavinium, Luceria, and Siris likewise 
j pretended to possess the Trojan Palladium. 

Palla wins (TLaMdtiioc). i. Of Methone, a 
sophist or rhetorician, who lived in the reign of 
Constantine the Great.— 2. Bishop of Helenopo- 
lis, in Bithynia, to which he was raised A.D. 400. 
He was ordained by Chrysostom ; and on the 
banishment of the latter, Palladius was accused 
of holding the opinions of Origen, and, fearful 
of the violence of his enemies, he fled to Rome, 
405. Shortly afterward he ventured to return 
to the East, but was arrested and banished to 
the extremity of Upper Egypt. He w-as after- 
ward restored to his bishopric of Helenopolis, 
from which he w 7 as translated to that of Aspona 
or Aspuna in Galatia, perhaps about 419 or 420. 
Three works in Greek have come down to us 
under the name of Palladius, but there has been 
considerable dispute whether they were written 
by one individual or more : (1.) Historia Lausi- 
aca, ** the Lausiac History,' 1 '' so called from its 
being dedicated to Lausus, a chamberlain at the 
imperial court. This work contains internal 
proofs of having been written by the Bishop of 
Helenopolis. It gives biographical notices or 
characteristic anecdotes of a number of ascetics 
with whom Palladius was personally acquaint- 
ed, or concerning whom he received informa- 
tion from those who had known them person- 
ally. Edited by Meursius, Lugd. Bat., 1616. 
(2.) The Life of Chrysostom, was probably writ- 
ten by a different person from the Bishop of 
Helenopolis. Edited by Bigotius, Paris, 1680. 
(3.) De Gentibus India, et Bragmanibus (Brah- 
mans). The authorship of this work is uncer- 
tain. It appears that the writer himself had 
visited India. Edited by Camerarius in Liber 
Gnomologicus, 8vo, Lips., without date ; and by 
Bissseus, London, 1665. — 3. Surnamed latroso- 
phista, a Greek medical writer, of whose life 
nothing is known. He lived after Galen. We 
possess three works commonly attributed to 
him, namely, two books of commentaries on 
Hippocrates, and a short treatise on Fevers, all 
of which are taken chiefly from Galen. — 4. Pal- 
ladius Rutilius Taurus ^Emilianus, the author 
of a treatise De Re Rustica, in the form of a 
Farmer's Calendar, the various operations con- 
nected with agriculture and a rural life being 
arranged in regular order, according to the sea- 
sons in which they ought to be performed. It 
is comprised in fourteen books : the first is in- 
troductory ; the twelve following contain the 
duties of the twelve months in succession, com- 
mencing with January ; the last is a poem, in 
eighty-five elegiac couplets, upon the art of 
grafting {Dc Insitione). A considerable portion 
of the work is taken from Columella. The date 
of the author is uncertain, but it is most proba- 
ble that he lived in the middle of the fourth cen- 
tury of the Christian era. The work was very 
popular in the Middle Ages. Edited in the 
Scriptores Rei Rustica by Gesner, Lips., 1735 ; 
reprinted by Ernesti in 1773, and by Schneider, 
Lips., 1794. 



PALLANTIA. 



PALMYRA. 



P_* llantia (Pallantinus : now Palencia), the 
chief town of the Vaccaei in the north of His- 
pania Tarraconensis, and on a tributary of the 
Durius. 

PallantIas and Pallantis, patronymics giv- 
en to Aurora, the daughter of the giant Pallas. 

Pallantium (Ha/J.uvTiov : U.aA?MVTievc), an 
ancient town of Arcadia near Tegea, said to 
have been founded by Pallas, the son of Lycaon. 
Evander is said to have come from this place, 
and to have called the town, which he founded 
on the banks of the Tiber, Pallantium (afterward 
Palantium and Palatlum), after the Arcadian 
town. On the foundation of Megalopolis, most 
of the inhabitants of Pallantium settled in the 
new city ; and the town remained almost de- 
serted, till it was restored by Antoninus Pius, 
and exempted from taxes on account of its sup- 
posed connection with the imperial city. 

[Pallantics, epithet of Evander. Vii. Pal- 
las, No. 4] 

Pallas (YluA/.ac)- 1. One of the Titans, son 
of Crius and Eurybia, husband of Styx, and fa- 
ther of Zelus, Cratos, Bia, and Nice. — 2. A gi- 
ant, slain by Minerva (Athena) in the battle with 
the gods — 3. According to some traditions, the 
father of Minerva (Athena), who slew him when 
he attempted to violate her. — 4. Son of Lycaon, 
and grandfather of Evander, is said to have 
founded the town of Pallantium in Arcadia. 
Hence Evander is called by the poets Pallantius 
heros. — 5. Son of Evander, and an ally of.Ene- 
as, was slain by the Rutulian Turnus. — 6. Son 
of the Athenian king Pandion, and father of 
Clytus and Butes. His two sons were sent 
with Cephalus to implore assistance of/Eacus 
against Minos. Pallas was slain by Theseus. 
The celebrated family of the Pallantidae at 
Athens traced their origin from this Pallas. 

Pallas (n.aA/.dc), a surname of Athena (Mi- 
nerva). In Homer this name always appears 
united with that of Athena, as UaA/.ag 'Adqvy, 
or Uallac 'Adrjvaiij ; but in later writers we 
also find Pallas alone instead of Athena (Miner- 
va). Some ancient writers derive the name 
from iraKkeiVi to brandish, in reference to the 
goddess brandishing the spear or aegis ; others 
derive it from the giant Pallas, who was slain 
by Athena (Minerva). But it is more probable 
that Pallas is the same word as -d/J.a!:, i. e., a 
virgin or maiden. 

Pallas, a favorite freedman of the Emperor 
Claudius. In conjunction with another freed- 
man, Narcissus, he administered the affairs of 
the empire. After the death of Messalina, Pal- 
las persuaded the weak emperor to marry Agrip- 
pina ; and as Narcissus had been opposed to this 
marriage, he now lost his former power, and 
Pallas and Agrippina became the rulers of the 
Roman world. It was Pallas who persuaded 
Claudius to adopt the young Domitius (after- 
ward the Emperor Nero), the son of Agrippina ; 
and it was doubtless with the assistance of Pal- 
las that Agrippina poisoned her husband. Nero, 
soon after nis accession, became tired of his 
mother's control, and. as one step toward eman- 
cipating himself from her authority, he deprived 
Pallas of all his public offices, and dismissed 
h«B from the palace in 56. He was suffered to 
irve unmolested for some years, till at length 
his immense wealth excited the rapacity of 
596 



| Nero, who had him removed by poison in 63. 

I His enormous wealth, which was acquired dur- 
ing the reign of Claudius, had become proverb- 
ial, as we see from the line in Juvenal (i., 107), 

ego possideo plus Pallante el Licinio. The brother 
of Pallas was Antonius or Claudius Felix, who 
was appointed by Claudius procurator of Judeea. 

Vid. Felix, Antonius. 
Pallas Lacus. Vid. Triton. 
Pallene (TiallrivT}). 1. (Un/ihjvaloc, TlaX- 
/jvioc), the most westerly of the three penin- 
sulas running out from Chalcidice in Mace- 
donia. It is said to have been formerly called 
Phlegra ($?Jypa), and on the narrow isthmus 
which connected it with the main land stood 
the important town of Potidaea. — 2. (Ua/.Jvvev^ 
rarely lia'A/.jp aloe), a demus in Attica belong- 
ing to the tribe Antiochis, was situated on one 
of the slopes of Pentelicus, a few miles south- 
west of Marathon. It possessed a temple of 
Minerva (Athena), surnamed Pallenis (liaXlr}- 
vie) from the place ; and in its neighborhood the 
contest between Pisistratus and the party op- 
posed to him took place. 

Palma (now Palma), a Roman colony on the 

j southwest coast of the island Balearis Major 

j (now Majorca). 

1 [Palma, A. Cornelius, was consul in A.D. 
| 99, and a second time in 109. Between his first 
j and second consulships he was governor of 
Syria, and conquered the part of Arabia around 
Petra about A D. 105. He was put to death bj 
order of Hadrian on the latter's accession to the 
throne in 117.] 

Palmaria (now Palmaruola), a small unin- 
habited island off the coast of Latium and the 
Promontory Circeium. 

[Palmus, a Trojan warrior wounded by Me- 
zentius, who stripped him of his armor.] 

Palmyra (Raluvpa: Ua'/pvpr/vnc, Palmyre- 
nus ; in the Old Testament, Tadmor : ruins at 
Tadmor), a celebrated city of Syria, stood in an 
oasis of the great Syrian Desert, which from 
its position must have been in the earliest times 
a halting-place for the caravans between Syria 
and Mesopotamia. Here Solomon built a city, 
which was called in Hebrew Tadmor, that is, 
the city of palm-trees ; and of this name the 
Greek Iluluvpa is a translation It lies in 34° 
18' north latitude, and 38° 14' east longitude, 
and was reckoned two hundred and thirty-seven 
Roman miles from the coast of Syria, one hund- 
red and seventy-six northeast of Damascus, 
eighty east of Emesa, and one hundred and 
thirteen southeast of Apamea. With the ex- 
ception of a tradition that it was destroyed by 
Nebuchadnezzar, we hear nothing of it till the 
time of the government of the East by M An- 
tonius, who marched to surprise it, but the in- 
habitants retreated with their movable property 
beyond the Euphrates Under the early Ro- 
man emperors it was a free city and a great 
I commercial emporium. Its position on the bor- 
der between the Parthian and Roman dominions 
i gave it the command of the trade of both, but 
I also subjected it to the injuries of war. Under 
I Hadrian and the Antonines it was highly fa- 
vored and reached its greatest splendor. The 
history of its temporary elevation to the rank 
j of a capital in the third century is related un- 
| der Odenathus and Zenobia. On its capture 



PALMYRENE. 



PAMPHYLIA. 



by Aurelian in 270, it was plundered, and soon 
afterward an insurrection of its inhabitants led 
to its partial destruction. It was fortified by 
Justinian, but never recovered from its fall. In 
the Arabian conquest it was one of the first 
cities taken ; but it was still inhabited by a 
small population, chiefly of Jews, till it was 
taken and plundered by Timour (Tamerlane) in 
1400. It has long been entirely deserted, ex- 
cept when a horde of Bedouins pitch their tents 
among its splendid ruins. Those ruins, which 
form a most striking object in the midst of the 
Desert, are of the Roman period, and decidedly 
I inferior in the style of architecture, as well as 
i in grandeur of effect, to those of Baalbek (vid. 
Heliopolis), the sister deserted city of Syria. 
The finest remains are those of the temple of 
the Sun ; the most interesting are the square 
sepulchral towers of from three to five stories. 
The streets and the foundations of the houses 
are traceable to some extent ; and there are 
several inscriptions in Greek and in the native 
Palmyrene dialect, besides one in Hebrew and 
one or two in Latin. The surrounding district 
of Palmyrene contained the Syrian Desert from 
the eastern border of Ccelesyria to the Euphra- 
tes. 

[Palmyrene (Ylal/uvpTjvrf). Vid. Palmyra.] 
[Palmys (nu.7ifj.vc), a warrior from Ascania, 
who came to the aid of the Trojans against the 
Greeks] 

[Palus M.#:otis (NatojTit; ?ufzvr/). Vid. Mjeo- 
tis.] 

[PaLUDKS PoMPTINiE. Vid. PoMPTINMi PaLU- 
DES.] 

Pamisus (ITu/ifarf). 1. A southern tributary 
of the Peneus in Thessaly. — 2. (Now Pirnatza), 
the chief river of Messenia, rises in the eastern 
| part of the country, forty stadia east of Ithome, 
flows first southwest, and then south through 
the Messenian plain, and falls into the Messe- 
nian Gulf —3. A small river in Laconia, falls into 
the Messenian Gulf near Leuctra. It was at 
one time the ancient boundary between Laconia 
and Messenia. 

[Pammenes (Tlanfj.tvr l Q). 1. A Theban gen- 
eral of considerable celebrity, was connected 
withEpaminondas by political and friendly ties. 
When Philip was sent as a hostage to Thebes, 
he was placed under the care of Pammenes. 
He distinguished himself in the defence and 
support of Megalopolis, and defeated the forces 
of the Persian king Ochus. — 2. An Athenian 
rhetorician, a contemporary of Cicero, who calls 
him the most eloquent man in Greece. M. 
Brutus studied under him ] 

[Pammon (Tlupftuv), one of the sons of Priam 
and Hecuba.] 

Pamphia or Pamthium (Uatupta, TLdu<pcov), a 
i village of jEtolia, destroyed by the Macedonians. 
Pamphila <Jlau<pi}.7]), a female historian of 
considerable reputation, who lived in the reign 
of Nero. She is described by some writers as 
a native of Epidaurus, by others as an Egyp- 
tian. Her principal work, of which Photius has 
given some extracts, was a kind of Historical 
Miscellany (entitled ov/jijiktov icTopiKtov vnofivr r 
uutuv Tioyoi). It was not arranged according 
to subjects or according to any settled plan, but 
it was more like a common-place book, in which 
each piece of information was set down as it 



fell under the notice of the writer. Modern 
scholars are best acquainted with the name of 
Pamphila from a statement in her work, pre- 
served by A. Gellius (xv., 23), by which is as- 
certained the year of the birth of Hellanicus, 
Herodotus, and Thucydides respectively. 

Pamphilus (UdfxcpiAog ). 1. A disciple of Plato, 
who is only remembered by the circumstance 
that Epicurus, when a young man, heard him at 
Samos. Epicurus used to speak of him with 
great contempt, that he might not be thought to 
owe any thing to his instruction ; for it was the 
great boast of Epicurus that he was the sole 
author of his own philosophy. — 2. An Alexan- 
drean grammarian, of the school of Aristarchus, 
and the author of a lexicon, which is supposed 
by some scholars to have formed the foundation 
of the lexicon of Hesychius. He appears to 
have lived in the first century of our era. — 3. 
A philosopher or grammarian of Nicopolis, the 
author of a work on agriculture, of which there 
are considerable fragments in the Geoponica. — 
4. Presbyter of Caesarea, in Palestine, saint and 
martyr, and celebrated for his friendship with 
Eusebius, who, as a memorial of this intimacy, 
assumed the surname of Pawphilus. Vid. Eu- 
sebius. He suffered martyrdom A.D. 307. The 
life of Pamphilus seems to have been entirely- 
devoted to the cause of biblical literature. He 
was an ardent admirer and follower of Origen. 
He formed, at Caesarea, an important public li- 
brary, chiefly of ecclesiastical authors. Perhaps 
the most valuable of the contents of this library 
were the Tetrapla and Hexapla of Origen, from 
which Pamphilus, in conjunction with Euse- 
bius, formed a new recension of the Septua- 
gint, numerous copies of which were put into 
circulation. — 5. Of Amphipolis, one of the most 
distinguished of the Greek painters, flourished 
about B C. 390-350. He was the disciple of 
Eupompus, the founder of the Sicyonian school 
of painting, for the establishment of which, how- 
ever, Pamphilus seems to have done much more 
than even Eupompus himself. Of his own works 
we have most scanty accounts ; but as a teach- 
er of his art he was surpassed by none of the 
ancient masters. According to Pliny, he was 
the first artist who possessed a thorough ac- 
quaintance with all branches of knowledge, es- 
pecially arithmetic and geometry, without which 
he used to say that the art could not be per- 
fected. All science, therefore, which could in 
any way contribute to form the perfect artist, 
w 7 as included in his course of instruction, which 
extended over ten years, and for which the fee 
was no less than a talent. Among those who 
paid this price for his tuition were Apelles and 
Melanthius. Not only was the school of Pam- 
philus remarkable for the importance which the 
master attached to general learning, but also 
for the minute attention which he paid to accu- 
racy in drawing. 

Pamphos (Uu[u<puc), a mythical poet, who is 
placed by Pausanias later than Olen, and much 
earlier than Homer. His name is connected 
particularly with Attica. 

Pamphylia (Tla/u<j)vX'ia : Ud/j.<pv?.og, Ua.{i(pv?iioc, 
PamphylTus), in its original and more restricted 
sense, was a narrow strip of the southern coast 
of Asia Minor, extending in a sort of arch along 
the Sinus PamphylTus (now Gulf of Adalia), be- 

597 



PAMPHYLIUM MARE. 



PANCHAICUS. 



tween Lycia on the west and Cilicia on the 
east, and on the north bordering on Pisidia. 
Its boundaries, as commonly stated, were Mount 
Climax on the west, the River Melas on the 
east, and the foot of Mount Taurus on the north ; 
but the statements are not very exact : Strabo 
gives to the coast of Pamphylia a length of six 
hundred and forty stadia, from Olbia on the 
west to Ptolemai's, some distance east of the 
Melas, and he makes its width barely two miles ; 
and there are still other different accounts. It 



parts of Greece, but at Athens his worship was 
not introduced till the time of the battle of Mar- 
athon. In Arcadia he was the god of forests, 
pastures, flocks, and shepherds, and dwelt in 
grottoes, wandered on the summits of mount- 
ains and rocks, and in valleys, either amusing 
himself with the chase, or leading the dances 
of the nymphs. As the god of flocks, both of 
wild and tame animals, it was his province to 
increase and guard them ; but he was also a 
hunter, and hunters owed their success or fail- 



was a belt of mountain coast-land, intersected i ure to him. The Arcadian hunters used to 



by rivers flowing down from the Taurus in a 
short course, but several of them with a con- 
siderable body of water : the chief of them, go- 
ing from west to east, were the Catarrhactes. 
Cestrus, Eu&ymedon, and Melas (Xo. 6), all 
navigable for some distance from their mouths. 
The inhabitants were a mixture of races, whence 
their name Hdpov/.oi, of all races (the genuine 



j scourge the statue of the god if they had been 
j disappointed in the chase. During the heat of 
mid-day he used to slumber, and was very in- 
dignant when any one disturbed him. As the 
god of flocks, bees also were under his protec- 
tion, as well as the coast where fishermen car- 
ried on their pursuit. As the god of every thing 
connected with pastoral life, he was fond of mu- 



old form, the other in -lol is later). Besides ! sic, and the inventor of the syrinx or shepherd's 



the aboriginal inhabitants of the Semitic (Syro- 
Arabian) family and Cilicians, there were very 



flute, which he himself played in a masterly 
manner, and in which he instructed others also. 



early Greek settlers and later Greek colonies j such as Daphnis. He is thus said to have loved 



in the land. Tradition ascribed the first Greek 
settlements to Mopsus, after the Trojan war, 
from whom the country w T as in early times call- 
ed Mopsopia. It was successively a part of 
the Persian, Macedonian, Greco-Syrian, and 
Pergamene kingdoms, and passed by the will 
of Attalus III. to the Romans (B.C. 130), under 
whom it w 7 as made a province ; but this prov- 
ince of Pamphylia included also Pisidia and 
Isauria, and afterward a part of Lycia. Under 
Constantine Pisidia was again separated from 
Pamphylia. 

Pamphylium Mare, PamphylIus Sims (ru 
Uapgv?uov TtO.ayoc, Ilaugv/uoc koZitoc : now 
Gulf of Adalia), the great gulf formed in the 
southern coast of Asia Minor by the direction 
of the Taurus chain and by Mount Solyma, be- 
tween the Promontorium Sacrum or Chelido- 
nium (now 7 Cape Khelidonia), the southeastern 
point of Lycia, and Promontorium Anemurium 
(now Cape Anemour), the southern point of Ci- 
licia. Its depth from north to south, from Pro- 
montorium Sacrum to Olbia, is reckoned by 
Strabo at three hundred and sixty-seven stadia 
(36-7 geographical miles), which is too little. 

Pamphylus (IldupvAoc), son of JCgimius and 
brother of Dymas, was king of the Dorians at 



the poet Pindar, and to have sung and danced 
his lyric songs, in return for which Pindar erect- 
ed to him a sanctuary in front of his house. 
Pan, like other gods who dwelt in forests, was 
dreaded by travellers, to whom he sometimes 
appeared, and whom he startled with sudden 
awe or terror. Thus, when Phidippides, the 
Athenian, was sent to Sparta to solicit its aid 
against the Persians, Pan accosted him, and 
promised to terrify the barbarians if the Athe- 
nians would worship him. Hence sudden fright 
without any visible cause was ascribed to Pan, 
and was called a Panic fear. He is further said 
to have had a terrific voice, and by it to have 
frightened the Titans in their fight with the 
gods. It seems that this feature, namely, his 
fondness of noise and riot, was the cause of his 
being considered the minister and companion 
of Cybele and Bacchus (Dionysus). He was, at 
the same time, believed to be possessed of pro- 
phetic powers, and to have even instructed 
Apollo in this art. While roaming in his forests 
he fell in love with Echo, by whom or by Pitho 
he became the father of lynx. His love of Sy- 
rinx, after whom he named his flute, is well 
known from Ovid (Met , i., 691, seq.). Fir- 
trees were sacred to him, since the nymph Pi- 



the foot of Mount Pindus, and along with the tys, whom he loved, had been metamorphosed 



Heraclidae invaded Peloponnesus. 

Pan (Ildv), the great god of flocks and shep- 
herds among the Greeks. He is usually called 
a son of Mercury (Hermes) by the daughter of 
Dryops ; but he is also described as a son of 
Mercury (Hermes) by Callisto, by OZneis or 
Thymbris, or by Penelope, whom the god visited 
in the shape of a ram. or as a son of Penelope 
by Ulysses, or by all her suitors in common. 
He was perfectly developed from his birth, and 
when his mother saw him she ran away through 
fear ; but Mercury (Hermes) carried him to Olym- 
pus, where all the gods were delighted with him, 
and especially Bacchus (Dionysus). From his 
delighting all the gods, the Homeric hymn de- 
rives his name. He was originally only an Ar- 
cadian god, and Arcadia was always the princi- 
pal seat of his worship. From this country his 
name and worship afterward spread over other 
598 



into that tree ; and the sacrifices offered to him 
consisted of cows, rams, lambs, milk, and honey. 
Sacrifices were also offered to him in common 
with Bacchus (Dionysus) and the nymphs. The 
various epithets which are given him by the 
poets refer either to his singular appearance, or 
are derived from the names of the places in 
which he was worshipped. The Romans identi- 
fied with Pan their own god Inuus, and also 
Faunus, which name is merely another form 
of Pan. In works of art Pan is represented as 
a voluptuous and sensual being, with horns, 
puck-nose, and goat's feet, sometimes in the 
act of dancing, and sometimes playing on the 
syrinx. 

" Panacea (JLavuKsia), i. c., "the all-healing," 
a daughter of yEsculapius, who had a temple at 
Oropus. 

Panachaicus Mons (to Havaxainbv opoc), a 



PAXACRA. 



PANDIOX. 



mountain in Achaia, six thousand three hundred 
feet high, immediately behind Patrae. 

Panacra {HdvaKpa), a mountain in Crete, a 
branch of Mount Ida. 

Panactum (IldvaicTov), a town on the frontiers 
of Attica and Bteotia, originally belonged to 
Bceotia, and, after being a frequent object of 
contention between the Athenians and Boeo- 
tians, at length became permanently annexed to 
Attica. 

Pan/enus (Udvaivor), a distinguished Atheni- 
an painter, who flourished B.C. 448. He was 
the nephew of Phidias, whom he assisted in 
decorating the temple of Jupiter (Zeus) at Olym- 
pia. He was also the author of a series of 
paintings of the battle of Marathon, in the Poe- 
cile at Athens. 

[Panjetius (Uavainoc). 1. Tyrant of Leon- 
tini He was the first who raised himself to 
power in that way in Sicily.— 2. A native of 
Tenos, commanded a vessel of the Tenians in 
the armament of Xerxes against Greece, ap- 
parently by compulsion, for, just before the bat- 
tle of Salamis, Panaetius with his vessel desert- 
ed (he Persians and joined the Greeks.] 

Pan-^tius (Uavairiog), a native of Rhodes, 
and a celebrated Stoic philosopher, studied first 
at Pergamum under the grammarian Crates, 
and subsequently at Athens under the Stoic 
Diogenes of Babylon, and his disciple Antipater 
of Tarsus. He afterward went to Rome, where 
he became an intimate friend of Laelius and of 
Scipio Africanus the younger. In B.C. 144 he 
accompanied Scipio on the embassy which he 
undertook to the kings of Egypt and Asia in al- 
liance with Rome. Panaetius succeeded Antip- 
ater as head of the Stoic school, and died at 
Athens, at all events before 111. The princi- 
pal work of Panaetius was his treatise on the 
theory of moral obligation (Tzepi tov icadrjicovToc), 
in three books, from which Cicero took the 
greater part of his work De OJiciis. Panaetius 
had softened down the harsh severity of the 
older Stoics, and, without giving up their funda- 
mental definitions, had modified them so as to 
make them applicable to the conduct of life, and 
had clothed them in the garb of eloquence. 

Pan.etolium, a mountain in ^Etolia, near 
Thermon. in which town the Panastolium or 
general assembly of the ^Etolians was held. 

[Panara. Vid. Panch/Ea.] 

[Panch^a (Uayxaia), a fabled island in the 
Eastern or Indian Ocean, which Euhemerus pre- 
tended to have discovered, and to have found 
in its capital, Panara, a temple of the Triphyl- 
ian Jupiter, containing a column inscribed with 
the date of the births and deaths of many of the 
gods. (Vid. Euhemekus.) Virgil makes men- 
tion of Panchaea and its turifera arena:, by which 
he evidently refers to Arabia Felix.] 

Panda, a river in the country of the Siraci, 
in the interior of Sarmatia Asiatica (Tac, Ann., 
xii.. 16). 

Pandareos (ITavr5ap£«c), son of Merops of Mi- 
letus, is said to have stolen from the temple of 
Jupiter (Zeus) in Crete the golden dog which 
Vuican (Hephaestus) had made, and to have car- 
ried it to Tantalus. When Jupiter (Zeus) sent 
Mercury (Hermes) to Tantalus to claim the dog 
back, Tantalus declared that it was not in his 
possession. The god, however, took the ani- 



mal by force, and threw Mount Sipylus upon 
Tantalus. Pandareos fled to Athens, and thence 
to Sicily, where he perished with his wife Har- 
mothoe. The story of Pandareos derives more 
interest from that of his three daughters. A6- 
don, the eldest of them, was married to Zethus, 
the brother of Amphion, by whom she became 
the mother of Itylus. From envy of Amphion, 
who had many children, she determined to mur- 
der one of his sons, Amaleus, but in the night 
she mistook her own son for her nephew, and 
killed him. The two other daughters of Pan- 
dareos, Merope and Cleodora (according to Pau- 
sanias, Camira and Clytia), were, according to 
Homer, deprived of their parents by the gods, 
and remained as helpless orphans in the palace. 
Venus (Aphrodite), however, fed them with milk, 
honey, and wine. Juno (Hera) gave them beauty 
and understanding far above other women. Di- 
ana (Artemis) gave them dignity, and Minerva 
(Athena) skill in the arts. When Venus (Aphro- 
dite) went up to Olympus to arrange the nup- 
tials for her maidens, they were carried off by 
the Harpies. 

Pandarus (Yldvdapoc). 1. A Lycian, son of 
Lycaon, commanded the inhabitants of Zelea 
on Mount Ida in the Trojan war. He was dis- 
tinguished in the Trojan army as an archer, and 
was said to have received his bow from Apollo. 
He was slain by Diomedes, or, according to 
others, by Sthenelus. He was afterward hon- 
ored as a hero at Pinara in Lycia.— 2. Son of 
Alcanor, and twin-brother of Bitias, was one of 
the companions of .Eneas, and was slain by 
Turnus. 

Pandataria (now Vendutene), a small island 
in the Tyrrhenian Sea off the coast of Cam- 
pania, to which Julia, the daughter of Augustus, 
was banished. 

Pandemos (Ildvdjiuoc), i.e., ''common to all 
the people," a surname of Venus (Aphrodite), 
used in a two-fold sense : 1. As the goddess of 
low, sensual pleasures, as Venus valgivaga or 
popularis, in opposition to Venus Urania, or the 
heavenly Venus (Aphrodite). 2. As the goddess 
uniting all the inhabitants of a country into one 
social or political body. Under the latter view- 
she was worshipped at Athens along with Pei- 
tho (persuasion), and her worship was said to 
have been instituted by Theseus at the time 
when he united the scattered townships into one 
great body of citizens. The sacrifices offered 
to her consisted of white goats. 

Pandion (Uavdiuv). 1 1. King of Athens, son 
of Erichthonius by the Naiad Pasithea, was 
married to Zeuxippe, by whom he became the 
father of Procne and Philomela, and of the twins 
Erechtheus and Butes. In a war against Lab- 
dacus, king of Thebes, he called upon Tereus 
of Daulis in Phocis for assistance, and after- 
ward rewarded him by giving him his daughter 
Procne in marriage. Vid. Tereus. It was in 
his reign that Bacchus (Dionysus) and Ceres 
(Demeter) were said to have come to Attica. — 
2. II. King of Athens, son ofCeorops andMetia- 
dusa. Being expelled from Athens by the Me- 
tionidae, he fled to Megara, and there married 
Pylia, the daughter of King Pylas. When the 
latter, in consequence of a murder, migrated 
into Peloponnesus, Pandion obtained the gov- 
ernment of Megara. He became the father of 

599 



PANDOCUS. 



PANNONIA. 



uEgeus, Pallas. Nisus, Lycus, and a natural son, 
CEneus, and also of a daughter, who was married 
to Sciron. After his death his four sons, called 
the Pandionida (Ilavdiovidai), returned from Me- 
.gara to Athens, and expelled the Metionidae. 
^Egeus obtained Athens, Lycus the eastern 
coast of Attica, Nisus Megaris, and Pallas the 
southern coast. — [3. A Greek in the army against 
Troy, a companion of Teucer.] 

[Pandocus (UuvdoKog), a Trojan, slain by 
Ajax before Troy.] 

Pandora (Ilavdupa), the name of the first 
woman on earth. When Prometheus had stolen 
the fire from heaven, Jupiter (Zeus), in revenge, 
caused Vulcan (Hepheestus) to make a woman 
out of earth, who by her charms and beauty 
should bring misery upon the human race. Ve- 
nus (Aphrodite) adorned her with beauty ; Mer- 
cury (Hermes) bestowed upon her boldness and 
cunning ; and the gods called her Pandora, or 
All-gifted, as each of the gods had given her 
some power by which she was to work the ruin 
of man. Mercury (Hermes) took her to Epi- 
metheus, who made her his wife, forgetting the 
advice of his brother Prometheus, that he should 
not receive any gifts from Jupiter (Zeus.) In 
the house of Epimetheus was a closed jar, which 
he had been forbidden to open. But the curi- 
osity of a woman could not resist the tempta- 
tion to know its contents ; and when she open- 
ed the lid, all the evils incident to man poured 
out. She had only time to shut down the lid, 
and prevent the escape of hope. Later writers 
relate that Pandora brought with her from heav- 
en a box (and not a jar) containing all human 
ills, upon opening which all escaped and spread 
over the earth, Hope alone remaining. At a 
still later period, the box is said to have con- 
tained all the blessings of the gods, which would 
have been preserved for the human race had not 
Pandora opened the vessel, so that the winged 
blessings escaped. 

PandSsia (Uavdnoia). 1. (Now Kastri), a town 
of Epirus in the district Thesprotia, on the River 
Acheron, and in the territory of the Cassopaei — 
2. (Now Castel Franco ?), a town in Bruttium, 
near the frontiers of Lucania, situated on the 
River Acheron, and also either upon or at the 
foot of three hills, was originally a residence of 
native CEnotrian chiefs. It was here that Alex- 
ander of Epirus fell, B.C. 326, in accordance with 
an oracle. 

Pandrosos (Jldvdpoaog), i.e., "the all-bedew- 
ing" or " refreshing," was a daughter of Ce- 
crops and Agraulos, and a sister of Erysichthon, 
Herse, and Aglauros. She was worshipped at 
Athens along with Thallo, and had a sanctu- 
ary there near the temple of Minerva (Athena) 
Polias. 

Paneas. Vid. CLesarea, No. 2. 

Paneum or -ium (Hdvsiov, Hdviov, i. e., Pan's 
abode), the Greek name of the cave, in a mount- 
ain at the southern extremity of the range of 
Antilibanus, out of which the Pviver Jordan takes 
its rise, a little above the town of Paneas or 
Caesarea Philippi. The mountain, in whose 
southern side the cave is, was called by the same 
name, and the surrounding district was called 
Paneas. 

Pang^um or Pang^eus (Uayyaiov, Udyyatoc : 
now Pangea), a celebrated range of mountains 
600 



in Macedonia, between the Strymon and the 
Nestus, and in the neighborhood of Philippi, 
with gold and silver mines, and with splendid 

roses. 

Panhellenius (U.ave7J.r]vLoc), i. c., the god 
worshipped by all the Hellenes. This surname 
is said to have been given to Jupiter (Zeus) by 
.Eacus, when he offered a propitiatory sacrifice 
on behalf of all the Greeks for the purpose of 
averting a famine. In -Egina there was a sanc- 
tuary of Jupiter (Zeus) Panhellenius, which was 
said to have been founded by ^Eacus ; and a 
festival, Panhellenia. was celebrated there. 

Panionium. Vid. Mycale ; and Diet, of Ant., 
s. v. Panionia. 

Panium (ILdvLov). 1. A town on the coast of 
Thrace, near Heraclea. — [2. Vid. Paneum.] 

Pannonia, one of the most important of the 
Roman provinces between the Danube and the 
Alps, w r as separated on the west from Noricum 
by the Mons Cetius, and from Upper Italy by 
the Alpes Juliae, on the south from Illyria by the 
Savus, on the east from Dacia by the Danube, 
and on the north from Germany by the same 
river. It thus corresponded to the eastern part 
of Austria, Styria, Carinthia, Carniola, the whole 
of Hungary between the Danube and the Save, 
Slavonia, and a part of Croatia and Bosnia 
The mountains in the south and west of the 
country, on the borders of Illyria, Italy, and 
Noricum, belonged to the Alps, and are there- 
fore called by the general name of the Alpes 
Pannonicae, of which the separate names are 
Ocra, Carvancas, Cetius, and Albii or Albani 
Montes. The principal rivers of Pannonia, be- 
sides the Danube, were the Dravus (now Dravc), 
Savus (now Save), and Arrabo (now Raab), all 
of which flow into the Danube. The Panno- 
nians (Pannonii), sometimes called Paeonians 
by the Greek writers, were probably of Ulyrian 
origin, and were divided into numerous tribes. 
They were a brave and warlike people, but are 
described by the Roman writers as cruel, faith- 
less, and treacherous. They maintained then 
independence of Rome till Augustus, after his 
conquest of the lllyrians (B.C. 35), turned his 
arms against the Pannonians, who were shortly 
afterward subdued by his general Vibius. In 
A D. 7 the Pannonians joined the Dalmatians 
and the other Illyrian tribes in their revolt from 
Rome, and were with difficulty conquered by 
Tiberius, after a desperate struggle, which last- 
ed three years (A.D. 7-9). It was after the 
termination of this war that Pannonia appears 
to have been reduced to the form of a Roman 
province, and was garrisoned by several Ro- 
man legions. The dangerous mutiny of these 
troops after the death of Augustus (A.D. 14) 
was with difficulty quelled by Drusus. From 
this time to the end of the empire Pannonia 
always contained a large number of Roman 
troops, on account of its bordering on the Quadi 
and other powerful barbarous nations. We find 
at a later time that Pannonia was the regular 
quarters of seven legions. In consequence of 
this large number of troops always stationed in 
the country, several towns were founded and 
numerous fortresses were erected along the 
Danube. Pannonia originally formed only one 
j province, but was soon divided into two prov- 
I inces, called Pannonia Superior and Pannonia 



PANOMPH.EUS. 



PANTHEUM. 



Inferior. These were separated from one an- 
other by a straight line drawn from the River 
Arrabo soutli as far as the Savus, the country 
west of this line being P. Superior , and the part 
east P. In/mo,-. Each of the provinces was 
governed by a separate propraetor; but they 
were frequently spoken of in the plural under 
the name of Pannonia:. In the fourth century, 
the part of P. Inferior between the Arrabo, the 
Danube, and the Dravus was formed into a 
separate province by Galerius, who gave it the 
name of Valeria in honor of his wife. But as 
P. Inferior had thus lost a great part of its ter- 
ritory, Constantine added to it a portion of P. 
Superior, comprising the upper part of the course 
of the Dravus and the Savus. P. Superior was 
now called Pannonia Prima, and P. Inferior 
Pannonia Secunda ; and all three Pannonian 
provinces (together with the two Noric prov- 
inces and Dalmatia) belonged to the six Illyrian 
provinces of the Western Empire. In the mid- 
dle of the fifth century Pannonia was taken 
possession of by the Huns. After the death of 
Attila it passed into the hands of the Ostro- 
goths, and subsequently into those of the Lan- 
gobards. 

Panomph.kcs (llavou^aloc), i. c, the author 
of all signs and omens, a surname of Jupiter 
(Zeus), who had a sanctuary on the Hellespont 
between Capes Rhceteum and Sigeum. 

Panope (U.av6~i]), a nymph of the sea, daugh- 
ter of Nereus and Doris. 

[Panopes, one of the followers of zEneas in 
his voyage to Italy, distinguished at the funeral 
games celebrated in Sicily in honor of Anchi- 
ses.] 

Panopeus (Havdirvlf), son of Phocus and As- 
teropaea, accompanied Amphitryon on his expe- 
dition against the Taphians or Teleboans, and 
took an oath not to embezzle any part of the 
booty ; but, having broken his oath, he was pun- 
ished by his son Epeus becoming unwarlike. 
He is also mentioned among the Calydonian 
hunters. 

Panopeus (Uavo-eir, Horn ), Panopk^b (Havo- 
ireai), or Panope (UavoTn], Thuc. ; ethnic Uavo- 
nevc, now Agio Vlasi), an ancient town in Pho- 
cis, on the Cephisus, and near the frontiers of 
Boeotia, twenty stadia west of Cheeronea, said 
to have been founded by Panopeus, son of Pho- 
cus. 

[Panopion Urp.i nics, was proscribed by the 
triumvirs in B.C 43, but was preserved by the 
fidelity of one of his slaves, who exchanged 
dresses with his master, dismissed him by the 
back door as the soldiers were entering the villa, 
then placed himself in the bed of Panopion, and 
allowed himself to be killed for his master.] 

Panopolis. Vid. Chrisms. 

Panoptic. Ytd. Argus. 

Panormus (lluvopfwc), that is, All- Port," or 
a place alway s tit for landing, the name of sev- 
eral harbors. 1 . {Llavopfitrjjc. Panormlta, Panor- 
mitanus ; now Palermo), an important town on 
the northern coast of Sicily and at the mouth 
of the River Orethus, was founded by the Phoe- 
nicians, and at a later time received its Greek 
name from its excellent harbor. From the Phoe- 
nicians it passed into the hands of the Cartha- 
ginians, in w hose power it remained for a long 
time, and who made it one of the chief stations 



for their fleet. It was taken by the Romans in 
the first Punic war, B.C. 254, and was subse- 
quently made a Roman colony.— 2. (Now Porto 
Rnphti), the principal harbor on the eastern 
coast of Attica, near the demus Prasiae, and op- 
posite the southern extremity of Eubcea. — 3. 
(Now Tekieh), a harbor in Achaia, fifteen stadia 
east of the promontory Rhium.— 4. A harbor in 
Epirus, in the middle of the Acroceraunian 
rocks.— 5. (Ruins near Mylopotamo), a town and 
harbor on the northern coast of Crete.— 0. The 
outer harbor of Ephesus. formed by the mouth 
of the River Cayster. Vid. p. 282, a. 

Pansa, C. VibIus, a friend and partisan of 
Cajsar, was tribune of the plebs B.C. 51, and 
was appointed by Caesar in 46 to the govern- 
ment of Cisalpine Gaul as successor to M. Bru- 
tus. Caesar subsequently nominated him and 
Hirtius consuls for 43. Pansa was consul in 
that year along with Hirtius, and fell before 
Mutina in the month of April. The details are 
given under Hirtius. 

Pantacyas, Pantagias, or PantagIes (Ilav- 
-aavac : now Fiumc di Porcari), a small river 
on the eastern coast of Sicily, which flowed into 
the sea between Megara and Syracuse. 

[Pant/enus (Udvrawog), the teacher of Cle- 
mens of Alexandrea, and master of the cate- 
chetical school in that city about A.D. 181 : in 
philosophy he had been in the Stoic school, and 
had adopted their principles, and hence was 
designated the Stoic. He was selected, on ac- 
count of his learning and piety, to conduct a 
missionary enterprise to India.] 

PantIleon (UavmAEuv). 1. Son of Ompha- 
lion, king or tyrant of Pisa in Elis at the period 
of the thirty-fourth Olympiad (B.C. 644), as- 
sembled an army, with which he made himself 
master of Olympia, and assumed by force the 
sole presidency of the Olympic games. The 
Eleans, on this account, would not reckon this 
as one of the regular Olympiads. Pantaleon 
assisted the Messenians in the second Mes- 
senian war.— [2. A son of Alyattes, king of 
Lydia, by an Ionian woman. His claim to the 
throne in preference to his brother Croesus was 
put forward by his partisans during the lifetime 
of Alyattes, but that monarch decided in favor 
of Croesus. — 3. A Macedonian of Pydna, an 
officer in the service of Alexander, who was 
appointed by him governor of Memphis.] 

Panthea. Vid. Abradatas. 

Pantheum (Tlavdeiov), a celebrated tempi© 
at Rome, in the Campus Martius, which is still 
extant, and used as a Christian church. It is 
in a circular form, surmounted by a dome, and 
contains a noble Corinthian portico of sixteen 
pillars. In its general form it resembles the 
Colosseum in the Regent's Park. It was built 
by M. Agrippa in his third consulship, B.C. 27, 
as the inscription on the portico still testifies. 
All the ancient authors call it a temple, and 
there is no reason for supposing, as some mod- 
ern writers have done, that it was originally an 
entrance to the public baths. The name is 
commonly derived from its being supposed to 
be sacred to all the gods ; but Dion Cassius 
expressly states that it was dedicated to Mars 
and Venus. The temple of Julius Caesar was 
erected by Augustus in the interior of the tem- 
ple, and that of Augustus in the pronaos. It 

601 



PANTHCEDAS. 



PAPHLAGONIA. 



was restored by the Emperor Septimius Seve- 
rus, A.D. 202. Between 608 and 610 it was 
consecrated as a Christian church by the pope 
Boniface IV., with the approbation of the Em- 
peror Phocas. In 655 the plates of gilded bronze 
that covered the roof were carried to Constan- 
tinople by command of Constans II. The Pan- 
theon is the largest circular building of anti- 
quity ; the interior diameter of the rotunda is 
one hundred and forty-two feet, and the height 
from the pavement to the summit about one 
hundred and forty-eight feet. The portico is 
one hundred and three feet wide, and the col- 
umns forty-seven feet high. 

[Panthcedas (YldvOoidag), a Spartan, sent out 
by the ephors in B.C. 403 against Clearchus, 
who had gone to Byzantium against orders. 
He was slain in battle in 377 against Pelopidas, 
near Tanagra.] 

Pant-hoc s, contr. 1? axthus (TIdvdooc, Tldvdovg), 
one of the elders at Troy, husband of Phrontis, 
and father of Euphorbus, Polydamas, and Hy- 
perenor. Hence both Euphorbus and Polyda- 
mas are called Pantlwid.es. He is said to have 
been originally a priest of Apollo at Delphi, and 
to have been carried to Troy by Antenor on 
account of his beauty. He continued to be a 
priest of Apollo, and is called by Virgil (Mn., 
ii., 319) Othryades, or son of Othryas. 

[Pantias (FLavrtac), of Chios, a statuary of 
the school of Sicyon, son and pupil of Sostra- 
tus, who was the seventh in the succession of 
disciples from Aristocles of Cydonia.] 

Panticapjeum {U.avTiKa~aiov : HavTLKa^alog, 
JlavTLKaTraLevg, TlavTiKa~iuTvs • now Kertsch), a 
town in the Tauric Chersonesus, was situated 
-on a hill twenty stadia in circumference on the 
Cimmerian Bosporus, and opposite the town of 
Phanagoria in Asia. It derived its name from 
the River Panticapes. It was founded by the 
Milesians about B.C. 541, and from its position 
and excellent harbor soon became a place of 
great commercial importance. It was the res- 
idence of the Greek kings of the Bosporus, and 
-hence is sometimes called Bosporus. Justinian 
caused it to be surrounded with new walls. 

Panticapes [IlavTucdiriig), a river in European 
Sarmatia, which, according to Herodotus, rises 
in a lake, separates the agricultural and nomad 
Scythians, flows through the district Hylaea, 
and falls into the Borysthenes. It is usually 
identified with the modern Somara, but without 
sufficient grounds. 

Panyasis (YlavvaGis). 1- A Greek epic poet, 
was a native of Halicarnassus, and a relation 
of the historian Herodotus, probably his uncle. 
Panyasis began to be known about B.C. 489, 
continued in reputation till 467, and was put to 
death by Lygdamis, the tyrant of Halicarnas- 
sus, about 457. The most celebrated of the 
poems of Panyasis was his Heraclea or Hera- 
cleas, which gave a detailed account of the ex- 
ploits of Hercules. It consisted of fourteen 
books and nine thousand verses. Another poem 
of Panyasis bore the name of Ionica ('loivixd), 
and contained seven thousand verses ; it relat- 
ed the history of Neleus, Codrus, and the Ionic 
colonies. In later times the works of Panvasis 
were extensively read and much admired ; the 
Alexandrine grammarians ranked him with Ho- 
mer, Hesiod, Pisander. and Antimachus, as one 
602 



of the five principal epic poets. [The frag- 
ments are collected by Tzschirner, Panyasidis 
Fragmenta, &c, Breslau, 1842 ; and by Diib- 
ner, at the end of Epici Graeci Minores, in Di- 
dot's Bibliotheca Graeca.] — 2. A philosopher, 
also a native of Halicarnassus, who wrote two 
books " On Dreams" (Ilepl oveipuv), was per- 
haps a grandson of the poet. 

[Panytascs (HavvaoooQ : now Spirnazza), a 
river of Illyris Graeca, which empties, south of 
Dyrrachium, into the Ionian Sea.] 

Paphlagonia {HaipXayovia : TLa&Myuv, pi. 
-ovsg, Paphlago), a district on the northern side 
of Asia Minor, between Bithynia on the west 
and Pontus on the east, being separated from 
the former by the River Parthenius, and from 
the latter by the Halys ; on the south it was di- 
vided by the chain of Mount Olympus (accord- 
ing to others by Olgassys) from Phrygia in the 
earlier times, but from Galatia afterward ; and 
on the north it bordered on the Euxine. These 
boundaries, however, are not always exactly 
observed. Xenophon brings the Paphlagonians 
as far east as Themiscyra and the Jasonian 
promontory. It appears to have been known 
to the Greeks in the mythical period. The Ar- 
gonautic legends mentioned Paphlagon, the son 
of Phineus, as the hero eponymus of the coun- 
try. In the Homeric Catalogue, Pylaemenes 
leads the Paphlagonians, as allies of the Tro- 
jans, from the land of the Heneti, about the 
River Parthenius, a region famed for its mules ; 
and from this Pylaemenes the later princes of 
Paphlagonia claimed their descent, and the 
country itself was sometimes called Pyl^me- 
nia. Herodotus twice mentions the Halys as 
the boundary between the Paphlagonians and 
. the Syrians of Cappadocia ; but we learn also 
| from him and from other authorities that the 
J Paphlagonians were of the same race as the 
Cappadocians (i. e., the Semitic or Syro- Ara- 
bian), and quite distinct, in their language and 
their customs, from their Thracian neighbors 
on the west. They were good soldiers, espe- 
cially as cavalry, but uncivilized and supersti- 
tious. The country had also other inhabitants, 
probably of a different race, namely, the Heneti 
and the Caucones ; and Greek settlements were 
established on the coast at an early period. The 
Paphlagonians were first subdued by Croesus. 
Under the Persian empire they belonged to the 
third satrapy, but their satraps made themselves 
independent, and assumed the regal title, main- 
taining themselves in this position (with a brief 
interruption, during which Paphlagonia was sub- 
ject to Eumenes) until the conquest of the coun- 
try by Mithradates, who added the eastern part 
of his own kingdom, and made over the west- 
ern part to Nicomedes, king of Bithynia, who 
gave it to his son Pylaemenes. After the fall 
of Mithradates the Romans added the north of 
Paphlagonia, along the coast, to Bithynia, and 
the interior was left to the native princes, as 
tributaries to Rome ; but, the race of these 
princes becoming soon extinct, the whole of 
Paphlagonia was made Roman, and Augustus 
made it a part of the province of Galatia. It 
was made a separate province under Constan- 
tino ; but the eastern part, from Sinope to the 
Halys, was assigned to Pontus, under the name 
of Hellespontus. Paphlagonia was a mountain- 



PAPHUS. 



PAPREMIS. 



ous countrv. being intersected from west to 
east by three chains of the Olympus system, 
namely, the Olympus itself on the southern bor- 
der, Olgassys in the centre, and a minor chain 
with no specific name nearer to the coast. The 
belt of land between this last chain and the sea 
was very fertile, and the Greek cities of Amas- 
tris and Sinopo brought a considerable com- 
merce to its shore ; but the inland parts were 
chiefly covered with native forests, which were 
celebrated as hunting grounds. The country 
was famed for its horses and mules, and in 
some parts there were extensive sheep-walks ; 
and its rivers were particularly famous for their 
fish. The country was divided into nine dis- 
tricts, the names of which are not of enough 
importance to be specified here. 

Paphus (Ila^cc), son of Pygmalion by the 
statue into which life had been breathed by 
Venus (Aphrodite). From him the town of 
Paphus is said to have derived its name ; and 
Pygmalion himself is called the Paphian hero. 
(Ov., Met., x., 290.) 

Paphus (TId<j>oc : Tld(pioc), the name of two 
towns on the western coast of Cyprus, near 
each other, and called respectively " Old Pa- 
phos" (UaXaixafyoc) and " New Paphos" (Ild- 
Qoe vea). Old Paphos was situated near the 
promontory Zephyrium, on the River Bocarus, 
ten stadia from the coast, where it had a good 
harbor ; while New Paphos lay more inland, in 
the midst of a fertile plain, sixty stadia from 
the former. Old Paphos was the chief seat of 
the worship of Venus (Aphrodite), who is said | 
to have landed at this place after her birth 
among the waves, and who is hence frequently 
called the Paphian goddess (Paphia). Here 
she had a celebrated temple, the high priest of 
which exercised a kind of religious superintend- 
ence over the whole island. Every year there 
was a grand procession from New Paphos to 
the temple of the goddess in the old city. There 
were two legends respecting the foundation of 
Paphos, one describing the .Syrian king Cinyras 
as its founder, and the other the Arcadian Ag- 
apenor on his return from Troy. These state- 
ments are reconciled by the supposition that 
Cinyras was the founder of Old Paphos and 
Agapenor of New Paphos. There can be no 
doubt of the Phoenician origin of Old Paphos, 
and that the worship of Venus (Aphrodite) was 
introduced here from the East ; but an Arcadian 
colony can not be admitted. When Paphos is 
mentioned by later writers without any epithet, 
they usually mean the New City ; but when the 
name occurs in the poets, we are generally to 
understand the Old City, as the poets, for the 
most part, speak of the place in connection 
with the worship of Venus (Aphrodite). Old 
Paphos was destroyed by an earthquake in the 
reign of Augustus, but was rebuilt by order of 
the emperor, and called Augusta. Under the 
Romans New Paphos was the capital of one of 
the four districts into which the island was di- 
vided. Old Paphos corresponds to the modern 
Kukla or Konu/dia, and New Paphos to the mod- 
ern Baffa. 

Papias (Tlcnrtac), an early Christian writer, 
said to have been a hearer of the Apostle John, 
and a companion of Polycarp, was bishop of Hie- 
rapolis, on the borders of Phrygia. He taught 



the doctrine of the Millennium, maintaining that 
there will be, for one thousand years after the 
resurrection of the dead, a bodily reign of Christ 
on this earth. Only fragments of his works are 

extant. 

Papixianus, /EmilIi s, a celebrated Roman 
jurist, was prsefectus praetorio under the Em- 
peror Septimius Severus, whom he accompanied 
to Britain. The emperor died at York A.D. 211, 
and is said to have commended his two sons, 
Caracalla and Geta, to the care of Papinian. 
On the death of his father, Caracalla dismissed 
Papinian from his office, and shortly afterward 
put him to death. There are five hundred and 
ninety-five excerpts from Papinian's works in 
the Digest. These excerpts are from the thirty- 
seven books of Quastiones, a work arranged ac- 
cording to the order of the Edict, the nineteen 
books of Responsa, the two books of Definitiones, 
the two books Dc Adultcriis, a single book De 
Adulteriis, and a Greek work or fragment, which 
probably treated of the office of aedile both at 
Rome and in other towns. No Roman jurist 
had a higher reputation than Papinian. Nor is 
his reputation unmerited. It was not solely be- 
cause of the high station that he filled, his pene- 
tration, and his knowledge, that he left an im- 
perishable name ; his excellent understanding, 
guided by integrity of purpose, has made him the 
model of a true lawyer. 

Papinius Statius. Vid. Statius. 
Papiria Gexs, patrician and plebeian. The 
patrician Papirii were divided into the families 
| of Crassus, Cursor, Maso, and Mugillanus ; and 
the plebeian Papirii into those of Carbo, Pcetus, 
and Turdus. Of these the families of Carbo, 
Cursor, Maso, and Mugillanus alone require 
mention. 

Papirian.e Fossae, a village in Etruria, on the 
Via Emilia, between Luna and Pisa. 

Papirius, C. or Sex., the author of a supposed 
collection of the Leges Regiae, which was called 
Jus Papirianum or Civile Papirianum. He is 
said to have lived in the reign of Tarquinius 
Superbus. 

Papius Mutilus. Vid. Mutilus. 
Pappua (II(27r7roiia), a lofty rugged mountain 
on the extreme border of Numidia, perhaps the 
same as the Thammes of Ptolemy, and as the 
mountain abounding with wild cats, near the 
city of Melitene, to which Diodorus Siculus 
refers (xx., 58), but without mentioning its 
name. 

Pappus (ITa7r7roc-), of Alexandrea, one of the 
later Greek geometers, is said by Snidas to have- 
lived under Theodosius (A.D. 379-395). Of the 
works of Pappus, the only one which has come 
down to us is his celebrated Mathematical Col- 
lections (Madn/xariKuv ovvayuytiv (3i6Aca). This 
work, as we have it now in print, consists of 
the last six of eight books. Only portions of 
these books have been published in Greek 
There are two Latin editions of Pappus : the 
first by Commandinus, Pisauri, 1588 ; and the 
second by Manolessius, Bononiaj, 1660. 

Papremis (TLdirpTjfuc), a city of Lower Egypt, 
capital of the Nomos Papremites, and sacred to 
the Egyptian god whom the Greeks identified 
with Mars (Ares). It is only mentioned by He- 
rodotus, and is perhaps the same as the ChoTs 
of later times. 

603 



PAPUS..EMILIUS. 



PARIS. 



Papus, jEmilil-s. 1. Iff., dictator B C. 321. — I 
2. Q., twice consul, 282 and 278, and censor 
275. In both his consulships and in his censor- 
ship he had as colleague C. Fabricius Luscinus. 
— 3. L., consul 225, defeated the Cisalpine Gauls 
with great slaughter. He was censor 220 with 
C. Flaminius. 

Paracheloitis (Uapaxe/.ulTcc), the name of 
the plain in Acarnania and zEtolia, near the 
mouth of the Achelous, and through which that 
river flows. 

Parachoathras (Hapaxoddpac, rdTlapaxoddpa: 
now Mountains of Louristan), a part of the chain 
of mountains forming the eastern margin of the 
Tigris and Euphrates valley, was the boundary 
between Susiana and Media. The same name 
is given to an eastern branch of the chain, which 
formed the boundary between Parthia and the 
desert of Carmania. Strabo places it too far 
north. 

Par^tacexe (n.apaiTaKi]vq : UapaiTaxai, TTg- 
paiTaKTjvoi, Paraetacas, Paraetaceni). the name of 
various mountainous regions in the Persian em- 
pire, is the Greek form of a Persian word, sig- 
nifying mountainous, I. The best known of 
those districts was on the borders of Media and 
Persis, and was inhabited by a people of Median 
origin, who are mentioned several times by the 
historians of Alexander and his successors. — | 
2. A district between the rivers Oxus and Jax- 
artes, on the borders of Bactria and Sogdiana. 
— 3. A district between Arachosia and Drangi- 
ana, also called Sacastana, from its inhabitants, 
the Scythian Sacae. 

Par^etonidm or Ammonia (UapatTovcov, ?} 'Au- 
iiuvia : now El-Bareton or Marsa-Labeit), an im- j 
portant city on the northern coast of Africa, be- 
longed to Marmarica in its widest sense, but 
politically to Egypt, namely, to the Nomos Libya : 
hence this city on the west and Pelusium on 
the east are called " cornua ^Egypti." It stood 
near the Promontory Artos or Pythis (now Ras- 
el-Hazeit), and was reckoned two hundred Ro- 
man miles west of Alexandrea, between seventy 
and eighty miles, or, according to Strabo, nine 
hundred stadia (all too small) east of the Cata- 
bathmos Major, and one thousand three hundred 
stadia north of Ammonium in the Desert (now 
Siwah), which Alexander the Great visited by 
the way of Paraetonium. The city was forty 
stadia in circuit. It was an important sea-port, 
a strong fortress, and a renowned seat of the 
worship of Isis. It w^as restored by Justinian, 
and continued a place of some consequence till 
its complete destruction by the late Pasha of 
Egypt, Meheraet Ali, in 1820. 

Paragon Sinus (Tlapdyuv koattoc : now Gulf 
of Oman), a gulf of the Indicus Oceanus, on the 
eoast of Gedrosia, namely, the gulf formed in the 
northwest of the Indian Ocean by the approach 
of the northeastern coast of Arabia to that of 
Beloochistan and Persia, outside of the entrance 
to the Persian Gulf. 

Par alia (Tlapa?ua), the sea-coast district of 
Attica, around the Promontory of Sunium, ex- 
tending upward as far as Hala^Axonides on the 
western coast, and Prasiae on the eastern coast. I 
The inhabitants of this district, the Par alii (Uapd- \ 
A/.oi). were one of the three political parties into j 
which Attica was divided at the time of Pisis- I 
tratus, the other two being the Diacrii (Aidicpioi), \ 



or Highlanders, and the Pediasii (Tledidccot), or 

inhabitants of the plain. 

Paralus (UdpaAoc), the younger of the two 
legitimate sons of Pericles. He and his brother 
Xanthippus were educated by their father with 
the greatest care, but they both appear to have 
been of inferior capacity, which was any thing 
but compensated by worth of character, though 
Paralus seems to have been a somewhat more 
hopeful youth than his brother. They both fell 
victims to the plague, B.C. 429. 

Parapotamii or ia (UapaTrordpiou -aula : now 
Belissi), an ancient town in Phocis, situated on 
a steep hill, and on the left bank of the River 
Cephisus, from which it derives its name. It 
was near the frontiers of Boeotia, being only 
forty stadia from Chaeronea. and sixty stadia 
from Orchomenus. It is probably mentioned by 
Homer(I£.,ii.,522). It was destroyed by Xerxes, 
but w T as rebuilt, and was destroyed a second time 
in the Sacred war. 

Parasopia (UapaccDTTta), a district in the south 
of Boeotia on both banks of the iEsopus, the in- 
habitants of which were called Parasbpii (Tlapa- 
cuttiol). 

[Parasopias (Tlapacurridc), a city ofThessaly r 
in the district CEtaea.] 
Parc^:. Vid. Moir^e. 

Parentium (now Parenzo), a town in Istria, 
with a good harbor, inhabited by Roman citizens, 
but not a Roman colonv, thirtv-one miles from 
Pola. 

Paris (Hdpcc), also called Alexander ('Ata'f- 
avdpoc), was the second son of Priam and Hecu- 
ba. Before his birth Hecuba dreamed that she 
had brought forth a fire-brand, the flames of 
which spread over the whole city. Accordingly, 
as soon as the child was born, he was given to 
a shepherd, who was to expose him on Mount 
Ida. After the lapse of five days, the shepherd, 
on returning to Mount Ida, found the child still 
alive, and fed by a she-bear. Thereupon he car- 
ried the boy home, and brought him up along 
with his own child, and called him Paris. When 
Paris had grown up, he distinguished himself 
as a valiant defender of the flocks and shep- 
herds, and hence received the name of Alexan- 
der, i. e., the defender of men. He also suc- 
ceeded in discovering his real origin, and was 
received by Priam as his son. He now married 
CEnone, the daughter of the river-god Cebren, 
by whom, according to some, he became the fa- 
ther of Corythus. But the most celebrated 
event in the life of Paris was his abduction of 
Helen. This came to pass in the following way ; 
Once upon a time, when Peleus and Thetis sol- 
emnized their nuptials, all the gods were invited 
to the marriage, with the exception of Eris, or 
Strife. Enraged at her exclusion, the goddess 
threw a golden apple among the guests, with 
the inscription, "To the fairest." Thereupon 
Juno (Hera), Venus (Aphrodite), and Minerva 
(Athena) each claimed the apple for herself. 
Jupiter (Zeus) ordered Mercury (Hermes) to 
take the goddesses to Mount Gargarus, a portion 
of Ida, to the beautiful shepherd Paris, who was 
there tending his flocks, and who was to decide 
the dispute. The goddesses accordingly ap- 
peared before him. Juno (Hera) promised him 
the sovereignty of Asia and great riches, Mi- 
nerva (Athena) great glory and renown in war r 



PARIS. 



PARMENIDES. 



and Venus (Aphrodite) the fairest of women foi 
his wife. Pans decided in favor of Venus 
(Aphrodite), and gave her the golden apple. 
This judgment called forth in Juno (Hera) and 
Minerva°(Athena) fierce hatred against Troy. 
Under the protection of Venus (Aphrodite), Pans 
now sailed to Greece, and was hospitahly re- 
ceived in the palace of Menelaus at Sparta. 
Here he suecrcucd in carrying off Helen, the 
wife of Menelaus, who was the most beautiful 
woman in the world. The accounts of this rape 
are not the same in all writers. According to 
the more usual account, Helen followed her se- 
ducer willingly, owing to the influence of Ve- 
nus (Aphrodite), while Menelaus was absent in 
Crete. Others relate that the goddess deceived 
Helen by giving to Paris the appearance of 
Menelaus; and others, again, say that Helen 
was carried off by Paris by force, either during 
a festival or during the chase. On his return 
to Troy, Paris passed through Egypt and Phoe- 
nicia, and at length arrived at Troy with Helen 
and the treasures which he had treacherously 
taken from the hospitable house of Menelaus. 
In regard to this voyage the accounts again dif- 
fer ; for, according to some, Paris and Helen 
reached Troy three days after their departure ; 
whereas, according to later traditions, Helen 
did not reach Troy at all, for Jupiter (Zeus) and 
Juno (Hera) allowed only a phantom resembling 
her to accompany Paris to Troy, while the real 
Helen was carried to Proteus in Egypt, and re- 
mained there until she was fetched by Mene- 
laus. The abduction of Helen gave rise to the 
Trojan war. Before her marriage with Mene 
laus she had been wooed by the noblest chiefs 
in all parts of Greece. Her former suitors now 
resolved to revenge her abduction, and sailed 
against Troy. Vul. Agamemnon. Homer de- 
scribes Paris as a handsome man, fond of the 
female sex and of music, and not ignorant of 
war, but as dilatory and cowardly, and detested 
by his own friends for having brought upon them 
the fatal war with the Greeks. He fought with 
Menelaus before the walls of Troy, and was de- 
feated, but was carried off by Venus (Aphrodite). 
He is said to have killed Achilles, either by one 
of his arrows, or by treachery in the temple of 
the Thymbraean Apollo. Vid. Achilles. On 
the capture of Troy, Paris was wounded by 
Philoctetes with an arrow of Hercules, and then 
returned to his long-abandoned wife CEnone. 
But she, remembering the wrongs she had suf- 
fered, or, according to others, being prevented 
by her father, refused to heal the wound. He 
then went back to Troy and died. CEnone 
quickly repented, and hastened after him with 
remedies, but came too late, and in her grief 
hung herself. According to others, she threw 
herself from a tower, or rushed into the flames 
of the funeral pile on which the body of Paris 
was burning. Paris is represented in works 
of art as a beautiful youth, without a beard, 
with a Phrygian cap, and sometimes with an 
apple in his hand, in the act of presenting it to 
Venus (Aphrodite). 

Paris, the name of two celebrated panto- 
mimes. 1. The elder Paris lived in the reign 
of the Emperor Nero, with whom he was a 
great favorite. He was originally a slave of 
Domitia, the aunt of the emperor, and he pur- 



chased his freedom by paying her a large sura 
of money. Paris was afterward declared, by 
order of the emperor, to have been free-born 
(intrenuus), and Domitia was compelled to re- 
store to him the sum which she had received 
for his freedom. When Nero attempted to be- 
come a pantomime, he put Paris to death as a 
dangerous rival— 2. The younger Paris, and 
the more celebrated of the two, was a native 
of Egypt, and lived in the reign of Domitian, 
with whom he was also a great favorite. He 
was put to death by Domitian because he had 
an intrigue with Domitia, the wife of the em- 
peror. 

Parish. Vid. Lutetia Parisiorcm. 

Parium (to Uuptov : YlaptdDdg, Ilapa/i'oc, Jla- 
piavevg : ruins at Kemcr), a city of Mysia, on 
the northern coast of the Troad, on the Pro- 
pontis, between Lampsacus and Priapus, was 
founded by a colony from Miletus, mingled with 
natives of* Paros and Erythrai, and became a 
flourishing sea-port, having a better harbor than 
that of Priapus. Under Augustus it was made 
a Roman colony, by the name of Colonia Pari- 
ana Julia Augusta. It was a renowned seat 
of the worship of Cupid (Eros), Bacchus (Dio- 
nysus), and Apollo. The surrounding district 
was called fj Ylapiavt}. 

Parma (Parmensis : now Parma), a town in 
Gallia Cispadana, situated on a river of the 
same name and on the Via ^Emilia, between 
Placentia and Mutina, was originally a town of 
the Boii, but was made a Roman colony B.C. 
183, along with Mutina, and from that time be- 
came a place of considerable importance. It 
suffered some injury in the civil war after Cae- 
sar's death, but was enlarged and embellished 
by Augustus, and received the name of Colonics 
Julia Augusta. After the fall of the Western 
Empire it was for a time called Chrysopolis, or 
the " Gold-City," but for what reason we do 
not know. The country around Parma was 
originally marshy ; but the marshes were drain- 
ed by the consul Scaurus, and converted into 
fertile land. The wool of Parma was particu- 
larly good. 

Parmenides (Uap/xEVLd7jc), a distinguished 
Greek philosopher, was a native of Elea in Italy. 
According to Plato, Parmenides, at the age of 
sixty-five, came to Athens to the Panathenaea, 
accompanied by Zeno, then forty years old, and 
became acquainted with Socrates, who at that 
time was quite young. Supposing Socrates to 
have been nineteen or twenty years of age at 
the time, we may place the visit of Parmenides 
to Athens in B.C. 448, and consequently his 
birth in 513. Parmenides was regarded with 
great esteem by Plato and Aristotle; and his 
fellow-citizens thought so highly of him, that 
every year they boiind their magistrates to ren- 
der obedience to the laws which he had enact- 
ed for them. The philosophical opinions of 
Parmenides were developed in a didactic poem, 
in hexameter verse, entitled On Nairn e, of 
which only fragments remain. In this poem he 
maintained that the phenomena of sense were 
delusive, and that it w r as only by mental ab- 
straction that a person could attain to the knowl- 
edge of the only reality, a One and All, a con- 
tinuous and self-existent substance, which could 
not be perceived by the senses. But although 



PAKMENION. 



PAROPAMISAD.-E. 



he believed the phenomena of sense to be de- 
lusive, nevertheless he adopted two elements, 
Warm and Cold, or Light and Darkness. The 
best edition of the fragments of Parmenides is 
by Karsten, in Philosophorum Grac. Veternm 
Opcr. Reliquia, Amstelod., 1835. 

Parmenion (Uapuevlov). 1. Son of Philotas, 
a distinguished Macedonian general in the serv- 
ice of Philip of Macedon and Alexander the 
Great. Philip held him in high esteem, and 
used to say of him that he had never been able 
to find more than one general, and that was 
Parmenion. In Alexander's invasion of Asia, 
Parmenionw as regarded as second in command. 
At the three great battles of the Granicus, Issus, 
and Arbela, while the king commanded the right 
wing of the army, Parmenion was placed at the 
head of the left, and contributed essentially to 
the victory on all those memorable occasions. 
The confidence reposed in him by Alexander 
appears to have been unbounded, and he is con- 
tinually spoken of as the most attached of the 
king's friends, and as holding, beyond all ques- 
tion, the second place in the state. But when 
Philotas, the only surviving son of Parmenion, 
was accused in Drangiana (B.C. 330) of being 
privy to the plot against the king's life, he not 
only confessed his own guilt when put to the 
torture, but involved his father also in the plot. 
"Whether the king really believed in the guilt 
of Parmenion, or deemed his life a necessary 
sacrifice to policy after the execution of his son, 
he caused his aged friend to be assassinated in 
Media before he could receive the tidings of his 
son's death. The death of Parmenion, at the 
age of seventy years, will ever remain one of 
the darkest stains upon the character of Alex- 
ander. It is questionable whether even Philo- 
tas was really concerned in the conspiracy, and 
we may safely pronounce that Parmenion had 
no connection with it. — 2. Of Macedonia, an 
epigrammatic poet, whose verses were included 
in the collection of Philip of Thessalonica, 
whence it is probable that he flourished in, or 
shortly before, the time of Augustus. 

[Parmeniscus (IlapfssvtaKor), a grammarian 
and commentator, of whose writings a few frag- 
ments remain.] 

[Parmenon (Uapusvov), of Byzantium, a cho- 
liambic poet, a few of whose verses are pre- 
served in Athenseus and the scholiasts : these 
fragments are collected by Meineke, ChoHambica 
Poesis Gracorum, Berol., 1845.] 

[Parmys (Udpfivg), daughter of Smerdis, the 
son of Cyrus. She became the wife of Darius 
Hystaspis, and was the mother of Ariomardos.] 

Parnassus (Tlapvaoaos, Uapvaaog, Ion. Hap- 
v?)oos), the name, in its widest signification, of 
a range of mountains, which extends from CEta 
and Corax southeast through Doris and Phocis, 
and under the name of Cirphis (Klp<pic) term- 
inates at the Corinthian Gulf between Cirrha 
and Anticyra. But in its narrower sense, Par- 
nassus indicates the highest part of the range a 
few miles north of Delphi. Its two highest 
summits were called Tithorea (Tidopea : now 
Velitza), and Lycorea (AvKuptLa : now Liakura), 
the former being northwest and the latter north- 
east of Delphi ; and hence Parnassus is fre- 
quently described by the poets as double-headed. 
Immediately above Delphi the mountain forms 
606 



a semicircular range of lofty rocks, at the foot 
of which the town was built. These rocks 
were called Phadriades ((baidpiddsc), or the "Re- 
splendent," from their facing the south, and 
thus receiving the full rays of the sun during 
the most brilliant part of the day. The sides 
of Parnassus were well wooded : at its foot 
grew myrtle, laurel, and olive-trees, and higher 
up, firs : and its summit was covered with snow 
during the greater part of the year. It con- 
tained numerous caves, glens, and romantic 
i ravines. It is celebrated as one of the chief 
seats of Apollo and the Muses, and an inspiring 
source of poetry and song. On Mount Lycorea 
was the Corycian cave, from which the Muses 
are sometimes called the Corycian nymphs. 
Just above Delphi was the far-famed Castalian 
spring, which issued from between two cliffs, 
called Nauplia and Hyamplia. These cliffs are 
frequently called by the poets the summits of 
j Parnassus, though they are in reality only small 
! peaks at the base of the mountain. The mount- 
| ain also was sacred to Bacchus (Dionysus), and 
j on one of its summits the Thyades held their 
j Bacchic revels. Between Parnassus Proper 
j and Mount Cirphis was the valley of the Plis- 
tus, through which the sacred road ran from 
Delphi to Daulis and Stiris; and at the point 
where the road branched off to these two places 
(called cxiGTTj), CEdipus slew his father Laius. 
— 2. A town in the north of Cappadocia, on a 
mountain of the same name (now Pascha Dagh), 
probably on the River Halys, and on the road 
between Ancyra and Archelais. 

Parnes (TLdpi gen. HapvijQoc : now Ozia 
or Nozia), a mountain in the northeast of At- 
tica, in some parts as high as four thousand 
feet, was a continuation of Mount Cithaeron., 
from which it extended eastward as far as the 
coast atRhamnus. It was well wooded, abound- 
ed in game, and on its lower slopes produced 
excellent wine. It formed part of the bound- 
ary between Bceotia and Attica ; and the pass 
through it between these two countries was 
easy of access, and was therefore strongly for- 
tified by the Athenians. On the summit of the 
mountain there was a statue of Jupiter (Zeus) 
Parnethius, and there were likewise altars of 
Jupiter (Zeus) Semaleos and Jupiter(Zeus) Om- 
brius or Apemius. 

Parnon (ILupvav : now Malevo), a mountain 
six thousand three hundred and thirty-five feez 
high, forming the boundary between Laconia 
and the territory of Tegea in Arcadia. 

Paropamisad^e (Tlapo-afiujadai) or Paropa- 
misii, the collective name of several commu- 
nities dwelling in the southern slopes of Mount 
Paropamisus (vid. next article), and of the coun- 
try they inhabited, which was not known by 
any other name. . It was divided on the north 
from Bactria by the Paropamisus ; on the west 
from Aria, and on the south from Drangiana 
and Arachosia, by indefinite boundaries ; and 
on the east from India by the River Indus, 
thus corresponding to the eastern part of Af- 
ghanistan and the strip of the Punjab west of 
the Indus. Under the Persian empire it was 
the northeasternmost district of Ariana. It 
was conquered by Alexander when he passed 
through it on his march to India ; but the peo- 
ple soon regained their independence, though 



PAROPAMISUS. 



PARRHASIUS. 



parts of the country were nominally included 
in the limits of the Greco-Syrian and Bactrian 
kingdoms. It is a rugged mountain region, in- 
tersected by branches of the Paropamisus. In 
the north the climate is so severe that, ac- 
cording to the ancient writers, confirmed by 
modern travellers, the snow almost buries the 
houses ; but in the south the valleys of the low- 
er mountain slopes yield all the products of the 
warmer regions of Asia. In its north was the 
considerable river Cophes or Cophei* (now Ca- 
bool), flowing into the Indus, and having a trib- 
utary, Choas, Chops, or Choaspes (No. 2). The 
particular tribes, included under the general 
name of Paropamisada^ were the Cabolitae (Ka- 
foXiTcii) in the north, whose name and position 
point to Cabool, the Parsii (Uapaioi) in the south- 
west, the Ambauta? (' Au6avTat) in the east, on 
the River Choas, the Parsuetae (Uapo-vfjTai) on 
the south, and the 'Apiard^vlot, probably a dom- 
inant tribe of a different race, on the west. At 
the time of the Macedonian conquest the people 
were little civilized, but quiet and inoffensive. 
The chief cities were Ortospana and Alexan- 
dra, the latter founded by Alexander the Great. 

Paropamisus (Hapoirdfiiaoc, and several other 
forms, of which the truest is probably Uapo-nrd- 
viaoc : now Hindoo- Koosh), a word no doubt de- 
rived, as many other words beginning like it, 
from the Old Persian paru, a mountain, is the 
name of a part of the great mountain-chain 
which runs from west to east through the cen- 
tre of the southern portion of the highlands of 
Central Asia, and divides the part of the con- 
tinent, which slopes down to the Indian Ocean, 
from the great central table-land of Tartary and 
Thibet. It is a prolongation of the chain of 
x\nti-Taurus. The name was applied to that 
part of the chain between the Sariphi Mount- 
ains (now Mountains of Kohistan) on the west 
and Mount Imaus (now Himalaya) on the east, 
or from about the sources of the River Margus 
on the west to the point where the Indus breaks 
through the chain on the east. They were be- 
lieved by the ancients to be among the highest 
mountains in the world (which they are), and to 
contain the sources of the Oxus and the Indus ; 
the last statement being an error which natu- 
rally arose from confounding the cleft by which 
the Indus breaks through the chain with its un- 
known source. When Alexander the Great 
crossed these mountains, his followers — regard- 
ing the achievement as equivalent to what a 
Greek considered as the highest geographical 
adventure, namely, the passage of the Caucasus 
— conferred this glory on their chief by simply 
applying the name of Caucasus to the mountain 
chain which he had thus passed ; and then, for 
the sake of distinction, this chain was called 
Caucasus Indieus. and this name has come 
down to our times in the native form of Hindoo- 
Koosh, and in others also. The name Paro- 
pamisus is also applied sometimes to the great 
southern branch of this chain (now Soliman 
Mountains) which skirts the valley of the Indus 
on the west, and which is more specifically call- 
ed Paryeti or Parsvet^:. 

Paropus (Paropinus), a small town in the in- 
terior of Sicily, north of the Nebrodes Montes. 

Parorea (Uapupeia). 1. A town in Thrace, 
on the frontiers of Macedonia, whose inhabit- 



ants were the same people as the Paroraei of 
Pliny. — 2. Or Paroria (Tlapupia), a town iR the 
south of Arcadia, north of Megalopolis, said to 
have been founded by Paroreus, son of Tri- 
colonus, and a grandson of Lycaon, the inhabit- 
ants of which took part in the building of Me- 
galopolis. 

Par6reat^2 (Tlapupe&Tai), the most ancient- 
inhabitants of the mountains in Triphylia in Elis, 
who were expelled by the Minyae. 

Parorios. Vid. Phrygia. 

Paros (Udpnc : Udpiog : now Paro), an island 
in the^Egean Sea, one of the larger of the Cyc- 
lades, was situated south of Delos and west of 
Naxos, being separated from the latter by a 
channel five or six miles wide. It is about 
thirty-six miles in circumference. It is said to 
have been originally colonized by Cretans, but 
was afterward inhabited by Ionians, and be- 
came so prosperous, even at an early period, as 
to send out colonies to Thasos and to Parium 
on the Propontis. In the first invasion of Greece 
by the generals of Darius, Paros submitted ta 
the Persians ; and after the battle of Marathon, 
Miltiades attempted to reduce the island, but 
failed in his attempt, and received a wound, of 
which he died. Vid. Miltiades. After the de- 
feat of Xerxes, Paros came under the supremacy 
of Athens, and shared the fate of the other Cyc- 
lades. Its name rarely occurs in subsequent 
history. The most celebrated productiojpof 
Paros was its marble, which was extensively 
used by the ancient sculptors. It was chiefly- 
obtained from a mountain called Marpessa. The 
Parian figs were also highly prized. The chief 
town of Paros was situated on the western coasts 
and bore the same name as the island. The 
ruins of it are still to be seen at the modern. 
Paroikia. Paros was the birth-place of the poet 
Archilochus. In Paros was discovered the cele- 
brated inscription called the Parian Chronicle, 
which is now preserved at Oxford. The in- 
scription is cut on a block of marble, and in its 
perfect state contained a chronological account 
of the principal events in Greek history from 
Cecrops, B.C. 1582, to the archonship of Dio- 
gnetus, 264. [This inscription, so far as it is 
preserved, was reprinted in Chandler's Marmora 
Oxoniensia, Oxford, 1763, fol. ; by Boeckh in his 
Corpus Inscriptionum Groecarum, vol. ii., p. 293, 
sqq. ; and by Miiller in Fragm. Hist. Grac., vol. 
i., p. 533-590.] 

Parrhasia {Uappaaia : Uappdaioi), a district 
in the south of Arcadia, to which, according to 
Pausanias, the towns Lycosura, Thocnia, Tra- 
pezus, Proseis, Acacesium, Acontium, Macaria, 
and Dasea belonged. The Parrhasii are said to 
have been one of the most ancient of the Arca- 
dian tribes. At the time of the Peloponnesian 
war they were under the supremacy of Manti- 
nea, but were rendered independent of that city 
by the Lacedaemonians. Homer (//., ii., 608) 
mentions a town Parrhasia, said to have been 
founded by Parrhasus, son of Lycaon, or by Pe- 
lasgus, son of Arestor. The adjective Parrhasius 
is frequently used by the poets as equivalent to 
Arcadian. 

Parrhasius (Tlappdcnoe), one of the most cele- 
brated Greek painters, was a native of Ephesus, 
the son and pupil of Evenor. He practiced his 
art chiefly at Athens, and by some writers he is 

607 



PARSII. 



PARTHENON. 



called an Athenian, probably because the Athe- 
nians had bestow ed upon him the right of citi- 
zenship. He flourished about B.C 400. Par- 
rhasius did for painting, at least in pictures of 
tfods and heroes, what had been done for sculp- 
ture by Phidias in divine subjects, and by Poly- 
cletus in the human figure : he established a 
eanon of proportion, which was followed by all 
the artists that came after him. Several inter- 
esting observations on the principles of art 
which he followed are made in a dialogue with 
Socrates, as reported by Xenophon (Mcrn., iii., 
10) The character of Parrhasius was marked 
in the highest degree by that arrogance which 
often accompanies the consciousness of pre- 
eminent ability. In epigrams inscribed on his 
works he not only made a boast of his luxuri- 
ous habits, but he also claimed the honor of hav- 
ing assigned with his own hand the precise lim- 
its of the art, and fixed a boundary which never 
was to be transgressed. Respecting the story 
of his contest with Zeuxis, vid. Zeuxis. Of the 
works of Parrhasius, the most celebrated seems 
to have been his picture of the Athenian People. 

Parsii. Vid. Paropamisad^e. 

Parsici Montes {ra TlapatKu oprj, now Bush- 
kurd Mountains in the west of Beloochistan), a 
chain of mountains running northeast from the 
Paragon Sinus (now Gulf of Oman), and forming 
the boundary between Carmania and Gedrosia. 
At^e foot of these mountains, in the west of 
Gedrosia, were a people called Parsid^e, with a 
capital Parsis (now perhaps Serbah). 

Parsyetve {Uapcvfj-ai), a people on the bor- 
ders of Arachosia and the Paropamisada;, with 
a mountain of the same name, which is proba- 
bly identical with the Paryeti Montes and with 
the Soliman Mountains. 

Parthalis, the chief city of the Calingae, a 
tribe of the Gangaridae, in India intra Gangem, 
at the head of the Sinus Gangeticus (now Sea 
of Be?igal). 

[Parthaon. Vid. Porthaon] 

Partheni. Vid. Parthini. 

Parthenias (Uapderiac), also called Parthe- 
ni a, a small river in Elis, which flows into the 
Alpheus east of Olympia, not far from Harpinna. 

Parthenium (Uapdeviov). 1. A town in.Mysia, 
south of Pergamum. — 2 (Now Felenk-burun), a 
promontory in the Chersonesus Taurica, on 
which stood a temple of the Tauric Diana (Ar- 
temis), from whom it derived its name. It was 
in this temple that human sacrifices were of- 
fered to the goddess. 

Parthenium Mare (to TLapdeviKov ni?Mynq), 
the southeastern part of the Mediterranean, be- 
tween Egypt and Cyprus. 

Parthenius (IlaudsvLos), of Nicaea, or, accord- 
ing to others, of Myrlea, a celebrated jjramma- 
rian, is said by Suidas to have been taken pris- 
oner by Cinna in the Mithradatic war, to have 
been manumitted on account of his learning, 
and to have lived to the reign of Tiberius. If 
this statement is true, Parthenius must have 
attained a great age, since there were seventy- 
seven years from the death of Mithradates to 
the accession of Tiberius. Parthenius taught 
Virgil Greek, and lie seems to have been verv 
• popular among the distinguished Romans of 
his time. The Emperor Tiberius imitated his 
poems, and placed his works and statues in the 
603 



public libraries along with the most celebrated 
ancient writers. Parthenius wrote many poems 
but the only one of his works which has come 
down to us is in prose, and entitled Tlepi epuri- 
kuv TzadrjauTuv. It contains thirty-six brief 
love-stories, which ended in an unfortunate 
manner. It is dedicated to Cornelius Gallus, 
and was compiled for his use, that he might 
avail himself of the materials in the composi- 
tion of epic and elegiac poems. The best edi- 
tion is by Westermann, in the Mythographx Grat- 
ci, Brunswick, 1843. 

Parthenius (Ylapdevioe). 1. A mountain on 
the frontiers of Argolis and Arcadia, through 
which was an important pass leading from Ar- 
golis toTegea. This pass is still called Partheni, 
but the mountain itself, which rises to the height 
of three thousand nine hundred and ninety-three 
feet, bears the name of Roinu. It was on this 
mountain that Telephus, the son of Hercules 
and Auge, was said to have been suckled by a 
hind ; and it was here, also, that the god Pan is 
said to have appeared to Phidippides, the Athe- 
nian courier, shortly before the battle of Mara- 
thon. — 2. (Also Uapdsvnc: now Chati-Su or Bar- 
tan- Su), the chief river of Paphlagonia, rises in 
Mount Olgassys, and flows northwest into the 
Euxine ninety stadia west of Amastris, forming 
in the lower part of its course the boundary be- 
tween Bithynia and Paphlagonia. 

Parthenon (6 Hnpdevuv, i. e., the virgin'* 
chamber), was the usual name of one of the 
finest, and, in its influence upon art. one of the 
most important edifices ever built, the temple 
of Minerva (Athena) Parthenos on the Acropolis 
of Athens. It was also called Hecatompedom 
{'YiKarou-edov) or Hecatompedos ('E/carr^TrecJof, 
sc. vegjc), from its being one hundred feet in one 
of its chief dimensions, probably in the breadth 
of the top step on which the front pillars stand. 
It was erected, under the administration of 
Pericles, on the site of the older temple of Mi- 
nerva (Athena), burned during the Persian in- 
vasion, and was completed by the dedication of 
the statue of the goddess. B.C. 438. Its archi- 
tects were Ictinus and Callicrates, but all the 
works were under the superintendence of Phidi- 
as. It was built entirely of Pentelic marble; 
its dimensions were two hundred and twenty- 
seven English feet long, one hundred and one 
broad, and sixty-five high ; it was fifty feet longer 
than the edifice which preceded it. Its archi- 
tecture was of the Doric order, and of the purest 
kind. It consisted of an oblong central build- 
ing (the cella or veuc), surrounded on all sides 
by a peristyle of pillars, forty-six in number, 
eight at each end and seventeen at each side 
(reckoning the corner pillars twice), elevated on 
a platform, which was ascended by three steps 
all round the building. Within the porticoes, at 
each end, was another row of six pillars, stand- 
ing on a level with the floor of the cella, and two 
steps higher than that of the peristyle. The 
cella was divided into two chambers of unequal 
size, the prodomus or pronaos (rrpodoiwc, Tzpovaoe}, 
and the opisthodomus (b-tododouoc) or posticum ; 
the former, which was the larger, contained the 
statue of the goddess, and was the true sanctu- 
ary, the latter being probably used as a treasury 
and vestry. Both these chambers had inner 
rows of pillars ^in two stories, one over the oth- 



PARTHENOP.EUS. 



PARTHIA. 



er), sixteen in the former and four in the latter, 
supporting the partial roof, for the large cham- 
ber, at least, had its centre open to the sky. 
Technically, the temple is called peripteral octa- 
ttyle hypcethral. It was adorned, within and 
without, with colors and gilding, and with sculp- 
tures which are regarded as the master-pieces 
of ancient art The colossal chryselephantine 
(ivory and gold) statue of Minerva (Athena), 
which stood at the end of the prodomus, opposite 
to the entrance, was the work of Phidias him- 
self, and surpassed every other statue in the 
ancient world, except that of Jupiter (Zeus) at 
Olympia by the same artist. The other sculp- 
tures were executed under the direction of 
Phidias by different artists, as may still be seen 
by differences in their style ; but the most im- 
portant of them were doubtless from the hand 
of Phidias himself: (1.) The tympana of the pedi- 
ments (i. e., the inner flat portion of the triangu- 
lar gable-ends of the roof above the two end 
porticoes) were filled with groups of detached 
colossal statues, those of the eastern or prin- 
cipal front representing the birth of Minerva 
(Athena), and those of the western front the 
contest between Minerva (Athena) and Neptune 
(Poseidon) for the land of Attica. (2.) In the 
frieze of the entablature (i. e., the upper of the 
two portions into which the surface between 
the columns and the roof is divided), the me- 
topes between the triglyphs (i. e., the square spaces 
between the projections answering to the ends 
of beams if the roof had been of wood) were 
filled with sculptures in high relief, ninety-two 
in all, fourteen on each front, and thirty-two on 
each side, representing subjects from the Attic 
mythology, among which the battle of the Athe- 
nians with the Centaurs forms the subject of 
the fifteen metopes from the southern side, which 
are now in the British Museum. (3 ) Along the 
top of the external wall of the cella, under the 
ceiling of the peristyle, ran a frieze, sculptured 
with a representation of the Panathenaic pro- 
cession in very low relief. A large number of 
the slabs of this frieze were brought to England 
by Lord Elgin, with the fifteen metopes just men- 
tioned, and a considerable number of other frag- 
ments, including some of the most important, 
though mutilated, statues from the pediments ; 
and the whole collection was purchased by the 
nation in 1816, and deposited in the British Mu- 
seum, where may also be seen excellent models 
of the ruins of the Parthenon, and of the temple 
as conjecturally restored. The worst of the in- 
juries which it has suffered from war and pillage 
was inflicted in the siege of Athens by the Vene- 
tians in 1687, when a bomb exploded in the very 
centre of the Parthenon, and threw down much 
of both the side walls. Its ruins are still, 
however, in sufficient preservation to give a 
good idea of the construction of all its principal 
parts. 

Parthenop^cs (UapdtvoTrnloc), one of the 
seven heroes who accompanied Adrastus in his 
expedition against Thebes. He is sometimes 
called a son of Mars (Ares) or Milanion and Ata- 
lanta. sometimes of Meleager and Atalanta, and 
sometimes of Talaus and Lysimaehe. His son, 
by the nymph Glymene, who marched against 
Thebes as one of the Epigoni, is called Proma- 
chus, Stratoiaus. Thesimenes, or Tlesimenes. 
39 



Parthenopseus was killed at Thebes by Asphodi- 
cus, Amphidicus, or Periclymenus. 

[Parthenope (rLapdevo-rrT}), one of the Sirens, 
who is said to have given its early and poetio 
name to Neapolis. Vid. Neapoms.] 

Parthenopolis (na„dev67r<)?.ig), a town in 
Mcesia Inferior, near the Pontus Euxinus, and 
between Calatis and Tomi. 

Parthia, Parthy,ea, Parthiene (TLnpftia, 
UapOvaia, Hafjdvnvrj : Tlupdot, llapdvaioi, Parthi, 
Parthieni : now Khorassan), a country of Asia, 
to the southeast of the Caspian. Its extent was 
different at different times; but, as the term was 
generally understood by the ancient geogra- 
phers, it denoted the partly mountainous and 
partly desert country on the south of the mount- 
ains which hem in the Caspian on the southeast 
(Mons Labuta), and which divided Parthia on the 
north from Hyrcania. On the northeast and 
east, a branch of the same chain, called Masdo- 
ranus, divided it from Aria; on the south the 
deserts of Parthia joined those of Carmania, and 
further westward the Mons Parachoathras di- 
vided Parthia from Persis and Susiana ; on the 
west and northwest it was divided from Media 
by boundaries which can not be exactly marked 
out. Of this district only the northern part, in 
and below the mountains of Hyrcania, seems to 
have formed the proper country of the Parthi, 
who were a people of Scythian origin. The an- 
cient writers tell us that the name means exiles; 
but this is uncertain. They were a very warlike 
people, and especially celebrated as horse-arch- 
ers. Their tactics, of which the Romans had 
fatal experience in their first wars with them, 
became so celebrated as to pass into a proverb. 
Their mail-clad horsemen spread like a cloud 
round the hostile army, and poured in a shower 
of darts ; and then evaded any closer conflict 
by a rapid flight, during which they still shot 
their arrow backward upon the enemy. Under 
the Persian empire, the Parthians, with the 
Chorasmii, Sogdii. and Arii, formed the six- 
teenth satrapy : under Alexander and the Greek 
kings of Syria, Parthia and Hyrcania together 
formed a satrapy. About B.C. 250 they revolt- 
ed from the Seleucidae, under a chieftain named 
Arsaces, who founded an independent mon- 
archy, the history of which is given under Ar- 
saces. During the period of the downfall of 
the Syrian kingdom, the Parthians overran the 
provinces east of the Euphrates, and about B C. 
130 they overthrew the kingdom of Bactria, so 
that their empire extended over Asia from the 
Euphrates to the Indus, and from the Indian 
Ocean to the Paropamisus, or even to the Oxus ; 
but on this northern frontier they had to main- 
tain a continual conflict with the nomad tribes 
of Central Asia. On the west their progress 
was checked by Mithradates and Tigranes, till 
those kings fell successively before the Ro- 
mans, who were thus brought into collision 
with the Parthians. After the memorable de- 
struction of Grassus and his army, B.C 53 (vid. 
Crassus), the Parthians threatened Syria and 
Asia Minor ; but their progress was stopped bj 
two signal defeats, which they suffered from 
Antony's legate Ventidius in 39 and 3& The 
preparations for renewing the war with Rome 
were rendered fruitless by the contest for the 
Parthian throne between Phraates IV. andTir- 

609 



PARTHINI. 



PASIOX. 



idates, which led to an appeal to Augustus, and 
to the restoration of the standards of Crassus, 
B.C. 20 ; an event to which the Roman poets 
often allude in terms of flattery to Augustus, 
almost as if he had conquered the Parthian em- 
pire. It is to be observed that the poets of the 
Augustan age use the names Parthi, Persae, and 
Medi indifferently. The Parthian empire had 
now begun to decline, owing to civil contests 
and the defection of the governors of provinces, 
and had ceased to be formidable to the Romans. 
There were, however, continual disputes be- 
tween the two empires for the protectorate of 
the kingdom of Armenia. In consequence of 
one of these disputes, Trajan invaded the Par- 
thian empire, and obtained possession for a short 
time of Mesopotamia ; but his conquests were 
surrendered under Hadrian, and the Euphrates 
again became the boundary of the two empires. 
There were other wars at later periods, which 
resulted in favor of the Romans, who took Se- 
leucia and Ctesiphon, and made the district of 
Osroene a Roman province. The exhaustion 
which was the effect of these wars at length 
gave the Persians the opportunity of throwing 
off the Parthian yoke. Led by Artaxerxes (Ard- 
shir), they put an end to the Parthian kingdom 
of the Arsacidae, after it had lasted four hund- 
red and seventy-six years, and established the 
Persian dynasty of the Sassanidae, A.D. 226. 
Vid. Arsaces, Sassanid^:. 

Parthini or Partheni (JlapOivoi, Uapdnvoc), 
an Illyrian people, in the neighborhood of Dyr- 
rhachium. 

Parthiscus or Parthissus, a river in Dacia, 
probably the same as the Tibiscus. Vid. Tibis- 
cus. 

Paryabres ( Tlapvadprjc : now Kara-bel Dagh, 
or Kut-Tagh), a mountain chain of Western 
Asia, running southwest and northeast from the 
east of Asia Minor into the centre of Armenia, 
and forming the chief connecting link between 
the Taurus and the mountains of Armenia. It 
was considered as the boundary between Cap- 
padocia (i. e., Pontus Cappadocius) and Arme- 
nia (i. e., Armenia Minor). In a wide sense the 
name seems sometimes to extend so far north- 
east as to include Mount Abus (now Ararat) in 
Armenia. 

Paryeti Montes (ra HapvrjT&v opn, from the 
Indian word paruta, i. e., a mountain: now Soli- 
man Mount), the great mountain chain which 
runs north and south on the western side of the 
valley of the Indus, and forms the connecting 
link between the mountains which skirt the 
northern coast of the Persian Gulf and the In- 
dian Ocean, and the parallel chain, further north, 
called the Paropamisus or Indian Caucasus ; or, 
between the eastern extensions of the Taurus 
and Anti-Taurus systems, in the widest sense. 
This chain formed the boundary between Ara- 
chosia and the Paropamisadae : it now divides 
Beloochistan and Afghanistan on the west from 
Scinde and the Punjab on the east, and it meets 
the Hindoo-Koosh in the northeastern corner of 
Afghanistan, between Cabool and Peshawur. Its 
ancient inhabitants were called Parylta (ITu- 
pvTjTai) ; and the name Paruta is found in old 
Persian inscriptions and in the Zendavesta (the 
old Persian sacred book) as that of a people. 

Parysatis (Rapvaang or Uapvadng), daughter 



! of Artaxerxes I. Longimanus, king of Persia* 
j was given by her father in marriage to her own 
| brother Darius, surnamed Ochus, who in B.C. 
j 424 succeeded Xerxes II. on the throne of Per- 
! sia. The feeble character of Darius threw the 
! chief power into the hands of Parysatis, whose 
j administration was little else than a series of 
! murders. Four of her sons grew up to man- 
| hood. The eldest of these, Artaxerxes Mne- 
| mon, was born before Darius had obtained the 
I sovereign power, and on this pretext Parysatis 
| sought to set aside his claims to the throne in 
| favor of her second son Cyrus. Failing in this 
I attempt, she nevertheless interposed after the 
j death of Darius, 405, to prevent Artaxerxes 
from putting Cyrus to death, and prevailed 
with the king to allow- him to return to his sat- 
rapy in Asia Minor. After the death of Cyrus 
J at the battle of Cunaxa (401), she did not hesi- 
I tate to display her grief for the death of her 
! favorite son by bestowing funeral honors on his 
mutilated remains ; and she subsequently suc- 
ceeded in getting into her power all the authors 
of the death of Cyrus, whom she put to death 
by the most cruel tortures. She afterward 
poisoned Statira, the wife of Artaxerxes. The 
j feeble and indolent king was content to banish 
! her to Babylon ; and it was not long before he 
j recalled her to his court, where she soon re- 
I covered all her former influence. Of this she 
availed herself to turn his suspicions against 
Tissaphernes, whom she had long hated as hav- 
ing been the first to discover the designs of 
Cyrus to his brother, and who was now put to 
death by Artaxerxes at her instigation, 396. 
She appears to have died soon afterward. 

Pasargada or -m (Ilaoapydda, Haaapyadai), 
the older of the two capitals of Persis (the other 
and later being Persepolis), is said to have been 
founded by Cyrus the Great on the spot where 
he gained his great victory over Astyages. The 
tomb of Cyrus stood here in the midst of a beau- 
tiful park. The exact site is doubtful. Strabo 
describes it as lying in the hollow part of Per- 
sis, on the River Cyrus, southeast of Persepo- 
lis, and near the borders of Carmania. Most 
modern geographers identify it with Murgkab t 
northeast of Persepolis, where there are the 
remains of a great sepulchral monument of the 
ancient Persians. Others place it at Farsa or 
at Darab-gherd, both southeast of Persepolis, 
but not answering Strabo's description in other 
respects so well as Murghab. Others identify 
it with Persepolis, which is almost certainly an 
error. 

PASARGADiE (Uaaapyddai), the most noble of 
the three chief tribes of the ancient Persians 
the other two being the Maraphii and Maspii 
The royal house of the Achaemenidae were of 
the race of the Pasargada?. They had their resi- 
dence chiefly in and about the city of Pasargada. 

[Paseas ( Ucaeac), father of the Sicyonian ty- 
rant Abantidas ; after the death of his son he 
| made himself tyrant, but was soon after slain 
by Nicocles.] 

" Pasias, a Greek painter, belonged to the Sic- 
S yonian school, and flourished about B.C. 220. 

Pasion (Jiaaiuv). [1. A Megarian, in the 
service of Cyrus the younger when he besieged 
Miletus : he afterward joined him with seven 
hundred men at Sardis in his expedition against 



pasiphae. 



PATERCULUS, C. VELLEIUS. 



tiis brother Artaxerxes. Having taken offence 
at Cyrus's allowing Clearchus to retain the sol- 
diers who had deserted from him at Tarsus, 
Pasion himself abandoned the cause of Cyrus, 
and sailed away from Myriandrus for Greece 
with his most valuable effects. He was not 
pursued, and Cyrus did not even detain his wife 
and children, who were in his power at Tralles.] 
—2. A wealthy banker at Athens, was origin- 
ally a slave of Antisthenes and Archestratus, 
who were also bankers. In their service he 
displayed great tidelity as well as aptitude for 
business, a°nd was manumitted as a reward. He 
afterward set up a banking concern on his own 
account, by which, together with a shield man- 
ufactory, he greatly enriched himself, while he 
continued all along to preserve his old character 
for integrity, and his credit stood high through- 
out Greece. He did not, however, escape an 
accusation of fraudulently keeping back some 
money which had bean intrusted to him by a 
foreigner from the Euxine. The plaintiff's case 
is stated in an oration of Isocrates(rpa7reCmKoc), 
still extant. Pasion did good service to Athens 
with his money on several occasions. He was 
rewarded with the freedom of the city, and was 
enrolled in the demus of Acharnae. He died at 
Athens in B.C. 370, after a lingering illness, 
accompanied with failure of sight. Toward the 
end of his life his affairs were administered to 
a great extent by his freedman Phormion, to 
whom he let his banking shop and shield manu- 
factory, and settled in his will that he should 
marry his widow Archippe, with a handsome 
dowry, and undertake the guardianship of his 
younger son Pasicles. His elder son, Apollo- 
dorus, grievously diminished his patrimony by 
extravagance and law-suits. 

Pasiphae (Retmfuai), daughter of Helios (the 
Sun) and Perseis, and a sister of Circe and 
iEetes, was the wife of Minos, by whom she 
became the mother of Androgeos, Catreus, Deu- 
calion, Glaucus, Acalle, Xenodice, Ariadne, and 
Phaedra. Hence Phaedra is called Pasiphaeia 
(Ov., Met , xv., 500). Respecting the passion 
of Pasiphae for the beautiful bull, and the birth 
of the Minotaurus, vid. p. 517, b. 

Pasiteles (Haairefaje). I. A statuary, who 
flourished about B.C. 468, and was the teacher 
of Colotes, the contemporary of Phidias. — 2. A 
statuary, sculptor, and silver-chaser, of the high- 
est distinction, was a native of Magna Graecia, 
and obtained the Roman franchise with his 
countrymen in B.C. 90. He flourished at Rome 
from about 60 to 30. Pasiteles also wrote a 
treatise in five books upon celebrated works of 
sculpture and chasing. 

Pasithea (n«<Ti0ea). I, One of the Charites, 
or Graces, also called Aglaia. — 2. One of the 
Nereids. 

Pasitigris (UaoiTiypriS or Haofrtyptg,: now 
probably [ Sha t-el- Arab]), a considerable river of 
Asia, rising in the mountains east of Mesoba- 
tene, on the confines of Media and Persis, and 
flowing first west by north to Mount Zagros 
or Parachoathras, then, breaking through this 
chain, it turns to the south, and flows through 
Susiana into the head of the Persian Gulf, after 
receiving the Eulaeus on its western side. Some 
geographers make the Pasitigris a tributary of 
the Tigris. 



Passaron {HacGapuv : near Dhramisius, south- 
west of Joannina), a town of Epirus in Molos- 
sia, and the ancient capital of the Molossian 
j kings. It was destroyed by the Romans, to- 
I gether with seventy other towns of Epirus, after 
I the conquest of Macedonia, B.C. 168. 
Passienus Crispus. Vid. Crispus. 
Passienus Paulus. Vid. Paulus. 
[Passienus Rufus. Vid. Rufus.] 
Patyeci ( Udrainoi ), Phoenician divinities, 
whose dwarfish figures were attached to Phoe- 
nician ships. 

Patala, Patalene. Vid. Pattala, Patta- 

LEXE. 

Patara (ru Udrapa : Harapcvg : ruins at Pa- 
tara), one of the chief cities of Lycia, was a 
flourishing sea-port, on a promontory of the 
same name (fj Hardpov uxpa), sixty stadia (six 
geographical miles) east of the mouth of the 
Xanthus. It was early colonized by Dorians 
from Crete, and became a chief seat of the 
worship of Apollo, who had here a very cele- 
brated oracle, which uttered responses in the 
winter only, and from whose son Patarus the 
name of the city was mythically derived. It 
was restored and enlarged by Ptolemy Phila- 
delphus, who called it Arsinoe, but it remained 
better known by its old name. 

[Patarbemis (IlaTdp6?}ficc), one of the prin- 
cipal officers of Apries, king of Egypt, having 
been sent to arrest and bring to him Amasis, 
but having failed in so doing, was shamefully 
mutilated by the king ; this conduct caused a 
revolt of the Egyptians.] 

Pat avium (Patavlnus : now Padova or Padua), 
an ancient town of the Veneti in the north of 
Italy, on the Medoacus Minor, and on the road 
from Mutina to Altinum, was said to have been 
founded by the Trojan Antenor. It became a 
flourishing and important town in early times, 
and was powerful enough in B.C. 302 to drive 
back the Spartan king Cleomenes with great 
loss when he attempted to plunder the surround- 
ing country. Under the Romans Patavium was 
the most important city in the north of Italy, 
and, by its commerce and manufactures (of 
which its woollen stuffs were the most cele- 
brated), it attained great opulence. According 
to Strabo, it possessed five hundred citizens, 
whose fortune entitled them to the equestrian 
rank. It was plundered by Attila ; and, in con- 
sequence of a revolt of its citizens, it was sub- 
sequently dest royed by Agilolf, king of the Lan- 
gobards, and razed to the ground ; hence the 
modern town contains few remains of antiquity. 
Patavium is celebrated as the birth-place of the 
historian Livy. In its neighborhood were the 
Aqua Patavincz, also called Aponi Fons, respect- 
ing which, vid. p. 78, b. 

Paterculus, C. Velleius, a Roman historian, 
was probably born about B.C. 19, and was de- 
scended from a distinguished Campanian fam- 
ily. He adopted the profession of arms ; and, 
soon after he had entered the army, he accom- 
panied C. Caesar in his expedition to the East, 
and was present with the latter at his interview 
with the Parthian king in A.D. 2. Two years aft- 
erward, A.D. 4, he served underTiberius in Ger- 
many, succeeding his father in the rank of prae- 
fectus equitum, having previously filled in suc- 
cession the offices of tribune of the soldiers and 

611 



PATERNUS, TARRUNTENUS. 



PATROCLUS. 



tribune of the camp. For the next eight years j 
Paterculus served under Tiberius, either as prae- 
fectus or legatus, in the various campaigns of 
the latter in Germany, Pannonia, and Dalmatia, 
and, by his activity and ability, gained the favor 
of the future emperor. He was quaestor A.D. 
7, but he continued to serve as legatus under 
Tiberius. He accompanied his commander on 
his return to Rome in 12, and took a prominent 
part in the triumphal procession of Tiberius, 
along with his brother Magius Celer. The two 
brothers were praetors in 15. Paterculus was 
alive in 30, as he drew up his history in that 
year for the use of M. Vinicius, who was then 
consul ; and it is conjectured, with much prob- 
ability, that he perished in the following year 
(31), along with the other friends of Sejanus. 
The favorable manner in which he had so re- 
cently spoken in his history of this powerful 
minister would be sufficient to insure his con- 
demnation on the fall of the latter. The work 
of Paterculus, which has come down to us, is a 
brief historical compendium in two books, and 
bears the title C. Vellcii Paterculi Histories Ro- 
mance, ad M. Vinicium Cos. Libri II. The begin- 
ning of the work is wanting, and there is also a 
portion lost after the eighth chapter of the first 
book. The object of this compendium was to 
give a brief view of universal history, but more 
especially of the events connected with Rome, 
the history of which occupies the main portion 
of the book. It commenced apparently with the 
destruction of Troy, and ended with the year 
30. In the execution of his work, Velleius has 
shown great skill and judgment. He does not 
attempt to give a consecutive account of all the 
events of history ; he seizes upon a few only 
of the more prominent facts, which he describes 
at sufficient length to leave them impressed 
upon the recollection of his hearers. His style, 
which is a close imitation of Sallust's, is char- 
acterized by clearness, conciseness, and en- 
ergy. In his estimate of the characters of the 
leading actors in Roman history, he generally 
exhibits both discrimination and judgment; but 
he lavishes the most indiscriminate praises, as 
might have been expected, upon his patron 
Tiberius. Only one manuscript of Paterculus 
has come down to us ; and as this manuscript 
abounds with errors, the text is in a very cor- 
rupt state. The best editions are by Ruhn- 
ken, Lugd. Bat., 1789 ; by Orelli. Lips.. 1835 ; by 
Bothe,f urici, 1837; [and byKritz, Lips., 1840.] 

Paternus, Tarruntenus, a jurist, is probably 
the same person who was praefectus prsetorio 
under Commodus, and was put to death by the 
emperor on a charge of treason. He was the 
author of a work in four books, entitled De Re 
Militari or Militarium, from which there are two 
-excerpts in the Digest. 

Patmos {HdT[ioq : now Patmo), one of the isl- 
ands called Sporades, in the Icarian Sea, at 
about equal distances south of Samos and west 
of the Promontorium Posidium on the coast of 
Caria, celebrated as the place to which the 
Apostle John was banished, and in which he 
wrote the Apocalypse. The natives still affect 
to show the cave where St. John saw the apoc- 
alyptic visions (to anj)XaLov ri]q a-rzoKaAvtyeur). 
On the eastern side of the island was a city with , 
a harbor. I 
612 



| Patrae (ILuTpat, TlarpEee, Herod : Ilarpevj ; 
now Patras), one of the twelve cities of Achaia, 
was situated west of Rhium, near the opening 
of the Corinthian Gulf. It is said to have been 
originally called Aroe ('Apo^), and to have been 
founded by the autochthon Eumelus ; and after 
the expulsion of the Ionians, to have been taken 
possession of byPatreus, from whom it derived 
its name. The town is rarely mentioned in 
early Greek history, and was chiefly of import- 
ance as the place from which the Peloponnesians 
directed their attacks against the opposite coast 
of ^Etolia. Patrae was one of the four towns 
which took the leading part in founding the sec- 
ond Achaean league. In consequence of assist- 
ing the ./Etolians against the Gauls in B.C. 279, 
Patrae became so weakened that most of the in- 
habitants deserted the town and took up their 
abodes in the neighboring villages. Under the 
Romans it continued to be an insignificant place 
till the time of Augustus, who rebuilt the town 
after the battle of Actiutn, again collected its 
inhabitants, and added to them those ofRhypae. 
Augustus further gave Patrae dominion over the 
neighboring towns, and even over Locris, and 
also bestowed upon it the privileges of a Roman 
colony: hence we find it called on coins Colonia 
Augusta Aroe Patrensis. Strabo describes Pa* 
trae in his time as a flourishing and populous 
town, with a good harbor, and it was frequently 
the place at which persons landed sailing from 
Italy to Greece. The modern Patras is still an 
important place, but contains few remains of 
antiquity. 

Patroci.es (UaTpoKAjjg), a Macedonian gen- 
eral in the service of Seleucus I and Antiochus 
I., kincrs of Syria. Patrocles held, both under 
Seleucus and Antiochus, an important govern- 
ment over some of the eastern provinces of the 
Syrian empire. During the period of his hold- 
ing this position, he collected accurate geo- 
graphical information, which he afterward pub- 
lished to the world ; but, though he is frequently 
cited by Strabo, who placed the utmost reliance 
on his accuracy, neither the title nor exact sub- 
ject of his work is mentioned. It seems clear, 
however, that it included a general account of 
India, as well as of the countries on the banks 
of the Oxus and the Caspian Sea. Patrocles 
regarded the Caspian Sea as a gulf or inlet of 
the ocean, and maintained the possibility of sail- 
ing thither by sea from the Indian Ocean. 

Patrocli Insula (UaTp6KA.(>v vfiaoq : now Ga- 
daronesi or Gaidronisi). a small island off the 
southwestern coast of Attica, nearSunium. 

Patroclus (Ilarpo/cP.ocor ILir/jo/cX^c), the cele- 
brated friend of Achilles, was son of Mencetius 
of Opus, and grandson of Actor and /fcgina, 
whence he is called Ac/ondcs. His mother is 
commonly called Sthenele. but some mention 
her under the name of Periapis or Polymele. 
iEacus, the grandfather.of Achilles, was a broth- 
er of Mencetius, so that Achiiles and Patroclus 
were kinsmen as well as friends While still a 
boy, Patroclus involuntarily slew Clysonymus, 
son of Amphidamas. In consequence of this 
accident, he was taken by his father to Peleus 
at Phthia, where he was educated together with 
Achilles. He is said to have taken pari in the 
: expedition against Troy on account of h s at- 
I tachment to Achilles. He fought bravely against 



PATRON. 



PAULUS. 



the Trojans, until his friend withdrew from the 
scene of action, when Patroclus followed his 
example. But when the Greeks were hard 
pressed, he begged Achilles to allow him to put 
on his armor, and with his men to hasten to the 
assistance of the Greeks Achilles granted the 
request, and Patroclus succeeded in driving back 
the Trojans and extinguishing the fire which 
was raging among the ships. He slew many 
enemies, and thrice made an assault upon the 
walls of Troy ; but on a sudden he was struck 
by Apollo, and became senseless. In this state 
Euphorbus ran him through with his lance from 
behind, and Hector gave him the last and fatal 
blow. Hector also took possession of his armor. 
A long struggle now ensued between the Greeks 
and Trojans for the body of Patroclus ; but the 
former obtained possession of it, and brought it 
to Achilles, wha was deeply grieved, and vowed 
to avenge the death of his friend. Thetis pro- 
tected the body with ambrosia against decom- 
position, until Achilles had leisure solemnly to 
burn it with funeral sacrifices. His ashes were 
collected in a golden urn which Bacchus (Dio- 
nysus) had once given to Thetis, and were de- 
posited under a mound, where the remains of 
Achilles were subsequently buried. Funeral 
games were celebrated in his honor. Achilles 
and Patroclus met again in the lower world ; or, 
according to others, they continued after their 
death to live together in the island of Leuce. 

[Patron, an Arcadian, mentioned by Virgil as 
one of those engaged in the games celebrated 
by .-Eneas in Sicily in honor of his father.] 

Patron-. [1. A native of Phocis, commander 
of the Greek mercenaries who accompanied 
Darius after the battle of Gaugamela. When 
Bessus and his accomplices were conspiring 
against Darius, Patron with his Greeks remain- 
ed faithful to him.]— 2. An Epicurean philoso- 
pher, lived for some time in Rome, where he be- 
came acquainted with Cicero and others. From 
Rome he removed to Athens, and there succeed- 
ed Phaedrus as president of the Epicurean school, 
B.C. 52. 

Pattala. Vid. Pattalene. 

Pattalenk or Patalene (riarrc/.//v7/, llara- 
hnvi) : now Lower Scindc), the name of the great 
delta formed by the two principal arms by which 
thelndus falls into the sea. At the apex of the 
delta stood the city Pattala or Patala (now 
probably Hydcrahad). The name is probably a 
native Indian word, namely, the Sanscrit patala, 
which means the western country, and is applied 
to the western part of Northern India about the 
Indus, in contradistinction to the eastern part 
about the Ganges. 

PatulcIus. a surname of Janus. Vid. Janus. 

Patumus (Uurcvuor : in the Old Testament, 
Pithom : probably near Habascyh or Bclbels), an 
Egyptian city in the Arabian Desert, on the east- 
ern margin of the Delta, near Bubastis, and near 
the commencement of Necho's Canal from the 
Nile to the Red Sea ; built by the Israelites dur- 
ing their captivity (Exod., i., 11). 

Paulina of Paullina. I.Lollia. Vid. Lol- 
lia.--2. Pompeia, wife of Seneca the philoso- 
pher, and probably the daughter of Pompeius 
Paulinus. who commanded in Germany in the 
reign of Nero. When her husband was con- 
demned tn death, she opened her veins along 



with him. After the blood had flowed some- 
time, Nero commanded her veins to be bound 
up ; she lived a few years longer, but with a 
paleness which testified how near she had been 
to death. 

Paulinus. 1. Pompeius, commanded in Ger- 
many along with L. Antistius Vetus in A.D. 58, 
and completed the dam to restrain the inunda- 
tion of the Rhine, which Drusus had commenced 
sixty-three years before. Seneca dedicated tc~ 
him his treatise De Brevitatc Vita ; and the Pom- 
peia Paulina, whom the philosopher married, 
was probably the daughter of this Paulinus. — 
2. Suetonius, propraetor in Mauretania, in the 
reign of the Emperor Claudius, A.D. 42, when 
he conquered the Moors who had revolted, and 
advanced as far as Mount Atlas. He had the 
command of Britain in the reign of Nero, from 
59 to 62. For the first two years all his under- 
takings were successful ; but during his absence 
on an expedition against the island of Mona 
(now Anglesey), the Britons rose in rebellion 
under Boadicea (61). They at first met with 
great success, but were conquered by Suetonius 
on his return from Mona. Vid. Boadicea. In 
66 he was consul ; and, after the death of Nero 
in 68, he was one of Otho's generals in the war 
against Vitellius. It was against his advice that 
Oiho fought the battle at Bedriacum. He was 
pardoned by Viteliius after Otho's death. — 3. Of 
Milan (Mediolancnsis), was the secretary of St. 
Ambrose, after whose death he became a dea- 
con, and repaired to Africa, where, at the re- 
quest of St. Augustine, he composed a biogra- 
phy of his former patron. This biography, and 
two other small works by Paulinus, are still ex- 
tant. — 4 Meropius Pontius Anicius Paulinus, 
bishop of Nola, and hence generally designated 
Paulinus Nolanus, was born at Bourdeaux, or at 
a neighboring town, which he calls Embroma- 
gum, about A.D. 353. His parents were wealthy 
and illustrious, and he received a careful educa- 
tion, enjoying in particular the instructions of 
the poet Ausonius. After many years spent in 
worldly honors, he withdrew from the world, and 
was eventually chosen bishop of Nola in 409. 
He died in 431. The works of Paulinus are 
still extant, and consist of Epistola (fifty-one in 
number), Carmina (thirty-two in number, com- 
posed in a great variety of metres), and a short 
tract entitled Passio S. Genesii Arclate?isis. Ed- 
ited by Le Brun, 4to, Paris, 1685, reprinted at 
Veron., 1736. 

Paullus or Paulus, a Roman cognomen in 
many gentes, but best known as the name of a 
family of the .Emilia gens. The name was 
originally written with a double I, but subse- 
quently with only one I. 

Paulus (IlaSAoc), Greek writers. 1. iEcmETA, 
a celebrated medical writer, of whose personal 
history nothing is known except that he was 
born in .^Egina, and that he travelled a good 
deal, visiting, among other places, Alexandrea. 
He probably lived in the latter half of the sev- 
enth century after Christ. He wrote several 
medical works in Greek, of which the principal 
one is still extant, with no exact title, but com- 
monly called De Re Medica Libri Septem. This 
work is chiefly a compilation from former writ- 
ers. The Greek text has been twice published, 
Venet., 1528. and Basil, 1538. There is an ex- 

613 



PAULUS, iEMILIUS. 



PAULUS, JULIUS. 



cellent English translation by Adams, London, 
1834, seq.—2. Of Alexandra, wrote, in A.D. \ 
378, an Introduction to Astrology (Kigayuyrj elc 
tt]v a~o-s?*EGfiaTiKr]i>), which has come down to 
us, edited by Schatus or Schato, Wittenberg, j 
1586. — 3. Of S amos ata, a celebrated heresiarch 
of the third century, was made bishop of Anti- i 
och about A.D. 260. He was condemned and j 
deposed by a council held in 269. Paulus de- S 
nied the distinct personality of the Son of God, j 
and maintained that the Word came and dwelt ; 
in the man Jesus. — 4. Silentiarius, so called, j 
because he was chief of the silentiarii, or secre- 
taries of the Emperor Justinian. He wrote va- 
rious poems, of which the following are extant : 
(1.) A Description of the Church of St. Sophia 
('Exopacig rov vaov rfjc dycac loty'iac), consist- 
ing of one thousand and twenty-nine verses, of 
which the first one hundred and thirty-four are 
iambic, the rest hexameter. This poem gives 
a clear and graphic description of the superb 
structure which forms its subject, and was re- 
cited by its author at the second dedication of j 
the church (A.D. 562), after the restoration of j 
the dome, which had fallen in. Edited by Graefe, i 
Lips., 1822, and by Bekker, Bonn, 1837, in the | 
Bonn edition of the Byzantine historians. (2.) A j 
Description of the Pulpit CEndpacig tov upOuvoc), j 
consisting of three hundred and four verses, is a j 
supplement to the former poem. It is printed j 
in the editions mentioned above. (3.) Epigrams, \ 
eighty-three in all, given in the Anthologia. j 
Among these is a poem On the Pythian Baths, j 
(E£f ra ev Uvdcoic -&ipiia). 

Paulus, ^Emilius. 1. M., consul B.C. 302, j 
and magister equitum to the dictator Q. Fabius j 
Maximus Rullianus, 301. — 2. M., consul 255 { 
with Ser. Fulvius Peetinus Nobilior, about the ; 
middle of the first Punic war. Vid. Nobilior, j 
No. 1. — 3. L., son of No. 2, consul 219, when 
he conquered Demetrius off the island of Pharos ! 
in the Adriatic, and compelled him to fly for j 
refuge to Philip, king of Macedonia. He was i 
consul a second time in 216 with C. Terentius : 
Varro. This was the year of the memorable 
defeat at Cannae. Vid. Hannibal. The battle 
was fought against the advice of Paulus ; and | 
he was one of the many distinguished Romans j 
who perished in the engagement, refusing to I 
fly from the field when a tribune of the soldiers 
offered him his horse. Hence we find in Hor- ! 
ace (Carm., i., 12), " animaeque magnae prodi- 
gam Paulum, superante Poeno.* ? Paulus was a 
stanch adherent of the aristocracy, and was j 
raised to the consulship by the latter party to ; 
counterbalance the influence of the plebeian 
Terentius Varro. — 4. L., afterward surnamed 
Macedonicus, son of No. 3, was born about 230 
or 229, since at the time of his second consul- 
ship, 168, he was upward of sixty years of age. 
He was one of the best specimens of the high 
Roman nobles. He would not condescend to 
flatter the people for the offices of the state, 
maintained with strictness severe discipline in 
the army, was deeply skilled in the law of the 
augurs, to whose college he belonged, and 
maintained throughout life a pure and unspot- 
ted character. He was elected curule aedile 
192 ; was praetor 191, and obtained Further 
Spain as his province, where he carried on war 
with the Lusitani ; and was consul 181. when 
614 



he conquered the Ingauni, a Ligurian people. 
For the next thirteen years he lived quietly at 
Rome, devoting most of his time to the educa- 
tion of his children. He was consul a second 
time in 168, and brought the war against Per- 
seus to a conclusion by the defeat of the Mace- 
donian monarch, near Pydna, on the 22d of 
June. Perseus shortly afterward surrendered 
himself to Paulus. Vid. Perseus. Paulus re* 
mained in Macedonia during the greater part of 
the following year as proconsul, and arranged 
the affairs of Macedonia, in conjunction with 
ten Roman commissioners, whom the senate 
had dispatched for the purpose. Before leav- 
ing Greece he marched into Epirus, where, in 
accordance with a cruel command of the senate, 
he gave to his soldiers seventy towns to be pil- 
laged because they had been in alliance with 
Perseus. The triumph of Paulus, which was 
celebrated at the end of November, 167, was 
the most splendid that Rome had yet seen. It 
lasted three days. Before the triumphal car of 
iEmilius walked the captive monarch of Mace- 
donia and his children, and behind it were his 
two illustrious sons, Q. Fabius Maximus and 
P. Scipio Africanus the younger, both of whom 
had been adopted into other families. But the 
glory of the conqueror was clouded by family 
misfortune. At this very time he lost his two 
younger sons ; one, twelve years of age, died 
only five days before his triumph, and the other, 
fourteen years of age, only three days after his 
triumph. The loss was all the severer, since 
he had no son left to carry his name down to 
posterity. In 164 Paulus was censor with Q. 
Marcius Philippus, and died in 160, after a long 
and tedious illness. The fortune he left behind 
him was so small as scarcely to be sufficient to 
pay his wife's dowry. The Adelphi of Terence, 
was brought out at the funeral games exhibited 
in his honor. .-Emilius Paulus was married 
twice. By his first wife, Papiria, the daughter 
of C. Papirius Maso, consul 231, he had four 
children, two sons, one of whom was adopted 
by Fabius Maximus and the other by P. Scipio, 
and two daughters, one of whom was married 
| to Q. Julius Tubero, and the other to M. Cato. 
son of Cato the censor. He afterward divorced 
Papiria ; and by his second wife, whose name 
I is not mentioned, he had two sons, whose death 
| has been mentioned above, and a daughter, who 
! was a child at the time that her father was 
\ elected to his second consulship. 
! Paulus, Julius, one of the most distinguish- 
| ed of the Roman jurists, has been supposed, 
i without any good reason, to be of Greek origin. 
| He was in the auditorium of Papinian. and, 
I consequently, was acting as a jurist in the reign 
! of Septimius Severus. He was exiled by Ela- 
i gabalus, but he was recalled by Alexander Se- 
verus when the latter became emperor, and 
was made a member of his consilium. Paulus 
also held the office of praefectus praetorio : he 
I survived his contemporary Ulpian. Paulus was 
I perhaps the most fertile of all the Roman law 
writers, and there is more excerpted from him 
in the Digest than from any other jurist ex- 
i cept Ulpian. Upward of seventy separate works 
! by Paulus are quoted in the Digest. Of these. 
! his greatest work was Ad Edictum, in eighty 
'. books. 



PAULUS, PASSIENUS. 

Paulus.Passieni s,acontemporary and friend 
cf the younger Pliny, was a distinguished Ro- 
man eques, and was celebrated for his elegiac 
and lyric poems. He belonged to the same 
municipium (Mevania in Umbria) as Propertius, 
whom he numbered among his ancestors. 

Pausanias {Uavaaviac). I. A Spartan of the 
Agid branch of the royal family, the son ofCle- 
ombrotus and nephew of Leonidas. Several 
writers incorrectly call him king ; but he only 
succeeded his father Cleombrotus in the guard- 
ianship of his cousin Plistarchus, the son of 
Leonidas, for whom he exercised the functions 
of royalty from B.C. 479 to the period of his 
death. In 479, when the Athenians called upon 
the Lacedaemonians for aid against the Persians, 
the Spartans sent a body of five thousand Spar- 
tans, each attended by seven Helots, under the 
command of Pausanias. At the Isthmus Pau- 
sanias was joined by the other Peloponnesian 
allies, and at Eleusis by the Athenians, and 
forthwith took the command of the combined 
forces, the other Greek generals forming a sort 
of council of war. The allied forces amounted 
to nearly one hundred and ten thousand men. 
Near Plataeae in Bceotia, Pausanias defeated the 
Persian army under the command of Mardonius. 
This decisive victory secured the independence 
of Greece. Pausanias received as his reward 
a tenth of the Persian spoils. In 477 the con- 
federate Greeks sent out a fleet, under the com- 
mand of Pausanias, to follow up their success 
by driving the Persians completely out of Eu- 
rope and the islands. Cyprus was first attack- 
ed, and the greater part of it subdued. From 
Cyprus Pausanias sailed to Byzantium, and cap- 
tured the city. The capture of this city afford- 
ed Pausanias an opportunity for commencing 
the execution of the design which he had ap- 
parently formed even before leaving Greece. 
Dazzled by his success and reputation, his sta- 
tion as a Spartan citizen had become too re- 
stricted for his ambition. His position as re- 
cent was one which must terminate when the 
king became of age. He therefore aimed at 
becoming tyrant over the whole of Greece, with 
the assistance of the Persian king. Among the 
prisoners taken at Byzantium were some Per- 
sians connected with the royal family. These 
he sent to the king, with a letter, in which he 
offered to bring Sparta and the rest of Greece 
binder his power, and proposed to marry his 
daughter. His offers were gladly accepted, and 
whatever amount of troops and money he re- 
quired for accomplishing his designs. Pausa- 
nias now set no bounds to his arrogant and dom- 
ineering temper The allies were so disgusted 
by his conduct, that they all, except the Pelo- 
ponnesians and ^Eginetans, voluntarily offered 
to transfer to the Athenians that pre-eminence 
of rank which Sparta had hitherto enjoyed. In 
this way the Athenian confederacy first took its 
rise. Reports of the conduct and designs of 
Pausanias reached Sparta, and he was recalled 
and put upon his trial ; but the evidence re- 
specting his meditated treachery was not yet 
thought sufficiently strong. Shortly afterward 
he returned to Byzantium, without the orders 
of the ephors, and renewed his treasonable in- 
trigues. He was again recalled to Sparta, was 
again put on his trial, and again acquitted- But 



PAUSANIAS. 

even after this second escape he still continued 
to carry on his intrigues with Persia. At length 
a man, who was charged with a letter to Per- 
sia, having his suspicions awakened by notic- 
ing that none of those sent previously on simi- 
lar errands had returned, counterfeited the seal 
of Pausanias and opened the letter, in which 
he found directions for his own death. He car- 
ried the letter to the ephors, who prepared to 
arrest Pausanias ; but he took refuge in the 
temple of Athena (Minerva) Chalcicecus. The 
ephors stripped off the roof of the temple and 
built up the door ; the aged mother of Pausa- 
nias is said to have been among the first who 
laid a stone for this purpose. When he was 
on the point of expiring, the ephors took him 
out lest his death should pollute the sanctuary. 
He died as soon as he got outside, B.C. 470. 
He left three sons behind him, Plistoanax, aft- 
erward king, Cleomenes, and Aristocles. — 2. 
Son of Plistoanax, and grandson of the preced- 
ing, was king of Sparta from B.C. 408 to 394. 
In 403 he was sent with an army into Attica, 
and secretly favored the cause of Thrasybulus 
and the Athenian exiles, in order to counteract 
the plans of Lysander. In 395 Pausanias was 
sent with an army against the Thebans ; but in 
consequence of the death of Lysander, who was 
slain under the walls of Haliartus on the day 
before Pausanias reached the spot, the king 
agreed to withdraw his forces from Boeotia. 
On his return to Sparta he was impeached, and, 
seeing that a fair trial was not to be hoped for, 
went into voluntary exile, and was condemned 
to death. He was living at Tegea in 385, when 
Mantinea was besieged by his son Agesipolis, 
who succeeded him on the throne. — 3. King of 
Macedonia, the son and successor of Aeropus. 
He was assassinated in the year of his acces- 
sion by Amyntas II., 394. — 4. A pretender to 
j the throne of Macedonia, made his appearance 
j in 367, after Alexander II. had been assassin- 
ated by Ptolemaius. Eurydice, the mother of 
Alexander, sent to request the aid of the Athe- 
nian general Iphicrates, who expelled Pausanias 
from the kingdom. — 5. A Macedonian y^)uth of 
distinguished family, from the province of Ores- 
tis. Having been shamefully treated by Attalus, 
he complained of the outrage to Philip ; but, as 
Philip took no notice of his complaints, he di- 
rected his vengeance against the king himself. 
He shortly afterward murdered Philip at the 
festival held at ^Egae, 336, but was slain on the 
spot by some officers of the king's guard. Sus- 
picion rested on Olympias and Alexander of 
having been privy to the deed ; but with regard 
to Alexander, at any rate, the suspicion is prob- 
ably totally unfounded. There was a story that 
Pausanias, while meditating revenge, having 
asked the sophist Hermocrates which was the 
shortest way to fame, the latter replied that it 
was by killing the man who had performed the 
greatest achievements. — 6. The traveller and 
i geographer, was perhaps a native of Lydia. He 
j lived under Antoninus Pius and M. Aurelius, 
I and wrote his celebrated work in the reign of 
j the latter emperor. This work, entitled 'EA- 
j ?Adoc. Uepirjyrjacr, a Periegesis or Itinerary of 
! Greece, is in ten books, and contains a descrip- 
tion of Attica and Megaris (i.), Corinthia, Sic- 
yonia, Phliasia, and Argolis (ii.), Laconica (iii.) r 

615 



PAUSIAS. 



PEDIUS. 



Messenia (iv.), Elis (v., vi.), Achaea (vii.), Arca- 
dia (viii ). Boeotia (ix ), Phocis (x ). The work 
shows that Pausanias visited most of the places 
in these divisions of Greece, a fact which is 
clearly demonstrated by the minuteness and 
particularity of his description. The work is 
merely an Itinerary. Pausanias gives no gen- 
eral description of a country or even of a place, 
but he describes the things as he comes to them. 
His account is minute ; but it mainly refers to 
objects of antiquity and works of art, such as 
buildings, temples, statues, and pictures. He 
also mentions mountains, rivers, and fountains, 
=ind the mythological stories connected with 
them, which, indeed, are his chief inducements 
to speak of them. His religious feeling was 
strong, and his belief sure, for he tells many 
old legends in true good faith and seriousness. 
His style has been much condemned by mod- 
ern critics ; but if we except some corrupt pas- 
sages, and if we allow that his order of words 
is not that of the best Greek writers, there is 
hardly much obscurity to a person who is com- 
petently acquainted with Greek, except that 
obscurity which sometimes is owing to the mat- 
ter. With the exception of Herodotus, there 
is no writer of antiquity, and perhaps none of 
modern times, who has comprehended so many 
Taluable facts in a small volume. The best 
editions are by Siebelis, Lips., 1822-1828, 5 vols. 
8vo ; by Schubart and Walz, Lips., 1838-40, 3 
vols. 8vo ; [and by L. Dindorf, Paris, 1845, 8vo.] 

Pausias (Havoiag), one of the most distin- 
guished Greek painters, was a contemporary 
of Aristides, Melanthius, and Apelles (about 
B.C. 360-330), and a disciple of Pamphilus. He 
had previously been instructed by his father 
Brietes, who lived at Sicyon, where also Pausias 
passed his life. The department of the art 
which Pausias most practiced was painting in 
encaustic with the cestrum. His favorite sub- 
jects were small panel-pictures, chiefly of boys. 
One of his most celebrated pictures was the 
portrait of Glycera, a flower-girl of his native 
city, of whom he was enamored when a young 
man. Most of his paintings were probably trans- 
ported to Rome, with the other treasures of Sic- 
yonian art, in the aedileship of Scaurus, when 
the state of Sicyon was compelled to sell all 
the pictures which were public property in order 
to pay its debts. 

[Pausic.2e {JLavoLKai), a people of the Persian 
empire, classed under the eleventh general di- 
vision, dwelling between the Oxus and Jaxar- 
tes.] 

Pausilypum (ro HavcLAvxov), that is, the 
" grief-assuaging," was the name of a splendid 
villa near Neapolis in Campania, which Vedius 
Pollio bequeathed to Augustus. The name was 
transferred to the celebrated grotto (now Posi- 
lippo) between Naples and Puzzuoli, which was 
formed by a tunnel cut through the rock by the 
architect Cocceius, by command of Agrippa. 
At its entrance the tomb of Virgil is still shown. 

[Pausiras (llavaipar) or Pausiris (Uavcipig), 
son of Amyrtaeus, the rebel satrap of Egypt. 
Vid. Amyrtaeus. Notwithstanding his father's 
revolt, he was appointed by the Persian king to 
the satrapy of Egypt.] 

Pauson (U.av(juv) f a Greek painter, who ap- 
pears, from the description of Aristotle (Poet.. 
616 



! ii., § 2), to have lived somewhat earlier than the 

time of this philosopher, 
i Pa usurps: (Pausulanus : now Monte delV Olmo), 

a town in the interior of Picenum, between Urbs 

Salvia and Asculum. 
Pavor. Vid. Pallor. 

Pax, the goddess of Peace, called Irene by the 

Greeks. Vid. Irene. 

Pax Julia or Pax Augusta (now Beja), a Ro- 
' man colony in Lusitania, and the seat of a con- 

ventus juridicus, north of Julia Myrtilis. 
\ Paxi (now Paxo and Antipaxo), the name of 
i two small islands ofFthe western coast of Greece* 

between Corcyra and Leucas. 

Ped^eum or Pedjeus (UrjdaLov, accus., Horn., 
: II, xiii., 172), a town of the Troad. 
; [Ped^eus (Il7/6alog), son of Antenor, slain by 

Meges in the Trojan war.] 
■' Pedalium {Urj6a?uov). 1. (Now Cape Ghinazi), 

a promontory of Caria, on the western side of 

the Sinus Glaucus, called also Artemisium, from 

a temple of Artemis upon it. — 2. (Now Capo della. 

Grega), a promontory on the eastern side of 

Cyprus. 

I [Pedanius, T. 1. The first centurion of the 
principes, was distinguished for his bravery in 
the second Punic war, B.C. 212. — 2. Pedanius 

' Secundus, praefectus urbi in the reign of Nero, 
was killed by one of his own slaves.] 

Pedasa {Uiidnaa : Uridaoevq, plur. Ur/SaaeeCt 
Herod ), a very ancient city of Caria, was origin- 
ally a chief abode of the Leleges. Alexander 

| assigned it to Halicarnassus. At the time of 
the Roman empire it had entirely vanished, 
though its name was preserved in that of the 
district around its site, namely, Pedasis (IT7?c5a- 
aiq). Its locality is only known thus far, that 
it must have stood somewhere in the triangle 
formed by Miletus, Halicarnassus, and Strato- 

' nicea. 

! Pedasus (IT^ao-oc). 1, A town of Mysia, on 
I the Satniois, mentioned several times by Homer, 
j It was destroyed by the time of Strabo, who says 
that it was a settlement of the Leleges on Mount 
j Ida. — [2. A city of Messenia, mentioned by Ho- 
I mer, which subsequent WTiters sought to identify 
with Methone or Corone.] 

[Pedasus (TL?j6aoog), son of Bucolion and the 
nymph Abarbarea, and brother of JSsepus, slain 
i by Euryalus under the walls of Troy.] 
Pedianus, Asconius. Vid. Asconius. 
[Pediea {Usdieta : now probably the ruins at 
j Palea-Fiva), a place in Phocis, near the Cephi- 
: sus, between Neon and Triteea.] 
! Pedius. 1. Q., the great-nephew of the dic- 
j tator C. Julius Caesar, being the grandson of 
| Julia, Caesar's eldest sister. He served under 
j Caesar in Gaul as his legatus, B.C. 57. In 55 
j he was a candidate for the curule aedileship with 
| Cn. Plancius and others, but he lost his election. 
' In the civil war he fought on Caesars side. He 
j was praetor in 48, and in that year he defeated 
i and slew Milo in the neighborhood of Thurii 
j In 45 he served against the Pompeian party in 
i Spain. In Caesar's will, Pedius was named one 
i of his heirs along with his two other great-neph- 
ews, C. Octavianus and L. Pinarius, Octavianus 
I obtaining three fourths of the property, and the 
| remaining one fourth being divided between 
Pinarius and Pedius : the latter resigned hia 
I share of the inheritance to Octavianus. After 



PEDNELISSUS. 



PEI AGONIA. 



the fall of the consuls Hirtius and Pansa, at 
the battle of Mutina, in April, 43, Octavianus 
inarched upon Rome at the head of an army, 
and in the month of August he was elected con- 
sul along with Pedius. The latter forthwith pro- 
posed a law, known by the name of the Lex Pe- 
dia, by which all the murderers of Julius Ca;sar 
were punished with aqua et ignis interdictw. 
Pedius was left in charge of the city, while Oc- 
tavianus marched into the north of Italy. He 
died toward the end of the year, shortly after the 
news of the proscription had reached Rome.— 
[2. Q., grandson of No. 1, was dumb from his 
birth. He was instructed in painting by the di- 
rection of his kinsman Messala, with the sanc- 
tion of Augustus, and attained to considerable 
excellence in the art, but died while still a 
youth.]— 3. Sextus, a Roman jurist, frequently- 
cited by Paulus and Ulpian, lived before the time 
of Hadrian. 

Pednelissus ([Ii6vy?uaa6g), a city in the in- 
terior of Pisidia, and apparently on the Euryme- 
don, above Aspendus and Selge. It formed an 
independent state, but was almost constantly at 
■war with Selge. Mr. Fellowes supposes its site 
to be marked by the ruins of the Roman period 
near Bolkas-Koi, on the eastern bank of the Eu- 
j-ymedon. 

Pedo Albinovanus. Vid. Albinovanus. 

Peduceus, Sex. 1. Propraetor in Sicily, B.C. 
76 and 75, in the latter of which years Cicero 
served under him as quaestor. — 2. Son of the 
preceding, and an intimate friend of Atticus and 
Cicero. In the civil war Peducaeus sided with 
Caesar, by whom he was appointed in 48 to the 
government of Sardinia. In 39 he was proprae- 
tor in Spain. 

Peoum (Pedanus : now Gallicano), an ancient 
town of Latium, on the Via Lavicana, which fell 
into decay at an early period. 

Pegje. Vid. Pag.*. 

Pegasis (Ylvyaoic), i. c, sprung from Pegasus, 
was applied to the fountain Hippocrene, which 
was called forth by the hoof of Pegasus. The 
Muses are also called Pegasides, because the 
fountain Hippocrene was sacred to them. 

Pegasus {Ufjyacog). c 1. The celebrated winged 
horse, whose origin is thus related : When Per- 
seus struck off the head of Medusa, with whom 
Neptune (Poseidon) had had intercourse in the 
form of a horse or a bird, there sprang from her 
Chrysaor and the horse Pegasus. The latter 
received this name because he was believed to 
have made his appearance near the sources 
(nrjyai) of Oceanus. He ascended to the seats 
of the immortals, and afterward lived in the 
palace of Jupiter (Zeus), for whom he carried 
thunder and lightning. According to this view, 
which is apparently the most ancient, Pegasus 
was the thundering horse of Jupiter (Zeus) ; 
but later writers describe him as the horse of 
Eos (Aurora), and place him among the stars. 
Pegasus also acts a prominent part in the com- 
bat of Bellerophon against the Chimaera. In 
order to kill the Chimaera, it was necessary for 
Bellerophon to obtain possession of Pegasus. 
For this purpose the soothsayer Polyidus at 
Corinth advised him to spend a night in the tem- 
ple of Minerva (Athena). As Bellerophon was 
asleep in the temple, the goddess appeared to 
him in a dream, commanding him to sacrifice to 



Neptune (Poseidon), and gave him a golden 
bridle. When he awoke he found the bridle, 
offered the sacrifice, and caught Pegasus while 
he was drinking at the well Pirene. According 
to some, Minerva (Athena) herself tamed and 
bridled Pegasus, and surrendered him to Bel- 
lerophon. After he had conquered the Chimaera, 
he endeavored to rise up to heaven upon his 
winged horse, but fell down upon the earth. 
Vid. Bellerophon. Pegasus was also regarded 
as the horse of the Muses, and in this conn* ction 
is more celebrated in modern times than in an- 
tiquity ; for with the ancients he had no con- 
nection with the Muses, except producing with 
his hoof the inspiring fountain Hippocrene. The 
story about this fountain runs as follows : When 
the nine Muses engaged in a contest with the 
nine daughters of Pierus on Mount Helicon, all 
became darkness when the daughters of Pierus 
began to sing ; whereas, during the song of the 
Muses, heaven, the sea, and all the rivers stood 
still to listen, and Helicon rose heavenward 
with delight, until Pegasus, on the advice of 
Neptune (Poseidon), stopped its ascent by kick- 
ing it with his hoof. From this kick there arose 
Hippocrene, the inspiring well of the Muses, on 
Mount Helicon, which, for this reason, Persius 
calls fons caballinus. Others, again, relate that 
Pegasus caused the well to gusli forth because 
he was thirsty. Pegasus is often seen repre- 
sented in ancient works of art along with Mi- 
nerva (Athena) and Bellerophon. — 2. A Roman 
jurist, one of the followers or pupils of Procu- 
lus, and preefectus urbi under Domitian (Juv., 
iv., 76). The Senatusconsultum Pegasianum, 
which was passed in the time of Vespasian, 
when Pegasus was consul suffectus with Pusio, 
probably took its name from him. 

[Peir^eus (Ueipaievg). Vid. Piraeus.] 
Peiso Lacus. Vid. Pelso Lacus. 
Pelagius, probably a native of Britain, cele- 
brated as the propagator of those heretical opin- 
ions which have derived their name from him, 
and which were opposed with great energy by 
his contemporaries, Augustine and Jerome. He 
first appears in history about the beginning of 
the fifth century, when we find him residing at 
Rome. In the year 409 or 4 10, when Alaric was 
threatening the metropolis, Pelagius, accom- 
panied by his disciple and ardent admirer Cceles- 
tius, passed over to Sicily, from thence pro- 
ceeded to Africa, and, leaving Ccelestius at 
Carthage, sailed for Palestine. The fame of 
his sanctity had preceded him, for upon his ar- 
rival he was received with great warmth by- 
Jerome and many other distinguished fathers 
of the Church. Soon afterward the opinions of 
Pelagius were denounced as heretical ; and, in 
A D. 417, Pelagius and Ccelestius were anathe- 
matized by Pope Innocentius. A very few only 
of the numerous treatises of Pelagius have de- 
scended to us. They are printed with the works 
of Jerome. 

[Pelagon (He^dyuv), I. A Pylian warrior, 
served in the Trojan war under Nestor. — 2. A 
Lycian warrior in the train of Sarpedon. — 3. A 
Phocian, son of Amphidamas : from him Cad- 
mus bought the cow which guided him to 
Thebes.] 

Pelagoma {Tlslayovia : He?<.ay6vec, pi.). 1. A 
district in Macedonia. The Pelagones were an 

617 



PELARGE. 



PELEUS. 



ancient people, probably of Pelasgic origin, and 
seem originally to have inhabited the Valley of 
the Axius, since Homer calls Pelagon a son of 
Axius. The Pelagones afterward migrated 
westward to the Erigon, the country around 
which received the name of Pelagonia, which 
thus lay south of Paeonia. The chief town of 
this district was also called Pelagonia (now Vi- 
iolia or Monastir), which was under the Romans 
the capital of the fourth division of Macedonia. 
It was situated on the Via Egnatia, not far from 
the narrow passes leading into Illyria. — 2. A 
district in Thessaly, called the Pelagonian Tripo- 
lis, because it consisted of the three towns of 
Azorus, Pythium, and Doliche. It was situated 
west of Olympus, in the upper valley of the 
Titaresius, and belonged to Perrhaebia, whence 
these three towns are sometimes called the 
Perrhaebian Tripolis. Some of the Macedonian 
Pelagonians, who had been driven out of their 
homes by the Peeonians, migrated into this part 
of Thessaly, which was originally inhabited by 
Dorians. 

[Pelarge {Jlelapyrj), daughter of Potneus, 
wife of Isthmiades, was instrumental in estab- 
lishing the Cabiri-vvorship in Bceotia, and hence 
became herself an object of worship.] 

Pelasgi (Tlc?.aoyoi), the earliest inhabitants 
of Greece, who established the worship of the 
Dodonaean Zeus (Jupiter), Hephaestus (Vulcan), 
the Cabiri, and other divinities that belong to the 
earliest inhabitants of the country. They claim- 
ed descent from a mythical hero, Pelasgus, of 
whom we have different accounts in the differ- 
ent parts of Greece inhabited by Pelasgians. 
The nation was widely spread over Greece and 
the islands of the Grecian archipelago, and the 
name of Pelasgia was given at one time to 
Greece. One of the most ancient traditions 
represented Pelasgus as a descendant of Pho- 
roneus, king of Argos ; and it seems to have 
been generally believed by the Greeks that the 
Pelasgi spread from Argos to the other coun- 
tries of Greece. Arcadia, Attica, Epirus, and 
Thessaly were, in addition to Argos, some of the 
principal seats of the Pelasgi. They were also 
found on the coasts of Asia Minor, and, accord- 
ing to seme writers, in Italy as well. Of the 
language, habits, and civilization of this people, 
we possess no certain knowledge. Herodotus 
«ays they spoke a barbarous language, that is, a 
language not Greek ; but from the facility with 
which the Greek and Pelasgic languages coa- 
lesced in all parts of Greece, and from the fact 
that the Athenians and Arcadians are said to 
liave been of pure Pelasgic origin, it is probable 
that the two languages had a close affinity. The 
Pelasgi are further said to have been an agri- 
cultural people, and to have possessed a consid- 
erable knowledge of the useful arts. The most 
ancient architectural remains of Greece, such 
as the treasury or tomb of Atreus at Mycenae, 
are ascribed to the Pelasgians, and are cited as 
■specimens of Pelasgian architecture, though 
there is no positive authority for these state- 
ments. 

PelasgIa (U&aoyla), an ancient name of the 
islands of Delos and Lesbos, referring, of course, 
to their having been early seats of the Pelasgi- 
ans. 

Pelasgiotis (liefaift&rtcy, a district in Thes- 
618 



saly, between Hestiasotis and Magnesia. Vid 
Thessalia. 

Pelasgus. Vid. Pelasgi. 

Pelendones, a Celtiberian people in Hispania 
Tarraconensis, between the sources of the Du- 
rius and the Iberus. 

Pelethronium (Ue^edpoviov), a mountainous 
district in Thessaly, part of Mount Pelion, where 
the Lapithae dwelt, and which is said to have de- 
rived its name from Pelethronius, king of the 
Lapithae, who invented the use of the bridle and 
the saddle. 

Peleus (Ui]?,evg), son of iEacus and Endeis, 
was king of the Myrmidons at Phthia in Thes- 
saly. He was a brother of Telamon, and step- 
brother of Phocus, the son of JEacus, by the 
Nereid Psamathe. Peleus and Telamon re- 
solved to get rid of Phocus, because he ex- 
celled them in their military games, and Tela- 
mon, or, according to others, Peleus, murdered 
their step-brother. The two brothers concealed 
their crime by removing the body of Phocus, 
but were nevertheless found out, and expelled 
by yEacus from iEgina. Peleus went to Phthia 
in Thessaly, where he was purified from the 
murder by Eurytion, the son of Actor, married 
his daughter Antigone, and received with her 
a third of Eurytion's kingdom. Others relate 
that he went to Ceyx at Trachis ; and, as he 
had come to Thessaly without companions, he 
prayed to Jupiter (Zeus) for an army ; and the 
god, to please Peleus, metamorphosed the ants 
(fivpp.7]K£s) into men, who were accordingly call- 
ed Myrmidons. Peleus accompanied Eurytion 
to the Calydonian hunt, and involuntarily killed 
him with his spear, in consequence of which he 
fled from Phthia to Iolcus, where he was again 
purified by Acastus, the king of the place. While 
residing at Iolcus, Astydamia, the wife of Acas- 
tus, fell in love with him ; but, as her proposals 
were rejected by Peleus, she accused him to 
her husband of having attempted her virtue. 
Acastus, unwilling to stain his hand with the 
blood of the man whom he had hospitably re- 
ceived, and whom he had purified from his guilt, 
took him to Mount Pelion, where they hunted 
wild beasts ; and when Peleus, overcome with 
fatigue, had fallen asleep, Acastus left him 
alone, and concealed his sword, that he might 
be destroyed by the wild beasts. When Peleus 
awoke and sought his sword, he was attacked 
by the Centaurs, but was saved by Chiron, who 
also restored to him his sword. There are 
some modifications of this account in other writ- 
ers : instead of Astydamia, some mention Hip- 
polyte, the daughter of Cretheus ; and others 
relate that after Acastus had concealed the 
sword of Peleus, Chiron or Mercury (Hermes) 
brought him another, which had been made by 
Vulcan (Hephaestus). While on Mount Pelion, 
Peleus married the Nereid Thetis, by whom he 
became the father of Achilles, though some re- 
garded this Thetis as different from the marine 
divinity, and called her a daughter of Chiron 
The gods took part in the marriage solemnity; 
Chiron presented Peleus with a lance, Neptune 
(Poseidon) with the immortal horses, Balius 
and Xanthus, and the other gods with arms. 
Eris or Strife was the only goddess who was 
not invited to the nuptials, and she revenged 
herself by throwing an apple among the guests, 



PELIADES. 

with the inscription " To the fairest." Vid. Par- 
is. Homer mentions Achilles as the only son 
of Peleus and Thetis, but later writers state 
that she had already destroyed by fire six chil- 
dren, of whom she was the mother by Peleus, 
and that, as she attempted to make away with 
Achilles, her seventh child, she was prevented 
by Peleus. After this, Peleus, who is also men- 
tioned among the Argonauts, in conjunction 
with Jason and the Dioscuri, besieged Acastus 
and Iolcus, slew Astydamia, and over the scat- 
tered limbs of her body led his warriors into 
the city. The ilocks of Peleus were at one 
time worried by a wolf, which Psamathe had 
sent to avenge the murder of her son Phocus. 
but she herself afterward, on the request of 
Thetis, turned the animal into stone. Peleus, 
who had in former times joined Hercules in his 
expedition against Troy, was too old to accom- 
pany his son Achilles against that city : he re- 
mained at home, and survived the death of his 
eon. 

Peliades (Tle/Mdsr), the daughters of Pelias. 
Vid. Pelias. 

Pelias (TlelC ac). 1. Son of Neptune (Poseidon) 
and Tyro, a daughter of Salmoneus. Neptune 
(Poseidon) once visited Tyro in the form of the 
river-god Enipeus, with whom she was in love, 
and she became by him the mother of Pelias and 
Neleus. To conceal her shame, their mother 
exposed the two boys, but they were found and 
reared by some countrymen. They subsequent- 
ly learned their parentage ; and, after the death 
of Cretheus, king of Iolcos, who had married 
their mother, they seized the throne of Iolcos, 
to the exclusion of .Eson, the son of Cretheus 
and Tyro. Pelias soon afterward expelled his j 
own brother Neleus, and thus became sole ruler | 
of Iolcos. After Pelias had long reigned over j 
loleos, Jason, the son of/Eson, came to Iolcos 
and claimed the kingdom as his right. In order j 
to get rid of him, Pelias sent him to Colchis to i 
fetch the golden fleece. Hence arose the cele- j 
brated expedition of the Argonauts. After the { 
return of Jason, Pelias was cut to pieces and j 
boiled by his own daughters (the Peliades), who 
had been told by Medea that in this manner they 
might restore their father to vigor and youth. 
His son Acastus held funeral games in his honor 
at Iolcus, and expelled Jason and Medea from 
the country. For details, vid. Jason, Medea, 
Argonauts. The names of several of the 
daughters of Pelias are recorded. The most 
celebrated of them was Alcestis, the wife of 
Admetus, who is therefore called by Ovid Pelice 
gener. — [2. A Trojan, wounded by Ulysses in 
the Trojan war ; he survived the destruction 
of the city, and accompanied ^Eneas to Italy.] 

Pelides (Il^.cafyf, IlrjXeicov), a patronymic 
from Peleus, generally given to his son Achilles, 
more rarely to his grandson Neoptolemus. 

Peligni, a brave and warlike people of Sabine 
origin in central Italy, bounded southeast by the 
Marsi, north by the Marrucini, south by Sam- 
mum and the Frentani, and east by the Fren- 
tani likewise. The climate of their country 
was cold (Hor., Carm., iii., 19, 8) ; but it pro- 
duced a considerable quantity of flax, and was 
celebrated for its honey. The Peligni, like their 
neighbors, the Marsi, were regarded as magi- 
cians. Their principal towns were Corfinium 



PELLA. 

: and Sulmo. They offered a brave resistance 
to the Romans, but concluded a peace with the 
republic along with their neighbors the Marsi, 
Marrucini, and Frentani, in B.C. 304. They took 
an active part in the Social war (90, 89), and 
their chief town Corfinium was destined by the 
allies to be the new capital of Italy in place 
of Rome. They were subdued by Pompeius 
Strabo, after which time they are rarely men- 
tioned. 

Pelinjeus Mons (to IhMvalov opof, or UeX?i.7j- 
valov : now Mount Elias), the highest mountain 
of the island of Chios, a little north of the city 
of Chios, with a celebrated temple of Zevc TleTii- 
vaZoc.. 

Pelinna, or more commonly Pelinn^eum (ne- 
"kivva, Ile?uvvaZov : now Gardhiki), a town of 
Thessaly in Hestiaeotis, on the left bank of the 
Peneus, was taken by the Romans in their war 
with Antiochus. 

Pelion, more rarely Pelios (to Urj/uov opog I 
now Plessidhi or Zagora), a lofty range of mount- 
ains in Thessaly, in the district of Magnesia, 
was situated between the Lake Brebeis and the 
Pagasaean Gulf, and formed the promontories 
of Sepias and iEantium. Its sides were cover- 
ed with wood, and on its summit was a templc- 
of Jupiter (Zeus) Actaaus, where the cold was 
so severe that the persons who went in pro- 
cession to this temple once a year wore thick 
skins to protect themselves. Mount Pelion was 
celebrated in mythology. The giants in their 
war with the gods are said to have attempted 
to heap Ossa and Olympus on Pelion, or Pelion 
and Ossa on Olympus, in order to scale heaven. 
Near the summit of this mountain was the cave 
of the Centaur Chiron, whose residence was 
probably placed here on account of the number 
of the medicinal plants which grew upon the 
mountain, since he was celebrated for his skill 
in medicine. On Pelion also the timber was 
felted with which the ship Argo was built, 
whence Ovid applies the term Pelias arbor to 
this ship. 

Pella (lleTCXa : Ile/JkaZoc, Pellaeus). l.(Now 
Alaklisi), an ancient town of Macedonia, in the 
district Bottiaea, was situated upon a hill, and 
upon a lake formed by the River Lydias, one 
hundred and twenty stadia from its mouth. It 
continued to be a place of small importance till 
the time of Philip, who made it his residence 
and the capital of the Macedonian monarchy^ 
and adorned it with many public buildings. It 
is frequently mentioned by subsequent writers 
on account of its being the birth-place of Alex- 
ander the Great. It was the capital of one of 
the four districts into which the Romans di- 
vided Macedonia (vid. p. 464, a), and was sub- 
sequently made a Roman colony under the name 
of Col. Jul. Aug. Pella.— 2. (Now El-Bujeh?), 
the southernmost of the ten cities which com- 
posed the Decapolis in Peraea, that is, in Pales- 
tine east of the Jordan, stood five Roman miles 
southeast of Scythopolis, and was also called 
Bovtic. It was taken by Antiochus the Great 
in the wars between Syria and Egypt, and was 
held by a Macedonian colony till it was de- 
stroyed by Alexander Jannaeus on account of 
the refusal of its inhabitants to embrace the 
Jewish religion. It was restored and given 
back to its old inhabitants by Pompey. It was 

619 



/ 



PELL^EUS PAGUS. 



PELOPONNESUS. 



the place of refuge of the Christians who fled 
from Jerusalem before its capture by the Ro- 
mans. The exact site of Pella is very uncer- 
tain. — 3. A city of Syria on the Orontes, for- 
merly called Pharnace, was named Pella by the 
Macedonians, and afterward Apamea (No. 1). — 
4. In Phrygia. Vid. Pelt^e. 

Pell^eus Pagus was the name given by Al- 
exander, after Pella in Macedonia, to the dis- 
trict of Susiana about the mouths of the Tigris ; 
in which he built the city of Alexandrea, after- 
ward called Charax. 

Pellana. Vid. Pellene, No. 2. 

Pellene (He22.7}vt], Dor. llel/iava : Tlellriv- 
tvg). 1 . A city in Achaia, bordering on Sicyonia, 
the most easterly of the twelve Achaean cities, 
was situated on a hill sixty stadia from the city, 
and was strongly fortified. Its port-town was 
Aristonautae. The ancients derived its name 
from the giant Pallas, or from the Argive Pel- 
len, the son of Phorbas. It is mentioned in Ho- 
mer ; and the inhabitants of Scione, in the pen- 
insula of Pallene, in Macedonia, professed to be 
descended from the Pellenaeans in Achaia, who 
were shipwrecked on the Macedonian coast on 
their return from Troy. In the Peloponnesian 
war Pellene sided with Sparta. In the later 
wars of Greece between the Achaean and JEto- 
lian leagues, the town was several times taken 
by the contending parties. Between Pellene 
and iEgee there was a smaller town of the same 
name, where the celebrated Pellenian cloaks 
(RtA?j]viaKai x^o-lvai) were made, which were 
given as prizes to the victors in the games at 
this place. — 2. Usually called Pellana, a town 
in Laconia, on the Eurotas, about fifty stadia 
northwest of Sparta, belonging to the Spartan 
Tripolis. 

Pelodes (TLi]lij6T](; ?ajj.7}v, in App. Ha/MEtg : 
now Armyro), a port-town belonging to Buthro- 
tum in Epirus, and on a bay which probably bore 
the same name. 

Pelopea or Pelopia <J\e7.6ttelo), daughter of 
Thyestes, dwelt at Sicyon, where her father of- 
fered her violence, without knowing that she 
was his daughter. While pregnant by her fa- 
ther, she married her uncle Atreus. Shortly 
afterward she bore a son ^Egisthus, who event- 
ually murdered Atreus. For details, vid. ^Egis- 
thcs. 

[Pelopid^e (ILE?.oTTiSai), descendants of Pe- 
lops, e g., Theseus {PluL), Tantalus, Atreus (Pe- 
lopeius, Ovid), Thyestes, Ajjamemnon {Propert. ), 
Hermione and Iphigenia (Pelopeia virgo, Ovid), 
Orestes (Lucan.).~\ 

Pelopidas (IleTioTTidac), the Theban general 
and statesman, son of Hippoclus, was descend- 
ed from a noble family, and inherited a large es- 
tate, of which he made a liberal use. He lived 
always in the closest friendship with Epami- 
nondas, to whose simple frugality, as he could 
not persuade him to share his riches, he is said 
to have assimilated his own mode of life. He 
took a leading part in expelling the Spartans 
from Thebes, B.C. 379 ; and from this time 
until his death there was not a year in which 
he was not intrusted with some important com- 
mand. In 371 he was one of the Theban com- 
manders at the battle of Leuctra, so fatal to the 
Lacedaemonians, and joined Epaminondas in 
urging the expediency of immediate action. In 
620 



369 he was also one of the generals in the first 
invasion of Peloponnesus by the Thebans. Re- 
specting his accusation on his return from this 
campaign, vid. p. 281, b. In 368 Pelopidas was 
sent again into Thessaly, on two separate occa- 
sions, in consequence of complaints against Al- 
exander of Pherae. On his first expedition Al- 
exander of Pherae sought safety in flight ; and 
Pelopidas advanced into Macedonia to arbitrate 
between Alexander II. and Ptolemy of Alorus. 
Among the hostages whom he took with him 
from Macedonia was the famous Philip, the fa- 
ther of Alexander the Great. On his second 
visit to Thessaly, Pelopidas went simply as an 
ambassador, not expecting any opposition, and 
unprovided with a military force. He was seiz- 
ed by Alexander of Pheras, and was kept in con- 
finement at Pherae till his liberation in 367 by a 
Theban force under Epaminondas. In the same 
year in which he was released he was sent as 
ambassador to Susa, to counteract the Lacedae- 
monian and Athenian negotiations at the Per- 
sian court. In 364 the Thessalian towns again 
applied to Thebes for protection against Alex- 
! ander, and Pelopidas was appointed to aid them, 
j His forces, however, were dismayed by an 
! eclipse of the sun (June 13), and, therefore 
i leaving them behind, he took with him into 
| Thessaly only three hundred horse. On his 
j arrival at Pharsalus he collected a force which 
{ he deemed sufficient, and marched against Al- 
j exander, treating lightly the great disparity of 
i numbers, and remarking that it was better as it 
j was, since there would be more for him to con- 
| quer. At Cynoscephalae a battle ensued, in 
| which Pelopidas drove the enemy from their 
i ground, but he himself was slain as, burning 
| with resentment, he pressed rashly forward to 
I attack.Alexander in person. The Thebans and 
Thessalians made great lamentations for his 
death, and the latter, having earnestly request- 
ed leave to bury him, celebrated his funeral with 
extraordinary splendor. 

[Pelopis Insula, nine islands on the coast 
of Argolis, eastward of Methana, between ^Egi- 
na and Calauria.] 

Peloponnesus (?/ He/.o~6vvT;aog : now More a), 
the southern part of Greece or the peninsula, 
which was connected with Hellas proper by the 
Isthmus of Corinth. It is said to have derived 
its name Peloponnesus, or the "Island of Pe- 
lops," from the mythical Pelops. Vid. Pelops. 
This name does not occur in Homer. In his 
time the peninsula was sometimes called Apia, 
from Apis, son of Phoroneus, king of Argos, and 
sometimes Argos ; which names were given to 
it on account of Argos being the chief power in 
Peloponnesus at that period. Peloponnesus 
was bounded on the north by the Corinthian 
Gulf, on the west by the Ionian or Sicilian Sea, 
on the south by the Libyan, and on the west by 
! the Cretan and Myrtoan seas. On the east and 
I south there are three great gulfs, the xVrgolic, 
! Laconian, and Messenian. The ancients com- 
! pared the shape of the country to the leaf of a 
! plane-tree ; and its modern name, the Morca (6 
j Mopeoj-), which first occurs in the twelfth cen- 
I tury of the Christian era, was given it on ac- 
count of its resemblance to a mulberry-leaf 
Peloponnesus was divided into various provin- 
ces, all of which were bounded on one side by 



PELOPS. 



PELOPS. 



the sea, with the exception of Arcadia, which 
was in the centre of the country. These prov- 
inces, besides Arcadia, were Achaia in the 
north, Ens in the west, Messenia in the west 
and south, Lacomia in the south and east, [Ar- 
golis in the east,] and Corinthia in the east 
and north. An account of the geography of the 
peninsula is given under these names. The 
area of Peloponnesus is computed to be seven 
thousand seven hundred and seventy-nine En- 
glish miles, and it probably contained a popu- 
lation of upward of a million in the flourishing 
period of Greek history. Peloponnesus was 
originally inhabited by Pelasgians. Subsequent- 
ly the Achaeans, who belonged to the JSolic 
race, settled in the eastern and southern parts 
of the peninsula, in Argolis, Laconia, and Mes- 
senia ; and the Ionians in the northern part, in 
Achaia ; while the remains of the original in- 
habitants of the country, the Pelasgians, col- 
lected chiefly in the central part, in Arcadia. 
Eighty years after the Trojan war, according to 
mythical chronology, the Dorians, under the 
conduct of the Heraclida?, invaded and conquer- 
ed Peloponnesus, and established Doric states 
in Argolis, Laconia, and Messenia, from whence 
they extended their power over Corinth, Sic- 
yon, and Megara. Part of the Achaean popula- 
tion remained in these provinces as tributary 
subjects to the Dorians, under the name of Peri- 
ceci, while others of the Achaeans passed over 
to the north of Peloponnesus, expelled the Io- 
nians, and settled in this part of the country, 
which was called after them Achaia. The iEto- 
lians, who had invaded Peloponnesus along with 
the Dorians, settled in Elis and became inter- 
mingled with the original inhabitants. The 
peninsula remained under Doric influence dur- 
ing the most important period of Greek history, 
and opposed to the great Ionic city of Athens. 
After the conquest of Messenia by the Spartans, 
it was under the supremacy of Sparta till the 
overthrow of the power of the latter by the 
Thebans at the battle of Leuctra, B.C. 371. 

Pelops (Ue^ojp), grandson of Jupiter (Zeus), 
son of Tantalus and Dione, the daughter of 
Atlas. Some writers call his mother Euryanassa 
or Clytia. He was married to Hippodamia, by 
whom he became the father of Atreus, Thyes- 
tes, Dias, Cynosurus, Corinthius, Hippalmus 
(Hippalcmus or Hippalcimus), Hippasus, Cleon, 
Arglus, Alcathous, .Elius, Pittheus, Trcezen, 
Nicippe, and Lysidice. By Axioche or the 
nymph Danais he is said to have been the father 
of Chrysippus. Pelops was king of Pisa in Elis, 
and from him the great southern peninsula of 
Greece was believed to have derived its name 
Peloponnesus. According to a tradition, which 
became very general in later times, Pelops was 
a Phrygian, who was expelled by Ilus from 
Phrygia whence called by Ovid, Met., viii., 622, 
Pelopela arva), and thereupon migrated with his 
great wealth to Pisa. Others describe him as 
a Paphlagonian, and call the Paphlagonians 
themselves UfAoTcrfiot,. Others, again, represent 
him as a native of Greece ; and there can be 
little doubt that in the earliest traditions Pelops 
was described as a native of Greece and not as 
a foreign immigrant ; and in them he is called 
the tamer of horses and the favorite of Neptune 
(Poseidon). The legends about Pelops consist 



mainly of the story of his being cut to h 
I and boiled, of his contest with CEnomaus anu 
| Hippodamia, and of his relation to his sons ; to 
j which we may add the honors paid to his re- 
mains. 1. Pelops cut to pieces and boiled (Kpeovp- 
! yea TIsaokoc). Tantalus, the favorite of the 
gods, once invited them to a repast, and on that 
occasion killed his own son, and having boiled 
him, set the flesh before them that they might 
eat it. But the immortal gods, knowing what 
it was, did not touch it ; Ceres (Demeter) alone, 
being absorbed by grief for her lost daughter, 
consumed the shoulder of Pelops. Hereupon 
the gods ordered Mercury (Hermes) to put the 
limbs of Pelops into a caldron, and thereby 
restore him to life. When the process was 
over, Clotho took him out of the caldron, and 
as the shoulder consumed by Ceres (Demeter) 
was wanting, the goddess supplied its place by 
one made of ivory ; his descendants (the Pelo- 
pidae), as a mark of their origin, were believed 
to have one shoulder as white as ivory. — 2. Con- 
test with CEnomaus and Hippodamia. As an or- 
acle had declared to CEnomaus that he should 
be killed by his son-in-law, he refused giving 
his fair daughter Hippodamia in marriage to any 
one. But since many suitors appeared, CEno- 
maus declared that he would bestow her hand 
upon the man who should conquer him in the 
chariot-race, but that he should kill all who 
were defeated by him. Among other suitors 
Pelops also presented himself, but when he saw 
the heads of his conquered predecessors stuck 
up above the door of CEnomaus, he was seized 
with fear, and endeavored to gain the favor of 
Myrtilus, the charioteer of CEnomaus, promis 
ing him half the kingdom if he would assist him 
in conquering his master. Myrtilus agreed, and 
left out the linch-pins of the chariot of CEnoma- 
us. In the race the chariot of CEnomaus broke 
down, and he was thrown out and killed. Thus 
Hippodamia became the wife of Pelops. But 
as Pelops had now gained his object, he was 
unwilling to keep faith with Myrtilus ; and ac- 
cordingly, as they were driving along a cliff, he 
threw Myrtilus into the sea. As Myrtilus sank, 
he cursed Pelops and his whole race. Pelops 
returned with Hippodamia to Pisa in Elis, and 
soon also made himself master of Olympia, 
where he restored the Olympian games with 
greater splendor than they had ever been cele- 
brated before.— 3. The sons of Pelops. Chrysip- 
pus was the favorite of his father, and was, in 
consequence, envied by his brothers. ^The two 
eldest among them, Atreus and Thyestes, with 
the connivance of Hippodamia, accordingly mur- 
dered Chrysippus, and threw his body into a 
well. Pelops, who suspected his sons of the 
murder, expelled them from the country. Hip- 
podamia, dreading the anger of her husband, fled 
to Midea in Argolis, from whence her remains 
were afterward conveyed by Pelops to Olympia. 
Pelops, after his death, was honored at Olympia 
above all other heroes His tomb, with an iron 
sarcophagus, existed on the banks of the Alphe- 
i us, not far from the temple of Diana (Artemis), 
i near Pisa. The spot on which his sanctuary 
i (UeTiomov) stood in the Altis was said to have 
been dedicated by Hercules, who also offered 
, to him the first sacrifices. The magistrates of 
j the Eleans likewise offered to him there an an* 

621 



PELORIS. 



PENELOPE. 



nual sacrifice, consisting of a black ram, with 
special ceremonies. The name of Pelops was 
so celebrated that it was constantly used by the 
poets in connection with his descendants and 
the cities they inhabited. Hence we find Atreus, 
the son of Pelops, called Pelopeius Atreus, and 
Agamemnon, the grandson or great-grandson 
of Atreus, called Pelopeius Agamemnon. In the 
same way, Iphigenia, the daughter of Agamem- 
non, and Hermione, the wife of Menelaus, are 
each called by Ovid Pdopexa virgo. Virgil (Mn., 
ii., 193) uses the phrase Pclopea mania to sig- 
nify the cities in Peloponnesus which Pelops 
and his descendants ruled over ; and, in like 
manner, Mycenae is called by Ovid Pelopelades 
Mycena. 

Peloris, Pelorias, or Pelorus (RelupLc, Tle- 
/.opidt, TlO,upoc : now Cape Faro), the northeast- 
ern point of Sicily, was northeast of Messana, on 
the Fretum Siculum, and one of the three prom- 
ontories which formed the triangular figure of 
the island. According to the usual story, it de- 
rived its name from Pelorus, the pilot of Hanni- 
bal's ship, who was buried here after being kill- 
ed by Hannibal in a fit of anger ; but the name 
was more ancient than Hannibal's time, being 
mentioned by Thucydides. On the promontory 
there was a temple of Neptune (Poseidon), and 
a tower, probably a light-house, from which the 
modern name of the Cape (Faro) appears to have 
come. 

Pelorus (Ylelupoc : now probably Lori or Lu~ 
ri), a river of Iberia in Asia, appears to have 
been a southern tributary of the Cyrus (now 
Kour). 

Pelso or Peiso (now Plattensee), a great lake 
in Pannonia, the waters of which were con- 
ducted into the Danube by the Emperor Galeri- 
us, who thus gained a great quantity of fertile 
land for his newly-formed province of Valeria. 

PELTiE {YL&rai : Ue?,T7jv6g), an ancient and 
nourishing city of Asia Minor, in the north of 
Phrygia, ten parasangs from Celaense (Xenoph.), 
and no doubt the same place as the Pella of the 
Roman writers, twenty-six Roman miles north 
or northeast of Apamea Cibotus, to the conven- 
tus of which it belonged. The surrounding dis- 
trict is called by Strabo to UeXrnvov iredlov. Its 
site is uncertain. Some identify it with the 
ruins eight miles south of Sandakli ; others, with 
those near Ishelcli. 

Peltuinum (Peltulnas, -atis : now Monte Bel- 
lo), a town of the Vestini in Central Italy. 

Pel^icjm (U.7j?,ovGLov : Egypt. Peremoun or 
Peromi ; in the Old Testament, Sin : all these 
names are derived from nouns meaning mud: 
JlnXovatu-ne ; Pelusiota : ruins at Tineh), also 
called Abaris in early times, a celebrated city 
of Lower Egypt, stood on the eastern side of the 
easternmost mouth of the Nile, which was call- 
ed after it the Pelusiac mouth, twenty stadia 
(two geographical miles) from the sea, in the 
midst of morasses, from which it obtained its 
name. As the key of Egypt on the northeast, 
and the frontier city toward Syria and Arabia, 
it was strongly fortified, and was the scene of 
many battles and sieges in the wars of Egypt 
with Assyria, Persia, Syria, and Rome, from the 
defeat of Sennacherib near it by Sethon down 
to its capture by Octavianus after the battle of 
Actium. In later times it was the capital of 
622 



I the district of Augustamnica. It was the birth- 
i place of the geographer Claudius Ptolemaeus. 

Penates, the household gods of the Romans, 
both those of a private family and of the state, 
as the great family of citizens. Hence we have 
to distinguish between private and public Pena- 
tes. The name is connected with penus, and 
the images of those gods were kept in the pene- 
tralia, or the central part of the house. The 
Lares were included among the Penates ; both 
names, in fact, are often used synonymously. 
The Lares, however, though included in the 
Penates, were not the only Penates ; for each 
family had usually no more than one Lar, where- 
as the Penates are always spoken of in the plu- 
ral. Since Jupiter and Juno were regarded as 
the protectors of happiness and peace in the 
family, these divinities were worshipped as Pe- 
nates. Vesta was also reckoned among the Pe- 
nates ; for each hearth, being the symbol of do- 
mestic union, had its Vesta. All other Penates, 
both public and private, seem to have consisted 
of certain sacred relics connected with indefi- 
nite divinities, and hence Varro says that the 
number and names of the Penates were indef- 
inite. Most ancient writers believe that the 
Penates of the state were brought by JEneas 
from Troy into Italy, and were preserved first at 
Lavinium, afterward at Alba Longa, and finally 
at Rome. At Rome they had a chapel near 
the centre of the city, in a place called sub Velia. 
As the public Lares were worshipped in the 
central part of the city and at the public hearth, 
so the private Penates had their place at the 
hearth of every house, and the table also was 
sacred to them. On the hearth a perpetual fire 
was kept up in their honor, and the table al- 
ways contained the salt-cellar and the firstlings 
of fruit for these divinities. Eveiy meal that 
was taken in the house thus resembled a sacri- 
fice offered to the Penates, beginning with a 
purification and ending with a libation, which 
was poured either on the table or upon the 
hearth. After every absence from the hearth, 
the Penates were saluted like the living inhab- 
itants of the house ; and whoever went abroad 
prayed to the Penates and Lares for a happy re- 
turn, and when he came back to his house, he 
hung up his armor, staff, and the like, by the 
side of their images. 

Peneis, that is, Daphne, daughter of the riv- 
er-god Peneus. 

Peneleos (JJ^'e/Ufcjf), son of Hippalcmus and 
Asterope, and one of the Argonauts. He was 
the father of Opheltes, and is also mentioned 
among the suitors of Helen. He was one of 
the leaders of the Boeotians in the war against 
Troy, where he slew Ilioneus and Lycon, and 
was wounded by Polydamas. He is said to have 
| been slain by Eurypylus, the son of Telephus. 

Penelope (TItjve?^^, Tieve/.o-i], Unvelo-xeia), 
I daughter oflcarius and Peribcea of Sparta, mar- 
ried Ulysses, king of Ithaca. (Respecting her 
j marriage, vid. Icarius, No. 2.) By Ulysses she 
J had an only child, Telemachus, who was an in- 
I fant when her husband sailed against Troy, 
j During the long absence of Ulysses she was be- 
; leaguered by numerous and importunate suitors, 
i whom she deceived by declaring that she must 
1 finish a large robe which she was making for 
Laertes, her aged father-in-law, before she could 



PENEST.-E. 



PENTRI. 



make up her mind. During the daytime she 
accordingly worked at the robe, and in the night 
she undid the work of the day. By this means 
she succeeded in putting off the suitors. But 
at length her stratagem was betrayed by her 
servants ; and when, in consequence, the faith- 
ful Penelope was pressed more and more by the 
impatient suitors. Ulysses at length arrived in 
Ithaca, after an absence of twenty years. Hav- 
ing recognized her husband by several signs, 
she heartily welcomed him, and the days of her 
arief and sorrow were at an end. Vid. Ulys- 
ses. While Homer describes Penelope as a 
most chaste and faithful wife, some later writ- 
ers charge her with the very opposite vice, and 
relate that by Mercury (Hermes) or by all the 
suitors together she became the mother of Pan. 
They add that Ulysses, on his return, repudiated 
her, whereupon she went to Sparta, and thence 
to Mantinea, where her tomb was shown in after 
times. According to another tradition, she mar- 
ried Telegonus, after he had killed his father 
Ulysses. 

[Penesive (llevtarai), according to Stephanus 
of Byzantium, a Thessalian tribe, but according 
to Livy, a warlike race of Grecian Illyria, in the 
district Pencstia or Pcnestiana terra, on the bor- 
ders of Thessaly and Macedonia.] 

Peneus (Ujjvetog). 1. (Now Salambria or Sa- 
lamria), the chief river of Thessaly, and one of 
the most important in all Greece, rises near Alal- 
comenaj in Mount Lacmon, a branch of Mount 
Pindus, flows first southeast and then northeast, 
arid after receiving many affluents, of which the 
most important were the Enipeus, the Lethaeus, 
and the Titaresius, forces its way through the 
Vale of Tempe between Mounts Ossa and Olym- 
pus into the sea. Vid. Tempe. As a god, Peneus 
was called a son of Oceanus and Tethys. By 
the Naiad Creusa he became the father of Hyp- 
seus, Stilbe, and Daphne. Cyrene also is called 
by some his wife, and by others his daughter, 
and hence Peneus is described as the progeni- 
tor of Aristaeus. — 2. (Now Gastuni), a river in 
Elis, which rises on the frontiers of Arcadia, 
flows by the town of Elis, and falls into the sea be- 
tween the promontories Chelonatas and Ichthys. 

Penius, a little river of Pontus, falling into 
the Euxine. (Ovid, Ex Ponto, iv., 10.) 

Pennine Alpes. Vid. Alpes. 

[Pennus, Junius M. 1. Praetor B.C. 172, and 
obtained Nearer Spain for his province. He was 
consul B.C. 167, with Q. iElius Pectus, and ob- 
tained Pisae as his province. — 2. M. Junius, son 
of the preceding, was tribune of the plebs B.C. 
126, in which year he brought forward a law for 
expelling all strangers or foreigners (peregrini) 
from Rome. This law was opposed by C. Grac- 
chus, but was carried. Pennus was afterward 
elected to the ajdileship, but died before obtain- 
ing any higher honor in the state.] 

Pentapolis (n.evTtnro?Ag), the name for any 
association of five cities, was applied specific- 
ally to, 1 . The five chief cities of Cyrenaica in 
Northern Africa, Cyrene, Berenice, Arsinoe, 
Ptolemai's, and Apollonia, from which, under the 
Ptolemies, Cyrenaica received the name of 
Pentapolis, or Pentapolis Libyae, or, in the Ro- 
man writers, Pentapolitana Regio. When the 
name occurs alone, this is its meaning ; the 
other applications of it are but rare.— 2. The 



five cities of the Philistines in the southwest of 
Palestine, namely, Gaza, Ashdod(Azotus),Aska- 
lon, Gath, and Ekron. — 3. In the apocryphal 

Book of the Wisdom of Solomon (x., 6), the name 
is applied to the five "cities of the plain" of the 
southern Jordan, Sodom, Gomorrha, Adama, 
ZeboTm, and Zoar, all of which (except the last, 
which was spared at the intercession of Lot) 
were overthrown by fire from heaven, and the 
valley in which they stood was buried beneath 
the waters of the Dead Sea. 

Penteleum (UevriXeiov), a fortified place in 
the north of Arcadia, near Pheneus. 

Pentelicus Mons (to UevTetiKov opoc : now 
Penteli), a mountain in Attica, celebrated for its 
marble, which derived its name from the demus 
of Pentele (IIevtUti), lying on its southern slope 
It is a branch of Mount Parnes, from which it 
runs in a southeasterly direction between Athens 
and Marathon to the coast. It is probably the 
same as the mountain called Brilessus (Epis- 
ode) by Thucydides and others. 

Penthesilea (ILevdeatfoia), daughter of Mars 
(Ares) and Otrera, and queen of the Amazons. 
After the death of Hector she came to the assist- 
ance of the Trojans, but was slain by Achilles, 
who mourned over the dying queen on account 
of her beauty, youth, and valor. Thersites rid- 
iculed the grief of Achilles, and was, in conse- 
quence, killed by the hero. Thereupon Diome- 
des, a relative of Thersites, threw the body of 
Penthesilea into the River Scamander ; but, ac- 
cording to others, Achilles himself buried it on 
the banks of the Xanthus. • 

Pentheus (nevfeiif), son ofEchlon and Agave, 
the daughter of Cadmus. He succeeded Cad- 
mus as king of Thebes ; and having resisted the 
introduction of the worship of Bacchus (Diony- 
sus) into his kingdom, he was driven mad by the 
god, his palace was hurled to the ground, and he 
himself was torn to pieces by his own mother 
and her two sisters, Ino and Autonoe, who, in 
their Bacchic phrensy, believed him to be a wild 
beast. The place where Pentheus suffered death 
is said to have been Mount Cithaeron or Mount 
Parnassus. It is related that Pentheus got upon 
a tree for the purpose of witnessing in secret 
the revelry of the Bacchic women, but on being 
discovered by them was torn to pieces. Ac- 
cording to a Corinthian tradition, the women 
were afterward commanded by an oracle to dis- 
cover that tree, and to worship it like the god 
Bacchus (Dionysus); and, accordingly, out of 
the tree two carved images of the god were 
made. The tragic fate of Pentheus forms the 
subject of the Bacchce of Euripides. 

[PENTHiCiDiE (Ilevd iMdat), a noble family at 
Mytilene in Lesbos, who derived their origin 
from Penthilus, the son of Orestes, who was 
said to have led a colony to Lesbos.] 

Penthilus (IHv6l?.oc), son of Orestes and Eri- 
gone, is said to have led a colony of Cohans to 
Thrace. He was the father of Echelatus and 
Damasias. 

Pentri, one of the most important of the 
tribes in Samnium, were conquered by the Ro- 
mans along with the other Samnites, and were 
the only one of the Samnite tribes who remain- 
ed faithful to the Romans when the rest of the 
nation revolted to Hannibal in the second Punic 
war. Their chief town was Bovianum. 

623 



PEOR. 



PERDICCAS. 



Peor, a mountain of Palestine, in the land 
of Moab, only mentioned in the Pentateuch. It 
was probably one of the summits of the mount- 
ains called Abarim, which ran north and south 
through Moabitis, along the eastern side of the 
valley of the southern Jordan and the Dead Sea. 

Peos ArtemIdos (Ileof, probably corrupted 
from Stteoj-, care/Aprifxidog : ruins at Beni Has- 
san), a city of the Heptanomis, or Middle Egypt, 
on the eastern bank of the Nile, nearly opposite 
to Hermopolis the Great, on the western bank. 
It is remarkable as the site of the most extensive 
rock-hewn catacombs in all Egypt, the walls of 
which are covered with sculptures and paintings 
of the greatest importance for elucidating Egyp- 
tian antiquities. 

Peparethls (Tle7r6.pnf)oc : JleTtapftdtoc : now 
Piperi), a small island in the JEgean Sea, off the 
coast of Thessaly, and east of Halonesus, with 
a town of the same name upon it, and two other 
small places. It produced a considerable quan- 
tity of wine. It is mentioned in connection 
with Halonesus in the war between Philip and 
the Athenians. Vid. Halonesus. 

[PEPHNos(IIe^TOf). 1. Acityon the west coast 
of Laconia, twenty stadia from Thalamae. In 
front of it lay, 2. A small island of the same 
name, where, according to tradition, the Dios- 
curi were born ] 

Pephredo (Ueopndo)). Vid. Gr^^e. 

Pepuza {IHttov^ : ruins near Besk-Shehr), a 
city in the west of Phrygia, of some note in ec- 
clesiastical history. 

Per^a (77 I&pata, sc yfj or ;£(5pa, the country 
on the opposite side), a general name for any dis- 
trict belonging to or closely connected with a 
country, from the main part of which it was 
separated by a sea or river, was used specific- 
ally for, 1 The part of Palestine east of the 
Jordan in general, but usually, in a more re- 
stricted sense, for a part of that region, namely, 
the district between the Rivers Hieromax on 
the north, and Arnon on the south. Respecting 
its political connections with the rest of the 
country, vid. Pal^estina. — 2. Per.ea Rhodio- 
rom (77 Trepaia tuv 'PoSiuv), also called the Rho- 
dian Chersonese, a district in the south of Caria, 
opposite to the island of Rhodes, from Mount 
Phcenix on the west, to the frontier of Lycia on 
the east. This strip of coast, which was reck- 
oned fifteen hundred stadia in length (by sea), 
and was regarded as one of the finest spots on 
the earth, was colonized by the Rhodians at an 
early period, and was always in close political 
connection with Rhodes even under the suc- 
cessive rulers of Caria ; and, after the victory 
of the Romans over Antiochus the*Great. B.C. 
190, it was assigned, with the whole of Carian 
Doris, to the independent republic of the Rho- 
dians. Vid. Rhopus.— 3. P. Tenediorum (ne- 
pain Tevediuv), a strip of the western coast of 
Mysia, opposite to the island of Tenedos, be- 
tween CapeSigeum on the north, and Alexandrea 
Troas on the south. — 4 A city on the western 
coast of Mysia, near Adramyttium, one of the 
colonies of the MytiJenseans, and not improb- 
ably preserving in its name that of a district 
once called Peraea Mytilenaeorum ; for the peo- 
ple of Mytilene are known to have had many 
settlements on this coast. 

[Percennics, a common soldier, was the rino - - 
624 



J leader in the formidable mutiny of the Panno- 
nian legions, which broke out at the beginning 
j of the reign of Tiberius, A. D. 14. He was killed 
i by order of Drusus.] 

Percote {UepKurn, formerly nepKtj-ij, aecord- 
I ing to Strabo : now Borgas or Burgus, Turk., 
and Percote, Grk.), a very ancient city of Mysia, 
j between Abydos and Lampsacus, near the Hel- 
I lespont, on a river called Percates, in a beau- 
\ tiful situation. It is mentioned by Homer. 

Perdiccas (UepdiKKac). 1. I. The founder of 
! the Macedonian monarchy, according to Herodo- 
{ tus, though later writers represent Caranus as 
the first king of Macedonia, and make Perdiccas 
only the fourth. Vid. Caranus. According to 
Herodotus, Perdiccas and his two brothers, Gau- 
anes and Aeropus, were Argives of the race of 
Temenus, who settled nearMount Bermius, from 
whence they subdued the rest of Macedonia. 
(Herod , viii., 137, 138 ) It is clear, however, 
that the dominions of Perdiccas and his imme- 
diate successors comprised but a very small 
part of the country subsequently known under 
that name. Perdiccas was succeeded by his 
son Argeeus — 2. II. King of Macedonia from 
about B.C. 454 to 413, was the son and success- 
or of Alexander I. Shortly before the com- 
mencement of the Peloponnesian war Perdiccas 
was at war with the Athenians, who sent a force 
to support his brother Philip, and Derdas, a 
Macedonian chieftain, against the king, while 
the latter espoused the cause of Potidaea, which, 
had shaken off the Athenian yoke, B.C. 432. In 
the following year peace was concluded be- 
tween Perdiccas and the Athenians, but it did 
not last long, and he was during the greater 
part of his reign on hostile terms with the Athe- 
nians. In 429 his dominions were invaded by 
Sitalces, king of the powerful Thracian tribe of 
the Odrysians, but the enemy was compelled,, 
by want of provisions, to return home. It was 
in great part at his instigation that Brasidas in 
424 set out on his celebrated expedition to Mac- 
edonia and Thrace. In the following year (423), 
however, a misunderstanding arose between 
him and Brasidas ; in consequence of which he 
abandoned the Spartan alliance, and concluded 
peace with Athens. Subsequently we find him 
at one time in alliance with the Spartans, and 
at another time with the Athenians; and it is 
evident that he joined one or other of the bel- 
ligerent parties according to the dictates of his 
own interest at the moment. — 3. III. King of 
Macedonia B C. 364-359, was the second son 
of Amyntas II. by his wife Eurydice. On the 
assassination of his brother Alexander II. by 
Ptolemy of Alorus, 367, the crown of Macedo- 
nia devolved upon him by hereditary right, but 
Ptolemy virtually enjoyed the sovereign power 
as guardian of Perdiccas till 364, when the lat- 
ter caused Ptolemy to be put to death, and took 
j the government into his own hands. Of the 
j reign of Perdiccas we have very little informa- 
i tion. We I am only that he was at one time 
! engaged in hostilities with Athens on account 
i of Amphipolis, and that he was distinguished 
' for his patronage of men of letters. He fell in 
battle against thelllyrians. 359 — 4. Son ofOron- 
tes. a Macedonian of the province of Orestis, 
was one of the most distinguished of the generals 
I of Alexander the Great. He accompanied Alex- 



PEUDIX. 



PERGAMON. 



ander throughout his campaigns in Asia; and 
he king on his deatn-bed is said to have taken 
the royal signet- ring from his ringer and given 
it to Perdiccas. After the death of the king 
<323), Perdiccas had the chief authority intrust- 
ed to him under the command of the new king 
Arrhidaeus, who was a mere puppet in his hands, 
and he still further strengthened his power by 
the assassination of his rival Meleager. Vid. 
Meleager. The other generals of Alexander 
regarded him with fear and suspicion ; and at 
length his ambitious schemes induced A ntipater, 
Craterus, and Ptolemy to unite in a league and 
declare open war against Perdiccas. Thus as- 
sailed on all sides, Perdiccas determined to 
l^ive Eumenes in Asia Minor, to make head 
against their common enemies in that quarter, 
while he himself marched into Egypt against 
Ptolemy. He advanced without opposition as 
far as Pelusium, but found the banks of the Nile 
strongly fortified and guarded by Ptolemy, and 
was repulsed in repeated attempts to force the 
passage of the river ; in the last of which, near 
Memphis, he lost great numbers of men. There- 
upon his troops, who had long been discontent- 
ed with Perdiccas, rose in mutiny, and put him 
to death in his own tent. 

Pekdix (llepfiis), the sister of DSedalus, and 
mother of Talos, or, according to others, the 
6ister's son of Daedalus, figu *3 in the mytho- 
logical period of Greek art, as the inventor of 
various implements, chiefly for working in wood. 
Perdix is sometimes confounded with Talos or 
Calos, and it is best to regard the various le- 
gends respecting Perdix, Talos, and Calos as 
referring to one and the same person, namely, 
according to the mythographers, a nephew of 
Daedalus. The inventions ascribed to him are, 
the saw, the idea of which is said to have been 
suggested to him by the back-bone of a fish, or 
the teeth of a serpent ; the chisel ; the com- 
passes ; the potter's wheel. His skill excited 
the jealousy of Daedalus, who threw him head- 
long from the temple of Minerva (Athena) on 
the Acropolis, but the goddess caught him in his 
fall, and changed him into the bird which was 
named after him, perdix, the partridge. 

Peuegrinus Proteus, a cynic philosopher, 
born at Parium, on the Hellespont, flourished in 
the reign of the Antonines. After a youth spent 
in debauchery and crimes, he visited Palestine, 
where he turned Christian, and by dint of hypoc- 
risy attained to some authority in the Church. 
He next assumed the cynic garb, and returned 
to his native town, where, to obliterate the mem- 
ory of his crimes, he divided his inheritance 
among the populace. He again set out on his j 
travels, and after visiting many places, and 
adopting every method to make himself conspic- 
uous, he at length resolved on publicly burning 
himself at the Olympic games ; and carried his \ 
resolution into effect in the two hundred and | 
thirty-sixth Olympiad, A.D. 165. Lucian, who j 
knew Peregrinus, and who was present at his 
strange self immolation, has left us an account 
of his life. 

Perenna, Anna. Vid. Anna. 

Perennis, succeeded Paternus in A.D. 183, 
as sole praefect of the praetorians, and, Corn- 
modus being completely sunk in debauchery and 

loth, virtually ruled the empire. Having, how- j 
40 



ever, rendered himself obnoxious to the sol- 
diery, he was put to death by them in 186 or 
187. Dion Cassius represents Perennis as a 
man of a pure and upright life ; but the other 
historians charge him with having encouraged 
the emperor in all his excesses, and urged him 
on in his career of profligacy. 

[Pereus (Uepevg), son of Elatus and Laodice, 
brother of Stymphalus, and father of Neaera .] 

Perga {Jlepyn : Ylepynloc : ruins at Murtana), 
an ancient and important city of Pamphylia, lay 
a little inland, northeast of Attalia, between the 
Rivers Catarrhactes and Cestrus, sixty stadia 
(six geographical miles) from the mouth of the 
former. It was a celebrated seat of the wor- 
ship of Diana (Artemis). On an eminence near 
the city stood a very ancient and renowned 
temple of the goddess, at which a yearly festi- 
val was celebrated ; and the coins of Perga bear 
images of the goddess and her temple. Under 
the later Roman empire, it was the capital of 
Pamphylia Secunda. It was the first place in 
Asia Minor visited by the Apostle Paul on his 
first missionary journey (Acts, xiii., 13 ; vid also 
xiv., 25). Splendid ruins of the city are still 
visible about sixteen miles northeast of Adalia. 

Pergama and Pergamia. Vid. Pergamon, 
No. 1. 

Pergamon or -um, Perga mos or -us (to ITfp- 
yafiov, 7} Repyajioc : the former by far the most 
usual form in the classical writers, though the 
latter is more common in English, probably on 
account of its use in our version of the Bible, 
Rev., ii., 13 ; in Latin it seldom occurs in the 
nominative, but, when used, the form is Perga- 
mum : Uepyn/iTjvnc, Pergamenus. The word is 
significant, connected with irvpyoc, a tower ; it is 
used in the plural form, irepyap-a, as a com- 
mon noun by ^Eschylus, Prom., 956; Euripides, 
Phcen., 1098, 1176). 1. The citadel of Troy, and 
used poetically for Troy itself : the poets also 
use the forms Pergama (rd Hzpyaua) and Per- 
gamia (rj Uepyauia, sc. ttoXic ) : the king of Troy, 
Laomedon, is called Hrpya^Ldrjc, and the Ro- 
mans are spoken of by Silius Italicus as "san- 
guis Pergameus." — 2. (Ruins at Bergama or 
Pergamo), a celebrated city of Asia Minor, the 
capital of the kingdom of Pergamus, and after- 
ward of the Roman province of Asia, w;.s situ- 
ated in the district of Southern Mysia calle d Teu- 
thrania, in one of the most beautiful and fertile 
valleys in the world. It stood on the northern 
bank of the River Ca'icus, at a spot where that 
river receives the united waters of two small 
tributaries, the Selinus, which flowed through 
the city, and the Cetius, which washed its walls. 
The navigable river CaVcus connected it with 
the sea at the Elai'tic Gulf, from which its dis- 
tance was somewhat less than twenty miles. 
It was built at the foot, and on the lowest slopes, 
of two steep hills, on one of which the ruins of 
the acropolis are still visible, and in the plain 
below are the remains of the Asclepieum and 
other temples, of the stadium, the theatre, and 
the amphitheatre, and of other buildings. The 
origin of the city is lost in mythical traditions, 
which ascribed its foundation to a colony from 
Arcadia under the Heraclid Telephus, and its 
name to Pergamus, a son of Pyrrhus and An- 
dromache, who made himself king of Teuthra- 
nia by killing the king Arius in single combat. 

625 



PERGAMOX. 



PERIANDER. 



There is also a tradition that a colony of Epi- I 
daurians settled here under .Esculapius (As- 
clepius). At all events, it was already, in the ! 
time of Xenophon, a very ancient city, with a : 
mixed population of Teuthranians and Greeks ; 
but it was not a place of much importance until 
the time of the successors of Alexander. After 
the defeat of Antigonus at Ipsus in 301, the 
northwestern part of Asia Minor was united to I 
the Thracian kingdom of Lysimachus, who en- ' 
larged and beautified the city of Pergamus, and I 
used it as a treasury on account of its strength j 
as a fortress. The command of the fortress ' 
was intrusted to Philet^eeus, who, toward the 
end of the reign of Lysimachus, revolted to Se- 
leucus, king of Syria, retaining, however, the 
fortress of Pergamus in his own hands ; and, 
upon the death of Seleucus in 280, Philetaerus 
established himself as an independent ruler. 
This is the date of the commencement of the 
kingdom of Pergamus, though the royal title | 
was only assumed by the second successor of j 
Philetaerus, Attalus I., after his great victory | 
over the Gauls. The successive kings of Per- 
gamus were Philetjerls, 280-263 ; Eumenes 

I. , 263-241 ; Attalus I., 241-197; Eumenes 

II. , 197-159 ; Attalus II. Philadelphus, 159- j 
138 ; Attalus III. Philometor, 138-133. For 
the outline of their history, vid. the articles. J 
The kingdom reached its greatest extent after j 
the defeat of Antiochus the Great by the Ro- j 
mans in B.C. 190, when the Romans bestowed I 
upon Eumenes II. the whole of Mysia, Lydia, 
both Phrygias, Lycaonia, Pisidia, and Pamphylia. | 
It was under the same king that Pergamus 
reached the height of its splendor, and that the 
celebrated library was founded, which for a long 
time rivalled that of Alexandrea, and the for- 
mation of which occasioned the invention of 
parchment, charta Pergamena. This library was 
afterward united to that of Alexandrea, having 
been presented by Antony to Cleopatra. Dur- 
ing its existence at Pergamus, it formed the 
centre of a great school of literature, which ri- 
valled that of Alexandrea. On the death of At- 
talus III. in B.C. 133, the kingdom, by a bequest 
in his will, passed to the Romans, who took pos- 
session of it in 130 after a contest with the 
usurper Aristonicus, and erected it into the prov- 
ince of Asia, with the city of Pergamus for its 
capital, which continued in such prosperity that 
Pliny calls it " longe clarissimum Asiae." The 
city was an early seat of Christianity, and is 
one of the Seven Churches of Asia, to whom 
the apocalyptic epistles are addressed. St. John 
describes it as the scene of a persecution of 
Christianity, and the seat of gross idolatry, 
which had even infected the Church. The ex- 
pression " where Satan's seat is" is thought by 
some to refer to the worship of the serpent, as 
the symbol of iEsculapius (Asclepius), the pa- 
tron god of the city. Under the Byzantine em- 
perors, the capital of the province of Asia was j 
transferred to Ephesus, and Pergamus lost much i 
of its importance. Among the celebrated na- I 
tives of the city were the rhetorician Apollo- j 
dorus and the physician Galen.— 3. A very an- 
cient city of Crete, the foundation of which was 
ascribed to the Trojans who survived their city, j 
The legislator Lycurgus was said to have died j 
here, and his grave was shown. The site of I 

626 



the city is doubtful. Some place it at Perama, 

others at Platanm. 

Pergamcs. Vid. Pergamon. 
Perge. Vid. Perga. 

[Pergus, a lake of Sicily, not far from the 
walls of Enna, on the banks of which Proser- 
pina (Persephone) was said to have been col- 
lecting flowers when she was seized and car- 
ried off by Pluto (Hades).] 

Periander (Uepiavdfjog). 1. Son of Cypselus, 
whom he succeeded as tyrant of Corinth, B.C. 
625, and reigned forty years, to B.C. 585. His 
rule was mild and beneficent at first, but after- 
ward became oppressive. According to the 
common story, this change was owing to the 
advice of Thrasybulus, tyrant of Miletus, whor% 
Periander had consulted on the best mode of 
maintaining his power, and who is said to have 
taken the messenger through a corn-field, cut- 
ting off as he went the tallest ears, and then to 
have dismissed him without committing himself 
to a verbal answer. The action, however, was 
rightly interpreted by Periander, who proceeded 
to rid himself of the most powerful nobles in 
the state. He made his power respected abroad 
as well as at home ; and besides his conquest 
of Epidaurus, mentioned below, he kept Corcyra 
in subjection". He was, like many of the other 
Greek tyrants, a patron of literature and philoso- 
phy, and Arion and Anacharsis were in favor at 
his court. He was very commonly reckoned 
among the Seven Sages, though by some he 
was excluded from their number, andMyson of 
Chena? in Laconia was substituted in his room. 
The private life of Periander was marked by 
misfortune and cruelty. He married Melissa, 
daughter of Procles, tyrant of Epidaurus. She 
bore him two sons, Cypselus and Lycophron, 
and was passionately beloved by him ; but he 
is said to have killed her by a blow during her 
pregnancy, having been roused to a fit of anger 
by a false accusation brought against her. His 
wife's death imbittered the remainder of his 
days, partly through the remorse which he felt 
for the deed, partly through the alienation of 
his younger son Lycophron, inexorably exasper- 
ated by his mother's fate. The young man's 
anger had been chiefly excited by Procles, and 
Periander, in revenge, attacked Epidaurus, and, 
having reduced it, took his father-in-law pris- 
oner. Periander sent Lycophron to Corcyra ; 
but when he was himself advanced in years, he 
summoned Lycophron back to Corinth to suc- 
ceed to the tyranny, seeing that Cypselus, his 
elder son, was unfit to hold it, from deficiency 
of understanding. Lycophron refused to return 
to Corinth as long as his father was there ; 
thereupon Periander offered to withdraw to 
Corcyra if Lycophron would come home and 
take the government. To this he assented ; but 
the Corcyraeans, not wishing to have Periander 
among them, put Lycophron to death. Perian- 
der shortly afterward died of despondency, at 
the age of eighty, and after a reign of forty 
years, according to Diogenes Laertius. He was 
succeeded by a relative, Psammetichus, son of 
Gordias. — 2. Tyrant of Ambracia, was contem- 
porary with his more famous namesake of Cor- 
inth, to whom he was also related, being the 
son of Gorgus, who was son or brother to Cyp- 
selus. Periander was deposed by the people 



PERIBCEA. 



PERICLES. 



probably alter the death of the Corinthian tyrant 
(585). 

Perib(ea (Uepi6oia). L Wife of Icarius, and 
mother of Penelope. Vid. Icarius, No. 2 — 

2. Daughter of Alcathous, and wife of Tela- 
mon, by whom she became the mother of Ajax 
and Teucer. Some writers call her Eribosa.— 

3. Daughter of Hipponous, and wife of (Eneus, 
by whom she became the mother of Tydeus. 
Vid. CEneus.— 4. Wife of King Polybus of Cor- 
inth.— [5. Daughter of Acesamenus, mother by 
Axius of Pelagon.— 6. Daughter ofEurymedon, 
mother of Nausithous by Neptune (Poseidon).] 

Pericles {[\epiK?J^). 1. The greatest of 
Athenian statesmen, was the son of Xanthip- 
pus and Agaristc, both of whom belonged to the 
noblest families of Athens. The fortune of his 
parents procured for him a careful education, 
which his extraordinary abilities and diligence 
turned to the best account. He received in- 
struction from Damon, Zeno of Elea, and Anax- 
agoras. With Anaxagoras he lived on terms 
of the most intimate friendship, till the philos- 
opher was compelled to retire from Athens. 
From this great and original thinker Pericles 
was believed to have derived not only the cast 
of his mind, but the character of his eloquence, 
which, in the elevation of its sentiments, and 
the purity and loftiness of its style, was the 
fitting expression of the force and dignity of his 
character and the grandeur of his conceptions. 
Of the oratory of Pericles no specimens remain 
to us, but it is described by ancient writers as 
characterized by singular force and energy. He 
w 7 asdescribed as thunderingandlighteningwhen 
he spoke, and as carrying the weapons of Jupi- 
ter (Zeus) upon his tongue. In B.C. 469, Peri- 
cles began to take part in public affairs, forty 
years before his death, and was soon regarded 
as the head of the more democratical part in the 
state, in opposition to Cimon. He gained the 
favor of the people by the laws which he got 
passed for their benefit. Thus it was enacted 
through his means that the citizens should re- 
ceive from the public treasury the price of their 
admittance to the theatre, amounting to two 
oboli apiece ; that those who served in the 
courts of the Heliaea should be paid for their at- 
tendance ; and that those citizens who served 
as soldiers should likewise be paid. It was at 
his instigation that his friend Ephialtes propos- 
ed, in 461, the measure by which the Areopagus 
was deprived of those functions which rendered 
it formidable as an antagonist to the democrat- 
ical party. This success was followed by the 
ostracism of Cimon, who was charged with La- 
conism, and Pericles was thus placed at the 
head of public affairs at Athens. Pericles was 
distinguished as a general as well as a states- 
man, and frequently commanded the Athenian 
armies in their wars with the neighboring states. 
In 454 he commanded the Athenians in their 
campaigns against the Sicyonians and Acarna- , 
nians ; in 448 he led the army which assisted j 
the Phocians in the Sacred war ; and in 445 he j 
rendered the most signal service to the state by 
recovering the island of Euboea, which had re- j 
volted from Athens. Cimon had been previously 
recalled from exile, without any opposition from 
Pericles, but had died in 449. On his death the 
aristocratical party was headed by Thucydides, 



the son ofMelesias, but on the ostracism of the 
latter in 444, the organized opposition of the 
aristocratical party was broken up, and Pericles 
was left without a rival. Throughout the re- 
mainder of his political course no one appeared 
to contest his supremacy; but the boundless in- 
fluence which he possessed was never perverted 
by him to sinister or unworthy purposes. So 
far from being a mere selfish demagogue, he 
neither indulged nor courted the multitude. 
The next important event in which Pericles was 
engaged was the war against Samos, which had 
revolted from Athens, and which he subdued 
after an arduous campaign, 440. The poet Soph- 
ocles was one of the generals who fought with 
Pericles against Samos. For the next ten years, 
till the outbreak of the Peloponnesian war, the 
Athenians were not engaged in any considera- 
ble military operations. During this period Peri- 
cles devoted especial attention to the Athenian 
navy, as her supremacy rested on her maritime 
superiority, and he adopted various judicious 
means for consolidating and strengthening her 
empire over the islands of the ^Egean. The 
funds derived from the tribute of the allies and 
from other sources were, to a large extent, de- 
voted by him to the erection of those magnifi- 
cent temples and public buildings which ren- 
dered Athens the wonder and admiration of 
Greece. Under his administration the Propy- 
laea, and the Parthenon, and the Odeum were 
erected, as well as numerous other temples 
and public buildings. With the stimulus af- 
forded by these works, architecture and sculp- 
ture reached their highest perfection, and some 
of the greatest artists of antiquity were em- 
ployed in erecting or adorning the buildings. 
The chief direction and oversight of the public 
edifices was intrusted to Phidias. Vid. Phidias. 
These works calling into activity almost every 
branch of industry and commerce at Athens, 
diffused universal prosperity while they proceed- 
ed, and thus contributed in this, as well as in 
other ways, to maintain the popularity and in- 
fluence of Pericles. But he still had many ene- 
mies, who were not slow to impute to him base 
and unworthy motives. From the comic poets 
Pericles had to sustain numerous attacks. They 
exaggerated his power, spoke of his party as 
Pisistratids, and called upon him to swear that 
he was not about to assume the tyranny. His 
high character and strict probity, however, ren- 
dered all these attacks harmless. But as his 
enemies were unable to ruin his reputation by 
these means, they attacl^ed him through his 
friends. His friends Phidias and Anaxagoras, 
and his mistress Aspasia, were all accused be- 
fore the people. Phidias was condemned and 
cast into prison (vid. Phidias) ; Anaxagoras was 
also sentenced to pay a fine and quit Athens (vid. 
Anaxagoras) ; and Aspasia was only acquitted 
through the entreaties and tears of Pericles. 
The Peloponnesian war has been falsely ascribed 
to the ambitious schemes of Pericles. It is true 
that he counselled the Athenians not to yield 
to the demands of the Lacedaemonians, and he 
pointed out the immense advantages which the 
Athenians possessed in carrying on the war; 
but he did this because he saw that war was 
inevitable ; and that, as long as Athens retained 
the great power which she then possessed, 

627 



PERICLYMENUS. 



PERIPHAS. 



Sparta would never rest contented. On the out- 
break of the war in 431, a Peloponnesian army 
under Archidamus invaded Attica, and upon Ids 
advice the Athenians conveyed their movable 
property into the city, and their cattle and beasts 
of burden to Eubcea, and allowed the Pelopon- 
nesians to desolate Attica without opposition. 
The next year (430), when the Peloponnesians 
again invaded Attica, Pericles pursued the same 
policy as before. In this summer the plague 
made its appearance in Athens. The Atheni- 
ans, being exposed to the devastation of the war 
and the plague at the same time, began to turn 
their thoughts to peace, and looked upon Peri- 
cles as the author of all their distresses, inas- 
much as he had persuaded them to go to war. 
Pericles attempted to calm the public ferment; 
but such was the irritation against him that he 
was sentenced to pay a fine. The ill feeling of 
the people having found this vent, Pericles soon 
resumed his accustomed sway, and was again 
elected one of the generals for the ensuing year 
(429). Meantime Pericles had suffered in com- 
mon with his fellow-citizens. The plague car- 
ried off most of his near connections. His son 
Xanthippus, a profligate and undutiful youth, 
his sister, and most of his intimate friends, died 

it. Still he maintained unmoved his calm 
bearing and philosophic composure. At last his 
only surviving legitimate son, Paralus, a youth 
of greater promise than his brother, fell a vic- 
tim. The firmness of Pericles then at last gave 
way : as he placed the funeral garland on the 
head of the lifeless youth, he burst into tears 
and sobbed aloud. He had one son remaining, 
his child by Aspasia, and he was allowed to en- 
rol this son in his own tribe and give him his 
own name. In the autumn of 429, Pericles him- 
self died of a lingering sickness. When at the 
point of death, as his friends were gathered 
round his bed, recalling his virtues and enumer- 
ating his triumphs, Pericles, overhearing their 
remarks, said that they had forgotten his great- 
est praise : that no Athenian through his means 
had been made to put on mourning. He sur- 
vived the commencement of the war two years 
and six months. The name of the wife of Peri- 
cles is not mentioned. She had been the wife 
of Hipponicus, by whom she was the mother of 
Callias She bore two sons to Pericles, Xan- 
thippus and Paralus. She lived unhappily with 
Pericles, and a divorce took place by mutual 
consent, when Pericles connected himself with 
Aspasia. Of his strict probity he left the de- 
cisive proof in the fa^t that at his death he was 
found not to have added a single drachma to his 
hereditary property. — 2. Son of the preceding, 
by Aspasia, was one of the generals at the battle 
of Arginusae, and was put to death by the Athe- 
nians with the other generals, 406. 

Periclymenus (nefjiK'Av/ievog.) I. One of the 
Argonauts, was son of Neleus and Chloris, and '. 
brother of Nestor. Neptune (Poseidon) gave j 
him the power of changing himself into different ! 
forms, and conferred upon him great strength, 
but he was nevertheless slain by Hercules at j 
the capture of Pylos.— 2. Son of Neptune (Po- j 
seidon) and Chloris, the daughter of Tiresias 
of Thebes. In the war of the Seven against 
Thebes he was believed to have killed Parthen- 
opaeus ; and when he pursued Amphiaraus, the : 
628 



latter, by the command of Jupiter (Zeus), was 
swallowed up by the earth. 

[Perictione (HeptKTLovrj), daughter of Crit- 
ias, and mother of the celebrated philosopher 
Plato.] 

[Peridia, a Theban female, mother of Onytes, 
who was slain by Turnus in Italy ] 

Perieres (Repi^p7jc). ]. Son of ^Eolus and 
Enarete, king of Messene, was the father of 
Aphareus and Leucippus by Gorgophone. In 
some traditions Perieres was called a son of 
Cynortas, and, besides the sons above mention- 
ed, he is said to have been the father of Tyn- 
dareos and Icarius. — [2. Father of Bonis, men- 
tioned in the Iliad. — 3. A Cumaean, founder of 
Zancle in Sicily.] 

[Perigune {UepLyovv7]), daughter of Sinis, the 
famous robber, who was slain by Theseus ; after 
her father's death Theseus married her, being 
charmed with her beauty, and had by her a son 
named Melanippus.] 

Perilaus (tlepiAaoc). 1. Son of Icarius and 
Periboea, and a brother of Penelope. — [2. A cit- 
izen of Megara, who espoused the parly of 
Philip of Macedon, and, according to Demos- 
thenes, betrayed his country to that monarch, 
but was afterward treated by him with neglect 
and contempt.] 

Perillus (Ilepf/uAof), a statuary, was the mak- 
er of the bronze bull of the tyrant Phalaris, re- 
specting which, vid. further under Phalaris. 
Like the makers of other instruments of death, 
Perillus is said to have become one of the vic- 
tims of his own handiwork. 

[Perimedes {UepLuridris). 1. A companion of 
Ulysses, mentioned in the Odyssey. — 2. Father 
of Schedius, who was a commander of the Pho- 
cians in the Trojan war.] 

[Perimos (Ylspifinc), son of Meges, a Trojan 
warrior, slain by Patroclus.] 

[Perimela, daughter of Hippodamas, cast by 
her father into the sea, and changed by Neptune 
into an island ] 

Perinthus {Tleptvdoc : TleplvdLoc : now Eski 
Eregli). an important town in Thrace, on the 
Propontis, was founded by the Samians about 
B C. 559 It was situated twenty-two miles 
west of Selymbria, on a small peninsula, and was 
built on the slope of a hill with rows of houses 
rising above each other like seats in an amphi- 
theatre. It is celebrated for the obstinate re- 
sistance which it offered to Philip of Macedon, 
at which time it was a more powerful place 
than Byzantium. Under the Romans it still 
continued to be a flourishing town, being the 
point at which most of the roads met leading to 
Byzantium. The commercial importance of the 
town is attested by its numerous coins, which 
are still extant. At a later time, but not earlier 
than the fourth century of the Christian era, we 
find it called Heraclea, which occurs sometimes 
alone without any addition, and sometimes in 
the form of Heraclea Thracice or Heraclea Perin- 
thus. 

Periphas (Tlepicpac). 1. An Attic autochthon, 
previous to the time of Cecrops. was a priest 
of Apollo, and, on account of his virtues, was 
made king of the country. In consequence of 
the honors paid to him, Jupiter (Zeus) wished 
to destroy him ; but, at the request of Apollo, he 
was metamorphosed by Jupiter (Zeus) into an 



PERIPHETES. 



PERSEPHONE. 



eagle, and his wife likewise into a bird.— [2. 
Son of the .Etolian Ochesius, fell by the hand 
of Mars (Ares) in the Trojan war.— 3. Son of 
Epytus, and ■ herald of ^Eneas.— 4. A Greek, 
-who was engaged in the Trojan war, and took 
part in the destruction of the city.] 

Periphetes (UepitfTw). 1- Son of Vulcan 
(Hephaestus) and Anticlea, surnamedCorynetes, 
that is, Club- bearer, was a robber at Epidaurus, 
who slew travellers with an iron club. The- 
seus at last killed him, and took his club for his 
own use. — [2 Son of Copreus of Mycenae, a 
Greek warrior at Troy, slain by Hector.— 3. A 
Trojan warrior, slain by Teucer.] 

[Perisadii (Uepioiltuc), an Illyrian people in 
the neighborhood of the silver mines of Damas- 
tion, also called leoapr/oiot.] 

Permessus (Rep/it/aoac : now Kefalari), a river 
in Boeotia, which descends from Mount Helicon, 
unites with the Olmius, and falls into the Lake 
Copais near Haliartus. [Its waters were sa- 
cred to the Muses.] 

Per.ve (Ylepvri), a little island off the coast of 
Ionia, opposite to the territory of Miletus, to 
which an earthquake united it. 

Pero (U7jpu), daughter of Neleus and Chloris, 
was married to Bias, and celebrated for her 
beauty, f Vid. Melampus.] 

Perperena (nep-epr/va, and other forms), a 
small town of Mysia, south of Adramyttium, in 
the neighborhood of which there were copper 
mines and celebrated vineyards. It was said 
to be the place at which Thucydides died. 

Perperna or Perpenna (the former is the 
preferable form). 1. M., praetor B.C. 135, when 
he carried on war against the slaves in Sicily, 
and consul 130, when he defeated Aristonicus 
in Asia, and took him prisoner. He died near 
Pergamum on his return to Rome in 129. — 2. 
M , son of the last, consul 92, and censor 86. 
He is mentioned by the ancient writers as an 
extraordinary instance of longevity. He at- 
tained the age of ninety-eight years, and died j 
in 49, the year in which the civil war broke out j 
between Caesar and Pompey. He took no prom- I 
inent part in the agitated times in which he 
lived. — 3 M. Perperna Vento, son of the last, ! 
joined the Marian party in the civil war, and ! 
was raised to the praetorship. After the con- j 
quest of Italy by Sulla in 82, Perperna fled to ! 
Sicily, which he quitted, however, upon the ar- } 
rival of Pompey shortly afterward. On the I 
death of Sulla in 78, Perperna joined the con- ; 
sul M. Lepidus in his attempt to overthrow the j 
new aristocratical constitution, and retired with 
him to Sardinia on the failure of this attempt. 
Lepidus died in Sardinia in the following year, ; 
77, and Perperna. with the remains of his army, i 
crossed over to Spain and joined Sertorius. j 
Perperna was jealous of the ascendency of Ser- 
tonus, and, alter serving under him some years, 
he and his friends assassinated Sertorius at a j 
banquet in 72. His death soon brought the war j 
to a close. Perperna was defeated by Pompey, j 
was taken prisoner, and was put to death. 

[Perranthks, a steep mountain in Epirus, on 
the western declivity of which the city Ambra- ! 
cia was situated.] 

Perrh.ebi (tlcp'p'aifjoi or HepaiBoi), a power- j 
ful and warlike Pelasgic people, who, according 
to Strabo, migrated from Euboea to the main 



land, and settled in the districts of Hestiaeotis 
and Pelasgiotis in Thessaly. Hence the north- 
ern part of this country is frequently called Per- 
rhaebia (Ue^aiSia, UepaiSia), though it never 
formed one of the regular Thessalian provinces. 
Homer places the Perrhaebi in the neighborhood 
of the Thessalian Dodona and the River Titare- 
sius ; and at a later time the name of Perrhaebia 
was applied to the district bounded by Macedo- 
nia and the Cambunian Mountains on the north, 
by Pindus on the west, by the Peneus on the 
south and southeast, and by the Peneus and 
Ossa on the east. The Perrhaebi were mem- 
bers of the Amphictyonic league. At an early 
period they were subdued by the Lapithae ; at 
the time of the Peloponnesian war they were 
subject to the Thessalians, and subsequently to 
Philip of Macedon ; but at the time of the Ro- 
man wars in Greece they appear independent 
of Macedonia. 

Perrhid^e (U.epf)!Aii), an Attic demus near 
Aphidna, belonging to the tribe Antiochis. 

Persabora or Perisabora (TLepcatupa : now 
Anbar), a strongly-fortified city of Babylonia, on 
the western sid'e of the Euphrates, at the point 
where the canal called Maarsares left the river. 

Pers^e. Vid. Per sis. 

Perseus (Uepaaioc), a Stoic philosopher, was 
a native of Cittium in Crete, and a disciple of 
Zeno. He lived for some years at the court of 
AtUigonus Gonatas, with whom he seems to 
have been in high favor. Antigonus appointed 
him to the chief command in Corinth, where he 
was slain when the city was taken bv Aratus, 
B.C. 243. 

Perse (Tlepa?]), daughter of Oceanus, and 
wife of Helios (the Sun), by whom she became 
the mother of ^Eetes and Circe. She is further 
called the mother of Pasiphae* and Perses. Ho- 
mer and Apollonius Rhodius call her Perse, 
while others call her Perseis or Persea. 

Perseip, a name given to Hecate, as the 
daughter of Perses by Asteria. 

Persephone (Uepoeo6v)i), called Proserpina 
by the Romans, the daughter of Zeus (Jupiter) 
and Demeter (Ceres). In Homer she is called 
Perscphorda (ttepGetioveia); the form Persephone 
first occurs in Hesiod. But, besides these forms 
of the name, we also find Perscphassa, Phersc- 
pkassa, Perscphatta, Phcrsephafta, Pherrcphassa, 
Pherephatta, and Phersephonia, for which various 
etymologies have been proposed. The Latin 
Proserpina is probably only a corruption of the 
Greek. In Attica she was worshipped under 
the name of Cora (K6p?} t Ion. Kovprj), that is, 
the Daughter, namely, of Demeter (Ceres) ■ and 
the two were frequently called The Mother and 
the Daughter {rj Mrj-yp kqi ij Kopy). Being the 
infernal goddess of death, she is also called a 
daughter of Zeus (Jupiter) and Styx. In Ar- 
cadia she was worshipped under the name of 
Despoena, and was called a daughter of Posei- 
don (Neptune) Hippius and Demeter (Ceres), 
and said to have been brought up by the Titan 
Anytus. Homer describes her as the wife of 
Hades (Pluto), and the formidable, venerable, 
and majestic queen of the Shades, who rules 
over the souls of the dead, along with her hus- 
band. Hence she is called by later writers June 
Infer iia, Averna, and Stygia ; and the Erinnyes 
are said to have been her daughters bv Pluto. 

629 



PERSEPOLIS. 



PERSEUS. 



Groves sacred to her are placed by Homer in 
the western extremity of the earth, on the fron- 
tiers of the lower world, which is itself called 
the house of Persephone (Proserpina). The 
story of her being carried off by Hades or Pluto 
against her will is not mentioned by Homer, 
who simply describes her as the wife and queen 
of Hades. Her abduction is first mentioned by 
Hesiod. The account of her abduction, which 
is the most celebrated part of her story, and the 
wanderings of her mother in search of her, and 
the worship of the two goddesses in Attica at 
the festival of the Eleusinia, are related under 
Demeter. In the mystical theories of the Or- 
phics, Persephone (Proserpina) is described as 
the all-pervading goddess of nature, who both 
produces and destroys every thing ; and she is 
therefore mentioned along, or identified with, 
other mystic divinities, such as Isis, Rhea, Ge 
(Terra), Hestia, Pandora, Artemis (Diana), Hec- 
ate. This mystic Persephone is further said to 
have become by Zeus (Jupiter) the mother of 
Dionysus (Bacchus), Iacchus, Zagreus orSaba- 
zius. Persephone (Proserpina) frequently ap- 
pears in works of art. She is represented either 
with the grave and severe character of an in- 
fernal Juno, or as a mystical divinity with a 
sceptre and a little box, in the act of being car- 
ried off by Pluto. 

Persepolis (UepffiiroXic, II epGatvolac : in the 
Middle Ages, Istakhar: now Takhti-Jemshid, i. e., 
Throne of Jemshid, or Chil-Minar, i. e., Forty Pil- 
lars : large ruins), is the Greek name, probably 
translated from the Persian name, which is not 
recorded, of the great city which succeeded Pa- 
sargada as the capital of Persis and of the Per- 
sian empire. From the circumstance, however, 
of the conquest of the Babylonian empire taking 
place about the time when Persepolis attained 
this dignity, it appears to have been seldom used 
as the royal residence. Neither Herodotus, Xen- 
ophon, Ctesias, nor the sacred writers during 
the Persian period, mention it at all, though they 
often speak of Babylon, Susa, and Ecbatana as 
the capitals of the empire. It is only from the 
Greek writers after the Macedonian conquest 
that we learn its rank in the empire, which ap- 
pears to have consisted chiefly in its being one 
of the two burial places of the kings (the other 
being Pasargada), and also a royal treasury ; for 
Alexander found in the palace immense riches, 
which were said to have accumulated from the 
time of Cyrus. Its foundation is sometimes as- 
cribed to Cyrus the Great, but more generally 
to his son Cambyses. It was greatly enlarged 
and adorned by Darius I. and Xerxes, and pre- 
served its splendor till after the Macedonian con- 
quest, when it was burned ; Alexander, as the 
story goes, setting fire to the palace with his 
own hand at the end of a revel, by the instiga- 
tion of the courtesan Thais, B.C. 331. It was 
not, however, so entirely destroyed as some his- 
torians represent. It appears frequently in sub- 
sequent history, both ancient and medieval. It 
is now deserted, but its ruins are considerable, 
though too dilapidated to give any good notion 
of Persian architecture, and they are rich in cune- 
iform inscriptions. It was situated in the heart 
of Persis. in the part called Hollow Persis {kocXtj 
UepcLc), not far from the border of the Carma- 
nian Desert, in a beautiful and healthv valley, 
630 



watered by the River Araxes (now Bend- Emir), 
and its tributaries the Medus and the Cyrus 
The city stood on the northern side of the Arax- 
es, and had a citadel (the ruins of which are 
still seen) built on the levelled surface of a rock, 
and inclosed by triple walls rising one above the 
other to the heights of sixteen, forty-eight, and 
sixty cubits, within which was the palace, with 
its royal sepulchres and treasuries. 

Perses (Uiparjc)- 1. Son of the Titan Crius 
and Eurybia, and husband of Asteria, by whom 
he became the father of Hecate. — 2. Son of Per- 
seus and Andromeda, described by the Greeks 
as the founder of the Persian nation. — 3. Son 
of Helios (the Sun) and Perse, and brother of 
/Eetes and Circe. 

Perseus (Uetyyevg), the famous Argive hero, 
was a son of Jupiter (Zeus) and Danae, and a 
grandson of Acrisius. An oracle had told Acris- 
ius that he was doomed to perish by the hands 
of Danae's son, and he therefore shut up his 
daughter in an apartment made of brass or stone. 
But Jupiter (Zeus) having metamorphosed him- 
self into a shower of gold, came down through 
the roof of the prison, and became by her the 
father of Perseus. From this circumstance Per- 
seus is sometimes called aurigena. As soon as 
Acrisius discovered that Danae had given birth 
to a son, he put both mother and son into a 
chest, and threw them into the sea ; but Jupi- 
ter (Zeus) caused the chest to land in the island 
of Seriphos, one of the Cyclades, where Dictys, 
a fisherman, found them, and carried them to 
Polydectes, the king of the country. They were 
treated with kindness by Polydectes ; but the 
latter having afterward fallen in love with Da- 
nae, and finding it impossible to gratify his de- 
sires in consequence of the presence of Perseus, 
who had meantime grown up to manhood, he 
sent Perseus aw r ay to fetch the head of Medu- 
sa, one of the Gorgons. Guided by Mercury 
(Hermes) and Minerva (Athena), Perseus first 
went to the Graeae, the sisters of the Gorgons, 
took from them their one tooth and their one 
eye, and would not restore them until they 
showed him the way to the nymphs who pos- 
sessed the winged sandals, the magic wallet, 
and the helmet of Pluto (Hades), which rendered 
the wearer invisible. Having received from the 
nymphs these invaluable presents, from Mercury 
(Hermes) a sickle, and from Minerva (Athena) 
a mirror, he mounted into the air, and arrived 
at the Gorgons, who dwelt near Tartessus on 
the coast of the ocean, whose heads were cover- 
ed, like those of serpents, with scales, and who 
had large tusks like boars, brazen hands, and 
golden wings. He found them asleep, and cut 
off the head of Medusa, looking at her figure 
through the mirror, for a sight of the monster 
herself would have changed him into stone. 
Perseus put her head into the wallet which he 
carried on his back, and as he went away he 
was pursued by two other Gorgons ; but his 
helmet, which rendered him invisible, enabled 
him to escape in safety. Perseus then pro- 
ceeded to JEthiopia, where he saved and married 
Andromeda. Vid. Andromeda. Perseus is also 
said to have come to the Hyperboreans, by 
whom he was hospitably received, and to Atlas, 
whom he changed into the mountain of the same 
name by the Gorgon's head. On his return to 



PERSEUS. 



persis. 



-Seriphos, he found his mother with Dictys in a 
temple, whither they had fled from the violence 
of Polydcctes. Perseus then went to the pal- 
ace of Polydcctes, and metamorphosed him and 
all his guests, and, some say, the whole island, 
into stone He then presented the kingdom to 
Dictys. He gave the winged sandals and the 
-helmet to Mercury (Hermes), who restored them 
to the nymphs and to Pluto (Hades), and the 
head of Gorgon to Minerva (Athena), who placed 
it in the middle of her shield or breast-plate. 
Perseus then went to Argos, accompanied by 
Danae" and Andromeda. Acrisius, remembering 
the oracle, escaped to Larissa, in the country 
of the Pelasgians ; but Perseus followed him, in 
order to persuade him to return. Some writers 
state that Perseus, on his return to Argos, found 
Proetus, who had expelled his brother Acrisius, 
in possession of the kingdom ; and that Perseus 
slew Proetus, and was afterward killed by Mega- 
penthes, the son of Proetus. The more common 
tradition, however, relates, that when Teutami- 
das, king of Larissa. celebrated games in honor 
of his guest Acrisius, Perseus, who took part in 
them, accidentally hit the foot of Acrisius with 
the discus, and thus killed him. Acrisius was 
buried outside the city of Larissa, and Perseus, 
leaving the kingdom of Argos to Megapenthes, 
the son of Proetus, received from him in ex- 
change the government of Tiryns. According 
to others, Perseus remained in Argos, and suc- 
cessfully opposed the introduction of the Bac- 
chic orgies. Perseus is said to have founded 
the towns ofMidea and Mycenae. By Androm- 
eda he became the father of Perses, Alcaeus, 
Sthenelus, Heleus, Mestor, Electryon, Gorgo- 
phone, and Autochthe. Perseus was worship- 
ped as a hero in several places. 

Perseus or Perses (Uepnevc), the last king 
of Macedonia, was the eldest son of Philip V., 
and reigned eleven years, from B.C. 178 to 168. 
Before his accession he persuaded his father to 
put to death his younger brother Demetrius, 
whom he suspected that the Roman senate in- 
tended to set up as a competitor for the throne 
•on the death of Philip. Immediately after his 
accession he began to make preparations for 
war with the Romans, which he knew to be in- 
evitable, though seven years elapsed before act- 
ual hostilities commenced. The war broke out 
in 171. The first year of the war was marked 
by no striking action. The consul P. Licinius 
Crassus first suffered a defeat in Thessaly in 
-an engagement between the cavalry of the two 
armies, but subsequently gained a slight ad- 
vantage over the king's troops. The second 
year of the war (170), in which the consul A. 
Hostilius Mancinus commanded, also passed 
over without any important battle, but was, on 
the whole, favorable to Perseus. The third 
year (169), in which the consul Q. Marcius 
Philippus commanded, again produced no im- 
portant results. The length to which the war 
had been unexpectedly protracted, and the ill 
success of the Roman arms, had by this time 
excited a general feeling in favor of the Mace- 
donian monarch ; but the ill-timed avarice of 
Perseus, who refused to advance the sum of 
money which Eumenes, king of Pergamus, de- 
manded, deprived him of this valuable ally; and 
the same unseasonable niggardliness likewise 



j deprived him of the services of twenty thousand 
Gaulish mercenaries, who had actually advanc- 
ed into Macedonia to his support, but retired on 
j failing to obtain their stipulated pay. He was 
: left to carry on the contest against Rome sin- 
| gle-handed. The fourth year of the war (168) 
I was also the last. The new consul, L. ^Emilius 
j Paulus, defeated Perseus with great loss in a 
| decisive battle fought near Pydna, on June 22, 
i 1 68. Perseus took refuge in the island of Samo- 
I thrace, where he shortly afterward surrendered 
I with his children to the praetor Cn. Octavius 
J When brought before ^Emilius, he is said to 
have degraded himself by the most abject sup- 
plications; but he was treated with kindness by 
the Roman general. The following year he 
was carried to Italy, where he was compelled 
to adorn the splendid triumph of his conqueror 
(November 30, 167), and afterward cast into a 
dungeon, from whence, however, the interces- 
sion of yEmilius procured his release, and he 
was permitted to end his days in an honorable 
captivity at Alba. He survived his removal 
thither a few years, and died, according to some 
accounts, by voluntary starvation, while others, 
fortunately with less probability, represent him 
as falling a victim to the cruelty of his guards, 
who deprived him of sleep. Perseus had been 
twice married; the name of his first wife, whom 
he is said to have killed with his own hand in 
a fit of passion, is not recorded ; his second, La- 
odice, was the daughter of Seleucus IV. Philo- 
pator. He left two children : a son, Alexander, 
and a daughter, both apparently by his second 
marriage, as they w-ere mere children when car- 
ried to Rome. Besides these, he had adopted 
his younger brother Philip, who appears to have 
been regarded by him as the heir to his throne, 
and became the partner of his captivity. 
Persia. Vid. Persis. 
Persici Montes. Vid. Parsici Montes. 
; Persicus Sinus, Persicum Mare (6 Hepainbg 
j koIttoc, t) HepciKT] -&d?.aaaa, and other forms : 
the Persian Gulf), is the name given by the 
later geographers to the great gulf of the Mare 
Erythraeum (now Indian Ocean), extending in a 
southeastern direction from the mouths of the 
Tigris, between the northeastern coast of Ara- 
bia and the opposite coast of Susiana, Persis, 
and Carmania, to the narrow strait formed by 
the long tongue of land which projects from the 
northern side of Oman in Arabia, by which strait 
it is connected with the more open gulf of the 
Indian Ocean called Paragon Sinus (now Gulf 
of Oman). The earlier Greek writers know 
nothing of it. Herodotus does not distinguish 
it from the Erythraean Sea. The voyage of 
Alexander's admiral Nearchus from the Indus 
to the Tigris made it better known, but still the 
ancient geographers in general give very inac- 
curate statements of its size and form. 

Per side s{Tlepct£i5rir, TiepanidSrjc),^ patronym- 
ic given to the descendants of Perses. 

Persis, and very rarely Persia {rj Uepalr, and 
I q TlepvLKT], sc. yrj, the fem. adjectives, the masc 
I being TIepgikoc, from the ethnic noun Yleparjc, pi. 

Uepaai, fem. YLepatg, Latin Persa and Perses, 
' pi. Persae : in modern Persian and Arabic, Fan 
j or Farsistan, i. e., stan, land of, Fars—Old Per- 
I sian pars, horse or horseman : Eng. Persia), orig- 
! inally a small mountainous district of Western 

631 



PERSIS. 



PERSIS. 



A6ia, lying on the northeastern side of the Per- 
sian Gulf, and surrounded on the other sides by 
mountains and deserts. On the northwest and 
north it was separated from Susiana, Media, 
and Parthia by the little river Oroatis or Orosis, 
and by Mons Parachoathras ; and on the east 
from Carmania by no definite boundaries in the 
Desert. The only level part of the country was 
the strip of sea-coast called Persis Pa ram a ; 
the rest was intersected with branches ofMons 
Parachoathras, the valleys between which were 
watered by several rivers, the chief of which 
were the Araxes, Cvrus, and Medus : in this 
part of the country, which was called Koile 
Persis, stood the capital cities Pasargada and 
Persepolis. The country has a remarkable 
variety of climate and of products ; the northern 
mountainous regions being comparatively cold, 
but with good pastures, especially for camels ; 
the middle slopes having a temperate climate, 
and producing abundance of fruit and wine ; and 
the southern strip of coast being intensely hot 
and sandy, with little vegetation except the 
palm-tree. The inhabitants were a collection 
of nomad tribes of the Indo-European stock, who 
called themselves by a name which is given in 
Greek as Art^ei (Wpralot), and which, like the 
-kindred Median name of Arii ("Apioi), signifies 
■noble or honorable, and is applied especially to 
the true worshippers of Ormuzd and followers 
of Zoroaster : it was, in fact, rather a title of 
honor than a proper name ; the true collective 
name of the people seems to have been Paraca. 
According to Herodotus, they were divided into 
three classes or castes : first, the nobles or war- 
riors, containing the three tribes of the Pasar- 
gad.'E, who were the most noble, and to w 7 hom 
the royal family of the Achaemenidee belonged, 
the Marphii, and the Maspii; secondly, the ag- 
ricultural and other settled tribes, namely, the 
Panthialaei, Derusiaei, and Germanii ; thirdly, 
the tribes which remained nomadic, namely, the 
Daae, Mardi, Dropici, and Sagartii, names com- 
mon to other parts of Western and Central Asia. 
The Persians had a close ethnical affinity to the 
Medes, and followed the same customs and re- 
ligion. Vid. Magi, Zoroaster. The simple and 
warlike habits which they cultivated in their na- 
tive mountains preserved them from the cor- 
rupting influences which enervated their Median 
brethren ; so that from being, as we find them 
at the beginning of their recorded history, the 
subject member of the Medo-Persian kingdom, 
they obtained the supremacy under Cyrus, the 
founder of the great Persian empire, B.C. 559. 
Of the Persian history before this date we know- 
hut little : the native poetical annalists of a later 
period are perfectly untrustworthy : the addi- 
tional light lately obtained from the Persian in- 
scriptions is, so far as it goes, confirmatory of 
the Greek writers, from whom, and from some 
small portions of Scripture, all our knowledge 
of ancient Persian history is derived. Accord- 
ing to these accounts, the Persians were first 
subjected by the Medes under Phraortes, about 
B.C. 638. at the time of the formation of the 
great Median empire ; but they continued to be 
governed by their own princes, the Achaemeni- 
dae. An account of the revolution, by which 
the supremacy was transferred to the Persians, 
is given under Cyrus. At this time there ex- 
632 



isted in Western Asia two other great king- 
doms, the Lydian, which comprised nearly the 
whole of Asia Minor, west of the River Halys, 
which separated it from the Medo-Persian ter- 
ritories, and the Babylonian, which, besides the 
Tigris and Euphrates valley, embraced Syria 
and Palestine. By the successive conquest of 
these kingdoms, the dominions of Cyrus were 
i extended on the west as far as the coasts of the 
j Euxine, the .-Egean. and the Mediterranean, and 
to the frontier of Egypt. Turning his arms in 
the opposite direction, he subdued Bactria, and 
effected some conquests beyond the Oxus, but 
fell in battle with the Massagetae. Vid. Cyrus. 
His son Cambyses added Egypt to the empire. 
Vid. Cambyses. Upon his death the Magian 
priesthood made an effort to restore the suprem- 
acy to the Medes {vid. Magi, Smerdis), which 
was defeated by the conspiracy of the sevea 
Persian chieftains, whose success conferred the 
crown upon Darius, the son of Hystaspes. This 
i king was at first occupied with crushing rebell- 
ions in every part of the empire, and with the 
I two expeditions against Scythia and Cyrena'ica, 
of which the former entirely failed, and the lat- 
ter was only partially successful. He conquer- 
ed Thrace, and on the east he added the valley 
of the Indus to the kingdom ; but in this quar- 
ter the power of Persia seems never to have 
been much more than nominal The Persian 
empire had now reached its greatest extent, 
from Thrace and CyrenaVca on the west to the 
Indus on the east, and from the Euxine, the 
Caucasus (or, rather, a little below it), the Cas- 
pian, and the Oxus and Jaxartes on the north, 
to ^Ethiopia, Arabia, and the Erythraean Sea on 
the south, and it embraced, in Europe, Thrace 
and some of the Greek cities north of the Eux- 
ine ; in Africa, Egypt and Cyrena'ica; in Asia, 
on the west, Palestine, Phoenicia, Syria, the sev- 
eral districts of Asia Minor, Armenia, Mesopo 
tamia, Assyria, Babylonia, Susiana, Atropatene, 
Great Media ; on the north, Hyrcania, Margi- 
ana, Bactriana, and Sogdiana ; on the east, the 
Paropamisus. Arachosia, and India (i. e., part of 
the Punjab and Scinde) ; on the south, Persis, 
Carmania, and Gedrosia ; and in the centre of 
the eastern part, Parthia, Aria, and Drangiana 
The capital cities of the empire were Babylon, 
Susa, Ecbatana in Media, and. though these 
were seldom, if ever, used as residences, Pasar 
gada and Persepolis in Persia. (Vid. the sev- 
eral articles.) Of this vast empire Darius un- 
dertook the organization, and divided it into 
twenty satrapies, of which a full account is 
given by Herodotus. For the other details of 
his reign, and especially the commencement of 
the wars w r ith Greece, vid. Dabius. Of the re- 
maining period of the ancient Persian history 
i till the Macedonian conquest, a sufficient ab- 
| stract will be found under the names of the sev- 
{ eral kings, a list of whom is now subjoined 
i (1.) Cyrus, B.C. 559-529 ; (2.) Cambyses, 529- 
! 522; (3.) Usurpat ion of the pseudo-S.MERDis, sev- 
1 en months, 522-521 ; (4.) Darius I., son of Hys- 
taspes, 521-485; (5.) Xerxes I., 485-465; (6.) 
Usurpation of Artaba^us, seven months, 465- 
464; (7.) Af.taxerses I. Longimanus, 464-425 ; 
(8.) Xerxes II., two months; (9.) Sogdianus, 
seven months, 425-424; (10.) Ochus, or Darius 
II. Nothus, 424-405 ; (11.) Aetaxerxes II. Mne> 



«9 



PERSIUS FLACCUS. 

mon, 405-359 , (12.) Ochus.or Artaxerxes III., 
369-338; (13.) Arses, 338-336; (14.) Darius III. 
Codomannus, 336-331. Kid. Alexander. Here 
the ancient history of Persia ends as a king- 
dom ; but, as a people, the Persians proper, un- 
der the influence especially of their religion, 
preserved their existence, and at length regain- 
ed their independence on the downfall of the 
Parthian empire. Vid. Sassanid^e. In reading 
the Roman poets, it must be remembered that 
they constantly use Persa as well as Medi as a 
general term for the nations east of the Euphra- 
tes and Tigris, and especially for the Parthians. 

Persius Flaoocs, A., the poet, was a Roman 
knight connected by blood and marriage with 
persons of the highest rank, and was born at 
Volateme in Etruria on the 4th of December, 
A.D. 34. He received the first rudiments of 
education in his native town, remaining there 
until the age of twelve, and then removed to 
Home, where he studied grammar under the 
celebrated Remmius Palaemon, and rhetoric un- 
der Verginius Flavius. He was afterward the 
pupil of Cornutus the Stoic, who became the 
guide, philosopher, and friend of his future life, 
and to whom he attached himself so closely 
that he never quitted his side. While yet a 
youth he was on familiar terms with Lucan, 
with Caisius Bassus the lyric poet, and with 
several other persons of literary eminence. He 
was tenderly beloved by the high-minded Pagtus 
Thrasea, and seems to have been well worthy 
of such affection, for he is described as a virtu- 
ous and pleasing youth. He died of a disease 
of the stomach, on the 24th of November, A.D. 
62, before he had completed his twenty-eighth 
year. The extant works of Persius, who, we 
are told, wrote seldom and slowly, consist of 
six short satires, extending in all to six hundred 
and fifty hexameter lines, and were left in an 
unfinished state. They were slightly corrected 
after his death by Corwutus, while Cajsius Bas- 
sus was permitted, at his own earnest request, 
to be the editor. In boyhood Persius had writ- 
ten some other poems, which were destroyed 
by the advice of Cornutus. Few productions 
have ever enjoyed more popularity than the Sat- 
ires ; but it would seem that Persius owes not 
a little of his fame to a cause which naturally 
might have produced an effect directly the re- 
verse, we mean the multitude of strange terms, 
proverbial phrases, far-fetched metaphors, and 
abrupt transitions which every where embarrass 
our progress. The difficulty experienced in re- 
moving these impediments necessarily impress- 
es both the words and the ideas upon everyone 
who has carefully studied his pages, and hence 
no author clings more closely to our memory. 
The first satire is superior both in plan and ex- 
ecution to the rest ; and those passages in the 
fifth, where Persius describes the process by 
which his own moral and intellectual faculties 
were expanded, arc remarkable for their grace 
and beauty. The best editions are by Jahn, 
Lips., 1843, and by Heinrich, Lips., 1844. 

Pertinax, Helvius, Roman emperor from 
January 1st to March 28th, A.D. 193, was of 
humble origin, and rose from the post of centu- 
rion both to the highest military and civil com- 
mands in the reigns of M. Aurelius and Corn- 
modus. On the murder of Commodus on the 



PETELTA. 

last day of September, 192, Pertinax, who was 
then sixty-six years of age, was reluctantly per 
suaded to accept the empire. He commenced 
his reign by introducing extensive reforms into 
the civil and military administration of the em- 
pire ; but the troops, who had been accustomed 
both to ease and license under Commodus, were 
disgusted with the discipline which he attempt- 
ed to enforce upon them, and murdered their 
new sovereign after a reign of two months and 
twenty-seven days. On his death the praetorian 
troops put up the empire to sale, which was pur- 
chased by M. Didius Salvius Julianus. Vid. p. 
256, b. 

Perusia (Perusinus : now Perugia), an an- 
cient city in the eastern part of Etruria, between 
the Lake Trasimenus and the Tiber, and one 
of the twelve cities of the Etruscan confeder- 
acy. It was situated on a hill, and was strongly 
fortified by nature and by art. In conjunction 
with the other cities of Etruria, it long resisted 
the power of the Romans, and at a later period 
it was made a Roman colony. It is memorable 
in the civil wars as the place in which L. Anto- 
nius, the brother of the triumvir, took refuge 
I when he was no longer able to oppose Octavi- 
| anus in the field, and where he was kept closely 
j blockaded by Octavianus for some months, from 
the end of B C. 41 to the spring of 40. Famine, 
compelled it to surrender ; but one of its citi- 
zens having set fire to his own house, the flames 
spread, and the whole city was burned to the 
ground. The war between L. Antonius and 
Octavianus is known from the long siege of this 
town by the name of the Bellum Perusinum. It 
was rebuilt and colonized anew by Augustus, 
from whom it received the surname of Augusta. 
In the later time of the empire it was the most 
important city in all Etruria, and long resisted 
the Goths. Part of the walls and some of the 
gates of Perusia still remain. The best pre- 
served of the gates is now called Arco d" Au- 
gusto, from the inscription Avgvsta Pervsia 
over the arch ; the whole structure is at least 
sixty or seventy feet high. Several interesting 
tombs, with valuable remains of Etruscan art, 
have been discovered in the neighborhood of the 
city. 

Pescennius Niger. Vid. Niger. 
Pessinus or Pesinus (Yleaaivovc, Ueoivov?: 
TieoaivovvTioG,iem Utaatvowric : ruins at Bala 
Hisar), a city of Asia Minor, in the southwest- 
ern corner of Galatia, on the southern slope of 
Mount Dindymus or Agdistis, was celebrated as 
a chief seat of the worship of Cybele, under the 

i surname of Agdistis, whose temple, crowded 
with riches, stood on a hill outside the city. In 
this temple was a wooden (Livy says stone) 
image of the goddess, which was removed to 
Rome, to satisfy an oracle in the Sibylline books. 

! Under Constantino the city was made the cap- 

| ital of the province of Galatia Salutaris, but it 
gradually declined until the sixth century, after 
which it is no more mentioned. 

Petalia or Petali^e (now Pctahus), an unin- 
habited and rocky island off the southwestern 

I coast of Eubcea, at the entrance into the Euri- 

| P us - 

Petei.ia or Petimu (Uerrj^ia : Petellnus : now 
Strongoli), an ancient Greek town on the east- 
ern coast of Bruttium, founded, according to 

633 



PETENES. 



PETRONIA. 



tradition, by Philoctetes. (Virg., JEn., iii., 402.) 
It was situated north of Croton, to whose terri- 
tory it originally belonged, but it was afterward 
conquered by the Lucanians. It remained faith- 
ful to the Romans, when the other cities of Brut- 
tium revolted to Hannibal, and it was not till 
after a long and desperate resistance that it was 
taken by one of Hannibal's generals. It was 
repeopled by Hannibal with Bruttians ; but the 
Romans subsequently collected the remains of 
the former population, and put them again in 
possession of the town. 

[Petenes. Vid. Petines.] 

Peteox (Uereuv : Heteuvioc), a small town 
in BcBotia, of uncertain site, dependent upon 
Haliartus according to some, and upon Thebes 
according to others. 

Peteos (TIet£0)c), son of Orneus, and father 
of Menestheus, was expelled from Athens by 
iEgeus, and went to Phocis, where he founded 
•Stiris. 

Petilicjs or Petillics. 1. CapitolInus. Vid. 
Capitolincs. — 2. Cerealis. Vid. Cerealis. — 

3. Spcrincs. Vid. Spurinus. 

[Petines (Uetlv7jc) or Petenes, one of the 
Persian generals at the beginning of the war 
with Alexander : he was slain at the battle of 
the Granicus.] 

Petosiris (JleTooipic), an Egyptian priest and 
astrologer, generally named along with Nechep- 
sos, an Egyptian king. The two are said to be 
the founders of astrology. Some works on as- 
trology were extant under his name. Like our 
own Lilly, Petosiris became the common name 
for an astrologer. (Juv., vi., 580.) 

Petovio or Pcetovio (now Pettau), a town in 
Pannonia Superior, on the frontiers of Noricum, 
and on the Dravus (now Drave), was a Roman 
colony with the surname Ulpta, having been 
probably enlarged and made a colony by Tra- 
jan or Hadrian. It was one of the chief towns 
of Pannonia, had an imperial palace, and was 
the head-quarters of a Roman legion. The an- 
cient town was probably on the right bank of 
the Drave, opposite the modern Pettau, as it is 
only on the former spot that inscriptions, coins, 
and other antiquities have been found. 

Petra (rj Uirpa : UcTpacoc , Petraeus, later Pe- 
trensis), the name of several cities built on 
rocks or in rocky places. 1. A small place in 
the Corinthian territory, probably on the coast, 
near the borders of Argolis. — 2. A place in Elis, 
not far from the city of Elis, of which some sup- 
pose it to have been the acropolis. The se- 
pulchral monument of the philosopher Pyrrho 
was shown here. — 3. (Now Casa della Pietra), 
also called Petr^a and Petrine (the people 
Uerplvoi and Petrlni), an inland town of Sicily, 
on the road from Agrigentum to Panormus. — 

4. A town on the coast of Illyricum, with a bad 
harbor. — 5. A city of Pieria in Macedonia. — 
6. A fortress of the Msedi in Thrace.— 7. (PI. 
neut.), a place in Dacia, on one of the three 
great roads which crossed the Danube.— 8. In 
Pontus, a fortress built by Justinian, on a preci- 
pice on the sea-coast, between the rivers Ba- 
thys and Acinasis.— 9. In Sogdiana, near the 
Oxus (Q. Curt., vii., ll)._io. By far the most 
celebrated of all the places of this name was 
Petra or Petr^e (now Wady-Musa), in Arabia 
Petrsa, the capital first of the Idumeeans, and 

634 



afterward of the Nabathaeans. It is probably 
the same place which is called Selah (which 
means, like nirpa, a rock) and Joktheel in the 
Old Testament. It lies in the midst of the 
mountains of Seir, at the foot of Mount Hor t 
just half way between the Dead Sea and the 
head of the ^Elanitic Gulf of the Red Sea, in a 
, valley, or rather ravine, surrounded by almost 
| inaccessible precipices, which is entered by a 
j narrow gorge on the east, the rocky walls of 
I which approach so closely as sometimes hardly 
j to permit two horsemen to ride abreast. On 
} the banks of the river which runs through this 
| ravine stood the city itself, a mile in length and 
| half a mile in breadth, between the sides of the 
j valley, and some fine ruins of its public build- 
! ings still remain. But this is not all : the rocks 
\ which surround, not only the main valley, but 
! all its lateral ravines, are completely honey- 
! combed with excavations, some of which were 
; tombs, some temples, and some private houses, 
j at the entrances to which the surface of the 
| rock is sculptured into magnificent architectural 
j facades and other figures, whose details are 
| often so well preserved as to appear but just 
j chiselled, while the effect is wonderfully height- 
| ened by the brilliant variegated colors of the 
; rock, where red, purple, yellow, sky-blue, black, 
i and white are seen in distinct layers. These 
| ruins are chiefly of the Roman period, when Pe- 
\ tra had become an important city as a centre 
j of the caravan traffic of the Nabathasans. At 
the time of Augustus, as Strabo learned from a 
friend who had resided there, it contained many 
Romans and other foreigners, and was governed 
by a native prince. It had maintained its inde- 
pendence against the Greek kings of Syria, and 
retained it under the Romans till the time of 
Trajan, by whom it was taken. It was the 
chief city of the whole country of Arabia Pe- 
traea, which probably derived its name from Pe- 
tra ; and under the later empire it was the capi- 
tal of Palaestina Tertia. 

Petreius, M., a man of great military experi- 
ence, is first mentioned in B.C. 62, when he 
served as legatus to the proconsul C. Antonius, 
and commanded the army in the battle in which 
Catiline perished. He belonged to the aristo- 
cratical party ; and in 55 he was sent into Spaia 
along with L. Afranius as legatus of Pompey, to 
whom the provinces of the two Spains had been 
granted. Soon after the commencement of the 
civil war in 49, Caesar defeated Afranius and 
Petreius in Spain, whereupon the latter joined 
Pompey in Greece After the loss of the battle 
of Pharsalia (48), Petreius crossed over to Af- 
rica, and took an active part in the campaign in 
46, which was brought to an end by the decisive 
! defeat of the Pompeian army at the battle of 
\ Thapsus. Petreius then fled with Juba, and, 
i despairing of safety, they fell by each other's 
j hands. 

Petrinus (now Rocca di monti Ragoni), a 
i mountain near Sinuessa, on the confines of La- 
j tium and Campania, on which good wine was 
j grown. 

Petrocorii, a people in Gallia Aquitanica, in 
j the modern Perigord. Their country contained 
| iron mines, and their chief town was Vesunna 
; (now Perigueux). 

I TPetronia, daughter of a man of consular 



PETRONIUS, C. 

rank, was first the wife ofVitellius, and subse- 
quently of Dolabella. By Vitellius she had a 
son Petronianus, whom his father put to death.] 

[Petronius, C. 1. Succeeded /EliusGallus in 
the government of Egypt, and carried on war in 
B.C. 22 against the Ethiopians, who had invad- 
ed Egypt under their queen Candace. Petronius 
not only drove back the Ethiopians, but took 
many of their towns. He was a friend of Her- 
od, and sent corn to Judaea when the latter 
country was visited by a famine.— -2. Turpilia- 
nus, consul A.D. Gl with C. Caesonius Partus, 
succeeded Suetonius Paulinus as governor of 
Britain, but did nothing in that capacity, though 
I he received the triumphal insignia in A.D. 65. 
He was put to death at the commencement of 
the reign of Galba ] 

Petronius, C. orT., an accomplished volup- 
tuary at the court of Nero. He was one of the 
chosen companions of Nero, and was regarded 
as director-in-chief of the imperial pleasures, the 
judge whose decision upon the merits of any 
proposed scheme of enjoyment was held as final 
(elegantia arbiter). The influence thus acquir- 
ed excited the jealous suspicions of Tigellinus : 
he was accused of treason ; and believing that 
destruction was inevitable, he resolved to die as 
he had lived, and to excite admiration by the 
frivolous eccentricity of his end. Having caused 
6 his veins to be opened, he from time to time 
arrested the flow of blood by the application of 
bandages. During the intervals he conversed 
with his friends, and even showed himself in 
the public streets of Cumae, where these events 
took place ; so that at last, when he sunk from 
exhaustion, his death (A.D. 66), although com- 
pulsory, appeared to be the result of natural and 
gradual decay. He is said to have dispatched 
in his last moments a sealed document to the i 
prince, taunting him with his brutal excesses. | 
A work has come down to us bearing the title j 
Petronii Arbitri Satyrtcotu which, as it now ex- | 
ists, is composed of a series of fragments, chiefly j 
in prose, but interspersed with numerous pieces \ 
of poetry. It is a sort of comic romance, in j 
which the adventures of a certain Encolpius and j 
his companions in the south of Italy, chiefly in j 
Naples or its environs, are made a vehicle for j 
exposing the false taste and vices of the age. j 
Unfortunately, the vices of the personages intro- I 
duced are depicted with such fidelity that we j 
are perpetually disgusted by the obscenity of j 
the descriptions. The longest section is gener- i 
ally known as the Supper of Trimalchio, present- 
ing us with a detailed account of a fantastic 
banquet, such as the gourmands of the empire 
were wont to exhibit on their tables. Next in 
interest is the well-known tale of the Ephesian 
Matron. A great number of conflicting opinions 
have been formed by scholars with regard to the 
author of the Satyricon. Many suppose that he 
is the same person as the C. or T. Petronius 
mentioned above ; and though there are no 
proofs in favor of this hypothesis, yet there is 
good reason to believe that the work belongs to 
the first century, or, at all events, is not later 
than the reign of Hadrian. The best edition is 
by P. Burmannus, 4to, Traj. ad Rhen., 1709, and 
again Amst, 1743. 

[Petrosidius, L., a standard bearer, diedfight- 
■ag bravely when Titurius Sabinus and Aurun- 



PHEAX. 

culeius Cotta were destroyed with their troops 
by Ambiorix, B.C. 54.] 

Peuce (YIcvkij : now Piczina), an island in 
Mcesia Inferior, formed by the two southern 
mouths of the Danube, of which the most south- 
erly was also called Peuce. but more commonly 
the Sacred Mouth. This island is of a triangu- 
lar form, and is said by the ancients to be as 
large as Rhodes. It was inhabited by the Peu- 
clni, who were a tribe of the Bastarnse, and took 
their name from the island. 

PEUCELA,PEUCELAOTIs(n£U/££'Aa, neUKf IciUTLC: 

now Pekheli or Pakholi), a city and district in the 
northwest of India intra Gangem, between the 
rivers Indus and Suastus. 

Peucestas (UevKso-rac), a Macedonian, and a 
distinguished officer of Alexander the Great. 
He had the chief share in saving the life of 
Alexander in the assault on the city of the Malli 
in India, and was afterward appointed by the 
king to the satrapy of Persia. In the division 
of the provinces after the death of Alexander 
(B.C. 323), he obtained the renewal of his gov- 
ernment of Persia. He fought on the side o 
Eumenes against Antigonus (317-316), but dis- 
played both arrogance and insubordination in, 
these campaigns. Upon the surrender of Eu- 
menes by the Argyraspids, Peucestas fell into 
the hands of Antigonus, who deprived him of 
his satrapy. 

Peucetia. Vid. Apuli. 

Peucini. Vid. Peuce. 

[Phage (<Pns/c^), sister of Ulysses, according to 
some accounts called Callisto.] 

Phacxum (fyuKtov : <&a.Ki£vc : now A Ufa ka), a 
mountain fortress of Thessaly, in the district 
Hestizeotis, on the right bank of the Peneus, 
northeast of Limnjea. 

[Phacusa (tiaKovoa), the capital of the Nomos 
Arabia in Lower Egypt, portions of which were 
on both banks of the Nile, thirty-six miles from 
Pelusium. At this place the canal began which 
ran from the Nile to the Arabian Gulf. The 
ruins on this site still bear the name Tell Fa- 
kus.] 

Phacussa {$a,Kovcoa : now Fecussa), an island 
in the Egean Sea, one of the Sporades. 

Ph,ea ($a£<z), the name of the sow of Crom- 
myon in Megaris, which ravaged the neighbor- 
hood, and was slain by Theseus. 

Ph^aces ($aia.KEC, Qairjicee.), a fabulous people 
immortalized by the Odyssey, who inhabited the 
island Scheria (S^ep^a), situated at the extreme 
western part of the earth, and who were gov- 
erned by King Alcinous. Vid. Alcirous. They 
are described by Horner as a people fond of the 
feast, the lyre, and the dance, and hence their 
name passed into a proverb to indicate persons 
of luxurious and sensual habits. Thus a glut- 
ton is called Phaax by Horace (Ep., i., 15, 24). 
The ancients identified the Homeric Scheria 
with Corcyra, whence the latter is called by the 
poets Phaacia tellus ; but there is no sound ar- 
gument in favor of the identity of the two isl- 
ands, and it is better to regard Scheria as alto- 
gether fabulous. 

Ph^ax (4>amf), an Athenian orator and states- 
man, and a contemporary of Nicias and Alcibia- 
des. Some critics maintain that the extant 
speech against Alcibiades, commonly attributed 
to Andocides, was written by Phaeax. 

635 



PHJEDIMA. 



PHALACRA. 



[Ph-edima (QaidtfiTj), a Persian lady, daughter 
of Otanes, was one of the wives of Cambyses 
and of Smerdis the magian. It was through her 
means that the false Smerdis was detected and 
exposed.] 

[Ph^edimus {^aidifiog). 1. A king of the Si- 
donians, who hospitably received Menelaus on 
his return from Troy. — 2. A native of Bisanthe 
in Macedonia, or of Amastris in Paphlagonia, 
an epigrammatic poet, four of whose epigrams 
are contained in the Greek Anthology.] 

Ph/Edon ($aiduv), a. Greek philosopher, was a 
native of Elis, and of high birth, but was taken 
prisoner, probably about B.C. 400, and was 
brought to Athens. It is said that he ran away 
from his master to Socrates, and was ransomed 
by one of the friends of the latter. Phaedon was 
present at the death of Socrates, while he was 
still quite a youth. He appears to have lived in 
Athens some time after t he death of Socrates, 
and then returned to Elis, where he became the 
founder of a school of philosophy. He was suc- 
ceeded by Plisianus, after whom theElean school 
was merged in the Eretrian. The dialogue of 
Plato, which contains an account of the death 
of Socrates, bears the name of Phaedon. 

PhjEdra ($aidpa), daughter of Minos by Pasi- 
phae or Crete, and the wife of Theseus. She 
was the step-mother of Hippolytus, the son of 
Theseus, with whom she fell in love ; but hav- 
ing been repulsed by Hippolytus, she accused 
him to Theseus of having attempted her dis- 
honor. After the death of Hippolytus, his inno- 
cence became known to his father, and Phaedra 
made away with herself. For details, vid. Hip- 
polytus. 

Ph^edriades. Vid. Parnassus. 

Ph^edrias (fyaidplac), a town in the south of 
Arcadia, southwestpf Megalopolis, fifteen stadia 
from the Messenian frontier. 

[Ph^eorias {Qaidptag), one of the thirty tyrants 
in Athens, as the name is given in Xenophon ; 
the common reading in Demosthenes hasPhaedi- 
mus] 

Phaedrus ($<w(5pof). 1. An Epicurean philoso- 
pher, and the president of the Epicurean school 
during Cicero's residence in Athens, B C. 80. 
He died in 70, and was succeeded by Patron. 
He was the author of a work on the gods (Uepi 
$eC)v), of which an interesting fragment was dis- 
covered at Herculaneum in 1806, and published 
by Petersen, Hamb., 1833. Cicero was largely 
indebted to this work for the materials of the 
first book of the De Natura Deorum. — 2. The 
Latin fabulist, of whom we know nothing but 
what is collected or inferred from his fables. 
He was originally a slave, and was brought 
from Thrace or Macedonia to Rome, where he 
learned the Latin language. As the title of his 
work is Phadri Aug. Liberti Fabula JEsopia, we 
must conclude that he had belonged to Augus- 
tus, who manumitted him. Under Tiberius he 
appears to have undergone some persecution 
from Sejanus. The fables extant under the 
name of Pheedrus are ninety-seven in number, 
written in iambic verse, and distributed into five 
books. Most of the fables are transfusions of 
the^Esopian fables, or those which pass as such, 
into Latin verse. The expression is generally 
clear and concise, and the language, with some 
few exceptions, as pure and correct as we should 
636 



expect from a Roman writer of the Augustan 
age. But Phaedrus has not escaped censure 
when he has deviated from his Greek model, and 
much of the censure is just. The best fables 
are those in which he has kept the closest to 
his original. Many of the fables, however, are 
not ^Esopian, as the matter clearly shows, for 
they refer to historical events of a much later 
period (v., 1, 8 ; iii., 10) ; and Phaedrus himself, 
in the prologue to the fifth book, intimates that 
he had often used the name of ^Esop only to 
recommend his verses. There is also another 
collection of thirty-two fables attributed to 
^Esop, and entitled Epitome Fabularum, which 
was first published at Naples in 1809, by Cas- 
sitti. Opinions are much divided as to the gen- 
uineness of this collection. The probability is, 
that the Epitome is founded on genuine Roman 
fables, which, in the process of transcription 
during many centuries, have undergone consid- 
erable changes. The last and only critical edi- 
tion of Phaedrus is by Orelli, Zurich, 1831. 

Ph^enarete. Vid. Socrates. 

Ph^enias. Vid. Phanias. 

Ph^estus (Qcuotos: ^aiariog. 1. A town in 
the south of Crete, near Gortyna, twenty sta- 
dia from the sea, with a port-town, Matala or 
Matalia, said to have been built by the Heraclid 
Phaestus, who came from Sicyon to Crete. The 
town is mentioned by Homer, but was destroyed 
at an early period by Gortyna. It was the birth- 
place of Epimenides, and its inhabitants were 
celebrated for their wit and sarcasm. — 2. A 
town ofThessaly, in the district Thessaliotis. 

Phaethon (Qasdov), that is, " the shining,"* 
occurs in Homer as an epithet or surname of 
Helios (the Sun), and is used by later writers as 
a proper name for Helios ; but it is more com- 
monly known as the name of a son of Helios by 
the Oceanid Clymene, the wife of Merops. The 
genealogy of Phaethon. however, is not the same 
in all writers, for some call him a son of Clym- 
enus, the son of Helios by Merope, or a son of 
Helios by Prote, or, lastly, a son of Helios by 
the nymph Rhode or Rhod'os. He received the 
significant name of Phaethon from his father, 
and was afterward presumptuous and ambitious 
enough to request his father to allow him for 
one day to drive the chariot of the sun across 
the heavens. Helios was induced by the en- 
treaties of his son and of Clymene to yield, but. 
the youth being too weak to check the horses, 
they rushed out of their usual track, and came 
so near the earth as almost to set it on fire. 
Thereupon Jupiter (Zeus) killed him with a flash 
of lightning, and hurled him down into the River 
Eridanus. His sisters, the Heliades or Phaethon- 
Hades, who had yoked the horses to the chariot^ 
were metamorphosed into poplars, and their 
tears into amber. Vid. Heliad/e. 

Phaethontiades. Vid. Heliad.e. 

Phaethusa. Vid. HeliadjE. 

Phagres (Qayp'oq : now Orfan or Or/ana), an 
ancient and fortified town of the Pierians in 
Macedonia, at the foot of Mount Pangaeon. 

[Phagrorion (Qaypupiov) or Phagroriopo- 
lis (QaypupioiroAic), a city of Lower Egypt, 
near the canal extending from Phacusa to Ar- 
sinoe.] 

[Phalacra {Qalanpa and $aA<lt(pai), a city of 
Cyrenaica, between Caenopolis and Marabina ; 



PHAL.«CUS. 



according to Pliny, celebrated on account of its 
wine.] 

Phal^ecus (*«Aa«of). 1. Son of Onomar- 
chus, succeeded his uncle Phayllus as leader of 
the Phocians in the Sacred War, B.C. 351. In 
order to secure his own safety, he concluded a 
treaty with Philip, by which he was allowed to 
withdraw into the Peloponnesus with a body of 
eight thousand mercenaries, leaving the un- 
happy Phocians to their fate, 346. Phalaecus 
now assumed the part of a mere leader of mer- 
cenary troops, in winch character we find him 
engaging in various enterprises. He was slain 
at the siege of Cydonia in Crete.— 2. A lyric and 
epigrammatic poet, from whom the metre called 
Phalacian took its name. Five of his epigrams 
are preserved in the Greek Anthology. His 
date is uncertain, but he was probably one of 
the principal Alexandrean poets. 

PnALvEsiiE (QaAatoiai), a town in Arcadia, 
south of Megalopolis, on the road to Sparta, 
twenty stadia from the Laconian frontier. 

Phalanva (QaAavva : fyaAavvaloc : now Kar- 
adjoli), a town of the Perrhaebi in the Th.es- 
salian district of Hestiaeotis, on the left bank of 
the Peneus, not far from Tempe. 

Phalanthus (Qd/Mvdnf), son of Aracus, was 
one of the Lacedaemonian Pariheniae, or the off- 
spring of some marriages of disparagement, 
which the necessity of the first Messenian war 
had induced the Spartans to permit. ( Vid. Diet, 
of Antiq., art. Parthenive.) As the Partheniae 
were looked down upon by their fellow-citizens, 
they formed a conspiracy under Phalanthus 
against the government. Their design having 
been detected, they went to Italy under the 
guidance of Phalanthus, and founded the city 
of Tarentum, about B.C. 708. Phalanthus was 
afterward driven out from Tarentum by a sedi- 
tion, and ended his days at Brundisium. 

Phalara (ru tukapa: ^a'Aapevc), a town in 
the Thessalian district of Piithiotis, on the Sinus 
Maliacus, served as the harbor of Lamia. 

[Phalaris, one of the Trojan warriors who 
accompanied JSneas to Italy : he was slain by 
Turnus.] 

Phalaris (baAapic), ruler of Agrigentum in 
Sicily, has obtained a proverbial celebrity as a 
cruel and inhuman tyrant ; but we have scarcely 
any real knowledge of his life and history. His 
reign probably commenced about B.C. 570, and 
is said to have lasted sixteen years. He was 
a native of Agrigentum, and appears to have 
been raised by his fellow-citizens to some high 
office in the state, of which he afterward avail- 
ed himself to assume a despotic authority. He 
was engaged in frequent wars with his neigh- 
bors, and extended Ins power and dominion on 
all sides, though more frequently by stratagem 
than open force. He perished by a sudden out- 
break of the popular fury, in which it appears 
that Telemachus, the ancestor of Tlierou, must 
have borne a conspicuous part. No circum- 
stance connected with Phalaris is more cele- 
brated than the brazen bull in which he is said 
to have burned alive the victims of his cruelty, 
and of which we are told that he made the first 
experiment upon its inventor Perillus. This 
latter story has much the air of an invention of 
later rimes, but the fame of this celebrated en- 
gine of torture was inseparably associated with 



the name of Phalaris as early as the time ot 
j Pindar. (Pind., Pyih., i., 185.) That poet also 
! speaks of Phalaris himself in terms which clear- 
| ly prove that his reputation as a barbarous tyrant 
| was then already fully established, and all sub- 
sequent writers, until a very late period, allude 
to him in terms of similar import. But in the 
j later ages of Greek literature, there appears to 
j have existed or arisen a totally different tradi- 
j tion concerning Phalaris, which represented him 
j as a man of a naturally mild and humane dispo- 
sition, and only forced into acts of severity or 
j occasional cruelty by the pressure of circum- 
| stances and the machinations of his enemies. 
, Still more strange is it that he appears at the 
same time as an admirer of literature and phi- 
losophy, and the patron of men of letters. Such 
is the aspect under which his character is pre- 
sented to us in two declamations commonly as- 
cribed to Lucian, and still more strikingly in the 
well-known epistles which bear the name of 
Phalaris himself. These epistles are now re- 
membered chiefly on account of the literary con- 
troversy to which they gave rise, and the mas- 
terly dissertation in which Bentley exposed 
their spuriousness. They are evidently the 
j composition of some sophist, though the pe- 
riod at which the forgery was composed can not 
now be determined. The first author who re- 
fers to them is Stobaeus. The best edition is 
by Schaefer, Lips., 1823. 

Phalarium (baAapiov), a fortress named after 
Phalaris, near the southern coast of Sicily, situ- 
ated on a hill forty stadia east of the River 
Himera. 

Phalasarna (ra QaAaaapva), a town on the 
northwestern coast of Crete. 

[Phalces (<&dAK7]s), a Trojan warrior, slais 
before Troy by Antilochus.] 

Phalerum (<$>dArjpov : baATjpevs), the most east- 
erly of the harbors of Athens, and the one 
chiefly used by the Athenians before the time 
of the Persian wars. Phalerum is usually de- 
scribed as the most easterly of the three har- 
bors in the peninsula of Piraeus ; but this ap- 
pears to be incorrect. The names of the three 
harbors in the peninsula were Piraeus, Zea, and 
Munychia ; while Phalerum lay southeast of 
these three, nearer the city, at Hagios Georgios. 
After the establishment by Themistocles of the 
three harbors in the peninsula of Piraeus, Phale- 
rum was not much used ; but it was connected 
with the city by means of a wall called the 
Phalerian Wall {^aAr/piKov retxog). Paleron or 
Phalerus was also an Attic dermis, containing 
temples of Jupiter (Zeus), Ceres (Demeter), and 
other deities. 

[Phalinus (QaAlvoc), a Zacynthian, in the 
service of Tissaphernes ; after the battle of 
' Cunaxa, B.C. 401, he accompanied the Persian 
heralds sent to the army of the ten thousand 
to require them to lay down their arms : he re- 
turned unsuccessful, having been unable to get 
any satisfactory answer from Clearchus ] 

Phauoria (QaAupia), a fortified town of Thes- 
saly in Hestiteotis, north of Tricca, on the left 
bank of ihe Peneus. 

Pti.v.V/E ($dvui, ?] Quvala uKpa : now Cape Mas- 
tico), the southern point of the island of Chios 
celebrated for its temple of Apollo and for its 
excellent wine. 

637 



PHANAGORIA. 



PHARMACUSSJS. 



Phanagoria (Qavayopeia. and other forms : \ 
ruins at Phanagori, near Taman, on the eastern 
side of the Straits of Kaffa), a Greek city, found- 
ed by a colony of Teians under Phanagoras, on 
the Asiatic coast of the Cimmerian Bosporus. 
It became the great emporium for all the traffic 
between the coasts of the Palus Maeotis and the 
countries on the southern side of the Caucasus, 
and was chosen by the kings of Bosporus as 
their capital in Asia. It had a temple of Venus 
(Aphrodite) Apaturos, and its neighborhood was 
rich in olive-yards. In the sixth century A.D. 
it was destroyed by the surrounding barbarians. 

Phanarce a ($avdf)oia), a great plain of Pon- 
tus in Asia Minor, inclosed by the mountain 
chains of Paryadres on the east, and Lithrus 
and Ophlimus on the west, was the most fertile 
part of Pontus. 

[Phanes ($dvyc), a Greek of Halicarnassus, 
in the service of Amasis, king of Egypt, whom 
he deserted, and went over to Cambyses, king 
of Persia ] 

Phanias or Phjenias (^aviac, Qaiviac), of Ere- 
sos in Lesbos, a distinguished Peripatetic phi- 
losopher, the immediate disciple of Aristotle, 
and the contemporary, fellow-citizen, and friend 
of Theophrastus. He flourished about B.C. 336. 
Phanias does not seem to have founded a dis- 
tinct school of his own, but he was a most dili- 
gent writer upon every department of philoso- 
phy, as it was studied by the Peripatetics, espe- 
cially logic, physics, history, and literature. His 
works, all of which are lost, are frequently quot- 
ed by later writers. One of his works most fre- 
quently cited was a sort of chronicle of his na- 
tive city, bearing the title of IlpvrdvEig 'Epiami. 

Phanocles (QavoKATje), one of the best of the 
later Greek elegiac poets, probably lived in the 
time of Philip and Alexander the Great. He 
seems only to have written one poem, which 
was entitled 'Epurec rj Ka?M. The work was 
upon paderasteia ; but the subject was so treat- 
ed as to exhibit the retribution which fell upon 
those who addicted themselves to the practice. 
We still possess a considerable fragment from 
the opening of the poem, which describes the 
love of Orpheus for Calais, and the vengeance 
taken upon him by the Thracian women. The 
fragments of Phanocles are edited by Bach, Phi- 
letce, Hermesianactis, atque Phanoclis Rcliquice, 
Halle, 1829; and by Schneidewin, Delectus Poes. 
Grac., p. 158. 

Phanodemcjs ($av6di]Lioc), the author of one 
of those works on the legends and antiquities 
of Attica, known under the name of Atthides. 
His age and birth place are uncertain, but we 
know that he lived before the time of Augustus, 
as he is cited by Dionysius of Halicarnassus. 
[The last edition of the fragments is in Muller's 
Hist. Grace. Fragm., p. 366-370.] 

[Phanosthenes ( §avood£v7}c ), an Andnan, 
was intrusted by the Athenians in B.C. 407 with 
the command of four ships, and was sent to 
Andros to succeed Conon on that station. On 
his way he fell in with two Thurian galleys, ' 
under the command of Dorieus, and captured 
them with their crews.] 

Phanote (now Gardhiki), a fortified town of 
Epirus in Chaonia, near the Illyrian frontier. 

Phantasia (QavTctGia), one of those numerous 
mythical personages to whom Homer is said 
638 



| to have been indebted for his poems. She is 
said to have been an Egyptian, the daughter of 
Nicarchus, an inhabitant of Memphis, and to 
have written an account of the Trojan war and 

the wanderings of Ulysses. 

Phaon (*dui»). 1. A boatman at Mytilene, 
is said to have been originally an ugly old man ; 
but, in consequence of his carrying Venus (Aph- 
rodite) across the sea without accepting pay- 
ment, the goddess gave him youth and beauty. 
After this Sappho is said to have fallen in love 
with him, and to have leaped from the Leuca- 
dian rock when he slighted her ; but this well- 
known story vanishes at the first approach of 
criticism. Vid. Sappho. — [2. A freedman of the 
Emperor Nero, in whose villa in the neighbor- 
hood of the city Nero took refuge when the 
people rose against him, and where he met his 
death, A.D. 68.] 

Phar^e ($apdi or $>j)pai). 1. (Qapaievc or $a- 
pevc), an ancient town in the western part of 
Achaea, and one of the twelve Achaean cities r 
was situated on the River Pierus, seventy stadia 
from the sea, and one hundred and fifty from 
Patrae. It was one of the states which took an 
active part in reviving the Achaean league in 
B.C. 281. Augustus included it in the territory 
of Patrae. — 2. (QapatTTjc, ^apaiaTTjg, ^apdrrjc: 
now Kaiamata), an ancient town in Messenia,. 
mentioned by Homer, on the River Nedon, near 
the frontiers of Laconia, and about six miles 
from the sea. In B.C. 180 Pharae joined the 
Achaean league together with the neighboring 
towns of Thuria and Abia. It was annexed by- 
Augustus to Laconia. — 3. Originally Pharis($u- 
p«f : QaptTijc, QapidTrjQ), a town in Laconia, in 
the valley of the Eurotas, south of Sparta. — 4. A 
town in Crete, founded by the Messenian Pharae 
[Pharan ($apdv), a city of Arabia Petraea, in 
the neighborhood of a promontory of the same 
name ( now Faraun), between the two arms of the 
Sinus Arabicus, and which is now recalled to 
mind by the Wady Faran or Firan.] 

[Phar ax ($dpa£). 1. One of the council of ten 
appointed by the Spartans in B.C. 418 to con- 
trol Agis. At the battle of Mantinea in that 
year, he restrained the Lacedaemonians from 
pressing too much on the defeated enemy, and 
so running the risk of driving them to despair. 
In B.C. 396 he laid siege with one hundred and 
twenty ships to Caunus, where Conon was sta- 
tioned, but was compelled to withdraw by the 
approach of a large force. — 2. A Spartan, sent 
to negotiate an alliance with Athens against 
Thebes, B.C. 369.] 

Pharb^thus (§dp6aiQoc : ruins at Horbeyt ?), 
the capital of the Nomos Pharbaethites in Lower 
Egypt, lay south of Tanis, on the western side 
of the Pelusiac branch of the Nile. 

Pharcadon (QapKaduv), a town of Thessaly, 
in the eastern part of Hestiaeotis. 
Pharis. Vid. Pharae, No. 3. 
Pharmacuss^e (Jbap/JtaKovooai). I. Two small 
islands off the coast of Attica, near Salamis, in 
! the Bay of Eleusis, now called Kyradhes or Me- 
gali and Mikri Kyra : on one of them was shown 
the tomb of Circe. — 2. Pharmacusa ($apua- 
Kuvaa), an island off the coast of Asia Minor, 
one hundred and twenty stadia from Miletus 
where King Attalus died, and near which Julius 
i Caesar was taken prisoner by pirates when a 



PHARNABAZUS. 



PHASAELIS. 



very young man. The whole adventure is re- 
lated by Plutarch (Cas., 1, 2). 

Pharnabazus (Qapvatafrc), son of Pharnaces, 
succeeded his father as satrap of the Persian 
provinces near the Hellespont. In B.C. 41 1 and 
the following years, he rendered active assist- 
ance to the Lacedaemonians in their war against 
the Athenians When Dercyllidas, and subse-. 
quently Agesilaus, passed over into Asia to 
protect the Asiatic Greeks against the Persian 
power, we find Pharnabazus connecting himself 
with Conon to resist the Lacedaemonians. In 
374 Pharnabazus invaded Egypt in conjunction 
with Iphicrates, but the expedition failed, chiefly 
through the dilatory proceedings and the ex- 
cessive caution of Pharnabazus. The character 
of Pharnabazus is eminently distinguished by 
generosity and openness. He has been charg- 
ed, it is true, with the murder of Alcibiades ; but 
the latter probably fell by the hands of others. 
Vid. Alcibiades. 

Pharnaces (QapvaKyc). I. King of Pontus, 
was the son of Mithradates IV., whom he suc- 
ceeded on the throne about B.C. 190. He car- 
ried on war for some years with Eumenes, king 
of Pergamus, and Ariarathes, king of Cappado- 
cia, but was obliged to conclude with them a 
disadvantageous peace in 179. The year of his 
death is uncertain ; it is placed by conjecture 
in 156.— 2. King of Pontus, or more properly of 
the Bosporus, was the son of Mithradates the 
Great, whom he compelled to put an end to his 
life in 63. Vid. Mithradates, No. 6. After the 
death of his father, Pharnaces hastened to make 
his submission to Pompey, who granted him the 
kingdom of the Bosporus with the titles of friend 
and ally of the Roman people. In the civil war 
between Caesar and Pompey, Pharnaces seized 
the opportunity to reinstate himself in his fa- 
ther's dominions, and made himself master of 
the whole of Colchis and the lesser Armenia. 
He defeated Domitius Calvinus, the lieutenant 
of Caesar in Asia, but was shortly afterward de- 
feated by Caesar himself in a decisive action 
near Zela (47). The battle was gained with 
such ease by Caesar, that he informed the sen- 
ate of his victory by the words Veni, vidi, vici. 
In the course of the same year Pharnaces was 
again defeated, and was slain by Asander, one 
of his generals, who hoped to obtain his mas- 
ter's kingdom. Vid. Asander. — [3. Father of 
Artabazus, who commanded the Parthians and 
Chorasmiansin the expedition of Xerxes against 
Greece. — 4. Son of Pharnabazus, appears to 
have been satrap of the provinces of Asia, near 
the Hellespont, as early as B.C. 430.— 5. A Per- 
sian of high rank, and brother-in-law of Darius 
Codomannus, was killed at the battle of the 
Granicus, B.C. 334 ] 

Pharnacia (Qapvaicla : now Kheresoun or Ke- 
rasunda), a flourishing city of Asia Minor, on the 
coast of Pontus Polemoniacus, was built near 
(some think on) the site of Cerasus, probably by 
Pharnaces, the grandfather of Mithradates the 
Great, and peopled by the transference to it of 
the inhabitants of Cotyora. It had a large com- 
merce and extensive fisheries, and in its neigh- 
borhood were the iron mines of the Chalybes. 
It was strongly fortified, and was used by Mith- 
radates in the war with Rome for the place of 
irefuge of his harem. 



[Pharxaspes (^apvua^i/r), a Persian of the 
family of the Achaemenidae, was the father of Cas- 
: sandane, a favorite wife of Cyrus the Great ] 

[Pharnuciius ($apvovx<>c)- 1. An officer of 
Cyrus the elder, and one of the chiliarchs of his 
cavalry in the war with Crcesus. After the con- 
quest of Babylon he was made satrap of the Hel- 
lespontine Phrygia and yEolis. — 2. One of the 
three commanders of the cavalry in the army of 
Xerxes. A fall from his horse occasioned his 
detention at Sardis while the Persians invaded 
Greece. By his order the horse's legs were cut 
off at the knees on the spot where he had thrown 
his master. — 3. A Lycian appointed by Alexan- 
der the Great to command the forces sent into 
Sogdiana against Spitamenes in B.C. 329.] 

Pharsalus {^dpaaXog, Ion. $upoi]%o<; : <bapca- 
?uoe: now Pharsa or Fcrsala), a town in Thes- 
saly, in the district Thessaliotis, not far from 
the frontiers of Phthiotis, west of the River 
Enipeus, and on the northern slope of Mount 
Narthacius. It was divided into an old and 
new city, and contained a strongly-fortified 
acropolis. In its neighborhood, northeast of the 
town and on the other side of the Enipeus, was 
a celebrated temple of Thetis, called Thetidium. 
Near Pharsalus was fought the decisive battle 
between Caesar and Pompey, B.C. 48, which 
made Caesar master of the Roman world. It is 
frequently called the battle of Pharsalla, which 
was the name of the territory of the town. 

Pharus (#dpof). I- (Now Pharos or Raudhat- 
el-tin, i. e., Fig-garden), a small island off the 
Mediterranean coast of Egypt, mentioned by Ho- 
mer, who describes it as a whole day's sail dis- 
tant from Mgy ptus, meaning probably, not Egypt 
itself, but the River Nile. When Alexander the 
Great planned the city of Alexandrea, on the 
coast opposite to Pharos, he caused the island 
to be united to the coast by a mole seven sta- 
dia in length, thus forming the two harbors of 
the city. Vid. Alexandrea. The island was 
chiefly famous for the lofty tower built upon it 
by Ptolemy II. Philadelphus for a light-house, 
whence the name of pharus was applied to all 
similar structures. It was in this island, too, 
that, according to the common story, the sev- 
enty translators of the Greek version of the Old 
Testament, hence called the Septuagint, were 
confined till their work was finished. The isl- 
and was w r ell peopled according to Julius Cae- 
sar, but soon afterward Strabo tells us that it 
was inhabited only by a fewfishermen.— 2. (Now 
Lesina or Hvar), an island of the Adriatic, off 
the coast of Dalmatia, east of Issa, with a Greek- 
city of the same name (ruins at Civita Vecchia), 
which was taken and destroyed by the Romans 
under .<Emilius Paulus, but probably rebuilt, as 
it is mentioned by Ptolemy under the name of 
Pharia. 

[Pharus (*apof). 1. The helmsman of Mene- 
laus, from whom the island of Pharus at the 
mouth of the Nile was believed to have derived 
its name. — 2. A Rutulian, slain by .-Eneas in 
Italy in the war with Turnus.] 
I Pharusii (Qapovoiot), a people in the interior 
■ (probably near the western coast) of Northern 
: Africa, who carried on a considerable traffic with 
I Mauretania. 

Phasaelis ($aaan?ur : now probably Ain-el- 
Fusail), a city of Palestine, in the valley of the 

639 



FHASELIS. 



PHEMONUK. 



^ordan, north of Jericho, built by Herod the 
Great. 

Phaselis (QaonMc, ^aarfkir^c : ruins at Tekro- 
va), an important sea-port town of Lycia, near 
-the borders of Pamphylia, stood on the Gulf of 
Pamphylia, at the foot of Mount Solyma, in a 
narrow pass between the mountains and the 
sea. It was founded by Dorian colonists, and 
from its position, and its command of three fine 
harbors, it soon gained an extensive commerce. 
It did not belong to the Lycian confederacy, 
but had an independent government of its own. 
It became afterward the head-quarters of the 
pirates who infested the southern coasts of Asia 
Minor, and was therefore destroyed by P. Ser- 
vilius Isauricus; and though the city was re- 
stored, it never recovered its importance. Pha- 
selis is said to have been the place at which 
the light, quick vessels called <pdanAoi were first 
built, and the figure of such a ship appears on 
its coins. 

Phasis (Quae). 1. (Now Faz or Rioni), a re- 
nowned river of the ancient world, rose in the 
Moschici Montes (or, according to others, in the 
Caucasus, where, in fact, its chief tributaries 
rise), and flowed westward through the plain of 
Colchis into the eastern end of the Pontus Eux- 
inus (now Black Sea), after receiving several af- 
fluents, the chief of which were the Glaucus and 
the Rion : the name of the latter was sometimes 
transferred, as it now is, to the main river. It 
was navigable about thirty-eight miles above its 
mouth for large vessels, and for small ones 
further up, as far as Sarapana (now Sharapan), 
whence goods were conveyed in four days across 
the Moschici Montes to the River Cyrus, and so 
to the Caspian. It was spanned by one hundred 
and twenty bridges, and had many towns upon 
its banks. Its waters were celebrated for their 
purity and for various other supposed qualities, 
some of a very marvellous nature ; but it was 
most famous in connection with the story of 
the Argonautic expedition. Vid. Argonauts. 
Some of the early geographers made it the 
boundary between Europe and Asia ; it was aft- 
erward the northeastern limit of the kingdom 
of Pontus, and, under the Romans, it was re- 
garded as the northern frontier of their empire 
in Western Asia. Another notable circumstance 
connected with it is, that it has given name to 
the pheasant (phasianus, tyaciavoc. (paaiavtudc 
opine), which is said to have been first brought 
to Greece from its banks, where the bird is still 
found in great numbers. When the geography 
of these regions was comparatively unknown, it 
was natural that there should be a doubt as to 
the identification of certain celebrated names, 
and thus the name Phasis, like Araxes, is ap- 
plied to different rivers. The most important 
of these variations is Xenophon's application of 
the name Phasis to the River Araxes in Ar- 
menia. {Anab , iv., 6.)— 2. Near the mouth of 
the river, on its southern side, was a town of 
the same name, founded and fortified by the 
Milesians as an emporium for their commerce, 
and used under the kings of Pontus and under 
the Romans as a frontier fort, and now a Russian 
fortified station, under the name of Pali. Some 
identify it with Sebastopolis. but most likely 
incorrectly.— 3. There was a river of the same 
name in the island of Taprobane (now Ceylon). 
640 



PhavorIncs. Vid. Favorinus. 

Phavllus {Qavl'koc). 1. A celebrated athlete 
of Crotona. who had thrice gained the victory 
at the Pythian games. He fought at the battle 
of Salamis, B.C. 480. in a ship fitted out at his 
own expense. — 2. A Phocian, brother of Ono- 
marchus, whom he succeeded as general of the 
Phocians in the Sacred war, 352. He died ia 
the following year, after a long and painful ill- 
ness. Phayllus made use of the sacred treas- 
ures of Delphi with a far more lavish hand than 
either of his brothers, and he is accused of be- 
stowing the consecrated ornaments upon his 
wife and mistresses. 

Phazania (now Fezzan), a district of Libya 
Interior. Vid. Garamantes. 

Phazemon ($aC?j[iuv : now probably Marsi- 
wan), a city of Pontus in Asia Minor, northwest 
of Amasia, and the capital of the western dis- 
trict of Pontus, called Phazemonltis (QaCrjuovi- 
tlc), which lay on the eastern side of the Halys, 
south of Gazelonitis, and was celebrated for its 
warm mineral springs. Pompey changed the 
name of the city to Neapolis, and the district 
was called Neapolitis ; but these names seem 
to have been soon dropped. 

Phea ($eia, $£u, $eai : Qsaioe), a town on the 
frontiers ofElis and Pisatis, with a harbor situ- 
ated on a promontory of the same name, and on 
the River Iardanus. In front of the harbor was 
a small island called Pheas (<belac.) 

Pheca or Phecadum, a fortress in Thessaly, 
in the district Hestiaeotis. 

Phegeus {Qnyevc). 1. King of Psophis in Ar- 
cadia, father of Alphesibcea or Arsinoe, of Pro- 
nous and Agenor, or of Temenus and Axion. 
He purified Alcmaeon after he had killed his 
mother, and gave him his daughter Alphesibcea 
in marriage. Alcmaeon presented Alphesibcea 
with the celebrated necklace and peplus of Har- 
monia ; but when Alcmaeon afterward wished 
to obtain them again for his new wife Callirrhoe, 
j he was murdered by the sons of Phegeus, by 
their fathers command. Phegeus was himself 
subsequently put to death by the sons of Alc- 
maeon. For details, vid. Alcm^on. — [2. Son of 
Dares, priest of Vulcan (Hephaestus) in Troy, 
slain in the Trojan war by Diomedes. — 3. Name 
of two Trojan warriors, companions of ^Eneas, 
slain by Turnus in Italy.] 

[Phellias (QtAAiac), a little stream of Laco- 
nia, which empties into the Eurotas, south of 
Sparta.] 

[Phelloe (<belJ.6n, near the modern Zakhnli\ 
a small town in the east of Achaia, forty stadia 
inland from -^Egira, in a well-watered and well- 
wooded district.] 

Phellus {^e'a7mc ax$eAAoc : QcAAirvc : ruins 
near Saaret). an inland city of Lycia, on a mount- 
ain between Xanthus and Antiphellus ; the lat- 
ter having been at first the port of Phellus, but 
afterward eclipsing it. 

Phellusa, a small island near Lesbos. 

Phemius ($ii[itnc) t a celebrated minstrel, soa 
of Terpius, who entertained with his song the 
. suitors in the palace of Ulysses in Ithaca. 

Phemonoe (fyrifiovori), a mythical Greek poet- 
ess of the ante-Homeric period, was said to 
have been the daughter of Apollo, and his first 
priestess at Delphi, and the inventor of the hex- 
| ameter verse. There were poems which went 



PHENEUS. 



PHERON. 



under the name of Phemonoc, like the old re- 
ligious poems which were ascribed to Orpheus, 
i Musaeus, and the other mythological bards. 

Pheneus (*cVeof or Qeveog : ^tveuTTjg : now 
Fonia), a town in the northeast of Arcadia, at 
the foot of Mount Cyllene, and on the River 
Aroanius. Its territory was called Pheneatis 
(^cvedrif). There were extensive marshes in 
the neighborhood, the waters of which, though 
partly carried off by a subterraneous emissary, 
which was supposed to have been made by Her- 
cules, [sometime ia collected, and formed a con- 
siderable lake]. The town was of great antiqui- 
ty. It is mentioned by Homer, and was said to 
have been built by an autochthon Pheneus. It 
contained a strongly-fortified acropolis, with a 
temple of Minerva (Athena) Tritonia ; and in 
the town itself were the tombs of Iphicles and 
Myrtilus, and temples of Mercury (Hermes) and 
Ceres (Demeter). 

Pherae (<bcpai : bepatoc : now Valestino), an 
ancient town of Thessaly, in the southeast of 
the Pelasgian plain, west of Mount Pelion, 
southwest of the Lake Boebeis, and ninety sta- 
dia from its port-town Pagasae on the Pagasaean 
Gulf. Pherae is celebrated in mythology as the 
residence of Admetus, and in history on account 
of its tyrants, who extended their power over 
nearly the whole of Thessaly. Of these the 
most powerful was Jason, who was made Ta- 
gus or generalissimo of Thessaly about B.C. 
374. Jason was succeeded in 370 by his two 
brothers Polydorus and Polyphron. The former 
was soon after assassinated by Polyphron. The 
latter was murdered in his turn in 369 by his 
nephew Alexander, who was notorious for his 
cruelty, and who was put to death in 367 by his 
wife Thebe and her three brothers. At a later 
period we read that Pherae was surrounded by a 
number of gardens and country houses. 

Pher^. Vid. Phar.<£. 

[Pheraulas (QepavXac) is introduced by Xen- 
ophon in the Cyropaedia as a Persian of hum- 
ble birth, but a favorite with Cyrus, and distin- 
guished by qualities of body and mind which 
would not have dishonored the noblest rank. 
He is described as having become tired of the 
honors and elevation to which Cyrus had raised 
him, and as having voluntarily resigned them 
to lead a quiet and retired life such as he had 
before enjoyed.] 

[Phereclus (<i>epeK /lor), a son of Harmonides, 
is said to have built the ship in which Paris 
carried off Helen, and to have been slain in the 
Trojan war by Meriones ] 

Pherecratks (<betjeKpuTTjs), of Athens, one of 
the best poets of the Old Comedy, was contem- 
porary with the comic poets Cratinus, Crates, 
Eupolis, Plato, and Aristophanes, being some- 
what younger than the first two, and somewhat 
older than the others He gained his first vic- 
tory B.C. 438, and he imitated the style of 
Crates, whose actor he had been. Crates and 
Pherecrates very much modified the coarse sat- 
ire and vituperation of which this sort of poetry 
had previously been the vehicle, and construct- 
ed their comedies on the basis of a regular plot, 
and with more dramatic action. Pherecrates 
did not, however, abstain altogether from per- 
sonal sat ire, for we see by the fragments of his 
plavs that he attacked Alcibiades, the tragic 
41 



poet Melanthius, and others. He invented a 
new metre, which was named, after him, the 
Pherecratean. The system of the verse is 

— _ 11 v w ^ _ which may be best explained 

as a choriambus, with a spondee for its base, 
and a long syllable for its termination. The 
metre is very frequent in the choruses of the 
Greek tragedians, and in Horace, as, for exam- 
ple, Grato Pyrrha sub anlro. The extant titles 
of the plays of Pherecrates are eighteen. 

Pherecydes {bepenvdris). 1. Of Syros, an isl- 
and in the iEgean, an early Greek philosopher, 
or rather theologian. He flourished about B.C. 
544. He is said to have obtained his knowledge 
from the secret books of the Phoenicians, and 
to have travelled in Egypt. Almost all the an- 
cient writers who speak of him state that he 
was the teacher of Pythagoras. According to 
a common tradition, he died of the lousy dis- 
ease, or Morbus Pediculosus ; though others 
give different accounts of his death. The most 
important subject which he is said to have 
taught was the doctrine of the Metempsycho- 
sis, or, as it is put by other writers, the doc- 
trine of the immortality of the soul. He gave 
an account of his views in a work which was 
extant in the Alexandrean period. It was writ- 
ten in prose, which he is said to have been the 
first to employ in the explanation of philosoph- 
ical questions. — 2. Of Athens, one of the most 
celebrated of the early Greek logographers. 
He lived in the former half of the fifth century 
B.C., and was a contemporary of Hellanicus 
and Herodotus. His principal work was a myth- 
ological history in ten books. It began with a 
theogony, and then proceeded to give an ac- 
count of the heroic age and of the great fami- 
lies of that time. His fragments have been col- 
lected by Sturz, Pherecydis Fragmenta, Lips., 
1824, second edition ; and by C. and T. Mailer, 
in Fragmentu Historicum Grcecorum, vol. i. 

Pheres ($ep?7f). 1. Son of Cretheus and Ty- 
ro, and brother of ^Eson and Amythaon ; he was 
married to Periclymene, by whom he became 
the father of Admetus, Lycurgus, Idomene, and 
Periapis. He was believed to have founded 
the town of Pherae in Thessaly. — 2. Son of Ja- 
son and Medea. — 3. A follower of Pallas, fought 
on the side of iEneas against Turnus, and was 
slain by Halesus. 

Pheretiades ($ep7]Tidd7]c), i. c, a son of Phe- 
res, is especially used as the name of Admetus. 

PheretIma (QepeTipa), wife of Battus III., 
and mother of Arcesilaus III., successive kings 
of Cyrene. After the murder of her son by the 
Barcasans (vid. Battiad^:, No. 6), Pheretima fled 
into Egypt to Aryandes, the viceroy of Darius 
Hystaspis, and representing that the death of 
Arcesilaus had been the consequence of his sub- 
mission to the Persians, she induced him to 
avenge it. On the capture of Barca by the Per- 
sian army, she caused those who had the prin- 
cipal share in her son's murder to be impaled, 
and ordered the breasts of their wives to be cut 
off. Pheretima then returned to Egypt, where 
she soon after died of a painful and loathsome 
disease. 

Pheron or Pheros ($epuv, $epug), king of 
Egypt, and son of Sesostris. He was visited 
with blindness, an hereditary complaint, though, 

641 



PHIDIAS. 



PHIDIAS. 



according to the legend preserved in Herodo- 
tus, it was a punishment for his presumptuous 
impiety in throwing a spear into the waters of 
the Nile when it had overflowed the fields. By 
attending to the directions of an oracle he was 
cured ; and he dedicated an obelisk at Heliop- 
olis in gratitude for his recovery. Pliny tells 
us that this obelisk, together with another also 
made by him, but broken in its removal, was to 
be seen at Rome, in the Circus of Caligula and 
Nero, at the foot of the Vatican Hill. Pliny calls 
the Pheron of Herodotus Nuncoreus or Nen- 
coreus, a name corrupted, perhaps, from Me- 
nophtheus. Diodorus gives him his father's 
name, Sesoosis. Pheron is of course the same 
word as Pharaoh. 

Phidias (Qeidiac), the greatest sculptor and 
statuary of Greece. Of his personal history we 
possess but few details. He was a native of 
Athens, and the son of Charmides, and was 
born about the time of the battle of Marathon, 
B.C. 490. He began to work as a statuary 
about 464, and one of his first great works was 
the statue of Minerva (Athena) Promachus, 
which may be assigned to about 460. This 
work must have established his reputation ; but 
it was surpassed by the splendid productions 
of his own hand, and of others working under 
his direction, during the administration of Peri- 
cles. That statesman not only chose Phidias 
to execute the principal statues which were to 
be set up, but gave him the oversight of all the 
works of art which were to be erected. Of 
these works the chief were the Propylaea of the 
Acropolis, and, above all, the temple of Minerva 
(Athena) on the Acropolis, called the Parthenon, 
on which, as the central point of the Athenian 
polity and religion, the highest efforts of the 
best of artists were employed. There can be no 
doubt that the sculptured ornaments of this tem- 
ple, the remains of which form the glory of the 
British Museum, were executed under the im- 
mediate superintendence of Phidias ; but the 
colossal statue of the divinity, made of ivory 
and gold, which was inclosed within that mag- 
nificent shrine, was the work of the artist's own 
hand. The statue was dedicated in 438. Hav- 
ing finished his great work at Athens, he went 
to Elis and Olympia, which he was now invited 
to adorn. He was there engaged for about four 
or five years, from 437 to 434 or 433, during 
which time he finished his statue of the Olym- 
pian Jupiter (Zeus), the greatest of all his works. 
On his return to Athens he fell a victim to the 
jealousy against his great patron, Pericles, 
which was then at its height. The party op- 
posed to Pericles, thinking him too powerful to 
be overthrown by a direct attack, aimed at him 
in the persons of his most cherished fiends, 
Phidias, Anaxagoras, and Aspasia. Vid. Peri- 
cles. Phidias was first accused of peculation, 
but this charge was at once refuted, as, by the 
advice of Pericles, the gold had been affixed to 
the statue of Minerva (Athena) in such a man- 
ner that it could be removed and the weight of 
it examined. The accusers then charged Phid- 
ias with impiety, in having introduced into the 
battle of the Amazons, on the shield of the 
goddess, his own likeness and that of Peri- 
cles. On this latter charge Phidias was thrown 
into prison, where he died from disease in 
642 



432. Of the numerous works executed by Phid- 
ias for the Athenians, the most celebrated wa3 
the statue of Minerva (Athena) in the Parthe- 
non, to which reference has already been made. 
This statue was of that kind of work which the 
Greeks called chryselephantine, that is, the statue 
was formed of plates of ivory laid upon a core 
of wood or stone, for the flesh parts, while the 
drapery and other ornaments were of solid gold. 
The statue stood in the foremost and larger cham- 
ber of the temple (prodomus). It represented 
the goddess standing, clothed with a tunic reach- 
ing to the ankles, with her spear in her left- 
hand, and an image of Victory four cubits high 
in her right : she was girded with the aegis, and 
had a helmet on her head, and her shield rested 
on the ground by her side. The height of the 
statue was twenty-six cubits, or nearly forty 
feet, including the base. The eyes were of a 
kind of marble, nearly resembling ivory, perhaps 
painted to imitate the iris and pupil ; there is 
no sufficient authority for the statement which 
is frequently made that they were of precious 
stones. The weight of the gold upon the statue, 
which, as above stated, was removable at pleas- 
ure, is said by Thucydides to have been forty 
talents (ii., 13). Still more celebrated than his 
statue of Minerva (Athena) was the colossal 
ivory and gold statue of Jupiter (Zeus), which 
Phidias made for the great temple of this god, 
in the Altis or sacred grove at Olympia. This 
statue was regarded as the master-piece, not 
only of Phidias, but of the whole range of Gre- 
cian art ; and was looked upon not so much as 
a statue, but rather as if it were the actual man- 
ifestation of the present deity. It was placed 
in the prodomus or front chamber of the temple, 
directly facing the entrance. It was only vis- 
ible, however, on great festivals : at other times 
it was concealed by a magnificent curtain. The 
god was represented as seated on a throne of 
cedar wood, adorned with gold, ivory, ebony, 
stones, and colors, crowned with a wreath of 
olive, holding in his right hand an ivory and gold 
statue of Victory, and in his left hand support- 
ing a sceptre, which was ornamented with all 
sorts of metals, and surmounted by an eagle. 
The throne was brilliant both with gold and 
stones, and with ebony and ivory, and was or- 
namented with figures both painted and sculp- 
tured. The statue almost reached to the roof, 
which w r as about sixty feet in height. The idea 
which Phidias essayed to embody in this, his 
greatest work, was that of the supreme deity 
of the Hellenic nation, no longer engaged in 
conflicts with the Titans and the Giants, but 
having laid aside his thunderbolt, and enthroned 
as a conqueror, in perfect majesty and repose, 
ruling with a nod the subject world. It is re- 
lated that when Phidias was asked what model 
he meant to follow in making his statue, he re- 
plied that of Homer (11, i., 528-530). The im- 
itation of this passage by Milton gives no small 
aid to the comprehension of the idea (Paradise 
Lost, iii., 135-137) : 

'• Thus while God spake, ambrosial fragrance fill'd 
All heaven, and in the blessed spirits elect 
Sense of new joy ineffable diffused." 

The statue was removed by the Emperor Theo- 
dosius I. to Constantinople, where it was de- 
stroyed by a fire in A.D. 475. The distinguish- 



PHIDIPPIDES. 



PHILADELPHIA. 



ing character of the art of Phidias was ideal 
beauty, and that of the sublimes* order, especially 
in the representation of divinities, and of sub- 

I jects connected with their worship. While on 
the one hand he set himself free from the stiff 
and unnatural forms which, by a sort of religious 
precedent, had fettered his predecessors of the 
archaic or hieratic school, he never, on the other 
hand, descended to the exact imitation of any 
human model, however beautiful ; he never rep- 
resented that distorted action, or expressed that 
vehement passion, which lie beyond the limits 
of repose ; nor did he ever approach to that al- 
! most meretricious grace, by which some of his 
greatest followers, if they did not corrupt the 
art themselves, gave the occasion for its cor- 
ruption in the hands of their less gifted and 
.spiritual imitators. 

Phidippides or PhilippIdes ($EidLm:idr]<;, <&£- 
/UK-Kidrjc), a courier, was sent by the Athenians 
to Sparta in B.C. 490 to ask for aid against the 
Persians, and arrived there on the second day 
from his leaving Athens. On his return to 
Athens, he related that on his way to Sparta he 
had fallen in with Pan on Mount Parthenium, 
near Tegea, and that the god had bid him ask 
the Athenians why they paid him no worship, 
though he had been hitherto their friend, and 
ever would be so. In consequence of this rev- 
elation, they dedicated a temple to Pan after 
the battle of Marathon, and honored him thence- 
forth with annual sacrifices and a torch-race. 

[Phidippus (Qeidnrnos), a son of Thessalus, 
the Heraclid, and brother of Antiphus, led the 
warriors of the Sporades in thirty ships against 
Troy.] 

Phidon (<betdov). 1. Son of Aristodamidas, 
and king of Argos, restored the supremacy of 
Argos over Cleonje, Phlius, Sicyon, Epidaurus, 
Trcezen, and ^Egina, and aimed at extending 
his dominions over the greater part of the Pelo- 
ponnesus. The Pisans invited him, in the 
eighth Olympiad (B.C. 748), to aid them in ex- 
cluding the Eleans from their usurped presi- 
dency at the Olympic games, and to celebrate 
them jointly with themselves. The invitation 
quite fell in with the ambitious pretensions of 
Phidon, who succeeded in dispossessing the 
Eleans and celebrating the games along with 
the Pisans ; but the Eleans not long after de- 
feated him, with the aid of Sparta, and recov- 
ered their privilege. Thus apparently fell the 
power of Phidon ; but as to the details of the 
struggle we have no information. The most 
memorable act of Phidon was his introduction 
of copper and silver coinage, and a new scale 
of weights and measures, which, through his 
influence, became prevalent in the Peloponne- 
sus, and ultimately throughout the greater por- 
tion of Greece. The scale in question was 
known by the name of the ^Eginetan, and it is 
usually supposed that the coinage of Phidon was 
struck in yEgina ; but there seems good reason 
for believing that what Phidon did was done in 
Argos, and nowhere else ; that " Phidonian 
measures" probably did not come to bear the 
specific name of the ./Eginetan until there was 
another scale in vogue, the Euboic, from which 
to distinguish them ; and that both the epithets 
were derived, not from the place where the 
scale first originated, but from the people whose 



commercial activity tended to make them most 
generally known, in the one case the ^Egine- 
tans, in the other case the inhabitants of Chal- 
cis and Eretria. — 2. An ancient Corinthian leg- 
islator of uncertain date. 

Phigalia (fyiyalia, $iyd?.eia, ^tyalta : <&tya- 
?,evg : now Paolitza), at a later time called Phi- 
alia, a town in the southwestern corner of Ar- 
cadia, on the frontiers of Messenia and Elis, 
and upon the River Lymax. It was taken by 
the Spartans B.C. 559, but was afterward re- 
covered by the Phigalians with the help of the 
Oresthasians. It is frequently mentioned in 
the later wars of the Achaean and ^Etolian 
leagues. Phigalia, however, owes its celebrity 
in modern times to the remains of a splendid 
temple in its territory, situated about six miles 
northeast of the town at Bassac on Mount Coty- 
lum. This temple was built by Ictinus, the con- 
temporary of Pericles and Phidias, and the arch- 
itect, along with Callicrates, of the Parthenon 
at Athens. It was dedicated to Apollo Epi- 
curius, or the Deliverer, because the god had 
delivered the country from the pestilence during 
the Peloponnesian war. Pausanias describes 
this temple as the most beautiful one in all Pel- 
oponnesus after the temple of Minerva (Athena) 
at Tegea. Most of the columns are still stand- 
ing. In 1812 the frieze round the interior of 
the inner cella was discovered, containing a se- 
ries of sculptures in alto-relievo, representing 
the combat of the Centaurs and the Lapithse, 
and of the Greeks and the Amazons. Their 
height is a little more than two feet, and their 
total length is one hundred feet. They were 
found on the ground under the spot which they 
originally occupied, and were much injured by 
their fall, and by the weight of the ruins lying 
upon them. They were purchased for the Brit- 
ish Museum in 1814, where they are still pre- 
served, and are usually known by the name of 
the Phigalian Marbles. They are some of the 
most interesting and beautiful remains of an- 
cient art in this country. 

Phila C&i'Aa), daughter of Antipater, the re- 
gent of Macedonia, is celebrated as one of the 
noblest and most virtuous women of the age in 
which she lived. She was married to Craterus 
in B.C. 322, and after the death of Craterus, 
who survived his marriage with her scarcely a 
year, she was again married to the young De- 
metrius, the son of Antigonus. She shared 
with her husband his various vicissitudes of 
fortune ; but when he was expelled from Mac- 
edonia in 287, she put an end to her own life 
at Cassandrea, unable to bear this unexpected 
reverse. She left two children by Demetrius : 
Antigonus, surnamed Gonatas, who became 
king of Macedonia ; and a daughter, Stratonice, 
married first to Seleucus, and afterward to his 
son Antiochus. 

Phila {§i?ia : ^clalog, $l2.6tt]s). 1. A town 
of Macedonia, in the province Pieria, situated 
on a steep hill on the Peneus, between Dium 
and Tempe, and at the entrance into Thessaly, 
built by Demetrius II., and named after his 
mother Phila. — 2. An island off the southern 
coast of Gaul, one of the Stcechades. 

[Philadelphia ($i'kadE^<i>cLa., now Allah-sheh , 
i. c, city of God). 1. A city of Lydia, on the 
Cogamus, at the foot of Mount Tmolus, was 

643 



PHILADELPHIA. 



PHILEMON. 



Sounded by Attalus Philadelphia, brother of Eu- 
menes, king of Pergamus. The place suffered 
repeatedly from violent shocks of earthquakes, 
and, in consequence, had, by the time of Strabo, 
become almost deserted. Tacitus mentions it 
among the towns restored by Tiberius, after a 
more than ordinary calamity of this kind. Phila- 
delphia was one of the Seven Churches of Asia 
mentioned in the Apocalypse. At a later period 
it made a gallant resistance to the Turks, but 
was finally subdued by Bajazet in A.D. 1390. — 
2. (In the Old Testament, Rabbath-Ammon or 
Rabbah), the capital of the Ammonites, situ- 
ated on the further side of the Jordan, taken 
from them by David. It was called Philadelphia 
from Ptolemy Philadelphus, and is frequently 
mentioned by this name in Greek and Roman 
writers. Vid. Rabbatamana.] 

Philadelphus ($ifalde?<.<j>og), a surname of 
Ptolemaeus II., king of Egypt (vid. Ptoleioeus), 
and of Attalus II. of Pergamus. Vid. Attalds. 

[Phil^e ($tA(u)i an island in the Nile, to the 
south of Elephantine, and the southernmost 
point of Egypt, inhabited in common by Egyp- 
tians and ^Ethiopians. The island was cover- 
ed with temples and other splendid structures, 
for it was sacred to Isis, and in the little island 
Abatos (-7. v.) close to it was the tomb of Osi- 
ris: from the magnificent ruins still existing in 
the island, it is now called Djesirct-el-Birbeh, i. 
e-, " Temple-island."] 

Philaeni (Wacuvol), two brothers, citizens of 
Carthage, of whom the following story is told : 
A dispute having arisen between the Carthagini- 
ans and Cyrena?ans about their boundaries, it 
was agreed that deputies should start at a fixed 
time from each of the cities, and that the place 
of their meeting, wherever it might be, should 
thenceforth form the limit of the two territories. 
The Philaeni were appointed for this service on 
the part of the Carthaginians, and advanced 
much further than the Cyrenaean party. The 
Cyrenaeans accused them of having set forth be- 
fore the time agreed upon, but at length con- 
sented to accept the spot which they had reach- 
ed as a boundary line, if the Philaeni would sub- 
mit to be buried alive there in the sand. Should 
they decline the offer, they were willing, they 
said, on their side, if permitted to advance as 
far as they pleased, to purchase for Cyrene an 
extension of territory by a similar death. The 
Philaeni accordingly then and there devoted 
themselves for their country in the way pro- 
posed. The Carthaginians paid high honors to 
their memory, and erected altars to them where 
they had died ; and from these, even long after 
all traces of them had vanished, the place still 
continued to be called " The Altars of the Phi- 
laeni." Our main authority for this story is Sal- 
lust, who probably derived his information from 
African traditions during the time that he was 
proconsul of Numidia, and at least three hund- 
red years after the event. We can not, there- 
fore, accept it unreservedly. The Greek name 
by which the heroic brothers have become known 
to us — bLAaivoi, or lovers of praise — seems 
clearly to have been framed to suit the tale. 

[Phil^us ($£/.<ur>c), a son of the Telamonian 
Ajax and Teemessa, from whom the Attic de- 
anus of Philaidae derived its name.] 

Pkilagrius ($i?idypLoc), a Greek medical writ- 
644 



er, born in Epirus, lived after Galen and before 
Oribasius, and therefore probably in the third 
century after Christ. He wrote several works, 
of which, however, only a few fragments re- 
main. 

Philammon ($tAa/Li{iuv), a mythical poet and 
musician of the ante-Homeric period, was said 
to have been the son of Apollo and the nymph 
Chione,orPhilonis,orLeuconoe. By the nymph 
Agriope, who dwelt on Parnassus, he became 
the father of Thamyris and Eumolpus. He is 
closely associated with the worship of Apollo at 
Delphi, and with the music of the cithara. He 
is said to have established the choruses of girls, 
who, in the Delphian worship of Apollo, sang 
hymns in which they celebrated the births of 
Latona (Leto), Diana (Artemis), and Apollo. 
Pausanias relates that in the most ancient mu- 
sical contests at Delphi, the first who conquered 
was Chrysothemis of Crete, the second was 
Philammon, and the next after him his son 
Thamyris. 

Philargyrius Junius, or Philargyrus, or Ju- 
nilius Flagrius, an early commentator upon 
Virgil, who wrote upon the Bucolics and Georg- 
ics. His observations are less elaborate than 
those of Servius, and have descended to us in a 
mutilated condition. The period when he flour- 
ished is altogether uncertain. They are printed 
in the edition of Virgil by Burmann ; [and in the 
edition of the commentaries of Servius by H. A. 
Lion, Gbttingen, 1825-26.] 

Phile or Philes, Manuel (NlavovrjA 6 ^>i?iijg), 
a Byzantine poet, and a native ofEphesus, was 
born about A.D 1275, and died about 1340. His 
poem, Dc Animalium Proprictatc, chiefly extract- 
ed from ^Elian, is edited byDe Paw, Traj. Rhen., 
1739 ; [and with a revised text by Lehrs and Diib- 
ner in the Bucolici Graeci, forming part of Di- 
dot's Bibliotheca Graeca, Paris, 1846;] and his 
other poems on various subjects are edited by 
Wernsdorf, Lips., 1768. 

Phileas (QiAeag). 1. A Greek geographer of 
Athens, whose time can not be determined with 
certainty, but who probably belonged to the older 
period of Athenian literature. He was the au- 
thor of a Periplus, which was divided into two 
parts, one on Asia, and the other on Europe. — 
[2. Of Tarentum, having been sent as ambassa- 
dor to Rome, he persuaded his countrymen, who 
were there detained as hostages, to make their 
escape, which they effected by his aid ; but, hav- 
ing been overtaken at Terracina, tbey were 
brought back to Rome, scourged, and thrown 
from the Tarpeian rock.] 

Philemon (4>tA^wv). 1. An aged Phrygian 
and husband of Baucis. Once upon a time, 
Jupiter (Zeus) and Mercury (Hermes), assum- 
ing the appearance of ordinary mortals, visited 
Phrygia ; but no one was willing to receive the 
strangers, until the hospitable hut of Philemon 
and Baucis was opened to them, where the two 
gods were kindly treated. Jupiter (Zeus) re- 
warded the good old couple by taking them to 
an eminence, while all the neighboring district 
was visited with a sudden inundation. On that 
eminence Jupiter (Zeus) appointed them the 
guardians of his temple, and allowed them both 
to die at the same moment, and then meta- 
morphosed them into trees. — 2. An Athenian 
poet of the New Comedy, was the son of Da* 



PHILESIUS. 



PHILINUS. 



ttion, and a native of Soli in Cilicia, but at an 
early age went to Athens, and there received 
the citizenship. He flourished in the reign of 
Alexander, a little earlier than Menander, whom, 
however, he long survived. He began to ex- 
hibit about B C. 330. He was the first poet of 
the New Comedy in order of time, and the sec- 
ond in celebrity ; and he shares with Menander 
the honor of its invention, or, rather, of reduc- 
ing it to a regular form Philemon lived nearly 
one hundred years. The manner of his death is 
differently related : some ascribing it to excess- 
ive laughter at a ludicrous incident ; others to 
joy at obtaining a victory in a dramatic contest ; 
while another story represents him as quietly 
called away by the goddesses whom he served 
in the midst of the composition or representa- 
tion of his last and best work. Although there 
can be no doubt that Philemon was inferior to 
Menander as a poet, yet he was a greater favor- 
ite with the Athenians, and often conquered his 
rival in the dramatic contests. Vid. Menander. 
The extant fragments of Philemon display much 
liveliness, wit, eloquence, and practical knowl- 
edge of life. His favorite subjects seem to have 
been Jove intrigues, and his characters were the 
standing ones of the New Comedy, with which 
Plautus and Terence have made us familiar. 
The number of his plays was ninety-seven ; the 
number of extant titles, after the doubtful and 
spurious ones are rejected, amounts to about 
fifty-three ; but it is very probable that some of 
these should be assigned to the younger Phile- 1 
mon. The fragments of Philemon are printed 
with those of Menander byMeineke, Berlin, 1823, 
8vo, in his Fragmcnta Comicorum Gracorum, 
Berol., 1841 ; [and by Fr. Diibner at the end of 
the Aristophanes inDidut's Bibliotheca Graeca, 
Paris, 1836.]— 3. The younger Philemon, also a 
poet of the New Comedy, was a son of the for- 
mer, in whose fame nearly all that belongs to 
him has been absorbed, so that, although he was 
the author of fifty-four dramas, there are only 
two short fragments, and not one title, quoted 
expressly under his name. — 4. The author of a 
Anet-iKav rexvo?ioyiKov, the extant portion of which 
was first edited by Burney, Lond., 1812, and aft- 
erward by Osann, Berlin, 1821. The author in- 
forms us that his work was intended to take the 
place of a similar lexicon by the grammarian 
Hyperechius. The work of Hyperechius was 
arranged in eight books, according to the eight 
different parts of speech. Philemon's lexicon 
was a meagre epitome of this work, and the part 
of it which is extant consists of the first book 
and the beginning of the second. Hyperechius 
lived about the middle of the fifth century of our 
era, and Philemon may probably be placed in 
the seventh. 

[Philesius (<bu.rjoi.ac), an Achaean, an officer 
in the army of Cyrus the younger, and, after the I 
treacherous capture of Clearchus and the other 
generals by Tissaphernes, was chosen in the J 
place of Menon. He was selected with Sophae- 
netus, as being the two oldest generis, to con- 
duet the older men, the women and children, j 
and the sick from Trapezus by sea. He is men- ! 
tioned also in the Anabasis on several subse- ! 
quent occasions ] 

Philet^ercs (QiXiraipoc). 1. Founder of the 
kingdom of Pergamus, was a native of Tieium j 



in Paphlagonia, and a eunuch. He is first men- 
tioned in the service of Docimus, the general of 
Antigonus, from which he passed into that of 
Lysimachus, who intrusted him with the charge 
of the treasures which he had deposited in the 
strong fortress of Pergamus. Toward the end 
of the reign of Lysimachus he declared in favor 
of Seleucus, and, after the death of the latter 
(B.C. 280), he took advantage of the disorders 
in Asia to establish himself in virtual independ- 
ence. At his death he transmitted the govern- 
ment of Pergamus, as an independent state, to 
his nephew Eumenes. He lived to the age of 
eighty, and died apparently in 263. — 2. An Athe- 
nian poet of the Middle Comedy. Some said he 
was the third son of Aristophanes, but others 
maintained that it was Nicostratus. He wrote 
twenty-one plays. [The fragments are collect- 
ed by Meineke, Comic. Grcec. Fragm., vol. i., p. 
640-5, edit, minor.] 

Philetas ($i?>7jTur), of Cos, the son of Tele- 
phus, a distinguished Alexandrean poet and 
grammarian, flourished during the reign of the 
first Ptolemy, who appointed him tutor of his 
son, Ptolemy II. Philadelphus. His death may- 
be placed about B.C. 280. Philetas seems to 
have been naturally of a very weak constitution, 
which at last broke down under excessive study. 
He was so remarkably thin as to become an 
object for the ridicule of the comic poets, who 
represented him as wearing leaden soles to his 
shoes, to prevent his being blown away by a 
strong wind. His poetry was chiefly elegiac. 
Of all the writers in that department, he was 
esteemed the best after Callimachus, to whom 
a taste less pedantic than that of the Alexan- 
drean critics would probably have preferred him ; 
for, to judge by his fragments, he escaped the 
snare of cumbrous learned affectation. These 
two poets formed the chief models for the Ro- 
man elegy ; nay. Propertius expressly states, in 
one passage, that he imitated Philetas in pref- 
erence to Callimachus. The elegies of Philetas 
were chiefly amatory, and a large portion of 
them was devoted to the praises of his mistress 
Bittis, or L as the Latin poets give the name, 
Battis. Besides his poems, Philetas wrote in 
prose on grammar and criticism. His most im- 
portant grammatical work was entitled 'Arcucra. 
The fragments of Philetas have been collected 
by Bach, with those of Hermesianax and Pha- 
nocles, Halis Sax., 1829. 

Phileus, an eminent Ionian architect, built 
the Mausoleum, in conjunction with Satyrus, 
and the temple of Minerva (Athena) Polias at 
Priene. The date of the erection of the Mau- 
soleum was soon after B.C. 353, the year in 
which Mausolus died ; that of the temple at 
Priene must have been about twenty years later. 

[Philiades ($i/uud7jg), a Messenian, father of 
Neon and Thrasylochus, the partisans of Philip 
of Macedon. It is probable that Philiades him- 
self was attached to the same party, as he is 
mentioned by Demosthenes in terms of con- 
tempt and aversion.] 

[Philinna ($i?avva) or PhilIne (^l/uvtj). 1. 
A female dancer of Larissa in Thessaly, was the 
mother of Arrhidaeus by Philip of Macedon. — 
2. Mother of the poet Theocritus.] 

Philinus {QiAivoc). 1. A Greek of Agrigen- 
tum, accompanied Hannibal in his campaigns 

645 



PHILIPPI. 



PHILIPPICS. 



against Rome, and wrote a history of the Punic 
wars, in which he exhibited much partiality 
toward Carthage.— 2. An Attic orator, a con- 
temporary of Demosthenes and Lycurgus. He 
is mentioned by Demosthenes in his oration 
against Midias, who calls him the son of Nicos- 
tratus, and says that he was trierarch with him. 
Three orations of Philinus are mentioned by 
the grammarians. — 3. A Greek physician, born 
in the island of Cos, and the reputed founder 
of the sect of the Empirici, probably lived in the 
third century B.C. He wrote a work on part 
of the Hippocratic collection, and also one on 
botany. 

PHILIPPI ($L?UTT-OL : Ql/UTTTTEVC, ^L/UTiTC^OLOC, 

<&u.i--nv6c : now Filibah or Felibejik), a cele- 
brated city in Macedonia adjecta (vid. p. 464, a), 
was situated on a steep height of Mount Pan- 
gaeus, and on the River Gangas or Gangites, 
between the rivers Nestus and Strymon. It 
was founded by Philip on the site of an ancient 
town Cremdes (Kpr/vtdeg), a colony of the Tha- 
sians, who settled here on account of the val- 
uable gold mines in the neighborhood. Philippi 
is celebrated in history in consequence of the 
victory gained here by Octavianus and Antony 
over Brutus and Cassius, B.C. 42, and as the 
place where the Apostle Paul first preached the 
Gospel in Europe, A.D. 53. The church at 
Philippi soon became one of the most important 
of the early Christian churches : one of Saint j 
Paul's Epistles is addressed to it. It was made 
a Roman colony by Octavianus after the vic- 
tory over Brutus and Cassius, under the name 
of Colonia Augusta Julia Philippensis ; and it 
continued to be under the empire a flourishing 
and important city. Its sea-port was Datum or 
Datus on the Strymonic Gulf. 

Philippides {Qikncmdiic). 1. Vid. Phidippi- 
des. — 2. Of Athens, the son of Philocles, is men- 
tioned as one of the six principal comic poets 
of the New Comedy by the grammarians. He 
flourished about B.C. 323. Philippides seems 
to have deserved the rank assigned to him, as 
one of the best poets of the New Comedy. He 
attacked the luxury and corruptions of his age, 
defended the privileges of his art, and made use 
of personal satire with a spirit approaching to 
that of the Old Comedy. His death is said to 
have been caused by excessive joy at an unex- 
pected victorj- : similar tales are told of the 
deaths of other poets, as, for example, Sopho- 
cles, Alexis, and Philemon. The number of his 
dramas is stated at forty-five. There are fif- 
teen titles extant. [The fragments of his plays 
are collected by Meineke, vol. ii.. p. 1116-24, 
edit, minor.] 

Philippopolis l7.lt: ~ ox o/uc : now Phiiippo- 
poli), an important town in Thrace, founded by 
Philip of Macedon on the site of a place previ- 
ously called Eumolpias or Poneropolis. It was 
situated in a large plain southeast of the Hebrus, I 
on a hill with three summits, whence it was 
sometimes called Trimontium. Under the Ro- 
man empire it was the capital of the province j 
of Thracia in its narrower sense, and one of the j 
most important towns in the country. 

Philippus ($l/utc~os). I. Minor historical per- 
sons, l. Son of Alexander I. of Macedonia, and I 
brother of Perdiccas II., against whom he re- 
belled in conjunction with Derdas. The rebels 
646 



were aided by the Athenians, B.C. 432. — 2. Son 
of Herod the Great, king of Judea, by his wife 
Cleopatra, was appointed by his father's will 
tetrarch of Ituraea and Trachonitis, the sover- 
eignty of which was confirmed to him by the 
decision of Augustus. He continued to reign 
over the dominions thus intrusted to his charge 
for thirty-seven years (B.C. 4-A.D. 34). He 
founded the city of Caesarea, surnamed Paneas, 
but more commonly known as Caesarea Philippi, 
near the sources of the Jordan, which he named 
in honor of Augustus. Vid. Cjesarea, No. 2. — 
3. Son of Herod the Great by Mariamne, whose 
proper name was Herodes Philippus. He must 
not be confounded with the preceding Philip. 
He was the first husband of Herodias, who aft- 
erward divorced him, contrary to the Jewish 
law, and married his half-brother, Herod Anti- 
pas. It is Herod Philip, and not the preceding, 
who is meant by the Evangelists (Matt., xiv., 3 ; 
Mark, vi., 17 ; Luke, iii., 19) when they speak 
of Philip, the brother of Herod. 

II. Kings of Macedonia. 

I. Son of Argfflus, was the third king, accord- 
ing to Herodotus and Thucydides, "who, not 
reckoning Caranus and his two immediate suc- 
cessors (Coenus and Thurimas or Turimmas). 
look upon Perdiccas I. as the founder of the 
monarchy. Philip left a son, named Aeropus. 
who succeeded him. — II. Youngest son of 
Amyntas II. and Eurydice, reigned B.C. 359- 
336. He was born in 382, and was brought up 
at Thebes, whither he had been carried as a 
hostage by Pelopidas, and where he received a 
most careful education. Upon the death of his 
brother Perdiccas III., who was slain in battle 
against the Illyrians, Philip obtained the gov- 
ernment of Macedonia, at first merely as regent 
and guardian to his infant nephew Amyntas ; 
but at the end of a few months he was enabled 
to set aside the claims of the young prince, and 
to assume for himself the title of king. Mace- 
donia was beset by dangers on every side. Its 
territory was ravaged by the Illyrians on the 
west, and the Paeonians on the north, while 
Pausanias and Argaeus took advantage of the 
crisis to put forward their pretensions to the 
throne. Philip was fully equal to the emergen- 
cy. By his tact and eloquence he sustained the 
failing spirits of the Macedonians, while at the 
same time he introduced among them a stricter 
military discipline, and organized their army on 
the plan of the phalanx. He first turned his 
arms against Argaeus, the most formidable of 
the pretenders, since he was supported by the 
Athenians. He defeated Argaeus in battle* and 
then concluded a peace with the Athenians. 
He next attacked the Paeonians, whom he re- 
duced to subjection, and immediately afterward 
defeated the Illyrians in a decisive battle, and 
compelled them to accept a peace, by which 
they lost a portion of their territory. Thus in 
the short period of one year, and at the age of 
twenty-four, had Philip delivered himself from 
his dangerous position, and provided for the se- 
curity of his kingdom. But energy and talents 
such as his were not satisfied with mere secu- 
rity, and henceforth his views were directed, 
not to defence, but to aggrandizement. His first 



PHILIPPUS. 



PHILIPPUS. 



efforts were directed to obtain possession of 
the various Greek cities upon the Macedonian 
eoast. Soon after his accession he had with- 
drawn his garrison from Amphipolis, and had 
declared it a tree city, because the Athenians 
had supported Argaeus with the hope of recov- 
ering Amphipolis, and his continuing to hold 
the place would have interposed difficulties in 
the way of a peace with Athens, which was 
at that time an object of great importance 
to him. But he had never meant seriously to 
abandon this important town; and accordingly, 
having obtained pretexts for war with the Am- 
phipofitans, he laid siege to the town, and gain- 
ed possession of it in 358. The Athenians 
had sent no assistance to Amphipolis, because 
Philip, in a secret negotiation with the Athe- 
nians, led them to believe that he was willing 
to restore the city to them when he had taken 
it, and would do so on condition of their mak- 
ing him master of Pydna. After the capture 
of Amphipolis, he proceeded at once to Pydna, 
which seems to have yielded to him without 
a struggle, and the acquisition of which, by 
his own arms, and not through the Athenians, 
gave him a pretext for declining to stand by 
his secret engagement with them. The hos- 
tile feeling which such conduct necessarily ex- 
cited against him at Athens made it most im- 
portant for him to secure the good will of the 
powerful town of Olynthus, and to detach the 
Olynthians from the Athenians. Accordingly, 
he gave to the Olynthians the town of Potidaea, 
which he took from the Athenians in 356. Soon 
after this he attacked and took a settlement of 
the Thasians, called Crenides, and, having in- 
troduced into the place a number of new col- 
onists, he named it Philippi after himself. One 
great advantage of this acquisition was, that it 
put him in possession of the gold mines of the 
district. From this point there is for some time 
a pause in the active operations of Philip. In 
352 he took Methone after a lengthened siege, 
in the course of which he himself lost an eye. 
The capture of this place was a necessary pre- 
liminary in any movement toward the south, 
lying as it did between him and the Thessalian 
border. He now marched into Thessaly to aid 
the Aleuadae against Lycophron, the tyrant of 
Pherae. The Phocians sent a force to support 
Lycophron, but they were defeated by Philip, 
and their general Onomarchus slain. This vic- 
tory gave Philip the ascendency in Thessaly. 
He established at Pherae what he wished the 
Greeks to consider a free government, and then 
advanced southward to Thermopylae. The pass, 
however, he found guarded by a strong Athe- 
nian force, and he was compelled, or at least 
thought it expedient, to retire. He now turned 
his arms against Thrace, and succeeded in es- 
tablishing his ascendency in that country also. 
Meanwhile Philip's movements in Thessaly had 
opened the eyes of Demosthenes to the real 
danger of Athens and Greece, and his first Phil- 
ippic (delivered in 352) was his earliest attempt 
to rouse his countrymen to energetic efforts 
against their enemy ; but he did not produce 
much effect upon the Athenians. In 349 Philip 
commenced his attacks on the Chalcidian cities. 
Olynthus, in alarm, applied to Athens for aid, 
and Demosthenes, in his three Olynthiac ora- 



tions, roused the people to efforts against the 
common enemy, not very vigorous at first, and 
fruitless in the end. In the course of three 
years Philip gained possession of all the Chal- 
cidian cities, and the war was brought to a con- 
clusion by the capture of Olynthus itself in 347. 
In the following year (346) he concluded peace 
with the Athenians, and straightway marched 
into Phocis, and brought the Phocian war to an 
end. The Phocian cities were destroyed, and 
their place in the Amphictyonic council was 
made over to the king of Macedonia, who was 
appointed also, jointly with the Thebans and 
Thessalians, to the presidency of the Pythian 
games. Ruling as he did over a barbaric na- 
tion, such a recognition of his Hellenic charac- 
ter was of the greatest value to him, especially 
as he looked forward to an invasion of the Per- 
sian empire in the name of Greece, united un- 
der him in a great national confederacy. Dur- 
ing the next few years Philip steadily pursued 
his ambitious projects. From 342 to 340 he 
was engaged in an expedition in Thrace, and 
attempted to bring under his power all the Greek 
cities in that country. In the last of these years 
he laid siege to Perinthus and Byzantium ; but 
the Athenians, who had long viewed Philip's 
aggrandizement with fear and alarm, now re- 
solved to send assistance to these cities. Pho- 
cion was appointed to the command of the arm- 
ament destined for this service, and succeeded 
in compelling Philip to raise the siege of both 
the cities (339). Philip now proceeded to carry 
on war against his northern neighbors, and 
seemed to give himself no further concern about 
the affairs of Greece. But meanwhile his hire- 
lings were treacherously promoting his designs 
against the liberties of Greece. In 339 the Am- 
phictyons declared war against the Locrians of 
Amphissa for having taken possession of a dis- 
trict of the sacred land ; but as the general 
they had appointed to the command of the Am- 
phictyonic army was unable to effect any thing 
against the enemy, the Amphictyons, at their 
next meeting in 337, conferred upon Philip the 
command of their army. Philip straightway 
marched through Thermopylae and seized Elatea. 
The Athenians heard of his approach with alarm; 
they succeeded, mainly through the influence 
of Demosthenes, in forming an alliance with the 
Thebans ; but their united army was defeated 
by Philip in the month of August, 338, in the 
decisive battle of Chaeronea, which put an end 
to the independence of Greece. Thebes paid 
dear for her resistance, but Athens was treated 
with more favor than she could have expected. 
Philip now seemed to have within his reach the 
accomplishment of the great object of his am- 
bition, the invasion and conquest of the Per- 
sian empire. In a congress held at Corinth, 
which was attended by deputies from every 
Grecian state with the exception of Sparta, war 
with Persia was determined on, and the king 
of Macedonia was appointed to command the 
forces of the national confederacy. In 337, 
Philip's marriage with Cleopatra, the daughter 
of Attalus, one of his generals, led to the most 
serious disturbances in his family. Olympias 
and Alexander withdrew in great indignation 
from Macedonia ; and though they returned 
home soon afterward, they continued to be on 

647 



PHILIPPUS. 



PHILIPPUS. 



hostile terms with Philip. Meanwhile, his prep- 
arations for his Asiatic expedition were not 
neglected, and early in 336 he sent forces into 
Asia, under Parmenion, to draw over the Greek 
cities to his cause. But in the summer of this 
year he was murdered at a grand festival which 
he held at yEgae, to solemnize the nuptials of 
his daughter with x\lexander of Epirus. His 
murderer was a youth of noble blood, named 
Pausanias, who stabbed him as he was walking 
in the procession. The assassin was immedi- 
ately pursued and slain by some of the royal 
guards. His motive for the deed is stated by Ar- 
istotle to have been private resentment against 
Philip, to whom he had complained in vain of a 
gross outrage offered to him by Attalus. Olym- 
pias and Alexander, however, were suspected 
of being implicated in the plot. Vid. Olympias. 
Philip died in the forty-seventh year of his age 
and the twenty-fourth of his reign, and was suc- 
ceeded by Alexander the Great. Philip had a 
great number of wives and concubines. Be- 
sides Olympias and Cleopatra, we may men- 
tion, 1. his first wife Audata, an Illyrian prin- 
cess, and the mother of Cynane ; 2. Phila, sister 
of Derdas and Machatas, a princess of Elymi- 
otis ; 3. Nicesipolis of Pherae, the mother of 
Thessalonica ; 4. Philinna of Larissa.the mother 
of Arrhidaeus ; 5. Meda, daughter of Cithelas, 
king of Thrace ; 6. Arsinoe, the mother of Ptol- 
emy I., king of Egypt, with whom she was preg- 
nant when she married Lagus. To these nu- 
merous connections temperament as well as 
policy seems to have inclined him. He was 
strongly addicted, indeed, to sensual enjoyment 
of every kind ; but his passions, however strong, 
were always kept in subjection to his interests 
and ambitious views. He was fond of science 
and literature, in the patronage of which he ap- 
pears to have been liberal ; and his apprecia- 
tion of great minds is shown by his connection 
with Aristotle. In the pursuit of his political 
objects he was, as we have seen, unscrupulous, 
and ever ready to resort to duplicity and corrup- 
tion ; but when we consider his humanity and 
generous clemency, we may admit that he does 
not appear to disadvantage, even morally speak- 
ing, by the side of his fellow-conquerors of man- 
kind. — III. The name of Philip was bestowed 
by the Macedonian army upon Arrhideeus, the 
bastard son of Philip II., when he was raised 
to the throne after the death of Alexander 
the Great. He accordingly appears in the list 
of Macedonian kings as Philip III. For his 
life and reign, vid. Arrhid^us. — IV. Eldest son 
of Cassander, whom he succeeded on the throne 
B.C. 296. He reigned only a few months, and 
was carried off by a consumptive disorder. — V. 
Son of Demetrius II., reigned B.C. 220-178. He 
was only eight years old at the death of his fa- 
ther Demetrius (229), and the sovereign power 
was consequently assumed by his uncle Antigo- 
nus Doson, who, though he certainly ruled as 
king rather than merely as guardian of his neph- 
ew, was faithful to the interests of Philip, to 
whom he transferred the sovereignty at his 
death in 220, to the exclusion of his own chil- 
dren. Philip was only seventeen years old at 
the time of his accession, but he soon showed 
that he possessed ability and wisdom superior 
to his years. In consequence of the defeat of 
648 



the Achaeans and Aratus by the ^Etolians, the 
former applied for aid to Philip. This was 
granted ; and for the next three years Philip 
conducted with distinguished success the war 
against the ^Etolians. This war, usually called 
the Social war, was brought to a conclusion in 
217, and at once gained for Philip a distinguish- 
ed reputation throughout Greece, while his clem- 
ency and moderation secured him an equal meas- 
ure of popularity. But a change came over his 
character soon after the close of the Social war. 
He became suspicious and cruel ; and having 
become jealous of his former friend and coun- 
sellor Aratus, he caused him to be removed by 
a slow and secret poison in 213. Meantime he 
had become engaged in war with the Romans. 
In 215 he concluded an alliance with Hannibal ; 
but he did not prosecute the w r ar with any ac- 
tivity against the Romans, who on their part 
were too much engaged with their formidable 
adversary in Italy to send any powerful arma- 
ment against the Macedonian king. In 211 the 
war assumed a new character in consequence 
of the alliance entered into by the Romans 
with the JEtolians. It was now carried on with 
greater vigor and alternate success ; but as Phil- 
ip gained several advantages over the ^Etolians, 
the latter people made peace with Philip in 205. 
In the course of the same year the Romans like- 
wise concluded a peace with Philip, as they 
were desirous to give their undivided attention 
to the war in Africa. It is probable that both 
parties looked upon this peace as little more 
than a suspension of hostilities. Such was 
clearly the view with which the Romans had 
accepted it ; and Philip not only proceeded to 
carry out his views for his own aggrandizement 
in Greece, without any regard to the Roman al- 
liances in that country, but he even sent a body 
of auxiliaries to the Carthaginians in Africa, 
who fought at Zama under Hannibal. As soon 
as the Romans had brought the second Punic 
war to an end, they again declared war against 
Philip, 200. This war lasted between three 
and four years, and was brought to an end by 
the defeat of Philip by the consul Flamininus at 
the battle of Cynoscephalse in the autumn of 197. 
Vid. Flamininus. By the peace finally granted 
to Philip (196), the king was compelled to aban- 
don all his conquests, both in Europe and Asia, 
surrender his wliole fleet to the Romans, and 
limit his standing army to five thousand men, 
besides paying a sum of one thousand talents. 
Philip w r as now effectually humbled, and en- 
deavored to cultivate the friendship of the all- 
powerful republic. But toward the end of his 
reign he determined to try once more the for- 
tune of war, and began to make active prepara- 
tions for this purpose. His declining years 
were embittered by the disputes between his 
sons Perseus and Demetrius ; and the former, 
by forged letters, at length persuaded the king- 
that Demetrius was plotting against his life, 
and induced him to consent to the execution of 
the unhappy prince. Philip was struck with the 
deepest grief and remorse when he afterward 
discovered the deceit that had been practiced 
upon him. He believed himself to be haunted 
by the avenging sptrit of Demetrius, and died 
shortly after, imprecating curses upon Perseus. 
His death took place in 179, in the fifty-ninth 



PHILIPPUS. 



PHILISCUS. 



year of his age, after a reign of nearly forty-two j 
years. 

III. Family of the Marcii Philippi. 
I. Q. Marcius Philippus, praetor 188, with 
Sicily as his province, and consul 186, when he 
carried on war in Liguria with his colleague 
Sp. Postumius Albinus. He was defeated by 
the enemy in the country of the Apuani, and the 
recollection of his defeat was preserved by the 
name of the saltus Marcius. In 169 Philippus 
was consul a second time, and carried on the 
war in Macedonia against Perseus, but accom- 
plished nothing of importance. Vid. Perseus. 
In 164 Philippus was censor with L. JEmilius 
Paulus, and in his censorship he set up in the 
city a new sun-dial — 2. L. Marcius Philippus, 
was a tribune of the plebs 104, when he brought 
forward an agrarian law, and was consul in 91 
with Sex. Julius Caesar. In this year Philip- 
pus, who belonged to the popular party, op- 
posed with the greatest vigor the measures of 
the tribune Drusus, who at first enjoyed the full 
confidence of the senate. But his opposition 
was all in vain ; the laws of the tribune were 
carried. Soon afterward Drusus began to be 
regarded with mistrust and suspicion ; Philip- 
pus became reconciled to the senate, and on his 
proposition a senatus consulturn w r as passed, 
declaring all the laws of Drusus to be null and 
void, as having been carried against the auspi- 
ces. Vid. Drusus. In the civil wars between 
Marius and Sulla, Philippus took no part. He 
survived the death of Sulla ; and he is men- 
tioned afterward as one of those who advocated 
sending Pompey to conduct the war in Spain 
against Sertorius. Philippus was one of the 
most distinguished orators of his time. (Hor., 
Epist., i., 7, 46.) As an orator he was reck- 
oned only inferior to Crassus and Antonius. 
He was a man of luxurious habits, which his 
wealth enabled him to gratify: his fish-ponds 
were particularly celebrated for their magnifi- 
cence and extent, and are mentioned by the 
ancients along with those of Lucullus and Hor- 
tensius. Besides his son, L. Philippus, who is 
spoken of below, he had a step son, Gellius Pub- 
licola. Vid. Publicola. — 3. L. Marcius Philip- 
pus, son of the preceding, was consul in 56. 
TJpon the death of C. Octavius, the father of 
Augustus, Philippus married his widow Atia, 
and thus became the step-father of Augustus. 
Philippus was a timid man. Notwithstanding 
his close connection with Caesar's family, he re- 
mained neutral in the civil wars ; and after the 
assassination of Caesar, he endeavored to dis- 
suade his step-son, the young Octavianus, from 
accepting the inheritance which the dictator had 
left him. He lived till his step-son had acquired 
the supremacy of the Roman world. He re- 
stored the temple of Hercules and the Muses, 
and surrounded it with a colonnade, which is 
frequently mentioned under the name of Porti- 
cus Philippi. (Clari monimenta Philippi, Ov., 
Fast., vi., 801.) 

IV. Emperors of Rome. 
1. M. Julius Philippus I., Roman emperor 
A.D. 244-249. was an Arabian by birth, and en- 
tered the Roman army, in which he rose to high 
rank. He accompanied Gordianus III. in his 



expedition against the Persians ; and upon the 
death of the excellent Misitheus {vid. Misith- 
eus), he was promoted to the vacant office of 
praetorian praefect. He availed himself of the 
influence of his high office to excite discontent 
among the soldiers, who at length assassinated 
Gordian, and proclaimed Philippus emperor, 244. 
Philippus proclaimed his son Caesar, concluded 
a disgraceful peace with Sapor, founded the city 
of Philippopolis, and then returned to Rome. 
In 245 he was engaged in prosecuting a suc- 
cessful war against the Carpi on the Danube. 
In 248, rebellions, headed by Iotapinus and Ma- 
rinus, broke out simultaneously in the East and 
in Moesia. Both pretenders speedily perished, 
but Decius, having been dispatched to recall 
the legions on the Danube to their duty, was 
himself forcibly invested with the purple by the 
troops, and compelled by them to march upon 
Italy. Philippus, having gone forth to encoun- 
ter his rival, w r as slain near Verona either in 
battle or by his own soldiers. The great do- 
mestic event of the reign of Philippus was the 
exhibition of the secular games, which were 
celebrated with even more than the ordinary 
degree of splendor, since Rome had now, ac- 
cording to the received tradition, attained the 
thousandth year of her existence (A.D. 248). — 

2. M Julius Philippus II., son of the foregoing, 
was a boy of seven at the accession (244) of 
his father, by whom he was proclaimed Caesar, 
and three years afterward (247) received the 
title of Augustus. In 249 he was slain, accord- i 
ing to Zosimus, at the battle ofVerona, or mur- 
dered, according to Victor, at Rome by the prae- 
torians, when intelligence arrived of the defeat 
and death of the emperor. 

V. Literary. 

1. Of Medma, in the south of Italy, a Greek 
astronomer, and a disciple of Plato. His ob- 
servations, which were made in the Pelopon- 
nesus and in Locris, were used by the astron- 
omers Hipparchus, Geminus the Rhodian, and 
Ptolemy. — 2. Of Thessalonica, an epigrammat- 
ic poet, who, besides composing a large num- 
ber of epigrams himself, compiled one of the 
ancient Greek Anthologies. The whole num- 
ber of epigrams ascribed to him in the Greek 
Anthology is nearly ninety; but of these, six 
(Nos. 36-41) ought' to be ascribed to Lucillius, 
and a few others are manifestly borrowed from 
earlier poets, while others are mere imitations 
The Anthology {Wvdoloyia) of Philip, in imita- 
tion of that of Meleager, and as a sort of sup- 
plement to it, contains chiefly the epigrams of 
poets who lived in, or shortly before, the time 
of Philip. The earliest of these poets seems to 
be Philodemus, the contemporary of Cicero, and 
the latest Automedon, who probably flourished 
under Nerva. Hence it is inferred that Philip 
flourished under Trajan. 

Philiscus (4>i/U'{T/cjOf). 1. An Athenian poet 
of the Middle Comedy, of whom little is known. 
He must have flourished about B.C. 400, or a 
little later, as his portrait was painted by Par- 
rhasius. — 2. Of Miletus, an orator or rhetorician, 
and the disciple of Isocrates, wrote a life of the 
orator Lycurgus, and an epitaph on Lysias. — 

3. Of iEgina, a cynic philosopher, was the dis- 
! ciple of Diogenes the Cynic, and the teacher of 

649 



PHILISCUS. 



PHILO. 



Alexander in grammar. — 4. Of Corcyra, a dis- 
tinguished tragic poet, and one of the seven 
who formed the Tragic Pleiad at Alexandrea, 
was also a priest of Bacchus (Dionysus), and in 
that character he was present at the coronation 
procession of Ptolemy Philadelphus in B.C. 284. 
He wrote forty-two dramas. — 5. Of Rhodes, a 
sculptor, several of whose works were placed 
in the temple of Apollo, adjoining the portico 
of Octavia at Rome. One of these statues was 
that of the god himself : the others were Lato- 
na and Diana, the nine Muses, and another 
statue of Apollo, without drapery. He proba- 
bly lived about B.C. 146. The group of Muses, 
found in the villa of Cassius at Tivoli, is sup- 
posed by some to be a copy of that of Philiscus. 
Others take the beautiful statue at Florence, 
known as the Apollino, for the naked Apollo of 
Philiscus. 

[Philiscus {§l?uokoc), a native of Abydus, 
sent in B.C. 368 into Greece by Ariobarzanes to 
effect a reconciliation between the Thebans and 
Lacedaemonians, but he did not fully succeed in 
bringing about the object of his mission. On 
his return to Asia he made himself master of 
a number of Greek states, over which he exer- 
cised a tyrannical sway, till he was at length 
assassinated at Lampsacus by Thersagoras and 
Execestus.] 

Philistine Fosse. Vid. Padus. 

Philistion (QlIic-'lov). 1. Of Nicaea or Mag- 
nesia, a mimographer, who flourished in the 
time of Augustus, about A.D. 7. He was an 
actor as well as a writer of mimes, and is said 
to have died of excessive laughter. — 2. A phy- 
sician, born either at one of the Greek towns in 
Sicily, or at Locri Epizephyrii in Italy, was tutor 
to the physician Chrysippus of Cnidos, and the 
astronomer and physician Eudoxus, and there- 
fore must have lived in the fourth century B.C. 

Philistus (<h'/U<7roc), a Syracusan, son of Ar- 
chonides or Archomenides, was born probably 
about B.C. 435. He assisted Dionysius in ob- 
taining the supreme power, and stood so high 
in the favor of the tyrant that the latter intrust- 
ed him with the charge of the citadel of Syra- 
cuse ; but at a later period he excited the jeal- 
ousy of the tyrant by marrying, without his con- 
sent, one of the daughters of his brother Lep- 
tines, and was in consequence banished from 
Sicily. He at first retired to Thurii, but after- 
ward established himself at Adria, where he 
composed the historical work which has given 
celebrity to his name. He was recalled from 
exile by the younger Dionysius soon after his 
accession, and quickly succeeded in establishing 
his influence over the mind of the latter. He 
exerted all his efforts to alienate Dionysius 
from his former friends, and not only caused 
Plato to be sent back to Athens, but ultimately 
succeeded in effecting the banishment of Dion 
also. Philistus was unfortunately absent from 
Sicily when Dion first landed in the island, and 
made himself master of Syracuse, B.C. 356. 
He afterward raised a powerful fleet, with which 
he gave battle to the Syracusans, but having 
been defeated, and finding himself cut off from 
all hopes of escape, he put an end to his own life 
to avoid falling into the hands of his enraged 
countrymen. Philistus wrote a history of Sicily, 
?vhich was one of the most celebrated historical 
650 



works of antiquity, though, unfortunately, only a 
few fragments of it have come down to us. It 
consisted of two portions, which might be re- 
garded either as two separate works, or as parts 
of one great whole, a circumstance which ex- 
plains the discrepancies in the statements of the 
number of books of which it was composed. 
The first seven books comprised the general his- 
tory of Sicily, commencing from the earliest 
times, and ending with the capture of Agrigen- 
tum by the Carthaginians, B.C. 406. The sec- 
ond part, which formed a sequel to the first, con- 
tained the history of the elder Dionysius in four 
books, and that of the younger in two : the lat- 
ter was necessarily imperfect. In point of 
style, Philistus is represented by the concurrent 
testimony of antiquity as imitating and even 
closely resembling Thucydides, though still fall- 
ing far short of his great model. The frag- 
ments of Philistus have been collected by Goel- 
ler in an appendix to his work, Be Situ et Origint 
Syracusarum, Lips., 1818, and by C.Muller, in the 
Fragmenta Historicorum Gracorum, Paris, 1841. 

Philo (QiXuv). 1. An Academic philosopher, 
was a native of Larissa and a disciple of Clito- 
machus. After the conquest of Athens by Mith- 
radates he removed to Rome, where he settled 
as a teacher of philosophy and rhetoric, and had 
Cicero as one of his hearers. — 2. Byblius, also 
called Herennius Byblius, a Roman grammari- 
an, and a native of Byblus in Phoenicia, as his 
patronymic indicates, was born about the time 
of Nero, and lived to a good old age, having 
written of the reign of Hadrian. He wrote 
many works, which are cited by Suidas and oth- 
ers, but his name is chiefly memorable by his 
translation of the writings of the Phoenician 
Sanchuniathon, of which considerable fragments 
have been preserved by Eusebius. Vid. San- 
chuniathon. — 3. Of Byzantium, a celebrated 
mechanician, and a comemporary of Ctesibius, 
flourished about B.C. 146. He wrote a work on 
military engineering, of which the fourth and 
fifth books have come down to us, and are print- 
ed in the Veterum Mathematicorum Opera of 
Thevenot, Paris, 1693. There is also attributed 
to this Philo a work On the Seven Wonders of tke 
World, but this work must have been written 
at a later time. The seven wonders are the 
Hanging Gardens, the Pyramids, the Statue of 
Jupiter Olympius, the Walls of Babylon, the Co- 
lossus of Rhodes, the Temple of Diana (Artemis) 
at Ephesus, and, we may presume from the pro- 
cemium, the Mausoleum ; but the last is en- 
tirely wanting, and we have only a fragment of 
the Ephesian temple. Edited by Orelli, Lips., 
1816. — 4. Judeus, the Jew, was born at Alex- 
andrea, and was descended from a priestly fam- 
ily of distinction. He had already reached an. 
advanced age, when he went to Rome (A.D. 40) 
on an embassay to the Emperor Caligula, in or- 
der to procure the revocation of the decree 
which exacted from the Jews divine homage to 
the statue of the emperor. We have no other 
particulars of the life of Philo worthy of record. 
His most important works treat of the books of 
Moses, and are generally cited under different 
titles. His great object was to reconcile the 
sacred Scriptures with the doctrines of the 
Greek philosophy, and to point out the con- 
formity between the two. He maintained that 



PHILO, Q. PUBLILIUS. 



PHILOCTETES. 



the fundamental truths of Greek philosophy were 
derived from the Mosaic revelation, and in or- 
der to make the latter agree more perfectly with 
the former, he had recourse to an allegorical in- 
terpretation of the books of Moses. Philo may 
therefore he regarded as a precursor of the Neo- 
Platonic philosophy. The best edition of his 
works is by Manger, Lond., 1742, 2 vols, fol— 
5. A Megakian philosopher, was a disciple of 
Diodorus Cronus, and a friend of Zeno— 6. Of 
Tarsus in Cilicia, a celebrated physician, fre- 
quently quoted by Galen and others. — 7. Art- 
ists. (1.) Son of Antipater, a statuary who 
lived in the time of Alexander the Great, and 
made the statue of Hephaestion, and also the 
statue of Jupiter (Zeus) Ourios, which stood on 
the shore of the Black Sea, at the entrance of 
the Bosporus, near Chalcedon, and formed an 
important landmark for sailors. It was still per- 
fect in the time of Cicero (in Verr., iv., 58), and 
the base has been preserved to modern times, 
bearing an inscription of eight elegiac verses. — 
(2.) A very eminent architect at Athens in the 
time of the immediate successors of Alexander. 
He built for Demetrius Phalereus, about B.C. 
318, the portico of twelve Doric columns to the 
great temple at Eleusis. He also constructed 
for the Athenians, under the administration of 
Lycurgus, a basin (armamentarium) in the Pirae- 
us, in which one thousand ships could lie. This 
work, which excited the greatest admiration, 
was destroyed in the taking of Athens by Sulla. 

Philo, Q. PublilTus, a distinguished general 
in the Samnite wars, and the author of one of 
the great reforms in the Roman constitution. He 
was consul B.C. 339, with Ti. iEmilius Mamer- 
cinus, and defeated the Latins, over whom he 
triumphed. In the same year he was appointed 
dictator by his colleague ^Emilius Mamercinus, 
and, as such, proposed the celebrated Publilia 
Leges, which abolished the power of the patri- 
cian assembly of the curiae, and elevated the 
plebeians to an equality with the patricians for 
all practical purposes. (Vid. Diet. of Antiq., art. 
Publilim Leges.) In 337 Philo was the first 
plebeian praetor, and in 332 he was censor with 
Sp. Postumius Albinus. In 327 he was consul 
a second time, and carried on war in the south 
of Italy. He was continued in the command 
for the following year with the title of procon- 
sul, the first instance in Roman history in which 
a person was invested with proconsular power. 
He took Palaepolis in 326. In 320 he was con- 
sul a third time, with L. Papirius Cursor, and 
carried on the war with success against the 
Samnites. 

Philo, Veturils. 1. L., consul B.C. 220 
with C. Lutatius Catulus ; dictator 217, for the 
purpose of holding the comitia ; and censor 210 
with P. Licinius Crassus Dives, and died while 
holding this office. — 2. L., praetor 209, with Cis- 
alpine Gaul as his province. In 207 he served 
under Claudius Nero and Livius Salinator in the 
campaign against Hasdrubal. In 206 he was 
consul with Q. Caecilius Metellus, and, in con- 
junction with his colleague, carried on the war 
against Hannibal in Bruttium. He accompanied 
Scipio to Africa, and after the battle of Zama, 
202, was sent to Rome to announce the news 
of Hannibal's defeat. 

Philoch.Kres (Qrtoxctpvs), a distinguished 



! painter, mentioned by Pliny, is supposed by the 
modern writers on art to be the same person as 
the brother of ^Eschines, of whose artistic per- 
formances Demosthenes speaks contemptuous- 
ly, but whom Ulpian ranks with the most dis- 
tinguished painters. 

[Philocharidas ('iH/.oxapldac), a Lacedaemo- 
nian of distinction, son of Eryxidaidas, employ- 
ed on several embassies during the Pelopon- 
nesian war.] 

Philociiorus (<L>i?,6xopog), a celebrated Athe- 
nian writer, chiefly known by his Atthis, or work 
on the legends, antiquities, and history of Attica. 
He was a person of considerable importance in 
his native city, and was put to death by Antigo- 
nus Gonatas when the latter obtained possession 
of Athens, about B.C. 260. His Atlhis consist- 
ed of seventeen books, and related the history 
of Attica from the earliest times to the reign 
of Antiochus Theos, B.C. 261. The work is 
frequently quoted by the scholiasts, lexicogra- 
phers, as well as other later authors. He also 
wrote many other works, the titles of which arc 
preserved by Suidas and the grammarians. The 
fragments of Philochorus have been published 
by Siebelis, Lips., 1811. and by Muller, Paris, 
1841. 

Philocles (^i/iOK?i/jc). 1. An Athenian tragic- 
poet, the sister's son of iEschylus ; his father's 
name was Philopithes. He is said to have com- 
posed one hundred tragedies. In the general 
character of his plays he was an imitator of 
^Eschylus ; and that he was not unworthy of 
his great master, may be inferred from the fact 
that he gained a victory over Sophocles, when 
the latter exhibited his (Edipus Tyrannus, B.C. 
429. Philocles was frequently ridiculed by the 
comic poets. — [2. An Athenian officer, joined 
with Conon in command of the Athenian fleet 
after the battle of the Arginusae. He was of a 
cruel disposition, and was the author of the 
proposal for the mutilation of the prisoners taken 
in an intended naval battle. Having fallen into 
the hands of Lysander at the battle of ^Egos- 
potami in B.C. 405, he was put to death by him. 
—3. An officer and friend of Philip V. of Mace- 
donia, by whom he was employed in several 
embassies, and who intrusted to him the task 
of succoring Eretria against the Romans and 
others. He subsequently allowed himself to be 
bribed to make a false report against Demetrius, 
the son of Philip (vid. Philippus V.), and so 
caused his death : for this he was tortured and 
put to death by Philip.] 

Philocrates ($L?>oKpd-i]c;), an Athenian ora- 
tor, was one of the venal supporters of Philip in 
opposition to Demosthenes. 

Philoctetes ($i%oktt/t?]c), a son of Pceas 
(whence he is called Pazantiadcs, Ov., Met., xiii., 
313) and Demonassa, the most celebrated archer 
in the Trojan war. He led the warriors fromMe- 
thone, Thaumacia, Meliboea, and Olizon, against 
Troy, in seven ships. But on his voyage thither 
he was left behind by his men in the island of 
Lemnos, because he was ill of a wound which 
he had received from the bite of a snake ; and 
Medon, the son of Oi'leus and Rhene, undertook 
the command of his troops. This is all that the 
Homeric poems relate of Philoctetes, with the 
addition that he returned home in safety ; bu 
the cyclic and tragic poets have added numer- 

651 



PHILOCYPRUS. 



PHILONIDES. 



ous details to the story. Thus they relate that 
he was the friend and armor-bearer of Her- 
cules, who instructed him in the use of the bow, 
and who bequeathed to him his bow, with the 
poisoned arrows. These presents were a re- 
ward for his having erected and set fire to the 
pile on Mount GEta, where Hercules burned 
himself. Philoctetes was also one of the suit- 
ors of Helen, and thus took part in the Trojan 
war. On his voyage to Troy, while staying in 
the island of Chryse, he was bitten by a snake. 
This misfortune happened to him when he was 
showing to the Greeks the altar of Minerva 
(Athena) Chryse, or while he was looking at the 
tomb of Troilns in the temple of Apollo Thym- 
braeus, or as he was pointing out to his com- 
panions the altar of Hercules. According to 
some accounts, the wound in his foot was not 
inflicted by a serpent, but by his own poisoned 
arrows. The wound is said to have become 
ulcerated, and to have produced such an intol- 
erable stench, that the Greeks, on the advice of 
Ulysses, abandoned Philoctetes, and left him 
alone on the solitary coast of Lemnos. He re- 
mained in this island till the tenth year of the 
Trojan war, when Ulysses and Diomedes [ac- 
cording to Sophocles, Ulysses and Neoptolemus] 
came to fetch him to Troy, as an oracle had de- 
clared that the city could not he taken without 
the arrows of Hercules. He accompanied these 
heroes to Troy, and on his arrival Apollo sent 
him into a deep sleep, during which Machaon 
(or Podalirius, or both, or JSsculapius himself) 
cut out the wound, washed it with wine, and 
applied healing herbs to it. Philoctetes was 
thus cured, and soon after slew Paris, where- 
upon Troy fell into the hands of the Greeks. 
On his return from Troy he is said to have been 
cast upon the coast of Italy, where he settled, 
and built Petelia and Crimissa. In the latter 
place he founded a sanctuary of Apollo Alasus, 
to whom he dedicated his bow. 

[Philocyprus ($l?.6kvttdoc), father of Aristo- 
cyprus, king of Soli in Cyprus, contemporary 
and friend of Solon, who celebrated his praises 
in an elegiac poem.] 

Philodemus ($i?.6d7]pto£), of Gadara in Pales- 
tine, an Epicurean philosopher and epigram- 
matic poet, contemporary with Cicero. The 
Greek Anthology contains thirty-four of his epi- 
grams, which are chiefly of a light and amatory 
character, and which quite bear out Cicero's 
statements concerning the licentiousness of his 
matter and the elegance of his manner. (Cic. 
in Pis., 28, 29.) Philodemus is also mentioned 
by Horace (Sat., I, 2, 121). 

[Philodemus ($i"A6dTj{ioc). 1. Of the borough 
of Paeania, father-in-law of the orator iEschines. 
— 2. An Argive, sent by Hieronymus, king of 
Syracuse, to Hannibal in B.C. 215 to propose 
an alliance. In B.C. 212, when Marcellus was 
besieging Syracuse, Philodemus was governor 
of the fort Euryalus on Epipolae, and this he 
surrendered to the Romans on condition that 
he and his garrison should be allowed to depart 
uninjured to join Epicydes in Achradina.] 

[Philgetius ($i?ioctioc), the celebrated cow- 
herd of Ulysses, frequently mentioned in the 
Odyssey : he recognized Ulysses on his return 
to Ithaca, and, along with Eumaeus, aided him 
in overcoming the suitors.] 
652 



Philolaus ($u6?.aoc), a distinguished Pytha- 
gorean philosopher, was a native of Croton or 
Tarentum. He was a contemporary of Soc- 
rates, and the instructor of Simmias and Cebes 
at Thebes, where he appears to have lived many 
years. Pythagoras and his earliest successors 
did not commit any of their doctrines to writ- 
ing ; and the first publication of the Pythago- 
rean doctrines is pretty uniformly attributed to 
Philolaus. He composed a work on the Pytha- 
gorean philosophy in three books, which Plato is 
said to have procured at the cost of one hund- 
red minae through Dion of Syracuse, who pur- 
chased it from Philolaus, who was at the time 
in deep poverty. Other versions of the story 

j represent Plato as purchasing it himself from 

j Philolaus or his relatives when in Sicily. Plato 
is said to have derived from this work the great- 
er part of his Timaeus. [Several fragments of 
this work, in the Doric dialect, have been pre- 
served, and these have been collected and edit- 
ed by Boeckh, Berlin, 1819.] 

[Philomedusa ($L?.ouidovaa), wife of Areith- 

i ous and mother of Menesthius.] 

Philomela ($i/.ofi?/?.a), daughter of King Pan- 

J dion in Attica, who, being dishonored by her 
brother-in-law Tereus, was metamorphosed into 

j anightingale. The story is given under Tereus. 
[Philomelides ($i?.o/j.T]?ieidjig, properly son of 

\ Philomela), a king in Lesbos, who compelled his 

! guests to wrestle with him, was vanquished by 

j Ulysses.] 

Philomelium or Philomelum ($i/.ofif/liov, or, 
j in the Pisidian dialect, ^i/.o^ndij : Qi/.ouijXevc, 
\ Philomelensis or Philomeliensis ; probably Ak- 
j Shehr, ruins), a city of Phrygia Paroreios, on the 
borders of Lycaonia and Pisidia, said to have 
j been named from the numbers of nightingales 
j in its neighborhood. It is mentioned several 
! times by Cicero. According to the division of 
j the provinces under Constantine, it belonged to 
I Pisidia. It is still found mentioned at the time 
i of the Crusades by the name of Philomene. 
j Philomelus ($i.'A6fi7]Aog), a general of the Pho- 
cians in the Phocian or Sacred war, was the 
i person who persuaded his countrymen to seize 
the temple of Delphi, and to apply the riches of 
the temple to the purpose of defending them- 
selves against the Amphictyonic forces, B.C. 
357. He commanded the Phocians during the 
early years of the war, but was slain in battle 
in 353. He was succeeded in the command by 
his brother Onomarchus. 

Philonides ($t?.uvi<j7)c), an Athenian poet of 
the Old Comedy, who is, however, better known 
on account of his connection with the literary 
history of Aristophanes. It is generally stated 
that Philonides was an actor of Aristophanes, 
who is said to have committed to him and to 
Callistratus his chief characters ; but the best 
I modern critics have shown that this is an erro- 
neous statement, and that the true state of the 
! case is, that several of the plays of Aristophanes 
j were brought out in the names of Callistratus 
and Philonides. We learn from Aristophanes 
| himself, not only the fact that he brought out 
j his early plays in the names of other poets, but 
' also his reasons for so doing. In the Parabasis 
| of the Knights (v., 514), he states that he ha'. 
• pursued this course, not from want of thought, 
but from a sense of the difficulty of his profes-- 



eMLONOME. 



PHILOSTRATUS. 



sion, and from a fear that he might suffer from 
that fickleness of taste which the Athenians 
had shown toward other poets, as Magnes, 
Crates, and Cratinus. It appears that Aris- 
tophanes used the name of Philonides, proba- 
bly, for the Clouds, and certainly for the Wasps, 
the Proagon, the Amphiaraus, and the Frogs. 
The Dataleis, the Babylonians, the Acharnians, 
the Birds, and the Lysislrata were brought out 
in the name of Callistratus. Of the extant 
plays of Aristophanes, the only ones which he 
is known to have brought out in his own name 
are the Knights, the Peace, and the Plutus. 

Philonome. Vid. Tenes. 

Philop<emen (Qi'AoTToifiTjv), of Megalopolis in 
Arcadia, one of the few great men that Greece 
produced in the decline of her political inde- 
pendence. The great object of his life was to 
infuse among the Achaeans a military spirit, 
and thereby to establish their independence on 
a firm and lasting basis. He was the son of 
Graugis, a distinguished man at Megalopolis, 
and was born about B.C. 252. He lost his fa- 
ther at an early age, and was brought up by 
Cleander, an illustrious citizen of Mantinea, who 
had been obliged to leave his native city, and 
had taken refuge at Megalopolis. He received 
instruction from Ecdemus and Demophanes, 
both of whom had studied the Academic phi- 
losophy under Arcesilaus. At an early age he 
became distinguished by his love of arms and 
his bravery in war. His name, however, first 
occurs in history in B.C. 222, when Megalopolis 
was taken by Cleomenes, and in the following 
year (221) he fought with conspicuous valor at 
the battle of Sellasia, in which Cleomenes was 
completely defeated. In order to gain addi- 
tional military experience, he soon afterward 
sailed to Crete, and served for some years in 
the wars between the cities of that island. On 
his return to his native country, in 210, he was 
appointed commander of the Achaean cavalry ; 
and in 208 he was elected strategus, or general 
of the Achaean league. In this year he defeat- 
ed Machanidas, tyrant of Lacedaemon, and slew 
him in battle with his own hand. In 201 he 
was again elected general of the league, when 
he defeated Nabis, who had succeeded Machan- 
idas as tyrant of Lacedaemon. Soon afterward 
Philopcemen took another voyage to Crete, and 
assumed the command of the forces of Gortyna. 
He did not return to Peloponnesus till 194. He 
was made general of the league in 192, when 
he again defeated Nabis, who was slain in the 
course of the year by some JEtolian mercena- 
ries. Philopcemen was re-elected general of 
the league several times afterward ; but the 
state of Greece did not afford him much further 
opportunity for the display of his military abili- 
ties. The Romans were now, in fact, the mas- 
ters of Greece, and Philopcemen clearly saw 
that it would be an act of madness to offer open 
resistance to their authority. At the same time, 
as the Romans still recognized in words the in- 
dependence of the league, Philopcemen offered 
a resolute resistance to all their encroachments 
upon the liberties of his country, whenever he 
could do so without affording them any pretext 
for war. In 188, when he was general of the 
league, he took Sparta, and treated it with the 
greatest severity. He razed the walls and for- 



tifications of the city, abolished the institutions 
of Lycurgus, and competed the citizens to adopt 
the Achaean laws in their stead. In 183 the 
Messenians revolted from the Achaean league. 
Philopcemen, who was general of the league for 
the eighth time, hastily collected a body of cav- 
alry, and pressed forward to Messene. He fell 
in with a large body of Messenian troops, by 
whom he was taken prisoner and carried to 
Messene. Here he was thrown into a dungeon, 
and was compelled by Dinocrates to drink pois- 
on. The news of his death filled the whole of 
Peloponnesus with grief and rage. An assem- 
bly was immediately held at Megalopolis ; Ly- 
cortas was chosen general ; and in the follow- 
ing year he invaded Messenia, which was laid 
waste far and wide ; Dinocrates and the chiefs 
of his party were obliged to put an end to their 
lives. The remains of Philopcemen were con- 
veyed to Megalopolis in solemn procession ; and 
the urn which contained the ashes was carried 
by the historian Polybius. His remains were 
then interred at Megalopolis with heroic honors, 
and soon afterward statues of him were erect- 
ed in most of the towns belonging to the Achae- 
an league. 

Philostephanus ($i2,ocTe<pavoc), of Cyrene, 
an Alexandrean writer of history and geogra- 
phy, the friend or disciple of Callimachus, flour- 
ished under Ptolemy II. Philadelphus, about B. 

C. 249. 

Philostorgius (^/locropytoc), a native of Bo- 
rissus in Cappadocia, was born about A.D. 358. 
He wrote an ecclesiastical history, from the 
heresy of Arius in 300 down to 425. Philos- 
torgius was an Arian, which is probably the 
reason why his work has not come down to us. 
It was originally in twelve books ; and we still 
possess an abstract of it, made by Photius. 

Philostratus (§il6oTpa-og), the name of a 
distinguished family of Lemnos, of which there 
are mentioned three persons in the history of 
Greek literature. 1. Son of Verus, taught at 
Athens ; but we know nothing about him, with 
the exception of the titles of his works, given 
by Suidas. He could not, however, have lived 
in the reign of Nero, according to the statement 
of Suidas, since his son was not born till the 
latter part of the second century. — 2. Flavius 
Philostratus, son of the preceding, and the 
most eminent of the three, was born about A. 

D. 182. He studied and taught at Athens, and 
is usually called the Athenian, to distinguish 
him from the younger Philostratus (No. 3), who 
more usually bears the surname of the Lem- 
nian. Flavius afterward removed to Rome, 
where we find him a member of the circle of 
literary men whom the philosophic Julia Dom- 
na, the wife of Severus, had drawn around her. 
It was at her desire that he wrote the life of 
Apollonius. He was alive in the reign of the 
Emperor Philippus (244-249). The following 
works of Philostratus have come down to us : 
1. The Life of Apollonius of Tyana (ru eg tov 
Tvavea 'AtwX'Auviov), in eight books. Vid. Apol- 
lonius, No. 7. 2. Lives of the Sophists (Bcoc 
ZacbioTuv), in two books, contains the history 
of philosophers who had the character of being 
sophists, and of those who were in reality soph- 
ists. It begins with the life of Goririas, and 
comes down to the contemporaries of Philostra- 

653 



PHILOTAS. 



PHILUS, FURIUS. 



tus in the reign of Philippus. 3. Hero-lea or 
Herolcus ('HpuiKa, 'HpuiKoc), is in the form of a 
dialogue, and gives an account of the heroes en- 
gaged in the Trojan war. 4. Imagines (EIkovec), 
in two books, contains an account of various 
paintings. This is the authors most pleasing 
work, exhibiting great richness of fancy, power, 
and variety of delineation, and a rich exuber- 
ance of style. 5. Epistolce ('EniGro/.ai), seven- 
ty-three in number, chiefly amatory. The best 
editions of the collected works of Philostratus 
are by Olearius, Lips., 1709, and by Kayser, 
Turic, 1844. — 3. Philostratus the younger, 
usually called the Lemnian, as mentioned above, 
was a son of Nervianus and of a daughter of 
Flavius Philostratus, but is erroneously called 
by Suidas a son-in-law of the latter. He en- 
joyed the instructions of his grandfather and 
of the sophist Hippodromus, and had obtained 
sufficient distinction at the early age of twenty- 
four to receive exemption from taxes. He visit- 
ed Rome, but he taught at Athens, and died in 
Lemnos. He wrote several works, and, among 
others, one entitled Imagines, in imitation of his 
grandfather's work with the same title, of which 
a portion is still extant. 

Philotas (4>iZwraf). [1. A Macedonian, fa- 
ther of Parmenion, the general of Alexander 
the Great.]— 2. Son of Parmenion, enjoyed a 
high place in the friendship of Alexander, and 
in the invasion of Asia obtained the chief com- 
mand of the tralpoi, or native Macedonian cav- 
alry. He served with distinction in the battles 
of the Granicus and Arbela, and also on other 
occasions; but in B.C. 330, while the army was 
in Drangiana, he was accused of being privy to 
a plot which had been formed by a Macedonian, 
named Dimnus, against the king's life. There 
was no proof of his guilt ; but a confession was 
wrung from him by the torture, and he was 
stoned to death by the troops, after the Mace- 
donian custom. Vid. Pakmexion. — [3. A Mace- 
donian officer in the service of Alexander the 
Great, received the government of Cilicia in 
the distribution of provinces after the death of 
Alexander. In B.C. 321 he was deprived of 
his government by Perdiccas, but was employed 
elsewhere by that general, as he still continued 
attached to the party of Perdiccas, and after the 
death of the regent united with Alcetas, Atta- 
lus. and their partisans in the contest against 
Antigonus, into whose power he finally fell] 

Philotimus {^l/mtluoc). 1. An eminent Greek 
physician, pupil of Praxagoras, and fellow-pupil 
of Herophilus, lived in the fourth and third cen- 
turies B.C. — [2. A freedman of Cicero, or rather 
of Terentia, had the chief management of Cic- 
ero's property.] 

Philoxexus {§i/ms£voc). 1. A Macedonian 
officer of Alexander the Great, received the 
government of Cilicia from Perdiccas in 321. — 
2. Of Cythera, one of the most distinguished 
dithyrambic poets of Greece, was born B.C. 435, 
and died 380, at the age of fifty-five. He was 
reduced to slavery in his youth, and was bought 
by the lyric poet Melanippides, by whom he was 
educated in dithyrambic poetry. After residing 
some years at Athens, he went to Syracuse, 
where he speedily obtained the favor of Dionys- 
ius, and took up his abode at his court. But 
s oon afterward he offended Dionysius. and was 
054 



cast into prison ; an act of oppression which 
most writers ascribe to the wounded vanity of 
the tyrant, whose poems Philoxenus not only 
refused to praise, but, on being asked to revise 
one of them, said that the best way of correct- 
ing it would be to draw a black line through the 
whole paper. Another account ascribes his dis- 
grace to too close an intimacy with the tyrant's 
mistress Galatea ; but this looks like a fiction, 
arising out of a misunderstanding of the object 
of his poem entitled Cyclops or Galatea. After 
some time he was released from prison, and re- 
stored outwardly to the favor of Dionysius ; but 
he finally left his court, and is said to have spent 
the latter part of his life in Ephesus. Of the 
dithyrambs of Philoxenus, by far the most im- 
portant was his Cyclops or Galatea, the loss oi 
which rs greatly to be lamented. Philoxenus 
also wrote another poem, entitled Dcipnon 
(keiKvov), or the Banquet, which appears to have 
been the most popular of his works, ancrof which 
we have more fragments than of any other. 
This poem was a most minute and satirical de- 
scription of a banquet, and the subject of it was 
furnished by the luxury of the court of Dionys- 
ius. Philoxenus was included in the attacks 
which the comic poets made on all the musicians 
of the day, for their corruptions of the simpli- 
city of the ancient music ; but we have abund- 
| ant testimony to the high esteem in which he- 
was held both during his life and after his death. 
! [His fragments are collected by Bippart in Phi- 
! loxeni, Timothei, Teleslis Dithyr. Reliquia, Lips., 
[1843.] — 3. The Leucadian, lived at Athens 
about the same time as Philoxenus of Cythera, 
with whom he is frequently confounded by the 
grammarians. Like his more celebrated name- 
sake, the Leucadian was ridiculed by the poets 
of the Old Comedy, and seems to have spent a 
part of his life in Sicily. The Leucadian was a 
most notorious parasite, glutton, and effeminate 
debauchee ; but he seems also to have had great 
wit and good humor, which made him a favor- 
ite at the tables which he frequented. — 4. A 
celebrated Alexandrean grammarian, w^ho taught 
at Rome, and wrote on Homer, on the Ionic 
and Laconian dialect, and several other gram- 
matical works, among which was a Glossary. 
which was edited by H. Stephanus, Paris, 1573. 
— 5. An Egyptian surgeon, who wrote several 
valuable volumes on surgery. He must have 
lived in or before the first century after Christ. 
— 6 A painter of Eretria, the disciple of Nicom- 
achus, who painted for Cassander a battle of 
Alexander with Darius. 

Philus, Fukius. LP., was consul B.C. 223 
with C. Flaminius, and accompanied his col- 
league in his campaign against the Gauls in the 
north of Italy. He was praetor 21G, when he 
commanded the fleet, with which he proceeded 
to Africa. In 214 he was censor with M. Atili- 
us Regulus, but died at the beginning of the 
following year. — 2. L., consul 136, received 
Spain as his province, and was commissioned 
by the senate to deliver up to the Numantines 
C. Hostilius Mancinus. the consul of the pre- 
ceding year. Philus, like his contemporaries 
Scipio Africanus the younger and Laelius, was 
fond of Greek literature and refinement. He- 
is introduced by Cicero as one of the speakers 
in his dialogue Dc Republica. 



PH1LYLLIUS. 



PHLIUS. 



Philyllius {Q&vMtog), an Athenian comic 
poet, belongs to the latter part of the Old Com- 
edy and the beginning of the Middle. 

[Philyra (bilvpa), a daughter of Oceanus, 
and the mother of Chiron by Saturn (Cronus).] 

Philybeis (4>uvf)7]ir- probably the little isl- 
and off Cape Zefrch, east of Kcrasunt-Ada), an 
island ofT the northern coast of Asia Minor 
(Pontus), east of the country of the Mosynceci, 
and near the promontory of Zephyrium (now 
Zefreh), where Chirox was nurtured by his 
mother Philyra. 

Philybes (*/?.ty)ff ), a people on the coast of 
Pontus, in the neighborhood of the island Phi- 
lybeis. 

Phineus (*iv£v<:). L. Son of Belus and An- 
chinoe, and brother of Cepheus. He was slain 
by Perseus. For details, vid. Andromeda and 
Perseus.— 2. Son of Agenor, and king of Sal- 
mydessus in Thrace. He was first married to 
Cleopatra, the daughter of Boreas and Orithyia, 
by whom he had two children, Oryithus (Oar- 
thus) and Crambis ; but their names are differ- 
ent in the different legends : Ovid calls them 
Polydectus and Polydorus. Afterward he was 
married to Idaea (some call her Dia, Eurytia, or 
Idothea), by whom he again had two sons, 
Thy n us and Mariandynus. Phineus was a blind 
soothsayer, who had received his prophetic 
powers from Apollo ; but the cause of his blind- 
ness is not the same in all accounts. He is 
most celebrated on account of his being tor- 
mented by the Harpies, who were sent by the 
gods to punish him on account of his cruelty 
toward his sons by the first marriage. His 
second wife falsely accused them of having 
made an attempt upon her virtue, whereupon 
Phineus put out their eyes, or, according to 
others, exposed them to be devoured by wild 
beasts, or ordered them to be half buried in the 
earth, and then to be scourged. Whenever a 
meal was placed before Phineus, the Harpies 
darted down from the air and carried it off ; 
later writers add that they either devoured the 
food themselves, or rendered it unfit to be eaten. 
When the Argonauts visited Thrace, Phineus 
promised to instruct them respecting their voy- 
age if they would deliver him from the mon- 
sters. This was done by Zetes and Calais, the 
sons of Boreas, and brothers of Cleopatra. 
Vid. p. 91, a. Phineus now explained to the 
Argonauts the further course they had to take, 
and especially cautioned them against the Sym- 
plegades. According to another story, the Ar- 
gonauts, on their arrival at Thrace, found the 
sons of Phineus half buried, and demanded their 
liberation, which Phineus refused. A battle 
thereupon ensued, in which Phineus was slain 
by Hercules. The latter also delivered Cleo- 
patra from her confinement, and restored the 
kingdom to the sons of Phineus ; and on their 
advice he also sent the second wife of Phineus 
back to her father, who ordered her to be put 
to death. Some traditions, lastly, state that 
Phineus was killed by Boreas, or that he was 
carried off by the Harpies into the country of 
the Bistones or Milchessians. Those accounts 
in which Phineus is stated to have put out the 
eyes of his sons, add that they had their sight 
restored to them by the sons of Boreas or by 
iEsculapius. 



Phinopolis ('bivoTroT.ic), a town in Thrace, on 
| the Pontus Euxinus, near the entrance to the 

! Bosporus. 

Phixtias (Qivrtas). 1. A Pythagorean, the 
friend of Damon, who was condemned to die 
by Dionysius the elder. For details, vid. Da- 
mox— 2. Tyrant of Agrigentum, who establish- 
ed his power over that city during the period 
of confusion which followed the death of Aga- 
thocles (B.C. 289). He founded a new city on 
the southern coast of Sicily, to which he gave 
his own name, and whither he removed all the 
inhabitants from Gela, which he razed to the 
ground. 

Phixtoxis Ixsula (now Isola di Figo), an isl- 
and between Sardinia and Corsica. 

Phlegethox (<t>?ieyeda)v), i. c, the flaming, a 
river in the lower world, in whose channel flow- 
ed flames instead of water. 

Phlegox (^/leywv), a native of Trallcs in 
Lydia, was a freedman of the Emperor Hadrian, 
whom he survived. The only two works of 
Phlegon which have come down to us are a 
small treatise on wonderful events (Tlepi d-av/Lca- 
oto)v), and another short treatise on long-lived 
persons (Ilepl (j.aKpo6iuv), which gives a list of 
persons in Italy who had attained the age of a 
hundred years and upward. Besides these two 
works Phlegon wrote many others, of which the 
most important was an account of the Olympi- 
ads in seventeen books, from 01. 1 to 01. 229- 
(A.D. 137). The best edition of Phlegon is by 
Westermann in his Paradoxographi, Brunsvig.,. 
1839. 

Phlegra. Vid. Pallexe. 
Phlegr^i Campi (tu Qheypala Tredta, or tj 
$Aeypa : now Solfatara), the name of the vol- 
canic plain extending along the coast of Cam- 
pania from Cumse to Capua, so called because 
it was believed to have been once on fire. It 
was also named Laboriae or Laborinus Campus, 
either on account of its great fertility, whiclv 
occasioned its constant cultivation, or on ac- 
count of the frequent earthquakes and internal 
convulsions to which it was exposed. 

Phlegvas (QXeyvac), son of Mars (Ares) and 
Chryse the daughter of Halmus, succeeded Ete- 
ocles in the government of Orchomenos in Bceo- 
tia, which he called after himself Phlegyantis. 
He was the father of Ixion and Coronis, the 
latter of whom became by Apollo the mother 
of iEsculapius. Enraged at this, Phlegyas set 
fire to the temple of the god, who killed him 
with his arrows, and condemned him to severe 
punishment in the lower world. Phlegyas is 
represented as the mythical ancestor of the race 
of the Phlegyas, a branch of the Minyae, who 
emigrated from Orchomenos in Bceotia and set- 
tled in Phocis. 

Phliasia. Vid. Phlius. 
Phlius (tf'AdoOc, -ovvTog : &7uaoiog), the chief 
town of a small province in the northeast of 
Peloponnesus, whose territory Phliasia (<b?ua- 
aia) was bounded on the north by Sicyonia, ort 
the west by Arcadia, on the east by the terri- 
tory of Cleonse, and on the south by that of Ar- 
gos. The greater part of this country was oc- 
cupied by mountains, called Coelossa, Carnea- 
tes, Arantinus, and Tricaranon. According to 
Strabo, the most ancient town in the country 
was Araethyrea, which the inhabitants deserted, 

655 



PHLYA. 



PHOCION. 



and afterward founded Phlius ; while Pausanias 
says nothing about a migration, but relates that 
the town was first called Arantia from its found- 
er Aras, an autochthon, afterward Araethyrea 
from the daughter of Aras, and finally Phlius, 
from Phlius, a grandson of Temenus. Phlius 
was originally inhabited by Argives. It after- 
ward passed into the hands of the Dorians, with 
whom part of the Argive population intermin- 
gled, while part migrated to Samos and Clazo- 
menae. During the greater part of its history 
it remained faithful to Sparta. 

[Phlya ($avi] : $Avevg), an Attic demus be- 
longing to the tribe Cecropis, but at a later time 
to the tribe Ptolemais.] 

Phlygonium ($Avy6viov), a small town in 
Phocis, destroyed in the Phocian war. 

Phocaea (QuKaca : QuKaevc, Phocaeensis : the 
ruins called Karaja-Fokia, i. e., Old Fokia, south- 
west of Fouges or New Fokia), the northernmost 
of the Ionian cities on the western coast of 
Asia Minor, stood at the western extremity of 
the tongue of land which divides the Sinus 
Elaiticus (now Gulf of Fouges) on the north 
from the Sinus Hermaeus (now Gulf of Smyrna) 
on the south. It was said to have been found- 
ed by Phocian colonists under Philogenes and 
Damon. It was originally within the limits of 
iEolis, in the territory of Cyme ; but the Cy- 
maeans voluntarily gave up the site for the new j 
city, which was soon admitted into the Ionian j 
confederacy on the condition of adopting cecists I 
of the race of Codrus. Admirably situated, and | 
possessing two excellent harbors, Naustathmus 
and Lampter, Phocaea became celebrated as a 
great maritime state, and especially as the 
founder of the most distant Greek colonies j 
toward the west, namely, Massilia in Gaul, and 
the still more distant, though far less celebrated, 
city of Maenaca in Hispania Beetica. After the 
Persian conquest of Ionia, Phocaea had so de- 
clined that she could only furnish three ships 
to support the great Ionian revolt ; but the 
spirit of her people had not been extinguished ; 
when the common cause was hopeless, and their 
city was besieged by Harpalus, they embarked, 
to seek new abodes in the distant west, and 
bent their course to their colony of Alalia in 
Corsica. During the voyage, however, a por- 
tion of the emigrants resolved to return to their 
native city, which they restored, and which re- 
covered much of its prosperity, as is proved by 
the rich booty gained by the Romans when they 
plundered it under the praetor ^Emilius, after 
which it does not appear as a place of any con- 
sequence in history. Care must be taken not 
to confound Phocaea with Phocis, or the ethnic 
adjectives of the former $ui<aevg and Phocaeen- 
sis with those of the latter, Qukevc and Phocen- 
sis : some of the ancient writers themselves 
have fallen into such mistakes. It should be 
observed, also, that the name of Phocaean is 
often used with reference to Massilia; and, by 
an amusing affectation, the people of Marseilles 
still call themselves Phocaeans. 

[Phocarum Insula (Qukuv vfjaoc, now Tiran, 
near the Promontorium Dsjerm), i. e., island of 
seals, an island of the Arabicus Sinus off the 
coast of Arabia.] 

[Phocas (QuKur), emperor of Constantinople 
from A.D. 602-610. He was a native of C ap- 
656 



padocia, of base extraction. For some time he 
was groom to Priscus, and at the time of his 
accession he held the humble office of centurion. 
His brutal courage raised him to the throne, 
which he disgraced by his infamous and tyran- 
nical conduct. His reign was one of defeat, 
disaster, internal dissension, and sanguinary ex- 
ecutions. He was finally dethroned and mur- 
dered by Heraclius, who succeeded him on the 
throne.] 

Phocion (Qokiuv), the Athenian general and 
statesman, son of Phocus, was a man of humble 
origin, and appears to have been born in B.C. 
402. He studied under Plato and Xenocrates 
He distinguished himself for the first time under 
his friend Cbabrias, in 376, at the battle of 
?saxos ; but he was not employed prominently 
in any capacity for many years afterward. In 
354 (according to others in 350) he was sent 
into Euboea in the command of a small force, 
in consequence of an application from Plutar- 
chus, tyrant of Eretria ; and he was subsequent- 
ly employed on several occasions in the war 
between the Athenians and Philip of Macedon. 
He frequently opposed the measures of Demos- 
thenes, and recommended peace with Philip j 
but he must not be regarded as one of the mer- 
cenary supporters of the Macedonian monarch. 
His virtue is above suspicion, and his public 
conduct was always influenced by upright mo- 
tives. When Alexander was marching upon 
Thebes in 335, Phocion rebuked Demosthenes 
for his invectives against the king ; and after 
the destruction of Thebes, he advised the Athe- 
nians to comply with Alexander's demand for 
the surrender of Demosthenes and other chief 
orators of the anti-Macedonian party. This 
proposal was indignantly rejected by the peo- 
ple, and an embassy was sent to Alexander, 
which succeeded in deprecating his resentment. 
According to Plutarch, there were two embas- 
sies, the first of which Alexander refused to re- 
ceive, but to the second he gave a gracious au- 
dience and granted its prayer, chiefly from re- 
gard to Phocion, who was at the head of it. 
Alexander ever continued to treat Phocion with 
the utmost consideration, and to cultivate his 
friendship. He also pressed upon him valuable 
presents; but Phocion persisted in refusing his 
presents, begging the king to leave him no less 
honest than he found him, and only so far avail- 
ed himself of the royal favor as to request the 
liberty of certain prisoners at Sardis, which was 
immediately granted to him. After Alexan- 
der's death, Phocion opposed vehemently, and 
with all the caustic bitterness which character- 
ized him, the proposal for war with Antipater. 
Thus, to Hyperides, who asked him tauntingly 
when he would advise the Athenians to go to 
war, he answered, " When I see the young will- 
ing to keep their ranks, the rich to contribute 
of their wraith, and the orators to abstain from 
pilfering the public money." When the Piraeus 
was seized by Alexander, the son of Polysper- 
chon, in 318, Phocion was suspected of having 
advised Alexander to take this step; where- 
upon, being accused of treason by Agnonides, 
he fled, with several of his friends, to Alexan- 
der, who sent them with letters of recommend- 
ation to his father Polysperchon. The latter, 
willing to sacrifice them as a peace-offering to 



PHOCIS. 



PHOCYLIDES. 



the Athenians, sent them back to Athens for 
the people to deal with them as they would. 
Here Phocion was sentenced to death. To the 
last, he maintained his calm, and dignified, and 
somewhat contemptuous bearing. When some 
wretched man spat upon him as he passed to 
the prison, kk Will no one," said he, " check this 
fellow's indecency !" To one who asked him 
whether he had any message to leave for his 
son Phocus, he answered, "Only that he bear 
no grudge against the Athenians." And when 
the hemlock which had been prepared was 
found insufficient for all the condemned, and 
the jailer would not furnish more until he was 
paid for it, " Give the man his money," said 
Phocion to one of his friends, " since at Athens 
one can not even die for nothing." He perish- 
ed in 317, at the age of eighty-five. The Athe- 
nians are said to have repented of their con- 
duct. A brazen statue was raised to the mem- 
ory of Phocion, and Agnonides was condemned 
to death. Phocion was twice married, and his 
second wife appears to have been as simple and 
frugal in her habits as himself ; but he was less 
fortunate in his son Phocus, who, in spite of 
his father's lessons and example, was a thor- 
ough profligate. As for Phocion himself, our 
commendation of him must be almost wholly 
confined to his private qualities. His fellow- 
citizens may have been degenerate, but he 
made no effort to elevate them. 

Phocis (i) $uKig: <b(0K7jtg Horn., $uiceeg Herod., 
4>w«fif Attic, Phocenses by the Romans), a coun- 
try in Northern Greece, was bounded on the 
north by the Locri Epicnemidii and Opuntii, on 
the east by Boeotia, on the west by the Locri 
Ozolss and Doris, and on the south by the Co- 
rinthian Gulf. At one time it possessed a nar- 
row strip of country on the Eubcean Sea, with 
the sea-port Daphnus, between the territory of 
the Locri Epicnemidii and Locri Opuntii. It 
was a mountainous and unproductive country, 
and owes its chief importance in history to the 
fact of its possessing the Delphic oracle. Its 
chief mountain was Parnassus, situated in the 
interior of the country, to which, however, Cne- 
mis on its northern frontier, Cirphis south of 
Delphi, and Helicon on the southeastern front- 
ier, all belonged. The principal river in Phocis 
was the Cephisus, the valley of which con- 
tained almost the only fertile land in the coun- 
try, with the exception of the celebrated Cris- 
saean plain in the southwest, on the borders of 
the Locri Ozolce. Among the earliest inhab- 
itants of Phocis we find mentioned Leleges, 
Thracians, Abantes, and Hyantes. Subsequent- 
ly, but still in the ante-historical period, the 
Phlegya?, an Achaean race, a branch of the Min- 
yae at Orchomenos, took possession of the coun- 
try ; and from this time the main bulk of the 
population continued to be Achaean, although 
there were Dorian settlements at Delphi and 
Bulis. The Phocians are said to have derived 
their name from an eponymous ancestor Pho- 
cus (vid. Phocus), and they are mentioned un- 
der this name in the Iliad. The Phocians played 
no conspicuous part in Greek history till the 
time of Philip of Macedon ; but at this period 
they became involved in a war, called the 
Phocian or Sacred war, in which the principal 
states of Greece took part. The Thebans had 
42 



long been inveterate enemies of the Phocians ; 
and as the latter people had cultivated a por- 
tion of the Crissaean plain, which the Amphic- 
tyons had declared in B.C. 585 should lie waste 
forever, the Thebans availed themselves of this 
pretext to persuade the Amphictyons to impose 
a fine upon the Phocians, and upon their refu- 
sal to pay it, the Thebans further induced the 
council to declare the Phocian land forfeited to 
the god at Delphi. Thus threatened by the Am- 
phictyonic council, backed by the whole power 
of Thebes, the Phocians were persuaded by 
Philomelus, one of their citizens, to seize Del- 
phi, and to make use of the treasures of the 
temple for the purpose of carrying on the war. 
They obtained possession of the temple in B.C. 
357. The war which ensued lasted ten years, 
and was carried on with various success on 
each side. The Phocians were commanded 
first by Philomelus, B.C. 357-353, afterward 
by his brother Onomarchus, 353-352, then by 
Phayllus, the brother of the two preceding, 
352-351, and finally by Phal^ecus, the son of 
Onomarchus, 351-346. The Phocians received 
some support from Athens, but their chief de- 
pendence was upon their mercenary troops, 
which the treasures of the Delphic temple en- 
abled them to hire. The Amphictyons and the 
Thebans, finding at length that they were un- 
able with their own resources to subdue the 
Phocians, called in the assistance of Philip of 
Macedon, who brought the war to a close in 
346. The conquerors inflicted the most signal 
punishment upon the Phocians, who were re- 
garded as guilty of sacrilege. All their towns 
were razed to the ground with the exception 
of Abee, and the inhabitants distributed in vil- 
lages, containing no more than fifty inhabit- 
ants. The two votes which they had in the 
Amphictyonic council were taken away and 
given to Philip. 

Phocra ($o/cpa), a mountain of Northern Af- 
rica, in Mauretania Tingitana, apparently on 
the western bank of the Mulucha, between the 
chains of the Great and Little Atlas. 

Phocus ($w/coc). 1. Son of Ornytion of Cor- 
inth, or, according to others, of Neptune (Posei- 
don), is said to have been the leader of a colony 
from Corinth into the territory of Tithorea and 
Mount Parnassus, which derived from him the 
name of Phocis. — 2. Son of ^Eacus and the Ne- 
reid Psamathe, husband of Asteria or Astero- 
dia, and father of Panopeus and Crissus. He 
was murdered by his half-brothers Telamon 
and Peleus. Vid. Peleus. According to some 
accounts, the country of Phocis derived its 
name from him. — 3. Son of Phocion. Vid. Pho- 
cion. 

Phocylides (QuKvlidns), of Miletus, an Io- 
nian poet, contemporary with Theognis, was 
born B.C. 560. His poetry was chiefly gnomic, 
and the few fragments of it which we possess 
display that contempt for birth and station, and 
that love for substantial enjoyment, which al- 
ways marked the Ionian character. These frag- 
ments, which are eighteen in number, are in- 
cluded in all the chief colleetions of the lyric 
and gnomic poets. Some of these collections 
contain a didactic poem, in two hundred and 
seventeen hexameters, entitled -Koiruia vovOeti- 
| kov, to which the name of Phocylides is attach- 

657 



PHCEBE. 



PHCEXICE. 



ed, but which is undoubtedly a forgery, made 
ince the Christian era. 



call, but without sufficient authority, the Leon- 
tes : the Belli s or Pagida (now Numan or Rah- 



Phcebe (4>o/677). 1. Daughter of Uranus (Coe- wn) by Ptolemal's,and the Kishon (now Kishon) 



lus) and Ge (Terra), became by Cceus the moth- 
er of Asteria and Leto (Latona). — 2. A surname 
of Artemis (Diana) in her capacity as the god- 
dess of the moon (Luna), the moon being re- 
garded as the female Phoebus or sun. — 3. Daugh- 
ter of Tyndareos and Leda, and a sister of Cly- 
taemnestra. — 4. Daughter of Leucippus, and sis- 
ter of Hilaira, a priestess of Athena (Minerva), 



north of Mount Carmel. Of the promontories 
referred to, omitting a number of less important 
' ones, the chief were, Theu-prosopon (now Ra- 
sesh-Shukah), between Tripolis and Byblus, Pro- 
montorium Album (now Ras-el-Abiad, i. e., While 
Cape), south of Tyre, and Mount Carmel, be- 
j sides those occupied by the cities of Tripolis, 
Byblus, Berytus, Sidon, Tyrus, and PtolemaTs. 



was carried off with her sister by the Dioscuri, ; This conformation of the coast and the position 
and became by Pollux (Polydeuces) the mother i of the country rendered it admirably suited for 



of Mnesileos. 



the home of great maritime states ; and accord- 



[Phcebeum ($ct6elov, in Hdt. $oi6?tbv), a place | ingly we find the cities of Phoenicia at the head, 
in the neighborhood of Sparta and not far from j both in time and importance, of all the naval 
Therapne, with a sanctuary of the Dioscuri. j enterprise of the ancient world. For the his- 
where the ephebi offered sacrifices to Enya- j tory of those great cities, vid. Sidon, Tyrus, 



hus.] 



j and the other articles upon them. As to the 



Phcebidas ($oi6idac), a Lacedaemonian, who, ; country in general, there is some difficulty about 
in B.C. 382, was appointed to the command of j the origin of the inhabitants and of their name. 



the troops destined to re-enforce his brother Eu- 
damidas, who had been sent against Olynthus. 



In the Old Testament the name does not occur : 
the people seem to be included under the gen- 



On his way Phcebidas halted at Thebes, and j eral designation of Canaanites, and they are 
treacherously made himself master of the Cad- ' also named specifically after their several cit- 
mea. The Lacedaemonians fined Phcebidas one I ies, as the Sidonians, Giblites (from Gebal, i e., 
hundred thousand drachmas, but nevertheless ' Byblus), Sinites, Arkites, Arvadites, &c. The 
kept possession of the Cadmea. In 378 he was 1 name ^olvlkij is first found in Greek writers as 
left by Agesilaus as harmost at Thespiae, and | early as Homer, and is derived by some from 



was slain in battle by the Thebans. 

Phcebus (§oi6oc), the Bright or Pure, occurs 
in Homer as an epithet of Apollo, and is used 
to signify the brightness and purity of youth. 
At a later time, when Apollo became connected 
with the Sun, the epithet Phoebus was a.oo ap- 
plied to him as the Sun-god. 

Phcenice (§oivinri : Phoenicia is only found in 



the abundance of palm-trees in the country 
((poivL^, the date-palm), and by others from the 
purple-red (<po[vi!j), which was obtained from a 
fish on the coasts, and was a celebrated article 
of Phoenician commerce ; besides the mythical 
derivation from Phoenix, the brother of Cadmus. 
The people were of the Semitic (Syro-Arabian) 
race, and closely allied to the Hebrews, and 



a doubtful passage of Cicero : $oivi!j,j>\.$o'ivLKec, j they are said to have dwelt originally on the 



fem. §oivi<sca, Phoenix, Phcenlces : also, the adj. 
Punicus, though used specifically in connection 
with Carthago, is etymologically equivalent to 
Qotvit;, by the well-known interchange of oi and 
v: now forming parts of the pashalics of Acre 
and Aleppo), a country of Asia, on the coast of 
Syria, extending from the River Eleutherus 
(now Nahr-cl-Kebir) on the north to below Mount 



shores of the Erythraean Sea. Their language 
was a dialect of the Aramaic, closely related 
to the Hebrew and Syriac. Their written char- 
acters were the same as the Samaritan or Old 
Hebrew ; and from them the Greek alphabet, 
and through it most of the alphabets of Europe, 
were undoubtedly derived ; hence they were 
regarded by the Greeks as the inventors of let- 



Carmel on the south, and bounded on the east ters. Other inventions in the sciences and arts 



by Coelesyria and Palestine. (Sometimes, 
though rarely, the name is extended to the 
whole western coast of Syria and Palestine). 
It was a mountainous strip of coast-land, not 
more than ten or twelve miles broad, hemmed 
in between the Mediterranean and the chain of 
Lebanon, whose lateral branches, running out 



are ascribed to them, such as arithmetic, as- 
tronomy, navigation, the manufacture of glass, 
and the coining of money. That, at a very 
early time, they excelled in the fine arts, is 
clear from the aid which Solomon received from 
Hiram, king of Tyre, in the building and the 
sculptured decorations of the temple at Jerusa- 



into the sea in bold promontories, divided the lem, and from the references in Homer to Si- 



country into valleys, which are well watered by 
rivers flowing down from Lebanon, and are ex- 
tremely fertile. Of these rivers, the most im- 
portant are, to one going from north to south, 
the Eleutherus (now Nahr-cl-Kebir) ; the Sab- 
baticus (now Arka) ; the river of Tripolis (now 
Kadisha) ; the Adonis (now Nahr-Ibrahi?Ji), south 
of Byblus ; the Lycus (now Nahr-cl-Kclb), north 
of Berytus ; the Magoras (now Nahr- Beirut), by 
Berytus ; the Tamyras (now Nahr-el-Damur). 
between Berytus and Sidon ; the Leo, or Bos- 
trenus (now Nahr-el-Auly), north of Sidon ; the 



donian artists. Respecting Phoenician litera- 
ture, we know of little beyond the celebrated 
work of Sanchuniathon. In the sacred his- 
tory of the Israelitish conquest of Canaan, in 
that of the Hebrew monarchy, and in the ear- 
liest Greek poetry, we find the Phoenicians al- 
ready a great maritime people. Early formed 
into settled states, supplied with abundance of 
timber from Lebanon, and placed where the car- 
avans from Arabia and the East came upon the 
Mediterranean, they carried over to the coasts 
of this sea the products of those countries, as 



great river (now Litany and Kasimiyeh) which j well as of their own, which was rich in metals, 
flows from Heliopolis south-southwest through j and the shores of which furnished the materials 
Coelesyria, and then, turning westward, falls of glass and the purple-fish already mentioned, 
into the sea north of Tyre, and which some j Their voyages and their settlements extended 
658 ' 



PHCENICE. 



PHOLUS. 



beyond the Pillars of Hercules, to the western i 
coasts of Africa and Spain, and even as far as | 
our own islands. Vid. Britannia, p 149, a. i 
Within the Mediterranean they planted numer- 
ous colonies, on its islands, on the coast of Spain, 
and especially on the northern coast of Africa, 
the chief of which was Carthago ; they had 
also settlements on the Euxine and in Asia 
Minor. In the eastern seas we have records 
of their voyages to Ophir, in connection with 
the navy of Solomon, and to the coasts of Af- 
rica under the kings of Egypt. Vid. Africa, p. 
27, b. They were successively subdued by the 
Assyrians, Babylonians, Persians, Macedonians, 
and Romans ; but neither these conquests, nor 
the rivalry of Carthage, entirely ruined their 
commerce, which was still considerable at the 
Christian era ; on the contrary, their ships form- 
ed the fleet of Persia and the Syrian kings, and 
partly of the Romans. Vid. Sidon, Tvrus, &c. 
TJnder the Romans, Phcenice formed a part of 
the province of Syria ; and under the Eastern 
empire, it was erected, with the addition of 
Ccelesyria, into the province of Phcenice Liba- 
uesia or Libanensis. 

Phcenice (Qoivini]). 1. (Now Fimki), an im- 
portant commercial town on the coast of the 
Epirus, in the district Chaonia, fifty-six miles 
northwest of Buthrotum, in the midst of a 
marshv country. It was strongly fortified by 
Justinian.— 2. A small island off' Gallia Narbo- 
nensis, belonging to the Stoechades. 

Phcenicium Mare (to ^olvlkiov nslayoc; : 2t- 
ihviri Mlaaaa), the part of the Mediterranean 
which washes the coast of Phcenice. 

PhCENICUS (QtOLVlKOVr; : $OLVlKOVV7lor, <$>OLVl- 

icovooiog). 1. Also Phcenix (Qoivit;), a harbor 
on the south of Crete, visited by St. Paul dur- 
ing his voyage to Rome. (Acts, xxvii., 12.)— 
[2. A harbor on the south coast of Messenia, 
opposite the CEnussa^ Insulge.]— 3. A sea-port 
of the island of Cythera.— 4. (Now Chesmeh or 
Egri Liman ?), a harbor of Ionia, in Asia Minor, 
at the foot of Mount Mimas. — 5. (Ruins at De- 
liktash), a flourishing city in the south of Lycia, 
on Mount Olympus, with a harbor below it. It 
is often called Olympus. Having become, un- 
der the Romans, one of the head-quarters of 
the pirates, who celebrated here the festival and 
mysteries of Mithras, it was destroyed by Ser- 
vilius Isauricus. 

Phcenicusa. Vid. JEov[se Insula. 

Phcenix ($otvt£). 1. Son of Agenor by Agri- 
ope or Telephassa. and brother of Europa, but 
Homer makes him the father of Europa. Being 
sent by his father in search of his sister, who 
was carried off by Jupiter (Zeus), he settled in 
the country, which « as called after him Phoe- 
nicia. — 2. Son of Amyntor by Cleobule or Hip- 
podamia, and king of the Dolopes, took part in 
the Calydonian hunt. His father Amyntor neg- 
lected his legitimate wife, and attached himself 
to a mistress, whereupon Cleobule persuaded 
her son to seduce her rival. When Amyntor 
discovered the crime, he cursed Phoenix, who 
shortly afterward fled to Peleus. Peleus re- 
ceived him kindly, made him the ruler of the 
country of the Dolopes, on the frontiers of 
Phthia, and intrusted to him his son Achilles, 
whom he was to educate. He afterward ac- 
companied Achilles on his expedition against 



Troy: According to another tradition, Phoenix 
did not dishonor his father's mistress, but she 
merely accused him of having made improper 
overtures to her, in consequence of which his 
father put out his eyes. But Peleus took him 
to Chiron, who restored to him his sight. Phoe- 
nix, moreover, is said to have called the son of 
Achilles Neoptolcmus, after Lycomedes had call- 
ed him Pyrrhus. Neoptolcmus was believed to 
have buried Phcenix at ETon in Macedonia or at 
Trachis in Thessaly.— 3. A fabulous bird Phce- 
nix, which, according to a tale related to Herod- 
otus (ii., 73) at Heliopolis in Egypt, visited that 
place once in every five hundred years, on his 
father's death, and buried him in the sanctuary 
of Helios. For this purpose the Phcenix was 
believed to come from Arabia, and to make an 
egg of myrrh as large as possible ; this egg he 
then hollowed out and put into it his father, 
closing it up carefully, and the egg was believed 
then to be of exactly the same weight as before. 
This bird was represented as resembling an 
eagle, with feathers partly red and partly golden. 
It is further related, that when his life drew to 
a close, he built a nest for himself in Arabia, to 
which he imparted the power of generation, so 
that after his death a new phcenix rose out of 
it. As soon as the latter was grown up, he, 
like his predecessor, proceeded to Heliopolis in 
Egypt, and burned and buried his father in the 
temple of Helios. According to a story which 
has gained more currency in modern times, the 
Phcenix, when he arrived at a very old age 
(some say five hundred, and others one thousand 
four hundred and sixty-one years), committed 
himself to the flames. Others, again, state that 
only one Phcenix lived at a time, and that when 
he died a worm crept forth from his body, and 
was developed into a new Phcenix by the heat 
of the sun. His death, further, took place in 
Egypt after a life of seven thousand and six 
years. Another modification of the same story 
relates, that when the Phcenix arrived at the 
age of five hundred years, he built for himself 
a funeral pile, consisting of spices, settled upon 
it, and died. Out of the decomposing body he 
then rose again, and, having grown up, he 
wrapped the remains of his old body up in myrrh, 
carried them to Heliopolis, and burned them 
there. Similar stories of marvellous birds oc- 
cur in many parts of the East, as in Persia the 
legend of the bird Simorg, and in India that of 
the bird Semendar. 

Phcenix (QoiviZ), a small river in the south- 
east of Thessaly, flowing into the Asopus near 
Thermopylaj. 

Phcenix. Vid. Phcenicus, No. 1. 
Phqeti^e or Phytia (^otrstat, ^otrtai, $i>r/ar, 
Thuc), a town in Acarnania, on a hill west of 
Stratus. 

Pholegandros (QolsyavSpog : now PolyJcan- 
dro), an island in the ^2gean Sea, one of the 
smaller Cyclades, between Melos and Sicinos. 

Pholoe (<t?oh)7] : now Olono). a mountain form- 
ing the boundary between i\.rcadia and Elis, 
being a southern continuation of Mount Ery- 
manthus, in which the rivers Selleis and Ladon 
took their origin. It is mentioned as one of the 
seats of the Centaurs. Vid. Pholus. 

Pholus ($6Aoc). 1. A Centaur, a son of Si- 
I lenus and the nymph Melia. He was accident- 

659 



PHORBANTIA. 



PHOTIUS. 



ally slain by one of the poisoned arrows of Her- 
cules. The mountain, between Arcadia and 
Elis, where he was buried, was called Pholoe 
after him. The details of his story are given 
on p. 357, a. — [2. A follower of iEneas, slain by 
Turnus in Italy.] 

Phorbaxtia. Vid. ^Egates. 

Phorbas ($6p6ag). L Son of Lapithes and 
Orsinome, and brother of Periphas. The Rho- 
dians, in pursuance of an oracle, are said to 
bave invited him into their island to deliver it 
from snakes, and afterward to have honored 
him with heroic worship. From this circum- 
stance he was called Ophiuchus, and is said by 
some to have been placed among the stars. 
According to another tradition, Phorbas went 
from Thessaly to Olenos, where Alector, king 
of Elis, made use of his assistance against Pe- 
lops, and shared his kingdom with him. Phor- 
bas then gave his daughter Diogenia in mar- 
riage to Alector, and he himself married Hyr- 
mine, a sister of Alector, by whom he became 
the father of Augeas and Actor. He is also de- 
scribed as a bold boxer, and is said to have 
plundered the temple of Delphi along with the 
Phlegyae, but to have been defeated by Apollo. 
— [2. A Lesbian, father of Diomede, whom 
Achilles carried off. — 3. A Trojan, father of Ili- 
oneus — 4. Of Syene, son of Methion, confeder- 
ate of Phineus. — 5. One of the followers of 
.£neas, whose form was assumed by the god 
of Sleep to deceive Palinurus.] 

Phorcides, Phorcydes, or Phorcyxides, that 
is, the daughters of Phorcus and Ceto, or the 
Gorgonsand Grace. Vid. Gorgoxes and Gr^.^. 

Phorcus, Phorcys, or Phorcyn ($6p«of, 4>6p- 
-kuc $6pKw) 1. A sea-deity, is described by 
Homer as "the old man of the sea," to whom 
a harbor in Ithaca was dedicated, and is called 
the father of the nymph Thoosa. Later writers 
call him a son of Ponius and Ge (Terra), and a 
brother of Thaumas, Nereus, Eurybia, and Ceto. 
By his sister Ceto he became the father of the 
Greece and Gorgones, the Hesperian dragon, and 
the Hesperides ; and by Hecate or Cratais, he 
was the father of Scylla — 2. Son of Pheenops, 
commander of the Phrygians of Ascania, assist- 
ed Priam in the Trojan war, but was slain by 
Ajax. — [3 A Rutulian, father of seven sons, 
who fought on the side of Turnus against JEneas 
on his arrival in Italy.] 

Phormion {QopuLuv). 1. A celebrated Athe- 
nian general, the son of Asopius. He distin- 
guished himself particularly in the command of 
an Athenian fleet in the Corinthian Gulf, where 
with far inferior forces he gained some briliiant 
victories over the Peloponnesian fleet in B.C. 
429. In the ensuing winter he landed on the 
coast of Acarnania, and advanced into the in- 
terior, where he also gained some successes. 
He was a man of remarkably temperate habits, 
and a strict disciplinarian. — 2. A peripatetic 
philosopher of Ephesus. of whom is told the 
«tory that he discoursed for several hours be- 
fore Hannibal on the military art and the duties 
of a general. When his admiring auditory asked 
Hannibal what he thought of him, the laiter re- 
plied, that of all the old blockheads whom he 
-bad -seen, none could match Phormion. 

jH&okmsb otPhormcs ($(3p/iic, ^(>pp.og), a native 
ifMamalus in Arcadia, removed to Sicily, where 
660 



he became intimate with Gelon, whose children 
he educated. He distinguished himself as a sol- 
dier, both under Gelon and Hieron his brother. 
In gratitude for his martial successes, he dedi- 
cated gifts to Jupiter (Zeus) at Olympia, and to 
Apollo at Delphi. He is associated by Aristotle 
with Epicharmus as one of the originators of 
comedy, or of a particular form of it. 

Phoroneus (Qopuvevg), son of Inachus and 
the Oceanid Melia or Archia, was a brother of 
^Egialeus and the ruler of Argos. He was mar- 
ried to the nymph Laodice, by whom he became 
the father of Niobe, Apis, and Car. According 
to other writers, his sons were Pelasgus, Iasus, 
and Agenor, who, after their father's death, di- 
vided the kingdom of Argos among themselves. 
Phoroneus is said to have been the first who of- 
fered sacrifices to Juno (Hera) at Argos, and to 
have united the people, who until then had lived 
in scattered habitations, into a city, which was 
called after him, uarv Qopuvmov. The patro- 
nymic Phoronides is sometimes used for Ar- 
gives in general, and especially to designate 
Amphiaraus and Adrastus. 

Phoronis (Qopuvig), a surname of Io, being 
according to some a descendant, and according 
to others a sister of Phoroneus. 

Photius (3wio£-), patriarch of Constantinople 
in the ninth century, played a distinguished part 
in the political and religious history of his age. 
After holding various high offices in the Byzan- 
tine court, he was, although previously a lay- 
man, elected patriarch of Constantinople in A. 
D. 858, in place of Ignatius, who had been de- 
posed by Bardas, who was all-powerful at the 
court of his nephew Michael HI., then a minor. 
The patriarchate of Photius was a stormy one, 
and full of vicissitudes. The cause of Ignatius 
was espoused by the Romish Church, and Pho- 
tius thus became one of the great promoters of 
the schism between the Eastern and Western 
Churches. In 867, Photius was himself de- 
posed by the Emperor Basil I., and Ignatius was 
restored ; hut on the death of Ignatius in 877, 
Photius, who had meantime gained the favor of 
Basil, was again elevated to the patriarchate. 
On the death of Basil in 886, Photius was ac- 
cused of a conspiracy against the life of the 
new emperor Leo VI., and was banished to a 
monastery in Armenia, where he seems to have 
remained till his death. Photius was one of the 
most learned men of his time, and in the midst 
of a busy life found time for the composition of 
numerous works, several of which have come 
down to us Of these the most important is 
entitled Myriobiblon seu Bibliotheca (MvpLo6t6'Aov 
7) Bi6/uo6r,K7]). It may be described as an ex- 
tensive review of ancient Greek literature by a 
scholar of immense erudition and sound judg- 
ment. It is an extraordinary monument of lit- 
erary energy, for it was written while the au- 
thor was engaged in an embassy to Assyria, at 
the request ofPhotius's brother Tarasius, who 
desired an account of the books which Photius 
had read in his absence. It contains the analy- 
ses of, or extracts from, two hundred and eighty 
volumes ; and many valuable works are only 
known to us from the account which Photius 
has given of them. The best edition of this 
work is by Bekker, Berlin, 1824-1825. Photius 
was also the author of a Nomocanon, and of a 



PHRAATA. 



PHRYGIA. 



Lexicon or Glossary, which has reached us in a 
very imperfect state. It was first published by 
Hermann, Lips , 1808, and subsequently at Lon- 
don, 1822, from the papers of Porson. Photius 
likewise wrote many theological works, some 
of which have been published, and others still 
remain in MS. 

Phraata (ru QpdaTci, and other forms), a great 
city of Media Atropatene, the winter residence 
of the Parthian kings, especially as a refuge in 
time of war, lay southeast of Gaza, near the 
River Amardus. The mountain fortress of Vera 
{Ovepa), which was besieged by Antony, was 
probably the same place. 

Phraataces, king of Parthia. Vid. Arsaces, 
No. 16. 

Phraates, the names of four kings of Parthia. 
Vid. Arsaces, Nos. 5, 7, 12, 15. 

[Phradmon (<I>pa(5^(jv), of Argos, a statuary, 
whom Pliny places, as the contemporary of 
Polycletus, Myron, &c, at 01. 90, B.C. 420.] 

[Phragandje, a people of Thrace, on the bor- 
ders of Macedonia ] 

Phranza or Phranzes (Qpavrlfi or ^pav-tyc), 
the last and one of the most important Byzan- 
tine historians, was frequently employed on im- 
portant public business by Constantino XIII., 
the last emperor of Constantinople. On the 
capture of Constantinople by the Turks in 1453, 
Phranza was reduced to slavery, but succeeded 
in making his escape. He subsequently retired 
to a monastery, where he wrote his Chronicon. 
This work extends from 1259 to 1477, and is the 
most valuable authority for the history of the 
author's time, especially for the capture of Con- 
stantinople. It is edited by Alter, Vienna, 1796, 
and by Bekker, Bonn, 1838. 

Phraortes (<&paopT7]c), second king of Media, 
and son of Deioces, whom he succeeded, reigned 
from B.C. 656 to 634. He first conquered the 
Persians, and then subdued the greater part of 
Asia, but was at length defeated and killed while 
laying siege to Ninus (Nineveh), the capital of 
the Assyrian empire. He was succeeded by his 
son Cyaxares. 

[Phrasaortes (<bpaoa6pTrjc), son of Rheo- 
mithres, a Persian, who was appointed by Alex- 
ander the Great satrap of the province of Per- 
sia Proper, B.C. 331. He died during the expe- 
dition of the king to India.] 

[Phratagune (Q>paTaynvv7)), a wife of Darius 
I., king of Persia, whose two children by this 
monarch fell at the battle of Thermopylae.] 

[Parataphernes (QparaoEpvTic), leader of the 
Parthians, Hyrcanians, and Tapurians in the 
army of Darius at Gaugamela. He came after 
the death of Darius to Alexander, when the lat- 
ter entered Hyrcania. and made his submission 
to him. He proved himself on several occa- 
sions worthy of confidence, so that Alexander 
gave back to him his satrapies Parthia and Hyr- 
cania. In the division of the provinces B.C. 323, 
he still retained Hyrcania.] 

Phricium (QpLKiov), a mountain in the east of 
Locris, near Thermopylae. 

Phriconis. V id. Cyme, Larissa, II., 2. 

Phrixa ($pf'frz, $ptfat, QoiSai: now Pakofu- 
naro), a town of Elis in Triphylia, on the bor- 
ders of Pisatis, was situated upon a steep hill 
on the River Alpheus, and was thirty stadia 
from Olyrapia. It was founded by the Min- 



yae, and is said to have derived its name from 
Phrixus. 

Phrixus ($pi'foc), son of Athamas and Ne- 
phele, and brother of Helle. In consequence of 
the intrigues of his step-mother Ino, he was to 
be sacrificed to Jupiter (Zeus) ; but Nephele res- 
cued her two children, who rode away through 
the air upon the ram with the golden fleece, the 
gift of Mercury (Hermes). Between Sigeum 
and the Chersonesus, Helle fell into the sea, 
which was called after her, the Hellespont ; but 
Phrixus arrived in safety in Colchis, the king- 
dom of^Eetes, who gave "him his daughter Chal- 
ciope in marriage. Phrixus sacrificed the ram 
which had carried him to Jupiter (Zeus) Phyx- 
ius or Laphystius, and gave its fleece to ^Eetes, 
who fastened it to an oak-tree in the grove of 
Mars (Ares). This fleece was afterward car- 
ried away by Jason and the Argonauts. Vid. 
Jason. By Chalcidspe Phrixus became the fa- 
ther of Argus, Melas, Phrontis, Cyt isorus, and 
Presbon. Phrixus either died of old age in the 
kingdom of JEetes, or was killed by .^Eetes in 
consequence of an oracle, or returned to Orcho- 
menus, in the country of the Minyans. 

Phrixus (4>pt?of), a river in Argolis, which 
flows into the Argolio Gulf between ToJnenism 
and Lerna. 

[Phronima ($pavtf>7j), daughter of Et< aretn s-. 
king of Axus in Crete, was, at the instigation 
of her step-mother, cast into the sea, but wat; 
saved, and afterward married to PolymnesUv?. 
to whom she bore Battus.] 

[Phrontis (bpovTLc). 1. Bern of Onetor, pilos- 
of the ship of Meneiaus. — 2. Wife of Panlhous.^ 

Phrygia Mater, a name frequently givon to 
Cybele, because she was especially worshipped 
in Phrygia. 

Phrygia (Jbpvyia : fywfj pi. Qpoytc* Phryx,. 
Phryges), a country of Asia Minor, which was 
of very different extent at different periods- 
According to the division of the provinces un- 
der the Roman empire, Phrygia formed the 
eastern part of the province of Asia, and was 
bounded on the west by Mysia, Lydia, andCaria,, 
on the south by Lycia and Pisidia, on the east 
by Lycaonia (which is often reckoned as a part 
of Phrygia) and Galatia (which formerly belong- 
ed to Phrygia). and on the north by Bithynia, 
With reference to its physical geography, it 
formed the western part (as Cappadocia did the 
eastern) of the great central table-land of Asia- 
Minor, supported by the chains of Olympus or 
the north and Taurus on the south, and break- 
ing on the west into the ridges which separate 
the great valleys of the Hermits, the Mjeander, 
&c, and which forms the headlands of the west- 
ern coast. This table-land itself was intersect- 
ed by mountain chains, and watered by the up- 
per courses and tributaries of the rivers just 
mentioned in its western part, and in its north- 
ern part by those of the Rhyndacus and Sanga- 
rius. These parts of the country were very 
fertile, especially in the valley of the Sangarius. 
but in the south and east the streams which de- 
scend from Taurus lose themselves in extensive 
salt marshes and salt lakes, some of which are 
still famous, as in ancient times, for their man- 
ufactures of salt. The Phrygians were a dis- 
tinct and remarkable people, whose origin is- 
one of the most difficult problems of atrtiquitv 

661 



PHRYGIA. 

They claimed a very high antiquity ; and ac- 
cording to the amusing account given by He- 
rodotus of the absurd experiment of Psammeti- 
chus. king of Egypt, on the first spontaneous 
speech of children, they were thought to have 
been proved the most ancient of people. Else- 
where Herodotus mentions a Macedonian tra- 
dition that the Phryges formerly dwelt in Ma- 
cedonia, under the name of Briges ; and later 
writers add that they passed over into Asia 
Minor one hundred years after the Trojan war. 
They are, however, mentioned by Homer as 
already settled on the banks of the Sangarius, 
where later writers tell us of the powerful 
Phrygian kingdom of Gordius and Midas. Al- 
though any near approach to certainty is hope- 
less, it would seem that they were a branch of 
the great Thracian family, settled, in times of 
unknown antiquity, in the northwest of Asia 
Minor, as far as the shores of the Hellespont 
and Propontis, and perhaps of the Euxine, and 
that the successive migrations of other Thra- 
cian tribes, as the Thyni, Bithyni, Mysians. 
and Teucrians, drove them further inland, till, 
from this cause, and perhaps, too, by the con- 
quests of the Phrygian kings in the opposite di- 
rection, they reached the Halys on the east and 
the Taurus on the south. They were not, how- 
ever, entirely displaced by the Mysians and Teu- 
crians from the country between the shores of 
the Hellespont and Propontis and Mounts Ida 
and Olympus, where they continued side by 
side with the Greek colonies, and where their 
name was preserved in that of the district un- 
der all subsequent changes, namely, Phrygia 
Minor or Phrygia Hellespontcs. The king- 
dom of Phrygia was conquered by Croesus, and 
formed part of the Persian, Macedonian, and 
Syro-Grecian empires ; but, under the last, the 
northeastern part, adjacent to Paphlagonia and 
the Halys, was conquered by the Gauls, and 
formed the western part of Galatia ; and a part 
west of this, containing the richest portion of 
the country, about the Sangarius, was subject- 
ed by the kings of Bithynia : this last portion 
was the object of a contest between the kings 
of Bithynia and Pergamus, but at last, by the 
decision of the Romans, it was added, under the 
name of Phrygia Epicietus £ttlkt?]toc. i. e., 
the acquired Phrygia), to the kingdom of Per- : 
gamus, to which the whole of Phrygia was as- j 
signed by the Romans, after the overthrow of j 
Antiochus the Great in B.C. 190. With the | 
rest of the kingdom of Pergamus, Phrygia pass- 
ed to the Romans by the testament of Attalus ! 
III., and thus became a part of the province of j 
Asia, B.C. 130. As to the distinctive names: 
the inland district usually understood by the \ 
name of Phrygia. when it occurs alone, was j 
also called Great Phrygia, or Phrygia Proper, ! 
in contradistinction to the Lesser Phrygia, or j 
Phrygia on the Hellespont ; and of this Great 
or Proper Phrygia, the northern part w^s call- ! 
ed, as just stated, Phrygia Epictetus, and the j 
southern part, adjacent to the Taurus, was call- 
ed, from its position, Phrygia Parorios -apo- 1 
oeloq). At the division of the provinces in the , 
fourth century, the last-mentioned part, also 
called Phrygia Pisidica, was assigned to Pisid- 
ia, and the southwestern portion, about the 
Mjeander, to Caria ; and the remainder was di- | 
662 



PHRYNICHUS. 

vided into Phrygia Salutaris on the east, with 
Synnada for its capital, and Phrygia Pacatiana 
j on the west, extending north and south from 
Bithynia to Pamphylia. Phrygia was rich in 
j products of every kind. Its mountains furnish- 
ed gold and marble ; its valleys oil and wine ; 
| the less fertile hills in the west afforded pasture 
■. for sheep, whose wool was highly celebrated ; 
ana even the marshes of the southeast furnish- 
ed abundance of salt. In connection with the 
i early intellectual culture of Greece, Phrygia is 
highly important. The earliest Greek music, 
" : especially that of the flute, was borrowed in 
part, through the Asiatic colonies, from Phrygia, 
: and one of the three musical modes was called 
i the Phrygian. With this country also were 
; closely associated the orgies of Bacchus (Dio- 
| nysus), and of Cybele, the mother of the gods, 
; the Phrygia Mater of the Roman poets. After 
the Persian conquest, however, the Phrygians 
seem to have lost all intellectual activity, and 
they became proverbial among the Greeks and 
Romans for submissiveness and stupidity. It 
should be observed that the Roman poets con- 
stantly use the epithet Phrygian as equivalent 
to Trojan. 

Phryne {Qpyvq), one of the most celebrated 
Athenian hetaerae, was a native of Thespiae in 
Boeotia. Her beauty procured for her so much 
wealth that she is said to have offered to re- 
build the wails of Thebes, after they had been 
destroyed by Alexander, if she might be allow- 
ed to put up this inscription on the walls : 
■'Alexander destroyed them, but Phryne, the 
hetsera, rebuilt them." She had among her ad- 
mirers many of the most celebrated men of the 
age of Philip and Alexander, and the beauty of 
her form gave rise to some of the greatest works 
of art. The most celebrated picture of Apelles, 
his Venus Anadyomene"(r£d. Apelles), is said 
to have been a representation of Phryne, who, 
at a public festival at Eleusis, entered the sea 
with dishevelled hair. The celebrated Cnidian 
Venus of Praxiteles, who was one of her lovers, 
was taken from her. 

Phrynichus {Qpvvixoc). 1. An Athenian, and 
one of the early tragic poets, is said to have- 
been the disciple of Thespis. He gained his 
first tragic victory in B.C. 511, twenty -four 
years after Thespis (535), twelve years after 
Chcerilus (523), and twelve years before .Eschy- 
lus (499); and his last in 476, on which occa- 
sion Themistocles was his choragus, and record- 
ed the event by an inscription. Phrynichus 
probably went, like other poets of the age, to 
the court of Hiero, and there died. In all the 
accounts of the rise and development of trage- 
dy, the chief place after Thespis is assigned tc 
Phrynichus, and the improvements which he 
introduced in the internal poetical character of 
the drama entitle him to be considered as the 
real inventor of tragedy. For the light, ludi- 
crous, Bacchanalian stories of Thespis, he sub- 
stituted regular and serious subjects, taken 
either from the heroic age, or the heroic deeds 
which illustrated the history of his own time. 
In these he aimed, not so much to amuse the 
audience as to move their passions ; and sc 
powerful was the effect of his tragedy on the 
capture of Miletus, that the audience burst into 
tears, and fined the poet one thousand drachmae, 



PHRYNNIS. 



PIIYLE. 



because he had exhibited the sufferings of a j 
kindred people, and even passed a law that no 
one should ever again make use of that drama. ! 
To the light mimetic chorus of Thespis he add- j 
ed the sublime music of dithyramhic choruses. 
Aristophanes more than once contrasts these 
ancient and beautiful melodies with the involved 
refinements of later poets. Phrynichus was the 
first poet who introduced masks, representing 
female persons in the drama. He also paid par- 
ticular attention to the dances of the chorus. 
In the drama of Phrynichus, however, the chorus 
still retained the principal place, and it was re- 
served foriEschylus and Sophocles to bring the 
dialogue and action into their due position. 
rThefew fragments of Phrynichus are given by 
Wagner in Trag. Grac. Fragm. (in Didot's Bibl. 
Graeca), p. 10-16 ] — 2. A distinguished comic 
poet of the Old Comedy, was a contemporary 
of Eupolis, and flourished B.C. 429. [The frag- \ 
ments are given by Meineke, Com. Grac. Frag., J 
i., 228-40, ed. minor.]— 3. A Greek sophist and 
grammarian, described by some as an Arabian, 
and by others as a Bithynian, lived under M. 
Aurelius and Commodus. His great work was 
entitled Zotpiorinr/ YlapaaKev^, in thirty-seven 
books, of which we still possess a fragment, 
published by Bekker, in his Anecdota Graca, 
Berol., 1814, vol. i. He also wrote a Lexicon 
of Attic words ( J E«/\oyr/ prjfidTuv nai bvo/idruv 
'Attikuv), which is extant : the best edition is 
by Lobeck, Lips., 1830. 

Phrynnis (Qpvvvic) or Phrynis (Qpvvtc), a 
celebrated dithyrambic poet, of the time of the 
Peloponnesian war, was a native of Mytilene, 
but flourished at Athens. His innovations, ef- 
feminacies, and frigid ness are repeatedly at- 
tacked by the comic poets. Among the innova- 
tions which he is said to have made was the 
addition of two strings to the heptachord. He 
was the first who gained the victory in the 
musical contests established by Pericles, in con- 
nection with the Panathenaic festival, probably 
in B.C. 445. 

[Phrynon (fypvvuv), an Athenian, who had 
been an Olympian victor, and was celebrated 
for his strength and courage, commanded the 
Athenian forces in their contest with the Myti- 
leneans for the possession of Sigeum. He en- 
gaged in single combat with Pittacus {vid. Pit- 
tacus), who entangled him in a net, and then 
dispatched him with a trident and a dagger, just 
as the rctiarii afterward fought at Rome.] 

Phthia. Vid. Phthiotis. 

Phthiotis (Qdiuric : bdiuTTjc), a district in thte 
southeast of Thessaly, bounded on the south by 
the Maliac Gulf, and on the east by the Pagasaean 
Gulf, and inhabited by Achaeans. Vid. Thes- 
salia. Homer calls it Phthia ($06/), and men- 
tions a city of the same name, which was cele- 
brated as the residence of Achilles. Hence the 
poets call Achilles Phthius heros, and his father 
Peleus Phthius rev. 

Phthira (ru bdLpa, bdeipuv opog), a mountain 
of Caria, forming a part or a branch of Latmus, 
inhabited by a people called bdipec. 

Phthirophagi (Qdeipoodyot, i. e., eaters of lice, 
[or, according to another derivation, eaters of 
pine-cones (from ipdtip, the fruit of the ttltvc <pdei- 
po$6poc\ as the Budini (Hdt., iv., 109). Vid. 
Hitter, Vorhalle, p. 459]), a Scythian people near 



the Caucasus, or, according to some, beyond the 
River Rha, in Sarmatia Asiatica. 

Phya. Vid. Pisistratus. 

Phycus (Qvkovc : now Ras-Scm or Ras-el- 
Kazat), a promontory on the coast of Cyrenaica, 
a little west of Apollonia and northwest of Gy- 
rene. It is the northernmost headland of Lib- 
ya east of the Lesser Syrtis, and the nearest 
point of this coast to that of Europe, the distance 
from Phycus to Tasnarum, the southern prom- 
ontory of Peloponnesus, being two hundred and 
eight miles. There was a small town of the 
same name on the headland. 

Phylace {^vAuurj). 1. A small town of Thes- 
saly in Phthiotis, southeast of Eretria, and east 
of Enipeus, on the northern slope of Mount 
Othrys. It was the birth-place of Protesilaus. 
— 2. A town of Epirus in Molossia.— 3. A town 
in Arcadia, near the sources of the Alpheus, on 
the frontiers of Tegea and Laconia. 

Phylacus {$v?mkoc). 1. Son of Deion and Dio- 
mede, and husband of Periclymene or Clymene, 
the daughter of Minyas, by whom he became 
the father of Iphiclus and Alcimede. He was 
believed to be the founder of the town of Phy- 
lace, in Thessaly. Either from his name or 
that of the town, his descendants, Phylacus, 
Iphiclus, and Protesilaus, are called Phylacida. 
— [2. A Trojan warrior, slain by Leitus. — 3. A 
Delphian hero, to whom a sanctuary was dedi- 
cated at Delphi. — 4. Son of Histiaeus of Samos.] 

Phylarchus {$vlapxo<,), a Greek historical 
writer, and a contemporary of Aratus, was prob- 
ably a native of Naucratis in Egypt, but spent 
the greater part of his life at Athens. His great 
work was a history in twenty-eight books, which 
embraced a period of fifty-two years, from the 
expedition of Pyrrhus into Peloponnesus, B.C. 
272, to the death of Cleomenes, 220. Phylar- 
chus is vehemently attacked by Polybius, who 
charges him with falsifying history through his 
partiality to Cleomenes, and his hatred against 
Aratus and the Achaeans. The accusation is 
probably not unfounded, but it might be retort- 
ed with equal justice upon Polybius, who has 
fallen into the opposite error of exaggerating 
the merits of Aratus and his party, and depre- 
ciating Cleomenes. The style of Phylarchus 
appears to have been too oratorical and declam- 
atory ; but it was, at the same time, lively and 
attractive. The fragments of Phylarchus have 
been collected by Lucht, Lips., 1836 ; by Bruck- 
ner, Vratisl., 1838 ; and by Muller, Fragm. His- 
tor. Grac, Paris, 1840. 

Phylas ($vlac). 1. King of the Dryopes, 
was attacked and slain by Hercules because he 
had violated the sanctuary of Delphi. By his 
daughter Midea, Hercules became the father of 
Antiochus. — 2. Son of Antiochus, and grandson 
of Hercules and Midea, was married to Deiphile, 
by whom he had two sons, Hippotas and Thero. 
— 3. King of Ephyra in Thesprotia, and the fa- 
ther of Polymele and Astyoche, by the latter of 
whom Hercules was the father of Tlepolemus. 

Phyle (<&vXr/ : ^vTiuaioc : now F'di), a demus 
in Attica, and a strongly fortified place, belong- 
ing to the tribe GEneis, was situated on the con- 
fines of Bceotia, and on the southwestern slope 
of Mount Parties. It is memorable as the place 
which Thrasybulus and the Athenian patriots 
seized soon after the end of the Peloponnesian 

663 



PHYLEUS. 



PICTOR, FABIUS. 



war, B.C. 404, and whence they directed their 
operations against the thirty tyrants at Athens. 

Phyleus ($uAevc), son of Augeas, was ex- 
pelled oy his father from Ephyra because he 
gave evidence in favor of Hercules. (Vid. p. 
357, b.) He then emigrated to Dulichium. By 
Ctimene or Timandra he became the father of 
Meges, who is hence called Phylides. 

[Phyllidas ($v?M6ag), a Theban, secretary 
to the polemarchs who held office under Spartan 
protection, after the seizure of the Cadmea by 
Phcebidas. He was a secret enemy of the new 
government, and contributed greatly to the suc- 
cess of the plot formed by Pelopidas for the 
liberation of his country from Spartan tyranny ] 

Phyllis. Vid. Demophon, No. 2. 

Phyllis ($v?Jac), a district in Thrace south 
of the Strymon, near Mount Pangaeus. 

[Phyllis, the nurse of Domitian, whom she 
buried after his assassination.] 

Phyllus {^vHoq : now Petrino), a town of 
Thessaly, in the district Thessaliotis, north of 
Metropolis. 

[Phylo ($vAw), one of the female attendants 
of Helen ] 

Physca ($v<jna), a town of Macedonia, in the 
district Eordaea. 

Physcon. Vid. Ptolem^us. 

Physcus (§v<7Kog). I. A city of the Ozolian 
Locrians in Northern Greece. — 2. (Now Paitch- 
shin). a town on the southern coast of Caria, in 
the Rhodian territory, with an excellent harbor, 
which was used as the port of Mylasa, and was 
the landing-place for travellers coming from 
Rhodes. — 3. (Now Odorneh), an eastern tribu- 
tary of the Tigris in Lower Assyria. The town 
of Opis stood at its junction with the Tigris. 

Phyt^eum ($vTatov : ^vralo^), a town in ^Eto- 
iia, southeast of Thermum, on the Lake Tri- 
chonis. 

Piceni. Vid. Picenum. 

Picentes. Vid. Picenum. 

Picentia (Picentinus : now Viccnza), a town 
in the south of Campania, at the head of the 
Sinus Paestanus, and between Salernum and 
the frontiers of Lucania, the inhabitants of 
which were compelled by the Romans, in con- 
sequence of their revolt to Hannibal, to abandon 
their town and live in the neighboring villages. 
Between the town and the frontiers of Lucania, 
there was an ancient temple of the Argive Juno, 
said to have been founded by Jason, the Argo- 
naut. The name of Picentini was not confined 
to the inhabitants of Picentia, but was given to 
the inhabitants of the whole coast of the Sinus 
Paestanus, from the promontory of Minerva to 
the River Silarus. They were a portion of the 
Sabine Picentes, who were transplanted by the 
Romans to this part of Campania after the con- 
quest of Picenum, B.C. 268, at which time they 
founded the town of Picentia. 

Picentini. Vid. Picentia and Picenum. 

Picenum (Picentes, sing. Picens, more rarely 
Picentini and Piceni), a country in Central Ita- 
ly, was a narrow strip of land along the west- 
ern coast of the Adriatic, and was bounded on 
the north by Umbria, from which it was sepa- 
rated by the River /Esis, on the west by Ura- 
tria and the territory of the Sabines, and on 
the south by the territory of the Marsi and Ves- 
tini, from which it was separated by a ran<?e of 
664 



hills and by the River Matrinus. It is said to 
have derived its name from the bird picus, 
which directed the Sabine immigrants into the 
land, or from a mythical leader Picus : some 
modern writers connect the name with the 
Greek 7tevkij, a pine-tree, on account of the pine- 
trees growing in the country on the slopes of 
the Apennines ; but none of these etymologies 
can be received. Picenum formed the fifth re- 
gion in the division of Italy made by Augustus. 
The country was traversed by a number of hills 
of moderate height, eastern offshoots of the 
Apennines, and was drained by several small 
rivers flowing into the Adriatic through the 
valleys between these hills. The country was 
upon the whole fertile, and was especially cel- 
ebrated for its apples ; but the chief employ- 
ment of the inhabitants was the feeding of 
cattle and swine. The Picentes, as already 
remarked, were Sabine immigrants ; but the 
population of the country appears to have been 
of a mixed nature. The Umbrians were in pos- 
session of the land when it was conquered by 
the Sabine Picentes, and some of the Umbrian 
population became intermingled with their Sa- 
bine conquerors. In addition to this, the south- 
ern part of the country was for a time in pos- 
session of the Liburnians. and Ancona w T as oc- 
cupied by Greeks from Syracuse. In B.C. 299 
the Picentes made a treaty with the Romans ; 
but having revolted in 269, they were defeated 
by the consul Sempronius Sophus in the follow- 
ing year, and were obliged to submit to the Ro- 
man supremacy. A portion of the people was 
transplanted to the coast of the Sinus Paesta- 
nus, where they founded the town Picentia. 
Vid. Picentia. Two or three years afterward 
the Romans sent colonies to Firmum and Cas- 
trum Novum in Picenum, in order to secure 
their newly-conquered possession. The Picen- 
tes fought with the other Socii against Rome 
in the Social or Marsic war (90-89), and receiv- 
ed the Roman franchise at the close of it. 

Pictavi. Vid. Pictones. 

Picti, a people inhabiting the northern part oi 
Britain, appear to have been either a tribe of 
the Caledonians, or the same people as the Cal- 
edonians, though under another name. They 
were called Picti by the Romans, from their 
practice of painting their bodies. They are first 
mentioned by the rhetorician Eumenius in an 
oration addressed to Constantius Chlorus, A.D. 
296 ; and after this time their name frequently 
occurs in the R,oman writers, and often in con- 
nection with that of the Scoti. In the next cen- 
tury we find them divided into two tribes, the 
Dicaledonae or Dicaledones.and the Vecturiones 
or Vecturones. At a still later period their prin- 
cipal seat was in the northeast of Scotland. 

Pictones, subsequently Pictavi, a powerful 
people on the coast of Gallia Aquitanica, whose 
territory extended north as far as the Liger 
(now Loire), and east probably as far the River 
Creusc. Their chief town was Limonum, sub- 
sequently Pictavi (now Poitiers). 

Pictoe, Fabius. 1. C, painted the temple 
of Salus, which the dictator C. Junius Brutu3 
Bubulcus contracted for in his censorship, B.C 
307, and dedicated in his dictatorship, 302 
j This painting, which must have been on the 
; walls of the temple, was probably a represcnta 



PICUMNUS. 



PILIA. 



tion of the battle which Bubulcus had gained 
against the Samnites. This is the earliest Ro- 
man painting of which we have any record. It 
was preserved till the reign of Claudius, when 
me temple was destroyed by fire. Ih conse- 
quence of this painting, C. Fabius received the 
surname of Pictor, which was borne by his de- 
scendants.— 2. 0., son of No. 1, consul 269.— 
3. N. (i. c, Numerius), also son of No. 1, con- 
sul 266.-4. Q , son of No. 2, was the most an- 
cient writer of Roman history in prose. He 
served in the Gallic war 225. and also in the 
second Punic war. His history, which was 
written in Greek, began with the arrival of 
./Eneas in Italy, and came down to his own 
time. Hence Polybius speaks of him as one 
of the historians of the second Punic war. [A 
few fragments of the history of Pictor are col- 
lected by Krause in Fragmenta Historicorum 
Lat., p. 52-63.]— 5. Q., prajtor 189, and flamen 
Quir'inalis. — 6. Sew., is said by Cicero to have 
been well skilled in law, literature, and antiqui- 
ty. He lived about B.C. 150. He appears to 
be the same as the Fabius Pictor who wrote a 
work De Jure Pontificio, in several books. He 
probably wrote Annals likewise in the Latin 
language, since Cicero {de Orat., ii., 12) speaks 
of a Latin annalist Pictor, whom he places after 
Cato, but before Piso ; which corresponds with 
the time at which Ser. Pictor lived, but could 
not apply to Q. Pictor, who lived in the time 
of the second Punic war. 

Picumnus and Pilumnus, two Roman divin- j 
ities, were regarded as two brothers, and as the 
beneficent gods of matrimony in the rustic re- 1 
ligion of the ancient Romans. A couch was 
prepared for them in the house in which there 
was a newly-born child. Piiumnus was be- 
lieved to ward off all sufferings from the infant 
with his pilum, with which he taught to pound 
the grain ; and Picumnus, who, under the name 
of Sterquilinius, was believed to have discov- 
ered the use of manure for the fields, conferred 
upon the infant strength and prosperity. Hence 
ooth were also looked upon as the gods of good 
deeds, and were identified with Castor and Pol- 
lux. When Danati landed in Italy, Picumnus 
is said to have built with her the town of Ar- 
dea, and to have become by her the father of 
Daunus. 

Picus {UIkoc), a Latin prophetic divinity, is 
described as a son of Saturnus or Sterculus, as 
the husband of Canens, and the father of Fau- 
nus. In some traditions he was called the first 
king of Italy. He was a famous soothsayer and 
augur, and as he made use in his prophetic art 
of a picus (a woodpecker), he himself was also 
called Picus. He was represented in a rude 
and primitive manner as a wooden pillar with 
a woodpecker on the top of it, but afterward 
as a young man with a woodpecker on his 
head. The whole legend of Picus is founded 
on the notion that the woodpecker is a prophet- 
ic bird, sacred to Mars. Pomona, it is said, 
was beloved by him, and when Circe's love for 
him was not requited, she changed him into a 
woodpecker, who, however, retained the pro- 
phetic powers which he had formerly possessed 
as a man. 

fPiDYTEs (Uidvrric), of Percote, an ally of the 

Tn: : ; :uis. was slain by Ulysses.] 



[Pielus {UUloc), son of Pyrrhus and An- 
dromache, brother of Molossus and Pergamus.] 

Pieria (lliepta : Uiepeg). 1. A narrow slip of 
country on the southeastern coast of Macedo- 
nia, extending from the mouth of the Peneus in 
Thessaly to the Haliacmon, and bounded on the 
west by Mount Olympus and its offshoots. A 
portion of these mountains was called by the 
ancient writers Pierus, or the Pierian Mount- 
ain. The inhabitants of this country, the Pie- 
res, were a Thracian people, and are celebrated 
in the early history of Greek poetry and music, 
since their country was one of the earliest seats 
of the worship of the Muses, and Orpheus is said 
to have been buried there. After the establish- 
ment of the Macedonian kingdom in Emathia 
in the seventh century B.C., Pieria was con- 
quered by the Macedonians, and the inhabitants 
were driven out of the country. — 2. A district 
in Macedonia, east of the Stryrnon near Mount 
Pangajum, where the Pierians settled, who had 
been driven out of their original abodes by the 
Macedonians, as already related. They pos- 
sessed in this district the fortified towns of 
Phagres and Pergamus. — 3. A district on the 
northern coast of Syria, so called from the 
Mountain Pieria, a branch of the Amanus, a 
name given to it by the Macedonians after their 
conquest of the East. In this district was the 
city of Seleucia, which is distinguished from 
other cities of the same name as Seleucia in 
Pieria. 

Pierides (Uteptdec). 1. A surname of the 
Muses, which they derived from Pieria, near 
Mount Olympus, where they were first worship- 
ped among the Thracians. Some derived the 
name from an ancient king Pierus, who is said 
to have emigrated from Thrace into Boeotia. 
and to have established their worship at Thes- 
piag. Pieris also occurs in the singular. — 2. 
The nine daughters of Pierus, king of Emathia 
(Macedonia), whom he begot by Euippe or An- 
tiope, and to whom he gave the names of the 
nine Muses. They afterward entered into a 
contest with the Muses, and, being conquered, 
they were metamorphosed into birds called Co- 
lymbas, Iyngx, Cenchris, Cissa, Chloris, Aca- 
lanthis, Nessa, Pipo, and Dracontis. 

Pierus (lllepoc). 1. Mythological. Vid. Pie- 
rides. — 2. A mountain. Vid. Pieria, No. I. 

Pietas, a personification of faithful attach- 
ment, love, and veneration among the Romans 
At first she had only a small sanctuary at Rome, 
but in B.C. 191 a larger one was built. She is 
represented on Roman coins as a matron throw- 
ing incense upon an altar, and her attributes 
are a stork and children. She is sometimes 
represented as a female figure offering her 
breast to an aged parent. 

Pietas Julia. Vid. Pola. 

Pigres (WyoTx)' of Halicarnassus, either the 
brother or the son of the celebrated Artemisia, 
queen of Caria. He is said to have been the 
author of the Margites, and the Batrachomyo- 
machia. 

[Pig rum Mare, called by the Greeks 6 Kpo- 
vloc 'Qiceavoc, the names under which the Arctic 
or Frozen Oeean was known to the ancients.] 

Pilia, the wife of T. Pomponius Atticus, to 
whom she was married on the 12th of Februa- 
ry, B.C. 56. In the summer of the following 

665 



PILORUS. 



PINDARUS. 



^ear she bore her husband a daughter, who sub- 
sequently married Vipsanius Agrippa. 

Pilokus (Rilupoq), a town of Macedonia in 
Chalcidice, at the head of the Singitic Gulf. 

PlLUMN'US. Vid. PlCUMNOS. 

Pikplea (Uiu-leia), a town in the Macedo- 
nian province of Pieria, sacred to the Muses, 
who were hence called Pimpleides. 

[Pimprama (UiuTrpafia), the capital city of the 
Adraistse, a tribe in the northwest of India in- 
tra Gangem.] 

Pinara (to. Ulvapa : Uivapevc ■ ruins at Pina- 
ra or Minara), an inland city of Lycia, some dis- 
tance west of the River Xanthus, at the foot of 
Mount Cragus. Here Pandarus was worship- 
ped as a hero. 

Pinaria Gens, one of the most ancient pa- 
trician gentes at Rome, traced its origin to a 
time long previous to the foundation of the city. 
The legend related that when Hercules came 
into Italy, he was hospitably received on the 
spot where Rome was afterward built by the 
Potitii and the Pinarii, two of the most distin- 
guished families in the country. The hero, in 
return, taught them the way in which he was 
to be worshipped ; but as the Pinarii were not 
at hand when the sacrificial banquet was ready, 
and did not come till the entrails of the victim 
were eaten, Hercules, in anger, determined that 
the Pinarii should in all future time be excluded 
from partaking of the entrails of the victims, 
and that in all matters relating to his worship 
they should be inferior to the Potitii. These 
two families continued to be the hereditary 
priests of Hercules till the censorship of App. 
Claudius (B.C. 312), who purchased from the 
Potitii the knowledge of the sacred rites, and 
intrusted them to public slaves ; whereat the 
god was so angry that the whole Potitia gens, 
containing twelve families and thirty grown-up 
men, perished within a year, or, according to 
other accounts, within thirty days, and Appius 
himself became blind. The Pinarii did not 
share in the guilt of communicating the sacred 
knowledge, and therefore did not receive the 
same punishment as the Potitii, but continued 
in existence to the latest times. It appears that 
the worship of Hercules by the Potitii and Pi- 
narii was a sacrum gentilitium belonging to these 
gentes, and that in the time of Appius Claudius 
these sacra privata were made sacra publica. The 
Pinarii were divided into the families of Mamer- 
cinus,Natta, Posca, Rusca, and Scarpus, but none 
of them obtained sufficient importance to require 
a separate notice. 

Pinarius, L. [1. The commander of the Ro- 
man garrison at Enna in the second Punic war, 
B.C. 214, suppressed with vigor an attempt at 
insurrection which the inhabitants made.] — 2. 
The great-nephew of the dictator C. Julius Cee- 
sar, being the grandson of Julia, Caesar's eldest 
sister. In the will of the dictator, Pinarius was 
named one of his heirs along with his two oth- 
er great-nephews, C. Octavius and Q. Pedius, 
Octavius obtaining three fourths of the prop- 
erty, and the remaining fourth being divided 
between Pinarius and Pedius. [Pinarius after- 
ward served in the army of the triumvirs in the 
war against Brutus and Cassius.] 

Pinarus {Tlivapnc), a river of Cilicia, rising in 
Mons Amanus, and falling into the Gulf of Issus 
§66 



! near Issus, between the mouth of the Pyramua 

! and the Syrian frontier. 

PiNDARus(riiv^apof). 1 The greatest lyric poet 
j of Greece, was born either at Thebes or at Cy- 
! noscephalae, a village in the territory of Thebes, 
about B.C. 522. His family was one of the 
noblest in Thebes, and seems also to have been 
celebrated for its skill in music. The father or 
uncle of Pindar was a flute-player, and Pindar 
at an early age received instruction in the art 
from the flute-player Scopelinus. But the youth 
soon gave indications of a genius for poetry, 
which induced his father to send him to Athens 
to receive more perfect instruction in the art 
Later writers tell us that his future glory as a 
poet was miraculously foreshadowed by a swarm 
of bees which rested upon his lips while he was 
asleep, and that this miracle first led him to 
compose poetry. At Athens Pindar became the 
pupil of Lasus of Hermione, the founder of the 
i Athenian school of dithyrambic poetry. He re- 
j turned to Thebes before he completed his twen- 
tieth year, and is said to have received instruc- 
tion there from Myrtis and Corinna of Tanagra, 
two poetesses who then enjoyed great celeb- 
j rity in Bceotia. With both these poetesses Pin- 
| dar contended for the prize in the musical con- 
| tests at Thebes ; and he is said to have been 
! defeated five times by Corinna. Pindar com- 
j menced his professional career as a poet at an. 
| early age, and was soon employed by different 
| states and princes in all parts of the Hellenic 
world to compose for them choral songs for 
I special occasions. He received money and pres- 
I ents for his works ; but he never degenerated 
into a common mercenary poet, and he contin- 
ued to preserve to his latest days the respect of 
j all parts of Greece. He composed poems for 
j Hieron, tyrant of Syracuse, Alexander, son of 
I Amyntas, king of Macedonia, Theron, tyrant of 
Agrigentum, Arcesilaus, king of Cyrene, as well 
as for many free states and private persons. He 
was courted especially by Alexander, king of 
Macedonia, and Hieron, tyrant of Syracuse ; and 
the praises which he bestowed upon the former 
I are said to have been the chief reason which led 
his descendant, Alexander, the son of Philip, to 
spare the house of the poet when he destroyed 
the rest of Thebes. Pindar's stated residence 
was at Thebes, though he frequently left home 
in order to witness the great public games, and 
to visit the states and distinguished men who 
courted his friendship and employed his serv- 
ices. Thus about B.C. 473 he visited the court 
of Hieron at Syracuse, where he remained four 
years. He probably died in his eightieth year 
in 442. The only poems of Pindar which have 
j come down to us entire are his Epinicia, or tri- 
umphal odes. But these were but a small por- 
I tion of his works. Besides his triumphal odes, 
! he wrote hymns to the gods, pagans, dithyrambs, 
I odes for processions (-pocodta), songs of maid- 
| ens (izapdeveia), mimic dancing songs (vTropxfj- 
fiara), drinking-songs (c.<6?ua), dirges (&fnjvoi), 
j and encomia (kyKUfita), or panegyrics on princes. 
Of these we have numerous fragments. Most 
of them are mentioned in the well-known lines 
of Horace (Carm., iv., 2) : 

" Seu per audaces nova dithyrambos 
Verba devolvit, numerisque fertur 
Lege solutis : 



PINDASUS. 



Seu deoa (hymns and paans) regcsve 

(encomia) canit, deorum 
Sanguinem 

Sive quos Eloa domum reducit 
Palma coelcstes (tkc Epinicia) : . . . 
Flebili spouses jureucinve raptum 
Plorat" [the dirges). 

In all of these varieties Pindar equally excelled, 
as we see from the numerous quotations made 
from them by the ancient writers, though they 
are generally of too fragmentary a kind to allow 
us to form a judgment respecting them. Our 
estimate of Pindar as a poet must be formed 
almost exclusively from his Epinicia,\xh\ch were 
composed in commemoration of some victory in 
the public games. The Epinicia are divided into 
four books, celebrating respectively the victories 
gained in the Olympian, Pythian, Nemean, and 
Isthmian games. In order to understand them 
properly, we must bear in mind the nature of the 
occasion for which they were composed, and the 
object which the poet had in view. A victory 
gained in one of the four great national festivals 
conferred honor not only upon the conqueror 
and his family, but also upon the city to which 
he belonged. It was accordingly celebrated 
with great pomp and ceremony. Such a cele- 
bration began with a procession to a temple, 
where a sacrifice was offered, and it ended with 
a banquet and the joyous revelry, called by the 
Greeks comus (kwuos). For this celebration a 
poem was expressly composed, which was sung 
by a chorus. The poems were sung either dur- 
ing the procession to the temple, or at the comus 
at the close of the banquet. Those of Pindar's 
Epinician odes which consist of strophes with- 
out epodes were sung during the procession, but 
the majority of them appear to have been sung 
at the comus. In these odes Pindar rarely de- 
scribes the victory itself, as the scene was fa- 
miliar to all the spectators, but he dwells upon 
the glory of the victor, and celebrates chiefly 
either his wealth (6?Xor) or his skill (apery) : his \ 
wealth, if he had gained the victory in the char- j 
iot-race, since it was only the wealthy that ! 
could contend for the prize in this contest ; his I 
skill, if he had been exposed to peril in the con- I 
test. The metres of Pindar are too extensive j 
and difficult a subject to admit of explanation in j 
the present work. No two odes possess the J 
same metrical structure. The Doric rhythm 
chiefly prevails, but he also makes frequent use 
of theiEolian and Lydian as well. The best edi- 
tions of Pindar are byBockh, Lips., 1811-1821, 2 
vols. 4to, and by Dissen, Gotha, 1830, 2 vols. 8vo, 
of which there is a second edition by Schneide- 
win, Gotha, 1843, $eq.— [2. Under the name of 
Pindarus there exists a Latin poem in hexame- 
ter verse, commonly called Epitome Iliados Ho- 
meri. Wernsdorf tried to prove that the name 
of the author was Pentadius, from which Pin- 
darus was a corruption, but this idea he after- 
ward abandoned ; Bahr thinks the poem must 
have been composed in the third or fourth cen- 
tury A.D. ; it is published by Wernsdorf in Poetoe 
Latini Minor es, vol. iv.,pt. ii.,and separately, with 
the notes of Theod. Van Kooten, by H. Weytingh, 
Lugd. Bat., 1809.— 3. The freedman of C. Cas- 
sius Longinus, put an end to his master's life 
at the request of the latter after the loss of the 
battle of Philippi.] 

Pindasus (Tlivdaaog). a southern branch of 



Mount femnus in M\oia, extending to the Ela'i- 
tic Gulf, and containing the sources of the Rivei 
Cetius. 

[Pindknissus (Pindenissitae in pi. ; now, ac- 
cording to Von Hammer, Schahmaran), a city of 
Cilicia, besieged and taken by Cicero during his 
administration of the province of Cilicia.] 

Pindus (Ylivchg). 1. A lofty range of mount- 
ains in Northern Greece, a portion of the great 
back-bone which rurfs through the centre of 
Greece from north to south. The name of Pin- 
dus was confined to that part of the chain which 
separates Thessaly and Epirus, and its most 
northerly and also highest part was called Lac- 
mon. — 2. One of the four towns of Doris, near 
the sources of a small river of the same name, 
which flowed through Locris into the Cephisus 

[Pineus. Vid. Pinnes.] 

Pinna (Pinnensis : now Civita diPcnna), the 
chief town of the Vestini at the foot of the Ap- 
ennines, surrounded by beautiful meadows. 

Pinnes. Pinneus, or Pineus, was the son of 
Agron, king of Illyria, by his first wife Triteuta. 
At the death of Agron (B.C. 231), Pinnes, who 
was then a child, was left in the guardianship of 
his step-mother Teuta, whom Agron had mar- 
ried after divorcing Triteuta. When Teuta was 
defeated by the Romans, the care of Pinnes de- 
volved upon Demetrius of Pharos ; but whet; 
Demetrius, in his turn, made war against the 
Romans and was defeated, Pinnes was placed 
upon the throne by the Romans, but was com- 
pelled to pay tribute. 

[Pintia (Uiv-ia : now Valladolid), a city of the 
Vacccei in Hispania Tarraconensis, situated on 
the road from Asturica to Caesaraugusta.] 

Pintuaria (Uivrovapia : now Teneriffe), one 
of the Insula Fortunate (now Canary Islands) 
off the western coast of Africa, also called Con- 
vallis, and, from the perpetual snow on its peak. 

NlVARIA. 

[Pionia (Tliovca : Pionites), a city in the in- 
terior of Mysia, on the River Satnio'is. north- 
west of Antandrus, and northeast of Gargara, 
said to have derived its name from Pionis, a de- 
scendant of Hercules.] 

Piraeus or Piraeus (IJeipaLEVc : now Porto Le- 
one or Porto Dracone). 1. The most important of 
the harbors of Athens, was situated in the penin- 
sula about five miles southwest of Athens. This 
peninsula, which is sometimes called by the gen- 
eral name of Piraeeus, contained three harbors, 
Piraeus proper on the western side, by far the 
largest of the three, Zea on the eastern side, 
separated from Piraeus by a narrow isthmus, 
and Munychia (now Pharnari) still further to the 
east. The position of Piraeeus and of the Athe- 
nian harbors has been usually misunderstood. 
In consequence of a statement in an ancient 
scholiast, it was generally supposed that the 
great harbor of Piraeeus was divided into three 
smaller harbors, Zea for corn vessels, Aphrodis- 
ium for merchant ships in general, and Can- 
tharus for ships of war ; but this division of the 
Piraeeus is now rejected by the best topogra- 
phers. Zea was a harbor totally distinct from 
the Piraeeus, as is stated above ; the northern 
portion of the Piraeeus seems to have been used, 
by the merchant vessels, and the Cantharus, 
where the ships of war were stationed, was on. 
the southern side of the harbor, near the en- 

667 



PIKjEUS. 



PISJ3. 



trance. It was through the suggestion of The- 
mistocles that the Athenians were induced to 
make use of the harbor of Piraeeus. Before 
the Persian wars their principal harbor was Pha- 
lerum, which was not situated in the Piraean 
peninsula at all, but lay to the east of Munychia. 
Vid. Phalerum. At the entrance of the harbor 
of Piraseus there were two promontories, the 
one on the right hand called Alcimus ('A^Ktuoc), 
on which was the tomb* of Themistocles, and 
the other on the left called Eetionea ('He-iuveta), 
on which the Four Hundred erected a fortress. 
The entrance of the harbor, which was narrow 
by nature, was rendered still narrower by two 
mole-heads, to which a chain was attached to 
prevent the ingress of hostile ships. The town 
or demus of Piraeeus was surrounded with strong 
fortifications byThemistocles, and was connect- 
ed with Athens by means of the celebrated Long 
Walls under the administration of Pericles. 
( Vid. p. 122, a.) The town possessed a consid- 
erable population, and many public and private 
buildings. The most important of its public 
buildings were the Agora Hippodamia, a tem- 
ple of Jupiter (Zeus) Soter, a large stoa, a the- 
atre, the Phreattys or tribunal for the admirals, 
the arsenal, the docks, &c. — [2. Pir.eus, an open 
roadstead on the eastern coast of Corinthia, near 
the Promontory Spiraeum, close to the borders of 
the territory of Epidaurus, where, in the twenti- 
eth year of the Peloponnesian war, the Atheni- 
ans blockaded a part of the Peloponnesian fleet.] 

[Piraeus (Uelpaioc), son of Clytius in Ithaca, 
a friend of Telemachus.] 

Pirene (n.eiprjv7})i a celebrated fountain at 
Corinth, which, according to tradition, took its 
origin from Pirene, a daughter of (Ebalus, who 
here melted away into tears through grief for 
the loss of her son Cenchrias. At this fountain 
Bellerophon is said to have caught the horse 
Pegasus. It gushed forth from the rock in the 
Acrocorinthus, was conveyed down the hill by 
subterraneous conduits, and fell into a marble 
basin, from which the greater part of the town 
was supplied with water. The fountain was 
celebrated for the purity and salubrity of its wa- 
ter, and was so highly valued that the poets fre- 
quently employed its name as equivalent to that 
of Corinth itself. 

PiREsiis (UeipEctai), probably the same as the 
Iresi^e of Livy, a town of Thessaly, in the dis- 
trict Thessaliotis, on the left bank of the Pe- 
neus. 

Pirithous (TLeip'idooc), son oflxion or Jupiter 
(Zeus) by Dia, was king of t he Lapithas in Thes- 
saly, and married to Hippodamia, by whom he 
became the father of Polypcetes. When Pirith- 
ous was celebrating his marriage with Hippo- 
damia, the intoxicated centaur Eurytion or Eu- 
rytus carried her off, and this act occasioned 
the celebrated fight between the Centaurs and 
Lapithae, in which the Centaurs were defeated. 
Pirithous once invaded Attica, but when Theseus 
came forth to oppose him, he conceived a warm 
admiration for the Athenian king, and from this 
time a most intimate friendship sprung up be- 
tween the two heroes. Theseus was present 
at the wedding of Pirithous, and assisted him in 
his battle against the Centaurs. Hippodamia 
afterward died, and each of the two friends re- 
solved to wed a daughter of Jupiter (Zeus). 
668 



j With the assistance of Pirithous, Theseus car- 
i ried off Helen from Sparta, and placed her at 
i Aphidnas, under the care of ^Ethra. Pirithous 
! was still more ambitious, and resolved to carry 
! off Persephone (Proserpina), the wife of the king 
I of the lower world. Theseus would not desert 
j his friend in the enterprise, though he knew the 
J risk which they ran. The two friends accord- 
j ingly descended to the lower world, but they 
j were seized by Pluto (Hades) and fastened to a 
| rock, where they both remained till Hercules 
\ visited the lower world. Hercules delivered 
j Theseus, who had made the daring attempt only 
i to please his friend, but Pirithous remained for- 
! ever in torment (amalorem trecenta Pirithoum co- 
j hibent catena, Hor., Carm. iii., 4, 80). Pirithous 
j was worshipped at Athens, along with Theseus, 
! as a hero. 

j [Pirous (Ueipooc), son of Imbrasus, a leader 
i of the Thracians, in alliance with the Trojans, 
; slain by Thoas ] 

Pirus (Yleipoc), Pierus (Illepoc), or Achelous, 
! the chief river of Achaia, which falls into the 
' Gulf of Patrae near Olenus. 

Pirustjs, a people in Illyria, exempted from 
i taxes by the Romans because they deserted 
! Gentius and passed over to the Romans. 
: Pisa (Ulaa : Uiad~7]c), the capital of Pisatis 
; {Uloutlc), the middle portion of the province of 
| Elis in Peloponnesus. Vid. Elis. In the most 
I ancient times Pisatis formed a union of eight 
| states, of which, in addition to Pisa, we find 
| mention of Salmone, Heraclea, Harpinna, Cyce- 
; sium, and Dyspontium. Pisa itself was situa- 
i ted north of the Alpheus, at a very short dis- 
| tance east of Olympia, and, in consequence ot 
! its proximity to the latter place, was frequently 
i identified by the poets with it. The history of 
I the Pisatae consists of their struggle with the 
I Eleans, with whom they contended for the pres- 
| idency of the Olympic games. The Pisataa ob- 
j tained this honor in the eighth Olympiad (B.C. 
748) with the assistance of Phidon, tyrant of 
Argos, and also a second time in the thirty- 
fourth Olympiad (644) by means of their own 
king Pantaleon. In the fifty-second Olympiad 
(572) the struggle between the two tribes was 
brought to a close by the conquest and destruc- 
tion of Pisa by the Eleans. So complete was 
the destruction of the city, that not a trace of it 
was left in later times ; and some persons, as 
we learn from Strabo, even questioned whether 
it had ever existed, supposing that by the name 
of Pisa the kingdom of the Pisatae was alone 
intended. The existence, however, of the city 
does not admit of dispute. Even after the de- 
struction of the city, the Pisatae did not relin- 
quish their claims ; and in the one hundred and 
fourth Olympiad (364), they had the presidency 
of the Olympic games along with the Arcadians, 
when the latter people were making war with 
the Eleans. 

Pis^e, more rarely Pisa (Pisanus : now Pisa), 
one of the most ancient and important of the 
cities of Etruria, was situated at the confluence 
of the Arnus and Ausar (now Serchio), about six 
miles from the sea ; hut the latter river altered 
its course in the twelfth century, and now flows 
into the sea by a separate channel. According 
to some traditions, Pisae was founded by the 
companions of Nestor, the inhabitants of Pisa 



PISANDER 



PISISTRATID.E. 



in ElLs, who were driven upon the coast of Italy 
on their return from Troy, whence the Roman 
poets give the Etruscan town the surname 
of Alphea. This legend, however, like many 
others, probably arose from the accidental simi- 
larity of the names of the two cities. It would 
seem that Pisa was originally a Pelasgic town, 
that it afterward passed into the hands of the 
Ligvie, and from them into those of the Etrus- 
cans. It then became one of the twelve cities 
of Etruria, and was, down to the time of Au- 
gustus, the most northerly city in the country. 
Pisa is frequently mentioned in the Ligurian 
wars as the head-quarters of the Roman legions. 
In B.C. 180 it was made a Latin colony, and 
appears to have been colonized again in the 
time of Augustus, since we find it called in in- 
scriptions Colonia Julia Pisana. Its harbor, 
called Portus Pisanus, at the mouth of the Ar- 
ntis, was much used by the Romans ; and in the 
time of Strabo the town of Pisa was still a place 
of considerable importance on account of the 
marble-quarries in its neighborhood, and the 
quantity of timber which it yielded for ship- 
building. About three miles north of the town 
were mineral springs, called Aqua Pis ance, which 
were less celebrated in antiquity than they are 
at the present day. There is scarcely a vestige 
of the ancient city in the modern Pisa. 

Pisander (TlecGavopoc). [1. Son of Maemalus, 
a leader of the Myrmidons before Troy. — 2. Son 
of Antimachus, brother of Hippolochus, a Tro- 
jan warrior, slain by Agamemnon. — 3. Another 
Trojan warrior, slain by Menelaus. ] — 4. Son of 
Polyctor, and one of the suitors of Penelope. — 
5. An Athenian, of the demus of Acharnae, lived 
in the time of the Peloponnesian war, and was 
attacked by the comic poets for his rapacity and 
cowardice. In 412 he comes before us as the 
chief ostensible agent in effecting the revolu- 
tion of the Four Hundred. In all the measures 
of the new government, of which he was a 
member, he took an active part ; and when The- 
ramenes and others withdrew from it, he sided 
with the more violent aristocrats, and was one 
of those who, on the counter-revolution, took 
refuge with Agis at Decelea. His property was 
confiscated, and it does not appear that he ever 
returned to Athens. — 6. A Spartan, brother-in- 
law of Agesilaus II., who made him admiral of 
the fleet in 395. In the following year he was 
defeated and slain in the sea-fight off Cnidus, 
against Conon and Pharnabazus. — 7. A poet of 
Camirus in Rhodes, flourished about B.C. 648- 
645. He was the author of a poem in two 
books on the exploits of Hercules, called Hera- 
dea ('HpuK^eta). The Alexandrean gramma- 
rians thought so highly of the poem that they 
received Pisander, as well as Antimachus and 
Panyasis, into the epic canon together with 
Homer and Hesiod. Only a few lines of it have 
been preserved. In the Greek Anthology we 
find an epigram attributed to Pisander of Rhodes, 
perhaps the poet of Camirus. [The few re- 
maining fragments are published by Dubner 
among the Potia Epici Minores, Paris, 1840.]— 
8. A poet of Laranda, in Lycia or Lycaonia, was 
the son of Nestor, and flourished in the reign 
ofAlexanderSeverus(A.D 222-235). He wrote 
a poem, called 'KpuiKai deoya/uai, which prob- 
ably treated of the marriages of gods and god- 



desses with mortals, and of the heroic progeny 
thus produced. 

Pisatis. Vid. Pisa. 

Pisaurum (Pisaurensis : now Pesaro), an an- 
cient town of Umbria, near the mouth of the 
River Pisaurus (now Foglia), on the road to 
Ariminum. It was colonized by the Romans in 
B.C. 186, and probably colonized a second time 
by Augustus, since it. is called in inscriptions 
Colonia Julia Felix. 

Pisaurus. Vid Pisaurum. 

Pisgah. Vid. Nebo. 

Pisidia {tj UlgiSikti : HioiSijc, pi. Uialdai, also 
HetGtdai, UiGeidai, and UiaidiKoi, PisiDA,pl. Pisi- 
d^e, anc. Peisid^e), an inland district of Asia 
Minor, bounded by Lycia and Pamphylia on the 
south, Cilicia on the southeast, Lycaonia and 
Isauria (the latter often reckoned a part of Pi- 
sidia) on the east and northeast, Phrygia Paro- 
reios on the north, where the boundary varied 
at different times, and was never very definite, 
and Caria on the west. It was a mountainous 
region, formed by that part of the main chain 
of Mount Taurus which sweeps round in a semi- 
circle parallel to the shore of the Pamphylian 
Gulf, the strip of shore itself, at the foot of 
the mountains, constituting the district of Pam- 
phylia. The inhabitants of the mountains were 
a warlike aboriginal people, related apparently 
to the Isaurians and Cilicians. They maintain- 
ed their independence, under petty chieftains, 
against all the successive rulers of Asia Minor. 
The Romans never subdued the Pisidians in 
their mountain fortresses, though they took 
some of the towns on the outskirts of their 
country; for example, Antiochia, which was 
made a colony with the Jus Italicum. In fact, 
the northern part, in which Antiochia stood, 
had originally belonged to Phrygia, and was 
more accessible and more civilized than the 
mountains which formed the proper country of 
the Pisidians. Nominally, the country was con- 
sidered a part of Pamphylia till the new sub- 
division of the empire under Constantine, when 
Pisidia was made a separate province. The 
country is still inhabited by wild tribes, among 
whom travelling is dangerous, and it is there- 
fore little known. Ancient writers say that it 
contained, amid its rugged mountains, some 
fertile valleys, where the olive flourished; and 
it also produced the gum storax, some medic- 
inal plants, and salt. On the southern slope of 
the Taurus, several rivers flowed through Pi- 
sidia and Pamphylia into the Pamphylian Gulf, 
the chief of which were the Cestrus and the 
Catarrhactes ; and on the north the mountain 
streams form some large salt lakes, namely, 
Ascania (now Hoiran and Egerdir) south of 
Antiochia, Caralius or Pusgusa (now Bei Shehr 
or Kerch) southeast of the former, and Trogitis 
(now Soghla) further to the southeast in Isau- 
ria. Special names were given to certain dis- 
tricts, which are sometimes spoken of as parts 
of Pisidia, sometimes as distinct countries, 
namely, Cibyratis, in the southwest along the 
north of Lycia, and Cabalia, the southwestern 
corner of Cibyratis itself ; Milyas, the district 
east of Cibyratis, northeast of Lycia, and north- 
west of Pamphylia, and Isauria, in the cast of 
Pisidia, on the borders of Lycaonia. 

PisisTRATiD.*: (Ylciaia-paTLdai), the legitimate 

669 



PISISTRATUS. 



PISISTRATUS. 



sods ol Pisistratus. The name is used some- 
times to indicate only Hippias and Hipparchus, 
and sometimes in a wider application, em- ! 
bracing the grandchildren and near connections 
of Pisistratos (as by Herod., viii., 52, referring 
:o a time when both Hippias and Hipparchus 
were dead). 

PisistrItcs {XleiGLiTparoq), the youngest son : 
of Nestor and Anaxibia, was a friend ofTelem- 
achus, and accompanied him on his journey from 
Pylos to Menelaus at Sparta. 

PisisteItcs {Jletaicrparo^), an Athenian, son ! 
of Hippocrates, was so named after Pisistratus, 
the youngest son of Nestor, since the family of 
Hippocrates was of Pylian origin, and traced 
their descent to Neleus, the father of Nestor. ; 
The mother of Pisistratus (whose name we do 
not know) was cousin-german to the mother of ; 
Solon. Pisistratus grew up equally distinguish- 
ed for personal beauty and for mental endow- 
ments. The relationship between him and So- ; 
Ion naturally drew thern together, and a close 
friendship sprang up between them. He as- 
sisted Solon by his eloquence in persuading the 
Athenians to renew their struggle with theMe- 
garians for the possession of Salamis, and he 
afterward fought with bravery in the expedi- 
tion which Solon led against the island. When 
Solon, after the establishment of his constitu- 
tion, retired for a time from Athens, the old 
rivalry between the parties of the Plain, the 1 
Highlands, and the Coast broke out into open 
feud. The party of the Plain, comprising chief- 
ly the landed proprietors, was headed by Lycur- 
gus ; that of the Coast, consisting of the wealth- 
ier classes not belonging to the nobles, by Mega- 
cles, the son of Alcmaeon ; the party of the High- 
lands, which aimed at more of political freedom 
and equality than either of the two others, was 
the one at the head of which Pisistratus placed 
himself, because they seemed the most likely 
to be useful in the furtherance of his ambitious 
designs. His liberality, as well as his military 
and oratorical abilities, gained him the support 
of a large body of citizens. Solon, on his re- 
torn, quickly saw through the designs of Pisis- 
tratus, who listened with respect to his advice, 
though he prosecuted his schemes none the less 
diligently. "When Pisistratus found his plans 
sufficiently ripe for execution, he one day made 
his appearance in the agora with his mules and 
his own person exhibiting recent wounds, pre- 
tending that he had been nearly assassinated by 
his enemies as he was riding into the country. 
An assembly of the people was forthwith call- 
ed, in which one of his partisans proposed that 
a body-guard of fifty citizens, armed with clubs, 
should be granted to him. It was in vain that 
Solon opposed this ; the guard was given him. 
Through the neglect or connivance of the peo- 
ple, Pisistratus took this opportunity of rais- 
ing a much larger force, with which he seized 
the citadel, B.C. 560, thus becoming what the 
Greeks called Tyrant of Athens. Having se- 
cured to himself the substance of power, he j 
made no further change in the constitution or ! 
in the laws, which he administered ably and j 
well. His first usurpation lasted but a short ■ 
time. Before his power was firmly rooted, the 
factions headed by Megacles and Lycurgus com- 
biaed. and Pisistratus was compelled *o evacu- 1 



ate Athens. He remained in banishment six 
years. Meantime the factions of Megacles and 
Lycurgus revived their old feuds, and Megacles 
made overtures to Pisistratus, offering to rein- 
state him in the tyranny if he would connect 
himself with him by receiving his daughter in 
marriage. The proposal was accepted by Pisis- 
tratus, and the following stratagem was devised 
for accomplishing his restoration, according to 
the account of Herodotus. A damsel named 
Phya, of remarkable stature and beauty, was 
dressed up as Minerva (Athena) in a full suit of 
armor, and placed in a chariot, with Pisistratus 
by her side. The chariot was then driven to- 
ward the city, heralds being sent on before to 
announce that Minerva (Athena) in person was 
bringing back Pisistratus to her Acropolis. The 
report spread rapidly, and those in the city be- 
lieving that the woman was really their tutela- 
ry goddess, worshipped her, and admitted Pisis- 
tratus. Pisistratus nominally performed his part 
of the contract with Megacles ; but, in conse- 
quence of the insulting manner in which he 
treated his wife, Megacles again made common 
cause with Lycurgus, and Pisistratus was a sec- 
ond time compelled to evacuate Athens. He 
retired to Eretria in Eubcea, and employed the 
next ten years in making preparations to regain 
his power. At the end of that time he invaded 
Attica with the forces he had raised, and also 
supported by Lygdamis of Naxos with a con- 
siderable body of troops. He defeated his op- 
ponents near the temple of Minerva (Athena) 
at Pallene, and then entered Athens without 
opposition. Lygdamis was rewarded by being 
established as tyrant of Naxos, which island 
Pisistratus conquered. Vid. Lygdamis. Hav- 
ing now become tyraot of Athens for the third 
time, Pisistratus adopted measures to secure 
the uodisturbed possessioo of his supremacy. 
He took a body of foreign mercenaries into his 
pay, and seized as hostages the children of sev- 
eral of the principal citizens, placing them in 
the custody of Lygdamis in Naxos. He main- 
tained at the same time the form of Solon's in- 
stitutions, only taking care, as his sons did after 
him, that the highest offices should always be 
held by some member of the family. He not 
only exacted obedience to the laws from his 
subjects and friends, but hfmself set the exam- 
ple of submitting to them. On one occasion he 
even appeared before the Areopagus to answer 
a charge of murder, which, however, was not 
prosecuted. Athens was indebted to him for 
many stately and useful buildings. Among 
these may be mentioned a temple to the Pyth- 
ian Apollo, and a magnificent temple to the 
Olympian Jupiter (Zeus), which remained un- 
finished for several centuries, and was at length 
completed by the Emperor Hadrian. Besides 
these, the Lyceum, a garden with stately build- 
ings a short distance from the city, was the 
work of Pisistratus, as also the fountain of the 
Nine Springs. Pisistratus also encouraged lit- 
erature in various ways. It was apparently un- 
der his auspices thatThespis introduced at Ath- 
ens his rude form of tragedy (B.C. 535),- and 
that dramatic contests were made a regular 
part of the Attic Dionysia. It is to Pisistratus 
that we owe the first written text of the whole 
of the poems of Homer, which, without his care 



PISO 



PISO. 



would most likely now exist only in a few dis- 
jointed fragments. Vid. Homerus. Pisistratus 
is also said to have been the first person in 
Greece who collected a library, to which he 
generously allowed the public access. By his 
first wife Pisistratus had two sons, Hippias and 
Hipparchus. By his second wife, Timonassa, 
he had also two sons, Iophon and Thessalus, 
who are rarely mentioned. He had also a bas- 
tard son, Hegesistratus, whom he made tyrant 
of Sigeum, after taking that town from the Myt- 
ilenaeans. Pisistratus died at an advanced age 
in 527, and was succeeded in the tyranny by his 
eldest son Hippias ; but Hippias and his broth- 
er Hipparchus appear to have administered the 
affairs of the state with so little outward dis- 
tinction, that they are frequently spoken of as 
though they had been joint tyrants. They con- 
tinued the government on the same principles 
as their father. Thucydides (vi., 54) speaks in 
terms of high commendation of the virtue and 
intelligence with which their rule was exer- 
cised till the death of Hipparchus. Hipparchus 
inherited his father's literary tastes. Several 
distinguished poets lived at Athens under the 
patronage of Hipparchus, as, for example, Simo- 
nides of Ceos, Anacreon of Teos, Lasus of Her- 
mione, and Onomacritus. After the murder of 
Hipparchus in 514, an account of which is given 
under Harmodius, a great change ensued in 
the character of the government. Under the 
influence of revengeful feelings and fears for his 
own safety, Hippias now became a morose and 
suspicious tyrant. He put to death great num- 
bers of the citizens, and raised money by ex- 
traordinary imposts. His old enemies the Alc- 
maeonidae, to whom Megacles belonged, availed 
themselves of the growing discontent of the cit- 
izens ; and after one or two unsuccessful at- 
tempts, they at length succeeded, supported by 
a large force under Cleomenes, in expelling the 
Pisistratidae from Attica. Hippias and his con- 
nections retired to Sigeum in 510. The family 
of the tyrants was condemned to perpetual ban- 
ishment, a sentence which was maintained even 
in after times, when decrees of amnesty were 
passed. Hippias afterward repaired to the court 
of Darius, and looked forward to a restoration 
to his country by the aid of the Persians. He 
accompanied the expedition sent under Datis 
and Artaphernes, and pointed out to the Per- 
sians the plain of Marathon as the most suita- 
ble place for their landing. He was now (490) 
of great age. According to some accounts, he 
fell in the battle of Marathon ; according to oth- 
ers, he died at Lemnos on his return. Hippias 
was the only one of the legitimate sons of Pisis- 
tratus who had children ; but none of them at- 
tained distinction 

Piso, Calpurni' s, the name of a distinguish- 
ed plebeian family. The name of Piso, like 
many other Roman cognomens, is connected 
with agriculture, the noblest and most honor- 
able pursuit of the ancient Romans : it comes 
from the verb piserc or pinserc, and refers to the 
pounding or grinding of corn. 1. Was taken 
prisoner at the battle of Cannae, B.C. 216; was 
praetor urbanus 211, and afterward commanded 
as proprajter in Etruria 210. Piso in his pras- 
torship proposed to the senate that the Ludr 
Apollinares, which had been exhibited for the 



first time in the preceding year (212), should be 
repeated, and should be celebrated in future an- 
nually. The senate passed a decree to this ef- 
fect. The establishment of these games by 
their ancestor was commemorated on coins by 
the Pisones in later times. — 2. C, son of No. 
1, was praetor 186, and received Further Spain 
as his province. He returned to Rome in 184, 
and obtained a triumph for a victory he had 
gained over the Lusitani and Celtiberi. He was. 
consul in 180, and died during his consulship 

Pisones with the agnomen Casoninus. 
3. L., received the agnomen Caasoninus be- 
cause he originally belonged to the Caesonia 
gens. He was praetor in 154, and obtained the 
province of Further Spain, but was defeated by 
the Lusitani. He was consul in 148, and was 
sent to conduct the war against Carthage ; he 
was succeeded in the command in the following 
year by Scipio. — 4. L., son of No. 3, consul 112 
with M. Livius Drusus. In 107 he served as 
legatus to the consul, L. Cassius Longinus, who 
was sent into Gaul to oppose the Cimbri and 
their allies, and he fell together with the con- 
sul in the battle, in which the Roman army was 
utterly defeated by the Tigurini in the territory 
of the Allobroges. This Piso was the grandfa- 
ther of Caesar's father-in-law, a circumstance 
to which Caesar himself alludes in recording his 
own victory over the Tigurini at a later time 
(Caes., B. G., I, 7, 12.)— 5. L., son of No. 4 r 
never rose to any of the offices of state, and is 
only known from the account given of him by 
Cicero in his violent invective against his son. 
He married the daughter of Calventius, a na- 
tive of Cisalpine Gaul, who came from Placen- 
tia and settled at Rome ; and hence Cicero calls 
his son, in contempt, a semi-Placentian.— 6. L. r 
son of No. 5, was an unprincipled debauchee 
and a cruel and corrupt magistrate. He is first 
mentioned in 59, when he was brought to trial 
by P. Clodius for plundering a province, of which 
he had the administration after his praetorship, 
and he was only acquitted by throwing himself 
at the feet of the judges. In the same year 
Caesar married his daughter Calpurnia ; and 
through his influence Piso obtained the consul- 
ship for 58, having for his colleague A. Gabinius, 
who was indebted for the honor to Pompey. 
Both consuls supported Clodius in his measures 
against Cicero, which resulted in the banish- 
ment of the orator. The conduct of Piso in 
support of Clodius produced that extreme re- 
sentment in the mind of Cicero which he dis- 
played against Piso on many subsequent occa- 
sions. At the expiration of his consulship Piso 
went to his province of Macedonia, where he 
remained during two years (57 and 56), plun- 
dering the province in the most shameless man- 
ner. In the latter of these years the senate re- 
solved that a successor should be appointed ; 
and in the debate in the senate which led ta 
his recall, Cicero attacked him in the most un- 
measured terms in an oration which has come 
down to us (De Promnciis Consularibus). Piso, 
on his return (55), complained in the senate of 
the attack of Cicero, and justified the adminis- 
tration of his province, whereupon Cicero re- 
iterated his charges in a speech which is like 
wise extant {In Pisoncm). Cicero, howevei 

671 



PISO. 



PISO. 



did not venture to bring to trial the father-in- 
law of Caesar. In 50 Piso was censor with Ap. 
Claudius Pulcher. On the breaking out of the 
civil war (49) Piso accompanied Pompey in his 
flight from the city ; and although he did not go 
■with him across the sea, he still kept aloof from 
Caesar. He subsequently returned to Rome, 
and remained neutral during the civil war. 
After Caesar's death (44) Piso at first opposed 
Antony, but is afterward mentioned as one of 
his partisans. — 7. L., son of No. 6, was consul 
in 15, and afterward obtained his province of 
Pamphylia ; from thence he was recalled by 
Augustus in 11, in order to make war upon the 
Thracians, who had attacked the province of 
Macedonia. He was appointed hy Tiberius 
praefectus urbi. While retaining the favor of 
the emperor, without condescending to servility, 
he at the same time earned the good-will of his 
fellow-citizens by the integrity and justice with 
which he governed the city. He died in A.D. 
32, at the age of eighty, and was honored by a 
decree of the senate with a public funeral. It 
was to this Piso and his two sons that Horace 
addressed his epistle on the Art of Poetry. 

Pisones icith the agnomen Frugi. 
8. L., received from his integrity and con- 
scientiousness the surname of Frugi, which is 
perhaps nearly equivalent to our " man of hon- 
or." He was tribune of the plebs 149, in which 
year he proposed the first law for the punish- 
ment of extortion in the provinces. He was 
consul in 133, and carried on war against the 
slaves in Sicily. He was a staunch supporter 
of the aristocratical party, and offered a strong 
opposition to the measures of C. Gracchus. 
Piso was censor, but it is uncertain in what 
year. He wrote Annals, which contained the 
history of Rome from the earliest period to the 
age in which Piso himself lived. — 9. L., son of 
No. 8, served with distinction under his father 
in Sicily in 133, and died in Spain about 111, 
whither he had gone as propraetor. — 10. L., son 
of No. 9, was a colleague of Verres in the prae- 
torship 74, when he thwarted many of the un- 
righteous schemes of the latter. — 11. C, son of 
No. 10, married Tullia, the daughter of Cicero, 
in 63, but was betrothed to her as early as 67. 
He was quaestor in 58, when he used every ex- 
ertion to obtain the recall of his father-in-law 
from banishment ; but he died in 57, before Cic- 
ero's return to Rome. He is frequently men- 
tioned by Cicero in terms of gratitude on ac- 
count of the zeal which he had manifested in 
his behalf during his banishment. 

Pisones without an agnomen. 
12. C, consul 67, belonged to the high aris- 
tocratical party, and in his consulship opposed 
with the utmost vehemence the law of the trib- 
une Gabinius for giving Pompey the command 
of the war against the pirates. In 66 and 65 
Piso administered the province of Narbonese 
Gaul as proconsul, and while there suppressed 
an insurrection of the Allobroges. In 63 he 
was accused of plundering the province, and 
was defended by Cicero. The latter charge 
was brought against Piso at the instigation of 
Cajsar ; and Piso, in revenge, implored Cicero, 
out without success, to accuse Caesar as one of 
672 



the conspirators of Catiline. — 13. M., usually 
called M. Pupius Piso, because he was adopted 
by M. Pupius when the latter was an old man. 
He retained, however, his family name Piso, 
just as Scipio, after his adoption by Metellus, 
was called Metellus Scipio. Vid. Metellus, 
No. 15. On the death of L. Cinna in 84, Piso 
married his wife Annia. In 83 he was appoint- 
ed quaestor to the consul L. Scipio ; but he 
quickly deserted this party, and went over to 
Sulla, who compelled him to divorce his wife 
on account of her previous connection with 
Cinna. After his praetorship, the year of which 
is uncertain, he received the province of Spain 
with the title of proconsul, and on his return to 
Rome in 69, enjoyed the honor of a triumph. 
He served in the Mithradatic war as a legatus 
of Pompey. He was elected consul for 61 
through the influence of Pompey. In his con- 
sulship Piso gave great offence to Cicero by 
not asking the orator first in the senate for his 
opinion, and by taking P. Clodius under his pro- 
tection after his violation of the mysteries of 
the Bona Dea. Cicero revenged himself on 
Piso by preventing him from obtaining the prov- 
ince of Syria, which had been promised him. 
Piso, in his younger days, had so high a repu- 
tation as an orator, that Cicero was taken to 
him by his father in order to receive instruc- 
tion from him. He belonged to the Peripatetic 
school in philosophy, in which he received in- 
I structions from Staseas. — 14. Cn., a young no- 
i ble who had dissipated his fortune by his ex- 
I travagance and profligacy, and therefore joined 
! Catiline in what is usually called his first con- 
! spiracy (66). (For details, vid. p. 183, a.) The 
senate, anxious to get rid of Piso, sent him into 
Nearer Spain as quaestor, but with the rank and 
title of propraetor. His exactions in the prov- 
ince soon made him so hateful to the inhabit- 
ants that he was murdered by them. It was, 
however, supposed by some that he was mur- 
dered at the instigation of Pompey or of Cras- 
sus. — 15. Cn., fought against Caesar in Africa 
(46), and after the death of the dictator joined 
Brutus and Cassius. He was subsequently par- 
doned, and returned to Rome ; but he disdain- 
ed to ask Augustus for any of tne honors of the 
state, and was, without solicitation, raised to 
the consulship in 23. — 16. Cn., son of No. 15, 
inherited all the pride and haughtiness of his 
father. He was consul B.C. 7, and was sent 
by Augustus as legate into Spain, where he 
made himself hated by his cruelty and avarice. 
Tiberius, after his accession, was chiefly jealous 
of Germanicus, his brother's son ; and accord- 
ingly, when the eastern provinces were assign- 
ed to Germanicus in A.D. 18, Tiberius conferred 
upon Piso the command of Syria, in order that 
the latter might do every thing in his power to 
thwart and oppose Germanicus. Plancina, the 
wife of Piso, was also urged on by Livia, the 
mother of the emperor, to vie with and annoy 
Agrippina. Germanicus and Agrippina were 
thus exposed to every species of insult and op- 
position from Piso and Plancina ; and when 
Germanicus fell ill in the autumn of 19, he be- 
lieved that he had been poisoned by them. Piso, 
on his return to Rome (20), was accused of mur- 
dering Germanicus ; the matter was investi 
gated by the senate; but before the investiga 



PISON. 



PITTACUS. 



tion came to an end, Piso was found one morn- 
ing in his room with his throat cut, and his 
sword lying by his side. It was generally sup- 
posed that, despairing of the emperor's protec- 
tion, he put an end to his own life ; but others 
believed that Tiberius dreaded his revealing his 
secrets, and accordingly caused him to be put 
to death. The powerful influence of Livia se- 
cured the acquittal of Plancina. — 17. C, the 
leader of the well-known conspiracy against 
Nero in A.D. 15. Piso himself did not form 
the plot ; but as soon as he had joined it, his 
great popularity gained him many partisans. 
He possessed most of the qualities which the 
Romans prized, high birth, an eloquent address, 
liberality, and affability ; and he also displayed 
a sufficient love of magnificence and luxury to 
suit the taste of the day, which would not have 
tolerated austerity of manner or character. The 
conspiracy was discovered by Milichus, a freed- 
man of Flavius Scevinus, one of the conspira- 
tors. Piso thereupon opened his veins, and 
thus died. There is extant a poem in two 
hundred lines, containing a panegyric on a cer- 
tain Calpurnius Piso, who is probably the same 
person as the leader of the conspiracy against 
Nero. — 18. L., surnamed Licinianus, was the 
son of ML Licinius Crassus Frugi, and was 
adopted by one of the Pisones. On the acces- 
sion of Galba to the throne, he adopted as his 
son and successor Piso Licinianus ; but the lat- 
ter only enjoyed the distinction four days, for 
Otho, who had hoped to receive this honor, in- 
duced the praetorians to rise against the em- 
peror. Piso fled for refuge into the temple of 
Vesta, but was dragged out by the soldiers, and 
dispatched at the threshold of the temple, A. 
D. 69. 

[Pisox (Hetauv), one of the thirty tyrants at 
Athens, to gratify his cupidity was the author 
of cruel and oppressive enactments against the 
metceci.] 

Pistok, that is, the baker, a surname of Jupi- 
ter at Rome, which is said to have arisen in the 
following manner. When the Gauls were be- 
sieging Rome, the god suggested to the besieged 
the idea of throwing loaves of bread among the 
enemies, to make them believe that the Ro- 
mans had plenty of provisions, and thus caused 
them to give up the siege. 

Pistoria or Pistorium ( Pistoriensis : now Pis- 
toia), a small place in Etruria, on the road from 
Luca to Florentia, rendered memorable by the 
defeat of Catiline in its neighborhood. 

[Pistyrus (IltffTvpof), a place of trade in the 
interior of Thrace, near a salt-lake of consider- 
able circuit.] 

Pitana. Vid. Sparta. 

Pitane (UiTuvTj : now Sanderli), a sea-port 
town of Mysia, on the coast of the ElaiticGulf, 
at the mouth of the Evenus, or, according to 
6ome, of the Calcua ; almost destroyed by an 
earthquake under Titus. Itwasthe birth-place 
of the Academic philosopher Arcesilaus. 

PlTHECUSA. Vifl. iENARIA. 

Pitho (Retftu), called Suada or Suadela by 
the Romans, the personification of Persuasion. 
She was worshipped as a divinity at Sicyon, 
where she was honored with a temple in the 
agora. Pith" also occurs as a surname of Ve- 
nus (Aphrodite), whose worship was said to 
43 



have been introduced at Athens by Theseus, 
when he united the country communities into 
towns. At Athens the statues of Pitho and 
Venus (Aphrodite) Pandemos stood close to- 
gether, and atMegara the statue of Pitho stood 
in the temple of Venus (Aphrodite), so that the 
two divinities must be conceived as closely con- 
nected, or the one, perhaps, merely as an attri- 
bute of the other. 

[Pitholaus (Ylei6(')?,aog), one of the three 
brothers-in-law and murderers of Alexander of 
Pherae. In B.C. 352 Pitholaus and his brother 
Lycophron were expelled from Pherae by Philip 
of Macedon ; but Pitholaus re-established him- 
self in the tyranny, and was again driven out 
by Philip, B.C. 349.] 

Pithon (Yllduv, also Hetduv and Tivdov). 1. 
Son of Agenor, a Macedonian officer of Alex- 
ander the Great. He received from Alexander 
the government of part of the Indian provinces, 
in which he was confirmed after the king's 
death. In B.C. 316 he received from Antigo- 
nus the satrapy of Babylon. He afterward 
fought with Demetrius against Ptolemy, and 
was slain at the battle of Gaza, 312 —2. Son 
of Crateuas or Crateas, a Macedonian officer 
of Alexander, who is frequently confounded 
with the preceding. After Alexander's death 
he received from Perdiccas the satrapy of Me- 
dia. He accompanied Perdiccas on his expedi- 
tion to Egypt (321), but he took part in the 
mutiny against Perdiccas, which terminated in 
the death of the latter. Pithon rendered im- 
portant service to Antigonus in his war against 
Eumenes ; but after the death of Eumenes, he 
began to form schemes for his own aggrandize- 
ment, and was accordingly put to death by An- 
tigonus, 316. 

Pitinum (Pitinas, -atis). 1. (Now Pitino), a 
municipium in the interior of Umbria, on the 
River Pisaurus, whence its inhabitants are call- 
ed in inscriptions Pitinates Pisaurcnses. The 
town also bore the surname Mergens. — 2. A 
town in Picenum, on the road from Castrum 
Novum to Prifernum. 

Pittacus (HiTTanos), one of those early cul- 
tivators of letters who were designated as M the 
Seven Wise Men of Greece," was a native of 
Mytilene in Lesbos, and was born about B.C. 
652. He was highly celebrated as a warrior, 
a statesman, a philosopher, and a poet. He is 
first mentioned in public life as an opponent 
of the tyrants of Mytilene. In conjunction with 
the brothers of Alcaeus, he overthrew and killed 
the tyrant Melanchrus, B.C. 612. In 606 he 
commanded the Mytilenaeans in their war with 
the Athenians for the possession of Sigeum, on 
the coast of the Troad, and signalized himself 
by killing in single combat Phrynon, the com- 
mander of the Athenians. This feat Pittacus 
performed by entangling his adversary in a net, 
and then dispatching him with a trident and a 
dagger, exactly after the fashion in which the 
gladiators called retiarii long afterward fought 
at Rome. This war was terminated by the 
mediation of Periander, who assigned the dis- 
puted territory to the Athenians ; but the inter- 
nal troubles of Mytilene still continued. The 
supreme power was fiercely disputed between 
a succession of tyrants, and the aristocratic 
party, headed by Alcrcus and his brother Antb 

673 



PITTHEUS. 



PLAIN CUS. 



menidas ; and the latter were driven into exile, i 
As the exiles tried to effect their return by j 
force of arms, the popular party chose Pittacus 
as their ruler, with absolute power, under the 
title of Msymnetes (aiavuv^rnc). He held this 
office for ten years (589-579), and then volun- 
tarily resigned it, having by his administration 
restored order to the state, and prepared it for 
the safe enjoyment of a republican form of gov- j 
ernment. He lived in great honor at Mytilene j 
for ten years after the resignation of his gov- 
ernment, and died in 569, at an advanced age. i 
Of the proverbial maxims of practical wisdom j 
which were current under the names of the 
seven wise men of Greece, two were ascribed 
to Pittacus, namely, XaXenov kod?.bv kpuevai, 
and Kaipbv yv&di. 

Pxttheus (Ucrdevc), king of Trcezene, was 
son of Pelops and Dia, father of JEthra, and 
grandfather and instructor of Theseus. When 
Theseus married Phaedra, Pittheus took Hippo- 
lytus into his house. His tomb and the chair 
on which he had sat in judgment were shown 
at Trcezene down to a late time. He is said to 
have taught the art of speaking, and even to 
have written a book upon it. iEthra, as his 
daughter, is called Pittheis. 

Pityia (TLirveta : now probably Shamelik), a 
town mentioned by Homer, in the north of Mys- 
ia, between Parium and Priapus, evidently J 
named from the pine forests in its neighborhood, j 

Pityoxesus (TlLTvovrjGoq : now Anghistri), an j 
island off the coast of Argolis. 

Pityus (Hltvovs : now probably Pitzunda), a 
Greek city in Sarmatia Asiatica, on the north- I 
eastern coast of the Euxine, three hundred and | 
sixty stadia northwest of Dioscurias. In the 
time of Strabo it was a considerable city and 
port. It was afterward destroyed by the neigh- 
boring tribe of the Heniochi, but it was restored, 
and long served as an important frontier fort- 
ress of the Roman empire. 

Pityusa, 'PnYvss\{tltrvovaa, Ultvovggc., con- 
tracted from TUTvoEoaa, fem. of irtrvoeic), i. e., j 
abounding in pine-trees. 1. The ancient name 
of Lampsacus, Salamis, and Chios.— 2. A small 
island in the Argolic Gulf. — 3. The name of 
two islands off the southern coast of Spain, 
west of the Baleares. The larger of them was 
called Ebusus (now Iviza), the smaller Ophiussa 
(now Formentera) : the latter was uninhabited. 

Pixodarus (Ui&dapoc), prince or king of Ca- 
ria, was the youngest of the three sons of Hec- 
atomnus, all of whom successively held the sov- 
ereignty of Caria. Pixodarus obtained posses- 
sion of the throne by the expulsion of his sister 
Ada, the widow and successor of her brother 
Idrieus, and held it 'vithout opposition for five 
years, B.C. 340-335 He was succeeded by 
his son-in-law Orontobates. 

Place rm a (Placentinus : now Piacenza), a 
Roman colony in Cisalpine Gaul, founded at the 
same time as Cremona. B.C. 219. It was situ- 
ated in the territory of the Anamares, on the I 
right bank of the Po, not far from the mouth of j 
the Trebia, and on the road from Mediolanum I 
to Parma. It was taken and destroyed by the j 
Gauls in 200, but was soon rebuilt by the Ro- 
mans, and became an important place. It con- | 
tinued to be a flourishing town down to the 
time of the Goths. 
674 



Placia (UXokltj, Ion. : UlaKinvoc), an ancient 
Pelasgian settlement in Mysia, east of Cyzicua, 
at the foot of Mount Olympus, seems to have 
been early destroyed. 

Placidia, Galla. Vid. Galla. 
[Placidus, Julius, the tribune of a cohort ol 
Vespasian's army, who dragged Vitellius out 
of the lurking-place in which he had concealed 
himself] 

Placitus, Sex., the author of a short Latin 
work entitled De Medicina (or Medicamentis) ex 
Animalibus, consisting of thirty-four chapters, 
each of which treats of some animal whose 
body was supposed to possess certain medical 
properties. As might be expected, it contains 
numerous absurdities, and is of little or no value 
or interest. The date of the author is uncer- 
tain, but he is supposed to have lived in the 
fourth century after Christ. The work is print- 
ed by Stephanus in the Medico. Artis Principes, 
Paris, fol., 1567, and elsewhere. 

Placcs (UXukoc), a mountain of Mysia, above 
the city of Thebe : not in the neighborhood of 
Placia, as the resemblance of the names had 
led some to suppose. 

Plan aria (now probably Canaria, Canary ) T 
one of the islands in the Atlantic called FOR- 
TUNATE. 

Planasia. 1. (Now Pianosa), an island be- 
tween Corsica and the coast of Etruria, to 
which Augustus banished his grandson Agrippa 
Postumus.— 2. An island off the southern coast 
of Gaul, east of the Stoechades. 

Planciades, FulgentIus. Vid Fulgentius. 
Plancina, Munatia, the wife of Cneius Piso, 
who was appointed governor of Syria in A.D. 
18. While her husband used every effort to 
thwart Germanicus, she exerted herself equally 
to annoy and insult Agrippina. She was en- 
couraged in this conduct by Livia, the mother 
of the emperor, who saved her from condemna- 
tion by the senate when she was accused along 
with her husband in 20. ( Vid. Piso, No. 16.) 
She was brought to trial again in 33, a few years 
after the death of Livia ; and, having no longer 
any hope of escape, she put an end to her life. 

Plancius, Cn., first served in Africa under 
the propraetor A. Torquatus, subsequently in 
B.C. 68 under the proconsul Q. Metellus in 
Crete, and next in 62 as military tribune in the 
army of C. Antonius in Macedonia. In 58 he 
was quaestor in Macedonia under the propraetor 
L. Appuleius, and here he showed great kind- 
ness to Cicero when the latter came to this 
province during his banishment. He was trib- 
une of the plebs in 56, and was elected curule 
aedile with A. Plotius in 54. But before Plan- 
cius and Plotius entered upon their office, they 
were accused by Juventius Laterensis and L. 
Cassius Longinus of the crime of so dalitium, or 
the bribery of the tribes by means of illegal as- 
sociations, in accordance with the Lex Licinia, 
which had been proposed by the consul Licinius 
Crassus in the preceding year. Cicero defend- 
ed Plancius in an oration still extant, and ob- 
tained his acquittal. Plancius espoused the 
Pompeian party in the civil wars, and after 
Caesar had gained the supremacy, lived in exile 
in Corey ra. 

Plancus, Munatius, the name of a distin- 
guished plebeian family. The surname Plancus 



PLANCUS, MUNATIUS. 



PLANUDES MAXIMUS. 



signified a person having flat splay feet without 
any bend in them. 1. L., was a friend of Julius 
Ca?sar, and served under hiin both in the Gallic 
and the civil wars. Caesar, shortly before his 
death, nominated him to the government of 
Transalpine Gaul for B.C. 44, with the excep- 
tion of the Narbonese and Belgic portions of 
the province, and also to the consulship for 42, 
with D. Brutus as his colleague. After Caesar's 
death Plancus hastened into Gaul, and took pos- 
session of his province. Here he prepared at 
first to support the senate against Antony ; but 
when Lepidus joined Antony, and their united 
forces threatened to overwhelm Plancus, the 
latter was persuaded by Asinius Pollio to fol- 
low his example, and to unite with Antony and 
Lepidus. Plancus, during his government of 
Gaul, founded the colonies of Lugdunum and 
Raurica. He was consul in 42, according to 
the arrangement made by Caesar, and he subse- 
quently followed Antony to Asia, where he re- 
mained for some years, and governed in suc- 
cession the provinces of Asia and Syria. He 
deserted Antony in 32, shortly before the break- 
ing out of the civil war between the latter and 
Octavianus. He was favorably received by 
Octavianus, and continued to reside at Rome 
during the remainder of his life. It was on his 
proposal that Octavianus received the title of 
Augustus in 27 ; and the emperor conferred 
upon him the censorship in 22, with Paulus 
.Emilius Lepidus. Both the public and pri- 
vate life of Plancus was stained by numerous 
vices. One of Horace's odes (Cartn., i., 7) is 
addressed to him. — 2. T., surnamed Bursa, 
brother of the former, was tribune of the plebs 
B.C. 52, when he supported the views of Pom- 
pey, who was anxious to obtain the dictatorship. 
With this object he did every thing in his povv- 
erto increase the confusion which followed upon 
the death of Clodius. At the close of the year, as 
soon as his tribunate had expired, Plancus was 
accused by Cicero of Vis, and was condemned. 
After his condemnation Plancus went to Raven- 
na in Cisalpine Gaul, where he was kindly re- 
ceived by Caesar. Soon after the beginning of 
the civil war he was restored to his civic rights 
by Caesar, but he appears to have taken no part 
in the civil war. After Caesar's death Plancus 
fought on Antony's side in the campaign of Mu- 
tina. He was driven out of Pollentia by Pon- 
tius Aquila, the legate of D. Brutus, and in his 
flight broke his leg. — 3 Cn , brother of the two 
preceding, praetor elect 44, was charged by Cae- 
sar in that year with the assignment to his sol- 
diers of lands at Buthrotum in Epirus. As At- 
ticus possessed property in the neighborhood, 
Cicero commended to Plancus with much ear- 
nestness the interests of his friend. He was 
praetor in 43, and was allowed by the senate to 
join his brother Lucius (No. 1) in Transalpine 
Gaul. — 4. L Plautio9 Plancus, brother of the 
three preceding, was adopted by a L. Plautius, 
and therefore took his praenomen as well as no- 
men, but retained his original cognomen, as was 
the case with Metellus Scipio (vid. Metellus, 
No. 15) and Pupius Piso. Vid. Piso, No. 13. 
Before his adoption his praenomen was Caius. 
He was included in the proscription of the tri- 
umvirs, 43, with the consent of his brother Lu- 
cius, and was put to death. 



Planudes Maxi'mls, was one of the most 
learned of the Constantinopolitan monks of the 
last age of the Greek empire, and was greatly 
distinguished as a theologian, grammarian, and 
rhetorician ; but his name is now chiefly inter- 
esting as that of the compiler of the latest of 
those collections of minor Greek poems, which 
were known by the names of Garlands or An- 
thologies CS,Tf:<pavoi, Wvdol.oy'ictL). Planudes flour- 
ished at Constantinople in the first half of the 
fourteenth century, under the emperors An- 
dronicus II. and III. Palaeologi. In A.D. 1327 
he was sent by Andronicus If. as ambassador 
to Venice. As the Anthology of Planudes was 
not only the latest compiled, but was also that 
which was recognized as The Greek Anthology, 
until the discovery of the Anthology of Constan- 
tinus Cephalas, this is chosen as the fittest place 
for an account of the Literary History of the 
Greek Anthology. 1. Materials. The various col- 
lections, to which their compilers gave the name 
of Garlands and Anthologies, were made up of 
short poems, chiefly of an epigrammatic char- 
acter, and in the elegiac metre. The earliest, 
examples of such poetry were furnished by the 
inscriptions on monuments, such as those erect- 
ed to commemorate heroic deeds, the statues of 
distinguished men, especially victors in the pub- 
lic games, sepulchral monuments, and dedica- 
tory offerings in temples (avadr/fiara) ; to which 
may be added oracles and proverbial sayings. 
At an early period in the history of Greek lit- 
erature, poets of the highest fame cultivated 
this species of composition, which received its 
most perfect development from the hand of Si- 
monides. Thenceforth, as a set form of poetry, 
it became a fit vehicle for the brief expression 
of thoughts and sentiments on any subject ; un- 
til at last the form came to be cultivated for its 
own sake, and the literati of Alexandrea and 
Byzantium deemed the ability to make epigrams 
an essential part of the character of a scholar. 
Hence the mere trifling, the stupid jokes, and 
the wretched personalities which form so large 
a part of the epigrammatic poetry contained in 
the Greek Anthology. — 2. The Garland of Me- 
leager. At a comparatively early period in the 
history of Greek literature, various persons col- 
lected epigrams of particular classes, and with 
reference to their use as historical authorities ; 
but the first person who made such a collection 
solely for its own sake, and to preserve epi- 
grams of all kinds, was Meleager, a cynic phi- 
losopher of Gadara, in Palestine, about B.C. 60. 
His collection contained epigrams by forty-six 
poets, of all ages of Greek poetry, up to the most 
ancient lyricJperiod. He entitled it The Gar- 
land CZriQavoc), with reference to the common 
comparison of small beautiful poems to flowers. 
The same idea is kept up in the word Antholo- 
gy (avdoloy'ta), which was adopted by the next 
compiler as the title of his work. The Garland 
of Meleager was arranged in alphabetical order, 
according to the initial letters of the first line 
of each epigram. — 3. The Anthology of Philip 
of Thessalonica was compiled in the time of 
Trajan, avowedly in imitation of the Garland 
of Meleager, and chiefly with the view of add- 
ing to that collection the epigrams of more re- 
cent writers —4. Diogenianus, Straton, and Di- 
ogenes Luertius. Shortly after Philip, in the 

675 



PLANUDES MAXIMUS. 



PLATO. 



reign of Hadrian, the learned grammarian, Di- j 
ogenianus of Heraclea, compiled an Anthology, j 
which is entirely lost. It might have been well j 
if the same fate had befallen the very polluted j 
collection of his contemporary, Straton of Sar- 
dis. About the same time Diogenes Laertius 
collected the epigrams which are interspersed 
in his lives of the philosophers, into a separate 
book. — 5. Agathias Scholasticus, who lived in 
the time of Justinian, made a collection entitled 
Kva/.cc e-iypa.fi/LidTuv. It was divided into sev- 
en books, according to subjects. The poems 
included in it were those of recent writers, and 
chiefly those of Agathias himself and of his con- 
temporaries, such as Paulus Silentiarius and 
Macedonius. — 6. The Anthology of Const antinus 
Cephalas, or the Palatine Anthology. Constan- 
tinus Cephalas appears to have lived about four 
centuries after Aorathias, and to have flourished 
in the tenth century, under the Emperor Con- 
stantinus Porphyrogenitus. The labors of pre- 
ceding compilers may be viewed as merely sup- 
plementary to the Garland of Meleager; but the 
Anthology of Constantinus Cephalas was an en- 
tirely new collection from the preceding An- 
thologies and from original sources. Nothing 
is known of Constantine himself. The MS. of 
the Anthology was discovered by Salmasius in 
1606, in the library of the Electors Palatine at 
Heidelberg. It was afterward removed to the 
Vatican, with the rest of the Palatine library 
(1623). and has become celebrated under the 
names of the Palatine Anthology and the Vati- 
can Cudex of the Greek Anthology. This MS. 
was restored to its old home at Heidelberg after 
the peace of 1815.— 7. The Anthology of Pla- 
iiudcs is arranged in seven books, each of which, 
except the fifth and seventh, is divided into 
chapters according to subjects, and these chap- 
ters are arranged in alphabetical order. The 
contents of the books are as follows: 1. Chief- 
ly eTTLdeiKTtKu, that is, displays of skill in this 
species of poetry, in ninety-one chapters. 2. 
Jocular or satiric {cku-tlku), chaps. 53. 3. Se- 
pulchral [eirtTv/i6ia), chaps. 32. 4. Inscriptions 
on statues of athletes and other works of art, de- 
scriptions of places, &c., chaps. 33. 5. The Ec- 
phrasis of Christodorus, and epigrams on stat- 
ues of charioteers in the Hippodrome at Con- 
stantinople. 6 Dedicatory {dvadjifiaTiicd), chaps. 
27. 7. Amatory (kpuriKu). Planudes did little 
more than abridge and rearrange the Anthology 
of Constantinus Cephalas. Only a few epigrams 
are found in the Planudean Anthology which are 
not in the Palatine. The best editions of the 
Greek Anthology are by Brunck and Jacobs. 
Brunck's edition, which appeared under the ti- 
tle of Analccta Veterum Poetarum Grcecorum, Ar- 
gentorati, 1772-1776, 3 vols. Svo, contains the 
whole of the Greek Anthology, besides some 
poems which are not properly included under 
that title. Brunck adopted a new arrangement ; 
he discarded the books and chapters of the early 
Anthology, placed together all the epigrams of 
•each poet, and arranged the poets themselves 
in chronological order, placing those epigrams, 
the authors of which were unknown, under the 
separate head of ua*?o~<>Ta. Jacobs*s edition is 
founded upon Brunck's, but is much superior, 
and ranks as the standard edition of the Greek 
Antholugv It is in 13 vols. 8vo, namely, four 
676 



volumes of the Text, one of Indices, and three 
of Commentaries, divided into eight parts, Lips., 
1795-1814. After the restoration of the MS 
of the Palatine Anthology to the University of 
Heidelberg, Jacobs published a separate edition 
of the Palatine Anthology, Lips., 1813-1817, 3 
vols. 

Platmea, more commonly Plat^^e (UXuraia, 
Tl?.aTauiL : TL?AiTaitvr), an ancient city of Bceotia, 
on the northern slope of Mount Cithaeron, not 
far from the sources of the Asopus, and on the 
frontiers of Attica. It was said to have been 
founded by Thebes, and its name was com- 
monly derived from Plateea, a daughter of Aso- 
pus. The town, though not large, played an 
important part in Greek history, and experienced 
many striking vicissitudes of fortune. At an 
early period the Plataeans deserted the Boeotian 
confederacy, and placed themselves under the 
protection of Athens ; and when the Persians 
invaded Attica in B.C. 490, they sent one thou- 
sand men to the assistance of the Athenians, 
and had the honor of fighting on their side at 
the battle of Marathon. Ten years afterward 
(480) their city was destroyed by the Persian 
army under Xerxes at the instigation of the 
Thebans, and the place was still in ruins in the 
following year (479), when the memorable bat- 
tle was fought in their territory in which Mar- 
donius was defeated and the independence of 
Greece secured. In consequence of this vic- 
tory, the territory of Plateeae was declared in- 
violable, and Pausanias and the other Greeks 
swore to guarantee its independence. The sanc- 
tity of the city was still further secured by its 
being selected as the place in which the great 
festival of the Eleutheria was to be celebrated 
in honor of those Greeks who had fallen in the 
war. (Vid.Dict.of Antiq., art. Eleutheria.) The 
Platseans further received from the Greeks the 
large sum of eighty talents. Plataeae now en- 
joyed a prosperity of fifty years ; but in the 
third year of the Peloponnesian war (429) the 
Thebans persuaded the Spartans to attack the 
town, and after a siege of two years at length 
succeeded in obtaining possession of the place 
(427). Plataeee was now razed to the ground, 
but was again rebuilt after the peace of Antal- 
cidas (387). It was destroyed the thiru time 
by its inveterate enemies, the Thebans, in 374. 
It was once more restored under the Macedo- 
nian supremacy, and continued in existence till 
a very late period. Its walls were rebuilt by 
Justinian. 

Platamodes (U?.arajuudnc : now Aja Kyria- 
hi), a promontory in the west of Messenia. 

Platana, -dm, -us {Il.~Aa.Tdvr}, Il?.dTavnv, UAd- 
Tavoc), a fortress in Phoenicia, in a narrow pass 
between Lebanon and the sea, near the River 
Damuras or Tamyras (now Damur). 

Platea (Yl'Aarea, also -eta, -etat, -ala), an isl- 
, and on the coast of Cyrenaica, in Northern Af- 
j rica, the first place taken possession of by the 
i Greek colonists under Battus. Vid. Cyrenaica. 
Plato (U'autuv). L The comic poet, was a 
native of Athens, contemporary with Aristoph- 
anes, Phrynichus, Eupolis, and Pherecrates, and 
flourished from B C. 428 to 389. He ranked 
among the very best poets of the Old Comedy. 
From the expressions of the grammarians, and 
from the large number of fragments which are 



PLATO. 



PLATO. 



preserved, it is evident that his plays were only 
second in popularity to those of Aristophanes. 
Purity of language, refined sharpness of wit, 
and a comhination of the vigor of the Old Com- 
edy with the gre ater elegance of the Middle and 
the New, were his chief characteristics. Sui- 
das gives the titles of thirty of his dramas. [The 
fragments of his comedies are contained in Mei- 
neke's Comic. Grate. Fragm., vol. i., p 357-401, 
edit, minor.]— 2. The philosopher, was the son 
of Ariston and Perictione or Potone, and was 
born at Athens either in B.C. 429 or 428. Ac- 
cording to others, he was born in the neighbor- 
ing island of ^Egina. His paternal family boast- 
ed of being descended from Codrus ; his mater- 
nal ancestors of a relationship with Solon. Pla- 
to himself mentions the relationship of Criti- 
as, his maternal uncle, with Solon. Originally, 
we are told, he was named after his grandfa- 
ther Aristoeles, but in consequence of the flu- 
ency of his speech, or, as others have it, the 
breadth of his chest, ho acquired that name un- 
der which alone we know him. One story made 
him the son of Apollo; another related that bees 
settled upon the lips of the sleeping child. He 
is also said to have contended, when a youth, 
in the Isthmian and other games, as well as to 
have made attempts in epic, lyric, and dithy- 
rambic poetry, and not to have devoted himself 
to philosophy till a later time, probably after 
Socrates had drawn him within the magic cir- 
cle of his influence. Plato was instructed in 
grammar, music, and gymnastics by the most 
distinguished teachers of that time. At an early 
age he had become acquainted, through Craty- 
lus,with the doctrines of Heraclitus, and through 
other instructors with the philosophical dogmas 
of the Eleatics and of Anaxagoras. In his twen- 
tieth year he is said to have betaken himself 
to Socrates, and became one of his most ar- 
dent admirers. After the death of Socrates 
(399) he withdrew to Megara, where he proba- 
bly composed several of his dialogues, especial- 
ly those of a dialectical character. He next 
went to Cyrene, through friendship for the math- 
ematician Theodorus, and is said to have visited 
afterward Egypt, Sicily, and the Greek cities in 
Lower Italy, through his eagerness for knowl- 
edge. The more distant journeys of Plato into 
the interior of Asia, to the Hebrews, Babylo- 
nians, and Assyrians, to the Magi and Persians, 
are mentioned only by writers on whom no re- 
liance can be placed. That Plato, during his res- 
idence in Sicily, became acquainted, "through 
Dion, with the elder Dionysius, but very soon 
fell out with the tyrant, is asserted by credible 
witnesses. But more doubt attaches to the 
story, which relates that he was given up by the 
tyrant to the Spartan ambassador Pollis, by him 
sold into iEgina, and set at liberty by the Cy- 
renian Anniceris. Plato is said to.have visited 
Sicily when forty years old, consequently in 389. 
After his return he began to teach, partly in the 
gymnasium of the Academy and its shady av- 
enues, near the city, between the exterior Ce- 
ramicus and the hill Colonus Hippius, and partly 
in his garden, which was situated at Colonus. 
He taught gratuitously, and without doubt main- 
ly in the form of lively dialogue ; yet on the more 
difficult parts of his doctrinal system he probably 
delivered also connected lectures. The more 



I narrow circle of his disciples assembled them- 
I selves in his garden at common simple meals, 
j and it was probably to them alone that the in- 
scription, said to have been set up over the 
vestibule of the house, " Let no one enter who 
is unacquainted with geometry," had reference. 
From this house came forth his nephew Speu- 
sippus.Xenocrates of Chalcedon, Aristotle, Her- 
aclides Ponticus, Hestiasus of Perinthus, Philip- 
pus the Opuntian, and others, men from the most 
distant parts of Greece. To the wider circle 
of those who, without attaching themselves to 
the more narrow community of the school, 
sought instruction and incitement from him, 
such distinguished men as Chabrias, Iphicrates, 
Timotheus, Phocion, Hyperides, Lycurgus, and 
Isocrates are said to have belonged. Whether 
; Demosthenes was of the number is doubtful. 
Even women are said to have attached them- 
selves to him as his disciples. Plato's occupa- 
tion as an instructor was twice interrupted by 
his voyages to Sicily: first when Dion, probably- 
j soon after the death of the elder Dionysius, per- 
j suaded him to make the attempt to win the 
younger Dionysius to philosophy; the second 
time, a few years later (about. 360), when the 
wish of his Pythagorean friends, and the invita- 
tion of Dionysius to reconcile the disputes which 
had broken out between him and his step-uncle 
Dion, brought him back to Syracuse. His ef- 
forts were both times unsuccessful, and he owed 
his own safety to nothing but the earnest inter- 
cession of Archytas. That Plato cherished the 
hope of realizing, through the conversion of Dio- 
I nysius, his idea of a state in the rising city of 
Syracuse, was a belief pretty generally spread 
in antiquity, and which finds some confirmation 
in the expressions of the philosopher himself, 
and of the seventh Platonic letter, which, though 
spurious, is written with the most evident ac- 
quaintance with the matters treated of. With 
the exception of these two visits to Sicily, Plato 
was occupied from the time when he opened the 
school in the Academy in giving instruction and 
in the composition of his works. He died in the 
eighty-second year of his age, B.C. 347. Ac- 
cording to some, he died while writing ; accord- 
ing to others, at a marriage feast. According 
j to his last will, his garden remained the property 
| of the school, and passed, considerably increased 
j by subsequent additions, into the hands of the 
Neo-Platonists, who kept as a festival his birth- 
day as well as that of Socrates. Athenians and 
strangers honored his memory by monuments. 
Still he had no lack of enemies and enviers. 
I He was attacked by contemporary comic poets, 
I as Theopompus, Alexis, Cratinus the younger, 
and others, by one-sided Socratics, as Antisthe- 
nes, Diogenes, and the later Megarics, and also 
| by the Epicureans, Stoics, certain Peripatetics, 
and later writers eager for detraction. Thus 
even Antisthenes and Aristoxenus charged him 
with sensuality, avarice, and sycophancy ; and 
others with vanity, ambition, and envy toward 
other Socratics, Protagoras, Epicharmus, and 
Philolaus. — The Writings of Plato. These 
writings have come down to us complete, and 
have always been admired as a model of the 
union of artistic perfection with philosophical 
acuteness and depth. They are in the form of 
dialogue ; but Plato was not the first writer who 



PLATO. 



PLATO. 



employed this style of composition for philosoph- 
ical instruction. Zeno the Eleatic had already 
written in the form of question and answer. 
Alexamenus the Teian and Sophron in the 
mimes had treated ethical subjects in the form 
of dialogue. Xenophon, iEschines, Antisthenes, 
Euclides, and other Socratics also had made use 
of the dialogistic form ; but Plato has handled 
this form not only with greater mastery than 
any one who preceded him. but, in all probabil- 
ity, with the distinct intention of keeping by this 
very means true to the admonition of Socrates, 
not to communicate instruction, but to lead to 
the spontaneous discovery of it. The dialogues 
of Plato are closely connected with one another, 
and various arrangements of them have been 
proposed. Schleiermacher divides them into 
three series or classes. In the first he consid- 
ers that the germs of dialectic and of the doc- 
trine of ideas begin to unfold themselves in all 
the freshness of youthful inspiration ; in the 
second, those germs develop themselves further 
by means of dialectic investigations respecting 
the difference between common and philosoph- 
ical acquaintance with things, respecting notion 
and knowledge (dofa and sKicrf/fin) ; in the third 
they receive their completion by means of an 
objectively scientific working out, with the sep- 
aration of ethics and physics. The first series 
embraces, according to Schleiermacher, the Phcc- 
drus, Lysis, Protagoras, Laches, Charmides, Eu- 
thyphron, and Parmenides; to which may be add- 
ed as an appendix, the Apologia, Crito, Ion, Hip- 
pias Mi?ior, Hipparchus, Minos, and Alcihiad.es II. 
The second series contains the Gorgias, Theatc- 
ius, Mcno, Euthydemiis, Cratylus, Sophistcs, Polit- 
icus, Symposium, Phcedo. and Pkilebus ; to which 
may be added as an appendix, the Thcages, 
Erastce, Alcibiades I., Mcnexenus, Hippias Major, 
and Clitophon. The third series comprises the 
Republic, Timaus, Critias, and the Laws. This 
arrangement is perhaps the best that has hith- 
erto been made of the dialogues, though open to 
exception in several particulars. The genuine- 
ness of several of the dialogues has been ques- 
tioned, but for the most part on insufficient 
grounds. The Epinomis, however, is probably 
to be assigned to a disciple of Plato, the Minos 
and Hipparchus to a Socratic. The second Alci- 
biades was attributed by ancient critics to Xeno- 
phon. The AnterastcE and Clitophon are proba- 
bly of much later origin. The Platonic letters 
were composed at different periods : the oldest 
of them, the seventh and eighth, probably by dis- 
ciples of Plato. The dialogues Dcmodocus, Sisy- 
phus, Eryxias, Axiochus, and those on justice and 
virtue, were with good reason regarded by an- 
cient critics as spurious, and with them may be 
associated the Hipparchus, Theagcs, and the Def- 
initions. The genuineness of the first Alcibia- 
des seems doubtful. The smaller Hippias, the 
Ion, and the Menexcnus, on the other hand, which 
are assailed by many modern critics, may very 
well maintain their ground as occasional com- 
positions of Plato. — The Philosophy of Plato. 
The nature of this work will allow only a few 
brief remarks upon this subject. The attempt 
to combine poetry and philosophy (the two funda- 
mental tendencies of the Greek mind) gives to 
the Platonic dialogues a charm which irresisti- 
bly attracts us, though we may have but a defi- 
678 



I cient comprehension of their subject matter, 
j Plato, like Socrates, was penetrated with the 
J idea that wisdom is the attribute of the God- 
! head ; that philosophy, springing from the im 
! pulse to know, is the necessity of the intellectual 
! man, and the greatest of the blessings in which 
; he participates. When once we strive after 
j Wisdom with the intensity of a lover, she be- 
j comes the true consecration and purification of 
I the soul, adapted to lead us from the night-like 
to the true day. An approach to wisdom, how- 
ever, presupposes an original communion with 
Being, truly so called ; and this communion 
again presupposes the divine nature or immor- 
tality of the soul, and the impulse to become like 
the Eternal. This impulse is the love which 
generates in Truth, and the development of it 
is termed Dialectics. Out of the philosophical 
impulse which is developed by Dialectics, not 
only correct knowledge, but also correct action, 
springs forth. Socrates's doctrine respecting the 
unity of virtue, and that it consists in true, vigor- 
ous, and practical knowledge, is intended to be 
set forth in a preliminary manner in the Prota- 
goras and the smaller dialogues attached to it. 
j They are designed, therefore, to introduce a 
! foundation for ethics, by the refutation of the 
j common views that were entertained of morals 
j and of virtue ; for although not even the words 
\ ethics and physics occur in Plato, and even dia- 
j lectics are not treated of as a distinct and sep- 
1 arate province, yet he must rightly be regarded 
j as the originator of the three-fofd division of 
\ philosophy, inasmuch as he had before him the 
I decided object to develop the Socratic method 
j into a scientific system of dialectics, that should 
! supply the grounds of our knowledge as well as 
j of our moral action (physics and ethics), and 
I therefore he separates the general investiga- 
! tions on knowledge and understanding, at least 
| relatively, from those which refer to physics and 
j ethics. Accordingly, the Theaetetus, Sophistes, 
| Parmenides, and Cratylus, are principally dia- 
; lectical ; the Protagoras, Gorgias, Politicus,Phi- 
! lebus, and the Politics, principally ethical; while 
! the Timaeus is exclusively physical. Plato's 
' dialectics and ethics, however, have been more 
i successful than his physics. Plato's doctrine 
I of ideas was one of the most prominent parts 
• of his system. He maintained that the exist- 
| ence of things, cognizable only by means of 
! conception, is their true essence, their idea. 
! Hence he asserts that to deny the reality of 
I ideas is to destroy all scientific research. He de- 
! parted from the original meaning of the word 
I idea (namely, that of form or figure), inasmuch 
j as he understood by it the unities (hddec, fiovu- 
dec) which lie at the basis of the visible, the 
I changeable, and which can only be reached by 
| pure thinking. He included under the expres- 
| sion idea every thing stable amid the changes 
i of mere phenomena, all really existing and un- 
! changeable definitudes, by which the changes 
] of things and our knowledge of them are con- 
| ditioned, such as the ideas of genus and species, 
I the laws and ends of nature, as also the prin- 
j ciples of cognition and of moral action, and the 
| essences of individual, concrete, thinking souls. 
J His system of ethics was founded upon his dia- 
i lectics, as is remarked above. Hence he as- 
j serted that, not being in a condition to grasp the 



PLATOR. 



PLAUTUS. 



idea of the good with full distinctness, we are 
able to approximate to it only so far as we ele- 
vate the power of thinking to its original purity. 
The best editions of the collected works of Plato 
are by Bekker, Berol ., 1816-1818; by Stall- 
baum, Gotha, 1827, seq., [not yet completed] ; 
and by Orelli and others, Turic., 1839, 4to. 

[Plator. 1. The commander of Oreum for 
Philip, betrayed the town to the Romans, B C. 
207.— 2. The brother of Gentius, the Illyrian 
king, called Plator by Livy, but Pleuratus by 
Polybius. Vid. Plkuratus.— 3. Of Dyrrhachium, 
was slain by Piso, proconsul in Macedonia B.C. 
57, although he had been hospitably received in 
the house of Plator ] 

Plautia Gens, a plebeian gens at Rome. The 
name is also written Plotius, just as we have 
both Clodius and Claudius. The gens was di- 
vided into the families of Hypsaus, Proculus, 
Silvanus, Venno, Venox; and although several 
members of these families obtained the consul- 
ship, none of them are of sufficient importance 
to require a separate notice. 

Plautianus, Fulvius, an African by birth, the 
fellow-townsman of Septimius Severus. He 
served as praefect of the preetorium under this 
emperor, who loaded him with honors and 
wealth, and virtually made over much of the 
imperial authority into his hands. Intoxicated 
by these distinctions, Plautianus indulged in the 
most despotic tyranny, and perpetrated acts of 
cruelty almost beyond belief. In A.D. 202 his 
daughter Plautilla was married to Caracalla ; 
but having discovered the dislike cherished by 
Caracalla toward both his daughter and himself, 
and looking forward with apprehension to the 
downfall which awaited him upon the death of 
the sovereign, he formed a plot against the life 
both of Septimius and Caracalla. His treach- 
ery was discovered, and he was immediately 
put to death, 203. His daughter Plautilla was 
banished first to Sicily, and subsequently to 
Lipara, where she was treated with the greatest 
harshness. After the murder of Geta in 212, 
Plautilla was put to death by order of her hus- 
band. 

Plautilla. Vid. Plautianus. 

Plautius. 1. A., a man of consular rank, 
who was sent by the Emperor Claudius in A.D. 
43 to subdue Britain. He remained in Britain 
four years, and subdued the southern part of the 
island. He obtained an ovation on his return 
to Rome in 47. — 2. A Roman jurist, who lived 
about the time of Vespasian, and is cited by sub- 
sequent jurists. 

Plautus, the most celebrated comic poet of 
Rome, was a native of Sarsina, a small village 
in Umbria. He is usually called M. Accius Plau- 
tus, but his real name, as an eminent modern 
scholar has shown, was T. Maccius Plautus. 
The date of his birth is uncertain, but it may 
be placed about B.C. 254. He probably came 
to Rome at an early age, since he displays such 
a perfect mastery of the Latin language, and an 
acquaintance with Greek literature, which he 
could hardly have acquired in a provincial town. 
Whether he ever obtained the Roman franchise 
is doubtful. When he arrived at Rome he was 
in needy circumstances, and was first employed 
in the service of the actors. With the money 
he had saved in this inferior station he left 



Rome and set up in basiness, but his specula 
tions failed ; he returned to Rome, and his ne- 
cessities obliged him to enter the service of a 
baker, who employed him in turning a handmill. 
While in this degrading occupation he wrote 
three plays, the sale of which to the managers 
of the public games enabled him to quit his 
drudgery and begin his literary career. He was 
then probably about thirty years of age (224), 
and accordingly commenced writing comedies 
a few years before the breaking out of the sec- 
ond Punic war. He continued his literary oc- 
cupation for about forty years, and died in 184, 
when he was seventy years of age. His con- 
temporaries at first were Livius Andronicus and 
Naevius, afterward Ennius and Caecilius : Ter- 
ence did not rise into notice till almost twenty 
years after his death. During the long time 
that he held possession of the stage, he was 
always a great favorite of the people ; and he 
expressed a bold consciousness of his own pow- 
ers in the epitaph which he wrote for his tomb, 
and which has come down to us : 

" Postquam est mortem aptus Plautus, comceuia luget 
Scena deserta, dem risus, ludus jocusque 
Et numeri innumeri simul omnes collacrumarunt." 

Plautus wrote a great number of comedies, 
and in the last century of the republic there 
were one hundred and thirty plays which bore 
his name. Most of these, however, were not 
considered genuine by the best Roman critics. 
There were several works written upon the sub- 
ject ; and of these the most celebrated was the 
treatise of Varro, entitled Quastiones Plautince. 
Varro limited the undoubted comedies of the 
poet to twenty-one, which were hence called 
the Fabulce Varroniana. These Varronian com- 
edies are the same as those which have come 
down to our own time, with the loss of one. 
At present we possess only twenty comedies 
of Plautus ; but there were originally twenty- 
one in the manuscripts, and the Vidularia, which 
was the twenty-first, and which came last in 
the collection, was torn off from the manuscript 
in the Middle Ages. The titles of the twenty- 
one Varronian plays are, 1. Amphitruo. 2. Asi- 
naria. 3. Aulularia. 4. Captivi. 5. Curculio. 
6. Casina. 7. Cistellaria. 8. Epidicus. 9. Bac- 
chides. 10. Mostellaria. 11. Mencechmi. 12. 
Miles. 13. Mercator. 14. Pseudolus. 15. Poe- 
nulus. 16. Persa. 17. Rudens. 18. Stickus. 
19. Trinummus. 20. Truculentus . 21. Vidu- 
laria. This is the order in which they occur in 
the manuscripts, though probably not the one 
in which they were originally arranged by Varro. 
The present order is evidently alphabetical ; the 
initial letter of the title of each play is alone re- 
garded, and no attention is paid to those which 
follow : hence we find Captivi, Curculio, Casina, 
Cistellaria : Mostellaria, Men&chmi, Miles, Mer- 
cator: Pseudolus, Poznulus, Persa. The play of 
the Bacckides forms the only exception to the 
alphabetical order. It was probably placed after 
the Epidicus by some copyist, because he had 
observed that Plautus, in the Bacckides (ii., 2, 
36), referred to the Epidicus as an earlier work. 
The names of the comedies are either taken 
from some leading character in the play, or from 
some circumstance which occurs in it : those 
titles ending in aria are adjectives, giving a 
general description of the plav : thus Asinaria 

679 



PLAUTUS. 



PLEURON. 



is the " Ass-Comedy." The comedies of Plau- 
tus enjoyed unrivalled popularity among the 
Romans, and continued to be represented down 
to the time of Diocletian. The continued popu- 
larity of Plautus through so many centuries was 
owing, in a great measure, to his being a na- 
tional poet. Though he founds his plays upon 
Greek models, the characters in them act, speak, 
and joke like genuine Romans, and he thereby 
secured the sympathy of his audience more com- 
pletely than Terence could ever have done. 
Whether Plautus borrowed the plan of all his 
plays from Greek models, it is impossible to say. 
The Ctstellaria, Bacchides, Paznulvs, and Stichus 
were taken from Menander, the Casino, and Ru- 
dens from Diphilus, and the Mercator and the 
Trinummus from Philemon, and many others 
were undoubtedly founded upon Greek originals. 
But in all cases Plautus allowed himself much 
greater liberty than Terence ; and in some in- 
stances he appears to have simply taken the 
leading idea of the play from the Greek, and to 
have tilled it up in his own fashion. It has been 
inferred from a well-known line of Horace 
(Epist., ii., 1, 58), " Plautus ad exemplar Siculi 
properare Epicharmi," that Plautus took great 
pains to imitate Epicharmus. But there is no 
correspondence between any of the existing 
plays of Plautus and the known titles of the 
comedies of Epicharmus ; and the verb prope- 
rare probably has reference only to the liveliness 
and energy of Plautus's style, in which he bore 
a resemblance to the Sicilian poet. It was, 
however, not only with the common people that 
Plautus was a favorite ; educated Romans read 
and admired his works down to the latest times. 
Cicero (De Off., i., 29) places his wit on a par 
with that of the old Attic comedy, and St. Jerome 
used to console himself with the perusal of the 
poet after spending many nights in tears on ac- 
count of his past sins. The favorable opinion 
which the ancients entertained of the merits 
of Plautus has been confirmed by the judgment 
of the best modern critics, and by the fact that 
several of his plays have been imitated by many 
of the best modern poets. Thus the Amphitruo 
has been imitated by Moliere and Dryden, the 
Aulularia by Moliere in his Avare, the Mostel- 
laria by Regnard, Addison, and others, the Me- 
nachmi by Shakspeare in his Comedy of Errors, 
the Trinummus by Lessing in his Schatz, and 
so with others. Horace {De Arte Poet., 270), 
indeed, expresses a less favorable opinion of 
Plautus ; but it must be recollected that the 
taste of Horace had been formed by a different 
school of literature, and that he disliked the 
ancient poets of his country. Moreover, it is 
probable that the censure of Horace does not 
refer to the general character of Plautus's po- 
etry, but merely to his inharmonious verses and 
to some of his jests. The text of Plautus has 
come down to us in a very corrupt state. It 
contains many lacunee and interpolations. Thus 
the Aulularia has lost its conclusion, the Bac- 
chides its commencement, &c. Of the present 
complete editions, the best are by Bothe, Lips., 
1834, 2 vols. 8vo, and by Weise, Quedlinb., 
1837-1838, 2 vols. 8vo, [2d edition, 1847-48, 
2 vols. 8vo] ; but Ritschl's edition, of which the 
first volume only has yet appeared (Bonn., 1849), 
will far surpass all others. 
680 



Playis (now Piave), a river in Venetia, in the 
north of Italy, which fell into the Sinus Ter- 

gestinus. 

Pleiades (Wkeiadec or Ile/laddef), the Pleiads, 
are usually called the daughters of Atlas and 
Pleione, whence they bear the name of the At- 
lantidcs. They were called Vergilia. by the Ro- 
mans. They were the sisters of the Hyades, 
and seven in number, six of whom are described 
as visible, and the seventh as invisible. Some 
call the seventh Sterope, and relate that site be- 
came invisible from shame, because she alone 
among her sisters had had intercourse with a 
mortal man ; others call herElectra, and make 
her disappear from the choir of her sisters on 
account of her grief at the destruction of the 
house of Dardanus. The Pleiades are said to 
have made away with themselves from grief at 
the death of their sisters, the Hyades, or at the 
fate of their father Atlas, and were afterward 
placed as stars at the back of Taurus, where 
they formed a cluster resembling a bunch of 
grapes, whence they were sometimes called 
(iorpvc. According to another story, the Plei- 
ades were virgin companions of Diana (Arte- 
mis), and, together with their mother Pleione f 
were pursued by the hunter Orion in Bceotia ; 
their prayer to be rescued from him was heard 
by the gods, and they were metamorphosed into 
doves (Treleiddec), and placed among the stars. 
The rising of the Pleiades in Italy was about 
the beginning of May, and their setting about 
the beginning of November. Their names are 
Electra, Maia, Taygete, Alcyone, Celaeno, Ster- 
ope, and Merope. 

Pleione {U/.n'iovrj), a daughter of Oceanus. 
and mother of the Pleiades by Atlas. Vid. 
Atlas and Pleiades. 

[Pleminius, Q., propraetor and legatus of 
Scipio Africanus, was sent in B.C. 205 against 
the town of Locri, in Southern Italy, which still 
continued in the possession of the Carthagin- 
ians. He took the town, of which he was left 
governor by Scipio ; but his treatment of the 
inhabitants was so cruel that they sent to Rome 
to make complaint, and the senate ordered his 
return ; he was thrown into prison B.C. 204. 
but died before his trial came on.] 

Plemmyeium (Il?>efi/Livpi.Gv : now Punta di Gi- 
gante), a promontory on the southern coast of 
Sicily, immediately south of Syracuse. 

Pleumoxii, a small tribe in Gallia Belgica, 
subject to the Nervii. 

Pleukatus (HXevpaToe). 1. King of Ulyna, 
was the son of Scerdila'idas. His name occurs 
as an ally of the Romans in the second Punic 
war, and in their subsequent wars in Greece. 
—[2. A brother of Gentius, and son of the pre- 
ceding. Vid. Plator. He was put to death 
by Gentius in order that the king might himself 
marry a daughter of Monnnius, who had been 
betrothed to Pleuratus. — 3. A son of Gentius, 
king of Illyria, who was taken prisoner, together 
with his father, and carried captive to Rome, 
— 4. An Illyrian exile, of whose services Per- 
seus, king of Macedonia, availed himself on his 
embassies to Gentius, king of Illyria, in B.C 
169.] 

Plluron (R?.evp6v. Yl?.svpuvLGc), an ancient 
city in JEtolia, and along with Calydon the most 
important in the country, was situated at a lit 



PLINIUS. 



PLINIUS. 



tie distance from the coast, northwest from the 
mouth of the Evenus, and on the southern slope 
of Mount Aracy nthus or Curius. It was originally 
inhabited by the Curetcs. This ancient city was 
abandoned by its inhabitants, when Demetrius 

! Poliorcetes laid waste the surrounding country, 
and a new city was built under the same name to 
the west of the ancient one. The two cities are 
distinguished by geographers under the names 

i of Old Pleuron and New Pleuron respectively. 
Plinius. 1. C. Pun us Secundus, the cele- 
brated author of the Historia Naturalis, and fre- 
quently called Pliny the elder, was born A.D. 
23, either at Verona or Novum Comum (now 
Como), in the north of Italy. But whichever 
was the place of his With, it is certain that his 
family belonged to Novum Comum, since the 
estates of the elder Pliny were situated there, 
the younger Pliny was born there, and several 
inscriptions found in the neighborhood relate to 
various members of the family. He came to 
Rome while still young, and being descended 
from a family of wealth and distinction, he had 
the means at his disposal for availing himself 
of the instruction of the best teachers to be 
found in the imperial uity. At the age of about 
twenty-three he went to Germany, where he 
served under L. Pompenius Secundus, of whom 
he afterward wrote a memoir, and was appoint- 
ed to the command ot a troop of cavalry (pra- 
fectus alec). It appeals from notices of his own 
that he travelled over most of the frontier of 
Germany, having visited the Oauoi, the sources 
of the Danube, &c. It was in the intervals 
snatched from his military duties that he com- 
posed his treatise dt Jaculat.ione cquestri. At 
the same time he commenced a history of the 
Germanic wars, which he afterward completed 
in twenty books. He returned to Rome with 
Pomponius (52). and applied himself to the 
study of jurisprudence. He practiced for some 
time as a pleader, but does not seem to have 
distinguished himself very greatly in that ca- 
pacity. The greater part of the reign of Nero 
he sppnt in retirement, chiefly, no doubt, at his 
native place. It may have been with a view 
to the education of his nephew that he com- 
posed the work entitled Studi os us, an extensive 
treatise in three books, occupying six volumes, 
in which he marked out the course that should 
be pursued in the training of a young orator, 
from the cradle to the completion of his educa- 
tion and his entrance into public life. During 
the reign of Nero he wrote a grammatical work 
in eight books, entitled Dubius Sermo; and to- 
ward the close of the reign of this emperor he 
was appointed procurator in Spain. He was 
here in 71, when his brother-in-law died, leav- 
ing his son, the younger Pliny, to the guardian- 
ship of his uncle, who, on account of his ab- 
sence, was obliged to intrust the care of him to 
Virginius Rufus. Pliny returned to Rome in 
the reign of Vespasian, shortly before 73, when 
he adopted his nephew. He had known Ves- 
pasian in the Germanic wars, and the emperor 
received him into the number of his most inti- 
mate friends. It was at this period of his life 
that he wrote a continuation of the history of 
Aufidius Bassos, in thirty one books, carrying 
the narrative down to his own times. Of his 
manner of life at this period an interesting ac- 



count has been preserved by his nephew (Epist., 
iii., 5). It was his practice to begin to spend 
a portion of the night in studying by can- 
dle-light, at the festival of the Vulcanalia (to- 
ward the end of August), at first at a late hour 
of the night, in winter at one or two o'clock in 
the morning. Before it was light he betook 
himself to the Emperor Vespasian, and after 
executing such commissions as he might be 
charged with, returned home and devoted the 
time which he still had remaining to study. 
After a slender meal, he would, ii; the summer- 
time, lie in the sunshine while son\o one read 
to him, he himself making notes and extracts. 
He never read any thing without making ex- 
tracts in this way, for he used to say that there 
was no book so bad but that some good might 
be got out of it. He would then take a cold 
bath, and after a slight repast sleep a very lit- 
tle, and then pursue his studies till the time of 
the ccena. During this meal some book was 
read to, and commented on by him. At table, 
as might be supposed, he spent but a short time. 
Such was his mode of life when in the midst 
of the bustle and confusion of the city. When 
in retirement in the country, the time spent in 
the bath was nearly the only interval not allot- 
ted to study, and that he reduced to the nar- 
rowest limits ; for during all the process of 
scraping and rubbing he had some book read to 
him, or himself dictated. When on a journey 
he had a secretary by his side with a book and 
tablets. By this incessant application, perse- 
vered in throughout life, he amassed an enor- 
mous amount of materials, and at his death left 
to his nephew one hundred and sixty volumina 
of notes {eleclornm comment arii), written ex- 
tremely small on both sides. With some reason 
might his nephew say that, when compared with 
Pliny, those who had spent their whole lives in 
literary pursuits seemed as if they had spent 
them in nothing else than sleep and idleness. 
From the materials which he had in this way 
collected he compiled his celebrated Historia 
Naturalis, which he published about 77. The de- 
tails of Pliny's death are given in a letter of tho 
younger Pliny to Tacitus (Ep., vi., 16). He per- 
ished in the celebrated eruption of Vesuvius, 
whioh overwhelmed Herculaneum and Pompeii, 
in 79, being fifty-six years of age. He was at the 
time stationed at Misenum in the command of 
the Roman fleet ; and it was his anxiety to ex- 
amine more closely the extraordinary phenom- 
enon, which led him to sail to Stabiae, where 
he landed and perished. The only work of 
Pliny which has come down to us is his Histo- 
ria Naturalis. By Natural History the ancients 
understood more than modern writers would 
usually include in the subject. It embraced 
astronomy, meteorology, geography, mineralo- 
gy, zoology, botany — in short, every thing that 
does not relate to the results of human skill or 
the products of human faculties. Pliny, how- 
ever, has not kept within even these extensive 
limits. He has broken in upon the plan implied 
by the title of the work, by considerable digres- 
sions on human inventions and institutions 
(book vii ). and on the history of the fine arts 
(xxxv.-xxxvii ). Minor digressions on similar 
topics are also interspersed in various parts of 
the work, the arrangement of which in other 

681 



PLINIUS. 



PLINIUS. 



respects exhibits but little scientific discrimina- 
tion. It comprises, as Pliny says in the pref- 
ace, twenty thousand matters of importance, 
drawn from about two thousand volumes. It 
is divided into thirty-seven books, the first of 
which consists of a dedicatory epistle to Titus, 
followed by a table of contents of the other 
books. When it is remembered that this work 
was not the result of the undistracted labor of 
a life, but written in the hours of leisure secured 
-from active pursuits, and that, too, by the author 
of other extensive works, it is, to say the least, 
a wonderful monument of human industry. It 
may easily be supposed that Pliny, with his in- 
ordinate appetite for accumulating knowledge 
out of books, was not the man to produce a 
scientific work of any value. He was not even 
an original observer. The materials which he 
worked up into his huge encyclopaedic compila- 
tion were almost all derived at second-hand, 
though doubtless he has incorporated the re- 
sults of his own observation in a larger number 
of instances than those in which he indicates 
such to be the case. Nor did he, as a compiler, 
show either judgment or discrimination in the 
selection of his materials, so that in his accounts 
the true and the false are found intermixed. 
His love of the marvellous, and his contempt 
for human nature, lead him constantly to intro- 
duce what is strange or wonderful, or adapted 
to illustrate the wickedness of man, and the un- 
satisfactory arrangements of Providence. His 
work is of course~valuable to us from the vast 
number of subjects treated of, with regard to 
many of which we have no other sources of in- 
formation. But what he tells us is often unin- 
telligible, from his retailing accounts of things 
with which he was himself personally unac- 
quainted, and of which he in consequence gives 
no satisfactory idea to the reader. Though a 
writer on zoology, botany, and mineralogy, he 
has no pretensions to be called a naturalist. 
His compilations exhibit scarcely a trace of 
scientific arrangement ; and frequently it can 
be shown that he does not give the true sense 
of the authors whom he quotes and translates, 
giving not uncommonly wrong Latin names to 
the objects spoken of by his Greek authorities. 
The best editions of Pliny's Natural History, 
with a commentary, are by Hardouin (Paris, 
1685, 5 vols. 4to ; second edition 1723, 3 vols. 
fol.) ; and by Panckoucke (Paris, 1329-1833, 20 
vols.), with a French translation and notes by 
Cuvier and other eminent scientific and literary 
men of France. The most valuable critical 
edition of the text of Pliny is by Sillig (Lips., 
1831-1836, 5 vols. 12mo).— 2, C. Plinius C^e- 
cilius Secdndus, frequently called Pliny the 
younger, was the son of C. Ceeeilius, and of 
Plinia, the sister of the elder Pliny. He was 
born at Comum in A.D. 61 ; and having lost 
his father at an early age, he was adopted by 
his uncle, as has been mentioned above. His 
education was conducted under the care of his 
uncle, his mother, and his tutor, Virginius Ru- 
ms. From his youth he was devoted to letters. 
In his fourteenth year he wrote a Greek trage- 
dy. He studied eloquence under Quintilian. 
His acquirements finally gained him the repu- 
tation of being one of the most learned men of 
ihe age , and his friend Tacitus, the historian, 
682 



j had the same honorable distinction. He was 
also an orator. In his nineteenth year he began 
to speak in the forum, and he was frequently 
employed as an advocate before the court of the 
Centumviri and before the Roman senate. He 
filled numerous offices in succession. While a 
young man he served in Syria as tribunus mili- 
tum, and was there a hearer of the stoic Eu- 
phrates and of Artemidorus. He was subse- 
quently quaestor Caesaris, praetor in or about 93, 
j and consul 100, in which year he wrote his 
I Panegyricus, which is addressed to Trajan. In 
| 103 he was appointed propraetor of the province 
I Pontica, where he did not stay quite two years, 
j Among his other functions he also discharged 
j that of curator of the channel and the banks of 
the Tiber. He was twice married. His sec- 
ond wife was Calpurnia, the grand-daughter of 
i Calpurnius Fabatus, and an accomplished wom- 
| an ; she was considerably younger than her 
: husband, who has recorded her kind attentions 
I to him. He had no children by either wife 
| born alive. The life of Pliny is chiefly known 
I from his letters. So far as this evidence shows, 
: he was a kind and benevolent man, fond of lit- 
erary pursuits, and of building on and improving 
! his estates. He was rich, and he spent liber- 
| ally. He was a kind master to his slaves. 
I His body was feeble, and his health not good. 

Nothing is known as to the time of his death, 
j The extant works of Pliny are his Panegyricus 
! and the ten books of his Epistolcz. The Pant- 
's gyricus is a fulsome eulogium on Trajan ; it is 
j of small value for the information which it con- 
i tains about the author himself and his times, 
j Pliny collected his own letters, as appears from 
! the first letter of the first book, which looks 
j something like a preface to the whole collection. 
! It is not an improbable conjecture that he may 
; have written many of his letters with a view 
; to publication, or that when he was writing 
; some of them the idea of future publication was 
in his mind. However, they form a very agree- 
| able collection, and make us acquainted with 
1 many interesting facts in the life of Pliny and 
j that of his contemporaries. The letters from 
! Pliny to Trajan and the emperor's replies are 
j the most valuable part of the collection : they 
J form the whole of the tenth book. The letter 
j on the punishment of the Christians (x., 97), and 
the emperor's answer (x., 98), have furnished 
I matter for much remark. The fact of a person 
j admitting himself to be a Christian was suffi- 
i cient for his condemnation ; and the punish- 
i ment appears to have been death. The Chris- 
! tians, on their examination, admitted nothing 
| further than their practice of meeting on a fixed 
I day before it was light, and singing a hymn to 
j Christ, as God (quasi Deo) ; their oath (what- 
! ever Pliny may mean by sacramentum) was not 
I to bind them to any crime, but to avoid theft, 
j robbery, adultery, breach of faith, and denial of 
| a deposit. Two female slaves, who were said 
to be deaconesses (mmistrce), were put to the 
I torture by Pliny, but nothing unfavorable to the 
| Christians could be got out of them : the gov- 
| ernor could detect nothing except a perverse 
I and extravagant superstition (svpcrstitionem pra- 
; cam et immotUcam). Hereupon he asked the 
j emperor's advice, for the contagion of the su- 
I perstition was spreading: yet he thought that 



PLINTHINE. 

it might be stopped. The emperor, in his reply, 
approves of the governor's conduct, as explain- 
ed in his letter, and observes that no general 
rule can be laid down. Persons supposed to be 
Christians are not to be sought for : if they are 
accused and the charge is proved, they are to 
be punished ; but if a man denied the charge, 
and could prove its falsity by offering his pray- 
ers to the heathen gods (das nostris), however 
suspected he may have been, he shall be ex- 
cused in respect of his repentance. Charges of 
accusation (libcllt), without the name of the in- 
formant or accuser, were not to be received, as 
they had been : it was a thing of the worst ex- 
ample, and unsuited to the age. One of the 
best editions of the Epistolce and Panegyricus is 
by Schaefer, Lips., 1805. The best editions of 
the Epistolce are by Cortius and Longolius, Am- 
sterdam, 1734, and by Gierig, Lips., 1800. 

Plinthixe (Yl?.iv6iv?]), a city of Lower Egypt, 
on the bay called from it Sinus Plinthinetes 
{JlXivdLV7]Tii(; /coA-of), was the westernmost city 
of Egypt (according to its narrower limits) on 
the frontier of Marmarica. It stood a little north 
of Taposiris (now Abousir). 

Plistarchus (liXeicTaoxo^)- l.King of Sparta, 
was the son and successor of Leonidas, who 
was killed at Thermopylae B.C. 480. He reign- 
ed from 480 to 458, but, being a mere child at the 
time of his father's death, the regency was as- 
sumed by his cousin Pausanias. It appears 
that the latter continued to administer affairs in 
the name of the young king till his own death, 
about 467. — [2. Son of Antipater, brother of 
Cassander, the Macedonian king.] 

Plisthexes (Jl?.£Lo0£vrir:), son of Atreus, and 
husband of Acrope or Eriphyle, by whom he 
became the father of Agamemnon, Menelaus, 
and Anaxibia ; but Homer makes the latter the 
children of Atreus. Yul. Agamemnon, Atreus. 

Plistia (now Prestia), a village in Samnium, in 
the valley between Mount Tifata and Taburnus. 

Plistoanax or Plisto.n ax (lYheLGTou.va.%, IIAet- 
orcjimf), king of Sparta, was the eldest son of 
the Pausanias who conquered at Platasae, B C. 
479. On the death of Plistarchus in 458, with- 
out issue, Plistoanax succeeded to the throne, 
being yet a minor. He reigned from 458 to 
408. In 445 he invaded Attica, but the prema- 
ture withdrawal of his army from the enemy's 
territory exposed him to the suspicion of hav- 
ing been bribed by Pericles. He was punished 
by a heavy fine, which he was unable to pay, 
and was therefore obliged to leave his country. 
He remained nineteen years in exile, taking up 
his abode near the temple of Jupiter (Zeus), on 
Mount Lycaeus in Arcadia, and having half his 
house within the sacred precincts, that he might 
enjoy the benefit of the sanctuary. During this 
period his son Pausanias. a minor, reigned in 
his stead. The Spartans at length recalled him 
in 426, in obedience to the injunctions of the 
Delphic oracle. But he was accused of having 
tampered with the Pythian priestess to induce 
her to interpose for him, and his alleged impiety 
in this matter was continually assigned by his 
enemies as the cause of all Sparta's misfortunes 
in the war, and therefore it was that he used 
all his influence to bring about peace with 
Athens in 421. He was succeeded by his son 
Pausanias. 



PLOTINUS. 

Plistus (IIAci(7r6f : now Xeropotamo), a small 
river in Phocis, which rises in Mount Parnas- 
sus, flows past Delphi, where it receives the 
small stream Castalia, and falls into the Cris- 
saean Gulf near Cirrha. 

PlotLva, Pompeia, the wife of the Emperor 
Trajan, and a woman of extraordinary merit 
and virtue. As she had no children, she per- 
suaded her husband to adopt Hadrian. She 
died in the reign of Hadrian, who honored hei 
memory by mourning for her nine days, by build- 
ing a temple in her honor, and by composing 
hymns in her praise. 

Plotinopolis ( HAomvoTTo/lif ), a town in 
Thrace, on the road from Trajanopolis to Ha- 
drianopolis, founded by Trajan, and named in 
honor of his wife Plotina. 

Plotinus (YlluTivoc;), the originator of the 
Neo Platonic system, was born at Lycopolis, in 
Egypt, about A.D. 203. The details of his life 
have been preserved by his disciple Porphyry 
in a biography which has come down to us. 
From him we learn that Plotinus began to study 
philosophy in his twenty-eighth year, and re- 
mained eleven years under the instruction of 
Ammonius Saccas. In his thirty-ninth year he 
joined the expedition of the Emperor Gordian 
(242) against the Persians, in order to become 
acquainted with the philosophy of the Persians 
and Indians. After the death of Gordian he 
fled to Antioch, and from thence to Rome (244). 
For the first ten years of his residence at Rome 
he gave only oral instructions to a few friends ; 
but he was at length induced in 254 to commit 
i his instructions to writing. In this manner, 
when, ten years later (264), Porphyry came to 
Rome and joined himself to Plotinus, twenty- 
one books of very various contents had been 
already composed by him. During the six years 
that Porphyry lived with Plotinus at Rome, the 
latter, at the instigation of Amelius and Por- 
phyry, wrote twenty-three books on the subjects 
which had been discussed in their meetings, to 
which nine books were afterward added. Of 
the fifty-four books of Plotinus, Porphyry re- 
marks that the first twenty-one books were of 
a lighter character, that only the twenty-three 
following were the production of the matured 
powers of the author, and that the other nine, 
especially the four last, were evidently writ- 
ten with diminished vigor. The correction of 
these fifty-four books was committed by Ploti- 
nus himself to the care of Porphyry. On ac- 
count of the weakness of his sight, Plotinus 
never read them through a second time, to say 
nothing of making corrections ; intent simply 
upon the matter, he was alike careless of orthog- 
raphy, of the division of the syllables, and the 
clearness of his hand-writing. The fifty-four 
books were divided by Porphyry into six En- 
neads, or sets of nine books. Plotinus was elo- 
quent in his oral communications, and was said 
to be very clever in finding the appropriate 
word, even if he failed in accuracy on the whole. 
Besides this, the beauty of his person was in- 
creased when discoursing ; his countenance 
was lighted up with genius, and covered with 
small drops of perspiration. He lived on the 
scantiest fare, and his hours of sleep were re- 
stricted to the briefest time possible. He was 
regarded with admiration and respect not only 



PLOTIUS. 



PLUTARCHUS. 



by men of science like the philosophers Ame- 
lias, Porphyry, the physicians Paulinus, Eusto- 
chius, and Zethus the Arab, but even by sena- 
tors and other statesmen. He enjoyed the favor 
of the Emperor Gallienus, and the Empress 
Salonina, and almost obtained from them the 
rebuilding of two destroyed towns in Campania, 
with the view of their being governed according 
to the laws of Plato. He died at Puteoli in 
262. The philosophical system of Plotinus is 
founded upon Plato's writings, with the addition 
of various tenets drawn from the Oriental phi- 
losophy and religion. He appears, however, to 
avoid studiously all reference to the Oriental 
origin of his tenets ; he endeavors to find them 
all under the veil of the Greek mythology, and 
points out here the germ of his own philosoph- 
ical and religious convictions. Plotinus is not 
guilty of that commixture and falsification of 
the Oriental mythology and mysticism which is 
found in Iamblichus, Proclus, and others of the 
Neo- Platonic school. The best edition of the 
Enneads of Plotinus is by Creuzer, Oxonii, 1835, 
3 vols. 4to. 

Plotius, whose full name was Marius Plo- 
tius Sacerdos, a Latin grammarian, the au- 
thor of De Metris Liber, probably lived in the 
fifth or sixth century of the Christian era. His 
work is published by Pntschius in the Gram- 
matics Latincz Auctores, Hannov., 1605, and by 
Gaisford in the Scriptores Latini Rei Metricce, 
Oxon., 1837. 

[Plotius Gallus, of Lugdunum, the first who 
taught rhetoric at Rome in the Latin language. 
He met with great success, and had a large num- 
ber of auditors, among whom was Cicero.] 

[Plotius Tucca. Vid. Tucca.] 

Plutarchus (LlXovTapxog). I. Tyrant of Ere- 
tria in Eubcea, whom the Athenians assisted in 
B.C. 354 against his rival, Callias of Chalcis. 
The Athenian army was commanded by Pho- 
cion, who defeated Callias at Tamynae ; but 
Phocion, having suspected Plutarchus of treach- 
ery, expelled him from Eretria — 2. The biog- 
rapher and philosopher, was born at Chaeronea 
in Bceotia. The year of his birth is not known ; 
but we learn from Plutarch himself that he was 
studying philosophy under Ammonius at the 
time when Nero was making his progress 
through Greece, in A D. 66 ; from which we 
may assume that he was a youth or a young 
man at that time. He spent some time at 
Rome, and in other parts of Italy ; but he tells 
ns that he did not learn the Latin language in 
Italy, because he was occupied with public com- 
missions, and in giving lectures on philosophy ; 
and it was late in life before he busied himself 
with Roman literature. He was lecturing at 
Rome during the reign of Domitian, but the 
statement of Suidas that Plutarch was the pre- 
ceptor of Trajan ought to be rejected. Plutarch 
spent the later years of his life at Chaeronea, 
where he discharged various magisterial offices, 
and held a priesthood. The time of his death 
is unknown. The work which has immortal- 
ized Plutarch's name is his Parallel Lives (Biol 
llapal?rf]?,oi) of forty-six Greeks and Romans. 
The forty-six Lives are arranged in pairs ; each 
pair contains the life of a Greek and a Roman, 
and is followed by a comparison of the two men : 
in a few pairs the comparison is omitted or lost. 
684 



He seems to have considered each pair of Lives 
and the Parallel as making one book (BiGUov). 
The forty-six Lives are the following : l. The- 
seus and Romulus ; 2. Lycurgus and Numa ; 3. 
Solon and Valerius Puhlicola ; 4. Themistocles 
and Camillas ; 5. Pericles and Q. Fabius Maxi- 
mus ; 6. Alcibiades and Coriolanus ; 7. Timo- 
leon and .Emilius Paulus ; 8. Pelopidas and 
Marcellus ; 9. Aristides and Cato the Elder j 
10. Philopoemen and Flamininus ; 11. Pyrrhus 
and Marius; 12. Lysander and Sulla; 13. Cimon 
andLucullus ; 14. Nicias andCrassus ; 15. Eu- 
menes and Sertorius; 16. Agesilaus and Pom- 
peius ; 17. Alexander and Caesar ; 18. Phocion 
and Cato the younger ; 19. Agis and Cleome- 
nes, and Tiberius and Caius Gracchi ; 20. De- 
mosthenes and Cicero; 21. Demetrius Polior- 
cetes and M. Antonius ; 22. Dion and M. Ju- 
nius Brutus. There are also the Lives of Ar- 
taxerxes Mnemon, Aratus, Galba, and Otho, 
which are placed in the editions after the forty- 
six lives. Perhaps no work of antiquity has 
been so extensively read in modern times as 
Plutarch's Lives. The reason of their popu- 
larity is, that Plutarch has rightly conceived the 
business of a biographer: his biography is true- 
portraiture. Other biography is often a dull, 
tedious enumeration of facts in the order of 
time, with perhaps a summing up of character 
at the end. The reflections of Plutarch are nei- 
ther impertinent nor trifling ; his sound good 
sense is always there ; his honest purpose is 
transparent ; his love of humanity warms the 
i whole. His work is and will remain, in spite 
j of all the fault that can be found with it by plod- 
! ding collectors of facts and small critics, the 
| book of those who can nobly think, and dare, 
and do. The best edition of the Lives is by 
Sintenis, Lips., 1839-1846, 4 vols. 8vo. Plu- 
tarch's other writings, above sixty in number, 
are placed under the general title of Moralia,ot 
Ethical works, though some of them are of a 
historical and anecdotical character, such as the 
essay on the malignity (KaKo^deia) of Herodo- 
tus, which neither requires nor merits refuta- 
tion, and his Apophthegmata, many of which 
are of little value. Eleven of these essays are 
generally classed among Plutarch's historical 
works : among them also are his Roman Ques- 
tions or Inquiries, his Greek Questions, and the 
Lives of the Ten Orators. But it is likely 
enough that several of the essays which are in- 
cluded in the Moralia of Plutarch are not by 
him. At any rate, some of them are not worth 
reading. The best of the essays included among 
the Moralia are of a different stamp. There is 
no philosophical system in these essays : pure 
speculation was not Plutarch's province. His 
best writings are practical, and their merits con- 
sist in the soundness of his views on the ordi- 
nary events of human life, and in the benevo- 
lence of his temper. His " Marriage Precepts" 
are a sample of his good sense and of his hap- 
piest expression. He rightly appreciated the 
importance of a good education, and he gives 
much sound advice on the bringing up of chil- 
dren. The best edition of the Moralia is by 
Wyttenbach : it consists of six volumes of text 
(Oxon., 1795-1800) and two volumes of notes 
(Oxon., 1810-1821), [4to, or 14 vols., text and 
! notes, 8vo, with a copious index Graecitatis, 



PLUTO. 

2 vols. 8vo, Oxon., 1830.] The best editions 
of all the works of Plutarch are by Reiske, 
Lips., 1774-1782, 12 vols. 8vo, and by Hutten, 
1791-1805, 14 vols. 8vo.— 3. The younger, was 
I a son of the last, and is supposed by some to 
have been the author of several of the works 
I which pass usually for his father's, as, e.g., the 
■ Apophthcgmata.—i. An Athenian, son of Nes- 
, torius, presided with distinction over the Neo- 
I Platonic school at Athens in the early part of 
i the fifth century, and was surnamed the Great. 
He numbered among his disciples Syrianus of 
Alexandrea, who succeeded him as head of the 
school, and Proclus of Lycia. He wrote com- 
mentaries, which are lost, on the " Tima;us" 
; of Plato, and on Aristotle's treatise "On the 
Soul." He died at an advanced age, about A.D. 
430. 

Pluto or Pluto n (UIovtuv), the giver of 
wealth, at first a surname of Hades, the god of 
the lower world, and afterward used as the real 
name of the god. In the latter sense it first oc- 
curs in Euripides. An account of the god is 
given under Hades. 

Plutus (YL?.r>vToc), sometimes called Pluton, 
the personification of wealth, is described as a 
son of Iasion and Demeter (Ceres). Vid. Iasion. 
Zeus (Jupiter) is said to have deprived him of 
sight, that he might not bestow his favors on 
righteous men exclusively, but that he might 
distribute his gifts blindly, and without any re- 
gard to merit. At Thebes there was a statue 
of Tyche or Fortune, at Athens one of Irene or 
Peace, and at Thespiae one of Athena (Minerva) 
Ergane, and in each of these cases Plutus was 
represented as the child of those divinities, sym- 
bolically expressing the sources of wealth. He 
seems to have been commonly represented as a 
boy with a Cornucopia. 

Pi-uvialia (UXovtrdXa, Ptol. : now probably 
i Ferro), one of the islands in the Atlantic called 

FoRTUNAT/E. 

Pluvius, i. e., the sender of rain, a surname of 
Jupiter among the Romans, to whom sacrifices 
. were offered during long-protracted droughts. 
Pnvtagoras (Upvrayopac). I. Eldest son of 
Evagoras, king of Salamis in Cyprus, was as- 
sassinated along with his father, B.C. 374. — 
2. King of Salamis in Cyprus, probably suc- 
ceeded Nicocles, though we have no account of 
his accession, or his relation to the previous 
monarchs. He submitted to Alexander in 332, 
and served with a fleet under that monarch at 
the siege of Tyre. 

Podalirius (Uo6a?.eif)tog). 1. Son of .Escula- 
i pius and Epione or Arsinoe, and brother of Ma- 
; chaon, along with whom he led the Thessalians 
I of Tricca against Troy. He was, like his broth- 
i er, skilled in the medical art. On his return 
1 from Troy he was cast by a storm on the coast 
of Syros in Caria, where he is said to have set- 
tled. He was worshipped as a hero on Mount 
Dria. — [2. A companion of .-Eneas, slain by Al- 
i sus in Italy ] 

Podarces (UodupnTK). 1. The original name 
! of Priam. Vid. Priamus.— 2. Son of Iphiclus 
and grandson of Phylacus, was a younger broth- 
er of Protesilaus, and led the Thessalians of 
Phylace against Troy. 

PoDARGE. Vid. HaRPYI^E. 

[Podes (Ilootff), son of Eetion, a Trojan war- 



PO LEMON. 

rior and friend of Hector, was slain by a javelin- 
blow from Menelaus in the fight over the corpse 
of Patroclus ] 

Pceas (Uoiac), son of Phylacus or Thauma- 
cus, husband ofMethone, and the father of Phi- 
loctetes, who is hence called Pacantiades, Paan- 
tius heros, Pceantia proles, and Pccante satus. 
Pceas is mentioned among the Argonauts, and 
is said to have killed with an arrow Talaus in 
Crete. Pceas set fire to the pile on which Her- 
cules burned himself, and was rewarded by the 
hero with his arrows. Vid. Hkkcules, Philoc- 

TETES. 

[Pceeessa (U-oLrjeoGa). 1. A city in Eastern 
Messenia, on the Nedon, with a temple of Mi- 
nerva (Athena) Nedusia. — 2. (Ruins still called 
ai UotTjaaai), one of the four cities in Ceos (the 
inhabitants of which were removed to Cartbaja), 
containing a sanctuary of Apollo Smintheus, and 
in the vicinity another of Minerva (Athena) Ne- 
dusia, which Nestor was believed to have built 
on his return from Troy.] 

Pcemander (Hoifiavfipnc), son of Chajresilaus 
and Stratonice, was the husband of Tanagra, a 
daughter of iEolus or vEsopus, by whom he be- 
came the father of Ephippus and Leucippus. 
He was the reputed founder of the town of Ta- 
nagra in Bcsotia, which was hence called Per- 
mandria. When Pcemander had inadvertently 
killed his own son, he was purified by Elephe- 
nor. 

Pcemanenus (U.oLfiavT)vo^ ; ethnic, the same: 
now probably Maniyas), a fortified place in Mys- 
ia, south of Cyzicus, with a celebrated temple 
of ^Esculapius. 

Poena (tlotvr)), a personification of retaliation, 
sometimes mentioned as one being, and some- 
times in the plural. The Pcenae belonged to the 
train of Dice, and are akin to the Erinnyes. 

[Pceni. I. Vid. Phoenicia, Carthago. — 2. Pce- 
ni, Bastuli, a people of Hispania Baetica, con- 
sisting of Phoenician settlers blended with the 
old inhabitants of the land.] 

Pcetovio. Vid. Petovio. 

Pogon (Uuyuv,) the harbor of Trcezen in Ar- 
golis. 

Pola (now Pola), an ancient town in Istria, 
situated on the western coast, and near the 
Promontory Polaticum (now Punta di Promon- 
toria), which was the most southerly point in 
the country. According to tradition, Pola was 
founded by the Colchians, who had been sent in 
pursuit of Medea. It was subsequently a Ro- 
man colony, with the surname Pieias Julia, and 
became an important commercial town, being 
united by good roads with Aquileia and the prin- 
cipal towns of Illyria. Its importance in an- 
tiquity is attested by its magnificent ruins, of 
which the principal are those of an amphithea- 
tre, of a triumphal arch (Porta aurea), erected 
to L. Sergius by his wife Salvia Postuma, and 
of several temples. 

PdLEMON (liolefiidv). 1. I. King of Pontus 
and the Bosporus, was the son of Zenon. the 
orator of Laodicea. As a reward fir the serv- 
ices rendered by his father as well as himself, 
he was appointed by Antony in B.C. 39 to the 
government of Cilicia, and he subsequently ob- 
tained in exchange the kingdom of Pontus. He 
accompanied Antony in his expedition against 
theParthians in 36. After the battle of Actium 

685 



POLEMON. 



POLITES. 



he was able to make his peace with Octavianus, 
who confirmed him in his kingdom. About the \ 
year 16 he was intrusted by Agrippa with the ! 
charge of reducing the kingdom of Bosporus, of 
which he was made king after conquering the 
country. His reign after this was long and 
prosperous ; he extended his dominions as far 
as the River TanaTs ; but having engaged in an 
expedition against the barbarian tribe of the As- 
purgians, he was not only defeated by them, but 
taken prisoner, and put to death. By his sec- 
ond wife Pythodoris, who succeeded him on the 
throne, he left two sons, Polemon II , and Zenon, 
king of Armenia, and one daughter, who was 
married to Cotys, king of Thrace. — 2. II. Son 
of the preceding and of Pythodoris, was raised 
to the sovereignty of Pontus and Bosporus by 
Caligula in A.D. 39. Bosporus was afterward 
taken from him by Claudius, who assigned it to 
Mithradates, while he gave Polemon a portion 
of Cilicia in its stead, 41. In 62, Polemon was 
induced by Nero to abdicate the throne, and 
Pontus was reduced to the condition of a Roman 
province. — 3. Of Athens, an eminent Platonic 
philosopher, was the son of Philostratus, a man 
of wealth and political distinction. In his youth 
Polemon was extremely profligate ; but one day, 
when he was about thirty, on his bursting into 
the school of Xenocrates, at the head of a band 
of revellers, his attention was so arrested by the 
discourse, which chanced to be upon temper- 
ance, that he tore off his garland and remained 
an attentive listener, and from that day he 
adopted an abstemious course of life, and con- 
tinued to frequent the school, of which, on the 
death of Xenocrates, he became the head, B.C. 
315. He died in 273, at a great age. He es- 
teemed the object of philosophy to be, to exer- 
cise men in things and deeds, not in dialectic 
speculation. He placed the summum bonum in 
living according to the laws of nature. — 4. Of 
Athens by citizenship, but by birth either of Il- 
ium, or Samos, or Sicyon, a Stoic philosopher 
and an eminent geographer, surnamed Periege- 
tes (6 TrepiT}y^T7}^), lived in the time of Ptolemy 
Epiphanes, at the beginning of the second cen- 
tury B.C. In philosophy he was a disciple of 
Panaetius. He made extensive journeys through 
Greece to collect materials for his geographical 
works, in the course of which he paid particu- 
lar attention to the inscriptions on votive offer- 
ings and on columns. As the collector of t hese 
inscriptions, he was one of the earlier contribu- 
tors to the Greek Anthology. Athenaeus and 
other writers make very numerous quotations 
from his works. They were chiefly descrip- 
tions of different parts of Greece : some were 
on the paintings preserved in various places, 
and several are controversial, among which is 
one against Eratosthenes. [The fragments of 
Polemon have been published by Preller in the 
work entitled Polemonis Periegetce Fragmenta, 
collegit, dig es sit, notis auxit L. Preller, Lips., 
1833 ] — 5. Axton'ius, a celebrated sophist and 
rhetorician, flourished under Trajan, Hadrian, 
and the first Antoninus, and was in high favor 
with the two former emperors. He was born 
of a consular family at Laodicea, but spent the 
greater part of his life at Smyrna. His most 
celebrated disciple was Aristides. Among his 
imitators in subsequent times was Gre?orv Na- 
686 



zianzen. His style of oratory was imposing 
rather than pleasing, and his character was 
haughty and reserved. During the latter part 
of his life he was so tortured by the gout that 
he resolved to put an end to his existence ; he 
had himself shut up in the tomb of his ancestors 
at Laodicea, where he died of hunger at the age 
of sixty-five. The only extant work of Pole- 
mon is the funeral orations for Cynaeglrus and 
Callimachus, the generals who fell at Marathon, 
which are supposed to be pronounced by their 
fathers. Tfiese orations are edited by Orelli, 
Lips.. 1819 —6. The author of a short Greek- 
work on Physiognomy, which is still extant. 
He must have lived in or before the third cen- 
tury after Christ, as he is mentioned by Origen, 
and from his style he can not be supposed to 
have lived much earlier than this time. His 
work consists of two books ; in the first, which 
contains twenty-three chapters, after proving 
the utility of physiognomy, he lays down the 
general principles of the science ; in the second 
book, which consists of twenty-seven chapters, 
he goes on to apply the principles he had before 
laid down, and describes in a few words the 
characters of the courageous man, the timid, 
the impudent, the passionate, the talkative, &c. 
The best edition of it is by Franz in his " Scrip- 
tores Physiognomoniae Veteres," Altenburff, 
1780. 

PolemonTuji {Ho?.epL0)viov : Uo?,sfi6vtoc, and 
Uo?.e^uvLevc '■ now Polcman), a city on the coast 
of Pontus, in Asia Minor, built by King Pole- 
mon (probably the second) on the site of the 
older city of Side, at the mouth of the River 
Sidenus (now Poleman Chai), and at the bottom 
of a deep gulf, with a good harbor. It was the 
capital of the kingdom of Polemon, comprising 
the central part of Pontus, east of the Iris, which 
was hence called Pontus Polemoniacus. 

Polias (Uo?uuc), i. e., "the goddess protect- 
ing the city, ? ' a surname of Minerva (Athena) 
at Athens, where she was worshipped as the 
protecting divinity of the Acropolis. 

Polichna (Uo?uxv7], Dor. Tlo?.txva : Uo?uxvi- 
rnc), a town. 1. In the northwest of Messenia, 
west of Andania. — 2. In the northeast of Laco- 
nia. — 3. In Chios. — 4. In Crete, whose territo- 
ry bordered on that of Cydonia. — 5. In Mysia, 
in the district Troas, on the left bank of the 
iEsepus, near its source. 

Polieus (Tlo/usvs), " the protector of the city,** 
a surname of Jupiter (Zeus), under which he 
had an altar on the acropolis at Athens. 

Poliorcetes, Demetrius. Vid. Demetrius. 

Polis (Holts), a village of the Locri Opuntii, 
subject to Hyle. 

[Polisma (Ilolicfia), a small town of the Mys- 
ian district Troas, on the Simo*is, already in 
Strabo's time in ruins.] 

Polites (Uo?uT7jg). 1. Son of Priam and Hec- 
uba, and father of Priam the younger, was a val- 
iant warrior, but was slain by Pyrrhus.— [2. One 
of the companions of Ulysses, changed by Circe 
into swine ; later legends made him to have 
been stoned to death by the inhabitants of the 
coast of Bruttium, near Temesa, for having vio- 
lated a maiden in a fit of intoxication : in re- 
venge, his spirit is said to have pursued them 
until they erected a temple to his honor, where 
a maiden was yearly sacrificed to him, until Eu 



POLITORIUM. 



I'OLUO. 



thyraon freed them by having vanquished the evil 
spirit.] 

Politorium, a town in the interior of Latium. 
destroyed by Ancus Marcius. 
, Poliuchus {Uohovxoc), j. c, " protecting the 
, city," occurs as a surname of several divinities, 
,such as Minerva (Athena) Chalcicecus at Spar- 
,ta, and of Minerva (Athena) at Athens. 

Polla, Argentari i, the wife of the poet Lu- 
can. 

PollentIa (Pollentinus). 1. (Now Polc?iza), 
a town of the Statielli in Liguria, at the conflu- 
\ ence of the Sturia and the Tanarus, and subse- 
quently a Roman municipium. It was cele- 
brated for its wool. In its neighborhood Stili- 
cho gained a victory over the Goths under Ala- 
iTic— 2. A town in Picenum, probably identical 
! "with Urbs Salvia.— 3. (Now Pollenza), a Roman 
i colony on the northeastern point of the Balearis 
Major. 

Pollio, Annius, was accused of treason (ma- 
ycstas) toward the end of the reign of Tiberius, 
but was not brought to trial. He was subse- 
quently one of Nero's intimate friends, but was 
accused of taking part in Piso's conspiracy 
against that emperor in A.D. 63, and was in con- 
sequence banished. 

Pollio, C. Asinius, a distinguished orator, 
poet, and historian of the Augustan age. He 
was born at Rome in B.C. 76, and became dis- 
tinguished as an orator at an early age. On the 
breaking out of the civil war he joined Caesar, 
and in 49 he accompanied Curio to Africa. Aft- 
er the defeat and death of Curio he crossed over 
to Greece, and fought at Caesar's side at the 
battle of Pharsalia (48). He also accompanied 
Caesar in his campaigns against the Pompeian 
party in Africa (46) and Spain (45). He return- 
jed with Caesar to Rome, but was shortly after- 
ward sent back to Spain, with the command of 
i the Further Province, in order to prosecute the 
war against Sextus Pompey. He was in his 
; province at the time of Ca:sar*s death (44). He 
took no part in the war between Antony and the 
senate ; but when Antony was joined by Lepi- 
dus and Octavianus in 43, Pollio espoused their 
cause, and persuaded L. Plancus in Gaul to fol- 
low his example. In the division of the prov- 
inces among the triumvirs, Antony received the 
Gauls. The administration of the Transpadane 
Gaul was committed to Pollio by Antony, and 
he had accordingly the difficult task of settling 
the veterans in the lands which had been as- 
signed to them in this province. It was upon 
this occasion that he saved the property of the 
poet Virgil at Mantua from confiscation, whom 
I he took under his protection from his love of 
. literature. In 40 Pollio took an active part in 
effecting the reconciliation between Octavianus 
' and Antony at Brundisium. In the same year 
, he was consul ; and it was during his consul- 
i ship that Virgil addressed to him his fourth Ec- 
logue. In 39 Antony went to Greece, and sent 
Pollio with a part ol his army against the Par- 
thini, an Illyrian people. Pollio defeated the 
Parthini and took the Dalmatian town of Sa- 
lonae, and, in consequence of his success, ob- 
tained the honor of a triumph on the 25th of 
October in tins year. He gave his son Asin- 
ius Gallus the agnomen of Salon inus after the 
town which he had taken. It was during his 



Illyrian campaign that Virgil addressed to him 
the eighth Eclogue. From this time Pollio 
withdrew altogether from political life, and de- 
voted himself to the study of literature. He 
still continued, however, to exercise his orator- 
ical powers, and maintained his reputation for 
eloquence by his speeches both in the senate 
and the courts of justice. He died at his Tus- 
culan villa, A.D. 4, in the eightieth year of his 
age, preserving to the last the full enjoyment 
of his health and of all his faculties. Pollio de- 
serves a distinguished place in the history of 
Roman literature, not so much on account of 
his works as of the encouragement which he 
gave to literature. He was not only a patron 
of Virgil, Horace (vid. Carm., ii., 1), and other 
great poets and writers, but he has the honor of 
having been the first person to establish a pub- 
lic library at Rome, upon which he expended 
the money he had obtained in his Illyrian cam- 
paign. None of Pollio's own works have come 
down to us, but they possessed sufficient merit 
to lead his contemporaries and successors to 
class his name with those of Cicero, Virgil, and 
Sallust as an orator, a poet, and a historian. It 
was, however, as an orator that he possessed 
the greatest reputation. Catullus describes him 
in his youth (Carm., xii., 9) as " leporum diser- 
tus puer et facetiarum," and Horace speaks of 
him in the full maturity of his powers (Carm., 
ii., 1, 13) as "Insigne maestis presidium reis et 
consulenti, Pollio, curiae ;" and we have also 
the more impartial testimony of Quintilian, the 
two Senecas, and the author of the Dialogue on 
Orators to the greatness of his oratorical pow- 
ers. Pollio wrote the history of the civil wars 
in seventeen books. It commenced with the 
consulship of Metellus and Afranius, B.C. 60v 
in which year the first triumvirate was formed, 
and appears to have come down to the time 
when Augustus obtained the undisputed su- 
premacy of the Roman world. As a poet Pollio 
was best known for his tragedies, which are 
spoken of in high terms by Virgil and Horace, 
but which probably did not possess any great 
merit, as they are hardly mentioned by subse- 
quent writers. The words of Virgil (Eel., iii., 
86), " Pollio et ipse facit nova carmina," prob- 
ably refer to tragedies of a new kind, namely, 
such as were not borrowed from the Greek, 
but contained subjects entirely new, taken from 
Roman story. Pollio also enjoyed great repu- 
tation as a critic, but he is chiefly known in this 
capacity for the severe judgment which he pass- 
ed upon his great contemporaries. Thus he 
pointed out many mistakes in the speeches of 
Cicero, censured the Commentaries of Caesar 
for their want of historical fidelity, and found 
fault with Sallust for affectation in the use of 
antiquated words and expressions. He also 
complained of a certain Patavinity in Livy, re- 
specting which some remarks are made in the 
life of Livy (p. 444, b). Pollio had a son, C. 
Asinius Gallus Saloninus. Vid. p. 320. Asin- 
ius Gallus married Vipsania, the former wife of 
Tiberius, by whom he had several children, 
namely : 1. Asinius Saloninus. 2. Asinius Gal- 
lus. 3. Asinius Pollio, consul A.D. 23. 4. Asin- 
ius Agrippa, consul A.D. 25. 5. Asinius Celer. 
[Pollio, Trubellius. Vid. Trebellius.] 
Pollio, Vedius, a Roman eques and a friend 

687 



POLLUSCA. 



POLYBIUS 



■of Augustus, was by birth a freedman, and has 
obtained a place in history on account of his 
riches and his cruelty. He was accustomed to 
feed his lampreys with human flesh, and when- 
ever a slave displeased him, the unfortunate 
wretch was forthwith thiown into the pond as 
food for the fish. On one occasion Augustus 
was supping with him, when a slave had the 
misfortune to break a crystal goblet, and his 
master immediately ordered him to be thrown 
to the fishes. The slave fell at the feet of Au- 
gustus, praying for mercy ; and when the em- 
peror could not prevail upon Pollio to pardon 
him, he dismissed the slave of his own accord, 
and commanded all Pollio's crystal goblets to 
be broken and the fish-pond to be filled up. Pol- 
lio died B.C. 15, leaving a large part of his prop- 
erty to Augustus. It was this Pollio who built 
the celebrated villa of Pausilypum near Naples. 

[Pollcsca, a city of the Volsci in Latium, 
belonging to the territory of Antium ; accord- 
ing to Nibby, the modern Casal dclla Mandria, 
with ruins of old fortifications.] 

Pollux or Polydeuces. Vid. Dioscuri. 

Pollux, Julius ('lov/uog Uo/.vdevKjjg). 1. Of 
Naucratis in Egypt, was a Greek sophist and 
grammarian. He studied rhetoric at Athens 
under the sophist Adrian, and afterward opened 
a private school in the city, where he gave in- 
struction in grammar and rhetoric. At a later 
time he was appointed by the Emperor Corn- 
modus to the chair of rhetoric at Athens. He 
died during the reign of Commodus at the age 
of fifty-eight. We may therefore assign A.D. 
183 as the year in which he flourished. He 
seems to have been attacked by many of his 
contemporaries on account of the inferior char- 
acter of his oratory, and especially by Lucian in 
his 'PijTopov diducKuAog. Pollux was the author 
of several works, all of which have perished, 
with the exception of the Onomaslicon. This 
work is divided into ten books, each of which 
contains a short dedication to the Casar Com- 
modus : it was therefore published before A.D. 
177, since Commodus became Augustus in that 
year. Each book forms a separate treatise by 
itself, containing the most important words re- 
lating to certain subjects, with short explana- 
tions of the meanings of the words. The alpha- 
betical arrangement is not adopted, but the 
words are given according to the subjects treat- 
ed of in each book. The best editions are by 
Lederlin and Hemsterhuis, Amsterdam, 1706 ; 
by Dindorf, Lips., 1824 ; and by Imm. Bekker, 
Berol., 1846. — 2. A Byzantine writer, the au- 
thor of a Chronicon, which treats at some length 
of the creation of the world, and is therefore 
entitled 'loropia (pvaiK^. Like most other By- 
zantine histories, it is a universal history, be- 
ginning with the creation of the world, and com- 
ing down to the time of the writer. The two 
manuscripts from which this work is published 
end with the reign of Valens, but the Paris man- 
uscript is said to come down as low r as the death 
of Romanus, A.D. 963. The best edition is by 
Hardt, Munich, 1792. 

Polus (nw/.oc). 1. A sophist and rhetorician, 
a native of Agrigentum. He was a disciple of 
Gorgias, and wrote a treatise on rhetoric, as 
well as other works mentioned by Suidas. He 
is introduced by Plato as an interlocutor in the 
688 



Gorgias. — 2. A celebrated tragic actor, the sou 
of Charicles of Sunium, and a disciple of Archi- 
as of Thurii. It is related of him, that at the 
age of seventy, shortly before his death, he act- 
ed in eight tragedies on four successive days. 

Poly^gos (Ho?.vaiyo(; : now Polybos or An- 
timdos), an uninhabited island in the vEgeao 
Sea, near Melos. 

Polyjenus (IToAvaivoc). 1. Of Lampsacus, i 
mathematician and a friend of Epicurus, adopt- 
ed the philosophical system of his friend, and, 
although he had previously acquired great rep- 
utation as a mathematician, he now maintained 
with Epicurus the worthlessness of geometry. 
— 2. Of Sardis, a sophist, lived in the time ol 
Julius Caesar. He is the author of four epi- 
grams in the Greek Anthology. His full name 
was Julius PolycEnus. — 3. The Macedonian, the 
author of the work on Stratagems in war (2rpa- 
T7}y7}fiaTa), which is still extant, lived about the 
middle of the second century of the Christian 
era. Suidas calls him a rhetorician, and we 
learn from Polyaenus himself that he was ac- 
customed to plead causes before the emperor. 
He dedicated his work to M. Aurelius and Verus, 
while they were engaged in the Parthian war, 
about A.D. 163, at which time, he says, he was 
too old to accompany them in their campaigns. 
This work is divided into eight books, of which 
the first six contain an account of the strata- 
gems of the most celebrated Greek generals, 
the seventh of those of barbarous or foreign peo- 
ple, and the eighth of the Romans and illustri- 
ous women. Parts, however, of the sixth and 
seventh books are lost, so that of the nine hund- 
red stratagems which Polyaenus described, only 
eight hundred and thirty-three have come down 
to us. The work is written in a clear and pleas- 
ing style, though somewhat tinged with the ar- 
tificial rhetoric of the age. It contains a vast 
number of anecdotes respecting many of the 
most celebrated men in antiquity ; but its value 
as a historical authority is very much dimin- 
ished by the little judgment which the author 
evidently possessed, and by our ignorance of the 
sources from which he took his statements. The 
best editions are by Maasvicius, Leyden, 1690; 
by Mursinna, Berlin, 1756 ; and by Corav, Paris, 
1809. 

Polybius (UoXv6ioc). 1. The historian, the 
son of Lycortas, and a native of Megalopolis, in 
Arcadia, was born about B C. 204. His father 
Lycortas was one of the most distinguished 
men of the Achaean league ; and Polybius re- 
ceived the advantages of his father's instruction 
in political knowledge and the military art. He 
must also have reaped great benefit from his 
intercourse with Philopcemen, who was a friend 
of his father's, and on whose death in 182 Po- 
lybius carried the urn in which his ashes were 
deposited. In the following year Polybius was 
appointed one of the ambassadors to Egypt, but 
he did not leave Greece, as the intention of 
sending an embassy was abandoned. From 
this time he probably began to take part in pub- 
lic affairs, and he appears to have soon obtained 
great influence among his countrymen. After 
the conquest of Macedonia in 168, the Roman 
commissioners, who were sent into the south 
of Greece, commanded, at the instigation of 
Callicrates, that one thousand Achaeans should 



POLYBIUS. 



POLYBIUS. 



be carried to Rome, to answer the charge of second Punic war, and the Social war in Greece, 
not having assisted the Romans against Per- j and ending with the conquest of Perseus and 
seus. This number included all the best and , the downfall of the Macedonian kingdom in 168. 
noblest part of the nation, and among them j This was, in fact, the main portion of his work, 
i was Polybius. They arrived in Italy in B.C. j and its great ohject was to show how the Ro- 
• 167, but, instead of being put upon their trial, j mans had in this brief period of fifty-three years 
1 they were distributed among the Etruscan j conquered the greater part of the world ; but 
j towns. Polybius was more fortunate than the ( since the Greeks were ignorant for the most 
; rest of his countrymen. He had prohably be- j part of the early history of Rome, he gives a 
come acquainted in Greece with iEmilius Pau- j survey of Roman history from the taking of the 
lus or his sons Fabius and Scipio, and the two ! city by the Gauls to the commencement of the 
youno- men now obtained permission from the ! second Punic war, in the first two books, which 
praetor for Polybius to reside at Rome in the ' thus form an introduction to the body of the 
house of their father Paulas. Scipio was then j work. With the fall of the Macedonian king- 
eighteen years of age, and soon became warmly dona the supremacy of the Roman dominion 
attached to Polybius. Scipio was accompanied ; was decided, and nothing more remained for 
by his friend in all his military expeditions, and | the ot her nations of the world than to yield sub- 
1 received much advantage from his experience ! mission to the Romans. The second part of 
I and knowledge. Polybius, on the other hand, | the work, which formed a kind of supplement 
besides finding a liberal patron and protector in j to the former part, comprised the period from 
Scipio, was able by his means to obtain access j the conquest of Perseus in 168 to the fall of 
I to public documents, and to accumulate mate- j Corinth in 146. The history of the conquest 
rials for his great historical work. After re- J of Greece seems to have been completed in the 
maining in Italy seventeen years, Polybius re- thirty-ninth book; and the fortieth book proba- 
turned to Peloponnesus in 151, with the surviv- \ bly contained a chronological summary of the 
ing Achaean exiles, who were at length allowed j whole work. The history of Polybius is one 
by the senate to revisit their native land. He of the most valuable works that has come down 
did not, however, remain long in Greece. He ! to us from antiquity. He had a clear apprehen- 
joined Scipio in his campaign against Carthage, j sion of the knowledge which a historian must 
and was present at the destruction of that city | possess ; and his preparatory studies were car- 
in 146. Immediately afterward he hurried to ried on with the greatest energy and persever- 
Greece, where the Achaeans were waging a mad j ance. Thus he not only collected with accu- 
and hopeless war against the Romans. He ap- j racy and care an account of the events that he 
pears to have arrived in Greece soon after the j intended to narrate, but he also studied the 
capture of Corinth ; and he exerted all his in- ! history of the Roman constitution, and made 
fluence to alleviate the misfortunes of his coun- 1 distant journeys to become acquainted with the 
try men, and to procure favorable terms for them, geography of the countries that he had to de- 
His grateful fellow-countrymen acknowledged scribe in his work. In addition to this, he had 
i the great services he had rendered them, and a strong judgment and a striking love of truth, 
i statues were erected to his honor at Megalopo- and, from having himself taken an active part 
I lis, Mantinea, Pallantium, Tegea, and other in political life, he was able to judge of the 
i places. Polybius seems now to have devoted motives and actions of the great actors in his- 
i himself to the composition of the great histor- j tory in a way that no mere scholar or rhetorician 
; ical work for which he had long been collect- could possibly do. But the characteristic feat- 
! ing materials. At what period of his life he ure of his work, and the one which distinguishes 
i made the journeys into foreign countries for it from all other histories which have come 
■ the purpose of visiting the places which he had down to us from antiquity, is its didactic nature, 
to describe in his history, it is impossible to He did not, like other historians, write to afford 
determine. He tells us (iii., 59) that he under- j amusement to his readers ; his object was to 
took long and dangerous journeys into Africa, teach by the past a knowledge of the future, 
Spain, Gaul, and even as far as the Atlantic, on and to deduce from previous events lessons of 
account of the ignorance which prevailed re- practical wisdom. Hence he calls his work a 
specting those parts. Some of these countries Pragmateia (Trpuy/iaTeia), and not a History (h- 
i he visited while serving under Scipio, who af- ropia). The value of history consisted, in his 
forded him every facility fur the prosecution of opinion, in the instruction that might be obtain- 
his design. At a later period of his life he ed from it. Thus the narrative of events be- 
visited Egypt likewise. He probably accom- came in his view of secondary importance ; 
: panied Scipio to Spam in 134, and was present they formed only the text of the political and 
at the fall of Numantia. since Cicero states (ad moral discourses which it was the province of 
Fam., v., 12) thai Polybius wrote a history of the historian to deliver. Excellent, however, 
the Numantine war He died at the age of as these discourses are, they materially detract 
eighty-two, in consequence of a fall from his from the merits of the history as a work of art; 
i horse, about 122. The history of Polybius con- their frequent occurrence interrupts the conti- 
• sisted of forty books. It began B.C. 220. where nuity of the narrative, and destroys, to a great 
I the history of Aral us left off, and ended at 146, extent, the interest of the reader in the scenes 
in which year Corinth was destroyed, and the which are described. Moreover, he frequently 
independence of Greece perished. It consisted inserts long episodes, which have little con- 
of two distinct parts, which were probably pub- nection with the main subject of his work, be- 
lished at different times, and afterward united cause they have a didactic tendency. Thus we 
into one work. The first part comprised a find that one whole book (the sixth) was de- 
period of ihirty-five years, beginning with the j voted to a history of the Roman constitution; 
44 689 



POLYBOTES. 



POLVCLES. 



and the thirty-fourth book seems to have been 
exclusively a treatise on geography. The style 
of Polybius bears the impress of his mind ; and 
as instruction, and not amusement, was the great 
object for which he wrote, he did not seek to 
please his readers by the choice of his phrases 
or the composition of his sentences. Hence 
the later Greek critics were severe in their con- 
demnation of his style. The greater part of 
the history of Polybius has perished. We pos- 
sess the first five books entire, but of the rest 
we have only fragments and extracts, some of 
which, however, are of considerable length, 
such as the account of the Roman army, which 
belonged to the sixth book. There have been 
discovered at different times four distinct col- 
lections of extracts from the lost books. The 
first collection, discovered soon after the revival 
of learning in a MS. brought from Corfu, con- 
tained the greater part of the sixth book, and 
portions of the following eleven. In 1582 Ursi- 
nus published at Antwerp a second collection 
of Extracts, entitled Excerpta de Legationibus, 
which were made in the tenth century of the 
Christian era by order of Constantinus Por- 
phyrogenitus. In 1634, Valesius published a 
third collection of extracts from Polybius, also 
taken from the Excerpta of Constantinus, en- 
titled Excerpta de Virtutibus et Vitiis. The 
fourth collection of extracts was published at 
Rome in 1827 by Angelo Mai, who discovered 
in the Vatican library at Rome the section of 
the Excerpta of Constantinus Porphyrogenitus, 
entitled Excerpta de Sentcntiis. The best edi- 
tion of Polybius with a commentary is by 
Schweighaeuser, Lips., 1789-1795, 8 vols. 8vo. 
The best edition of the text alone is by Bekker 
(Berol., 1844, 2 vols. 8vo), who has added the 
Vatican fragments. Livy did not use Polybius 
till he came to the second Punic war, but from 
that time he followed him very closely. Cicero 
likewise chiefly followed Polybius in the ac- 
count which he gives of the Roman constitution 
in his De Republica. The history of Polybius 
was continued by Posidonius and Strabo. Vid. 
Posidonius, Strabo. Besides the great his- 
torical work of which we have been speaking, 
Polybius wrote, 2. The Life of Philopozmen, in 
three books. 3. A treatise on Tactics. 4. A 
History of the Numantine War. — 2. A freedman 
of the Emperor Augustus, read in the senate 
the will of the emperor after his decease. — 3. A 
favorite freedman of the Emperor Claudius. 
He was the companion of the studies of Clau- 
dius ; and on the death of his brother, Seneca 
addressed to him a Consolatio, in which he be- 
stows the highest praises upon his literary at- 
tainments. Polybius was put to death through 
the intrigues of Messalina, although he had been 
one of her paramours. 

Polybotes (n.o\v66T7/g), one of the giants 
who fought against the gods, was pursued by 
Neptune (Poseidon) across the sea as far as the 
island of Cos. There Neptune (Poseidon) tore 
away a part of the island, which was afterward 
called Nisyrion, and, throwing it upon the giant, 
buried him under it. 

Polybotus (Uo2.v6otoc : ruins at Bulawadin), 
a city of Great Phrygia, east of Synnada. 

Polybus {Ub^vtoq). 1. King of Corinth, by 
whom GEdipus was brought up. Vid. (Edipus. 
090 



He was the husband of Peribcea or Merope. 
Pausanias makes him king of Sicyon, and de- 
scribes him as a son of Mercury (Hermes) and 
Chthonophyle, and as the father of Lysianassa, 
whom he gave in marriage to Talaus, king of 
the Argives. — [2. A Trojan warrior, son of An- 
tenor. — 3. Husband of Alcandra, king of Egyp- 
tian Thebes, guest-friend of Menelaus. — 4. An 
Ithacan, father of the suitor Eurymachus. — 5. 
One of the suitors of Penelope, slain by Eumae- 
us. — 6. A Phaeacian mentioned in the Odys- 
sey] — 7. A Greek physician, one of the pupils 
of Hippocrates, was also his son-in-law, and 
lived in the island of Cos, in the fourth century 
B.C. Polybus, with his brothers-in-law, Thes- 
salus and Dracon, were the founders of the an- 
cient medical sect of the Dogmatici. He was 
sent abroad by Hippocrates, with his fellow- 
pupils, during the time of the plague, to assist 
different cities with his medical skill, and he 
afterward remained in his native country. He 
has been supposed, both by ancient and modern 
critics, to be the author of several treatises in 
the Hippocratic collection. 

Polycakpus (U.o? l .vKap'nog), one of the apos- 
tolical fathers, was a native of Smyrna. The 
date of his birth and of his martyrdom are un- 
certain. He is said to have been a disciple of 
the apostle John, and to have been consecrated 
by this apostle bishop of the church at Smyrna. 
It has been conjectured that he was the angel 
of the church of Smyrna to whom Christ di- 
rected the letter in the Apocalypse (ii , 8-11); 
and it is certain that he was bishop of Smyrna 
at the time when Ignatius of Antioch passed 
through that city on his way to suffer death at 
Rome, some time between 107 and 116. Igna- 
tius seems to have enjoyed much this inter- 
course with Polycarp, whom he had known in 
former days, when they were both hearers of 
the apostle John. The martyrdom of Polycarp 
occurred in the persecution under the emperors 
Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus. As he 
was led to death, the proconsul offered him his 
life if he would revile Christ. "Eighty and 
six years have I served him," was the reply, 
" and he never did me wrong : how, then, can I 
revile my King and my Saviour?" We have 
remaining only one short piece of Polycarp, his 
Letter to the Philippians, which is published along 
with Ignatius and the other apostolical writers. 
Vid. Ignatius. 

[Polycaste (Tlo?,vKaGT7j). 1. Daughter of 
Lygaeus, wife of Icarius, mother of Penelope. 
— 2. Daughter of Nestor and Anaxibia, wife of 
Telemachus, to whom she bore Perseptolis.] 

Polycles (UoavkIvc)- 1- The name of two 
artists. The elder Polycles was probably an 
Athenian, and flourished about B.C. 370. He 
appears to have been one of the artists of the 
later Athenian school, who obtained great ce- 
lebrity by the sensual charms exhibited in their 
works. One of his chief works was a celebrated 
statue of an Hermaphrodite. The younger 
Polycles is placed by Pliny in 155, and is said 
to have made a statue of Juno, which was placed 
in the portico of Octavia at Rome, when that 
portico was erected by Metellus Macedonicus. 
But since most of the works of art with which 
Metellus decorated his portico were not the 
original productions of living artists, but the 



POIA'OLETUS. 



POLYCRATES. 



works of former masters, it has been conjec- 
tured that this Polycles may be no other than 
the Athenian artist already mentioned.— [2. A 
famous athlete, often crowned at the four great 
games of Greece : his statue was placed in the 
sacred grove at Olympia ] 

Polycletus ( QaMitlet Tog ). 1. The Elder, of 
Argos, probably by citizenship, and of Sicyon, 
probably by birth, was one of the most cele- 
brated statuaries of the ancient world ; he was 
also a sculptor, an architect, and an artist in 
toreutic. He was the pupil of the great Argive 
statuary Ageladas, under whom he had Phidias 
and Myron for his fellow-disciples. He was 
somewhat younger than Phidias, and about the 
same age as Myron. He flourished about B.C. 
152-412. Of his personal history we know- 
nothing further. As an artist, he stood at the 
head of the schools of Argos and Sieyon, and 
approached more nearly than any other to an 
equality with Phidias, the great head of the 
Athenian school. The essential difference be- 
tween these artists was that Phidias was un- 
surpassed in making the images of the gods, 
Polycletus in those of men. One of the most 
celebrated works of Polycletus was his Dory- 
chorus or Spcar-bearcr, a youthful figure, but 
with the full proportions of a man. This was 
the statue which became known by the name 
of Canon, because in it the artist had embodied 
a perfect representation of the ideal of the hu- 
man figure. Another of his great works was 
his ivory and gold statue of Juno (Hera) in her 
temple between Argos and Mycenae. This 
work was executed by the artist in his old age, 
and was doubtless intended by him to rival 
Phidias's chryselephantine statues of Minerva 
{Athena) and of Jupiter (Zeus), though it was 
surpassed by them in costliness and size. The 
goddess was seated on a throne, her head 
crowned with a garland, on which were work- 
ed the Graces and the Hours, the one hand 
holding the symbolical pomegranate, and the 
other a sceptre, surmounted by a cuckoo, a bird 
sacred to Juno (Hera) on account of her having 
been once seduced by Jupiter (Zeus) under that 
form. This statue remained always the ideal 
model of Juno (Hera). In the department of 
toreutic, the fame of Polycletus no doubt rest- 
ed chiefly on the golden ornaments of his statue 
of Juno (Hera) ; but he also made small bronzes 
{sigilla) and drinking- vessels (phiala). As an 
architect, Polycletus obtained great celebrity by 
the theatre, and the circular building (tholus) 
which he built in the sacred inclosure of iEs- 
culaptus at Epidaurus.— 2. The Younger, also a 
statuary of Argos, of whom very little is known, 
because his fame was eclipsed by that of his 
more celebrated namesake, and, in part, con- 
temporary. The younger Polycletus may be 
placed about 400. — 3. Of Larissa, a Greek his- 
torian, and one of the numerous writers of the 
history of Alexander the Great. [Most of the 
extracts from his histories refer to the geogra- 
phy of the countries which Alexander invaded. 
They are collected, with a notice of the author, 
by C. Miiller, in his Scripiorcs Rerum Alexandri 
Magni, p. 129-33, in Didot's Bibliotheca Graeca, 
Paris, 1846 ] — 1. A favorite freedman of Nero, 
who sent him into Britain to inspect the state 
of the island 



Polyc rates (U.o?.vKpurn^). 1. Of Samos, one 
of the most fortunate, ambitious, and treacher- 
| ous of the Greek tyrants. With the assistance 
I of his brothers Pantagnotus and Syloson, he 
j made himself master of the island toward the 
| latter end of the reign of Cyrus. At first he 
! shared the supreme power with his brothers ; 
| but he shortly afterward put Pantagnotus to 
: death, and banished Syloson. Having thus be- 
i come sole despot, he raised a powerful fleet, 
; and extended his sway over several of the 
j neighboring islands, and even conquered some 
! towns on the main land. He had formed an al- 
I liance with Amasis, king of Egypt, who, how- 
\ ever, finally renounced it through alarm at the 
amazing good fortune of Polycrates, which never 

■ met with any check or disaster, and which there- 
! fore was sure, sooner or later, to incur the envy 
| of the gods. Such, at least, is the account of" 

[ Herodotus, who has narrated the story of the 
i rupture between Amasis and Polycrates in his 
most dramatic manner. In a letter which Ama- 
sis wrote to Polycrates, the Egyptian monarch 
advised him to throw away one of his most val- 
uable possessions, in order that he might thus 
inflict some injury upon himself. In accord- 
ance with this advice, Polycrates threw into the 
sea a seal-ring of extraordinary beauty ; but in 
a few days it was found in the belly of a fish, 
which had been presented to him by a fisher- 
[ man. In the reign of Cambyses, the Spartans 

■ and Corinthians sent a powerful force to Samos 
| in order to depose the tyrant ; but their expe- 
j dition failed, and after besieging the city forty 
I days, they left the island. The power of Poly- 
| crates now became greater than ever. The 
I great works which Herodotus saw at Samos 
j were probably executed by him. He lived in 
| great pomp and luxury, and, like others of the 

Greek tyrants, was a patron of literature and 
the arts. The most eminent artists and poets 
found a ready welcome at his court, and his 
friendship for Anacreon is particularly cele- 
brated. But in the midst of all his prosperity 
he fell by the most ignominious fate. Orcetes, 
the satrap of Sardis, had formed a deadly hatred 
against Polycrates. By false pretences, the sa- 
trap contrived to allure him to the main land, 
where he was arrested soon after his arrival, 
and crucified, 522. — 2. An Athenian rhetorician 
and sophist of some repute, a contemporary of 
Socrates and Isocrates, taught first at Athens 
i and afterward at Cyprus. He was the teach- 
er of Zoilus. He wrote, 1. An accusation 
j of Socrates, which was a declamation on the 
( subject, composed some years after the death 
{ of the philosopher. 2. A defence of Busiris. 
i The oration of Isocrates, entitled Busiris, is ad- 
j dressed to Polycrates, and points out the faults 
) which the latter had committed in his oration 
I on this subject. 3. An obscene poem, which 
J he published under the name of the poetess Phi- 
i loenis, for the purpose of injuring her reputation, 
j — [3. An Athenian, a lochagus in the army of 
i the Greek auxiliaries of the younger Cyrus, a 
friend of Xenophon, whom he defended on one 
! occasion. — 4. Descended from an illustrious 
family at Argos, went to the court of Ptolemy 
! Philopator, and proved of great service in drill- 
ing the Egyptian troops. He commanded the 
1 cavalry on the left wing at the battle of Raphia 

691 



POLYCTOR. 



POLYIDUS. 



in B.C. 217 against Antiochus HI., in which 
Antiochus was defeated, and which secured to 
Ptolemy the provinces of Ccelesyria, Phoenicia, 
and Palestine. Although young, Polycrates was 
appointed governor of Cyprus, which office he J 
filled with ability and integrity. In his later j 
years he appears to have changed for the worse, ! 
and to have indulged in every vice.] 

[Polyctor (Uo?^vkto)p), son of Pterelaus, a 
prince of Ithaca. A place in Ithaca, Polycto- 
rium, was believed to have derived its name 
from him.] 

Polydamas (TLo?i,vduua^). 1. Son of Panthous 
and Phrontis, was a Trojan hero, a friend of I 
Hector, and brother of Euphorbus. — 2. Of Sco- j 
turjsa in Thessaly, son of Nicias, conquered in j 
the Pancratium at the Olympic games in 01. 93, 
B C. 408. His size was immense, and the most j 
marvellous stories are related of his strength, j 
how he killed without arms a huge and fierce 
lion'on Mount Olympus, how he stopped a char- 
iot at full gallop, &c. His reputation led the 
Persian king, Darius Ochus, to invite him to 
his court, where he performed similar feats. — 
3 Of Pharsalus in Thessaly, was intrusted by j 
his fellow-citizens, about B C. 375, with the su- I 
preme government of their native town. He | 
afterward entered into a treaty with Jason of | 
Pheras. On the murder of Jason in 370, his 
brother Polyphron put to death Polydamas. j 

Polydectes ( UoXvdeKTT/c). 1. King of the J 
island of Seriphos, was son of Magnes, and j 
brother of Dictys. He received kindly Danae | 
and Perseus, when the chest in which they had 
been exposed by Acrisius floated to the island 
of Seriphos. His story is related under Per- i 
seus. — 2. King of Sparta, was the eldest son of j 
Eunomus, the brother of Lycurgus the lawgiver, 
and the father of Charilaus, who succeeded 
him. Herodotus, contrary to the other authori- 
ties, makes Polydectes the father of Eunomus. j 

Polydeuces (Uo?,v()evKr]<;), one of the Dioscuri, ! 
and the twin- brother of Castor, called by the 
Romans Pollux. Vid. Dioscuri. 

[Polydora {UoAvfiupa). 1. A daughter of 
Oceanus andTethys. — 2. Daughter of Meleager 
and Cleopatra, was married to Protesilaus. after I 
whose death she made away with hersell. — 3. 
Da ghter of Peleus and Antigone was a sister j 
of Achilles, and married to Spercheius or Borus, 
by whom she became themotherof Menesthius.] ; 

Polydorus {UokvSupoq). 1. King of Thebes, 
son of Cadmus and Harmonia, husband of Nyc- j 
te'i's, and father of Labdacus. — 2. The youngest 
among the sons of Priam and Laothoe, was 
slain by Achilles. This is the Homeric ac- 
count ; but later traditions make him a son of 
Priam and Hecuha, and give a different account 
of his death. One tradition relates that, when 
Ilium was on the point of falling into t he hands 
of the Greeks, Priam intrusted Polydorus and a 
large sum of money to Polymestor or Polym- 
nestor, king of the Thracian Chersonesus. Aft- 
er the destruction of Troy, Polymestor killed 
Polydorus for the purpose of getting possession 
of his treasures, and cast his body into the sea. j 
His body was afterward washed upon the coast, \ 
where it was found and recognized by his moth- j 
ei Hecuba, who, together with other Trojan cap- 
tives, took vengeance upon Polymestor by kill- ; 
ing his two children, and putting out his eyes. I 
692 



Another tradition stated that Polydorus was in- 
trusted to his sister Iliona, who was married to 
Polymestor. She brought him up as her own 
son, while she made every one else believe that 
her own son DeTphilus or De'ipylus was Poly, 
dorus. The Greeks, anxious to destroy the 
race of Priam, promised to Polymestor Electra 
for his wife, and a large amount of gold, if he 
would kill Polydorus. Polymestor was pre- 
vailed upon, and he accordingly slew his own 
son. Polydorus thereupon persuaded his sis- 
ter Iliona to kill Polymestor. — 3. King of Sparta, 
was the son of xAlcamenes and the father of 
Eurycrates, who succeeded him. He assisted 
in bringing the first Messenian war to a conclu- 
sion, B.C. 724. He was murdered by Polemar- 
chus, a Spartan of high family ; but his name 
was precious among his people on account of his 
justice and kindness. Crotona and the Epi- 
zephyrian Locri were founded in his reign. — 4. 
Brother of Jason of Pheree, obtained the su- 
preme power, along with his brother Polyphron, 
on the death of Jason in B.C. 370, but was 
shortly afterward assassinated by Polyphron — 
5. A sculptor of Rhodes, one of the associates 
of Agesander, in the execution of the celebrated 
group of the Laocoon. V-id. Agesander. 

Polyeuctus (UoAvevktoc ), an Athenian orator 
of the demus Sphettus, was a political friend of 
Demosthenes, with whom he worked in resist- 
ing the Macedonian party. 

Polygnotus ( Uo?iVyvurog ), one of the most 
celebrated Greek painters, was a native of the 
island of Thasos, and was honored with the citi- 
zenship of Athens, on which account he is some- 
times called an Athenian. His father, Aglao- 
phon, was his instructor in his art ; and he had 
a brother, named Aristophon, who was also a 
painter. Polygnotus lived on intimate terms 
with Cimon and his sister Elpinice ; and he 
probably came to Athens in B.C. 463, after the 
subjugation of Thasos by Cimon. He appears 
to have been at that time an artist of some repu- 
tation, and he continued to exercise his art al- 
most down to the beginning of the Peloponne- 
sian war (431). The period of his greatest ar- 
tistic activity at Athens seems to have been 
that which elapsed from his removal to Athens 
(463) to the death of Cimon (449), who employ- 
ed him in the pictorial decoration of the public 
buildings with which he began to adorn the 
city, such as the temple of Theseus, the Ana- 
ceum, and the Poecile. He afterward went to 
Delphi, when he was employed with other art- 
ists in decorating the buildings connected with 
the temple. He appears to have returned to 
Athens about 435, where he executed a series 
of paintings in the Propylaea of the Acropolis. 
The Propylaea were commenced in 437, and 
completed in 432. The subjects of the pictures 
of Polygnotus were almost invariably taken from 
Homer and the other poets of the epic cycle^ 
They appear to have been mostly painted on 
panels, which were afterward let into the walls 
where they were to remain. 

Polyhymnia. Vid. Polymnia. 

Polyidus (TloXviSoc). 1. Son of Cceranus, 
grandson of Abas, and great-grandson of Me- 
lampus. He was, like his ancestor Melampus, 
a celebrated soothsayer at Corinth, and is de- 
scribed as the father of Euchenor, Astycratia, 



POLYMEDIUM. 



POLYXENA. 



and Manto. When Alcathous had murdered 
his own son Callipolis at Megara, he was puri- 
fied by Polyidus, who erected at Megara a sanc- 
tuary to Bacchus (Dionysus), and a statue of 
the god.— 2. A dithyrambic poet of the most 
flourishing period of the later Athenian dithy- 
ramb, and also skillful as a painter, was con- 
temporary with Philoxenus, Timotheus, and 
Telestes, about B C. 400. 

[Pol ymedium (U.o'XvpLTjdiov), a village of the 
Mysian district Troas, forty stadia from the 
promontory of Lectum, and in the neighbor- 
hood of Assus.] 

[Polymele (Uoh'fif/?^)- daughter of Phylas, 
wife of Echecles, by Mercury (Hermes) mother 
of Eudorus ] 

[Polymelus (UoXvun^og), a Trojan warrior, 
slain by Patroclus before Troy.] 

POLYMESTOR Or PoLYM NESTOR. Vid. PoLY- 
DORUS. 

PoLYMNESTUSOrPoLYMNASTUS(no/a',UV7;arOf), 

the son of Meles of Colophon, was an epic, ele- 
giac, and lyric poet, and a musician. He flour- 
ished B.C. 675-644, He belongs to the school 
of Dorian music, which flourished at this time 
at Sparta, where he carried on the improve- 
ments of Thaletas. The Attic comedians at- 
tacked his poems for their erotic character. 
As an elegiac poet, he may be regarded as the 
predecessor of his fellow-countryman, Mimner- 
mus. 

[PoLYMNE STL'S (HolvuviJGTOc). Vid. PflKONI- 
JA.] 

Polymnia or Polyhymnia (Rn/.vjivia), daugh- 
ter of Jupiter (Zeus), and one of the nine Muses. 
She presided over lyric poetry, and was believed 
to have invented the lyre. In works of art she 
was usually represented in a pensive attitude. 
Vid. MusiE. 

PolynIces (Uo?iVV£iKT}c), son of CEdipus and 
Jocasta, and brother of Eteocles and Antigone. 
His story is given under Eteocles and Adbas- 
tus. 

[POLYPAIDES. Vtd. ThEOGKIS.] 

Polyphemus (Uo?.v6r}fio^). 1. Son ofNeptune 
^Poseidon) and the nymph Thoosa, was one of 
the Cyclopes in Sicily. Vid. Cyclopes. He is 
represented as a gigantic monster, having only 
one eye in the centre of his forehead, caring 
nought for the gods, and devouring human flesh. 
He dwelt in a cave near Mount ./Etna, and fed 
his flocks upon the mountain. He fell in love 
with the nymph Galatea, but as she rejected 
him for Acis, he destroyed the latter by crush- 
ing him under a hum rock When Ulysses was 
driven upon Sicily, Polyphemus devoured some 
of his companions ; and Ulysses would have 
shared the same fate, had he not put out the 
eye of the monster while he was asleep. Vid. 
Ulysses. — 2. Son of Elatus or Neptune (Po- 
seidon) and Hippea, was one of the Lapithac-at 
Larissa in Theaealy He was married to Lao- 
nome, a sister of Hi rculcs. He was also one 
of the Argonauts, but being left behind by them 
in Mysia, he founded Cios, and fell fighting 
against the Chalybes 

Polyphron (p.o%v<j>puv), brother of Jason of 
Phera, succeeded to the supreme power with 
his brother Polydorus on the death of Jason in 
B.C. 370. Shortly afterward he murdered Poly- 
dorus. He exercised his power with ^reat 



cruelty, and was murdered in his turn, 369, by 
his nephew Alexander, who proved a still great- 
er tyrant. 

Polypgetes (HoXuTotY^c), son of Pirithous 
and Hippodamia, was one of the Lapitha?, and 
joined the Greeks in the Trojan war. 

PoLYRRHENIA Or -1UM (Ilo/.V^T]Via : Tlolv(}f)7j- 

vio$ ), a town in Crete, whose territory embraced 
the whole western corner of the island. It pos- 
sessed a sanctuary of Dictynna, and is said to 
have been colonized by Achaeans an-1 • >eda> 
monians. 

Polysperchon (noA^-t^wi;), a Macedonian, 
and a distinguished officer of Alexander the 
Great. In B.C. 323 he was appointed by Alex- 
ander second in command of the army of in- 
valids and veterans, which Craterus had to con- 
duct home to Macedonia. He afterward served 
under Antipatcr in Europe, and so great was 
the confidence which the latter reposed in him, 
that Antipater on his death-bed (319) appointed 
Polysperchon to succeed him as regent and 
guardian of the king, while he assigned to his 
own son Cassander the subordinate station of 
chiliarch. Polysperchon soon became involved 
in war with Cassander, who was dissatisfied 
with this arrangement. It was in the course 
of this war that Polysperchon basely surrender- 
ed Phocion to the Athenians, in the hope of 
securing the adherence of Athens. Although 
Polysperchon was supported by Olympias, and 
possessed great influence with the Macedonian 
soldiers, he proved no match for Cassander, and 
was obliged to yield to him possession of Mac- 
edonia about 316. For the next few years Poly- 
sperchon is rarely mentioned, but in 310 he 
again assumed an important part by reviving 
the long-forgotten pretensions of Hercules, the 
son of Alexander and Barsine, to the throne of 
?vIaccdonia. Cassander marched against him, 
but, distrusting the fidelity of his own troops, he 
entered into secret negotiations with Poly- 
sperchon, and persuaded the latter, by prom- 
ises and flatteries, to murder Hercules. From 
this time he appears to have served under Cas- 
sander ; but the period of his death is not men 
tioned. 

[PoLYSTRATus(no/t'crrpfi7oc). 1. An eminent 
Epicurean philosopher, succeeded Hermarchus 
as the head of the sect, and w r as himself succeed- 
ed by Dionysius. — 2. An epigrammatic poet, 
who lived probably soon after the taking of Cor- 
inth, B.C. 146 : two of his epigrams are given 
in the Anthology, one of which is on the de- 
struction of Corinth.] 

Polytimetcs (Uo?.vTf//7jTog : now Sogd or Ko- 
hik in Bokhara), a considerable river of Sogdiana, 
which, according to Strabo, vanished under 
ground near Maracanda (now Samarkand), or, 
as Arrian says, was lost in the sands of the 
steppes. 

[Polvtropus (Ilo?.v-po-oc), leader of a troop 
of mercenaries in the Spartan service, seized 
Orchomenus B.C. 370 ; he fell in an attack 
made by the Mantineans under Lycomedes on 
Orchomenus.] 

Polyxena {Uo/.v^v7]), daughter of Priarn and 
Hecuba, was beloved by Achilles. When the 
Greeks, on their voyage home, were still linger- 
ing on the coast of Thrace, the shade of Achil- 
les appeared to them, demanding that Polvxena 

693 



POLYXEXUS 



pompeius: 



should be sacrificed to him. Neoptolemus ac- 
cordingly sacrificed her on the tomb of his fa- 
ther. It was related that Achilles had promised 
Priam to bring about a peace with the Greeks, 
if the king would give him his daughter Polyx- 
ena in marriage ; and that when Achilles had 
gone to the temple of the Thymbraean Apollo, 
for the purpose of negotiating the marriage, he 
was treacherously killed by Paris. Another 
tradition stated that Achilles and Polyxena fell 
in love with each other when Hector's body was 
delivered up to Priam ; and that Polyxena fled 
to the Greeks after the death of Achilles, and 
killed herself on the tomb of her beloved with 
a sword. 

[Polyxenus (n.o?>v£evoc), son of Agasthenes, 
grandson of Augeas, father of Amphimachus. 
was the leader of the Epeans before Troy ] 

Polyxo (ELolviju). 1. The nurse of Queen 
Hypsipyle in Lemnos, was celebrated as a proph- 
etess. — 2. An Argive woman, married to Tlepo- 
lemus, son of Hercules, followed her husband to 
Rhodes, where, according to some traditions, 
she is said to have put to death the celebrated 
Helen. Vid. Helena. 

Polyzelus (noAvfg&of). 1. Brother ofHieron, 
the tyrant of Syracuse. Vid. Hieron. — 2. Of 
Rhodes, an historian, of uncertain date, wrote 
a history of his native country. — 3. An Athenian 
comic poet, belonging to the last period of the 
Old Comedy and the beginning of the Middle. 
[His fragments are edited by Meineke, in Comic. 
Grcec. Fragm., vol. i., p. 477-79, edit, minor.] 

[POMETIA. Vid. SOESSA PoMETIA.] 

Pomona, the Roman divinity of the fruit of 
trees, hence called Pomorura Patrona. Her name 
is evidently derived from Pomum. She is rep- 
resented by the poets as beloved by several of 
the rustic divinities, such as Silvanus, Picus, 
Vertumnus, and others. Her worship must orig- 
inally have been of considerable importance, 
since a special priest, under the name of flamen 
Pomonalis, was appointed to attend to her serv- 
ice. 

[PoMP<£Dius Silo. Vid. Silo.] 

Pompeia. 1. Daughter of Q. Pompeius Rufus, 
son of the consul of B.C. 88, and of Cornelia, 
the daughter of the dictator Sulla. She mar- 
ried C. Caesar, subsequently the dictator, in 67, 
but was divorced by him in 61, because she 
was suspected of intriguing with Clodius, who 
stealthily introduced himself into her husband's 
house while she was celebrating the mysteries 
of the Bona Dea. — 2. Sister of Cn. Pompey, the 
triumvir, married C. Memmius, who was killed 
in the war against Sertorius in 75. — 3. Daughter 
of the triumvir by his third wife Mucia. She 
married Faustus Sulla, the son of the dictator, 
who perished in the African war, 46. She aft- 
erward married L. Cornelius Cinna, and her 
son by this marriage, Cn. Cinna Magnus, enter- 
ed into a conspiracy against Augustus. As her 
brother Sextus survived her, she must have died 
before 35. — 4. Daughter of Sextus Pompey, the 
son of the triumvir, and of Scribonia. At the 
peace of Misenum in 39 she was betrothed to 
M. Marcellus, the son of Octavia, the sister of 
Octavianus, but was never married to him. She 
accompanied her father in his flight to Asia, 36. 
— 5. Paulina. Vid. Paulina. 

PomceiInus. Tib. Claudius, son of a Roman 
694 



. knight originally from Antioch, rose to the high- 
| est dignities under M. Aurelius. This emperor 
j gave him his daughter Lucilla in marriage. He 
i lived to the reign of Severus. 

Pompeii (llouTCTjioi, Ho/zircla. Hofi7t?]ia : Pom- 
! peianus), a city of Campania, was situated on 
the coast, at the mouth of the River Sarnus, and 
, at the foot of Mount Vesuvius ; but, in conse 
i quence of the physical changes which the sur 
| rounding courtry has undergone, the ruins of 
Pompeii are found at present about two miles 
from the sea. Pompeii was first in the hands 
of the Oscans, afterward of the Tyrrhenians. 
; and finally became a Roman municipium. It 
j was partly destroyed by an earthquake in A.D, 
63, but was overwhelmed in 79, along with 
Herculaneum and Stabiae, by the great eruption 
| of Mount Vesuvius. The lava did not reach 
| Pompeii, but the town was covered with suc- 
i cessive layers of ashes and other volcanic mat- 
j ter, on which a soil was gradually formed, 
j Thus a great part of the city has been preserved, 
| with its market-places, theatres, baths, temples, 
j and private houses ; and the excavation of it in 
1 modern times has thrown great light upon many 
points of antiquity, such as the construction of 
Roman houses, and. in general, all subjects eon- 
, nected with the private life of the ancients. The 
first traces of the ancient city were discovered 
, in 1689, rising above the ground ; but it was 
; not till 1721 that the excavations were cora- 
; menced. These have been continued with va- 
i rious interruptions down to the present day, 
and now about half the city is exposed to view, 
j It was surrounded by walls, which were about 
two miles in circumference, surmounted at in- 
tervals by towers, and containing six gates. 
PoMPEi'opoLis {Ilnp.-rjlov7zo7.LQ), the name of 
i several cities founded or enlarged by Pompey. 
i 1. (Now Task Kopri), an inland city of Cappa- 
j docia, southwest of Sinope, on the River Am- 
nias (now Gdk Irmak), a western tributary of 
■ the Halys. — 2. Vid. Pompelon. — 3. Vid. Soloe. 
Pompeius. 1. Q. Pompeius, said to have been 
the son of a flute player, was the first of the 
family who rose to dignity in the state. He was 
j consul in 141, when he carried on war against 
; the Numanlines in Spain. Having been defeat- 
; ed by the enemy in several engagements, he con- 
| eluded a peace with them ; but on the arrival 
! of his successor in the command, he disowned 
! the treaty, which was declared invalid by the 
: senate. He was censor in 131 with Q. Metel- 
. lusMacedonicus. — 2. Q. Pompeius Rufus, either 
i son or grandson of the preceding, was a zealous 
i supporter of the aristocratical party. He was 
i tribune of the plebs 100, praetor 91, and con- 
| sul 88, with L. Sulla. When Sulla set out for 
| the East to conduct tlie war against Mithra- 
I dates, he left Italy in charge of Pompeius Rufus, 
and assigned to him the army of Cn. Pompeius 
Strabo, who was still engaged in carrying on 
war against the Marsi. Strabo, however, who 
was unwilling to be deprived of the command, 
caused Pompeius Rufus to be murdered by the 
soldiers. Cicero mentions Pompeius Rufus 
among the orators whom he had heard in his 
youth. — 3. Q. Pompeius Rufus, son of No. 2, 
married Sulla's daughter, and was murdered by 
the party of Sulpicius and Marius in the forum 
during the consulship of his father, 88.-4. Q 



POMPEIUS. 

Pompeius Rifus, son of No. 3, and grandson of 
, the dictator Sulla, was tribune of the plebs 52, 
, when he distinguished himself as the great par- 
tisan of the triumvir Pompey, and assisted the 
, latter in obtaining the sole consulship. Rufus, 
however, on the expiration of his office, was ac- 
i cused of Vis, was condemned, and went into 
exile at Bauli in Campania.— 5. Q. Pompeius 
Rufus, praetor 63, was sent to Capua to watch 
over Campania and Apulia during Catiline's 
conspiracy. In 61 he obtained the province 
of Africa, with the title of proconsul —6. Sex. 
Pompeius, married Lucilia, a sister of the poet 
C. Lucilius. — 7. Sf.x. Pompeius, elder son of 
No. 6, never obtained any of the higher offices 
of the state, but acquired great reputation as a 
man of learning, and is praised by Cicero for 
his accurate knowledge of jurisprudence, geom- 
etry, and the Stoic philosophy. — 8. Sex. Pom- 
peius, a descendant of No. 7, consul A.D. 14, 
with Sex. Appuleius, in which year the Emperor 
Augustus died. He seems to have been a pa- 
tron of literature. Ovid addressed him several 
letters during his exile ; and it was probably 
this same Sex. Pompeius whom the writer Va- 
lerius Maximus accompanied to Asia, and of 
whom he speaks as his Alexander. — 9. Cn. Pom- 
peius Strabo, younger son of No. 6, and father 
of the triumvir. He was quaestor in Sardinia 
103, praetor 94, and propraetor in Sicily in the 
following year. He was consul 89, when he 
carried on war with success against the allies, 
subduing the greater number of the Italian peo- 
ple who were still in arms. Toward the end 
of the year he brought forward the law (lex Pom- 
pcia) which gave to all the towns of the Trans- 
padani the Jus Latii or Latinitas. He continu- 
ed in the south of Italy as proconsul in the fol- 
lowing year (88), and when Pompeius Rufus 
(No. 2) was appointed to succeed him in the 
command of the army, Strabo caused him to he 
assassinated by the troops. Next year (87) the 
Marian party obtained the upper hand. Strabo 
was summoned by the aristocrat ical party to 
their assistance; and, though not active in their 
cause, he marched to the relief of the city, and 
fought a battle near the Colline Gate with Cinna 
and Sertorius. Shortly afterward he was killed 
by lightning. His avarice and cruelty had made 
him hated by the soldiers to such a degree that 
they tore his corpse from the bier and dragged 
it through the streets. Cicero describes him 
{Brut., 47) •« as worthy of hatred on account of 
his cruelty, avarice, and perfidy/' He possess- 
ed some reputation as an orator, and still more 
as a general. He left behind him a considerable 
property, especially in Picenum.— 10. Cn. Pom- 
feius Magnus, the Triumvir, son of No. 9, was 
born on the 30th of September, B.C. 106, in the 
consulship of Atilius Serranus and Servilius 
Csepio, and was, consequently, a few months 
younger than Cicero, who was born on the 3d 
of January in this year, and six years older than 
Caesar. He fought under his father in 89 against 
the Italians, when he was only seventeen years 
of age, and continued with him till his death 
two years afterward. For the next few years 
the Marian party had possession of Italy ; and 
accordingly Pompey, who adhered to the aristo- 
cratical party, was "obliged to keep in the back 
ground. But when it became known in 84 that 



POMPEIUS. 

' Sulla was on the point of returning from Greece 
to Italy, Pompey hastened into Picenum, where 
he raised an army of three legions. Although 
only twenty-three years of age, Pompey display- 
ed great military abilities in opposing the Marian 
generals by whom he was surrounded ; and when 
he succeeded in joining Sulla in the course of the 
year (83), he was saluted by the latter with the 
title of Imperator. During the remainder of the 
war in Italy Pompey distinguished himself as 
one of the most successful of Sulla's generals ; 
and when the war in Italy was brought to a 
close, Sulla sent Pompey against the Marian 
party in Sicily and Africa. Pompey first pro- 
ceeded to Sicily, of which he easily made him- 
self master (82) : here he put Carbo to death. 
In 81 Pompey crossed over to Africa, where he 
defeated Cn. Domitius Ahenorbarbus and the 
Numidian king Hiarbas, after a hard-fought bat- 
tle. On his return to Rome in the same year, 
he was received with enthusiasm by the peo- 
ple, and was greeted by Sulla with the surname 
of Magnus, a name which he bore ever after- 
ward, and handed down to his children. Pom- 
pey, however, not satisfied with this distinction, 
sued for a triumph, which Sulla at first refused ; 
but at length, overcome by Pompey's importu- 
nity, he allowed him to have his own way. Ac- 
cordingly, Pompey, who had not yet held any 
public office, and was still a simple eques, en- 
tered Rome in triumph in September, 81, and 
before he had completed his twenty-fifth year. 
Pompey continued faithful to the aristocracy 
after Sulla's death (78), and supported the con- 
sul Catulus in resisting the attempts of his col- 
league Lepidus to repeal the laws of Sulla; and 
when Lepidus had recourse to arms in the fol- 
lowing year (77), Pompey took an active part in 
the war against him, and succeeded in driving 
him out of Italy. The aristocracy, however, 
now began to fear the young and successful 
general; but since Sertorius in Spain had for 
the last three years successfully opposed Metel- 
lus Pius, one of the ablest of Sulla's generals, 
and it had become necessary to send the latter 
some effectual assistance, the senate, with con- 
siderable reluctance, determined to send Pom- 
pey to Spain, with the title of proconsul, and. 
I with equal powers to Metellus. Pompey re- 
mained in Spain between five and six years 
(76-71) ; but neither he nor Metellus was able 
to gain any decisive advantage over Sertorius. 
I But when Sertorius was treacherously murder- 
I ed.by his own officer Perperna in 82, the war 
J was speedily brought to a close. Perperna was 
easily defeated by Pompey in the first battle, 
! and the whole of Spain was subdued by the 
early part of the following year (71). Pompey 
| then returned to Italy at the head of his army. 
In his march toward Rome he fell in with the 
remains of the army of Spartacus, which M. 
Crassus had previously defeated. Pompey cut 
to pieces these fugitives, and therefore claimed 
for himself, in addition to all his other exploits, 
the glory of finishing the Servile war. Pompey 
was now a candidate for the consulship ; and 
although he was ineligible by law, inasmuch as 
he was absent from Rome, had not yet reached 
the legal age, and had not held any of the lower 
' offices of the state, still his election was cer- 
I tain. His military glory had charmed the peo- 

695 



POMPEIUS. 



POMPEIUS. 



pie ; and as it was known that the aristocracy 
looked upon Pompey with jealousy, they ceased 
to regard him as belonging to this party, and 
hoped to obtain, through him, a restoration of 
the rights and privileges of which they had been 
deprived by Sulla. Pompey was accordingly 
elected consul, along with M. Crassus ; and on 
the 31st of December, 71, he entered the city 
a second time in his triumphal car, a simple 
eques. In his consulship (70), Pompey openly 
broke with the aristocracy, and became the 
great popular hero. He proposed and carried 
a law, restoring to the tribunes the power of 
which they had been deprived by Sulla. He 
also afforded his all-powerful aid to the Lex 
Aurelia, proposed by the praetor L. Aurelius 
Cotta, by which the judices were to be taken in 
future from the senatus, equites, and tribuni 
aerarii, instead of from the senators exclusive- 
ly, as Sulla had ordained. In carrying both 
these measures Pompey was strongly support- 
ed by Caesar, with whom he was thus brought 
into close connection. For the next two years 
(69 and 68) Pompey remained in Rome. In 67 
the tribune A. Gabinius brought forward a bill, 
proposing to confer upon Pompey the command 
of the war against the pirates with extraordi- 
nary powers. This bill was opposed by the 
aristocracy with the utmost vehemence, but 
was notwithstanding carried. The pirates were 
at this time masters of the Mediterranean, and 
had not only plundered many cities on the coasts 
of Greece and Asia, but had even made descents 
upon Italy itself. As soon as Pompey received 
the command, he began to make his prepara- 
tions for the war, and completed them by the 
end of the w r inter. His plans were formed with 
great skill and judgment, and were crowned 
with complete success. In forty days he cleared 
the Western Sea of pirates, and restored com- 
munication between Spain, Africa, and Italy. 
He then followed the main body of the pirates 
to their strong-holds on the coast of Cilicia ; 
and after defeating their fleet, he induced a great 
part of them, by promises of pardon, to surren- 
der to him. Many of these he settled at Soli, 
which was henceforward called Pompeiopolis. 
The second part of the campaign occupied only 
forty-nine days, and the whole war was brought 
to a conclusion in the course of three months ; 
so that, to adopt the panegyric of Cicero (pro 
Leg. Man., 12), " Pompey made his preparations 
for the war at the end of the winter, entered 
upon it at the commencement of spring, and fin- 
ished it in the middle of the summer." Pom- 
pey was employed during the remainder of this 
year and the beginning of the following in vis- 
iting the cities of Cilicia and Pamphylia, and 
providing for the government of the newly-con- 
quered districts. During his absence from Rome, 
Pompey was appointed to succeed Lucullus in 
the command of the war against Mithradates 
(66). The bill conferring upon him this com- 
mand was proposed by the tribune C. Manil- 
ius, and was supported by Cicero in an oration 
which has come down to us (pro Lege Manilla). 
Like the Gabinian law, it was opposed by the 
whole weight of the aristocracy, but was carried 
triumphantly. The power of Mithradates had 
been broken by the previous victories of Lucul- 
lus, and it was only left to Pompev to brins the 
696 



war to a conclusion. On the approach of Pom- 
pey, Mithradates retreated toward Armenia, but 
he was defeated by the Roman general ; and as 
Tigranes now refused to receive him into his 
dominions, Mithradates resolved to plunge into 
the heart of Colchis, and from thence make his 
way to his own dominions in the Cimmerian 
Bosporus. Pompey now turned his arms against 
Tigranes ; but the Armenian king submitted to 
him without a contest, and was allowed to con- 
clude a peace "with the republic. In 65 Pom- 
pey set out in pursuit of Mithradates, but he 
met with mnch opposition from the Iberians and 
Albanians ; and after advancing as far as the 
River Phasis (now Faz), he resolved to leave 
' these savage districts. He accordingly retraced 
' his steps, and spent the winter at Pontus, which 
I he reduced to the form of a Roman province, 
j In 64 he marched into Syria, deposed the king 
; Antiochus Asiaticus, and made that country also 
I a Roman province. In 63 he advanced further 
; south, in order to establish the Roman suprem- 
: acy in Phoenicia, Coelesyria, and Palestine. 
; The Jews refused to submit to him, and shut 
j the gates of Jerusalem against him, and it was 
j not till after a siege of three months that the 
j city was taken. Pompey entered the Holy of 
Holies, the first time that any human being, ex- 
, cept the high priest, had dared to penetrate into 
j this sacred spot. It was during the war in Pal- 
j estine that Pompey received intelligence of the 
I death of Mithradates. Vid. Mithradates, No. 6. 
! Pompey spent the next winter in Pontus ; and 
after settling the affairs of Asia, he returned to 
■ Italy in 62. He disbanded his army almost im- 
; mediately after landing at Brundisium, and thus 
! calmed the apprehensions of many, who feared 
j that, at the head of his victorious troops, he 
would seize upon the supreme power. He did 
not, however, return to Rome till the following 
year (51), and he entered the city in triumph 
on the 30th of September. He had just com- 
pleted his forty-fifth year, and this was the third 
time that he had enjoyed the honor of a tri- 
umph. With this triumph the first and most 
glorious part of Pompey's life may be said to 
have ended. Hitherto his life had been an al- 
most uninterrupted succession of military glory. 
But now he was called upon to play a prominent 
part in the civil commotions of the common- 
wealth, a part for which neither his natural tal- 
ents nor his previous habits had in the least fit- 
ted him. It would seem that, on his return to 
Rome, Pompey hardly knew what part to take 
in the politics of the city. He had been appoint- 
ed to the command against the pirates and Mith- 
radates in opposition to the aristocracy, and they 
still regarded him with jealousy and distrust. 
At the same time, he was not disposed to unite 
himself to the popular party, which had risen 
into importance during his absence in the East, 
| and over which Coesar possessed unbounded in- 
i fluence. The object, however, which engaged 
I the immediate attention of Pompey was to ob- 
I tain from the senate a ratification for all his acts 
j in Asia, and an assignment of lands which he 
j had promised to his veterans. The senate, how- 
j ever, glad of an opportunity to put an affront 
| upon a man whom they both feared and hated, 
j resolutely refused to sanction his measures in 
! Asia. This was the unwisest thing the senate 



POMPEIUS. 

could have done. If they had known their real 
interests, they would have sought to win Pom- 

: pey over to their side, as a counterpoise to the 
growing and more dangerous influence of Cae- 
sar. But their short-sighted policy threw Pom- 

i pey into Caesar's arms, and thus sealed the 
downfall of their party. Caesar promised to ob- 
tain for Pompey the ratification of his acts, and 

, Pompey, on his part, agreed to support Caesar 
in all his measures. That they might be more 
sure of carrying their plans into execution, Cae- 
sar prevailed upon Pompey to become recon- 
ciled to Crassus, with whom he was at variance, 
but who, by his immense wealth, had great in- 
fluence at Rome. The three agreed to assist 
one another against their mutual enemies, and 
thus was first formed the first triumvirate. This 
union of the three most powerful men at Rome 
crushed the aristocracy for the time. Support- 
ed by Pompey and Crassus, Ceesar was able in 
his consulship (59) to carry all his measures. 
Pompey's acts in Asia were ratified, and Cae- 
sar's agrarian law, which divided the rich Cam- 
panian land among the poorer citizens, enabled 
Pompey to fulfill the promises he had made to 
his veterans. In order to cement their union 
more closely, Caesar gave to Pompey his daugh- 
ter Julia in marriage. Next year (58) Caesar 
went to his province in Gaul, but Pompey re- 
mained in Rome. While Caesar was gaining 
glory and influence in Gaul, Pompey was grad- 
ually losing the confidence of all parties at Rome. 
The senate hated and feared him ; the people 
had deserted him for their favorite Clodius, and 
he had no other resource left but to strengthen 
his connection with Caesar. Thus he came to 
be regarded as the second man in the state, and 
was obliged to abandon the proud position which 
he had occupied for so many years. According 
to an arrangement made with Caesar, Pompey 
and Crassus were consuls for a second time in 
55. Pompey received as his provinces the two 
Spains, Crassus obtained Syria, while Caesar's 
government was prolonged for five years more, 
namely, from the 1st of January, 53, to the end 
of the year 49. At the end of his consulship 
Pompey did not go in person to his provinces, 
but sent his legates, L. Afranius and M. Petre- 
ius, to govern the Spains. while he himself re- 
mained in the neighborhood of the city. His 
object now was to obtain the dictatorship, and 
to make himself the undisputed master of the 
Roman world. Caesar's increasing power and 
influence had at length made it clear to Pom- 
pey that a struggle must take place between 
them, sooner or later. The death of his wife 
Julia in 54, to whom he was tenderly attached, 
broke one link which still connected him with 
Caesar, and the fill of Crassus in the following 
year (53), in the Parthian expedition, removed 
the only person who had the least chance of con- 
testing the supremacy with them. In order to 
obtain the dictatorship, Pompey secretly en- 
couraged the civil discord with which the state 
was torn asunder ; and such frightful scenes of 
anarchy followed the death of Clodius at the 
beginning of 52, that the senate had now no al- 
ternative but calling in the assistance of Pom- 
pey, who was accordingly made sole consul in 
52. and succeeded in restoring order to the 
state. Soon afterward Pompey became recon- 



POMPEIUS. 

ciled to the aristocracy, and was now regarded 
as their acknowledged head. The history of 
the civil war which followed is related in the 
life of C^sar. It is only necessary to mention 
here, that after the battle of Pharsalia (48) Pom- 
pey sailed to Egypt, where he hoped to meet 
with a favorable reception, since he had been 
the means of restoring to his kingdom the father 
of the young Egyptian monarch. The ministers 
of the latter, however, dreading Caesar's anger 
if they received Pompey, and likewise Po'm- 
pey's resentment if they forbade him to land, 
resolved to release themselves from their diffi- 
culties by putting him to death. They accord- 
ingly sent out a small boat, took Pompey on 
board, and rowed for the shore. His wife and 
friends watched him from the ship, anxious to 
see in what manner he would be received by 
the king, who was standing on the edge of the 
sea with his troops ; but just as the boat reach- 
ed the shore, and Pompey was in the act of 
rising from his seat in order to step on land, he 
was stabbed in the back by Septimius, who had 
formerly been one of his centurions, and was 
now in the service of the Egyptian monarch 
Pompey was killed on the 29th of September, 
B.C. 48, and had just completed his fifty-eighth 
year. His head was cut off, and his body, 
which was thrown out naked on the shore, was 
buried by his freedman Philippus, who had ac- 
companied him from the ship. The head was 
brought to Caesar when he arrived in Egypt 
soon afterward, but he turned away from the 
sight, shed tears at the melancholy death of his 
rival, and put his murderers to death. Pom- 
pey's untimely death excites pity; but no one 
who has well studied the state of parties at the 
close of the Roman commonwealth can regret 
his fall. There is abundant evidence to prove 
that, had Pompey's party gained the mastery, 
a proscription far more terrible than Sulla's 
would have taken place, and Italy and the prov- 
inces have been divided as booty among a few 
profligate and unprincipled nobles. From such 
horrors the victory of Caesar saved the Roman 
world. Pompey was married five times. The 
names of his wives were, I. Antistia. 2. iEmil- 
ia. 3. Mucia. 4. Julia. 5 Cornelia.— 1 1. Gw. 
Pompeius Magnus, elder son of the triumvir by 
his third wife, Mucia. In the civil war in 48 
he commanded a squadron of the fleet in the 
Adriatic Sea. After his father's defeat at Phar- 
salia, he crossed over to Africa, and, after re- 
maining there a short time, sailed to Spain 
in 47. In Spain he was jofhed by his brother 
Sextus and others of his party, who had fled 
from Africa after their defeat at Thapsus. Here 
the two brothers collected a powerful army, but 
were defeated by Caesar himself at the battle 
of Munda, fought on the 17th of March, 45. 
Cneius escaped from the field of battle, but was 
shortly afterward taken prisoner and put to 
death. — 12 Sextus Pompeius Magnus, younger 
son of the triumvir by his third wife, Mucia, 
was born 75. After the battle of Pharsalia he 
accompanied his father to Egypt, and saw him 
murdered before his eyes. After the battle of 
Munda and the death of his brother, Sextus lived 
for a time in concealment in the country of the 
Lacetani, between the Iberus and the Pyrenees , 
but when Caesar quitted Spain, he collected a 

697 



POMPEIUS FESTUS. PONTIA. 

body of troops, and emerged from his lurking- j long, and from eight to ten miles in breadth, 
place. In the civil wars which followed Cae- | The marshes are formed chiefly by the rivers 
sar's death, the power of Sextus increased. He j Nymphaeus, Ufens, and Amasenus, and some 
obtained a large fleet, became master of the sea, j other small streams, which, instead of finding 
and eventually took possession of Sicily. His j their way into the sea, spread over this plain, 
fleet enabled him to stop all the supplies of corn ! Hence the plain is turned into a vast number 
which were brought to Rome from Egypt and j of marshes, the miasmas arising from which 
the eastern provinces ; and such scarcity began j are exceedingly unhealthy in the summer. At 
to prevail in the city, that the triumvirs were ; an early period, however, they appear not to 
compelled by the popular discontent to make : have existed at all. or, at any rate, to have been 
peace with Pompey. This peace was concluded ; confined to a narrow district. We are told that 
at Misenum in 39, but the war was renewed in ; originally there were twenty-three towns shu- 
ttle following 3-ear. Octavianus made great ef- ; ated in this plain ; and in B.C. 432, the Pomp- 
forts to collect a large and powerful fleet, which [ tinus Agcr is mentioned as yielding a large 
he placed under the command of Agrippa. In quantity of corn. Even as late as 312, the 
36, Pompey's fleet was defeated off Naulochus i greater part of the plain must still have been 
with great loss. Pompey himself fled from ; free from the marshes, since the censor Appius 
Sicily to Lesbos, and from Lesbos to Asia. ; Claudius conducted the celebrated Via Appia in 
Here he was taken prisoner by a body of Anto- j that year through the plain, which must then 
ny's troops, and carried to Miletus, where he j have been sufficiently strong to bear the weight 
was put to death (35), probably by command of i of this road. In the course of a century and a 
Antony, though the latter sought to t hrow the | half after this, the marshes had spread to a great 
responsibility of the deed upon his officers. ; extent ; and, accordingly, attempts were made 
Pompeius Festus. Vid. Festus. j to drain them by the consul Cethegus in 160, 

Pompeius Trogcs. Vid. Justinus, ! by Julius Caesar, and by Augustus. It is usu- 

Pompelon (now Pamplona), which name is ally said that Augustus caused a navigable ca- 
equivalent to Pornpeiopolis, so called by the sons ; nal to be dug alongside of the Via Appia from 
of Pompey, was the chief town of the Vascones : Forum Appii to the grove of Feronia, in order 
in Hispania Tarraconensis, on the road from | to carry off a portion of the waters of the marsh- 
Asturica to Burdigala. j es ; but this canal must have been dug before 

[Pompilius, Numa. Vid. Ncma.] | the time of Augustus, since Horace embarked 

[Pompilics Androntcus, a Syrian by birth, i upon it on his celebrated journey from Rome to 
taught rhetoric at Rome in the former half of J Brundisium in 37, at which time Octavianus, 
the century before Christ : being eclipsed by as he was then called, could not have underta- 
other grammarians, he retired to Cumas, where ' ken any of his public works. Subsequently the 
he composed many works, the chief one of : marshes again spread over the whole plain, and 
which was entitled Annalium Ennii Elencki.] \ the Via Appia entirely disappeared ; and it was 
Pomponia. i. Sister of T. Pomponius Atti- ' not until the pontificate of Pius VI. that any se- 
cus, was married to Q. Cicero, the brother of I rious attempt was made to drain them. The 
the orator, B.C. 68. The marriage proved an I works were commenced in 1778, and the great- 
extremely unhappy one. Q. Cicero, after lead- I er part of the marshes was drained ; but the 
ing a miserable life with his wife for almost j plain is still unhealthy in the great heats of the 
twenty-four years, at length divorced her at the ' summer. 

end of" 45, or in the beginning of the following | Pomptinus, C, was prastor B.C. 63, when he 
year. — 2 Daughter of T. Pomponius Atticus. ! was employed by Cicero in apprehending the 
She is also called Caecilia, because her father \ ambassadors of the Allobroges. He afterward 
was adopted by Q. Caecilius, and likewise At- ; obtained the province of Gallia Narbonensis, 
tica. She was born in 51, and she was still | and in 61 defeated the Allobroges, who had in- 
quite young when she was married to M. Vip- ! vaded the province. He triumphed in 54, after 
sanius Agrippa. Her daughter Vipsania Agrip- J suing in vain for this honor for some years, 
pina married Tiberius, the successor of Augus- j Pons, a common name for stations on the 
tus. I Roman roads at the passage of rivers, some of 

Pompoxiana. Vid. Stcechades. ; which stations on the more important roads 

Pomponius, Sextus, a distinguished Roman ', grew into villages or towns. 1. P. JSni (now 
iurist, who lived imder Antoninus Pius and M. j Pfimzcn), in Vindelicia, at the passage of the 
Aurelius. Some modern writers think that j Inn, was a fortress with a Roman garrison. — 2. 
there were two jurists of this name. The works ' P. Aureoli (now Pontirolo), in Gallia Transpa- 
of Pomponius are frequently cited in the Digest, j dana, on the road from Bergamum to Mediola- 
Pomponius Atticus. Vid. Atticus. j num, derived its name from one of the thirty 

Pomponius Bononiensis, the most celebrated j tyrants, who was defeated and slain by Clau- 
writer of Fabulae Atellanae, was a native of Bo- j dius in this place. — 3. P. Campanus, in Campa- 
nonia (now Bologna), in Northern Italy, as his nia, between Sinuessa and Urbana, on the Savo. 
surname shows, and flourished B.C. 91. Respecting the bridges of Rome, rid. Roma. 

Pomponius Mela. Vid. Mela. Pontia (now Ponza), a rocky island off the 

PomptLv-e Paludes (HofMnrlvai XipLvai : now ! coast of Latium, opposite Formiae, which was 
Palude Pontine ; in English, the Pontine Marsh- j taken by the Romans from the Volscians, and 
cs), the name of a low, marshy plain on the [ colonized, B.C. 313. Under the Romans, it was 
coast of Latium, between Circeii and Terraci- : used as a place of banishment for state crim- 
na, said to have been so called after an ancient j inals. There is a group of smaller islands round 
town Pontia, which disappeared at an early } Pontia, which are sometimes called Insula 
period. The plain is about twenty-four miles ' Pontia?. 
693 



PONTINUS. 



PONTUS. 



Pontine (Uoirivos), a river and mountain 
|ii Argolis, near Lerna, with a sanctuary of Mi- 
nerva (Athena) Saitis. 

Pontius, C son of Herennius Pontius, the 
general of the Sammtes in B.C. 321, defeated 
the Roman armv under the two consuls T. Ve- 
turius Calvinus'and Sp. Postumius Albinus in 
one of the mountain passes in the neighborhood 
of Caudium. The survivors, who were com- 
pletely at the mercv of the Samnites, were dis- 
missed unhurt by Pontius. They had to sur- 
render their arms and to pass under the yoke ; 
and, as the price of their deliverance, the con- 
suls and the other commanders swore, in the 
name of the republic, to a humiliating peace. 
The Roman state, however, refused to ratify 
the treaty. Nearly thirty years afterward, Pon- 
tius was defeated by Q. Fabius Gurges (292), 
was taken prisoner, and was put to death after 
the triumph of the consul. 

Pontius Aquila. Vid. Aquila. 

Pontius Pilatus was the sixth procurator of 
.Judaea, and the successor of Valerius Gratus. 
He held the office for ten years in the reign of 
Tiberius, from A.D. 26 to 36, and it was during 
his government that Christ taught, suffered, 
and died. By his tyrannical conduct he excited 
an insurrection at Jerusalem, and at a later 
period commotions in Samaria also, which were 
not put down without the loss of life. The Sa- 
maritans complained of his conduct to VitWlius, 
the governor of Syria, who deprived him of his 
office, and sent him to Rome to answer before 
the emperor the accusations that were brought 
against him. Eusebius states that Pilatus put 
an end to his own life at the commencement 
of the reign of Caligula, worn out by the many 
misfortunes he had experienced. The early 
Christian writers refer frequently to an official 
report, made by Pilatus to the Emperor Tibe- 
rius, of the condemnation and death of Christ. 
It is very doubtful whether this document was 
genuine; and it is certain that the acts of Pi- 
late, as they are called, which are extant in 
Greek, as well as his two Latin letters to the 
emperor, are the productions of a later age. 

Pontius Telesinus. 1. A Samnite, and com- 
mander of a Samnite army, with which he 
fought against Sulla. He was defeated by Sulla 
in a hard-fought battle near the Colline gate, 
B.C. 82. He fell in the fight ; his head was 
cut off, and carried under the walls of Praeneste, 
to let the younger Marius know that his last 
hope of succor was gone. — 2. Brother of the 
preceding, was shut up in Prameste with the 
younger Marius, when his brother was defeated 
by Sulla. After the death of the elder Pontius, 
Marius and Telesinus, finding it impossible to 
escape from Prameste, resolved to die by one 
another's hand? Telesinus fell first, and Ma- 
rius put an end to his own life, or was slain by 
his slave. 

[Pontonous (Uovrovoor), a herald of Alcino- 
us, king of the Pha^acians.] 

Pont us (6 Uovroc). 1. The northeasternmost 
district of Asia Minor, along the coast of the Eux- 
ine, east of the River Halys, having originally 
no specific name, was spoken of as the country 
h Uovtc), on ihc Pontus (Euxinus), and hence 
acquired the name of Pontus, which is first 
found in Xenophon's Anabasis. The term, how- 



ever, was used very indefinitely, until the set 
tlement of the boundaries of the country as a 
Roman province. Originally it was regarded 
as a part of Cappadocia ; but its parts were best 
known by the names of the different tribes who 
dwelt along the coast, and of whom some ac- 
count is given by Xenophon in the Anabasis. 
We learn from the legends of the Argonauts, 
who are represented as visiting this coast, and 
the Amazons, whose abodes are placed about 
the River Thermodon, east of the Iris, as well 
as from other poetical allusions, that the Greeks 
had some knowledge of these southeastern 
shores of the Euxine at a very early period. A 
great accession to such knowledge was made 
by the information gained by Xenophon and his 
comrades when they passed through the coun- 
try in their famous retreat ; and long afterward 
the Romans became well acquainted with it by 
means of the Mithradatic war, and Pompey's 
subsequent expedition through Pontus into the 
countries at the foot of the Caucasus. The 
name first acquired a political rather than a ter- 
ritorial importance, through the foundation of a 
new kingdom in it, about the beginning of the 
fourth century B.C., by Ariobarzanes I. The 
history of the gradual growth of this kingdom 
until, under Mithradates VI., it threatened the 
Roman empire in Asia, is given under the names 
of its kings, of whom the following is the list : 
(1.) Ariobarzanes L, exact date unknown : (2.) 
Mithradates I., to B. C. 363 : (3.) Ariobarza- 
nes II., 363-337 : (4.) Mithradates If., 337-302 : 
(5.) Mithradates III., 302-266: (6.) Ariobar- 
zanes III., 266-240? (7.) Mithradates IV. ,240- 
1901 (8.) Pharnaces I., 190-156] (9. ) Mithra- 
dates V. Euergetes, 156-120 \ (10.) Mithrada- 
; tes VI. Eupator. 120-63: (11.) Pharnaces II., 
63-47. After the death of Pharnaces, the re- 
'■ duced kingdom retained a nominal existence un- 
I der his son Darius, w ho was made king by Anto- 
ny in B.C. 39, but was soon deposed ; and under 
, Polemon I. and Polemon II., till about A.D. 62, 
when the country was constituted by Nero a 
Roman province. Of this province the western 
boundary was the River Halys, which divided 
it from Paphlagronia ; the furthest eastern limit 
was the Phasis, which separated it from Col- 
chis ; but others carry it only as far as Trape- 
zus, and others to an intermediate point, at the 
River Acampsis : on the south it was divided 
from Galatia, Cappadocia. and Armenia Minor 
! by the great chain of the Paryadres and by its 
[ branches. It was divided into the three dis- 
\ tricts of Pontus Galaticus*, in the west, bor- 
! dering on Galatia, P. Polemoniacus in the cen- 
! tre, so called from its capital Polemonium, and 
! P. Cappadocius in the east, bordering on Cap 
padocia (Armenia Minor). In the new division 
of the provinces under Constantino, these three 
districts were reduced to two, Helenopontus 
in the west, so called in honor of the emperor's 
mother, Helena, and Pontus Polemoniacus in 
the east. The country was also divided into 
smaller districts, named from the towns they 
surrounded and the tribes who peopled them. 
Pontus was a mountainous country ; wild and 
barren in the east, where the great chains ap- 
proach the Euxine ; but in the west watered by 
the great rivers Halys and Iris and their trib- 
utaries, the vallevs of which, as well as the land 

699 



PONTUS EUXINUS. 



POPULONIA. 



along the coast, are extremely fertile. Besides | 
corn and olives, it was famous for its fruit trees, I 
and some of the hest of our common fruits are j 
said to have been brought to Europe from this 
quarter ; for example, the cherry (vid. Cerasus). 
The sides of the mountains were covered with 
fine timber, and their lower slopes with box and 
other shrubs. The eastern part was rich in 
minerals, and contained the celebrated iron 
mines of the Chalybes. Pontus was peopled 
by numerous tribes, belonging probably to very 
different races, though the Semitic (Syro- Arabi- 
an) race appears to have been the prevailing 
one, and hence the inhabitants were included 
under the general name of Leucosyri. The 
chief of these races are spoken of in separate 
articles. — [2. The part of Lower Moesia which 
lay between the Euxine, the mouths of the Ister, 
and Mount Haemus, and forming, therefore, a 
considerable tract along the shore, was some- 
times called Pontus : of this frequent mention 
is made in the poetry of Ovid. Tomi lay in this 
district, and Ovid's Epistolcz e Ponto derived 
their name from this quarter.] 

Pontus Euxinus, or simply Pontus (6 Uovrog, 
Uovtoc Ev&ivog : to YIovtlkov 7T£?.ayog, Mare 
Euxinum : now the Black Sea, Turk. Kara Den- 
iz, Grk. Maurcthalassa, Russ. Tchcriago More 
or Czarnc-Morc, all names of the same mean- | 
ing, and supposed to have originated from the j 
terror with which it was at first regarded by j 
the Turkish mariners, as the first wide expanse 
of sea with which they became acquainted), the j 
great inland sea inclosed by Asia Minor on the 
South, Colchis on the east, Sarmatia on the | 
north, and Dacia and Thracia on the west, and j 
having no other outlet than the narrow Bospo- 
rus Thracius in its southwestern corner. It i 
lies between 28° and 41° 30' east longitude, and j 
between 41° and 46° 40' north latitude, its j 
length being about seven hundred miles, and j 
its breadth varying from four hundred to one j 
hundred and sixty. Its surface contains more ! 
than one hundred and eighty thousand square j 
miles. It receives the drainage of an immense ! 
extent of country in Europe and in Asia ; but I 
much the greater portion of its waters flows j 
from the former continent by the following 
rivers : the Ister or Danubius (now Danube), 
whose basin contains the greater part of cen- 
tral Europe ; the Tyras or Danaster (now Dnies- 
ter), Hypanis or Bogus (now Boug), Borysthe- 
nes (now Dnieper), and Tanais (now Don), 
which drain the immense plains of Southern 
Russia, and flow into the northern side of the ! 
Euxine, the last of them (i. e., the Tanais) I 
through the Palus Maeotis (now Sea of Azov). \ 
The space thus drained is calculated at above j 
eight hundred and sixty thousand square miles, : 
or nearly one fifth of the whole surface of Eu- j 
rope. In Asia, the basin of the Euxine contains, 
first, the triangular piece of Sarmatia Asiatica 
between the Tanais on the north, the Caucasus 
on the south, and on the east the Hippici Mon- I 
tes, which form the watershed dividing the trib- ; 
utaries of the Euxine from those of the Caspi- i 
an ; the waters of this space flow into the Ta- 
nais and the Palus Maeotis, and the largest of 
them is the Hypanis or Vardanes (now Kuban), \ 
which comes down to the Palus Maeotis and 
the Euxine at their junction, and divides its I 
700 



waters between them : next we have the nar 
row strip of land between the Caucasus and the 
northeastern coast of the sea ; then on the east. 
Colchis, hemmed in between the Caucasus and 
Moschici Montes, and watered by the Phasis ; 
and lastly, on the south, the whole of that part 
of Asia Minor which lies between the Parya- 
dres and Antitaurus on the east and southeast, 
the Taurus on the south, and the highlands of 
Phrygia on the west, the chief rivers of this 
portion being the Iris (now Yeshil Irmak), the 
Halys (now Kizil Irmak), and the Sangarius 
(now Sakariych). The whole of the Asiatic 
basin of the Euxine is estimated at one hundred 
thousand square miles. As might be expected 
from this vast influx of fresh water, the water 
is much less salt than that of the Ocean. The 
waters which the Euxine receives from the 
rivers that flow directly into it, and also from 
the Palus Maeotis (now Sea of Azov) through 
the Bosporus Cimmerius (now Straits of Kaffa 
or Yenikaleh), find their exit at the southwestern 
corner, through the Bosporus Thracius (now 
Channel of Constantinople), into the Propontis 
(now Sea of Marmara), and thence in a constant 
rapid current through the Hellespontus (now 
Straits of Gallipoli or Dardanelles) into the^Egae- 
um Mare (now Archipelago). The Argonautic 
and other legends show that the Greeks had 
some acquaintance with this sea at a very early 
period. It is said that they at first called ii 
'A&vog (inhospitable), from the savage character 
of the races on its coast, and from the supposed 
terrors of its navigation, and that afterward, on 
their favorite principle of euphemism (i. e , ab- 
staining from words of evil omen), they changed 
its name to Ev^evoc, Ion. Ev^eivoc, hospitable. 
The Greeks of Asia Minor, especially the people 
of Miletus, founded many colonies and commer- 
cial emporiums on its shores, and as early as 
the Persian wars we find Athens carrying on a 
regular trade with these settlements in the com 
grown in the great plains on its northern side 
(the Ukraine) and in the Chersonesus T;iuriea 
(now Crimea), which have ever since supplied 
Western Europe with large quantities of grain. 
The history of the settlements themselves will 
be found under their several names. The Ro- 
mans had a pretty accurate knowledge of the 
sea. An account of its coasts exists in Greek, 
entitled " Periplus Maris Euxini," ascribed to 
Arrian, who lived in the reign of Hadrian. Vid 
Arrtanus. 

Popilius L^nas. Vid. L^enas. 

Poplicola. Vid. Pqblicola. 

Popp^ea Sabina. Vid. Sabina. 

Popp^us Sabinus. Vid. Sabinus. 

Populonia or -ium (Populoniensis : Papillo- 
ma), an ancient town of Etruria, situated on a 
lofty hill, sinking abruptly to the sea, and form- 
ing a peninsula. According to one tradition it 
was founded by the Corsicans ; but according 
to another it was a colony from'Volaterrae, or 
was taken from the Corsicans by the Volater- 
rani. It was not one of the twelve Etruscac 
cities, and was never a place of political import- 
ance ; but it carried on an extensive commerce, 
and was the principal sea-port of Etruria. It 
was destroyed by Sulla in the civil wars, and 
was in ruins in the time of Strabo. There are 
still remains of the walls of the ancient Popu 



PORCIA. 



PORSENA. 



Ionia, showing that the city was only about one 
and a half miles in circumference. 

PorcIa. I. Sister of Cato Uticensis, married 
L. Domitius Ahenobarbus, consul B.C. 54, who 
was slain in the battle of Pharsalia. She died 
in 46.-2. Daughter of Cato Uticensis by his 
first wife Atilia. She was married first to M. 
Bibulus, consul f>9, to whom she bore three chil- 
dren. Bibulus died in 48 ; and in 45 she mar- 
ried M. Brutus, the assassin of Julius Caesar. 
She inherited all her father's republican princi- 
ples, and likewise his courage and firmness of 
will. She induced her husband, on the night 
before the fifteenth of March, to disclose to her 
the conspiracy against Caesar's life, and she is 
reported to have wounded herself in the thigh 
in order to show that she had a courageous soul, 
and could be trusted with the secret. She put 
an end to her own life after the death of Brutus 
in 42. The common tale was, that her friends, 
suspecting her design, had taken all weapons 
out of her way, and that she therefore destroyed 
herself by swallowing live coals. The real fact 
may have been that she suffocated herself by 
the vapor of a charcoal fire, which we know was 
a frequent means of self-destruction among the 
Romans. 

Porcius Cato. Vid. Cato. 
Porcius Festus. Vid. Festus. 
Porcius Latro. Vid. Latro. 
Porcius Licinus. Vid. Licinus. 
Porphyrio, PomponIus, the most valuable 
among the ancient commentators on Horace. 
He lived after Festus and Aero. [These scholia 
are printed in several editions of Horace, the 
latest is that of G. Braunhard, Lips., 1831, scq., 
4 vols. 8vo ] 

Porphyrion (TlopQvpiuv), one of the giants 
who fought against the gods. When he at- 
tempted to offer violence to Juno (Hera), or to 
throw the island of Delos against the gods, Ju 
piter (Zeus) hurled a thunder-bolt at him, and 
Hercules completed his destruction with his 
arrows. 

Porphyris (Uoptyvpk), an earlier name of the 
island of Nisyrus. 

Porphyrius (Ilopdvpior), usually called Por- 
phyry, the celebrated antagonist of Christianity, 
was a Greek philosopher of the Neo-Platonic 
school. He was born A.D. 233, either in Bata- 
nea in Palestine or at Tyre. His original name 
was Malchus, the Greek form of the Syrophce- 
nician Melcch, a word which signified king. 
The name Porphyrius (in allusion to the usual 
color of royal robes) was subsequently devised 
for him by his preceptor Longinus. After stud- 
ying under Origen at Caesarea, and under Apol- 
lonius and Longinus at Athens, he settled at 
Rome in his thirtieth year, and there became a 
diligent disciple of Plotinus. He soon gained 
the confidence of Plotinus, and was intrusted 
by the latter with the difficult and delicate duty 
of correcting and arranging his writings. Vid. 
Plotinus. After remaining in Rome six years, 
Porphyry fell into an unsettled state of mind, 
and began to entertain the idea of suicide, in 
order to get free from the shackles of the flesh ; 
but on the advice of Plotinus he took a voyage 
to Sicily, where he resided for some time. It 
was during his residence in Sicily that he wrote 
His treatise against the Christian religioL, in 



fifteen books. Of the remainder of his life we 
know very little He returned to Rome, where 
he continued to teach until his death, which 
took place about 305 or 306. Late in life he 
married Marcella, the widow of one of his 
friends, and the mother of seven children, with 
the vie w, as he avowed, of superintending their 
education. As a writer Porphyry deserves con- 
siderable praise. His style is tolerably clear, 
and not unfrecmently exhibits both imagination 
and vigor. His learning was most extensive. 
A great degree of critical and philosophical 
acumen was not to be expected in one so ar- 
dently attached to the enthusiastic and some- 
what fanatical system of Plotinus. His attempt 
to prove the identity of the Platonic and Aris- 
totelic systems would alone be sufficient to 
show this. Nevertheless, his acquaintance 
with the authors whom he quotes was manifest- 
ly far from superficial. His most celebrated 
work was his treatise against the Christian re- 
ligion ; but of its nature and merits we are not 
able to judge, as it has not come down to us. 
It was publicly destroyed by order of the Em- 
peror Theodosius. The attack was sufficiently 
vigorous to call forth replies from above thirty 
different antagonists, the most distinguished of 
whom were Methodius, Apollinaris, and Euse- 
bius. A large number, however, of his works 
has come down to us, of which his Life of 
Pythagoras and Life of Plotinus are some of 
the best known. 

Porphyrius, Publilius Optatianus, a Roman 
poet, who lived in the age of Constantino the 
Great. He wrote a Panegyric upon Constan- 
tine ; three Idyllia, namely, 1. Ara Pythm, 2. 
Syrinx, 3. Organon, with the lines so arranged 
as to represent the form of these objects ; and 
five Epigrams. 

[PORRIMA. Vid. POSTVERTA.] 

Porsena* or Porsenna, Lars, king of the 
Etruscan town of Clusium, marched against 
Rome at the head of a vast army, in order to 
restore Tarquinius Superhus to the throne. He 
took possession of the hill Janiculum, and would 
have entered the city by the bridge which con- 
nected Rome with the Janiculum, had it not 
been for the superhuman prowess of Horatius 
Codes, who kept the whole Etruscan army at 
bay, while his comrades broke down the bridge 
behind him. Vid. Cocles. The Etruscans pro- 
ceeded to lay siege to the city, which soon be- 
gan to suffer from famine Thereupon a young 
Roman, named C. Mucius, resolved to deliver 
his country by murdering the invading king. 
He accordingly went over to the Etruscan camp, 
but, ignorant of the person of Porsena, killed the 
royal secretary instead. Seized, and threatened 
with torture, he thrust his right hand iruo the 
fire on the altar, and there let it burn, to show 
how little he heeded pain. Astonished at his 
courage, the king bade him depart in peace; 
and Scaevola, as he was henceforward called, 
told him, out of gratitude, to make peace with 
Rome, since three hundred noble youths had 
sworn to take the life of the king, and he was 
the first upon whom the lot had fallen. Por- 
sena thereupon made peace with the Romans, 
and withdrew his troops from the Janiculum 

* The quantity of the penultimate is doubtful. It is 
6hort in Horace and Martial, but long in Virgil. 

701 



PORTHAON. 



POSEIDON. 



after receiving twenty hostages from the Ro- 
mans. Such was the tale by which Roman 
vanity concealed one of the earliest and great- 
est disasters of the city. The real fact is, that 
Rome was completely conquered by Porsena. 
This is expressly stated by Tacitus (Hist., iii., 
72), and is confirmed by other writers. Pliny 
tells us that so thorough was the subjection of 
the Romans that they were expressly prohibited 
from using iron for any other purpose but agri- 
culture. The Romans, however, did not long 
remain subject to the Etruscans. After the 
conquest of Rome, Armas, the son of Porsena, 
proceeded to attack Aricia, but was defeated 
before the city by the united forces of the Latin 
cities, assisted by the Greeks of Cumae. The 
Etruscans appear, in consequence, to have been 
confined to their own territory on the right bank 
of the Tiber, and the Romans to have availed 
themselves of the opportunity to recover their 
independence. 

PorthIon (UopOduv), son of Agenor and Epi- 
easte, was king of Pleuron and Calydon in iEto- 
lia, and married to Euryte, by whom he became 
the father of QEneus, Agrius, Alcathous, Melas, 
Leucopeus, and Sterope. 

Porthmus (llopdfiog), a harbor in Euboea, be- 
longing to Eretria, opposite the coast of Attica. 

Portuncs or Portumncs, the protecting gen- 
ius of harbors among the Romans. He was in- 
voked to grant a happy return from a voyage. 
Hence a temple was erected to him at the port 
of the Tiber, from whence the road descended 
to the port of Ostia. At his temple an annual 
festival, the Portunalia, was celebrated on the 
17th of August. When the Romans became 
familiar with Greek mythology, Portunus was 
identified with the Greek Paleemon. Vid. Pa- 

Porus (nwpoc). 1. King of the Indian prov- 
inces east of the River Hydaspes, offered a for- 
midable resistance to Alexander when the lat- 
ter attempted to cross this river, B.C. 327. The 
battle which he fought with Alexander was one 
of the most severely contested which occurred 
during the whole of Alexander's campaigns. 
Porus displayed great personal courage in the 
battle ; and when brought before the conqueror, 
he proudly demanded to be treated in a manner 
worthy of a king. This magnanimity at once 
conciliated the favor of Alexander, who not only 
restored to him his dominions, but increased 
them by large accessions of territory. From 
this time Porus became firmly attached to his 
generous conqueror, whom he accompanied to 
the Hyphasis. In 321 Porus was treacherous- 
ly put to death by Eudemus, who commanded 
the Macedonian troops in the adjacent province. 
We are told that Porus was a man of gigantic 
stature — not less than five cubits in height ; 
and his personal strength and prowess in war 
were not less conspicuous than his valor. — 2. 
Another Indian monarch, who, at the time of 
Alexander's expedition, ruled over the district 
termed Gandaris, east of the River Hydraotes. 
His dominions were subdued by Hephasstion, 
and annexed to those of the preceding Porus, 
who was his kinsman. 

Poseidon (Yiootiduv), called Neptunus by the 
Romans, was the god of the Mediterranean Sea. 
His name seems to be connected with Trdrof, 
702 



TtovToq, and TTora/xoe, according to which he is 
the god of the fluid element. He was a son of 
Cronos (Saturn) and Rhea (whence he is called 
Cronius, and by Latin poets Saturnius). He 
was accordingly a brother of Zeus (Jupiter), 
Hades (Pluto), Hera (Juno), Hestia (Vesta), and 
Demeter (Ceres), and it was determined by lot 
that he should rule over the sea. Like his 
| brothers and sisters, he was, after his birth, 
| swallowed by his father Cronos (Saturn), but 
J thrown up again. According to others, he was 
j concealed by Rhea, after his birth, among a 
j flock of lambs, and his mother pretended to 
have given birth to a young horse, which she 
! gave to Cronos (Saturn) to devour. In the Ho- 
i meric poems Poseidon (Neptune) is described 
! as equal to Zeus (Jupiter) in dignity, but less 
| powerful. He resents the attempts of Zeus (Ju- 
[ piter) to intimidate him ; he even threatens his 
j mightier brother, and once conspired with Hera 
• (Juno) and Athena (Minerva) to put him into 
j chains ; but on other occasions we find him 
! submissive to Zeus (Jupiter). The palace of 
Poseidon (Neptune) was in the depth of the sea 
r near iEga3 in Eubcea, where he kept his horses 
j with brazen hoofs and golden manes. With 
I these horses he rides in a chariot over the waves 
| of the sea, which become smooth as he ap- 
proaches, and the monsters of the deep recog- 
1 nize him and play around his chariot. General- 
! ly he yoked his horses to his chariot himself, 
but sometimes he was assisted by Amphitrite. 
' Although he generally dwelt in the sea, still he 
also appears at Olympus in the assembly of the 
gods. Poseidon (Neptune), in conjunction with 
Apollo, is said to have built the walls of Troy 
for Laomedon, whence Troy is called Neplunia 
Pergama. Laomedon refused to give these 
gods the reward which had been stipulated, and 
even dismissed them with threats. Poseidon 
(Neptune), in consequence, sent a marine mon- 
ster, which was on the point of devouring La- 
omedon's daughter, when it was killed by Her- 
cules ; and he continued to bear an implacable 
hatred against the Trojans. He sided with the 
Greeks in the war against Troy, sometimes 
witnessing the contest as a spectator from the 
heights of Thrace, and sometimes interfering 
in person, assuming the appearance of a mortal 
hero and encouraging the Greeks, while Zeus 
(Jupiter) favored the Trojans. In the Odyssey, 
Poseidon (Neptune) appears hostile to Ulysses,, 
whom he prevents from returning home in con- 
sequence of his having blinded Polyphemus, a 
son of Poseidon (Neptune) by the nymph Thoosa. 
Being the ruler of the sea (the Mediterranean), 
he is described as gathering clouds and calling 
forth storms, but at the same time he has it in 
his power to grant a successful voyage and save 
those who are in danger ; and all other marine 
divinities are subject to him. As the sea sur- 
rounds and holds the earth, he himself is de- 
scribed as the god who holds the earth (yairjoxotf, 
and who has it in his power to shake the earth 
(kvocixdow, k.lv7]77jp ydf). He was further re- 
garded as the creator of the horse. It is said 
that when Poseidon (Neptune) and Athena (Mi- 
nerva) disputed as to which of them should give 
the name to the capital of Attica, the gods de- 
cided that it should receive its name from the 
deity who should bestow upon man the most use- 



POSEIDON. 



POSIDONIUS. 



Ail gift. Poseidon (Neptune) then created the 
borse, and Athena (Minerva) called forth the 
olive-tree, in consequence of which the honor 
was conferred upon the goddess. According to 
others, however, Poseidon (Neptune) did not 
• create the horse in Attica, but in Thessaly, 
where he also gave the famous horses to Pel- 
eus. Poseidon (Neptune) was accordingly be- 
lieved to have taught men the art of managing 
horses by the bridle, and to have been the orig- 
inator and protector of horse races. Hence he 
was also represented on horseback, or riding in 
a chariot drawn by two or four horses, and is 
designated by the epithets Itzttcoc, I-xtzelos, or 
lnmos uvaf. He even metamorphosed himself 
into a horse for the purpose of deceiving Deme- 
ter (Ceres). The symbol of Poseidon's (Nep- 
tune's) power was the trident, or a spear with 
three points, with which he used to shatter 
rocks, to call forth or subdue storms, to shake 
the earth, and the like. Herodotus states that 
the name and worship of Poseidon (Neptune) 
were brought into Greece from Libya ; but he 
was probably a divinity of Pelasgian origin, and 
originally a personification of the fertilizing 
power of w T ater, from which the transition to 
regarding him as the god of the sea was not 
difficult. The following legends respecting 
Poseidon (Neptune) deserve to be mentioned. 
In conjunction with Zeus (Jupiter) he fought 
against Cronos (Saturn) and the Titans ; and in 
the contest with the Giants he pursued Poly- 
botes across the sea as far as Cos, and there 
killed him by throwing the island upon him. 
He further crushed the Centaurs when they 
were pursued by Hercules, under a mountain in 
Leucosia, the island of the Sirens. He sued, 
together with Zeus (Jupiter), for the hand of 
Thetis ; but he withdrew when Themis proph- 
esied that the son of Thetis would be greater 
than his father. When Ares (Mars) had been 
caught in the w r onderful net by Hephaestus (Vul- 
can), the latter set him free at the request of 
Poseidon (Neptune) ; but the latter god after- 
ward brought a charge against Ares (Mars) be- 
fore the Areopagus for having killed his son 
Halirrhothius. At the request of Minos, king 
of Crete, Poseidon (Neptune) caused a bull to 
rise from the sea, which the king promised to 
sacrifice ; but when Minos treacherously con- 
cealed the animal among a herd of oxen, the 
god punished Minos by causing his wife Pas- 
iphae to fall in love with the bull. Poseidon 
(Neptune) was married to Amphitrite, by whom 
he had three children, Triton, Rhode, and Ben- 
thesicyme ; but he had also a vast number of 
children by other divinities and mortal women. 
His worship extended over all Greece and 
Southern Italy, but he was more especially re- 
vered in Peloponnesus and in the Ionic towns 
on the coast. The sacrifices offered to him 
generally consisted of black and white bulls ; 
but wild boars and rams were also sacrificed to 
him. Horse and chariot races were held in his 
honor on the Corinthian isthmus. The Pan- 
ionia, or the festival of all the Ionians near 
Mycale, was celebrated in honor of Poseidon 
(Neptune). In works of art, Poseidon (Nep- 
\ :ne) may be easily recognized by his attri- 
tites, the dolphin, the horse, or the trident, and 
>,e was frequently represented in groups along 



with Amphitrite, Tritons, Nereids, dolphins, the 
Dioscuri, Palaemon, Pegasus, Bellerophontes, 
Thalassa, Ino, and Galene. His figure does not 
present the majestic calm which characterizes 
his brother Zeus (Jupiter) ; but as the state of 
the sea is varying, so also is the god represent- 
ed sometimes in violent agitation and some- 
times in a state of repose. The Roman god 
Neptunus is spoken of in a separate article. 

Posidippus [lloGcldLTnrog, UootdnnTor). 1. An 
Athenian comic poet of the New Comedy, was 
a native of Cassandrea in Macedonia. He was 
reckoned one of the six most celebrated poets 
of the New Comedy. In time, he was the last 
of all the poets of the New Comedy. He began 
to exhibit dramas in the third year after the 
death of Menander, that is, in B.C. 289. [The 
fragments of his plays are contained in Mei- 
neke's Comic. Grac. Fragm., vol. ii., p. 1141-49, 
edit, minor.] — 2. An epigrammatic poet who 
was probably a different person from the comic 
poet, though he seems to have lived about the 
same time. His epigrams formed a part of the 
Garland of Meleager, and twenty-two of them 
are preserved in the Greek Anthology. 

Posidium (TloGetSiov). the name of several 
promontories sacred to Poseidon (Neptune). 1 . 
(Now Punta della Licosa), in Lucania, opposite 
the island Leucosia, the southern point of the 
Gulf of Paestum. — 2. In Epirus, opposite the 
northeast point of Corcyra. — 3. (Now Cape 
Stavros), in Thessaly, forming the western 
point of the Sinus Pagasseus, perhaps the same 
as the promontory which Livy (xxxi., 46) calls. 
Zelasium. — 4. (Now Cape Helene), the southwest- 
ern point of Chios. — 5. On the western coast of 
Caria, between Miletus and the Iassius Sinus* 
with a town of the same name upon it. — 6. Ort 
the western coast of Arabia, with an altar dedi- 
cated to Poseidon (Neptune) by Ariston, whom. 
Ptolemy had sent to explore the Arabian Gulf 
— 7. (Now Posseda), a sea-port town in Syria, in 
the district Cassiotis. 

PoSIDONIA. Vid. PiSSTUM. 

Posidoniom (Yloceiduviov : now Cape Possidhi 
or Kassandkrea), a promontory on the western 
coast of the peninsula Pallene in Macedonia, 
not far from Mende. 

Posidonius (Tloosiduvioe.), a distinguished 
Stoic philosopher, was a native of Apamea in 
Syria. The date of his birth is not known with 
any exactness, but it may be placed about B.C. 
135. He studied at Athens under Panaetius, 
after whose death (112) Posidonius set out on 
his travels. After visiting most of the coun- 
tries on the coast of the Mediterranean, he fixed 
his abode at Rhodes, where he became the presi- 
dent of the Stoic school. He also took a prom- 
inent part in the political affairs of Rhodes, and 
was sent as ambassador to Rome in 86. Cicero, 
when he visited Rhodes, received instruction 
from Posidonius. Pompey also had a great ad- 
miration for Posidonius, and visited him twice, 
in 67 and 62. To the occasion of his first visit 
I probably belongs the story that Posidonius, to 
prevent the disappointment of his distinguish- 
ed visitor, though severely afflicted with the 
gout, had a long discourse on the topic that pain 
is not an evil. In 51 Posidonius removed to 
Rome, and appears to have died soon after at 
the age of 84. Posidonius was a man of exten- 

703 



POSTUMIA CASTRA. 



PILENESTE. 



.sive and varied acquirements in almost all de- 
partmentsof human knowledge. Cicero thought 
so highly of his powers that he requested him 
to write an account of his consulship. As a 
physical investigator he was greatly superior to 
the Stoics generally, attaching himself in this 
respect rather to Aristotle. His geographical 
and historical knowledge was very extensive. 
He cultivated astronomy with considerable dili- 
gence. He also constructed a planetary ma- 
chine, or revolving sphere, to exhibit the daily 
motions of the sun, moon, and planets. His 
calculation of the circumference of the earth 
differed widely from that of Eratosthenes. He 
made it only one hundred and eighty thousand 
stadia, and his measurement was pretty gener- 
ally adopted. None of the writings of Posi- 
donius have come down to us entire. His frag- 
ments are collected by Bake, Lugd. Bat., 1810. 

Postumia Castra (now Salado), a fortress in 
Hispania Baetica, on a hill near the River Sal- 
sum (now Salado). 

Postumia Gens, patrician, was one of the 
most ancient patrician gentes at Rome. Its ! 
members frequently held the highest offices of 
the state, from the banishment of the kings to j 
the downfall of the republic. The most distin- 
guished family in the gens was that of Albus j 
or Albinus ; but we also find at the commence- I 
ment of the republic families of the names of | 
Megellus and Tubertus. 

Postumus, whose full name w r as M. Cassia- \ 
nus Latinius Postianus, stands second in the list 
of the so-called thirty tyrants. Being nomi- 
nated by Valerian governor of Gaul, he assumed 
the title of emperor in AD. 258, while Valerian 
was prosecuting his campaign against the Per- 
sians. Postumus maintained a strong and just 
government, and preserved Gaul from the dev- 
astation of the warlike tribes upon the eastern 
border. After reigning nearly ten years, he 
was slain by his soldiers in 267, and Laelianus 
proclaimed emperor in his stead. 

Postverta or Postvorta, properly a surname 
of Carmenta, describing her as turning back- 
ward and looking at the past, which she re- 
vealed to poets and other mortals. In like man- 
ner, the prophetic power, with which she looked 
into the future, is indicated by the surnames 
Antcvorta, Prorsa (i. e., Proversa), and Porrima. 
Poets, however, have personified these attri- 
butes of Carmenta, and thus describe them as 
the companions of the goddess. 

Potami or Potamus {HoTd/iot, Uora/iog : Hord- 
jiiog : now Keratia), a demus in the south of At- 
tica, belonging to the tribe Leontis, where the 
tomb of Ion was shown. 

Potamon (Hotu/iuv). 1 . A rhetorician of Myt- 
ilene, lived in the time of Tiberius Caesar, 
whose favor he enjoyed. — 2. A philosopher of 
Alexandrea, who is said to have introduced at 
Rome an eclectic sect of philosophy. He ap- 
pears to have lived at Rome a little before the 
time of Plotinus, and to have intrusted his chil- 
dren to the guardianship of the latter. 

Potentia (Potentinus). 1. A town of Pice- 
mim, on the River Flosis, between Ancona and 
Gastellum Firmanum, was made a Roman col- 
ony in B.C. 186.— 2. (Now Potenza), a town of 
Lucania, on the Via Popilia, east of Forum Po- 
pilii. 

704 



Pothinus, a eunuch, the guardian of the 
young King Ptolemy, recommended the assas- 
sination of Pompey when the latter fled to 
Egypt, B.C. 48. Pothinus plotted against Cae- 
sar when he came to Alexandrea shortly after- 
ward, and was put to death by Caesar's order. 

Potid^ea (JLoTidaia : TloTLdaiaTrjQ : now Pi- 
naka), a town in Macedonia, on the narrow isth- 
mus of the peninsula Pallene, was a strongly- 
fortified place, and one of considerable import- 
ance. It was a colony of the Corinthians, and 
must have been founded before the Persian 
wars, though the time of its foundation is not 
recorded. It afterward became tributary to 
Athens, and its revolt from the latter city in 
B.C. 432 was one of the immediate causes of 
the Peloponnesian war. It was taken by the 
Athenians in 429, after a siege of more than two 
years, its inhabitants expelled, and their place 
supplied by Athenian colonists. In 356 it was 
taken by Philip, who destroyed the city, and 
gave its territory to the Olynthians. Cassan- 
der, however, built a new city on the same site, 
to which he gave the name of Cassandrea (Kaa- 
advdpeta : Kaaaavdpevg), and which he peopled 
with the remains of the old population and with 
the inhabitants of Olynthus and the surround- 
ing towns, so that it soon became the most 
flourishing city in all Macedonia. It was taken 
and plundered by the Huns, but was restored 
by Justinian. 

Potidania, a fortress in the northeast of^Eto- 
lia, near the frontiers of Locris. 

Potitii. Vid. Pinaria Gens. 

Potitus, the name of an ancient and celebrat- 
ed family of the Valeria gens. This family dis- 
appears about the time of the Samnite wars ; 
but the name was revived at a later period by 
the Valeria gens as a praenomen : thus we find 
mention of a Potitus Valerius Messala, who was 
consul suffectus in B.C. 29. 

PotnLe (Uorviai : TLorvievq), a small town in 
Bceotia, on the Asopus, ten stadia south of 
Thebes, on the road to Plataeae. The adjective 
Potniad.es (sing. Potnias) is an epithet frequently 
given to the mares which tore to death Glaucus 
| of Potniae. Vid. Glaucus, No. 1. 
j Praaspa. Vid. Phraata. 

Practius (YlpaKTioc : now Borgas or Muska- 
| Jcoi-Su), a river of the Troad, rising in Mount 
: Ida, and flowing into the Hellespont north of 
j Abydus. 

! Pr^eneste (Praenestinus : now Palestrina), 
I one of the most ancient towns of Latium, was 
• situated on a steep and lofty hill, about twenty 
miles southeast of Rome, with which it was 
I connected by a road called Via Praenestina. It 
; was probably a Peiasgic city, but it claimed a 
Greek origin, and was said to have been found- 
! ed by Telegouus, the son of Ulysses. It wa 
strongly fortified by nature and by art, and fre- 
quently resisted the attacks of the Roman 
Together with the other Latin towns, it became 
subject to Rome, and was at a later period made 
j a Roman colony. It was here that the younger 
Marius took refuge, and was for a considerable 
time besieged by Sulla's troops. Praeneste pos- 
sessed a very celebrated and ancient temple of 
i Fortuna, with an oracle, which is often men- 
1 tioned under the name of Praenestina? sories. 
| It also had a temple of Juno. In consequence 



PR.ESUS. 



PRAXITELES. 



or its lofty situation, Pracneste was a cool and j 
healthy residence in the great heats of summer ! 
if rigid urn Praneslc. Hor , Carm., Hi, 4. 22), and | 
was therefore much frequented at that season 
by the wealthy Roma*ns. The remains of the 
ancient walls and some other antiquities are 
still to be seen at Palcstrina. 

Pr/Esus (Up-uoae: Upaiaioc), an inland town 
in the east of Crete, belonging to the Eteocre- 
tes, which was destroyed by the neighboring 
lown of Hierapytna. 

Pretoria Augusta. Vul. Augusta, No. 4. 

[Prjetutii, a people of Central Italy, who are 
often assigned to Picenum, though they were 
of a different race from the Picentes. Their ter- 
ritory was fertile, and celebrated for its wine. 
The principal places in their land were Inter- 
amna and Hadna (now Atn).] 

PRAs(il / j«f, gen. Wpavroc: Upuvrec). a town of 
Thessaly, in the west of the district Phthiotis, 
on the northeastern slope of Mount Narthacius. 

PrasLe {Ruaoiai : TlpaniFvc). 1. Or Prasia 
(Uftaaia) a town of the Eleuthero-lacones, on 
the eastern coast of Laconia, was taken and de- 
stroyed by the Athenians in the second year of 
the Peloponnesian war. — 2 (Now Prassa), a 
dernus in Attica, south of Stiria, belonging to 
the tribe Pandionis, with a temple of Apollo. 

Prasias Lai-us (Upacuuc 7.ipvrj : now Tukino), 
a lake in Thrace, between the Strymon and 
Nestus, and near the Strymonic Gulf, with silver 
mines in the neighborhood. 

Prasii, Pr^esii, and Pa rrhasii (Tlpasiot : San- 
scrit Prachinas, i. e., people of the Eastern coun- 
try), a great and powerful people of India on 
the Ganges, governed at the time of Seleucus 
I. by King Sandrocottus Their capital city 
was Palibothra (now Patna) ; and the extent 
of the kingdom seems to have embraced the 
whole valley of the Upper Ganges, at least as 
far down as that city. At a later time the mon 
arehy declined, so that in Ptolemy we only find 
the name as that of the inhabitants of a small 
district, called Prasiaca {UpaGLaurt), about the 
River Soa. 

Prasodis Mare (npaoud?!^ daAncaa or koa- 
ttoc). the southwestern part of the Indian Ocean, 
about the Promontory Prasum. 

Prasum (Hpuooif uKpurripLov '. now Cape Del- 
gudo), a promontory on the eastern coast of 
Africa, in 10£° south latitude, appears to have 
been the southernmost point to which the an- 
cient knowledge of this coast extended. 

Pratinas {UitnTtvag). one of the early tragic 
poets at Athens, whose combined efforts brought 
the art to its perfection, was a native of Phlius, 
and was therefore by birth a Dorian. It is not 
stated at what time he went to Athens ; but he 
was older than Chcenlus, and younger than ^Es- 
chylus, with both of whom he competed for the 
prize about B.C 500. The step in the progress 
of the art which was ascribed to Pratinas was 
the separation of the satyric from the tragic 
drama. His plays were much esteemed. Prat- 
inas also ranked high among the lyric as well 
as the dramatic poets of his age. He may, per- 
haps, be considered to have shared with his con- 
temporary Lasus the honor of foundingthe Athe- 
nian school of dithyrarnbic poetry. [The frag- 
ments <»f Pratinas are contained in Wagner's 
Tragic. Gruc. Fragm, p 7-10 ] 
45 



Praxagoras (tlpai-ayopac), a celebrated physi- 
cian, was a native of the island of Cos, and lived 
in the fourth century B.C. He belonged to the 
medical sect of the Dogmatici, and was cele- 
brated for his knowledge of medical science in 
general, and especially for his attainments in 
anatomy and physiology. 

Praxias (Tlpui-iac), an Athenian sculptor of 
the age of Phidias, but of the more archaic 
school of Calamis, commenced the execution 
of the statues in the pediments of the great 
temple of Apollo at Delphi, but died while he 
was still engaged upon the work. His date 
may be placed about B.C. 448 and onward. 

Praxidice {Upa^tSiKij), i. c, tiie goddess who 
carries out the objects of justice, or watches 
that justice is done to men. When Menelaus 
arrived in Laconia, on his return from Troy, he 
set up a statue of Praxidice near Gytheum, not 
far from the spot where Paris, in carrying off 
Helen, had founded a sanctuary of Aphrodite 
(Venus) Migonitis. Near Haliartus, in Boeotia, 
we meet with the worship of Praxidicae, in the 
plural : they were here called daughters of Ox 
yges, and their names were Alalcomenia,Thelx- 
incea, and Aulis. In the Orphic poets Praxidice 
seems to be a surname of Persephone (Proser- 
pina). 

Praxilla (Upd^iA?M), of Sicyon, a lyric poet 
ess, who flourished about B.C. 450, and was one 
of the nine poetesses who were distinguished 
as the Lyric Muses. Her scholia were among the 
most celebrated compositions of that species. 
She belonged to the Dorian school of lyric po- 
etry, but there were also traces of ^Eolic influ- 
ence in her rhythms, and even in her dialect. 
[The fragments of her poems are given in Prax- 
illa. GrazcanicG vafis qua extant residua, Upsala, 
1826 ; and are found also in the collections of 
Schneidewin and Bergk.] 

Praxiphanes (Hpufjupuvvc), a Peripatetic phi- 
losopher, a native either of Mytilene or of 
Rhodes, was a pupil of Theophrastus, and lived 
about B.C. 322. Epicurus is said to have been 
one of his pupils. Praxiphanes paid especial 
attention to grammatical studies, and is hence 
named along with Aristotle as the founder and 
creator of the science of grammar. 

Praxiteles (flpaft-e^c), one of the most dis- 
tinguished artists of ancient Greece, was both 
a statuary in bronze and a sculptor in marble. 
We know nothing of his personal history, ex- 
cept that he was a citizen, if not a native, of 
Athens, and that his career as an artist was in- 
timately connected with that city. He prob- 
ably flourished about B.C. 364 and onward. 
Praxiteles stands, with Scopas, at the head of 
the later Attic school, so called in contradistinc- 
tion to the earlier Attic school of Phidias. With- 
out attempting those sublime impersonations 
of divine majesty in which Phidias had been so 
inimitably successful, Praxiteles was unsur- 
passed in the exhibition of the softer beauties 
of the human form, especially in the female 
figure. The most celebrated work of Praxit- 
eles was his marble statue of Aphrodite (Ve- 
nus), which was distinguished from other stat- 
ues of the goddess by the name of the Cnidians, 
who purchased it. It was always esteemed the 
most perfectly beautiful of the statues of the 
goddess. Many made the voyage to Cnidus cx- 

705 



PRAXITHEA. 



PRIAPUS. 



pressly to behold it. So highly did the Cnidi- I 
ans themselves esteem their treasure, that when 
King Nicomedes offered them, as the price of 
it, to pay off the whole of their heavy public 
debt, they preferred to endure any suffering 
rather than part with the work which gave their 
city its chief renown. It was afterward carried 
to Constantinople, where it perished by fire in 
the reign of Justinian. Praxiteles modelled it 
from a favorite courtesan named Phryne, of 
whom he also made more than one portrait 
statue. Another of the celebrated works of 
Praxiteles was his statue of Eros. It was pre- 
served at Thespise, where it was dedicated by 
Phryne ; and an interesting story is told of the 
manner in which she became possessed of it. 
Praxiteles had promised to give Phryne which- 
ever of his works she might choose, but he was 
unwilling to tell her which of them, in his own 
opinion, was the best. To discover this, she 
sent a slave to tell Praxiteles that a fire had 
broken out in his house, and that most of his 
works had already perished. On hearing this 
message, the artist rushed out, exclaiming that 
all his toil was lost if the fire had touched his 
Satyr or his Eros. Upon this, Phryne confessed 
the stratagem, and chose the Eros. This statue 
was removed to Rome by Caligula, restored to 
Thespias by Claudius, and carried back by Nero 
to Rome, where it stood in Pliny's time in the 
schools of Octavia, and it finally perished in the 
conflagration of that building in the reign of 
Titus. Praxiteles had two sons, who were 
also distinguished sculptors, Timarchus and Ce- 
phisodotus. 

PraxIthea (Ilpa^Ldia), daughter of Phrasimus 
and Diogenla, was the wife of Erechtheus, and 
mother of Cecrops, Pandorus, Metion, Orneus, 
Procris, Creusa, Chthonia, and Orithyia. 

PreciIni, a people in Gallia Aquitanica, at the 
foot of the Pyrenees. 

Prelius Lacus (now Lago di Castiglione), a 
lake in Etruria, near the coast, near the north- 
ern end of which was a small island. 

[Premnis (Uprjuvig). Vid. Primis.] 

Prepesinthus (npeiricnvdoc), one of the small- 
er Cyclades, between Oliaros and Siphnos. 

[Prexaspes (TlpriZaGnris). 1. A Persian, held 
in the highest esteem and greatly trusted by 
Cambyses : he was employed by the latter to 
make away with his brother Smerdis secretly. 
His fidelity was severely tested on one occa- 
sion, when Cambyses, in one of his fits of phren- 
sy, shot the son of Prexaspes through the heart 
with an arrow before the eyes of his parent to 
prove that his hand was steady, and that the 
charge against him of too great fondness for 
wine was unfounded. When the false Smerdis 
usurped the throne, Cambyses suspected Prex- 
aspes of treachery, but the latter cleared him- 
self. Subsequently the magi endeavored to gain 
Prexaspes to their side, but he, pretending at first 
to favor their views by denying the assassina- 
tion of Smerdis, declared before the assembled 
Persians the truth, and exposed the scheme of 
the magi, and then threw himself from the tow T - 
er on which he was standing. — 2. Son of Aspa- 
thines, one of the naval commanders of Xerxes. ] 

Priamides, that is, a son of Priam, by which 
name Hector, Paris, Helenus, Deiphobus, and 
the other sons of Priam are frequently called. 
706 



Priamus (Hpiafiog), the famous king of Troy 
at the time of the Trojan war. He was a son 
of Laomedon and Strymo or Placia. His orig- 
inal name is said to have been Podarces, i. e., 
" the swift-footed," which was changed into 
Priamus, " the ransomed" (from npiafj-ai), be- 
cause he was the only surviving son of Laom- 
edon, and w r as ransomed by his sister Hesione 
after he had fallen into the hands of Hercules. 
He is said to have been first married to Arisbe, 
the daughter of Merops, by whom he became 
the father of ^Esacus ; but afterward he gave 
up Arisbe to Hyrtacus, and married Hecuba, by 
whom he had the following children : Hector, 
Alexander or Paris, Deiphobus, Helenus, Pam- 
mon, Polites, Antiphus, Hipponous, Polydorus, 
Troilus, Creusa, Laodice, Polyxena, and Cas- 
sandra. By other women he had a great many 
children besides. According to the Homeric 
tradition, he was the father of fifty sons, nine- 
teen of whom were children of Hecuba, to whom 
others add an equal number of daughters. In 
the earlier part of his reign Priam is said to 
have supported the Phrygians in their war 
against the Amazons. When the Greeks land- 
ed on the Trojan coast Priam was already ad- 
vanced in years, and took no active part in the 
war. Once only did he venture upon the field 
of battle, to conclude the agreement respecting 
the single combat between Paris and Menelaus. 
After the death of Hector, Priam, accompanied 
by Mercury (Hermes), went to the tent of Achil- 
les to ransom his son's body for burial, and ob- 
tained it. His death is not mentioned by Ho- 
mer, but is related by later poets. When the 
Greeks entered Troy, the aged king put on his 
armor, and was on the point of rushing against 
the enemy, but he was prevailed on by Hecuba 
to take refuge with herself and her daughters 
as a suppliant at the altar of Jupiter (Zeus). 
While he w r as tarrying in the temple, his son 
Polites, pursued by Pyrrhus, rushed into the 
sacred spot, and expired at the feet of his fa- 
ther, whereupon Priam, overcome with indig- 
nation, hurled his spear with feeble hand against 
Pyrrhus, but was forthwith killed by the latter. 
Virgil mentions {Mn., v., 564) another Priam, 
a son of Polites, and a grandson of King Priam. 

Priansus (Upcavaog : UpiavcLog, Ilptavctevc), 
a town in Crete, on the southern coast, south of 
Lyctus, confounded by Strabo with Praesus. 

Priapus (Uptcnzog), son of Bacchus (Diony- 
sus) and Venus (Aphrodite). It is said that Ve- 
nus (Aphrodite), who was in love with Bacchus 
(Dionysus), went to meet the god on his return 
from India, but soon abandoned him, and pro- 
ceeded to Lampsacus on the Hellespont to give 
birth to the child of the god. Juno (Hera), who 
was dissatisfied with her conduct, caused her 
to give birth to a child of extreme ugliness, who 
was named Priapus. The earliest Greek poets, 
such as Homer and Hesiod, do not mention this 
divinity, and it was only in later times that he 
was honored with divine worship. He was wor- 
shipped more especially at Lampsacus on the 
Hellespont, whence he is sometimes called Hel- 
lespontiacus. He was regarded as the promoter 
of fertility both in vegetation and in ail animals 
connected with an agricultural life ; and in this 
capacity he was worshipped as the protector of 
flocks of sheep and goats, of bees, of the vine, ot 



PRIAPUS. 



PRISOUS. 



all garden produce, and even of fishing. Like j 
other divinities presiding over agricultural pur- | 
suits, he was believed to be possessed of pro- ; 
phetic powers, and is sometimes mentioned in l 
the plural. As Priapus had many attributes in 
common with other gods of fertility, the Orphics 
identified him with their mystic Bacchus (Dio- 
nysus), Mercury (Hermes), Helios, &c. The 
Attic legends connect Priapus with such sens- 
ual and licentious beings as Conisalus, Orthanes, 
and Tychon. In like manner, he was confound- 
ed by the Italians with Mutunus or Muttunus, 
the personification of the fructifying power in 
nature. The sacrifices offered to him consist- 
ed of the first-fruits of gardens, vineyards, and 
fields, of milk, honey, cakes, rams, asses, and 
fishes. He was represented in carved images, 
mostly in the form of hermce, carrying fruit in 
his garment, and either a sickle or cornucopia 
in his hand. The hermae of Priapus in Italy, 
like those of other rustic divinities, were usu- 
ally painted red, whence the god is called ruber 
or rubicundus. 

Priapus (Upianoc, Ion. ILpiijiroc : Upianvvog : 
ruins at Karaboa). 1. A city of Mysia, on the 
Propontis, east of Parium, with a small but ex- 
cellent harbor. It was a colony of the Mile- 
sians, and a chief seat of the worship of Pria- 
pus. The surrounding district was called Pria- 
pis (TlpiaiTig) and Priapene (ILpiaTrnvri). — [2. A 
small island of the .zEgean Sea, near Ephesus.] 

Priene (Tlpif/V7] : UpLyvevg, UpirjvioQ : Prien- 
eus, pi. Prienenses : ruins at Samsun), one of 
the twelve Ionian cities on the coast of Asia Mi- 
nor, stood in the northwestern corner of Caria, 
at the southern foot of Mount Mycale, and on 
the northern side of the Sinus Latmicus. Its 
foundation was ascribed mythically to the Ne- 
leid ./Epytus, in conjunction with Cadmeans, 
from whom it was also called Kadp.r/. It stood 
originally on the sea-shore, and had two har- 
bors and a small fleet, but the change in the 
coast by the alluvial deposits of the Maeander 
left it some distance inland. It was of much 
religious importance in connection with the Pa- 
nionian festival on Mount Mycale, at which the 
people of Priene took precedence in virtue of 
their being the supposed descendants of those 
of Helice in Greece Proper. The city was also 
celebrated as the birth-place of Bias. 

Prifernum, a town of the Vestini, on the east- 
ern coast of Central Italy. 

[Prilis Lacus, called by Cicero Lacus Pre- 
lius (now Lago di Castiglione), a lake of Etru- 
ria, near the city of Rusellee, and just above the 
River Umbro (now Ombrone).'] 

[Primis or Premnis (~n.pip.ie or TlprjpviQ). 1- 
Called Magna, to distinguish it from No. 2, sit- 
uated near the junction of the Astaboras with 
the Nile, immediately north of the island of 
Meroe. — 2. (Now Ibrccm, with Egyptian and Ro- 
man ruins), on the Nile, further down than No. 
1, occupied as a frontier post by the Romans.] 

Primus, M. Antonius, a native of Tolosa in 
Gaul, was condemned of forgery (falsum) in the 
reign of Nero, was expelled the senate, of which 
he was a member, and was banished from the 
city. After the death of Nero (68), he was re- 
stored to his former rank by Galba, and appoint- 
ed to the command of the seventh legion, which 
was stationed in Pannonia. He was one of the 



first generals in Europe who declared in favor 
of Vespasian, and he rendered him the most im- 
portant services. In conjunction with the gov- 
ernors of Mcesia and Pannonia, he invaded It- 
aly, gained a decisive victory over the Vitellian 
army at Bedriacum, and took Cremona, which 
he allowed his soldiers to pillage and destroy. 
He afterward forced his way into Rome, not- 
withstanding the obstinate resistance of the Vi- 
tellian troops, and had the government of the 
city till the arrival of Mucianus from Syria. Vid. 
Mucianus, No. 2. We learn from Martial, who 
was a friend of Antonius Primus, that he was 
alive at the accession of Trajan. 

Priscianus, a Roman grammarian, surnamed 
Ccesariensis, either because ho was born at Caes- 
area, or educated there. He flourished about 
A.D. 450, and taught grammar at Constantino- 
ple. He was celebrated for the extent and 
depth of his grammatical knowledge, of which 
he has left the evidence in his work on the sub- 
ject, entitled Commcntariorum grammaticorum 
Libri XVIII., addressed to his friend and pa- 
tron, the consul Julianus. Other titles are, how- 
ever, frequently given to it. The first sixteen 
books treat of the eight parts of speech rec- 
ognized by the ancient grammarians, letters, 
syllables, &c. The last two books are on syn- 
tax. This treatise soon became the standard 
work on Latin grammar, and in the epitome of 
Rabanus Maurus obtained an extensive circu- 
lation. The other works of Priscianus still ex- 
tant are, 1. A grammatical catechism on twelve 
lines of the jEneid, manifestly intended as a 
school book. 2. A treatise on accents. 3. A 
treatise on the symbols used to denote numbers 
and weights, and on coins and numbers. 4. On 
the metres of Terence. 5. A translation of the 
Upoyvpvuapara (Praexerciiamcnta) of Hermoge- 
nes. 6. On the declensions of nouns. 7. A 
poem on the Emperor Anastasius, in three hund- 
red and twelve hexameters, with a preface in 
twenty-two iambic lines. 8. A piece Be Pon- 
deribus et Mcnsuris, in verse. 9. An Epitome 
phenomenon, or De Sideribus, in verse. 10. A 
free translation of the Periegesis of Dionysius, 
in one thousand four hundred and twentj'-seven 
lines, manifestly made for the instruction of 
youth. 11. A couple of epigrams. The best 
edition of Priscianus is by Krehl, Lips., 1819- 
20, 2 vols. 8vo. 

Priscianus, Theodorus, a physician, and a 
pupil of Vindicianus, lived in the fourth century 
after Christ. He is supposed to have lived at 
the court of Constantinople, and to have attain- 
ed the dignity of Arehiater. He is the author 
of a Latin work, entitled Rerum Mcdicarum Li- 
bri Quatuor, published in 1532, both at Strasburg 
and at Basel. 

Priscus (Jlpionoe), a Byzantine historian, was 
a native of Panium in Thrace, and was one 
of the ambassadors sent by Theodosius the 
Younger to Attila, A.D. 445. He died about 
471. Priscus wrote an account of his embassy 
to Attila, enriched by digressions on the life and 
reign of that king. The work was in eight books, 
but only fragments of it have come down to us. 
Priscus was an excellent and trustworthy his- 
torian, and his style was remarkably elegant 
and pure. The fragments are published, with 
those of Dexippus and others, by Bekker and 

707 



PRISCUS, HELVIDIUS. 



PROCLUS. 



Niebuhr, in the Bonn Collection of the Byzan- 
tines, 1829, 8vo. 

Priscus, Helvidius, son-in-law of Thrasea 
Psetus, and, like him, distinguished by his love 
of virtue, philosophy, and liberty. He was quaes- 
tor in Achaia during the reign of Nero, and trib- 
une of the plebs A D. 56. When Thrasea was 
put to death by Nero (66), Priscus was banish- 
ed from Italy. He was recalled to Rome by 
Galba (68). but in consequence of his freedom 
of speech and love of independence, he was 
again banished by Vespasian, and was shortly 
afterward put to death by order of this emperor. 
His life was written by Herennius Senecio at 
the request of his widow Fannia; and the ty- 
rant Domitian, in consequence of this work, 
subsequently put Senecio to death, and sent 
Fannia into exile. Priscus left a son, Helvid- 
ius, who was put to death by Domitian. 

Priscus, Servilius. The Prisci were an an- 
cient family of the Servilia gens, and filled the 
highest offices of the state during the early years 
of the republic. They also bore the agnomen 
of Structus, which is always appended to their 
name in the East, till it was supplanted by that 
of Fidenas. which was first obtained by Q. Ser- 
vilius Priscus Structus, w ho took Fidenae in his 
dictatorship, B.C. 435, and which was also borne 
by his descendants. 

Priscus, Tarquinius. Vid. Tarquinius. 

Privernum (Privernas, -atis : now Piperno), 
an ancient town of Latium, on the River Ama- 
senus, belonged to the Volscians It was con- 
quered by the Romans at an early period, and 
was subsequently made a colony. 

[Pkiverxus, a Rutulian warrior under Tur- 
nus, slain by Capys ] 

Pro^eresius (Upoaipeaioc), a teacher of rhet- 
oric, was a native of Armenia, and was born 
about A D. 276. He first studied at Antioch 
under Ulpian, and afterward at Athens under 
Julianus. He became at a later time the chief 
teacher of rhetoric at Athens, and enjoyed a 
very high reputation. He died in 368, in his 
ninety-second year. 

[Proba, Falconia, a poetess, greatly admired 
in the Middle Ages, but whose real name and 
the place of whose nativity are uncertain. Her I 
only production now extant, a Cento Virgilia- 
nus. contains narratives in hexameter verse ot 
striking events in the Old and New Testament, 
expressed in lines and portions of lines derived 
from the poems of Virgil. The. best editions 
of the Cenio Virgiliunus are by Meibomius, 
Helinst., 4to, 1597; and of Kromayer, Hal. 
Magd.. 8vo, 1719.] 

Probalinthus (U.po6<l?uvdog : UpoCn/umoc), a 
demus in Attica, south of Marathon, belonging 
to the tribe Pandionis. 

PROBATiA(fl^f6arfG),a river of Boeotia. which, j 
after passing through the territory of Trachin, j 
and receiving its tributary the Hercyna, flowed j 
into the Lake Copais. 

Probus, vEmilics. Vid Nepos, Cornelius. 

Probus, M. Aurelius, Roman emperor A D. 
276-282. was a native of Sirmium in Pannonia, j 
and rose to distinction by his military abilities, j 
He was appointed by the Emperor Tacitus gov- 
ernor of the whole East, and, upon the death ! 
of that sovereign, the purple was forced upon I 
his acceptance by the armies of Syria. The i 



downfall of Florianus speedily removed his only 
rival (vid. Florianus), and he was enthusiastic- 
ally hailed by the united voice of the senate, 
the people, and the legions. The reign of Pro- 
bus presents a series of the most brilliant 
achievements. He defeated the barbarians on 
the frontiers of Gaul and Illyricum, and in oth- 
er parts of the Roman empire, and put down 
the rebellions of Saturninus at Alexandrea, and 
of Proculus and Bonosus in Gaul. But, after 
crushing all external and internal foes, he was 
killed at Sirmium by his own soldiers, who had 
risen in mutiny against him because he had em- 
ployed them in laborious public works. Probus 
was as just and virtuous as he was warlike, and 
is deservedly regarded as one of the greatest 
and best of the Roman emperors. 

Probus, Valerius. 1. Of Berytus, a Roman 
grammarian, who lived in the time of Nero. To 
this Probus we may assign those annotations 
on Terence, from which fragments are quoted 
in the scholia on the dramatist. — 2. A Roman 
grammarian, flourished some years before A. 
GeHius, and therefore about the beginning of the 
second century. He was the author of com- 
mentaries on Virgil, and possessed a copy of a 
portion, at least, of the Georgics, which had. 
been corrected by the hand of the poet himself. 
These are the commentaries so frequently cited 
by Servius ; but the Scholia in Bucolica et Geor- 
gia*, now extant under the name of Probus, be- 
long to a much later period. This Probus was 
probably the author of the life of Persius, com- 
monly ascribed to Suetonius. There is extant 
a work upon grammar, in two books, entitled 
M. Valerii Probi Grammatical Institutiones ; but 
this work was probably not written by either of 
the preceding grammarians. It is published in 
the collections of Putschius, Hannov., 1605, and 
of Lindemann, Lips., 1831. 

Procas, one of the fabulous kings of Alba 
Longa, succeeded Aventinus, and reigned twen- 
ty-three years : he was the father of Numitor 
and Amulius. 

Prochyta (now Procida), an island off* the 
coast of Campania, near the promontory Mise- 
num, is said to have been torn away by an 
eart hquake either from this promontory or from 
the neighboring island of Pithecusa or iEnaria. 

[Procilla, Julia, the mother of Agricola ] 

[Procillius, a Roman historian, a contem- 
porary of Cicero. He appears to have written 
on early Roman history, as Varro quotes his 
account of the origin of the Curtian Lake, as well 
as on the later history, as he mentions Pom- 
pey's triumph on his return from Africa.] 

Procles (UpoK/.nO 1- One of the twin sons 
of Aristodemus. For details, vid. Eurysthenes. 
— [2. Tyrant of Epidaurus, the father of Lysis 
or Melissa, the wife of Periander. Having re- 
vealed to the son of the latter the secret of his 
mother's death (vid. Periander),. he incurred 
the implacable resentment of Periander. who 
attacked and captured Epidaurus, and took Pro- 
cles prisoner ] 

Proclus (Up6k?,oc). 1. Surnamed Diadochus 
(Auidoxoc), the successor, from his being regard- 
ed as the genuine successor of Plato in doc- 
trine, was one of the most celebrated teachers 
of the Neo-Platonic school. He vi as born at By- 
zantium A.D. 412, but was brought up at Xan- 



PROCLUS. 



PROCOPIUS. 



»hus in Lycia.to which city his parents belonged, 
and which Proclus himself regarded as his na- 
tive place. He studied at Alexandrea under 
Olympiodorus, and afterward at Athens under 
Plutarchus and Syrianus. At an early age his 
philosophical attainments attracted the attention 
and admiration of his contemporaries. He had 
written his commentary on the Timaeus of Pla- 
to, as well as many other treatises, by his twen- 
ty-eighth year. On the death of Syrianus, Pro- 
clus succeeded him in his school, and inherited 
from him the house in which he resided and 
taught. Marinus, in his life of Proclus, records, 
with intense admirat ion, the perfection to which 
his master attained in all virtues. The highest 
of these virtues were, in the estimation of Ma- 
rinus, those of a purifying and ascetic kind. 
From animal food he almost totally abstained ; 
fasts and vigils he observed with scrupulous 
exactitude. The reverence with which he hon- 
ored the sun and moon would seem to have 
been unbounded. He celebrated all the import- 
ant religious festivals of every nation, himself 
composing hymns in honor, not only of Grecian 
deities, but of those of other nations also. Nor 
were departed heroes and philosophers except- 
ed from this religious veneration ; and he even 
performed sacred rites in honor of the departed 
spirits of the entire human race. It was, of 
course, not surprising that such a man should 
be favored with various apparitions and mirac- 
ulous interpositions of the gods. He used to 
tell how a god had once appeared and proclaimed 
to him the glory of the city. But the still higher 
grade of what, in the language of the school, 
was termed the theurgic virtue, he attained by 
his profound meditations on the oracles, and the 
Orphic and Ohaldaic mysteries, into the pro- 
found secrets of which he was initiated by As- 
clepigenia, the daughter of Plutarchus, who 
alone was in complete possession of the theur- 
gic knowledge and discipline, which had de- 
scended to her from the great Nestorius. He 
profited so much by her instructions as to be 
able, according to Marinus, to call down rain in 
a time of drought, to stop an earthquake, and 
to procure the immediate intervention of ^Es- 
culapius to cure the daughter of his friend 
Archiadas. Proclus died A.D. 4S5. During the 
last five years of his life he had become super- 
annuated, his strength having been exhausted 
by his fastings ami other ascetic practices. As 
a philosopher, Proclus enjoyed the highest ce- 
lebrity among his contemporaries and success- 
ors ; but his philosophical system is character- 
ized by vagueness, mysticism, and want of good 
sense. He professed that his design was not 
to bring forward views of his own, but simply 
to expound Plato, in doing which he proceeded 
on the idea that every thing in Plato must be 
brought into accordance with the mystical the- 
ology of Orpheus. He wrote a separate work 
on the coincidence of the doctrines of Orpheus, 
Pythagoras, and Plato. It was much in the 
same spirit that he attempted to blend together 
the logical method of Aristotle and the fanciful 
speculations of Neo- Platonic mysticism. Sev- 
eral of the works of Proclus are still extant. 
The most important of them consist of Com- 
mentaries on Plato, a treatise on various theo- 
logical and philosophical subjects. There is no 



complete edition of Proclus. The edition of 
Cousin (Paris, 6 vols. 8vo, 1820-1827) contains 
the following treatises of Proclus : On Provi- 
dence and Fate ; On Ten Doubts about Provi- 
dence ; On the Nature of Evil ; a Commentary 
on the Alcibiades, and a Commentary on the 
Parmenides. The other principal works of Pro- 
clus are : On the Theology of Plato, in six 
books ; Theological Elements ; a Commentary 
on the Timseus of Plato ; five Hymns of an 
Orphic character. Several of these have been 
translated into English by Thomas Taylor. 
Proclus was also a distinguished mathematician 
and grammarian. His Commentaries on the 
first hook of Euclid, and on the Works and Days 
of Hesiod, are still extant. — [2. Eutychius, a 
grammarian, who flourished in the second cen- 
tury, born at Sicca, in Africa. He was the in- 
structor of M. Antoninus, and is called the most 
learned grammarian of his age.] 

Procne (Uponvri), daughter of King Pandion 
of Athens, and wife of Tereus. Her story is 
given under Tereus. 

PROCONNESUS (UpQKOVVTjCOC, QT ItpoiKdvVttfSOge 

i. e., Fawn. Island, now Marmara), an island of 
the Propontis (now Sea of Marmara), which 
takes from it its modern name, off the northern 
coast of Mysia, northwest of the peninsula of 
Cyzicus or Dohpnis. The latter was also called 
Proconnesus from irpo!; (fawn), because it was 
a favorite resort of deer in the fawning season, 
whence it was also called Elaphonnesus ('EXa- 
(pdwncoc, i. e., deer-island) ; and the two were 
distinguished by the names of Old and New 
Proconnesus. The island was celebrated for 
its marble, and hence its modern name. It 
was the native place of the poet Aristeas. 

Procopics (UposoiTLo;). 1. A native of Cili- 
cia, and a relative of the Emperor Julian, served 
with distinction under Constantius II. and Jr> 
lian. Having incurred the suspicions of Jovian 
and of his successor Valens, Procopius remain- 
ed in concealment for about two years ; but in 
A.D. 355 he was proclaimed emperor at Con- 
stantinople, while Valens was staying at Caesa- 
rea in Cappadocia. Both parties prepared for 
war. In the following year (366) the forces of 
Procopius were defeated in two great battles. 
Procopius himself was taken prisoner, and put 
to death by order of Valens. — 2. An eminent 
Byzantine historian, was born at Caesarca, in 
Palestine, about A.D. 500. He went to Con 
stantinople when still a young man, and then 1 
obtained so much distinction as an advocate 
and a professor of eloquence, that he attracted 
the attention of Belisarius, who appointed him 
his secretary in 527. In this capacity Proco- 
pius accompanied the great hero on his differ 
ent wars in Asia, Africa, and Italy, being fre 
quently employed in state business of import- 
ance, or in conducting military expeditions. 
Procopius returned with Belisarius to Constan- 
tinople a little before 542. His eminent talents 
were appreciated by the Emperor Justinian, 
who conferred upon him the title of illustris, 
made him a senator, and in 562 created him 
prefect of Constantinople. Procopius died about 
the same time as Justinian, 565. As an histo- 
rian, Procopius deserves great praise. His 
style is good, formed upon classic models, often 
elegant, and generally full of vigor. His works 

709 



PROCRIS. 



PRCETUS. 



are: 1. Histories ('laropiai), in eight books; 
viz., two On the Persian War, containing the 
period from 408-553, and treating more fully 
of the author's own times ; two On the War 
with the Vandals, 395-545 ; four On the Gothic 
War, or, properly speaking, only three books, 
the fourth (eighth) being a sort of , supplement 
containing various matters, and going down to 
the beginning of 553. It was continued by 
Agathias till 559. The work is extremely in- 
teresting ; the descriptions of the habits, &c, 
of the barbarians are faithful, and done in a 
masterly style. 2. On the Public Buildings erect- 
ed by Justinian (KTtGp:a-a), in six books. A 
work equally interesting and valuable in its 
kind, though apparently too much seasoned 
with flattery of the emperor. 3. Anecdota ('Av- 
ekSoto), a collection of anecdotes, some of them 
witty and pleasant, but others most indecent, 
reflecting upon Justinian, the Empress Theo- 
dora, Belisarius, and other eminent persons. 
It is a complete Chronique Scandaleuse of the 
court of Constantinople, from 549 till 562. 4. 
Ora'irmes, probably extracts from the " Histo- 
ry," which is rather overstocked with harangues 
and speeches. The best edition of the collect- 
ed works of Procopius is by Dindorf, Bonn, 3 
vols. Svo, 1833-1838; [the best edition of the 
Anecdota is by Orelli, Lipsiee, 1827, 8vo.] 

Procris (TIpoKpLc), daughter of Erechtheus 
and wife of Cephalus. For details, vid. Ceph- 
alus. 

Procrustes ( Uponpovarvc ), that is, " the 
Stretcher," a surname of the famous robber 
Polypemon or Damastes. He used to tie all 
travellers who fell into his hands upon a bed : 
if they were shorter than the bed, he stretched 
their limbs till they were of the same length ; 
if they were longer than the bed, he made them 
of the same size by cutting off some of their 
limbs. He was slain by Theseus, on the Ce- 
phisus, in Attica. The bed of Procrustes is 
used proverbially even at the present day. 

Proculeius, C., a Roman eques, one of the 
friends of Augustus, was sent by the latter, after 
the victory at Actium, to Antony and Cleopa- 
tra. It is of this Proculeius that Horace speaks 
(Carm., ii., 2). He is said to have divided*bis 
property with his brothers (perhaps cousins) 
Ceepio and Murena, who had lost their property 
in the civil wars. Proculeius put an end to his 
life by taking gypsum, when suffering from a 
disease in the stomach. 

Proculus, the jurist, was the contemporary 
of the jurist Nerva the younger, who was prob- 
ably the father of the Emperor Nerva. The 
fact that Proculus gave his name to the school 
or sect (Proculiani or Proculciani, as the name 
is also written) which was opposed to that of 
the Sabiniani, shows that he was a jurist of 
note. Proculus is often cifred, and there are 
thirty-seven extracts from him in the Digest 
from his eight books of Epistolee. He appears 
to have written notes on Labeo. Some writers 
suppose that Proculus is the Licinius Proculus 
who was Praefectus Praetorio under Otho. 

Proculus, Julius, a Roman senator, is said, 
in the legend of Romulus, to have informed the 
sorrowing Roman people, after the strange de- 
parture of their king from the world, that Rom- 
ulus had descended from heaven and appear- 
710 



ed to him, bidding him tell the people to honor 
him in future as a god under the name of Quiri- 
nus. 

PrSdicus (JlpodtKoc), the celebrated sophist, 
was a native of Iulis, in the island of Ceos. 
He lived in the time of the Peloponnesian war 
and subsequently ; but the date can not be de- 
termined either of his birth or of his death. 
Prodicus came frequently to Athens on the pub- 
lic business of his native city. He was brought 
forward in the Clouds and the Birds of Aris- 
tophanes, which belong respectively to B.C. 423 
and 414. Prodicus is mentioned as one of the 
teachers of Isocrates, and he was alive at the 
time of the death of Socrates (399). Suidas 
relates that Prodicus was put to death by the 
Athenians as a corrupter of the youth, but this 
statement sounds very suspicious. He is men- 
tioned both by Plato and Xenophon with more 
respect than the other sophists. Like Protago- 
ras and others, he travelled through Greece, de- 
livering lectures for money, and in this way he 
amassed a large fortune. He paid especial at- 
tention to the correct use of words. We have 
the substance of one of his lectures preserved 
by Xenophon in the well-known fable called 
" The choice of Hercules." When Hercules, 
as he entered upon manhood, was upon the 
point of choosing between virtue and vice, there 
appeared to him two women, the one of digni- 
fied beauty, adorned with purity, modesty, and 
discretion, the other of a voluptuous form, and 
meretricious look and dress. The latter prom- 
ised to lead him by the shortest road, without 
any toil, to the enjoyment of every pleasure. 
The other, while she reminded him of his an- 
cestors and his noble nature, did not conceal 
from him that the gods have granted nothing 
really beautiful and good without toil and labor. 
The former sought to deter him from the path 
of virtue by urging its difficulties ; the latter 
impressed upon him the emptiness of pleasure, 
and the honor and happiness flowing from a life 
of virtue. Thereupon Hercules decided in fa- 
vor of virtue. 

Proerna (Upoepva), a town of Thessaly, in 
the western part of the district of Phthiotis, on 
the western slope of Mount Narthacius, and 
near the sources of the Apidanus. 
Prcetides. Vid. Prcetus. 
Prcetus (YlpoiToc), son of Abas and Ocalea, 
and twin-brother of Acrisius. In the dispute 
between the two brothers for the kingdom of 
Argos, PrGetus was expelled, whereupon he 
fled to Iobates, in Lycia, and married Antea or 
Sthenebcea, the daughter of the latter. With 
the assistance of Iobates, Prcetus was restored 
to his kingdom, and took Tiryns, which was 
now fortified by the Cyclopes. Acrisius then 
shared his kingdom with his brother, surrender- 
ing to him Tiryns, Midea, and the coast of Ar- 
golis. By his wife, Prcetus became the father 
of three daughters, Lysippe, Iphinoe, and Iphi- 
anassa, who are often mentioned under the gen- 
eral name of Prcetides. When these daugh- 
ters arrived at the age of maturity, they were 
stricken with madness, the cause of which is 
differently related. Some say that it was a 
punishment inflicted upon them by Bacchus 
(Dionysus) because they had despised his wor- 
ship ; others relate that they were driven mad 



PROMACHUS. 

by Juno (Hem) because they presumed to con- 
sider themselves more handsome than the god- 
dess, or because they had stolen some of the 
gold of her statue. The phrensy spread to the 
other women of Argos ; till at length Prcetus 
agreed to divide his kingdom between Melam- 
pus and his brother Bias, upon the former prom- 
ising that he would cure the women of their 
madness. Melampus then chose the most ro- 
bust among the young men, gave chase to the 
mad women, amid shouting and dancing, and 
drove them as far as Sicyon. During this pur- 
suit Iphinoe died, but the two other daughters 
were cured by Melampus by means of purifica- 
tions, and were then married to Melampus and 
Bias. The place where the cure was effected 
upon his daughters is not the same in all tradi- 
tions, some mentioning the well Anigros, oth- 
ers the fountain Clitor in Arcadia, or Lusi in 
Arcadia. Besides these daughters, Proetus had 
a son, Megapenthes. When Bellerophon came 
to Proetus to be purified of a murder which he 
had committed, the wife of Proetus fell in love 
with him ; but, as Bellerophon declined her ad- 
vances, she charged him before Prcetus with 
having made improper proposals to her. Proe- 
tus then sent Bellerophon to Iobates, in Lycia, 
with a letter desiring the latter to murder Bel- 
lerophon. Vid. Bellerophon. According to 
Ovid (Met., v., 238), Acrisius was expelled from 
his kingdom by Prcetus ; and Perseus, the 
grandson of Acrisius, avenged his grandfather 
by turning Prcetus into stone by means of the 
head of Medusa. 

[Promachus (UpSfiaxog), a Boeotian chief, son 
of Alegenor, slain by Acamas at the siege of 
Troy.] 

Prometheus (U-pourjOevg), son of the Titan 
Iapetus and Clymene, and brother of Atlas, Me- 
noetius, and Epimetheus. His name signifies 
" forethought," as that of his brother Epime- 
theus denotes " afterthought." Once in the 
reign of Jupiter (Zeus), when gods and men 
were disputing with one another at Mecone 
(afterward Sicyon), Prometheus, with a view 
of deceiving Jupiter (Zeus), cut up a bull and 
divided it into two parts : he wrapped up the 
best parts and the intestines in the skin, and at 
the top he placed the stomach, which is one of 
the worst parts, while the second heap consist- 
ed of the bones covered with fat. When Ju- 
piter (Zeus) pointed out to him how badly he 
had made the division, Prometheus desired him 
to choose ; but Jupiter (Zeus), in his anger, and 
seeing through the stratagem of Prometheus, 
chose the heap of bones covered with the fat. 
The father of the gods avenged himself by with- 
holding fire from mortals, but Prometheus stole 
it in a hollow tube {vupBrj^ ferula). Jupiter 
(Zeus) thereupon chained Prometheus to a pil- 
lar, where an eagle consumed in the daytime 
his liver, which was restored in each succeed- 
ing night. Prometheus was thus exposed to 
perpetual torture ; but Hercules killed the eagle 
and delivered the sufferer, with the consent of 
Jupiter (Zeus), who in this w r ay had an oppor- 
tunity of allowing his son to gain immortal 
fame. Further in order to punish men, Jupiter 
(Zeus) gave Pandora as a present to Epime- 
theus, in consequence of which diseases and 
.sufferings of every kind befell mortals. (For 



PROMETHEUS. 

details, vid. Pandora.) This is an outline of 
the legend about Prometheus, as contained in 
the poems of Hesiod. ^Eschylus, in his trilogy 
Prometheus, added various new features to this 
legend. Although Prometheus belonged to the 
Titans, he is nevertheless represented by JEs- 
chylus as having assisted Jupiter (Zeus) against 
the Titans. But when Jupiter (Zeus) wanted 
to extirpate the whole race of man, whose place 
he proposed to fill by an entirely new race of 
beings, Prometheus prevented the execution of 
the scheme, and saved mankind from destruc- 
tion. Prometheus further deprived them of 
their knowledge of the future, and gave them 
hope instead. He taught them the use of fire, 
made them acquainted with architecture, astron- 
omy, mathematics, writing, the treatment of 
domestic animals, navigation, medicine, the art 
of prophecy, working in metal, and all the other 
arts. But, as he had acted in all these things 
contrary to the will of Jupiter (Zeus), the latter 
ordered Vulcan (Hephaestus) to chain him to a 
rock in Scythia, which was done in the pres- 
ence of Cratos and Bia, two ministers of Jupiter 
(Zeus). Prometheus, however, still continued 
to defy Jupiter (Zeus), and declared that it was 
the decree of fate, by which Jupiter (Zeus) was 
destined to be dethroned by his own son. As 
Prometheus steadfastly refused to give any ex- 
planation of this decree. Jupiter (Zeus) hurled 
him into Tartarus, together with the rock to 
which he was chained. After the lapse of a 
long time, Prometheus returned to the upper 
world, to endure a fresh course of suffering, for 
he was now fastened to Mount Caucasus, and 
his liver devoured by an eagle, as related in the 
Hesiodic legend. This state of suffering was 
to last until some other god, of his own accord, 
should take his place, and descend into Tar- 
tarus for him. This came to pass when Chi- 
ron, who had been incurably wounded by an 
arrow of Hercules, desired to go into Hades ; 
and Jupiter (Zeus) allowed him to supply the 
place of Prometheus. According to others, 
however, Jupiter (Zeus) himself delivered Pro- 
metheus, when the Titan was at length pre- 
vailed upon to reveal to Jupiter (Zeus) the de- 
cree of fate, which was, that if he should be- 
come by Thetis the father of a son, that son 
should deprive him of the sovereignty. There 
was also a legend which related that Prome- 
theus had created man out of earth and water, 
either at the very beginning of the human race, 
or after the flood of Deucalion, when Jupiter 
(Zeus) is said to have ordered him and Minerva 
( Athena) to make men out of the mud, and the 
winds to breathe life into them. Prometheus 
is said to have given to men a portion of all the 
qualities possessed by the other animals (Hor., 
Carm., i., 16, 13). The kind of earth out of 
which Prometheus formed men was shown in 
later times near Panopeus in Phocis. In the 
legend of Prometheus, he often appears in con- 
nection with Minerva (Athena). Thus he is 
said to have been punished on Mount Caucasus 
for the criminal love he entertained for her; 
and he is further said, with her assistance, to 
have ascended into heaven, and there secretly 
to have lighted his torch at the chariot of Helios, 
in order to bring down the fire to man. At 
Athens Prometheus had a sanctuary in the 

711 



PROMONA. 



PROPONTIS. 



Academy, from whence a torch-race took place 
in honor of him. 

Promona (Rpufiova: now Pctrovacz, on Mount 
Promina), a mountain fortress in the interior of 
Dalmatia. 

[Promulus, a Trojan warrior, slain by Turnus 
in Italy.] 

Pronapides (UpovaTTidnc), an Athenian, is 
said to have been the teacher of Homer. He is 
enumerated among those who used the Pelasgic 
letters, before the introduction of the Phoeni- 
cian, and is characterized as a graceful com- 
poser of song. 

Pronax {Upuva^), son of Talaus and Lysi- 
mache, brother of Adrastus and Eriphyle, and 
father of Lycurgus and Amphithea. According 
to some traditions, the Nemean games were in- 
stituted in honor of Pronax. 

Pronni (Upovvoi . TLfjovvaioc), a town on the 
eastern coast of Cephallenia, and one of the 
four towns of the island. 

Pronomus (Ilpavofwg), of Thebes, son of 
CEniadas, was one of the most distinguished 
auletic musicians of Greece at the time of the 
Peloponnesian war. He was the instructor of 
Alcibiades in Mute-playing. He invented a new 
sort of flute, the compass of which was such 
that melodies could be played upon it in all the 
three modes of music, the Dorian, the Phrygian, 
and the Lydian, for each of which, before this 
invention, a separate flute had been necessary. 

Pronous (Up6i>nog). 1. Son of Phegeus, and 
brother of Agenor, in conjunction with whom 
he slew Alcmaeon. (For details, vid. Agenor 
and Alcileon.)- [2. A Trojan warrior, slain by 
Patroclus in the Trojan war.] 

Pronusa, a surname of Juno among the Ro- 
mans, describing her as the deity presiding over 
marriage. 

Propertius, Sex. Aurelics, the Roman poet, 
was probably born about B C 51. He tells us 
that he was a native of Umbria, where it bor- 
ders on Etruria, but nowhere mentions the ex- 
act spot. He was not descended from a fami- 
ly of any distinction (ii., 24, 37), and he was de- 
prived of his paternal estate by an agrarian di- 
vision, probably that in 36, after the Sicilian 
war. At the time of this misfortune he had 
not yet assumed the toga virilis, and was there- 
fore under sixteen years of age. He had al- 
ready lost his father, who, it has been conjec- 
tured, was one of the victims sacrificed after 
the taking of Perusia ; but this notion does not 
rest on any satisfactory grounds. We have no 
account, of Propertius's education ; but from one 
of his elegies (iv., 1) it would seem that he was 
destined to be an advocate, but abandoned the 
profession for that of poetry. The history of 
his life, so far as it is known to us, is the his- 
tory of his amours, nor can it be said how much 
of this is fiction. He began to write poetry at 
a very early age, and the merit of his produc- 
tions soon attracted the attention and patronage 
of Maecenas. This was most probably shortly 
after the death of Antony in 30, when Proper- 
tius was about 21. It was probably in 32 or 31 
that Propertius first became acquainted with his 
Cynthia. She was a native of Tibur, and her 
real name was Hostia. As Propertius (iii., 20, 
8) alludes to her doclus avus, it is probable that 
she was a grand-daughter of Hostius, who wrote 
712 



a poem on the Histric war. Vid. Hostius. She 
seems to have inherited a considerable portion 
of the family talent, and was herself a poetess, 
besides being skilled in music, dancing, and 
needle- work. It appears that Propertius subse- 
quently married, probably after Cynthia's death, 
and left legitimate issue, since the younger 
Pliny twice mentions Passienus Paulus as de- 
scended from him. This must have been 
through the female line. The year of Proper- 
tius's death is altogether unknown. Propertius 
resided on the Esquiline, near the gardens of 
Maecenas. He seems to have cultivated the 
friendship of his brother poets, as Ponticus, 
Bassus, Ovid, and others. He mentions Virgil 
(ii., 34, 63) in a way that shows he had heard 
parts of the iEneid privately recited. But 
though he belonged to the circle of Meecenas r 
he never once mentions Horace. He is equal- 
ly silent about Tibullus. His not mentioning 
Ovid is best explained by the difference in their 
ages ; for Ovid alludes more than once to Pro- 
pertius, and with evident affection. As an ele- 
giac poet, a high rank must be awarded to Pro- 
pertius, and among the ancients it was a dis- 
puted point whether the preference should be- 
given to him or to Tibullus. To the modern 
reader, however, the elegies of Propertius are 
not nearly so attractive as those of Tibullus. 
This arises partly from their obscurity, but in a 
great measure, also, from a certain want of na- 
ture in them. The fault of Propertius was too 
pedantic an imitation of the Greeks. His whole 
ambition was to become the Roman Callima- 
chus (iv., 1, 63), whom, as well as Philetas and 
other of the Greek elegiac poets, he made his 
model. He abounds with obscure Greek myths, 
as well as Greek forms of expression, and the 
same pedantry infects even his versification. 
Tibullus generally, and Ovid almost invariably, 
close their pentameter with a word contained 
in an iambic foot ; Propertius, especially in his 
first book, frequently ends with a word of three, 
or four, or even five syllables. The best edi- 
tions of Propertius are by Burmann, Utrecht, 
1780; by Kuinoel, Leipzig, 1804 ; byLachmann, 
Leipzig, 1816 ; and by Hertzberg, Halle, 1844, 
1845. 

Prophthasia (Hpoddaaia: now probably Pe- 
shawarun), the northernmost city of Drangiana, 
on the borders of Asia, was probably the place 
where Philotas was put to death. 

Propontis (?) TlpoTTovTLQ : now Sea of Mar- 
mara), so called from its position with reference 
to the Pontus (Euxinus), and thus more fully 
described as v, rrpd rov ILovtov tov Ev^slvov #d- 
lacGa, and "Vestibulum Ponti," is the small 
sea which united the Euxine and the JEgean 
{vid. Pontus Euxinus), and divides Europe 
(Thracia) from Asia (Mysia and Bithynia). It 
is of an irregular oval shape, running out on 
the east into two deep gulfs, the Sinus Astace- 
nus (now Gulf of Ismid) and the Sinus Cianus 
(now Gulf of Modonia), and containing several 
islands. It received the waters of the Rhyjj^ 
dacus and other rivers of Eastern Mysia and 
Western Bithynia, flowing from Mount Ida and 
Olympus ; and several important Greek cities 
stood on its shores, the chief of which were 
Byzantium and Heraclea Perinthus on the 
north, and Cvzicus on the south. Its length is 



PROSCHIUM. 



PROTEUS. 



calculated by Herodotus at one thousand four 
hundred stadia (one hundred and forty geograph- 
ical miles) and its greatest breadth at five hund- 
red stadia (fifty geographical miles), which is 
very near the truth. 

Proschium. Vtd. Pylene. 

Proserpina. Vtd. Persephone. 

Prospai.ta (tu Upoanalra: UpoairuXriog), a 
dermis in the south of Attica, belonging to the 
tribe Acamantis. 

Prosper, a celebrated ecclesiastical writer, 
was a native of Aquitania, and flourished during 
the first half of the fifth century. He distin- 
guished himself by his numerous writings in 
defence of the doctrines of Augustine against 
the attacks of the Semipelagians. Many of his 
theological works are extant; and there are 
two Chronicles bearing his name: 1. Chronicon 
Consulare, extending from A D. 379, the date 
at which the chronicle of Jerome ends, down to 
455, the events being arranged according to the 
years of the Roman consuls. We find short 
notices with regard to the Roman emperors, the 
Roman bishops, and political occurrences in 
general, but the troubles of the Church are 
especially dwelt upon, and, above all, the Pe- 
lagian heresy. 2. Chronicon Imperialc, compre- 
hended within the same limits as the preceding 
(379-455), but the computations proceed ac- 
cording to the years of the Roman emperors, 
and not according to the consuls. While it 
agrees with the Chronicon Consulare in its 
general plan, it differs from it in many particu- 
lars, especially in the very brief allusions to the 
Pelagian controversy, and in the slight, almost 
disrespectful notices of Augustine. The second 
of these Chronicles was probably not written 
by Prosper of Aquitania, and is assigned by 
most critics to Prosper Tiro, who, it is imagined, 
flourished in the sixth century. There are like- 
wise several poems which have come down to 
U3 under the name of Prosper. The best edi- 
tion of Prosper's works is the Benedictine, 
Paris, 1711. 

Prosvmna (Upuavfiva : Upoavuvaloc), an an- 
cient town of Argolis, with a temple of Juno 
(Hera), north of Argos. 

Prota (Upura : now Protc), an island in the 
Propontis, near Chalcedon. 

Protagoras (TlpoTaybpac), a celebrated soph- 
ist, was born at Abdera, in Thrace, probably 
about B.C. 480, and died about 411, at the age 
of nearly seventy years. It is said that Pro- 
tagoras was once a poor porter, and that the 
skill with which he had fastened together, and 
poised upon his shoulders, a large bundle of 
wood, attracted the attention of Democritus, 
who conceived a liking for him, took him under 
his care, and instructed him in philosophy. 
This well-known story, however, appears to 
have arisen out of the statement of Aristotle, 
that Protagoras invented a sort of porter's knot 
for the more convenient carrying of burdens. 
In addition to which, Protagoras was about 
twenty years older than Democritus. Protag- 
oras was the first who called himself a sophist, 
and taught for pay ; and he practiced his pro- 
fession for the space of forty years. He must 
have come to Athens before B.C. 445, since he 
drew up a code of laws for the Thurians, who 
left Athens for the first time in that year. 



Whether he accompanied the colonists toThu- 
rii, we are not informed; but at the time of the 
plague (430) we find him again in Athens. Be- 
tween his first and second visit to Athens, he 
had spent some time in Sicily, where he had 
acquired great fame, and he brought with him 
to Athens many admirers out of other Greek 
cities through which he had passed. His in- 
structions were so highly valued that he some- 
times received one hundred mina; from a pupil; 
and Plato says that Protagoras made more 
money than Phidias and ten other sculptors. 
In 41 1 he was accused of impiety by Pythodo- 
rus, one of the Four Hundred. His impeachment 
was founded on his book on the gods, which 
began with the statement ; " Respecting the 
gods, I am unable to know whether they exist 
or do not exist." The impeachment was fol- 
lowed by his banishment, or, as others affirm, 
only by the burning of his book. Protagoras 
wrote a large number of works, of which the 
most important were entitled Truth ('AAr/tieta), 
and On the Gods (Ilepi Qeuv). The first con- 
tained the theory refuted by Plato in the Theac- 
tetus. Plato gives a vivid picture of the teach- 
ing of Protagoras in the dialogue that bears his 
name. Protagoras was especially celebrated 
for his skill in the rhetorical art. By way of 
practice in the art, he was accustomed to make 
his pupils discuss Theses (communes loci) ; an 
exercise which is also recommended by Cicero. 
He also directed his attention to language, and 
endeavored to explain difficult passages in the 
poets. 

[Protkas (Upo-sac). 1. An Athenian gen- 
eral in the time of the Peloponnesian war, the 
son of Epicles. He was one of the three com- 
manders of the squadron sent out to assist the 
Corcyreans in their contest with the Corinthi- 
ans. Again, in the first year of the Pelopon- 
nesian war, Proteas was one of the three com- 
manders of the fleet of one hundred ships sent 
round Peloponnesus. — 2. Son of Andronicus, a 
Macedonian officer in the service of Antipater.] 

Protesilacjs (HpuTeaiAanq), son of Iphielus 
and Astyoche, belonged to Phylace in Thessaly. 
He is called Phylacius and PhylacUcs, either 
from his native place, or from his being a grand- 
son of Phylacus. He led the warriors of sev- 
eral Thessalian places against Troy, and was 
the first of all the Greeks who was killed by the 
Trojans, being the first who leaped from the 
ships upon the Trojan coast. According to the 
common tradition, he was slain by Hector. Pro- 
tesilaus is most celebrated in ancient story for 
the strong affection existing between him and 
his wife Laodamia, the daughter of Acastus. 
(For details, vid. Laodamia.) His tomb was 
shown near Eleus, in the Thracian Chersone- 
sus, where a magnificent temple was erected to 
him. There was a belief that nymphs had 
planted elm-trees around his grave, which died 
away when they had grown sufficiently high to 
see Troy, and that fresh shoots then sprang 
from the roots. There was also a sanctuary of 
Protesilaus at Phylace, at which funeral games 
were celebrated. 

Proteus (llpurcvc), the prophetic old man of 
the sea, is described in the earliest legends as 
a subject of Neptune (Poseidon), whose flocks 
(the seals) he tended. According to Homer, he 

713 



PROTHOENOR. 



PRUSIAS. 



resided in the island of Pharos, at the distance 
of one day's sail from the River iEgyptus 
(Nile) : whereas Virgil places his residence in 
the island of Carpathos, between Crete and 
Rhodes. At midday Proteus rose from the sea, 
and slept in the shadow of the rocks of the coast, 
with the monsters of the deep lying around him. 
Any one wishing to learn from him the future, 
was obliged to catch hold of him at that time ; 
as soon as he was seized, he assumed every 
possible shape, in order to escape the necessity 
of prophesying ; but whenever he saw that his 
endeavors were of no avail, he resumed his 
usual form, and told the truth. After finishing 
his prophecy he returned into the sea. Homer 
ascribes to him a daughter Idothea. Another 
set of traditions describes Proteus as a son of 
Neptune (Poseidon), and as a king of Egypt, 
who had two sons, Telegonus and Polygonus or 
Tmolus. His Egyptian name is said to have 
been Cetes, for which the Greeks substituted 
that of Proteus. His wife is called Psamathe 
or Torone, and, besides the above-mentioned 
sons, Theoclymenus and Theonoe" are likewise 
called his children. He is said to have hospi- 
tably received Bacchus (Dionysus) during his 
wanderings. Mercury (Hermes) brought to him 
Helena after her abduction, or, according to 
others, Proteus himself took her from Paris, 
gave to the lover a phantom, and restored the 
true Helen to Menelaus after his return from 
Troy. 

[Prothoenor (TIpcdoTjvup), a son of Areilycus, 
was one of the leaders of the Boeotians against 
Troy, where he was slain by Polydamas.] 

[Prothoon (Upodbuv), a Trojan warrior, slain 
by Teucer.] 

[Prothous (Jlpodooc), a son of Tenthredon, 
commander of the Magnetes who dwelt about 
Mount Pelion and the River Peneus, was one 
of the Greek heroes at Troy. J 

[Proto (Hpcj-w), one of the Nereids.] 

Protogenes (UpuroyhTjc). a celebrated Greek j 
painter. He was a native of Caunus, in Caria, 
a city subject to the Rhodians. and flourished 
B.C. 332-300. He resided at Rhodes almost 
entirely ; the only other city of Greece which 
he is said to have visited is Athens, where he 
executed one of his great works in the Propy- 
laea. Up to his 50th year he is said to have 
lived in poverty and in comparative obscurity, 
supporting himself by painting ships, which at 
that period used to be decorated with elaborate 
pictorial devices. His fame had, however, 
reached the ears of Apelles, who, upon visiting 
Rhodes, made it his first business to seek out 
Protogenes. As the surest way of making the 
merits of Protogenes known to his fellow-citi- 
zens, Apelles offered him, for his finished works, 
the enormous sum of fifty talents apiece, and 
thus led the Rhodians to understand what an 
artist they had among them. Protogenes was 
distinguished by the care with which he 
wrought up his pictures. His master-piece was 
the picture of Ialysus, the tutelary hero of j 
Rhodes, on which he is said to have spent seven j 
years, or even, according to another statement, 
eleven ; and to have painted it four times over. 
This picture was so highly prized, even in the 
artist's lifetime, that when Demetrius Poliorce- 
tes was using every effort to subdue Rhodes, 



he refrained from attacking the city at its most 
vulnerable point, lest he should injure this pic- 
ture, which had been placed in that quarter. 
There is a celebrated story about this picture, 
relating to the accidental production of one of 
the most effective parts of it, the foam at the 
mouth of a tired hound. The artist, it is said, 
dissatisfied with his repeated attempts to pro- 
duce the desired effect, at last, in his vexation, 
dashed the sponge, with which he had repeat- 
edly effaced his work, against the faulty place ; 
and the sponge, charged as it was by repeated 
use with the necessary colors, left a mark in 
which the painter recognized the very foam 
which his art had failed to produce. 

ProtogenIa (HpuToyeveia), daughter of Deu- 
calion and Pyrrha, and wife of Locrus ; but 
Jupiter (Zeus) carried her off, and became by 
her the father of Opus. 

[Protomachos ( UpuTOfzaxog ), an Athenian 
commander at the battle of the Arginusae, had 
charge of the right wing, and defeated the ene- 
my. He retired into voluntary exile to avoid 
the action brought at Athens against the com- 
manders in that battle.] 

Proxencis (UpoEevoc), a Boeotian, was a dis- 
ciple of Gorgias, and a friend of Xenophon. 
Being connected by the ties of hospitality with 
the younger Cyrus, the latter engaged him in 
his service. He was seized by Tissaphernes 
and put to death, with the other Greek generals. 
It was at the invitation of Proxenus that Xeno- 
phon was induced to enter the service of Cyrus. 

Prudentics, Aurelius Clemens, the earliest 
of the Christian poets of any celebrity, was a 
native of Spain, and was born A.D. 348. After 
practicing as an advocate, and discharging the 
duties of a civil and criminal judge in two im- 
portant cities, he received from the Emperor 
Theodosins, or Honorius, a high military ap- 
pointment at court ; but as he advanced in 
years, he became sensible of the emptiness of 
worldly honor, and earnest in the exercises of 
religion. His poems are composed in a great 
variety of metres, but possess little merit either 
in expression or in substance. The Latinity is 
impure, abounding both in words altogether bar- 
barous, and in classical words employed in a 
barbarous sense ; and the author is totally igno- 
rant or regardless of the common laws of pros- 
ody. The best editions of Prudentius are by 
Arevalus, Rom., 17S8 and 1789, 2 vols. 4to., and 
by Obbarius, Tubing., 1845, 8vo. 

Prusa or Prusias {Upoiaa : Hpovoievc). 1. 
P. ad Olympum (U. i) kni rcj 'OP.ty/Trcj : now 
Brusa), a great city of Bithynia, on the northern 
side of Mount Olympus, fifteen Roman miles 
from Cius and twenty-five from Nicaea, was 
built by Prusias, king of Bithynia, or, according 
to some, by Hannibal. — 2. Some writers distin- 
guish from this a smaller city, called P. ad 
Hypium or Hyppium {npbe tC) Ttttt/gj TrorafiC), 
Ptol. ; sub Hypio monte, Plin ), which stood 
northwest of the former, and was originally 
called Cierus (Kiepoc), and belonged to the ter- 
ritory of Heraclea, but was conquered by Pru- 
sias, who named it after himself. It stood 
northwest of the former. Perhaps it is only 
another name for Cius. 

Prusias (Jlpovaiac). 1. I. King of Bithynia 
from about B.C. 228 to 180, though the date 



PRYMNESIA. 

Neither of his accession nor of his death is ex- 
actly known. He was the son of Zielas, whom 
he succeeded. He appears to have been a 
monarch of vigor and ability, and raised his 
kingdom of Bithynia to a much higher pitch of 
power and prosperity than it had previously at- 
tained. It was at his court that Hannibal took 
refuge ; and when the Romans demanded the 
surrender of the Carthaginian general, the king 
basely gave his consent, and Hannibal only es- 
caped falling into the hands of his enemies by 
a voluntary death.— 2. II. King of Bithynia, son 
and successor of the preceding, reigned from 
about 180 to 149. He courted assiduously the 
alliance of the Romans. He carried on war 
with Attalus, king of Pergamus, with whom, 
however, he was compelled by the Romans to 
conclude peace in 154. He was slain in 149 by 
order of his son Nicomedes, as is related in the 
life of the latter. Vid. Nicomedes, No. 2. Pru- 
sias is described to us as a man in whom per- 
sonal deformity was combined with a character 
the most vicious and degraded. His passion 
for the chase is attested by the epithet of 
the " Huntsman" (Kvv7jy6g). 

Prymnesia or Prymnesus (IJpvfcvr/aia, Tipvfi- 
VT}cbq, Upviuurjaaog : ruins at Seid-el-Ghazi), a 
city in the north of Phrygia, which appears, from 
its coins, to have been a chief seat of the wor- 
ship of Midas as a hero. 

[Prymneus (Ylpv/xvevr), a Phseacian, one of 
the competitors in the games celebrated by 
Alcinous while Ulysses was in the Phaeacian 
island.] 

[Prytanis (JIpvTavig). 1. A Lycian warrior 
at the siege of Troy, slain by Ulysses. — 2. A 
companion of ^Eneas, slain by Turnus.] 

Prytanis (Upvravis), king of Sparta, of the 
Proclid line, was the son of Eurypon, and fourth 
king of that race. 

[Psamathe (-fa/Liufh]). 1. Daughter of Nereus 
and Doris, by ^acus mother of Phocus. — 2. 
Daughter of Crotopus in Argos, mother of 
Linus.] 

Psamathus (^a/aadovc, -ovvrog : ^a/j./na6ovvTL- 
og, ^aufiadovacoc), a sea-port town in Laconia, 
near the promontory Tcenarum. 

Psammenitus ("raufiyvcTog), king of Egypt, 
succeeded his father Amasis in B.C. 526, and 
reigned only six months. He was conquered 
by Cambyses in 525, and his country made a 
province of the Persian empire. His life was 
spared by Cambyses, but as he was detected 
shortly afterward in endeavoring to excite a 
revolt among the Egyptians, he was compelled 
to put an end to his life by drinking bull's blood. 

Psammis (■^dftfj.ir), king of Egypt, succeeded 
his father Necho, and reigned from B.C. 601 to 
595. He carried on war against ^Ethiopia, and 
died immediately after his return from the latter 
country. He was succeeded by his son Apries. 

PSAMMITICHUS Or PsAMMETlCHUS (^a^UtYi^Of 

or -^anfiriTixos), the Greek form of the Egyptian 
Psametik, a king of Egypt, and founder of the 
Saitic dynasty, reigned from B.C. 671 to 617. 
He was originally one of the twelve kings who 
obtained an independent sovereignty in the con- 
fusion which followed the death of Setho. Hav- 
ing been driven into banishment by the other 
kings, he took refuge in the marshes ; but 
shortly afterward, with the aid of some Ionian 



PSYCHE. 

and Carian pirates, he conquered the other 
kings, and became sole ruler of Egypt. He 
provided a settlement for his Greek mercena- 
ries on the Pelusiac or eastern branch of the 
Nile, a little below Bubastis, and he appears to 
have mainly relied upon them for the mainte- 
nance of his power. In order to facilitate in- 
tercourse between the Greeks and his other 
subjects, he ordered a number of Egyptian chil- 
dren to live with them, that they might learn 
the Greek language ; and from them sprung the 
class of interpreters. The employment of for- 
eign mercenaries by Psammitichus gave great 
offence to the military caste in Egypt ; and 
being indignant at other treatment which they 
received from him, they emigrated in a body of 
two hundred and forty thousand men into ^Ethi- 
opia, where settlements were assigned to them 
by the ^Ethiopian king. It must, therefore, 
have been chiefly with his Ionian and Carian 
troops that Psammitichus carried on his wars 
against Syria and Phoenicia. He laid siege to 
the city of Azotus (the Ashdod of Scripture) for 
twenty-nine years, till he took it. As Psam- 
mitichus had displeased a large portion of his 
subjects by the introduction of foreigners, he 
seems to have paid especial court to the priest- 
hood. He built the southern propylaea of the 
temple of Vulcan (Hephaestus) at Memphis, and 
a splendid aula, with a portico round it, for the 
habitation of Apis, in front of the temple. 

[Psaphis ("ifri0/f, now Calano according to 
Leake), the northernmost demus of Attica.] 

Pselcis ("PfA/a'f : ruins at Dakke or Dekkeh), 
the chief city in the Dodecaschcenus, that is, 
the northern part of ^Ethiopia, Which was adja- 
cent to Egypt, to which it was regarded by the 
Romans as belonging. The city stood on the 
western bank of the Nile, between Syene and 
Tachompso, the latter of which was so far 
eclipsed by Pselcis as to acquire the name of 
Contrapselcis. Under the later empire, Pselcis 
was garrisoned by a body of German horsemen. 

Psellus (i^/Uof). 1. Michael Psellus, the 
elder, of Andros, flourished in the ninth century 
after Christ. He was a learned man, and an 
eager student of the Alexandrean philosophy. 
He was probably the author of some of the 
works which are ascribed to the younger Psel- 
lus. — 2. Michael Constantius Psellus, the 
younger, a far more celebrated person, flourish- 
ed in the eleventh century of our era. He was 
born at Constantinople 1020, and lived at least 
till 1105. He taught philosophy, rhetoric, and 
dialectics at Constantinople, where he stood 
forth as almost the last upholder of the falling 
cause of learning. The emperors honored him 
with the title of Prince of the Philosophers. 
His works are both in prose and poetry, on a 
vast variety of subjects, and distinguished by 
an eloquence and taste which are worthy of a 
better period. They are too numerous to be 
mentioned in this place. 

Psophis (^ucpic : '¥a<f>'idiGc : now Khan of Tri- 
potamo), a town in the northwest of Arcadia, on 
the River Erymanthus, is said to have been 
originally called Phegia. It sided with the yEto- 
lians against the Achaeans, but w T as taken B.C. 
219 by Philip, king of Macedonia, who was then 
in alliance with the Achaeans. 

Psyche i^vxfj), " the soul," occurs, in the lat- 

715 



PSYCH IUM. 



PTOLEMjEUS. 



er times of antiquity, as a personification of the i 
human soul. Psyche was the youngest of the j 
three daughters of a king, and excited by her j 
beauty the jealousy and envy of Venus. In or- j 
der to avenge herself, the goddess ordered Cupid i 
or Amor to inspire Psyche with a love for the 
most contemptible of all men ; but Cupid was 
so stricken with her beauty that he himself fell 
in love with her. He accordingly conveyed her 
to a charming spot, where, unseen and unknown, 
he visited her every night, and left her as soon 
as the day began to dawn. Psyche might have 
continued to enjoy this state of happiness if 
she had attended to the advice of her lover, who 
told her never to give way to her curiosity, or 
to inquire who he was. But her jealous sisters 
made her believe that in the darkness of night 
she was embracing some hideous monster, and 
accordingly once, while Cupid was asleep, she 
drew near to him with a lamp, and, to her 
amazement, beheld the most handsome and 
lovely of the gods. In her excitement of joy 
and fear, a drop of hot oil fell from her lamp 
upon his shoulder. This awoke Cupid, who 
censured her for her mistrust, and escaped. 
Psyche's happiness was now gone, and after 
attempting in vain to throw herself into a river, 
she wandered about from temple to temple, in- 
quiring after her lover, and at length came to 
the palace of Venus. There her real sufferings 
began, for Venus retained her, treated her as a 
slave, and imposed upon her the hardest and 
most humiliating labors. Psyche would have 
perished under the weight of her sufferings, had 
not Cupid, who still loved her in secret, in- 
visibly comforted and assisted her in her toils. 
With his aid she at last succeeded in overcom- 
ing the jealousy and hatred of Venus : she be- 
came immortal, and was united to him forever. 
It is not difficult to recognize in this lovely story 
the idea of which it is merely the mythical em- 
bodiment ; for Psyche is evidently the human 
soul, which is purified by passions and misfor- 
tunes, and is thus prepared for the enjoyment 
of true and pure happiness. In works of art 
Psyche is represented as a maiden with the 
wings of a butterfly, along with Cupid in the 
different situations described in the allegory. 

Psychium Cfvxiov), a town on the southern 
coast of Crete. 

Psylli {fkv'A?.oL), a Libyan people, the earliest 
known inhabitants of the district of Northern 
Africa called Cyrenaica. 

Psyra (rd ^vpd : Yvptoc : now Ipsara), a small 
island of the JEgezn Sea, forty stadia (four ge- 
ographical miles) in circuit, lying fifty stadia 
(five geographical miles) west of the northwest- 
ern point of Chios. It had a city of the same 
name. 

PsYTTALEA. Vid. SaLAMIS. 

Ptele5s (Xlre/U'tjc), a small lake in Mysia, 
near Ophrynium, on the coast of the Helles- 
pont. 

Pteleum (Ute/.eov : HreTieemK, Tirz/.tcvcLOc). 
1. (Now Ftelia), an ancient sea-port town of 
Thessaly, in the district Phthiotis, at the south- 
western extremity of the Sinus Pagasasus, was 
destroyed by the Romans. — 2. A town in Elis 
Triphylia, said to have been a colony from the 
preceding. — 3. A fortress of Ionia, on the coast 
of Asia iMinor, belonging to Ervthrse. 
716 



[Pterelaus (TlrepOiaoc), son of Taphius, king 
of the island Taphos, father of Comaetho : ac- 
cording to Strabo, he was a son of De'i'oneus.] 

[Pteria {Urepia), according to Herodotus, 
capital of a district of the same name belonging 
to Cappadocia; according to Stephanus of By- 
zantium, however, who also calls the place 
Urepiov, it was a city of Media ] 

Ptolem^us (Uro?.e/j.aloc), usually called Ptol- 
emy. I. Minor historical persons. 1. Nephew 
of Antigonus, king of Asia. He carried on war 
in Greece on behalf of Antigonus, but in 310 he 
abandoned the cause of his uncle, and concluded 
a treaty with Cassander and Ptolemy the son 
of Lagus. He soon gave offence to the Egyp- 
tian king, and was, in consequence, compelled 
to put an end to his life bv poison, B.C. 309 — 
2 Son of Lysimachus, king of Thrace. He was 
the eldest of the three sons of that monarch by 
his last wife Arsinoe, and the only one who 
escaped falling into the hands of Ptolemy Cerau- 
nus. — 3. Son of Pyrrhus, king of Epirus, by 
his wife Antigone, the step-daughter of Ptolemy 
Lagi. When only fifteen years of age he was 
left by his father in charge of his hereditary do- 
minions, when Pyrrhus himself set out on his 
expedition to Italy, 280. At a later time he 
fought under his father in Greece, and was slain 
in the course of Pyrrhus's campaign in the Pel- 
oponnesus, 272. — 4. Surnamed Philadelphia, 
son of M. Antony, the triumvir, by Cleopatra. 
After the death of Antony, 30, his life was spar- 
ed by Augustus at the intercession of Juba and 
Cleopatra, and he was brought up by Octavia 
with her own children. 

II. Kings of Egypt. 

I. Surnamed Soter, the Preserver, but more 
commonly known as the son of Lagus, reigned 
B.C. 323-285. His father Lagus was a Mace- 
donian of ignoble birth, but his mother Arsinoe 
had been a concubine of Philip of Macedon. on 
which account it seems to have been generally 
believed that Ptolemy was in reality the off- 
spring of that monarch. Ptolemy is mentioned 
among the friends of the young Alexander be- 
fore the death of Philip. He accompanied Alex- 
ander throughout his campaigns in Asia, and 
was always treated by the king with the great- 
est favor. On the division of the empire which 
followed Alexander's death (323), Ptolemy ob- 
tained the government of Egypt. In 321 his 
dominions were invaded by Perdiceas, the re- 
gent ; but the assassination of Perdiceas by his 
mutinous soldiers soon delivered Ptolemy from 
this danger. In the following year Ptolemy en- 
larged his dominions by seizing upon the im- 
portant satrapy of Phoenicia and Coelesyria. 
It was probably during this expedition that he 
made himself master of Jerusalem by attacking 
the city on the Sabbath day. A few years after- 
ward (316) Ptolemy entered into an alliance 
with Cassander and Lysimachus against Antig- 
onus, w r hose growing power had excited their 
common apprehensions. In the war which 
followed, Antigonus conquered Coelesyria and 
Phoenicia (315, 314); but Ptolemy recovered 
these provinces by the defeat of Demetrius, the 
son of Antigonus, in 312. In 311 hostilities 
were suspended by a general peace. This peace, 
however, was of short duration, and Ptolemy 



PTOLEM^US. 

appears to have been the first to recommence 
:he war. He crossed over to Greece, where he 
announced himself as the liberator of the Greeks, 
but he effected little. In 306 Ptolemy was de- 
feated by Demetrius in a great sea-fight off Sal- 
amis in Cyprus. In consequence of this defeat, 
Ptolemy lost the important island of Cyprus, 
which had previously been subject to him. An- 
tigonus was so much elated by this victory as 
to assume the title of king, an example which 
Ptolemy, notwithstanding his defeat, immedi- 
ately followed. Antigonus and Demetrius fol- 
lowed up their success by the invasion of Egypt, 
but were compelled to return to Syria without 
effecting any thing. Next year (305) Ptolemy 
rendered the most important assistance to the 
Rhodians, who were besieged by Demetrius ; 
and when Demetrius was at length compelled 
to raise the siege (304), the Rhodians paid di- 
vine honors to the Egyptian monarch as their 
savior and preserver (2wr?7p), a title which ap- 
pears to have been now bestowed upon Ptolemy 
for the first time. Ptolemy took comparatively 
little part in the contest, which led to the de- 
cisive battle of Ipsus, in which Antigonus was 
defeated and slain (301). The latter years of 
Ptolemy's reign appear to have been devoted 
almost entirely to the arts of peace, and to pro- 
moting the internal prosperity of his dominions. 
In 285 Ptolemy abdicated in favor of his young- 
est son Ptolemy Philadelphus, the child of his 
latest and most beloved wife, Berenice, exclud- 
ing from the throne his two eldest sons Ptolemy 
Ceraunus and Meleager, the offspring of Euryd- 
ice. The elder Ptolemy survived this event 
two years, and died in 283. His reign is vari- 
ously estimated at thirty-eight or forty years, 
according as we include or not these two years 
which followed his abdication. The character 
of Ptolemy has been generally represented in a 
very favorable light by historians, and there is 
no doubt that if we compare him with his con- 
temporary and rival potentates he appears to 
deserve the praises bestowed upon his mildness 
and moderation. But it is only with this im- 
portant qualification that they can be admitted, 
for there are many evidences that he did not 
shrink from any measure that he deemed requi- 
site in order to carry out the objects of his am- 
bition. But as a ruler Ptolemy certainly de- 
serves the highest praise. By his able and vig- 
orous administration he laid the foundations of 
the wealth and prosperity which Egypt enjoyed 
for a long period. Under his fostering care 
Alexandrea quickly rose to the place designed 
for it by its founder, that of the greatest com- 
mercial city of the world. Not less eminent 
were the services rendered by Ptolemy to the 
advancement of literature and science. In this 
department, indeed, it is not always easy to dis 
tinguish the portion of credit due to the father 
from that of his son; but it seems certain that 
to the elder monarch belongs the merit of hav- 
ing originated those literary institutions which 
assumed a more definite and regular form, as 
well as a more prominent place, under his suc- 
cessor. Such appears to have been the case 
with the two most celebrated of all, the Library 
and the Museum of Alexandrea. The first sug- 
gestion of these important foundations is as- 
cribed by some writers to Demetrius of Phalerus, 



PTOLEMUEDS. 

who spent all the latter years of his life at the 
court of Ptolemy. But many other men of lit- 
erary eminence were also gathered around the 
Egyptian king, among whom may be especially 
noticed the great geometer Euclid, the philoso- 
phers Stilpo of Megara, Theodorus of Cyrene, 
and Diodorus su roamed Cronus ; as well as the 
elegiac poet PhileUs of Cos, and the gramma- 
rian Zenodotus. To the two last we are told 
Ptolemy confided the literary education of his 
son Philadelphia. Many anecdotes sufficient!) 
attest the free intercourse which subsisted be- 
tween the king and the men of letters by whom 
he was surrounded, and prove that the easy fa- 
miliarity of his manners corresponded with his 
simple and unostentatious habits of life. We 
also find him maintaining a correspondence with 
Menander, whom he in vain endeavored to at- 
tract to his court, and sending overtures prob- 
ably of a similar nature to Theophrastus. Nor 
were the fine arts neglected : the rival painters 
Antiphilus and Apelles both exercised their 
talents at Alexandrea, where some of their most 
celebrated pictures were produced. Ptolemy 
was himself an author : he composed a history 
of the wars of Alexander, which is frequently 
cited by later writers, and is one of the chief 
authorities which Arrian made the groundwork 
of his own history. — II. Philadklphus (B.C. 
285-247), the son of Ptolemy I. by his wife 
Berenice, was born in the island of Cos, 309. 
His long reign was marked by few events of a 
striking character. He was engaged in war 
with his half-brother Magas, who had governed 
Cyrene as viceroy under Ptolemy Soter, hut on 
the death of that monarch not only asserted his 
independence, but even attempted to invade 
Egypt. Magas was supported by Antiochus II., 
king of Syria ; and the war was at length term- 
inated by a treaty, whicn left Magas in undis- 
puted possession of the Cyrena'.'ea. while his in- 
fant daughter Berenice was betrothed to Ptol- 
emy, the son of Philadelphia. Ptolemy also 
concluded a treaty with the Romans. He was 
frequently engaged in hostilities with Syria, 
which were terminated toward the close of his 
reign by a treaty of peace, by which Ptolemy 
gave his daughter Berenice in marriage to An- 
tiochus II. Ptolemy's chief care, however, was 
directed to the internal administration of his 
kingdom, and to the patronage of literature and 
science. The institutions of which the founda- 
tions had been laid by his father quickly rose 
under his fostering care to the highest pros- 
perity. The Museum of Alexandrea became 
the resort and abode of all the most distin- 
guished men of letters of the day. and in the 
library attached to it were accumulated all the 
treasures of ancient learning. Among the other 
illustrious names which adorned the reign of 
Ptolemy may he mentioned those of the poets 
Philetas and Theocritus, the philosophers Hege- 
sias and Theodorus, the mathematician Euclid, 
and the astronomers Timocharis, Aristarchus 
of Samos, and Aratus. Nor was his patron- 
age confined to the ordinary cycle of Hellenic 
literature. By his interest in natural history 
he gave a stimulus to the pursuit of that science, 
which gave birth to many important works, while 
he himself formed collections of rare animals 
within the precincts of the royal palace. It was 

717 



PTOLEMiEUS. 



PTOLEMJEUS. 



during his reign also, and perhaps at his desire, 
that Manetho gave to the world in a Greek form 
the historical records of the Egyptians ; and ac- 
cording to a well-known tradition, it was by his 
express command that the Holy Scriptures of 
the Jews were translated into Greek. The new 
cities or colonies founded by Philadelphus in 
different parts of his dominions were extremely 
numerous. On the Red Sea alone we find at 
least two bearing the name of Arsinoe, one 
called after another of his sisters Philotera, and 
two cities named in honor of his mother Bere- 
nice. The same names occur also in Cilicia 
and Syria ; and in the latter country he founded 
the important fortress of Pto]ema'is in Palestine. 
All authorities concur in attesting the great pow- 
er and wealth to which the Egyptian monarchy 
was raised under Philadelphus. He possessed 
at the close of his reign a standing army of two 
hundred thousand foot and forty thousand horse, 
besides war-chariots and elephants ; a fleet of 
one thousand five hundred ships, and a sum of 
seven hundred and forty thousand talents in his 
treasury ; while he derived from Egypt alone 
an annual revenue of fourteen thousand eight 
hundred talents. His dominions comprised, be- 
sides Egypt itself, and portions of ^Ethiopia, Ara- 
bia, and Libya, the important provinces of Phoe- 
nicia and Ccelesyria, together with Cyprus, Ly- 
cia, Caria, and the Cyclades ; and during a great 
part at least of his reign, Cilicia and Pamphyl- 
ia also. Before his death Cyrene was reunited 
to the monarchy by the marriage of his son Ptol- 
emy with Berenice, the daughter of Magas. The 
private life and relations of Philadelphus do not 
exhibit his character in as favorable a light as 
we might have inferred from the splendor of his 
administration. He put to death two of his 
brothers, and he banished his first wife Arsinoe, 
the daughter of Lysimachus, to Coptos in Up- 
per Egypt, on a charge of conspiracy. After her 
removal Ptolemy married his own sister Arsi- 
noe, the widow of Lysimachus : a flagrant vio- 
lation of the religious notions of the Greeks, 
but which was frequently imitated by his suc- 
cessors. He evinced his affection for Arsinoe* 
not only by bestowing her name upon many of 
his newly-founded colonies, but by assuming 
himself the surname of Philadelphus, a title 
which some writers referred in derision to his 
unnatural treatment of his two brothers. By 
this second marriage Ptolemy had no issue, but 
his first wife had borne him two sons — Ptole- 
my, who succeeded him on the throne, and Ly- 
simachus ; and a daughter, Berenice, whose 
marriage to Antiochus II., king of Syria, has 
been already mentioned. — III. Euergetes (B.C. 
247-222), eldest son and successor of Philadel- 
phus. Shortly after his accession he invaded 
Syria, in order to avenge the death of his sister 
Berenice. Vid. Berenice, No. 2. He met with 
the most striking success. He advanced as far 
as Babylon and Susa, and after reducing all 
Mesopotamia, Babylonia, and Susiana, received 
the submission of all the upper provinces of 
Asia as far as the confines of Bactria and India. 
From this career of conquest he was recalled 
by the news of seditions in Egypt, and returned 
to that country, carrying with him an immense 
booty, comprising, among other objects, all the 
statues of the Egyptian deities which had been 
718 



carried off by Cambyses to Babylon or Persia. 
These he restored to their respective temples, 
an act by which he earned the greatest popu- 
larity with his native Egyptian subjects, who 
bestowed on him, in consequence, the title of 
Euergetes (the Benefactor), by which he is gen- 
erally known. While the arms of the king him- 
self were thus successful in the East, his fleets 
reduced the maritime provinces of Asia, includ- 
ing Cilicia, Pamphylia, and Ionia, as far as the 
Hellespont, together with Lysimachia and other 
important places on the coast of Thrace, which 
continued for a long period subject to the Egyp- 
tian rule. Concerning the events which followed 
the return of Euergetes to his own dominions 
(probably in 243), we are almost wholly in the 
dark ; but it appears that the greater part of the 
eastern provinces speedily fell again into the 
hands of Seleucus, while Ptolemy retained pos- 
session of the maritime regions and a great part 
of Syria itself. He soon obtained a valuable 
ally in the person of Antiochus Hierax, the 
younger brother of Seleucus, whom he support- 
ed in his wars against his elder brother. We 
find Euergetes maintaining the same friendly 
relations as his father with Rome. During the 
latter years of his reign he subdued the Ethio- 
pian tribes on his southern frontier, and ad- 
vanced as far as Adule, a port on the Red Sea, 
where he established an emporium, and set up 
an inscription commemorating the exploits of 
his reign. To a copy of this, accidentally pre- 
served to us by an Egyptian monk, Cosmas In- 
dicopleustes, we are indebted for much of the 
scanty information we possess concerning his 
reign. Ptolemy Euergetes is scarcely less cel- 
ebrated than his father for his patronage of lit- 
erature and science ; he added so largely to the 
library at Alexandrea that he has been some- 
times erroneously deemed its founder. Eratos- 
thenes, Apollonius Rhodius, and Aristophanes 
the grammarian, flourished at Alexandrea dur- 
ing his reign — sufficient to prove that the liter- 
ature and learning of the Alexandrean school 
still retained their former eminence. By his 
wife Berenice, who survived him, Euergetes 
left three children : 1. Ptolemy, his successor; 
2. Magas ; and, 3. Arsinoe, afterward married 
to her brother Ptolemy Philopator. — IV. Philop- 
ator (B.C. 222-205), eldest son and successor 
of Euergetes. He w r as very far from inheriting 
the virtues or abilities of his father ; and his 
reign was the commencement of the decline of 
the Egyptian kingdom, which had been raised 
to such a height of power and prosperity by 
his three predecessors. Its first beginning was 
stained with crimes of the darkest kind. He 
put to death his mother Berenice, and his broth- 
er Magas, and his uncle Lysimachus, the broth- 
er of Euergetes. He then gave himself up with- 
out restraint to a life of indolence and luxury, 
while he abandoned to his minister Sosibius the 
care of all political affairs. The latter seems 
to have been as incapable as his master, and 
the kingdom was allowed to fall into a state of 
the utmost disorder, of which Antiochus the 
j Great, king of Syria, was not slow to avail him- 
I self. In the first two campaigns (219, 218), 
j Antiochus conquered the greater part of Coele- 
j syria and Palestine, but in the third year of the 
i war (217) he was completely defeated by Ptol- 



PTOLEM^US. 

emy in person at the decisive battle of Raphia, | 
and was glad to conclude a peace with the | 
Egyptian monarch. On his return from his 
Syrian expedition, Ptolemy gave himself up 
more and more to every species of vice and de- 
bauchery. His mistress Agathoclea, and her 
brother Agathocles, divided with Sosibius the 
patronage and distribution of all places of hon- 
or or profit. Toward the close of his reign Ptol- 
emy put to death his wife Arsinoe. His de- 
baucheries shortened his life. He died in 205, 
leaving only one son, a child of five years old. 
We find Ptolemy following up the policy of his 
predecessors by cultivating the friendship of the 
Romans, to whom he furnished large supplies 
of corn during their struggle with Carthage. 
Plunged as he was in vice and debauchery, 
Philopator appears to have still inherited some- 
thing of the love of letters for which his prede- 
cessors were so conspicuous. We find him as- 
sociating on familiar terms with philosophers 
and men of letters, and especially patronising 
the distinguished grammarian Aristarchus. — V. 
Epiphanes (B.C. 205-181), son and successor 
of Ptolemy IV. He was a child of five years 
old at the death of his father, 205. Philip king 
of Macedonia and Antiochus III. of Syria de- 
termined to take advantage of the minority of 
Ptolemy, and entered into a league to divide 
his dominions between them. In pursuance of 
this arrangement, Antiochus conquered Coele- 
syria, while Philip reduced the Cyclades and 
the cities in Thrace which had still remained 
subject to Egypt. In this emergency the Egyp- 
tian ministers had recourse to the powerful in- 
tervention of the Romans, who commanded both 
monarchs to refrain from further hostilities, and 
restore all the conquered cities. In order to 
evade this demand without openly opposing the 
power of Rome, Antiochus concluded a treaty 
with Egypt, by which it was agreed that the 
young king should marry Cleopatra, the daugh- 
ter of Antiochus, and receive back the Syrian 
provinces as her dower. This treaty took place 
in 199, but the marriage was not actually sol- 
emnized until six years after. The adminis- 
tration of Egypt was placed in the hands of 
Aristomenes, a man who was every way worthy 
of the charge. As early, however, as 196, the 
young king was declared of full age, and the 
ceremony of his anacleteria, or coronation, was 
solemnized with great magnificence. It was 
on this occasion that the decree was issued 
which has been preserved to us in the celebra- 
ted inscription known as the Rosetta stone, a 
monument of great interest in regard to the in- 
ternal history of Egypt under the Ptolemies, in- 
dependent of its importance as having afforded 
the key to the discovery of hieroglyphics. In 
193 the marriage of Ptolemy with the Syrian 
princess Cleopatra was solemnized at Raphia. 
Ptolemy, however, refused to assist his father- 
in-law in the war against the Romans, which 
was at this time on the eve of breaking out, 
and he continued steadfast in his alliance with 
Rome. But he derived no advantage from the 
treaty which concluded it, and Antiochus still 
retained possession of Ccelesyria and Phoeni- 
cia. As long as Ptolemy continued under the 
guidance and influence of Aristomenes, his ad- 
ministration was equitable and popular. Grad- 



PTOLEALETJS. 

I ually, however, he became estranged from his 
able and virtuous minister, and threw himself 
more and more into the power of flatterers and 
vicious companions, until at length he was in- 
duced to rid himself of Aristomenes, who was 
compelled to take poison. Toward the close of 
his reign Ptolemy conceived the project of re- 
covering Ccelesyria from Seleucus, the suc- 
cessor of Antiochus, and had assembled a large 
mercenary force for that purpose ; but having, 
by an unguarded expression, excited the appre- 
hensions of some of his friends, he was cut off 
by poison in the twenty-fourth year of his reign 
and the twenty-ninth of his age, 181. He left 
two sons, both named Ptolemy, who subse- 
quently ascended the throne, under the names 
of Ptolemy Philometor and Euergetes II., and 
a daughter who bore her mother's name of Cleo- 
patra. His reign was marked by the rapid de- 
cline of the Egyptian monarchy, for the prov- 
inces and cities wrested from it during his mi- 
nority by Antiochus and Philip were never re- 
covered, and at his death Cyprus and the Cy- 
rena'ica were almost the only foreign posses- 
sions still attached to the crown of Egypt. — VI. 
Philometor (B.C. 181-146), eldest son and suc- 
cessor of Ptolemy V. He was a child at the 
death of his father in 181, and the regency was 
assumed during his minority by his mother Cleo- 
patra, who, by her able administration, main- 
tained the kingdom in a state of tranquillity. 
But after her death in 173, the chief power fell 
into the hands of Eulaeus and Lenaeus, minis- 
ters as corrupt as they were incapable, who had 
the rashness to engage in war with Antiochus 
Epiphanes, king of Syria, in the vain hope of re- 
covering the provinces of Ccelesyria and Phoe- 
nicia. But their army was totally defeated by 
Antiochus near Pelusium, and Antiochus was 
able to advance without opposition as far as 
Memphis, 170. The young king himself fell 
into his hands, but was treated with kindness 
and distinction, as Antiochus hoped by his means 
to make himself the master of Egypt. On learn- 
ing the captivity of his brother, the young Ptol- 
emy, who was then at Alexandrea with his sis- 
ter Cleopatra, assumed the title of king, un- 
der the name of Euergetes II., and prepared 
to defend the capital to the utmost. Antiochus 
hereupon laid siege to Alexandrea, but he was 
unable to take the city, and withdrew into Syria, 
after establishing Philometor as king at Mem- 
phis, but retaining in his hands the frontier fort- 
ress of Pelusium. This last circumstance, to- 
gether with the ravages committed by the Syr- 
ian troops, awakened Philometor, who had hith- 
erto been a mere puppet in the hands of the 
Syrian king, to a sense of his true position, and 
he hastened to make overtures of peace to his 
brother and sister at Alexandrea. It was agreed 
that the two brothers should reign together, ana 
that Philometor should marry his sister Cleo- 
patra. But this arrangement did not suit the 
views of Antiochus, who immediately renewed 
hostilities. The two brothers were unable to 
offer any effectual opposition, and he had ad- 
vanced a second time to the walls of Alexan- 
drea, when he was met by a Roman embassy, 
headed by M. Popilius Lsenas, who haughtily 
commanded him instantly to desist from hos- 
tilities. Antiochus did not venture to disobev, 

719 



PT0LE1VLEUS. 



PTOLEM.EUS. 



and withdrew to his own dominions, 168. Dis- 
sensions soon broke out between the two broth- 
ers, and Euergetes expelled Philometor from 
Alexandrea. Hereupon Philometor repaired in 
person to Rome, 164, where he was received 
by the senate with the utmost honor, and dep- 
uties were appointed to reinstate him in the 
sovereign power. This they effected with lit- 
tle opposition, but they settled that Euergetes 
should obtain Cyrene as a separate kingdom. 
Euergetes, however, shortly afterward laid 
claim to Cyprus as well, in which he was sup- 
ported by the Romans; but Philometor refused 
to surrender the island to him, and in the war 
which ensued, Euergetes was taken prisoner 
by his brother, who not only spared his life, but 
sent him back to Cyrene on condition that he 
should thenceforth content himself with that 
kingdom. The attention of Philometor appears 
to have been from this time principally directed 
to the side of Syria. Demetrius Soter having 
sought, during the dissensions between the two 
brothers, to make himself master of Cyprus, 
Ptolemy now supported the usurper Alexander 
Balas, to whom he gave his daughter Cleopatra 
in marriage, 150. But when Ptolemy advanced 
with an army to the assistance of his son-in- 
law, Ammonius, the favorite and minister of 
Alexander, formed a plot against the life of 
Ptolemy ; whereupon the latter took away his 
daughter Cleopatra from her faithless husband, 
and bestowed her hand on Demetrius Nicator, 
the son of Soter, whose cause he now espoused. 
In conjunction with Demetrius, Ptolemy carried 
on war against Alexander, whom he defeated 
in a decisive battle ; but he died a few days aft- 
erward, in consequence of an injury which he 
received from a fall from his horse in this bat- 
tle, 146. He had reigned thirty-five years from 
the period of his first accession, and eighteen 
from his restoration by the Romans. Philome- 
tor is praised for the mildness and humanity of 
his disposition. Polybius even tells us that not 
a single citizen of Alexandrea was put to death 
by him for any political or private offence. On 
the whole, if not one of the greatest, he was at 
least one of the best of the race of the Ptole- 
mies. He left three children : 1. A son, Ptol- 
emy, who was proclaimed king after his fa- 
ther's death, under the name Ptolemy Eupator, 
but was put to death almost immediately after 
by his uncle Euergetes. 2. A daughter, Cleo- 
patra, married first to Alexander Balas, then to 
Demetrius II., king of Syria ; and, 3. Another 
daughter, also named Cleopatra, who was aft- 
erward married to her uncle Ptolemy Euergetes. 
— VII. Euergetes If. or Physcon (Qvokuv), that 
is, Big-Belly, reigned B.C. 146-117. His his- 
tory down to the death of his brother has been 
already given. In order to secure undisputed 
possession of the throne, he married his sis- 
ter Cleopatra, the widow of his brother Phi- 
lometor, and put to death his nephew Ptolemy, 
who had been proclaimed king under the sur- 
name of Eupator. A reign thus commenced in 
blood was continued in a similar spirit. Many 
of the leading citizens of Alexandrea, who had 
taken part against him on the death of his broth- 
er, were put to death, while the populace were 
given up to the cruelties of his mercenary troops, 
and the streets of the city were repeatedly del- 
720 



uged with blood. Thousands of the inhabit- 
ants fled from the scene of such horrors, and 
the population of Alexandrea was so greatly 
thinned that the king found himself compelled 
to invite foreign settlers from all quarters to 
repeople his deserted capital. At the same 
time that he thus incurred the hatred of his 
subjects by his cruelties, he rendered himself 
an object of their aversion and contempt by 
abandoning himself to the most degrading vi- 
ces. In consequence of these, he had become 
bloated and deformed in person, and enormous- 
ly corpulent, whence the Alexandreans gave 
him the nickname of Physcon, by which appel- 
lation he is more universally known. His un- 
ion with Cleopatra was not of long duration. 
He became enamored of his niece Cleopatra 
(the offspring of his wife by her former mar- 
riage with Philometor), and he did not hesitate 
to divorce the mother and receive her daughter 
instead as his wife and queen. By this pro- 
ceeding he alienated still more the minds of his 
Greek subjects ; and his vices and cruelties at 
length produced an insurrection at Alexandres. 
Thereupon he fled to Cyprus, and the Alexan- 
dreans declared his sister Cleopatra queen (130). 
Enraged at this, Ptolemy put to death Memphi- 
tis, his son by Cleopatra, and sent his head and 
hands to his unhappy mother. But Cleopatra 
having been shortly afterward expelled from 
Alexandrea in her turn, Ptolemy found himself 
unexpectedly reinstated on the throne (127). 
His sister Cleopatra fled to the court of her 
elder daughter Cleopatra, the wife of Demetrius 
II., king of Syria, who espoused the cause of the 
fugitive. Ptolemy, in revenge, set up against 
him a pretender named Zabinas or Zebina, who 
assumed the title of Alexander II. But the 
usurper behaved with such haughtiness to Ptol- 
emy, that the latter suddenly changed his poli- 
cy, became reconciled to his sister Cleopatra, 
whom he permitted to return to Egypt, and 
gave his daughter Tryphaena in marriage to 
Antiochus Grypus, the son of Demetrius. Ptol- 
emy died after reigning twenty-nine years from 
the death of his brother Philometor ; but he 
himself reckoned the years of his reign from 
the date of his first assumption of the regal title 
in 170. Although the character of Ptolemy 
Physcon was stained by the most infamous 
vices and by the most sanguinary cruelty, he 
still retained that love of letters which appears 
to have been hereditary in the whole race of 
the Ptolemies. He had in his youth been a 
pupil of Aristarchus, and not only courted the 
society of learned men, but was himself the 
author of a work called 'Y-n-o/zv^ara, or me- 
moirs, which extended to twenty- four books. 
He left two sons : Ptolemy, afterward known 
as Soter II., and Alexander, both of whom sub- 
sequently ascended the throne of Egypt ; and 
three daughters: 1. Cleopatra, married to her 
brother Ptolemy Soter ; 2. Trypheena, the wife 
of Antiochus Grypus, king of Syria ; and, 3. Se- 
lene, who was unmarried at her father's death. 
To his natural son Ptolemy, surnamed Apion, 
he bequeathed by his will the separate kingdom 
of Cyrene. — VIII. Soter II., and also Philo- 
metor, but more commonly called Lathyru* 
or Lathurus (Audovpog). reigned B C. 117-107 
and also 89-81. Although he was of full age 



PT0LE1VLEUS. 



PTOLEMiEUS. 



at the time of his father's death (117), he was 
obliged to reign jointly with his mother, Cleo- 
patra, who had been appointed by the will of 
her late husband to succeed him on the throne. 
She was, indeed, desirous of associating with 
herself her younger son, Ptolemy Alexander; 
but since Lathyrus was popular with the Alex- 
andreans, she was obliged to give way, and sent 
Alexander to Cyprus. After declaring Lathy- 
rus king, she compelled him to repudiate his 
sister Cleopatra, of whose influence she was 
jealous, and to marry his younger sister Selene 
in her stead. After reigning ten years jointly 
with his mother, he was expelled from Alexan- 
dra by an insurrection of the people which she 
had excited against him (107). His brother 
Alexander now assumed the sovereignty of 
Egypt, in conjunction with his mother, while 
Lathyrus was able to establish himself in the 
possession of Cyprus. Cleopatra, indeed, at- 
tempted to dispossess him of that island also, 
but without success, and Ptolemy held it as an 
independent kingdom for the eighteen years 
during which Cleopatra and Alexander reigned 
in Egypt. After the death of Cleopatra and 
the expulsion of Alexander in 89, Ptolemy La- 
thyrus was recalled by the Alexandreans, and 
established anew on the throne of Egypt, which 
he occupied thenceforth without interruption 
till his death in 81. The most important event 
of this period was the revolt of Thebes, in Up- 
per Egypt, which was still powerful enough to 
hold out for nearly three years against the arms 
of Ptolemy, but at the end of that time was 
taken and reduced to the state of ruin in which 
it has ever since remained. Lathyrus reigned 
in all thirty-five years and a half; ten in con- 
junction with his mother (117-107), eighteen 
in Cyprus (107-89), and seven and a half as sole 
ruler of Egypt. He left only one daughter. 
Berenice, called also Cleopatra, who succeeded 
him on the throne ; and two sons, both named 
Ptolemy, who, though illegitimate, became sev- 
erally kings of Egypt and Cyprus. — IX. Alex- 
ander I., youngest son of Ptolemy VII., reign- 
ed conjointly with his mother Cleopatra from 
the expulsion of his brother Lathyrus, B.C. 107 
to 90. In this year he assassinated his mother ; 
but he had not reigned alone a year, when he 
was compelled by a general sedition of the popu- 
lace and military to quit Alexandrea. He, 
however, raised fresh troops, but was totally 
defeated in a sea-fight by the rebels ; where- 
upon Lathyrus was recalled by the Alexandre- 
ans to Egypt, as has been already related. Al- 
exander now attempted to make himself master 
of Cyprus, and invaded that island, but was de- 
feated and slain. He left a son, Alexander, who 
afterward ascended the throne of Egypt. — X. 
Alexander II., son of the preceding, was at 
Rome at the death of Ptolemy Lathyrus in 81. 
Sulla, who was then dictator, nominated the 
young Alexander (who had obtained a high 
place in his favor) king of Egypt, and sent him 
to take possession of the crown. It was, how- 
ever, agreed, in deference to the claims of Cle- 
opatra Berenice, the daughter of Lathyrus, 
whom the Alexandreans had already placed on 
the throne, that Alexander should marry her, 
and admit her to share the sovereign power. 
He complied with the letter of this treaty by 
46 



marrying Cleopatra, but only nineteen days alt- 
erward caused her to be assassinated. The 
Alexandreans thereupon rose against their new 
monarch and put him to death. — XI. Dionysus, 
but more commonly known by the appellation 
of Auletes, the flute-player, was an illegitimate 
son of Ptolemy Lathyrus. When the assassin- 
ation of Berenice and the death of Alexander II. 
had completed the extinction of the legitimate 
race of the Lagidse, Ptolemy was proclaimed 
king by the Alexandreans, B.C. 80. He was 
anxious to obtain from the Roman senate their 
ratification of his title to the crown, but it was 
not till the consulship of Caesar (59) that he was 
able to purchase by vast bribes the desired priv- 
ilege. He had expended immense sums in the 
pursuit of this object, which he was compelled 
to raise by the imposition of fresh taxes, and 
the discontent thus excited combining with the 
contempt entertained for his character, led to 
his expulsion by the Alexandreans in 58. 
Thereupon he proceeded in person to Rome to 
procure from the senate his restoration. His 
first reception was promising ; and he procured 
a decree from the senate commanding his 
restoration, and intrusting the charge of effect- 
ing it to P. Lentulus Spinther, then proconsul 
of Cilicia. Meanwhile, the Alexandreans sent 
an embassy of one hundred of their leading cit- 
izens to plead their cause with the Roman 
senate ; but Ptolemy had the audacity to cause 
the deputies, on their arrival in Italy, to be 
j waylaid, and the greater part of them murder- 
ed. The indignation excited at Rome by this 
j proceeding produced a reaction : the tribunes 
took up the matter against the nobility ; and an 
j oracle was produced from the Sibylline books, 
\ forbidding the restoration of the king by an 
armed force. The intrigues and disputes thus 
j raised were protracted throughout the year 56, 
and at length Ptolemy, despairing of a favorable 
result, quitted Rome in disgust, and withdrew 
to Ephesus. But in 55, A. Gabinius, who was 
proconsul in Syria, was induced, by the influ- 
ence of Pompey, aided by the enormous bribe 
of 10,000 talents from Ptolemy himself, to un- 
dertake his restoration. The Alexandreans had 
in the mean time placed on the throne of Egypt 
Berenice, the eldest daughter of Ptolemy, who 
had married Archelaus, the son of the general 
of Mithradates, and they opposed Gabinius with 
an army on the confines of the kingdom. They 
were, however, defeated in three successive 
battles, Archelaus was slain, and Ptolemy once 
more established on the throne, 55. One of his 
first acts was to put to death his daughter Ber- 
enice, and many of the leading citizens of Alex- 
andrea. He survived his restoration only three 
years and a half, during which time he was sup- 
ported by a large body of Roman soldiers who 
had been left behind by Gabinius for his pro- 
tection. He died in 51, after a reign of twenty- 
nine years from the date of his first accession. 
He left two sons, both named Ptolemy, and two 
daughters, Cleopatra and Arsinoe. — XII. Eldest 
son of the preceding. By his father's will the 
sovereign power was left to himself and his 
sister Cleopatra jointly, and this arrangement 
was carried into effect without, opposition, 51. 
Auletes had also referred the execution of his 
will to the Roman senate, and the latter accept- 

721 



PTOLEMiEUS. 



PTOLEMiEUS. 



ed the office, confirmed its provisions, and be- 
stowed on Pompey the title of guardian of the 
young king. But the approach of the civil war 
prevented them from taking any active part in 
the administration of affairs, which fell into the 
hands of a eunuch named Pothinus. It was 
not long before dissensions broke out between 
the latter and Cleopatra, which ended in the 
expulsion of the princess, after she had reigned 
in conjunction with her brother about three 
years, 48. Hereupon she took refuge in Syria, 
and assembled an army, with which she in- 
vaded Egypt. The young king, accompanied 
by his guardian, met her at Pelusium, and it 
was while the two armies were here encamped 
opposite to one another that Pompey landed in 
Egypt, to throw himself as a suppliant on the 
protection of Ptolemy ; but he was assassinated 
by the orders of Pothinus, before he could ob- 
tain an interview with the king himself. Short- 
ly after, Caesar arrived in Egypt, and took upon 
himself to settle the dispute between Ptolemy 
and his sister. But as Cleopatra's charms 
gained for her the support of Caesar, Pothinus 
determined to excite an insurrection against 
Caesar. Hence arose what is usually called 
the Alexandrean war. Ptolemy, who was at 
first in Caesar's hands, managed to escape, and 
put himself at the head of the insurgents ; but 
he was defeated by Caesar, and was drowned in 
an attempt to escape by the river (47). — XIII. 
Youngest son of Ptolemy Auletes, was declared 
king by Caesar in conjunction with Cleopatra, 
after the death of his elder brother Ptolemy 
XII., 47; and although he was a mere boy, it 
"was decreed that he should marry his sister, 
with whom he was thus to share the power. 
Both his marriage and regal title were, of 
course, purely nominal ; and in 43 Cleopatra 
put him to death. 

III. Kings of other Countries. 
1. Surnamed Alorites, that is, of Alorus, re- 
gent, or, according to some authors, king of 
Macedonia. He obtained the supreme power 
by the assassination of Alexander II., the eldest 
son of Amyntas, B.C. 367, but was, in his turn, 
assassinated by Perdiccas III., 364. — 2. Sur- 
named Apion, king of Cyrene (117-96), was an 
illegitimate son of Ptolemy Physcon, king of 
Egypt, who left him by his will the kingdom of 
the Cyrenal'ca. At his death in 96, Apion be- 
queathed his kingdom by his will to the Roman 
people. The senate, however, refused to ac- 
cept the legacy, and declared the cities of the 
Cyrenal'ca free. They were not reduced to the 
condition of a province till near thirty years 
afterward. — 3. Surnamed Ceracxus, king of 
Macedonia, was the son of Ptolemy I., king of 
Egypt, by his second wife Eurydice. When 
his father in 285 set aside the claim of Cerau- 
nus to the throne, and appointed his younger 
son, Ptolemy Philadelphus, his successor, Ce- 
raunus repaired to the court of Lysimachus. 
After Lysimachus had perished in battle against 
Seleucus (281). Ptolemy Ceraunus was received 
by the latter in the most friendly manner ; but 
shortly afterward (280) he basely assassinated 
Seleucus, and took possession of the Macedo- 
nian throne. After reigning a few months, he 
was defeated in battle bv the Gauls, taken pris- 
722 



oner, and put to death. — 4. Tetrarch of Chalcis 
in Syria, the son of Mennaeus. He appears to 
have held the cities of Heliopolis and Chalcis 
as well as the mountain district of Ituraea, from 
whence he was in the habit of infesting Damas- 
cus and the more wealthy parts of Ccelesyria 
with predatory incursions. He reigned from 
about 70 to 40, when he was succeeded by his 
son Lysanias. — 5. King of Cyprus, was the 
younger brother of Ptolemy Auletes, king of 
Egypt, being, like him, an illegitimate son of 
Ptolemy Lathyrus. He was acknowledged as 
king of Cyprus at the same time that his brother 
Auletes obtained possession of the throne of 
Egypt, 80. He had offended P. Clodius by neg- 
lecting to ransom him when he had fallen into 
the hands of the Cilician pirates ; and accord- 
ingly Clodius, when he became tribune (58), 
brought forward a law to deprive Ptolemy of 
his kingdom, and reduce Cyprus to a Roman 
province. Cato, who had to carry into execu- 
tion this nefarious decree, sent to Ptolemy, ad- 
vising him to submit, and offering him his per- 
sonal safety, with the office of high-priest at 
Paphos, and a liberal maintenance. But the 
unhappy king refused these offers, and put an 
end to his own life, 57. — 6. King of Epirus, was 
the second son of Alexander II., king of Epirus, 
and Olympias, and grandson of the great Pyr- 
rhus. He succeeded to the throne on the death 
of his elder brother, Pyrrhus II., but reigned 
only a very short time. The date of his reign 
can not be fixed with certainty, but as he was 
contemporary with Demetrius II., king of Mac- 
edonia, it may be placed between 239-229. — 7. 
King of Mauretaxia, was the son and success- 
or of Juba II. By his mother Cleopatra he was 
descended from the kings of Egypt, whose name 
he bore. The period of his accession can not 
be determined with certainty, but we know that 
he was on the throne in A.D. 18. He continued 
to reign without interruption till A.D. 40, when 
he was summoned to Rome by Caligula, and 
shortly after put to death, his great riches hav- 
ing excited the cupidity of the emperor. 

IV. Literary. 
1. Claudius Ptolem^eus, a celebrated mathe- 
matician, astronomer, and geographer. Of Ptol- 
emy himself we know absolutely nothing but his 
date. He certainly observed in A.D. 139, at Al- 
exandra ; and, since he survived Antoninus, 
he was alive A.D. 161. His writings are as 
follows : 1. Mfyd/?; ^vvra^ig r?/f Worpovofitac, 
usually known by its Arabic name of Almagest. 
Since the Tetrabiblus, the work on astrology, 
was also entitled ovvratjie, the Arabs, to distin- 
guish the two, probably called the greater work 
fieyaXv, and afterward (ley'iarr) : the title Alma- 
gest is a compound of this last adjective and the 
Arabic article. The Almagest is divided into 
thirteen books. It treats of the relations of the 
earth and heaven ; the effect of position upon 
the earth ; the theory of the sun and moon, 
without which that of the stars can not be un- 
dertaken ; the sphere of the fixed stars, and 
those of the five stars called planets. The sev- 
enth and eighth books are the most interesting 
to the modern astronomer, as they contain a 
catalogue of the stars. This catalogue gives 
the longitudes and latitudes of one thousand 



PTOLEM.EUS. 



PTOLEMAIS. 



and twenty-two stars, described by their posi- 
tions in the constellations. It seems that this 
catalogue is in the main really that of Hippar- 
chus, altered to Ptolemy's own time by assum- 
ing the value of the precession of the equinoxes 
given by Hipparchus as the least which could 
be ; some changes having also been made by 
Ptolemy's own observations. Indeed, the whole 
work of Ptolemy appears to have been based 
upon the observations of Hipparchus, whom he 
constantly cites as his authority. The best edi- 
tion of the Almagest is by Halma, Paris, 1813, 
1816, 2 vols. 4to. There are also two other 
volumes by Halma (1819-1820), which contain 
some of the other writings of Ptolemy. — 2. Te- 
-pabifrkoc avvra^ic, generally called Tctrabiblon, 
or Quadripartitum de Apotclcsmatibus et Judiciis 
Astrorum. With this goes another small work, 
called Kapiroc, or Fructus Librorum Suorum, often 
called Centiloquium, from its containing a hund- 
red aphorisms. Both of these works are as- 
trological, and it has been doubted by some 
whether they be genuine. But the doubt merely 
arises from the feeling that the contents are un- 
worthy of Ptolemy. — 3. Kavuv BaaiTiecov, a cata- 
logue of Assyrian, Persian, Greek, and Roman 
sovereigns, with the length of their reigns, sev- 
eral times referred to by Syncellus. — 4. Qdoetc 
axTtavuv aarepuv nal ovvayuyr) eTTiOTjfiaoei&v, De 
Apparentiis. et Significationibus inerrantium, an 
annual list of sidereal phenomena. — 5, 6. De 
Ana.ltm.male and Pianisphcerium. These works 
are obtained from the Arabic. The Analcmma 
is a collection of graphical processes for facili- 
tating the construction of sun-dials. The Plani- 
sphere is a description of the stereographic pro- 
jection, in which the eye is at the pole of the 
circle on which the sphere is projected. — 7. Yiepl 
virodeoswv rCov 7rXavu/j.EVLJv, De Planctarum Hy- 
pothcsibus. This is a brief statement of the 
principal hypotheses employed in the Almagest 
for the explanation of the heavenly motions. — 
8. 'Ap/uoviKuv {3t6?iia y'., a treatise on the theory 
of the musical scale. — 9. llepl kplttjolov nal rjye- 
fioviKOv, De Judicandi Facultatc et Animi Princi- 
patu, a metaphysical work, attributed to Ptol- 
emy. — 10. TeuypaQtKT/ 'TfyrjyTioLc, in eight books, 
the great geographical work of Ptolemy. This 
work was the last attempt made by the ancients 
to form a complete geographical system ; it was 
accepted as the text-book of the science ; and 
it maintained that position during the Middle 
Ages, and until the fifteenth century, when the 
rapid progress of maritime discovery caused it 
to be superseded. It contains, however, very 
little information respecting the objects of in- 
terest connected with the different countries 
and places ; for, with the exception of the in- 
troductory matter in the first book, and the lat- 
ter part of the work, it is a mere catalogue of 
the names of places, with their longitudes and 
latitudes, and with a few incidental references 
to objects of interest. The latitudes of Ptol- 
emy are tolerably correct ; but his longitudes 
are very wide of the truth, his length of the 
known world, from east to west, being much 
too great. It is well worthy, however, of re- 
mark, in passing, that the modern world owes 
much to this error ; for it tended to encourage 
that belief in the practicability of a western 
passage to the Indies, which occasioned the dis- 



covery of America by Columbus. The first book 
is introductory. The next six and a half books 
(ii.-vii., 4) are occupied with the description of 
the known world, beginning with the West of 
Europe, the description of which is contained 
in book ii. ; next comes the East of Europe, in 
book iii. ; then Africa, in book iv. j then West- 
ern or Lesser Asia, in book v. ; then the Great- 
er Asia, in book vi. ; then India, the Chersone- 
sus Aurea, Serica, the Sin<E, and Taprobane, in 
bookvii., cc. 1-4. The form in which the de- 
scription is given is that of lists of places, with 
their longitudes and latitudes, arranged under 
the heads, first, of the three continents, and 
then of the several countries and tribes. Pre- 
fixed to each section is a brief general descrip- 
tion of the boundaries and divisions of the part 
about to be described ; and remarks of a mis- 
cellaneous character are interspersed among the 
lists, to which, however, they bear but a small 
proportion. The remaining part of the seventh, 
and the whole of the eighth book, are occupied 
with a description of a set of maps of the known 
world. These maps are still extant. The best 
edition of the Gcographia of Ptolemy is by Pe- 
trus Bertius, Lugd. Bat., 1619, fol. ; reprinted 
Antwerp, 1624, fol— 2. Of Megalopolis, the son 
of Agesarchus, wrote a history of King Ptolemy 
IV. Philopator.— 3. An Egyptian priest of Men- 
des, who wrote on the ancient history of Egypt. 
He probably lived under the first Roman em- 
perors. — 4. Surnamed Chemnus, a grammarian 
of Alexandrea, flourished under Trajan and 
Hadrian. An epitome of one of his works is 
preserved by Photius. 

Ptolemais (Jlrole/iiaig : nTO?ie/j.aiT7]C and FIto- 
?\,e l uaevc). 1. Also called Ace ('Aktj, a corrup- 
tion of the native name Acco, Old Testament : 
now, in Arabic, Akka, French St. Jean d? Acre, 
English Acre), a celebrated city on the coast of 
Phoenicia, south of Tyre, and north of Mount 
Carmel, lies at the bottom of a bay surrounded 
by mountains, in a position marked out by na- 
ture as a key of the passage between Ccelesyria 
and Palestine. It is one of the oldest cities 
of Phoenicia, being mentioned in the Book of 
Judges (i., 31). Under the Persians it was made 
the head-quarters of the expeditions against 
Egypt ; but it was not till the decline of Tyre 
that it acquired its great importance as a mili- 
tary and commercial city. The Ptolemy who 
enlarged and strengthened it, and from whom it 
obtained its Greek name, is supposed to have 
been Ptolemy I. the son of Lagus. After the 
change of its name, its citadel continued to be 
called Ace. Under the Romans it was a col- 
ony, and belonged to Galilee. To recount its 
great celebrity in medieeval and modern history 
does not fall within the province of this work. 
— 2. (At or near the modern El-Lahum), a small 
town of Middle Egypt, in the Nomos ArsinoTtes, 
between Arsinoe' and Heracleopolis the Great. 
— 3. P. Hermii (II. jj 'Epftelov, UroXefiaiKr) irolig: 
now Mcnshieh, ruins), a city of Upper Egypt, on 
the western bank of the Nile, below Abydos, 
was a place of great importance under the Ptol- 
emies, who enlarged and adorned it, and made 
it a purely Greek city, exempt from all pecul- 
iarly Egyptian laws and customs. — 4. P. The- 
ron t , or Epitheras (n. Qrjpuv, t) eni &Tjpa<;), a 
port on the Red Sea, on the coast of the Troglo- 



PTOON. 



PULCHERIA 



dyta?, an emporium for the trade with India and 
Arabia, but chiefly remarkable in the history 
of mathematical geography, inasmuch as, the 
sun having been observed to be directly over it 
forty-five days before and after the summer sol- 
stice, the place was taken as one of the fixed 
points for determining the length of a degree 
of a great circle on the earth's surface. — 5. (Now i 
Tolmelta, or Tolometa, ruins), on the northwest- j 
ern coast of Cyrenaica, one of the five great j 
cities of the Libyan Pentapolis, was at first only 
the port of Barca, which lay one hundred stadia i 
(ten geographical miles) inland, but which was j 
so entirely eclipsed by Ptolemai's that, under j 
the Romans, even the name of Barca was trans- j 
ferred to the latter city. From which of the j 
Ptolemies it took its name, we are not informed, j 
Its magnificence is attested by its splendid ruins, j 
which are now partly covered by the sea. They 
are four miles in circumference, and contain the j 
remains of several temples, three theatres, and 
an aqueduct. 

Ptoox (Ilrcjov: now Palca and Strutzina), a 
mountain in Bceotia, an offshoot of Helicon, 
which extends from the southeast side of the ! 
Lake Copais southward to the coast. 

Publicola, or Poplicula, or Poplicola, a Ro- 
man cognomen, signified " one who courts the 
people" (from populus and colo), and thus " a j 
friend of the people." The form Poplicula or j 
Poplicola was the more ancient, but Publicola J 
was the one usually employed by the Romans 
in later times. 

Publicola, P. Valerius, took an active part 
in expelling the Tarquins from the city, and 
was thereupon elected consul with Brutus (B. 
C. 509). He secured the liberties of the peo- 
ple by proposing several laws, one of the most 
important of which was that every citizen who 
was condemned by a magistrate should have 
the right of appeal to the people. He also or- 
dered the lictors to lower the fasces before the 
people, as an acknowledgment that their power 
was superior to that of the consuls. Hence he 
became so great a favorite with the people, 
that he received the surname of Publicola. He 
was consul three times again, namely, in 508, 
507, and 504. He died in 503. He was buried 
at the public expense, and the matrons mourn- 
ed for him ten months, as they had done for 
Brutus. The descendants of Publicola bore the 
same name, and several of them held the highest 
offices of state during the early years of the re- 
public. 

Publicola, Gellius. 1. L., consul with Cn. 
Lentulus Clodianus, B.C. 72. Both consuls 
carried on war against Spartacus, but were de- 
feated by the latter. In 70 Gellius was censor, 
and in 67 and 66 he served as one of Pompey's 
legates in the war against the pirates. He be- 
longed to the aristocratical party. In 63 he 
warmly supported Cicero in the suppression of 
the Catilinarian conspiracy. In 59 he opposed 
the agrarian law of Caesar, and in 57 he spoke 
in favor of Cicero's recall from exile. He was 
alive in 55, when Cicero delivered his speech 
against Piso, but he probably died soon after- 
ward. He was married twice. He must have 
reached a great age, since he is mentioned as 
the contubernalis of C. Papirius Carbo, who 
was consul in 120. — 2. L., son of the preceding 



by his first wife. He espoused the republican 
party after Caesar's death (44), and went with 
M. Brutus to Asia. After plotting against the 
lives of both Brutus and Cassius, he deserted 
to the triumvirs, Octavianus and Antony. He 
was rewarded for his treachery by the consul- 
ship in 36. In the war between Octavianus 
and Antony, he espoused the side of the latter, 
and commanded the right wing of Antony's fleet 
at the battle of Actium. — 3. Brother probably 
of No. 1, is called step-son of L. Marcius Philip- 
pus, consul 91, and brother of L. Marcius Philip- 
pus, consul 56. According to Cicero's account, 
he was a profligate and a spendthrift, and having 
dissipated his property; united himself to P. 
Clodius. 

Publilia, the second wife of M. Tullius Cic- 
ero, whom he married B.C. 46. As Cicero 
was then sixty years of age, and Publilia quite 
young, the marriage occasioned great scandal. 
It appears that Cicero was at the time in great 
pecuniary embarrassments ; and after the di- 
vorce of Terentia, he was anxious to contract 
a new marriage for the purpose of obtaining 
money to pay his debts. Publilia had a large 
fortune, which had been left to Cicero in trust 
for her. The marriage proved an unhappy one, 
as might have been expected ; and Cicero di- 
vorced her in 45. 

PUBLILIUS PfllLO. Vid. PHILO. 

Publilius, Volero, tribune of the plebs B.C. 
472, and again 471, effected an important change 
in the Roman constitution. In virtue of the 
laws which he proposed, the tribunes of the 
plebs and the aediles were elected by the comitia 
tributa instead of by the comitia centuriata, as 
had previously been the case, and the tribes ob- 
tained the power of deliberating and determin- 
ing in all matters affecting the whole nation, 
and not such only as concerned the plebs. Some 
said that the number of the tribunes was now 
for the first time raised to five, having been 
only two previously. 

Publius Syrus. Vid. Syrus. 
Pucinum (HovKLvov), a fortress in Istria, in the 
north of Italy, on the road from Aquileia to Pola, 
was situated on a steep rock, which produced 
wine, mentioned by Pliny under the name of 
Vinum Pucinum. 

Pudicitia (Aidcjf), a personification of mod- 
esty, was worshipped both in Greece and at 
Rome. At Athens an altar was dedicated to 
her. At Rome two sanctuaries were dedicated 
i to her, one under the name of Pudicitia patricia, 
and the other under that of Pudicitia pltbeia. 
The former was in the forum Boarium, near the 
: temple of Hercules. When the patrician Vir- 
ginia w r as driven from this sanctuary by the 
other patrician women, because she had mar- 
j ried the plebeian consul L. Volumnius, she built 
I a separate sanctuary to Pudicitia plebcia in the 
j Vicus Longus. 

Pulcher, Claudius. Vid. Claudius. 
Pulcheria, eldest daughter of the Emperor 
Arcadius, was born A.D. 399. In 414, when 
she was only fifteen years of age, she became 
the guardian of her brother Theodosius, and 
was declared Augusta or empress. She had 
the virtual government in her hands during the 
I whole lifetime of her brother, who died in 450. 
} On his death she remained at the head of af 



PULCHRUM PROMONTORIUM. 



PYLADES. 



fairs, and shortly afterward she married Mar- 
cian, with whom she continued to reign in com- 
mon till her death in 453. Pulcheria was a 
woman of ability, and was celebrated for her 
piety, and her public and private virtues. 

PULCHRUM PROMONTORIUM (Ka!bv UKpUTTjpiOv), 

a promontory on the northern coast of the Car- 
thaginian territory in Northern Africa, where 
the elder Scipio Africanus landed; probably 
identical with the Apollinis Promontorium. 

Pullus, L. Junius, consul B.C. 249, in the 
first Punic war. His fleet was destroyed by a 
storm, on account, it was said, of his neglect- 
ing the auspices. In despair, he put an end to 
his own life. 

Pupienus Maximus, M. Clodius, was elected 
emperor with Balbinus in A.D. 238, when the 
senate received intelligence of the death of the 
two Gordians in Africa ; but the new emperors 
were slain by the soldiers at Rome in the same 
year. 

Pupius, a Roman dramatist, whose composi- 
tions are characterized by Horace as the "lacry- 
mosa poemata Pupi." 

Pur a {Uovpa : now probably Bunpur), the cap- 
ital of Gedrosia, in the interior of the country, 
on the borders of Carmania. 

PurpurarLe Insula (now probably the Ma- i 
deira group), a group of islands in the Atlantic 
Ocean, off the northwestern coast of Africa, 
which are supposed to have derived their name ! 
from the purple muscles which abound on the 
opposite coast of Africa (Gaitulia). The islands I 
of Hera (*Hpa) and Autolala (Avto?al?m), men- J 
tioned by Ptolemy, appear to belong to the | 
group. 

Purpureo, L. Furius, praetor B.C. 200, ob- I 
tained Cisalpine Gaul as his province, and gain- j 
ed a brilliant victory over the Gauls, who had | 
laid siege to Cremona. He was consul 196, ! 
when he defeated the Boii. 

Puteolanum, a country house of Cicero near 
Puteoli, where he wrote his Quastiones Acadc- 
miccB, and where the Emperor Hadrian was 
buried. 

Puteolanus Sinus (now Bay of Naples), a bay 
of the sea on the coast of Campania, between 
the promontory Misenum and the promontory of 
Minerva, which was originally called Cumanus, 
but afterward Puteolanus, from the town Pute- 
oli. The northwest corner of it was separated 
by a dike eight stadia in length from the rest 
of the bay, thus forming the Lucrinus Lacus. 

Puteoli (Puteolanus : now Pozzuoli), origin- 
ally named Dic.earchia (AiKatapxia, AiKaiup- 
XeLa: Aacaiapxevc, AinaiapxeLTrjc., -xI-tvc), a cele- 
brated sea-port town of Campania, situated on 
a promontory on the east side of the Puteolanus 
Sinus, and a little to the east of Cumse, was 
founded by the Greeks of Cumss, B.C. 521, un- 
der the name of Dicaearchia. In the second 
Punic war it was fortified by the Romans, who 
changed its name into that of Puteoli, either 
from its numerous wells, or from the stench 
arising from the mineral springs in its neigh- 
borhood. The town was indebted for its im- 
portance to its excellent harbor, which was 
protected by an extensive mole formed from 
the celebrated reddish earth of the neighboring 
hills. This earth, called Pozzolana, when mix- 
ed with chalk, forms an excellent cement, which 



in course of time becomes as hard in water as 
stone. The mole was built on arches like a 
bridge, and seventeen of the piers are still visi- 
ble projecting above the water. To this mole 
Caligula attached a floating bridge, which ex- 
tended as far as Baiae, a distance of two miles. 
Puteoli was the chief emporium for the com- 
merce with Alexandrea and with the greater part 
of Spain. The town was colonized by the Ro- 
mans in B.C. 194, and also anew by Augustus, 
Nero, and Vespasian. It was destroyed by 
Alaric in A.D. 410, by Genseric in 455, and also 
by Totilas in 545, but was on each occasion 
speedily rebuilt. There are still many ruins of 
the ancient town at the modern Pozzuoli. Of 
these the most important are the remains of 
the temple of Serapis, of the amphitheatre, 
and of the mole already described. 

Putput (now probably Hamamet), a sea-port 
town of Africa Propria (Zeugitana) on the Gulf 
of Neapolis (now Gulf of Hamamet). Its name 
is evidently Phoenician. 

Pydna [Uvdva : UvSvatoc : now Kitron), a 
town of Macedonia, in the district Pieria, was 
situated at a small distance west of the Ther- 
maic Gulf, on which it had a harbor. It was 
originally a Greek colony, but it was subdued 
by the Macedonian kings, from whom, however, 
it frequently revolted. Toward the end of the 
Peloponnesian war it was taken after a long 
siege by Archelaus, and its inhabitants removed 
twenty stadia inland ; but at a later period we 
still find the town situated on the coast. It 
again revolted from the Macedonians, and was 
subdued by Philip, who enlarged and fortified 
the place. It was here that Olympias sustain- 
ed a long siege against Cassander, B.C. 317- 
316. It is especially memorable on account of 
the victory gained under its walls by ^milius 
Paulus over Perseus, the last king of Mace- 
donia, 168. Under the Romans it was also 
called Citrum or Citrus. 

Pygela or Phygela (Uvye/.a, QvyeXa), a small 
town of Ionia, on the coast of Lydia, with a tem- 
ple of Diana (Artemis) Munychia. Tradition 
ascribed its foundation to Agamemnon on his 
return from Troy. 

Pygm^i (Uvyfj.atoL, i. e., men of the height of 
a -nvynrj, i. e., thirteen and a half inches), a 
fabulous people, first mentioned by Homer (II. t 
iii., 5), as dwelling on the shores of Ocean, and 
attacked by cranes in spring time. The fable 
is repeated by numerous writers, in various 
forms, especially as to the locality, some 
placing them in ^Ethiopia, others in India, and 
others in the extreme north of the earth. The 
story is referred to by Ovid and Juvenal, and 
forms the subject of several works of art. 

Pygmalion (Uvyfia?uuv). 1. King of Cyprus 
and father-of Metharme. He is said to have 
fallen in love with the ivory image of a maiden 
which he himself had made, and therefore to 
have prayed to Venus (Aphrodite) to breathe life 
into it. When the request was granted, Pyg- 
malion married the maiden, and became by her 
the father of Paphus. — 2. Son of Belus and 
brother of Dido, who murdered Sichasus, Dido's 
husband. For details, vid. Dido. 

Pylades (Ilv?M6nc). 1. Son of Strophius and 
Anaxibia, a sister of Agamemnon. His father 
was king of Phocis ; and after the death of A<ia- 

725 



PYLJE. 



PYRENE. 



meranon, Orestes was secretly carried to his 
father's court. Here Pylades contracted that 
friendship with Orestes which became proverb- 
ial. He assisted Orestes in murdering his moth- 
er Clyteemnestra, and also accompanied him to 
the Tauric Chersonesus ; and he eventually 
married his sister Electra, by whom he became 
the father of Hellanicus, Medon, and Sti'ophius. 
For details, rid. Orestes. — 2. A pantomime 
dancer in the reign of Augustus, spoken of un- 
der Bathyllus. 

Pvl#: (Y1v?ml, i. e., Gates). 1. A general 
name for any narrow pass, such as Thermopy- 
lae, Pylse Albania?, Caspian, &c. {Vid. the sev- 
eral specific names.) — 2. Two small islands at 
the entrance into the Arabicus Sinus {now Red 
Sea) from the Erythraean Sea. 

Pyl^emenes (Tlv?.aLuev7]c), appears to have 
been the name of many kings of Paphlagonia, 
so as to have become a kind of hereditary ap- 
pellation, like that of Ptolemy in Egypt and 
Arsaces in Parthia. We have, however, very 
little definite information concerning them. 

[Pyl/eus (TlvAcuog), son of Lethus, leader of 
the Pelasgians from Larissa, an ally of the Tro- 
jans.] 

[Pvlartes {Uvluprng), a Trojan warrior, j 
slain by Patroclus.] 

Pylas (ILv/.ag), son of Cteson, and king of 
Megara, who, after slaying Bias, his own fa- 
ther's brother, founded the town of Pylos in 
Peloponnesus, and gave Megara to Pandion, 
who had married his daughter Pylia, and ac- 
cordingly was his son-in-law. 

Pylene (Uv?JiV7j), an ancient town of iEtolia, 
on the southern slope of Mount Aracynthus, on 
whose site Proschium was subsequently built. 

[Pylon {Ilv/.uv), a Trojan warrior, slain by 
Polypcetes.] 

Pylos (Uv/.og), the name of three towns on 
the western coast of Peloponnesus. 1. In Elis, 
at the foot of Mount Scollis, and about seventy ; 
or eighty stadia from the city of Elis, on the i 
road to Olympia, near the confluence of the 
Ladon and the Peneus It is said to have been 
founded by Pylon or Pylas of Megara, to have 
been destroyed by Hercules, and to have been ' 
afterward rebuilt by the Eleans. — 2. In Triphyl- | 
ia, about thirty stadia from the coast, on the : 
River Mamaus, west of the Mountain Minthe, ! 
and north of Lepreum. — 3. In the southwest of 
Messenia, was situated at the foot of Mount \ 
iEgaleos on a promontory at the northern en- ; 
trance of the basin, now called the Bay of Nav- j 
arino, the largest and safest harbor in all Greece. 
This harbor was fronted and protected by the 
small island of Sphacteria (now Sphagia), which 
stretched along the coast about a mile and three 
quarters, leaving only two narrow entrances at j 
each end. In the second Messenian war the \ 
inhabitants of Pylos offered a long and brave i 
resistance to the Spartans ; but after the cap- j 
ture of Ira, they were obliged to quit their na- 
tive country with the rest of the Messenians. | 
Pylos now remained in ruins, but again became 
memorable in the Peloponnesian war, when the | 
Athenians under Demosthenes built a fort on 
the promontory Coryphasium, a little south of 
the ancient city, and just within the northern 
entrance to the harbor (B.C. 425). The at- 
tempts of the Spartans to dislodge the Atheni- I 
726 



ans proved unavailing ; and the capture by 
Cleon of the Spartans, who had landed in the 
island of Sphacteria, was one of the most im- 
portant events in the whole war. — There has 
been much controversy, which of these three 
places was the Pylos founded by Neleus, and 
governed by Nestor and his descendants. The 
town in Elis has little or no claim to the honor, 
and the choice lies between the towns in Triphyl- 
ia and Messenia. The ancients usually decided 
in favor of the Messenian Pylos ; but most mod- 
ern critics support the claims of the Triphylian 
city. 

[Pyracmon, one of the assistants of Vulcan 
in forging the thunderbolts of Jupiter (Zeus). 
Vid. Cyclopes.] 

[Pyr^echmes {UvpatxfJ-rjc), leader of the Paeo- 
nians, an ally of the Trojans, slain by Patro- 
clus according to Homer, or by Diomedes ac- 
cording to Dictys.] 

Pyramia (tu Hvpd/iLa), a town of Argolis, in 
the district Thyreatis, where Danaus is said to 
have landed. 

Pyramus. Vid. Thisbe. 

Pyramus (Jlvpauoq : now Jihan), one of the 
largest rivers of Asia Minor, rises in the anti- 
Taurus range, near Arabissus in Cataonia (the 
southeastern part of Cappadocia), and after run 
ning southeast, first under ground, and then as 
a navigable river., breaks through the Taurus 
chain by a deep and narrow ravine, and then 
flows southwest through Cilicia in a deep and 
rapid stream, about one stadium (six hundred 
and six feet) in width, and falls into the sea 
near Mallus. Its ancient name is said to have 
been Leucosyrus, from the Leucosyri who dwelt 
on its banks. 

[Pyrander (Tlvpav8poc), a historian of an un- 
known period, wrote a work entitled Ue?^o7rov- 

V7)GiaKU.~\ 

[Pyrasus (Uvpaaog), a city of the Thessalian 
district Phthiotis, mentioned by Homer, but al- 
ready in Strabo's time in ruins : it was situated 
on the coast, twenty stadia (two geographical 
miles) from Thebae, with a Demetrium.] 

[Pyrasus (Uvpaaoc), a Trojan warrior, slain 
by Ajax.] 

Pyrene or Pyren^ei Moxtes {HvpfjvT}, tu. Uv 
prjvaia bpv : now Pyrenees), a range of mount- 
ains extending from the Atlantic to the Medi- 
terranean, and forming the boundary between 
Gaul and Spain. The length of these mount- 
ains is about two hundred and seventy miles in 
a straight line ; their breadth varies from about 
forty miles to twenty ; their greatest height Is 
between eleven thousand and twelve thousand 
feet. The Romans first became acquainted with 
these mountains by their campaigns against the 
Carthaginians in Spain in the second Punic war. 
Their name, however, had travelled eastward 
at a much earlier period, since Herodotus (if. 
33) speaks of a city Pyrene belonging to the 
Celts, near which the Ister rises. The ancient 
writers usually derived the name from Trip, 
"fire," and then, according to a common prac- 
tice, invented a story to explain the false ety- 
mology, relating that a great fire once raged 
upon the mountains. The name, however, is 
probably connected with the Celtic Byrin or 
Bryn, " a mountain." The continuation of the 
mountains along the Mare Cantabricum was 



PYRENES PROMONTORIUM. 



PYRRHUS. 



called Saltus Vasconum, and still further west 
Mons Vindius or Vinnias. The Romans were 
acquainted with only three passes over the Pyr- 
enees, the one on the west near Carasae (now 
Garis), not far from the Mare Cantabricum, the 
one in the middle leading from Caesaraugusta 
to Beneharnum (now Bareges), and the one on 
the east, which was most frequently used, near 
the coast of the Mediterranean by Juncaria (now 
Jmvjucra). 

Pyrenes Promontorium, or Promontorium 
Veneris (now Cape Creiis), the southeastern 
extremity of the Pyrenees in Spain, on the 
frontiers'of Gaul, derived its second name from 
a temple of Venus on the promontory. 

Pyrgi. 1. (Ilvpyui or Tlvpyoc : Tivpyhrjc), the 
most southerly town of Triphylia in Elis, near 
the Messenian frontier, said to have been found- 
ed by the Minyae. — 2. (Pyrgensis : now Santa 
Severa), an ancient Pelasgic town on the coast 
of Etruria, was used as the port of Caere or 
Agylla, and was a place of considerable import- 
ance as a commercial emporium. It was at an 
early period the head-quarters of the Tyrrhenian 
pirates. It possessed a very wealthy temple of 
Ilithyia, which Dionysius of Syracuse plundered 
in B.C. 384. Pyrgi is mentioned at a later time 
as a Roman colony, but lost its importance un- 
der the Roman dominion. There are still re- 
mains at Sla Severa of the ancient polygonal 
walls of Pyrgi. 

[Pyrgo, nurse of the children of Priam, ac- 
companied iEneas after the destruction of Troy, 
and showed the Trojan women that it was a 
goddess, and not Beroe, who urged them to fire 
the Trojan ships in Sicily.] 

Pyrgotei.es (UvpyoriATjc), one of the most 
celebrated gem engravers of ancient Greece, 
was a contemporary of Alexander the Great, 
who placed him on a level with Apelles and 
Lysippus, by naming him as the only artist who 
was permitted to engrave seal-rings for the king. 

Pyricus, a Greek painter, who probably lived 
soon after the time of Alexander the Great. He 
devoted himself entirely to the production of 
small pictures of low and mean subjects. 

Pyriphlegethon ( Hvpitiheyeduv), that is, flam- 
ing with fire, the name of one of the rivers in 
the lower world. 

Pyromachus, the name of two artists. The 
name occurs in four different forms, namely, 
Phyromachus, Phylomachus, Philomachus, and 
Pyromachus. 1. An Athenian sculptor, who 
executed the bas-reliefs on the frieze of the 
temple of Minerva (Athena) Polias, about B.C. 
415. The true form of his name appears to have 
been Phyromachus. — 2. An artist who flourish- 
ed B.C. 295-240, is mentioned by Pliny (xxxiv., 
8, s. 19) as one of those statuaries who rep- 
resented the battles of Attalus and Eumenes 
against the Gauls. Of these battles the most 
celebrated was that which obtained for Attalus 
I. the title of king, about 241. It is supposed 
by the best writers on ancient art that the cel- 
ebrated statue of a dying combatant, popularly 
called the Dying Gladiator, is a copy from one 
of the bronze statues in the works mentioned 
by Pliny. It is evidently the statue of a Celt. 

Pyrrha (Ylvppa : Uvppaioc). 1. A town on 
the western coast of the island of Lesbos, on 
the inner part of the deep bay named after it, 



and consequently on the narrowest part of the 
island. — 2. A town and promontory of Phthio- 
tis in Thessaly, on the Pagasaean Gulf, and near 
the frontiers of Magnesia. Off this promontory 
there were two small islands, named Pyrrha 
and Deucalion.— 3. A small Ionic town in Ca- 
ria, on the northern side of the Sinus Latmicus, 
and fifty stadia from the mouth of the Maeander. 

Pyrrhi Castra (Uv^ov ^apaf), a fortified 
place in the north of Laconia, where Pyrrhus 
probably encamped in his invasion of the coun- 
try in B.C. 272. 

Pyrrhichus (Tlvppixoc), a town of the Eleu- 
thero-lacones in the southwest of Laconia. 

Pyrrho (TLvpfov), the founder of the Skep- 
tical or Pyrrhonian school of philosophy, was a 
native of Elis in Peloponnesus. He is said to 
have been poor, and to have followed at first 
the profession of a painter. He is then said to 
| have been attracted to philosophy by the books 
j of Democritus, to have attended the lectures of 
Bryson, a disciple of Stilpon, to have attached 
i himself closely to Anaxarchus, and with him to 
j have joined the expedition of Alexander the 
Great. During the greater part of his life he 
I lived in retirement, and endeavored to render 
himself independent of all external circumstan- 
ces. His disciple Timon extolled with admira- 
tion his divine repose of soul, and his indiffer- 
ence to pleasure or pain. So highly was he 
valued by his fellow-citizens that they made 
him their high priest, and erected a monument 
to him after his death. The Athenians con- 
ferred upon him the rights of citizenship. We 
know little respecting the principles of his skep- 
tical philosophy ; and the ridiculous tales told 
about him by Diogenes Laertius are probably the 
j invention of his enemies. He asserted that cer- 
i tain knowledge on any subject was unattainable, 
and that the great object of man ought to be to 
! lead a virtuous life. Pyrrho wrote no works, 
except a poem addressed to Alexander, which 
was rewarded by the latter in a royal manner. 
His philosophical system was first reduced to 
writing by his disciple Timon. He reached the 
age of ninety years, but we have no mention of 
the year either of his birth or of his death. 

Pyrrhus [Uvppo^). 1. Mythological. Vid. 
Neoptolemus. — 2. I. King of Epirus, son of 
iEacides and Phthia, was born B.C. 318. His 
ancestors claimed descent from Pyrrhus, the 
j son of Achilles, who was said to have settled in 
I Epirus after the Trojan war, and to have be- 
come the founder of the race of Molossian kings. 
On the deposition of his father by the Epirots 
(vid. ^Eacides), Pyrrhus, who was then a child 
of only two years old, was saved from destruc- 
tion by the faithful adherents of the king, who 
carried him to Glaucias, the king of the Tau- 
; lantians, an Illyrian people. Glaucias took the 
1 child under his care, and brought him up with 
j his own children. He not only refused to sur- 
I render Pyrrhus to Cassander, but about ten 
I years afterward he marched into Epirus at the 
head of an army, and placed Pyrrhus on the 
throne, leaving him, however, under the care 
i of guardians, as he was then only twelve years 
! of age. In the course of four or five years, 
however, Cassander, who had gained his su- 
premacy in Greece, prevailed upon the Epirots 
; to expel their young king. Pyrrhus, who was 

727 



PYRRHUS. 



PYRRHUS. 



still only seventeen years of age, joined Deme- ' 
trius, " ho had married his sister De'fdamia, ac- 
companied him to Asia, and was present at the 
battle of Ipsus, 301, in which he gained great 
renown for his valor. Antigonus fell in the 
battle, and Demetrius became a fugitive ; but 
Pyrrhus did not desert his brother-in-law in his 
misfortunes, and shortly afterward went for him 
as a hostage into Egypt. Here he was fortu- 
nate enough to win the favor of Berenice, the 
wife of Ptolemy, and received in marriage An- 
tigone, her daughter by her first husband. Ptol- 
emy now supplied him with a fleet and forces, 
with which he returned to Epirus. Neoptole- 
mus, who had reigned from the time that Pyr- 
rhus had been driven from the kingdom, agreed 
to share the sovereignty with Pyrrhus. But 
such an arrangement could not last long, and 
Pyrrhus anticipated his own destruction by put- 
ting his rival to death. This appears to have 
happened in 295, in which year Pyrrhus is said 
to have begun to reign. He was now twenty- 
three years old, and he soon became one of the 
most popular princes of his time. His daring 
courage made him a favorite with his troops, 
and his affability and generosity secured the 
love of his people. He seems at an early age 
to have taken Alexander as his model, and to 
have been fired with the ambition of imitating 
his exploits and treading in his footsteps. His 
eyes were first directed to the conquest of Mace- 
donia. By assisting Alexander, the son of Cas- 
sander, against his brother Antipater, he obtain- 
ed possession of the whole of the Macedonian 
dominions on the western side of Greece. But 
the Macedonian throne itself fell into the hands 
'Demetrius, greatly to the disappointment of 
T .hus. The two former friends now became 
most deadly enemies, and open war broke 
out between them in 291. After the war had 
been carried on with great vigor and various 
vicissitudes for four years, Pyrrhus joined the 
coalition formed in 287 by Seleucus, Ptolemy, 
and Lysimachus against Demetrius. Lysim- 
achus and Pyrrhus Invaded Macedonia; Deme- 
trius was deserted by his troops, and obliged to 
fly in disguise ; and the kingdom was divided 
between Lysimachus and Pyrrhus. But the 
latter did not long retain his portion ; the Mace- 
donians preferred the rule of their old general 
Lysimachus, and Pyrrhus was accordingly driv- 
en out of the country after a reign of seven 
months (286). For the next few years Pyrrhus 
reigned quietly in Epirus without embarking in 
any new enterprise. But a life of inactivity 
was insupportable to him, and accordingly he 
readily accepted the invitation of the Taren- 
tines to assist them in their war against the 
Romans. He crossed over to Italy early in 280, 
in the thirty-eighth year of his age. He took 
with him twenty thousand foot, three thousand 
horse, two thousand archers, five hundred sling- 
ers, and either fifty or twenty elephants, hav- 
ing previously sent Milo, one of his generals, 
with a detachment of three thousand men. As 
soon as he arrived at Tarentum, he began to 
make vigorous preparations for carrying on the 
war; and as the giddy and licentious inhabit- 
ants of Tarentum complained of the severity of 
his discipline, he forthwith treated them as 
their master rather than as their ally, shut up 



the theatre and all other public places, and com- 
pelled their young men to serve in his ranks. 
In the first campaign (2S0), the Roman consul, 
M. Valerius Laevinus, was defeated by Pyrrhus 
near Heraclea, on the bank of the River Siris. 
The battle was long and bravely contested, and 
it was not till Pyrrhus brought forward his ele- 
phants, which bore down every thing before 
them, that the Romans took to flight. The loss 
of Pyrrhus, though inferior to that of the Ro- 
mans, was still very considerable. A large 
proportion of his officers and best troops had 
fallen ; and he said, as he viewed the field of 
battle, " Another such victory, and I must re- 
turn to Epirus alone." He therefore availed 
himself of his success to send his minister Cin- 
eas to Rome with proposals of peace, while he 
himself marched slowly toward the city. His 
proposals, however, were rejected by the sen- 
ate. He accordingly continued his march, rav- 
aging the Roman territory as he went along. 
He advanced within twenty- four miles of Rome; 
but as he found it impossible to compel the Ro- 
mans to accept the peace, he retraced his steps, 
and withdrew into winter-quarters to Taren- 
tum. As soon as the armies were quartered 
for the winter, the Romans sent an embassy to 
Pyrrhus to endeavor to obtain the ransom of 
the Roman prisoners. The ambassadors were 
received by Pyrrhus in the most distinguished 
manner ; and his interviews with C. Fabricius, 
who was at the head of the embassy, form one 
of the most celebrated stories in Roman his- 
tory. Vid. Fabricius. In the second campaign 
(279), Pyrrhus gained another victory near As- 
culum over the Romans, who were commanded 
by the consuls P. Decius Mus and P. Sulpicius 
Saverrio. The battle, however, was followed 
by no decisive results, and the brunt of it had 
again fallen, as in the previous year, almost ex- 
clusively on the Greek troops of the king. He 
was therefore unwilling to hazard his surviving 
Greeks by another campaign with the Romans, 
and accordingly he lent a ready ear to the in- 
vitations of the Greeks in Sicily, who begged 
him to come to their assistance against the 
Carthaginians. The Romans were likewise 
anxious to get rid of so formidable an oppo- 
nent, that they might complete the subjugation 
of Southern Italy without further interruption. 
When both parties had the same wishes, it was 
not difficult to find a pretext for bringing the 
war to a conclusion. This was afforded at the 
beginning of the following year (278) by one 
of the servants of Pyrrhus deserting to the, 
Romans and proposing to the consuls to poison 
his master. The consuls Fabricius and iEmil- 
ius sent back the deserters to the king, stating 
that they abhorred a victory gained by treason. 
Thereupon Pyrrhus, to show his gratitude, sent 
Cineas to Rome with all the Roman prisoners, 
without ransom and without conditions ; and 
the Romans granted him a truce, though not a 
formal peace, as he had not consented to evac- 
uate Italy. Pyrrhus now crossed over into 
Sicily, where he remained upward of two years, 
from the middle of 478 to the latter end of 476. 
At first he met with brilliant success, defeated 
the Carthaginians, and took Eryx; but having 
failed in an attempt upon Lilybaeum, he lost his 
popularity with the Greeks, who began to form 



PYRRHUS. 



PYTHAGORAS. 



cabals and plots against him. This led to re- 
taliation on the part of Pyrrhus, and to acts 
which were deemed both cruel and tyrannical 
by the Greeks. His position in Sicily at length 
became so uncomfortable and dangerous that 
he soon became anxious to abandon the island. 
Accordingly, when his Italian allies again beg- 
ged him to come to their assistance, he gladly 
complied with their request. Pyrrhus returned 

- to Italy in the autumn of 276. In the following 
year (275) the war was brought to a close. 
Pyrrhus was defeated with great loss nearBen- 

' eventum by the Roman consul Curius Dentatus, 
and was obliged to leave Italy. He brought 
back with him to Epirus only eight thousand 
foot and five hundred horse, and had not money 
to maintain even these without undertaking 
new wars. Accordingly, in 273, he invaded 
Macedonia, of which Antigonus Gonatas, the 
son of Demetrius, was then king. His only 
object at first seems to have been plunder ; but 
his success far exceeded his expectations. An- 
tigonus was deserted by his own troops, and 
Pyrrhus thus became king of Macedonia a sec- 
ond time. But scarcely had he obtained pos- 
session of the kingdom before his restless spirit 
drove him into new enterprises. On the invita- 
tion of Cleonymus, he turned his arms against 
Sparta, but was repulsed in an attack upon this 
city. From Sparta he marched toward Argos 
in order to support Aristeas, one of the leading 
citizens at Argos, against his rival Aristippus, 
whose cause was espoused by Antigonus. In 
the night time Aristeas admitted Pyrrhus into 
the city ; but the alarm having been given, the 
j citadel and all the strong places were seized by j 
the Argives of the opposite faction. On the j 
dawn of day Pyrrhus saw that it would be 
necessary for him to retreat ; and as he was j 
fighting his way out of the city, an Argive j 
woman hurled down from the house-top a 
ponderous tile, which struck Pyrrhus on the 
back of his neck. He fell from his horse stun- 
ned with the blow, and being recognized by 
some of the soldiers of Antigonus, was quickly 
dispatched. His head was cut off and carried 
to Antigonus, who turned away from the sight, 
and ordered the body to be interred with be- 
coming honors. Pyrrhus perished in 272, in the 
forty-sixth year of his age, and in the twenty- 
third of his reign. He was the greatest war- 
rior and one of the best princes of his time. 
With his daring courage, his military skill, and 
his kingly bearing, he might have become the 
most powerful monarch of his day if he had 
steadily pursued the immediate object before 
him. But he never rested satisfied with any 
acquisition, and was ever grasping at some fresh 
object: hence Antigonus compared him to a 
gambler, who made many good throws with 
the dice, but was unable to make the proper use 
of the game. Pyrrhus was regarded in subse- 
quent times as one of the greatest generals that 
had ever lived. Hannibal said that of all gen- 
erals Pyrrhus was the first, Scipio the second, 
and himself the third ; or, according to another 
version of the story, Alexander was the first, 
Pyrrhus the second, and himself the third. 
Pyrrhus wrote a work on the art of war, which 
was read in the time of Cicero; and his com- 
mentaries are quoted by both Dionysius and 



Plutarch. Pyrrhus married four wives : 1. An- 
tigone, the daughter of Berenice. 2. A daugh- 
ter of Audoleon, king of the Pa3onians. 3. Bir- 
cenna, a daughter of Bardylis, king of the 
Illyrians. 4. Lanassa, a daughter of Agatho- 
cles of Syracuse. His children were, 1. Ptol- 
emy, born 295 ; killed in battle, 272. 2. Alex- 
ander, who succeeded his father as king of 
Epirus. 3. Helenus. 4. Nereis, who married 
Gelon of Syracuse. 5. Olympias, who married 
her own brother Alexander. 6. Deidamia or 
Laodamia.— 3. II. King of Epirus, son of Alex- 
ander II. and Olympias, and grandson of Pyr- 
rhus I., was a child at the time of his father's 
death (between 262 and 258). During his mi- 
nority the kingdom was governed by his mother 
Olympias. According to one account, Olympias 
survived Pyrrhus, who died soon after he had 
grown up to manhood ; according to another 
account, Olympias had poisoned a maiden to 
whom Pyrrhus was attached, and was herself 
poisoned by him in revenge. 

Pythagoras (Uvdayopag). 1. A celebrated 
Greek philosopher, was a native of Samos, and 
the son of Mnesarchus, who was either a mer- 
chant, or, according to others, an engraver of 
signets. The date of his birth is uncertain, 
but all authorities agree that he nourished in 
the times of Polycrates and Tarquinius Superb- 
us (B.C. 540-510). He studied in his own 
country under Creophilus, Pherecydes of Syros, 
and others, and is said to have visited Egypt 
and many countries of the East for the purpose 
of acquiring knowledge. We have not much 
trustworthy evidence either as to the kind and 
amount of knowledge which he acquired, or as 
to his definite philosophical views. It is ce "'> 
tain, however, that he believed in the trans.. I a 
gration of souls ; and he is said to have p. 
tended that he had been Euphorbus, the son of 
Panthus, in the Trojan war, as well as various 
other characters. He is further said to have 
discovered the propositions that the triangle 
inscribed in a semicircle is right-angled, that 
the square on the hypotenuse of a right-angled 
triangle is equal to the sum of the squares on 
the sides. There is a celebrated story of his 
having discovered the arithmetical relations of 
the musical scale by observing accidentally the 
various sounds produced by hammers of differ- 
ent weights striking upon an anvil, and suspend- 
ing by strings weights equal to those of the 
different hammers. The retailers of the story, 
of course, never took the trouble to verify the 
experiment, or they would have discovered that 
different hammers do not produce different 
sounds from the same anvil, any more than dif- 
ferent clappers do from the same bell. Discov- 
eries in astronomy are also attributed to Pythag- 
oras. There can be little doubt that he paid 
great attention to arithmetic, and its applica- 
tion to weights, measures, and the theory of 
music. Apart from all direct testimony, how- 
ever, it may safely be affirmed, that the very 
remarkable influence exerted by Pythagoras, 
and even the fact that he was made the hero 
of so many marvellous stories, prove him to 
have been a man both of singular capabilities 
and of great acquirements. It may also be 
affirmed with safety that the religious element 
was the predominant one in the character of 

729 



PYTHAGORAS. 



PYTHAGORAS. 



Pythagoras, and that religious ascendency in ed. It is also stated that they had common 
connection with a certain mystic religious sys- 1 meals, resembling the Spartan syssitia, at which 
tem was the object which he chiefly labored to ' they met in companies of ten. Considerable 
secure. It was this religious element which importance seems to have been attached to 
made the profoundest impression upon his con- music and gymnastics in the daily exercises of 
temporaries. They regarded him as standing the disciples. Their whole discipline is repre- 
in a peculiarly close connection with the gods, sented as tending to produce a lofty serenity 
The Crotoniats even identified him with the : and self-possession, regarding the exhibition of 
Hyperborean Apollo. And without viewing which various anecdotes were current in anti- 
him as an impostor, we may easily believe that quity. Among the best ascertained features of 
he himself, to some extent, shared the same the brotherhood are the devoted attachment of 
views. He pretended to divination and proph- the members to each other, and their sovereign 
ecy ; and he appears as the revealer of a mode contempt for those who did not belong to their 
of life calculated to raise his disciples above the ranks. It appears that they had some secret 
level of mankind, and to recommend them to ! conventional symbols, by which members of 
the favor of the gods. Xo certainty can be ar- the fraternity could recognize each other, even 
rived at as to the length of time spent by Pythag- if they had never met before. Clubs similar to 
oras in Egypt or the East, or as to his resi- that at Crotona were established at Sybaris, 
dence and efforts in Samos or other Grecian Metapontum, Tarentum, and other cities of 
cities, before he settled at Crotona in Italy. He Magna Graecia. The institutions of Pythago- 
probably removed to Crotona because he found ras were certainly not intended to withdraw 
it impossible to realize his schemes in his na- those who adopted them from active exertion, 
tive country while under the tyranny of Poly- that they might devote themselves exclusively 
crates. The reason why he selected Crotona to religious and philosophical contemplations, 
as the sphere of his operations it is impossible He rather aimed at the production of a calm 
to ascertain ; but soon after his arrival in that bearing and elevated tone of character, through 
city he attained extensive influence, and gained which those trained in the discipline of the 
over great numbers to enter into his views. Pythagorean life should exhibit in their per- 
His adherents were chiefly of the noble and sonal and social capacities a reflection of the 
wealthy classes. Three hundred of these were order and harmony of the universe. Whether 
formed into a select brotherhood or club, bound he had any distinct political designs in the 
by a sort of vow to Pythagoras and each other, foundation of his brotherhood is doubtful ; but 
for the purpose of cultivating the religious and it was perfectly natural, even without any ex- 
ascetic observances enjoined by their master, press design on his part, that a club such as the 
and of studying his religious and philosophical Three Hundred of Crotona should gradually 
theories. Every thing that was done and taught come to mingle political with other objects, and, 
among the members was kept a profound secret by the facilities afforded by their secret and 
from ail without its pale. It was an old Pytha- compact organization, should speedily gain ex- 
gorean maxim, that every thing was not to be tensivepoliticalinfluer.ee. That this influence 
told to every body. There were also gradations should be decisively on the side of aristocracy 
amons the members themselves. In the ad- or oligarchy resulted naturally both from the 
mission of candidates Pythagoras is said to nature of the Pythagorean institutions, and from 
have placed great reliance on his physiognom- the rank and social position of the members of 
ical discernment. If admitted, they had to pass the brotherhood. Through them, of course, 
through a period of probation, in which their Pythagoras himself exercised a large amount 
powers of maintaining silence were especially of indirect influence over the affairs both of 
tested, as well as their general temper, dispo- Crotona and of other Italian cities. This Pyth- 
sition, and mental capacity. As regards the agorean brotherhood or order resembled in many 
nature of the esoteric instruction to which only respects the one founded by Loyola. It is easy 
the most approved members of the fraternity to understand how this aristocratical and ex- 
were admitted, some have supposed that it had elusive club would excite the jealousy and hos- 
reference to the political views of Pythagoras, tility not only of the democratical party in Cro- 
Others have maintained, with greater probabili- tona, but also of a considerable number of the 
ty. that it related mainly to the orgies, or secret opposite faction. The hatred which they had 
religious doctrines and usages, which undoubt- excited speedily led to their destruction. The 
edly formed a prominent feature in the Pytha- populace of Crotona rose against them ; and an 
gorean system, and were peculiarly connected attack was made upon them while assembled 
with the worship of Apollo. There were some either in the house of Milo. or in some other 
outward peculiarities of an ascetic kind in the place of meeting. The building was set on fire, 
mode of life to which the members of the broth- and many of the assembled members perished ; 
erhood were subjected. Some represent him only the younger and more active escaped, 
as forbidding all animal food ; but all the mem- Similar commotions ensued in the other cities 
hers can not have been subjected to this pro- of Magna Graecia in which Pythagorean clubs 
hibition, since the athletic Milo, for instance, had been formed. As an active and organized 
could not possibly have dispensed with animal brotherhood, the Pythagorean order was every 
food. According to some ancient authorities, where suppressed ; but the Pythagoreans still 
he allowed the use of all kinds of animal food continued to exist as a sect, the members of 
except the flesh of oxen used for ploughing, and which kept up among themselves their reli- 
rams. There is a similar discrepancy as to the gious observances and scientific pursuits, while 
prohibition of fish and beans. But temperance individuals, as in the case of Archytas, acquired 
of all kinds seems to have been strictlv enjoin- now and then great political influence. Re- 
730 



PYTHAGORAS. 



PYTHEAS. 



specting the fate of Pythagoras himself, the 
accounts varied. Some say that he perished 
in the temple with his disciples, others that 
he fled first to Tarentum, and that, being driven 
thence, he escaped to Metapontum, and there 
starved himself to death. His tomb was shown 
at Metapontum in the time of Cicero. Accord- 
ing to some accounts, Pythagoras married The- 
ano, a lady of Crotona, and had a daughter 
Damo, and a son Telauges, or, according to 
others, two daughters, Damo and Myia ; while 
other notices seem to imply that he had a 
wife and a daughter grown up when he came 
to Crotona. When we come to inquire what 
were the philosophical or religious opinions 
held by Pythagoras himself, we are met at 
the outset by The difficulty that even the au- 
thors from whom we have to draw possessed 
no authentic records bearing upon the age of 
Pythagoras himself. If Pythagoras ever wrote 
any thing, his writings perished with him, or 
not long after. The probability is that he wrote 
nothing. Every thing current under his name 
in antiquity was spurious. It is all but certain 
that Philolaus was the first who published the 
Pythagorean doctrines, at any rate in a written 
form. ( Vid. Philolaus.) Still there was so mark- 
ed a peculiarity running through the Pythago- 
rean philosophy, that there can be little question 
as to the germs of the system, at any rate, hav- 
ing been derived from Pythagoras himself. Py- 
thagoras resembled the philosophers of the Ionic 
school, who undertook to solve, by means of a 
single primordial principle, the vague problem 
of the origin and constitution of the universe as 
a whole. His predilection for mathematical 
studies led him to trace the origin of all things 
to number, his theory being suggested, or at all 
events confirmed, by the observation of various 
numerical relations, or analogies to them, in the 
phenomena of the universe. Musical principles 
likewise played almost as important a part in 
the Pythagorean system as mathematical or 
numerical ideas. We find running through the 
entire system the idea that order, or harmony 
of relation, is the regulating principle of the 
whole universe. The intervals between the 
heavenly bodies were supposed to be determ- 
ined according to the laws and relations of 
musical harmony. Hence arose the celebrated 
doctrine of the harmony of the spheres ; for 
the heavenly bodies, in their motion, could not 
but occasion a certain sound or note, depending 
on their distances and velocities ; and as these 
were determined by the laws of harmonical in- 
tervals, the notes altogether formed a regular 
musical scale or harmony. This harmony, how- 
ever, we do not hear, either because we have 
been accustomed to it from the first, and have 
never had an opportunity of contrasting it with 
stillness, or because the sound is so powerful as 
to exceed our capacities for hearing. The ethics 
of the Pythagoreans consisted more in ascetic 
practice, and maxims for the restraint of the 
passions, especially of anger, and the cultiva- 
tion of the power of endurance, than in scien- 
tific theory. What of the latter they had was, 
as might be expected, intimately connected with 
their number-theory. Happiness consisted in 
the science of the perfection of the virtues of 
the soul, or in the perfect science of numbers. 



I Likeness to the Deity was to be the object of 
I all our endeavors, man becoming better as he 
approaches the gods, who are the guardians and 
guides of men. Great importance was attached 
to the influence of music in controlling the force 
of the passions. Self-examination was strongly 
insisted on. The transmigration of souls was 
viewed apparently in the light of a process of 
purification. Souls under the dominion of sen- 
suality either passed into the bodies of animals, 
or, if incurable, were thrust down into Tartarus, 
to meet with expiation or condign punishment. 
The pure were exalted to higher modes of life, 
and at last attained to incorporeal existence. 
As regards the fruits of this system of training 
or belief, it is interesting to remark, that wher- 
ever we have notices of distinguished Pyth- 
agoreans, we usually hear of them as men of 
great uprightness, conscientiousness, and self- 
restraint, and as capable of devoted and endur- 
ing friendship. Vid. Archytas, Damon, and 
Phintias. — 2. Of Rhegium, one of the most cel- 
ebrated statuaries of Greece, probably flourished 
B.C. 480-430. His most important works ap- 
pear to have been his statues of athletes. 

Pytheas (Ilv&iac). 1- An Athenian orator, 
distinguished by his unceasing animosity against 
Demosthenes. He had no political principles, 
made no pretensions to honesty, and changed 
sides as often as suited his convenience or his 
interest. Of the part that he took in political 
j affairs only two or three facts are recorded. 

He opposed the honors which the Athenians 
| proposed to confer upon Alexander, but he aft- 
I erward espoused the interests of the Macedonian 
! party. He accused Demosthenes of having re- 
j ceived bribes from Harpalus. In the Lamian 
war, B.C. 322, he joined Antipater, and had thus 
I the satisfaction of surviving his great enemy 
| Demosthenes. He is said to have been the au- 
I thorof the well-known saying, that the orations 
j of Demosthenes smelt of the lamp. — 2. OfMas- 
I silia in Gaul, a celebrated Greek navigator, 
| who sailed to the western and northern parts 
of Europe, and wrote a work containing the re- 
I suits of his discoveries. He probably lived in 
I the time of Alexander the Great, or shortly aft- 
! erward. He appears to have undertaken voy- 
| ages, one in which he visited Britain and Thule, 
and of which he probably gave an account in his 
i work On the Ocean ; and a second, undertaken 
| after his return from his first voyage, in which 
i he coasted along the whole of Europe from Ga- 
j dira (now Cadiz) to the Tanais, and the descrip- 
i tion of which probably formed the subject of his 
j Pcriplus. Pytheas made Thule a six days' sail 
' from Britain, and said that the day and the 
i night were each six months long in Thule ; 
j hence some modern writers have supposed that 
he must have reached Iceland, while others 
I have maintained that he advanced as far as the 
j Shetland Islands. But either supposition is very 
< improbable, and neither is necessary ; for re- 
ports of the great length of the day and night 
in the northern parts of Europe had already 
j reached the Greeks, before the time of Pytheas. 
• There has been likewise much dispute as to 
| what river we are to understand by the Tanais. 
The most probable conjecture is that, upon reach- 
j ing the Elbe, Pytheas concluded that he had ar- 
! rived at the Tanais, separating Europe from 

731 



PYTHIAS. 



QUADRIFRONS. 



Asia. — 3. A silver-chaser, who flourished at 
Rome in the age immediately following that of 
Pompey, and whose productions commanded a 
remarkably high price. 

Pythias (ILvdtdc). 1. The sister or adopted 
daughter of Hermias, and the wife of Aristotle. 
— 2. Daughter of Aristotle and Pythias. 

Pythium (Uvdcov). 1. A place in Attica, not 
far from Eleusis. — 2. A town of Thessaly in the 
eastern part of the district Hestiaeotis, which, 
with Azorus and Doliche, formed a Tripolis. 

Pythius (UvOloc), a Lydian, the son of Atys, 
was a man of enormous wealth, which he de- 
rived from his gold mines in the neighborhood 
of Celaenae in Phrygia. When Xerxes arrived 
at Celaenag, Pythius banqueted him and his 
whole army. His five sons accompanied Xerx- 
es. Pythius, alarmed by an eclipse of the sun 
which happened, came to Xerxes, and begged 
that the eldest might be left behind. This re- 
quest so enraged the king that he had the young 
man immediately killed and cut in two, and the 
two portions of his body placed on either side 
of the road, and then ordered the army to march 
between them. 

[Pytho. Vid. Delphi.] 

Pythoclides (YlvdonAddnc), a celebrated mu- 
sician of the time of Pericles, was a native of 
Ceos, and flourished at Athens, under the pa- 
tronage of Pericles, whom he instructed in his 
art. 

Pythodoris (Uvdodup'ir), wife of Polemon I., 
king of Pontus. After the death of her husband 
she retained possession of the government. 
She subsequently married Archelaus, king of 
Cappadocia, but after his death (A.D. 17) re- 
turned to her own kingdom, of which she con- 
tinued to administer the affairs herself until her 
decease, which probably did not take place un- 
til A.D. 38. Of her two sons, the one, Zenon, 
became king of Armenia, while the other, Pole- 
mon, succeeded her on the throne of Pontus. 

Python (Uvduv). 1. The celebrated serpent, 
which was produced from the mud left on the 
earth after the deluge of Deucalion. He lived 
in the caves of Mount Parnassus, but was slain 
by Apollo, who founded the Pythian games in 
commemoration of his victory, and received in 
consequence the surname Pythius. — 2. Of Ca- 
tana, a dramatic poet of the time of Alexander, 
whom he accompanied into Asia, and whose 
army he entertained with a satyric drama when 
they were celebrating the Dionysia on the banks 
of the Hydaspes. The drama was in ridicule 
of Harpalus and the Athenians. [The frag- 
ments of Python are contained in Wagner's 
Trag. Grtzc. Fragm., p. 134-136, Paris, 1S46.] 

Pyxites (Uv^ltvc : now Vitzeh), a river of 
Pontus, falling into the Euxine near Trapezus. 

Pyxus. Vid. Buxentum. 

Q. 

Quadi, a powerful German people of the 
Suevic race, dwelt in the southeast of Ger- 
many, between Mount Gabreta, the Hercynian 
forest, the Sarmatian mountains, and the Dan- 
ube. They were bounded on the west by the 
Marcomanni, with whom they were always 
closely united, on the north by the Gothini and 
Osi, on the east by the Iazyges Metanastae, 
732 



from whom they were separated by the River 
Granuas (now Gran), and on the south by the 
Pannonians, from whom they were divided by 

I the Danube. They probably settled in this dis- 
trict at the same time as the Marcomanni made 
themselves masters of Bohemia (vid. Marco- 

I manni) ; but we have no account of the earlier 

! settlements of the Quadi. When Maroboduus, 
and shortly afterward his successor Catualda, 
had been expelled from their dominions and had 
taken refuge with the Romans in the reign of 
Tiberius, the Romans assigned to the barbari- 

j ans, who had accompanied these monarchs, and 

i who consisted chiefly of Marcomanni and Quadi, 

i the country between the Marus (now March? 

I Morava ? or Marosch ?) and Cusus (now Waag ?), 

| and gave to them as king Vannius, who be- 
longed to the Quadi. Vannius was expelled by 
his nephews Vangio and Sido, but this new 

; kingdom of the Quadi continued for a long time 
afterward under Roman protection. In the 
reign of M. Aurelius, however, the Quadi join- 
ed the Marcomanni and other German tribes in 
the long and bloody war against the empire, 

I which lasted during the greater part of that em- 
peror's reign. The independence of the Quadi 
and Marcomanni was secured by the peace 
which Commodus made with them in A.D. 180. 
Their name is especially memorable in the his- 

■ tory of this war by the victory which M. Aurel- 

' ius gained over them in 174, when his army 
was in great danger of being destroyed by the 
barbarians, and was said to have been saved by 
a sudden storm, which was attributed to the 
prayers of his Christian soldiers. (Vid. p. 131, 
b.) The Quadi disappear from history toward 
the end of the fourth century. They probably 
migrated with the Suevi further west. 

Quadrates, one of the Apostolic Fathers, and 
an early apologist for the Christian religion. 
He passed the early part of his life in Asia 
Minor, and was afterward bishop of the Church 

i at Athens. He presented his Apology to Ha- 
drian in the tenth year of his reign (A.D. 126). 
This apology has been long lost. 

Quadratus, Asinius, lived in the times of 
Philippus I. and II., emperors of Rome (A.D. 
244-249), and wrote two historical works in the 

! Greek language. 1. A history of Rome, in fif- 
teen books, in the Ionic dialect, called Xi?.ie77]- 

! p/f, because it related the history of the city, 
from its foundation to the thousandth year of 
its nativity (A.D. 248), when the Ludi Ssecu- 
lares were performed with extraordinary pomp. 

j 2. A history of Parthia. 

Quadratus, Fannius, a contemporary of 

| Horace, was one of those envious Roman poets 
who tried to depreciate Horace, because his 
writings threw their own into the shade. 
Quadratus, L. NmNiuSj tribune of the plebs 

I B.C. 58, distinguished himself by his opposition 

I to the measures of his colleague, P. Clodius, 

; against Cicero. 

Quadratus, Ummidius. 1. Governor of Syria 
during the latter end of the reign of Claudius, 

j and the commencement of the reign of Nero, 
from about A.D. 51 to 60. — 2. A friend and ad- 
mirer of the younger Pliny, whom he took as 

j his model in oratory. 

| Quadrifrons, a surname of Janus. It is said 
, that after the conquest of the Faliscans an im- 



WUADRIGARIUS, Q. CLAUDIUS. 



QUINTILIANUS, M. FABIUS. 



age of Janus was found with four foreheads. 
I Hence a temple of Janus Quadrifrons was after- 
i ward built in the Forum transitorium, which 
i had four gates. The fact of the god being rep- 
! resented with four heads is considered by the 
ancients to be an indication of his being the di- 
vinity presiding over the year with its four 
seasons. 

Quadrigarius, Q. Claudius, a Roman his- 
torian who flourished B.C. 100-78. His work, 
which contained at least twenty-three books, 
commenced immediately after the destruction 
of Rome by the Gauls, and must in all proba- 
bility have come down to the death of Sulla, 
since the seventh consulship of Marius was 
commemorated in the nineteenth book. By 
Livy he is uniformly referred to simply as Clau- 
dius or Clodtus. By other authors he is cited 
as Quinttus, as Claudius, as Q. Claudius, as 
Claudius Quadrigarius, or as Quadrigarius. 
From the caution evinced by Livy in making 
use of him as an authority, especially in mat- 
ters relating to numbers, it would appear that 
he was disposed to indulge, although in a less 
degree, in those exaggerations which disfigured 
the productions of his contemporary Valerius 
Antias. It is somewhat remarkable that he is 
nowhere noticed by Cicero. By A. Gellius, on 
the other hand, he is quoted repeatedly, and 
praised in the warmest terms. 

Quariates, a people in Gallia Narbonensis, 
on the western slope of the Alpes Cottiae, in the 
valley of Queiras. 

Quies, the personification of tranquillity, was 
worshipped as a divinity by the Romans. She 
had one sanctuary on the Via Lavicana, proba- 
bly a pleasant resting-place for the weary trav- 
eller, and another outside the Porta Collina. 

Quietus, Q. Luslus. i . An independent Moor- 
ish chief, served with distinction under Trajan 
both in the Dacian and Parthian wars. Trajan 
made him governor of Judaea, and raised him to 
the consulship in A.D. 116 or 117. AfterTrajan's 
death he returned to his native country, but he 
was suspected by Hadrian of fomenting the dis- 
turbances which then prevailed in Mauretania, 
and was shortly afterward put to death by order 
of Hadrian. — [2. C. Fulvius, included in the 
list of the thirty tyrants enumerated byTrebel- 
lius Pollio, was one of the two sons of that Ma- 
rianus who assumed the purple after the cap- 
ture of Valerian. Having charge of the east- 
ern provinces, when he heard of the defeat and 
death of his father and brother, he took refuge 
in Emesa, where he was besieged, captured, and 
slain by Odenathus in A.D. 262.] 

QuinitilIus Varus. Vid. Varus. 

Quintia, or Quinctia Gens, an ancient patri- 
cian gens at Rome, was one of the Alban houses 
removed to Rome by Tullus Hostilius, and en- 
rolled by him among the patricians. Its mem- 
bers often held, throughout the whole history of 
the republic, the highest offices of the state. 
Its three most distinguished families bore the 
names of Capitolinus, Cincinnatus, and Flamini- 
nus. 

[Quintianus Afranius, a senator of disso- 
lute life, had been ridiculed by Nero in a poem, 
and in revenge took part in Piso's conspiracy 
against that emperor. On the detection of the 
conspiracy, he had to put an end to his life.] 



I Quintilianus, M. Fabius, the most celebrated 
I of Roman rhetoricians, was born at Calagurris 
(now Calahorra), in Spain, A.D 40. If not reared 
at Rome, he must, at least, have completed his 
education there, for he himself informs us that, 
while yet a very young man, he attended the 
lectures of Domitius Afer, who died in 59. Hav- 
ing revisited Spain, he returned from thence 
(68) in the train of Galba, and forthwith began 
to practice at the bar, where he acquired con- 
siderable reputation. But he was chiefly dis- 
tinguished as a teacher of eloquence, bearing 
away the palm in this department from all his 
rivals, and associating his name, even to a prov- 
erb, with pre-eminence in the art. Among his 
pupils were numbered Piiny the younger and the 
two grand-nephews of Domitian. By this prince 
he was invested with the insignia and title of 
consul (consularia ornamcnta), and is, moreover, 
celebrated as the first public instructor who, in 
I virtue of the endowment by Vespasian, received 
I a regular salary from the imperial exchequer. 
| After having devoted twenty years, commenc- 
ing probably with 69, to the duties of his pro- 
fession, he retired into private life, and is sup- 
posed to have died about 118. The great work 
of Quintilian is a complete system of rhetoric 
in twelve books, entitled De Institutione Orato- 
ria Libri XII , or sometimes Institutiones Ora- 
tories, dedicated to his friend Marcellus Victo- 
rius, himself a celebrated orator, and a favorite 
at court. It was written during the reign of 
Domitian, while the author was discharging his 
duties as preceptor to the sons of the emperor's 
niece. In a short preface to his bookseller Try- 
pho, he acquaints us that he commenced this 
undertaking after he had retired from his labors 
as a public instructor (probably in 89), and that 
he finished his task in little more than two years. 
The first book contains a dissertation on the 
preliminary training requisite before a youth 
can enter directly upon the studies necessary 
to mould an accomplished orator, and presents 
us with a carefully- sketched outline of the meth- 
od to be pursued in educating children, from 
the time they leave the cradle until they pass 
from the hands of the grammarian. In the sec- 
ond book we find an exposition of the first prin- 
ciples of rhetoric, together with an investiga- 
tion into the nature or essence of the art. The 
five following are devoted to invention and 
arrangement (inventio, dispositio) ; the eighth, 
ninth, tenth, and eleventh, to composition (in- 
cluding the proper use of the figures of speech) 
and delivery, comprised under the general term 
elocutio ; and the last is occupied with what the 
author considers by far the most important por- 
tion of his project, an inquiry, namely, into va- 
rious circumstances not included in a course of 
scholastic discipline, but essential to the forma- 
tion of a perfect public speaker, such as his 
manners ; his moral character ; the principles 
by which he must be guided in undertaking, in 
preparing, and in conducting causes ; the pe- 
culiar style of eloquence which he may adopt 
with greatest advantage ; the collateral studies 
to be pursued ; the age at which it is most suit- 
able to commence pleading ; the necessity of 
retiring before the powers begin to fail ; and 
various other kindred topics. This production 
bears throughout the impress of a clear, sound 



QUINTILLUS, M. AURELIUS. 



RABATHMOBA. 



judgment, keen discrimination, and pure taste, 
improved by extensive reading, deep reflection, 
and long practice. The diction is highly polish- 
ed and very graceful. The sections which pos- 
sess the greatest interest for general readers are 
those chapters in the first book which relate to 
elementary education, and the commencement 
of the tenth book, which furnishes us with a 
compressed but spirited history of Greek and 
Roman literature. There are also extant one 
hundred and sixty-four declamations under the 
name of Quintilian, nineteen of considerable 
length ; the remaining one hundred and forty- 
five, which form the concluding portion only 
of a collection which originally extended to 
three hundred and eighty-eight pieces, are mere 
skeletons or fragments. No one believes these 
to be the genuine productions of Quintilian, and 
few suppose that they proceeded from any one 
individual. They apparently belong not only to 
different persons, but to different periods, and 
neither in style nor in substance do they offer 
any thing which is either attractive or useful. 
Some scholars suppose that the anonymous Di- 
alogus de Oratoribus, usually printed among the 
works of Tacitus, ought to be assigned to Quin- 
tilian. The best editions of Quintilian are by 
Burmann, 2 vols. 4to, Lug. Bat., 1720 ; by Ges- 
ner, 4to, Gott.,1738 ; and by Spalding and Zumpt, 
6 vols. 8 vo, Lips., 1798-1829. 

Quintillus, M. Aurelius, the brother of the 
Emperor M. Aurelius Claudius, was elevated to 
the throne by the troops whom he commanded 
at Aquileia in A.D. 270. But as the army at 
Sirmium, where Claudius died, had proclaimed 
Aurelian emperor, Quintillus put an end to his 
own life, seeing himself deserted by his own 
soldiers, to whom the rigor of his discipline had 
given offence. 

T. Quintius Capitolinus Barbatus, a cele- 
brated general in the early history of the repub- 
lic, and equally distinguished in the internal 
history of the state. He frequently acted as 
mediator between the patricians and plebeians, 
with both of whom he was held in the highest 
esteem. He was six times consul, namely, in 
B.C. 471, 468, 465, 446, 443, 439. Several of 
his descendants held the consulship, but none 
of these require mention except T. Quintius 
Pennus Capitolinus Crispinus, who was con- 
sul 208, and was defeated by Hannibal. 

Quintus, an eminent physician at Rome in 
the former half of the second century after 
Christ. He was so much superior to his med- 
ical colleagues that they grew jealous of his 
eminence, and formed a sort of coalition against 
him, and forced him to quit the city by charg- 
ing him with killing his patients. He died about 
A.D. 148. 

Quintus Curtius. Vid. Curtius. 

Quintus Smyrn^eus (KoivTog 2[/.vpvatoc), com- 
monly called Quintus Calaber, from the cir- 
cumstance that the first copy through which his 
poem became known was found in a convent at 
Otranto in Calabria. He was the author of an 
epic poem in fourteen books, entitled ra ped' 
OfiTjpov, or xapaXenr6/j.eva 'O/i^pu. Scarcely any- 
thing is known of his personal history ; but it 
appears most probable that he lived toward the 
end of the fourth century after Christ. The 
matters treated of in his poem are the events 
734 * 



of the Trojan war from the death of Hector to 
the return of the Greeks. In phraseology, sim- 
iles, and other technicalities, Quintus closely 
copied Homer. The materials for his poem he 
found in the works of the earlier poets of the 
epic cycle. But not a single poetical idea of 
his own seems ever to have inspired him. His 
gods and heroes are alike devoid of all charac- 
ter ; every thing like pathos or moral interest 
was quite beyond his powers. With respect to 
chronology, his poem is as punctual as a diary. 
His style, however, is clear, and marked on the 
whole by purity and good taste, without any 
bombast or exaggeration. There can be little 
doubt that his work is nothing more than an am- 
plification or remodelling of the poems of Arc- 
tinus and Lesches. He appears to have also 
made diligent use of Apollonius. The best edi- 
tion is by Tychsen, Strasburg, 1807 : [it is alio 
contained in the Poeta Epici Graci Minores, in 
Didot's Bibliotheca Graeca, Paris, 1840.] 

Qcjirinalis Mons. Vid. Roma. 

Quirinus, a Sabine word, perhaps derived 
from quiris, a lance or spear. It occurs first 
of all as the name of Romulus, after he had 
been raised to the rank of a divinity ; and the 
festival celebrated in his honor bore the name 
of Quirinalia. It is also used as a surname of 
Mars, Janus, and even of Augustus. 

Quirinus, P. Sulpicius, was a native of Lanu- 
vium, and of obscure origin, but was raised to 
the highest honors by Augustus. He was con- 
sul B.C. 12, and subsequently carried on war 
against some of the robber tribes dwelling in 
the mountains of Cilicia. In B.C. 1, Augus- 
tus appointed him to direct the counsels of his 
grandson C. Caesar, then in Armenia. Some 
years afterward, but not before A.D. 5, he was 
appointed governor of Syria, and while in thi? 
office he took a census of the Jewish people. 
This is the statement of Josephus, and appears 
to be at variance with that of Luke, who speaks 
as if the census or enrollment of Cyrenius (i. e., 
Quirinus) was made at the time of the birth of 
Christ. Quirinus had been married to Emilia 
Lepida, whom he divorced : but in A.D. 20, 
twenty years after the divorce, he brought an 
accusation against her. The conduct of Quiri- 
nus met with general disapprobation as harsh 
and revengeful. He died in A.D. 21, and was 
honored with a public funeral. 

Quiza (Kovi^a : now Giza, near Oran), a mu- 
nicipium on the coast of Mauretania Cassarien- 
sis, in Northern Africa, forty Roman miles west 
of Arsenaria. 

R. 

Raamses or Rameses (LXX. 'PapiEoa?)), a city 
I of Lower Egypt, built as a treasure city by the 
I captive Israelites under the oppression of the 
i Pharaoh "who knew not Joseph" (Exod., i., 
|ll), and usually identified with Heroopolis. 
| Rabathmoba {'Pa6a6/jLu6a, i. e., Rabbath-Moah 
. in the Old Testament ; also called Rabbab, Ar r 
Ar.-Moab, and afterward Areopolis : now Rab- 
bah), the ancient capital of the Moabites, lay in 
a fertile plain on the eastern side of the Dead 
Sea, and south of the River Arnon, in the dis- 
trict of Moabitis in Arabia Petraea, or, accord- 
ing to the latter division of the provinces, in 
Palaestina Tertia. 



RABBATAMANA. 



RAURACI. 



Rabbatamana {'VaCaTafiava, i. c, Rabbath- 
Ammon in tbe Old Testament ; ruins at Am- 
nion), the ancient capital of the Ammonites, lay 
in Peraea, on a southern tributary of the Jabbok, 
northeast of the Dead Sea. Ptolemy II. Phil- 
adelphus gave it the name of Philadelphia, and 
it long continued a nourishing and splendid city. 

Rabirius. 1. C, an aged senator, was ac- 
cused in B.C. 63, by T. Labienus, tribune of the 
plebs, of having put to death the tribune L.Ap- 
puleius Saturninus in 100, nearly forty years 
before. Vid. Saturninus. The accusation was 
set on foot at the instigation of Caesar, who 
judged it necessary to deter the senate from 
resorting to arms against the popular party. 
To make the warning still more striking, La- 
bienus did not proceed against him on the charge 
of majestas, but revived the old accusation of 
pcrducllio, which had been discontinued for some 
centuries, since persons found guilty of the lat- 
ter crime were given over to the public execu- 
tioner and hanged on the accursed tree. The 
Duumviri Perduellionis appointed to try Rabiri- 
us were C. Caesar himself and his relative L. 
Caesar. With such judges the result could not 
be doubtful ; Rabirius was forthwith condemned ; 
and the sentence of death would have been car- 
ried into effect, had he not availed himself of 
his right of appeal to the people in the comitia 
of the centuries. The case excited the great- 
est interest, since it was not simply the life or 
death of Rabirius, but the power and author- 
ity of the senate, which were at stake. Rabir- 
ius was defended by Cicero ; but the eloquence 
of his advocate was of no avail, and the people 
would have ratified the decision of the duum- 
virs, had not the meeting been broken up by 
the praetor Q. Metellus Celer, who removed 
the military flag which floated on the Janicu- 
lum. This was in accordance with an ancient 
custom, which was intended to prevent the 
Campus Martius from being surprised by an en- 
emy when the territory of Rome scarcely ex- 
tended beyond the boundaries of the city. — 2. 
C. Rabirius Postumus, was the son of the sis- 
ter of the preceding. He was born after the 
death of his father, whence his surname Pos- 
tumus; and he was adopted by his uncle, whence 
his name C. Rabirius. He had lent large sums 
of money to Ptolemy Auletes ; and after the res- 
toration of Ptolemy to his kingdom by means of 
Gabinius in B.C. 55, Rabirius repaired to Alex- 
andrea, and was invested by the king with the 
office of Diozcetcs, or chief treasurer. In this 
office he had to amass money both for himself 
and for Gabinius ; but his extortions were so 
terrible that Ptolemy had him apprehended, ei- 
ther to secure him against the wrath of the 
people, or to satisfy their indignation, lest they 
should drive him again from his kingdom. Ra- 
birius escaped from prison, probably through the 
connivance of the king, and returned to Rome. 
Here a trial awaited him. Gabinius had been 
sentenced to pay a heavy fine on account of his 
extortions in Egypt ; and as he was unable to 
pay this fine, a suit was instituted against Ra- 
birius, who was liable to make up the deficien- 
cy if it could be proved that he had received 
any of the money of which Gabinius had ille- 
gally become possessed. Rabirius was defend- 
ed by Cicero, and was probably condemned. He 



is mentioned at a later time (46) as serving 
under Caesar, who sent him from Africa into 
Sicily, in order to obtain provisions for his army. 
— 3. A Roman poet, who lived in the last years 
of the republic, and wrote a poem on the Civil 
Wars. A portion of this poem was found at 
Herculaneum, and was edited by Kreyssig, un- 
der the title " Carminis Lalini de hello Actia- 
co^s^Alcxandrino fragmenta" 4to, Schneeberg, 

Racilius, L., tribune of the plebs B.C. 56, 
and a warm friend of Cicero and of Lentulus 
Spinther. In the civil war Racilius espoused 
Caesar's party, and was with his army in Spain 
in 48. There he entered into the conspiracy 
formed against the life of Q. Cassius Longinus, 
the governor of that province, and was put to 
death, with the other conspirators, by Longinus. 

Radagaisus, a Scythian, invaded Italy at the 
head of a formidable host of barbarians in the 
reign of the Emperor Honorius. He was de- 
feated by Stilicho, near Florence, in A.D. 408, 
and was put to death after the battle, although 
he had capitulated on condition that his life 
should be saved. 

[R;eti (more correct than Rhaeti). Vid. 
Rh^tia.] 

Rama or Arimath^ea ( 'Pa/zu, 'Apifiadala : 
now Er-Ram), a town of Judaea, north of Jeru- 
salem, in the mountains of Ephraim, frequently 
mentioned both in the Old and New Testament. 

Rambacia ('Pafj.6anla\ the chief city of the 
Oritae, on the coast of Gedrosia, colonized by 
Alexander the Great. 

Ramitha. Vid. Laodicea, No. 3. 

Ramses, the name of many kings of Egypt of 
the eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth dy- 
nasties. It was during this era that most of 
the great monuments of Egypt were erected, 
and the name is consequently of frequent occur- 
rence on these monuments, where it appears 
under the form of Ramessu. In Julius Africa- 
nus and Eusebius it is written Ramses, Rame- 
ses, or Ramesses. The most celebrated of the 
kings of this name is, however, usually called Se- 
sostris by the Greek writers. Vid. Sesostris. 

Raphana or Raphane^e ('Pafyaviai : ruins at 
Rafaniat), a city of Syria, in the district of Cas- 
siotis, at the northern extremity of Lebanon. 

Raphia or Raphea ('Pa<bla, 'Pdcpeia : now Re- 
pha), a sea-port town in the extreme southwest 
of Palestine, beyond Gaza, on the edge of the 
desert. Having been destroyed in some man- 
ner unknown to us, it was restored by Gabini- 
us. — [At this place Ptolemy Philopator gained 
a decisive victory over Antiochus the Great. 
Vid. Ptolemy.] 

[Rapo, a Rutilian warrior in the army of 
Turnus, slew Parthenius.] 

Rasen^e. Vid. Etruria. 

Ratiaria (now Arzer Palanka), an important 
town in Mcesia Superior, on the Danube, the 
head-quarters of a Roman legion, and the sta- 
tion of one of the Roman fleets on the Danube. 

Ratomagus or Rotomagus (now 7 Rouen), the 
chief town of the Vellocasses in Gallia Lugdu- 
nensis. 

Raudii Campi. Vid. Campi Raudii.' 

Rauraci, a people in Gallia Belgica, bounded 
on the south by the Helvetii, on the west by 
the Sequani, on the north by the Tribocci, and 

735 



RAURANUM. 



REGILLUS LACUS. 



on the* east by the Rhine. They must have i 
been a people of considerable importance, as I 
twenty-three thousand of them are said to have j 
emigrated with the Helvetii in B.C. 58, and they : 
possessed several towns, of which the most im- j 
portant were Augusta (now Angst) and Basilia j 
(now Basle or Bale). 

Rauranum (now Rom or Raum, near Chenay), I 
a town of the Pictones in Gallia Aquitanica, j 
south of Limonum. 

Rausium or Rausia (now Ragusa), a town on 
the coast of Dalmatia, is not mentioned till a i 
late period, and only rose into importance after 
the destruction of Epidaurus. 

Ravenna (Ravennas, -atis : now Ravenna), j 
an important town in Gallia Cisalpina, on the 
River Bedesis, and about a mile from the sea, 
though it is now about five miles in the interior, 
in consequence of the sea having receded all j 
along this coast. Ravenna was situated in the j 
midst of marshes, and was only accessible in 
one direction by land, probably by the road lead- 
ing from Ariminum. The town laid claim to a 
high antiquity. It was said to have been found- 
ed by Thessalians (Pelasgians), and afterward 
to have passed into the hands of the Umbrians, 
but it long remained an insignificant place, and 
its greatness does not begin till the time of the 
empire, when August us made it one of the two 
chief stations of the Roman fleet. This em- 
peror not only enlarged the town, but caused a 
large harbor to be constructed on the coast, 
capable of containing two hundred and forty 
triremes, and he connected this harbor with the 
Po by means of a canal called Padusa or Au- 
gusta Fossa. This harbor was called Classes, 
and between it and Ravenna a new town sprung 
up, to which the name of Casarea was given. 
All three were subsequently formed into one 
town, and were surrounded by strong fortifica- 
tions. Ravenna thus suddenly became one of 
the most important places in the north of Italy. 
The town itself, however, was mean in appear- 
ance. In consequence of the marshy nature of 
the soil, most of the bouses were built of wood, 
and since an arm of the canal was carried 
through some of the principal streets, the com- 
munication was carried on to a great extent by 
gondolas, as in modern Venice. The town, also, 
was very deficient in a supply of good drinking- 
water ; but it was not considered unhealthy, 
since the canals drained the marshes to a great 
extent, and the ebb and flow of the tide pre- 
vented the waters from stagnating. In the 
neighborhood good wine was grown, notwith- 
standing the marshy nature of the soil. When 
the Roman empire was threatened by the bar- 
barians, the emperors of the West took up their 
residence at Ravenna, which, on account of its 
situation and its fortifications, was regarded as 
impregnable. After the downfall of the West- 
ern empire, Theodoric also made it the capital 
of his kingdom ; and after the overthrow of the 
Gothic dominion by Narses, it became the resi- ! 
dence of the exarchs or the governors of the 
Byzantine empire in Italy till the Lombards 
took the town, A.D. 752. The modern Ravenna 
stands on the site of the ancient town ; the I 
village Porto di Fuori on the site of Caesarea ; I 
and the ancient harbor is called Porto Vecchio 
del Caudia.no. I 
736 



Reate ( Reatlnus : now Rieti ), an ancient 
town of the Sabines in Central Italy, said to 
have been founded by the Aborigines or Pelas- 
gians, was situated on the Lacus Velinus and 
the Via Salaria. It was the chief place of as- 
sembly for the Sabines, and was subsequently 
a praefectura or a municipium. The valley in 
which Reate was situated was so beautiful that 
it received the name of Tempe ; and in its 
neighborhood is the celebrated waterfall, which 
is now known under the name of the fall of 
Terni or the Cascade delle Marmore. This 
waterfall owed its origin to a canal constructed 
by M'. Curius Dentatus, in order to carry off 
the superfluous waters from the Lake Velinus 
into the River Nar. It falls into this river from 
a height of one hundred and forty feet. By this 
undertaking, the Reatini gained a large quan- 
tity of land, which was called Rosea Rura. 
Reate was celebrated for its mules and asses. 

Rebilus, C. Caninius, one of Caesar's legates 
in Gaul and in the civil war. On the last day 
of December in B.C. 45, on the sudden death 
of the consul Q. Fabius Maximus, Caesar made 
Rebilus consul for the few remaining hours of 
the day. 

Rediculus, a Roman divinity, who had a tem- 
ple near the Porta Capena, and who was believ- 
ed to have received his name from having in- 
duced Hannibal, when he was near the gates of j 
the city, to return (redire) southward. A place 
on the Appian road, near the second mile-stone 
from the city, was called Campus Rediculi. 
This divinity was probably one of the Lares of 
the city of Rome. 

Redones, a people in the interior of Gallia 
Lugdunensis, whose chief town was Condate 
(now Rennes). 

Redux, i. e., " the divinity who leads the trav- 
eller back to his home in safety," occurs as a 
surname of Fortuna. 

Regalianus, Regallianus, or Regilliancs, 
a Dacian, who served with distinction under the 
emperors Claudius and Valerian. The Mce- 
sians, terrified by the cruelties inflicted by Gal- 
lienus on those who had taken part in the re- 
bellion of Ingenuus, suddenly proclaimed Regali- 
anus emperor, and quickly, with the consent of 
the soldiers, in a new fit of alarm, put him to 
death, A D 263. Hence heis enumerated among 
the thirty tyrants. 

Regiana (now Villa de Rayna), a town in His- 
pania Baetica, on the road from Hispalis to 
Emerita. 

Regillum, a small place in the Sabine terri- 
tory, from which Appius Claudius migrated to 
Rome. Its site is uncertain, as it disappeared 
at an early period. 

Regillus, ^EmIlius. 1. M., had been declar- 
ed consul, with T. Otacilius, for B.C. 214, by 
the centuria praerogativa, and would have been 
elected had not Q. Fabius Maximus, who pre- 
sided at the comitia, pointed out that there was 
need of generals of more experience to cope 
with Hannibal. Regillus died in 205, at which 
time he is spoken of as Flamen Martialis. — 2. 
L., son of the preceding, was praetor 190, when 
he received the command of the fleet in the war 
against Antiochus. 

Regillus Lacus, a lake in Latium, memo- 
rable for the victory gained on its banks by the 



REGINUM. 

Romans over the Latins, B.C. 498. It was east 
of Rome, in the territory of Tusculum, and be- 
tween Lavicum and Gabii ; but it can not be 
identified with certainty with any modern lake. 
It perhaps occupied the site of the valley of 
Isidoro, which is now dry. 

Reginum or Castra Regina (now Regens- 
burg), a Roman fortress in Vindelicia, on the 
Danube, and on the road leading to Vindobona, 
was the head quarters of a Roman legion. 
Regium Flumen. Vid. Naarmalcha. 
Regium Lepidi, Regium LepIoum, or simply 
Regium, also Forum Lepidi (Regienses a Le- 
pido : now Reggio), a town of the Boii in Gallia 
Cisalpina, between Mutina and Tarentum, which 
was probably made a colony by the consul M. 
J^milius Lepidus, when he constructed the 
^Emilia Via through Cisalpine Gaul, though we 
have no record of the foundation of the colony. 

Regulus, M. Aquilius, was one of the dela- 
tores or informers in the time of Nero, and thus 
rose from poverty to great wealth. Under Do- 
mitian he resumed his old trade, and became 
one of the instruments of that tyrant's cruelty. 
He survived Domitian, and is frequently spoken 
of by Pliny with the greatest detestation and 
contempt. Martial, on the contrary, who flat- 
tered all the creatures of Domitian, celebrates 
the virtues, the wisdom, and the eloquence of 
Regulus. 

Regulus, Atilius. 1. M , consul B.C. 335, 
carried on war against the Sidicini. — 2. M., con- 
sul 294, carried on war against the Samnites. — 
3. M., consul 267, conquered the Sallentini, took 
the town of Brundisium, and obtained, in con- 
sequence, the honor of a triumph. In 256 he 
was consul a second time with L. Manlius Vulso 
Longus. The two consuls defeated the Cartha- 
ginian fleet, and afterward landed in Africa with 
a large force. They met with great and strik- 
ing success ; and after Manlius returned to 
Rome with half of the army, Regulus remained 
in Africa with the other half, and prosecuted 
the war with the utmost vigor. The Cartha- 
ginian generals Hasdrubal, Bostar, and Hamil- 
car avoided the plains, where their cavalry and 
elephants would have given them an advantage 
over the Roman army, and withdrew into the 
mountains. There they were attacked by Reg- 
ulus, and defeated with great losrs ; fifteen thou- 
sand men are said to have been killed in battle, 
and five thousand men, with eighteen elephants, 
to have been taken. The Carthaginian troops 
retired within the walls of the city, and Regu- 
lus now overran the country without opposition. 
Numerous towns fell into the power of the Ro- 
mans, and among others Tunis, at the distance 
of only twenty miles from the capital. The 
Carthaginians, in despair, sent a herald to Reg- 
ulus to solicit peace. But the Roman general 
would only grant it on such intolerable terms 
that the Carthaginians resolved to continue the 
war and hold out to the last. In the midst of 
their distress and alarm, success came to them 
from an unexpected quarter. Among the Greek 
mercenaries who had lately arrived atCarthage 
was a Lacedaemonian of the name of Xanthip- 
pus. He pointed out to the Carthaginians that 
their defeat was owing to the incompetency of 
their generals, and not to the superiority of the 
Roman arms ; and he inspired such confidence 
47 



REGULUS. 

in the people that he was forthwith placed at 
the head of their troops. Relying on his four 
thousand cavalry and one hundred elephants, 
Xanthippus boldly marched into the open coun- 
try to meet the enemy. In the battle which en- 
sued, Regulus was totally defeated ; thirty thou- 
sand of his men were slain ; scarcely two thou- 
sand escaped to Clypea ; and Regulus himself 
was taken prisoner, with five hundred more 
(B.C. 255). Regulus remained in captivity for 
the next five years, till 250, when the Cartha- 
ginians, after their defeat by the proconsul Me- 
tellus, sent an embassy to Rome to solicit peace, 
or at least an exchange of prisoners. They al- 
lowed Regulus to accompany the ambassadors 
on the promise that he would return to Carthage 
if their proposals were declined, thinking that he 
would persuade his countrymen to agree to an 
exchange of prisoners in order to obtain his own 
liberty. This embassy of Regulus is one of the 
most celebrated stories in Roman history. The 
orators and poets related how Pvegulus at first 
refused to enter the city as a slave of the Car- 
thaginians ; how afterward he would not give 
his opinion in the senate, as he had ceased by 
his captivity to be a member of that illustrious 
body ; how, at length, when he was allowed by 
the Romans to speak, he endeavored to dissuade 
the seriate from assenting to a peace, or even 
to an exchange of prisoners ; and when he saw 
them wavering, from their desire of redeeming 
him from captivity, how he told them that the 
Carthaginians had given him a slow poison, 
which would soon terminate his life ; and how, 
finally, when the senate, through his influence, 
refused the offers of the Carthaginians, he 
firmly resisted all the persuasions of his friends 
to remain in Rome, and returned to Carthage, 
where a martyr's death awaited him. On his 
arrival at Carthage he is said to have been put 
to death with the most excruciating tortures. 
It was related that he was placed in a chest 
covered over in the inside with iron nails, and 
thus perished ; and other writers stated, in ad- 
dition, that after his eyelids had been cut off", 
he was first thrown into a dark dungeon, and 
then suddenly exposed to the full rays of a 
burning sun. When the news of the barbarous 
death of Regulus reached Rome, the senate is 
said to have given Hamilcar and Bostar, two 
of the noblest Carthaginian prisoners, to the 
family of Regulus, who revenged themselves 
by putting them to death with cruel torments. 
This celebrated tale, however, has not been al- 
lowed to pass without question in modern times. 
Many writers supposed that it was invented in 
order to excuse the cruelties perpetrated by the 
family of Regulus on the Carthaginian prison- 
ers committed to their custody. Regulus was 
one of the favorite characters of early Roman 
story. Not only was he celebrated on account 
of his heroism in giving the senate advice which 
secured him a martyr's death, but also on ac- 
count of his frugality and simplicity of life. 
Like Fabricius and Curius, he lived on his he- 
reditary farm, which he cultivated with his own 
hands; and subsequent ages loved to tell how- 
he petitioned the senate for his recall from 
Africa when he was in the full career of vic- 
tory, as his farm was going to ruin in his ab- 
sence, and his family was suffering from want. 

737 



REII APOLLINARES. 



RH.ETIA. 



4. C., surnaraed Serranus, consul 257, when 

he defeated the Carthaginian fleet off the Li- 
paraean islands, and obtained possession of the 
islands of Lipara and Melite. He was consul 
a second time in 250 with L. Manlius Vulso. 
The two consuls undertook the siege of Lily- 
haeum ; but they were foiled in their attempts 
to carry the place by storm, and after losing a 
great number of men, were obliged to turn the 
siege into a blockade. This Regulus is the first 
Atilius who bears the surname Serranus, which 
afterward became the name of a distinct family 
in the gens. The origin of this name is spoken 
of under Serranus. — 5. M., son of No. 3, was 
consul 227, and again 217, in the latter of which 
years he was elected to supply the place of C. 
Flaminius, who had fallen in the battle of the 
Trasimene Lake. He was censor in 214. — 6. 
C, consul 225, conquered the Sardinians, who 
had revolted. On his return to Italy he fought 
against the Gauls, and fell in the battle. 

Reii Apollinares (now Riez), a Roman col- 
ony in Gallia Narbonensis, with the surname 
Julia Augusta, east of the River Druentia. north 
of Forum Voconii, and northwest of Forum 
Julii. 

RemesiIna orRoMEsilNA (now Must a pha Pa- 
lanka), a town in Mcesia Superior, between Nai- 
sus and Serdica. 

Remi or Rhemi, one of the most powerful 
people in Gallia Belgica, inhabited the country- 
through which the Axona flowed, and were 
bounded on the south by the Nervii, on the 
southeast by the Veromandui, on the east by 
the Suessiones and Bellovaci, and on the west 
by the Nervii. They formed an alliance with 
Caesar when the rest of the Belgae made war 
against him, B.C. 57. Their chief town was 
Durocortorum, afterward called Remi (now T 
Rheims). 

Remmius Pae^mon. Vid. Pal^emon. 

Remus. Vid. Romclus. 

[Repentinus, Calpcrnius, a centurion in the 
army in Germany, was put to death on account 
of his fidelity to the Emperor Galba, A.D. 69.] 

Resaina, Res^ena, Resina (PeaaLva, 'Peatva : 
now Ras-el-Ain), a city of Mesopotamia, near 
the sources of the Chaboras, on the road from 
Carrae to Nisibis. After its restoration and for- 
tification by Theodosius, it was called Treodo- 
siopolis (Q£o6oclovtto?uc). Whether it is the 
same as theResen of the Old Testament (Gen., 
x., 12) seems very doubtful. 

Restio, Antics. 1. The author of a sump- 
tuary law of uncertain date, but passed after 
the sumptuary law of the consul .Emilius Le- 
pidus, B.C. 78, and before the one of Caesar. — 
2. Probably a son of the preceding, proscribed 
by the triumvirs in 43, but preserved by the 
fidelity of a slave. 

[Retina (now Resina, east of Portici), a vil- 
lage on the coast of Campania, not far from 
Promontorium Misenum] 

[Retovium (now Retorbio), a place in the in- 
terior of Liguria] 

Reudigni, a people in the north of Germany, 
on the right bank of the Albis, north of the 
Langobardi. 

Rex, Marcius. 1. Q., praetor B.C. 144, built 
the aqueduct called Aqua Marcia, which was 
one of the most important at Rome. Vid. Roma, 
739 



| XIV., p. 753.-2. Q., consul 118, founded in this 
year the colony of Xarbo Martius in Gaul, and 
i carried on war against the Stoeni, a Ligurian 
j people at the foot of the Alps. — 3. Q., consul 
| 68, and proconsul in Cilicia in the following 
i year. On his return to Rome in 66 he sued for 
] a triumph, but as obstacles were thrown in the 
way by certain parties, he remained outside the 
• city to prosecute his claims, and was still there 
j when the Catilinarian conspiracy broke out in 
I 63. The senate sent him to Faesulae to watch 
I the movements of C. Mallius or Manlius, Cati- 
! line's general. [Manlius sent proposals of peace 
I to Marcius, but the latter refused to listen to his 
j terms unless he consented to lay doum his arms. 
| Marcius Rex married the eldest sister of Clo- 
dius. He died before B.C. 61, without leaving 
his brother-in-law the inheritance he had ex- 
pected.] 

Rha (To : now Volga), a great river of Asia, 
first mentioned by Ptolemy, who describes it as 
rising in the north of Sarmatia, in two branches, 
Rha Occidentalis and Rha Orientalis (now the 
Volga and the Kama), after the junction of 
! which it flowed southwest, forming the bound- 
ary between Sarmatia Asiatica and" Scythia, till 
near the Tanais (now Don), where it suddenly 
turns to the southeast, and falls into the north- 
western part of the Caspian. 

Rhadamanthcs ('Padd/iavdoc), son of Jupiter 
(Zeus) and Europa, and brother of King Minos 
of Crete. From fear of his brother he fled to 
Ocalea in Bceotia, and there married Alcmene 
; In consequence of his justice throughout life, 
he became, after his death, one of the judges 
in the low r er world. 

Rhaetia, a Roman province south of the 
Danube, was originally distinct from Vindelicia, 
and was bounded on the west by the Helvetii, 
I on the east by Noricum, on the north by Vin- 
! delicia, and on the south by Cisalpine Gaul, thus 
\ corresponding to the Grisons in Switzerland, 
and to the greater part of the Tyrol. Toward 
the end of the first century, however, Vindelicia 
was added to the province of Rhaetia, whence 
Tacitus speaks of Augusta Vindelicorum as 
situated in Rhaetia. At a later time Rhaetia 
was subdivided into two provinces, Rhatia Pri- 
ma and Rhatia Secunda, the former of which an- 
swered to the old province of Rhaetia, and the 
latter to that of Vindelicia. The boundaries 
between the two provinces are not accurately 
\ defined, but it may be stated in general that 
they were separated from each other by the 
Brigantinus Lacus (now T Lake of Constance) and 
the River CEnus (now Inn). Vindelicia is 
spoken of in a separate article. Vid. Vindeli- 
cia. R.haetia was a very mountainous country, 
since the main chain of the Alps ran through 
I the greater part of the province. These mount- 
ains were called Alpes Rhaeticae, and extended 
from the Saint Gothard to the Ortclcr by the 
pass by the Stehio ; and in them rose the 
CEnus (now Lm) and most of the chief rivers 
in the north of Italy, such as the Athesis (now 
Adige), and the Addua (now Adda). The val- 
leys produced corn and excellent wine, the latter 
of which was much esteemed in Italy. Augns- 
! tus drank Rhaetian wine in preference to all 
\ others. The original inhabitants of the country, 
i the Rh^ti, are said by most ancient writers to- 



RHACOTIS. 



RHEA. 



have been Tuscans, who were driven out of the 
north of Italy by the invasion of the Celts, and 
who took refuge in this mountainous district 
under a leader called Rhwtus. Many modern 
writers suppose the Rhaeti and the Etruscans to 
have been the same people, only they invert the 
ancient tradition, and believe that the Rhaeti 
descended from their original abodes on the 
Alps, and settled first in the north of Italy and 
next in the country afterward called Etruria. 
They support this view by the fact that the 
Etruscans were called in their own language 
Rasena, which seems merely another form of 
Rhaeti, as well as by other arguments, into 
which it is unnecessary to enter in this place. 
It is impossible to arrive at any certain conclu- 
sion respecting the original population of the 
country. In the time of the Romans the coun- 
try was inhabited by various Celtic tribes. The 
Rhaeti are first mentioned by Polybius. They 
were a brave and warlike people, and caused 
the Romans much trouble by their marauding 
incursions into Gaul and the north of Italy. 
They were not subdued by the Romans till the 
reign of Augustus, and they offered a brave and 
desperate resistance against both Drusus and 
Tiberius, who finally conquered them. Rheetia 
was then formed into a Roman province, to 
which Vindelicia was afterward added, as has 
been already stated. The victories of Drusus 
and Tiberius were celebrated by Horace ( Carrn. 
iv., 14). The Rhaeti were divided into several 
tribes, such as the Lepontii, Vennones, Tri- 
dentini, &c. The only town in Rhaetia of any 
importance was Tridentinum (now Trent). 

[Rhacotis ('Panting), a village of Lower 
Egypt, afterward included in the city Alexan- 
dra. ] 

Rhag^e ('Pay at, 'Pay a, 'Payetd : 'Payrjvoc : 
ruins at Rai, southeast of Tehran), the greatest 
city of Media, lay in the extreme north of Great 
Media, at the southern foot of the mountains 
(Caspius Mons) which border the southern 
shores of the Caspian Sea, and on the western 
side of the great pass through those mountains 
called the Caspise Pylae. It was therefore the 
key of Media toward Parthia and Hyrcania. 
Having been destroyed by an earthquake, it was 
restored by Seleucus Nicator, and named Euro- 
pus (EvpuTTog). In the Parthian wars it was 
again destroyed, but it was rebuilt by Arsaces, 
and called Arsacia ('ApaaKta). In the Middle 
Ages it was still a great city under its original 
name, slightly altered (Rai) ; and it was finally 
destroyed by the Tartars in the twelfth century. 
The surrounding district, which was a rugged 
volcanic region, subject to frequent earthquakes, 
was called 'Paytavt). 

Rhamnus ('Pa/ivovg, -ovvrog : 'Pa/uvovciog : 
now Obrio Kastro), a demus in Attica, belonging 
to the tribe ^Eantis, which derived its name 
from the rhamnus, a kind of prickly shrub. 
(Papvovc is an adjective, a contraction of (yafi- 
voeig, which comes from fiu/xvog). Rhamnus 
was situated on a small rocky peninsula on the 
eastern coast of Attica, sixty stadia from Mar- 
athon. It possessed a celebrated temple of 
Nemesis, who is hence called by the Latin poets 
Rhamnusia dea or virgo. In this temple there 
was a colossal statue of the goddess made by 
Agoracritus, the disciple of Phidias. Another 



account, but less trustworthy, relates that ttie 
statue was the work of Phidias, and was made 
out of the block of Parian marble which the 
Persians brought with them for the purpose of 
setting up a trophy, when they were defeated 
at Marathon. There are still remains of this 
temple, as well as of a smaller one to the same 
goddess. 

[Ramphias {'PapQiaf), a Lacedemonian, father 
of Clearchud, was one of the three ambassadors 
who were sent to Athens in B.C. 432 with the 
final demand of Sparta for the independence of 
all the Greek states. The demand was refused, 
and the Peloponnesian war ensued. In B.C. 
422, Ramphias, with two colleagues, command- 
ed a force of nine hundred men, intended for 
the strengthening of Brasidas in Thrace; but 
their passage through Thessaly was opposed by 
the Thessalians, and, hearing also of the battle 
of Amphipolis and the death of Brasidas, they 
returned to Sparta.] 

Rhampsinitus ('Vafnj)LviToc), one of the an- 
cient kings of Egypt, succeeded Proteus, and 
was succeeded by Cheops. This king is said 
to have possessed immense wealth ; and in or- 
der to keep it safe, he had a treasury built of 
stone, respecting the robbery of which Herodo- 
tus (ii., 121) relates a romantic story, which 
bears a great resemblance to the one told about 
the treasury built by the two brothers Agame- 
des and Trophonius of Orchomenus. Vid. Aga- 
medes. Rhampsinitus belongs to the twentieth 
dynasty, and is known in inscriptions by the 
name of Ramessu Neter-kek-pen. 

Rhapta (ra 'Panra), the southernmost sea- 
port known to the ancients, the capital of the 
district of Barbaria or Azania, on the eastern 
coast of Africa. It stood on a river called 
Rhaptus (now Doara), and near a promontory 
called Rhaptum (now Formosa), and the people 
of the district were called 'Pdiptot Aidtorreg. 

[Rhathines ('PadiV7]c), a Persian, was one of 
the commanders sent by Pharnabazus to aid the 
Bithynians in opposing the passage of the Cy- 
rean Greeks under Xenophon through Bithynia, 
B.C. 400. The satrap's forces were completely 
defeated. We hear again of Rhathines in B.C. 
396, as one of the commanders for Pharnabazus 
of a body of cavalry, which worsted that of 
Agesilaus in a skirmish near Dascylium.] 

Rhea (Ted, Epic and Ion. 'Peta, 'Pein, or 'Pen), 
an ancient Greek goddess, appears to have been 
a goddess of the earth. She is represented as 
a daughter of Uranus (Ccelus) and Ge (Terra), 
and the wife of Cronos (Saturn), by whom she 
became the mother of Hestia (Vesta), Demeter 
(Ceres), Hera (Juno), Hades (Pluto), Poseidon 
(Neptune), and Zeus (Jupiter). Cronos devour- 
ed all his children by Rhea, but when she was 
on the point of giving birth to Zeus (Jupiter), 
she went to Lyctus in Crete, by the advice of 
her parents. When Zeus (Jupiter) was born, 
she gave to Cronos (Saturn) a stone wrapped 
up like an infant, which the god swallowed, sup- 
posing it to be his child. Crete was undoubt- 
edly the earliest seat of the worship of Rhea, 
though many other parts of Greece laid claim 
to the honor of being the birth-place of Zeus 
(Jupiter). Rhea was afterward identified by the 
Greeks in Asia Minor with the great Asiatic 
goddess, known under the name of "the Great 

739 



RHEA SILVIA. 



RHENEA. 



Mother,"' or the Mother of the uods," and also 
hearing other names, such as Cybele, Agdistis, 
Dindymene, &c. Hence her worship became 
of a wild and enthusiastic character, and vari- 
ous Eastern rites were added to it, which soon 
spread throughout the whole of Greece. From 
the orgiastic nature of these rites, her worship 
became closely connected with that of Diony- 
sus (Bacchus). Under the name of Cybele her 
worship was universal in Phrygia. Under the 
name of Agdistis, she was worshipped with 
great solemnity at Pessinus in Galatia, which 
town was regarded as the principal seat of her 
worship. Under different names we might trace 
the worship of Rhea even much further east, 
as far as the Euphrates and even Bactriana. 
She was, in fact, the great goddess of the East- 
ern world, and we find her worshipped there 
under a variety of forms and names. As re- 
gards the Romans, they had from the earliest 
times worshipped Jupiter and his mother Ops. 
the wife of Saturn. During the war with Han- 
nibal the Romans fetched the image of the 
Mother of the Gods from Pessinus ; but the 
worship then introduced was quite new to them, 
and either maintained itself as distinct from the 
worship of Ops, or became united with it. A 
temple was built to her on the Palatine, and the 
Roman matrons honored her with the festival 
of the Megalesia. In all European countries 
Rhea was conceived to be accompanied by the 
Curetes, who are inseparably connected with 
the birth and bringing up of Jupiter (Zeus) in 
Crete, and in Phrygia by the Corybantes, Atys, 
and Agdistis. The Corybantes were her en- 
thusiastic priests, who with drums, cymbals, 
horns, and in full armor, performed their orgi- 
astic dances in the forests and on the mount- 
ains of Phrygia. In Rome the Galli were her 
priests. The lion was sacred to her. In works 
of art she is usually represented seated on a 
throne, adorned with the mural crown, from 
which a veil hangs down. Lions appear crouch- 
ing on the right and left of her throne, and some- 
times she is seen riding in a chariot drawn by 
lions. 

Rhea Silvia. Vid. Romulus. 

Rhebas (PfjSag, 'P^atog : now Riva), a river 
of Bithynia, in Asia Minor, falling into the 
Euxine northeast of Chalcedon ; very small and 
insignificant in itself, but much celebrated in 
the Argonautic legends. 

Rhedoxes. Vid. Redones. 

Rhegium ('Pr/yiov : Rheglnus : now Reggio), 
-a celebrated Greek town on the coast of Brut- 
tium, in the south of Italy, was situated on the 
Fretum Siculum, or the straits which separate 
Italy and Sicily. The ancients derived its name 
from the verb firjywfii (" break"), because it was 
supposed that Sicily was at this place torn asun- 
der from Italy. Rhegium was founded about 
the beginning of the first Messenian war, B.C. 
743, byzEolian Chalcidians from Eubcea and by 
Doric Messenians, who had quitted their native 
country on the commencement of hostilities be- 
tween Sparta and Messenia. At the end of the 
second Messenian war, 668, a large body of 
Messenians, under the conduct of the sons of 
Aristomenes, settled at Rhegium, which now be- 
came a nourishing and important city, and ex- 
tended its authority over several of the neigh- 
740 



i boring towns. Even before the Persian wars 
' Rhegium was sufficiently powerful to send three 
j thousand of its citizens to the assistance of the 
j Tarentines, and in the time of the elder Diony- 
sius it possessed a fleet of eighty ships of war. 
The government was an aristocracy, but in the 
beginning of the fifth century B.C., Anaxilaus, 
who was" of a Messenian family, made himself 
tyrant of the place. In 494 this Anaxilaus con- 
quered Zancle in Sicily, the name of which he 
changed into Messana. He ruled over the two 
, cities, and on his death in 476 he bequeathed 
his power to his sons. About ten years after- 

■ ward (466) his sons were driven out of Rhegi- 
; um and Messana, and republican governments 
! were established in both cities, which now be- 
I came independent of one another. At a later 
: period Rhegium incurred the deadly enmity of 
1 the elder Dionysius in consequence of a person- 
I al insult which the inhabitants had offered him. 

■ It is said that when he asked the Rhegians to 
give him one of their maidens for his wife, they 

: replied that they could only grant him the 
; daughter of their public executioner. Diony- 
; sius carried on war against the city for a long 
time, and after two or three unsuccessful at- 
tempts he at length took the place, which he 
' treated with the greatest severity. Rhegium 
| never recovered its former greatness, though it 
I still continued to be a place of considerable im- 
\ portance. The younger Dionysius gave it the 
; name of Phtzbia, but this name never came into 
; general use, and was speedily forgotten. The 
Rhegians having applied to Rome for assistance 
; when Pyrrhus was in the south of Italy, the 
Romans placed in the town a garrison of four 
thousand soldiers, who had been levied among 
J the Latin colonies in Campania. These troops 
[ seized the town in 279, killed or expelled the 
; male inhabitants, and took possession of their 
wives and children. The Romans were too 
i much engaged at the time with their war against 
' Pyrrhus to take notice of this outrage ; but when 
! Pyrrhus was driven out of Italy, they took sig- 

■ nal vengeance upon these Campanians, and re- 
! stored the surviving Rhegians to their city. 
: Rhegium suffered greatly from an earthquake 
! shortly before the breaking out of the Social 
j war, 90 ; but its population was augmented by 
, Augustus, who settled here a number of veter- 
; ans from his fleet, whence the town bears in 
' Ptolemy the surname Julium. Rhegium was 
| the place from which persons usually crossed 
1 over to Sicily, but the spot at which they em- 
i barked was called Coldmna Rhegina ('Prjyivuv 
j cT7j?ug : now Torre di Carallo), and was one 

hundred stadia north of the town. The Greek 
j language continued to be spoken at Rhegium 
i till a very late time, and the town was subject 
j to the Byzantine court long after the downfall 
; of the Western empire. 

i [Rhegma CPTjyua), the lagoon formed by the 
River Cydnus in Cilicia, at its mouth, and which 
served as a harbor to the city of Tarsus.] 

Rhenea (Prjveia, also 'Prjvi?, 'Prjvaia), former- 
ly called Oriygia and Ccladussa, an island in the 
^Egean Sea and one of the Cyclades, west of 
Delos, from which it was divided by a narrow 
strait only four stadia in width. When Poly- 
j crates took the island, he dedicated it to Apollo, 
I and united it by a chain to Delos ; and Nicias 



RHENUS. 



RIIIP.EI MONTES. 



connected the two islands by means of a bridge. 
When the Athenians purified Delos in B.C. 426, 
they removed all the dead from the latter island 
to Rhenea. 

Rhenus. 1 . (Now Rhein in German, Rhine in 
English), one of the great rivers in Europe, 
forming in ancient times the boundary between 
Gaul and Germany, rises in Mons Adula (now 
St. Gothard) not far from the sources of the 
Rhone, and flows first in a westerly direction, 
passing through the Lacus Brigantinus (now 
Lake of Constance) till it reaches Basilia (now 
Bade), where it takes a northerly direction, 
and eventually flows into the ocean by several 
mouths. The ancients spoke of two main arms 
into which the Rhine was divided in entering 
the territory of the Batavi, of which the one on 
the east coniinued to bear the name of Rhe- 
nus, while that on the west, into which the 
Mosa (now Mam or Meusc) flowed, was called 
Vahalis (now Waal). After Drusus, in B.C. 12, 
had connected the Flevo Lacus (now Zuydcr- 
Sec) with the Rhine by means of a canal, in 
making which he probably made use of the bed 
of the Yssel, we find mention of three mouths 
of the Rhine. Of these the names, as given by 
Pliny, are, on the west, Helium (the Vahalis of 
other writers) ; in the centre, Rhenus ; and 
on the east, Flevum ; but at a later time we 
again find mention of only two mouths. The 
Rhine is described by the ancients as a broad, 
rapid, and deep river. It receives many tribu- 
taries, of which the most important were the 
Mosella (now Moselle) and Mosa (now Maas or 
Meuse) on the left, and the Nicer (now Neckar), 
Moenus (now Mam), and Luppia (now Lippe) on 
the right. It passed through various tribes, of 
whicli the principal on the west were the Nan- 
tuates, Helvetii, Sequani, Mediomatrici, Triboc- 
ci, Treviri, Ubii, Batavi, and Canninefates, and 
the principal on the east were the Rhaeti, Vin- 
delici, Mattiaoi, Sigambri, Tencteri, Usipetes, 
Bructeri, and Frisii. The length of the Rhine 
is stated differently by the ancient writers. Its 
whole course amounts to about nine hundred 
and fifty miles. The inundations of the Rhine 
near its mouth are mentioned by the ancients. 
Caesar was the first Roman general who cross- 
ed the Rhine. He threw a bridge of boats 
across the river, probably in the neighborhood 
of Cologne. The etymology of the name is 
doubtful ; some connect it with rinnen or rinnan, 
according to which it would mean the " current" 
or " stream ;" others with then or rein, that is, 
the " clear" river — 2 (Now Reno), a tributary 
of the Padus (now Po) in Gallia Cisalpina, near 
Bononia, on a small island of which Ociavianus, 
Antony, and Lepidus formed the celebrated tri- 
umvirate. The small river Lavinius (now La- 
tino) flows into the Rhenus ; and Appian places 
in the Lavinius the island on which the trium- 
virate was formed. 

[Rheomithres ('PeoLtidpriz), a Persian, who 
joined in the general revolt of the western prov- 
inces from Artaxerxes Mnemon in B.C. 362, 
and was employed by his confederates to go to 
Tachos, king of Egypt, for aid. Although suc- 
cessful in tins application, he made his own 
peace with Artaxerxes by betraying a number 
of the rebel chiefs. He was also one of the 
commanders of the Persian cavalry in the bat- 



tle at the Granicus, B.C. 334, and fell m the 
battle at Issus, B.C. 333.] 

Rhephaim, a valley of Judaea, continuous with 
the valley of Hinnorn, southwest of Jerusalem. 
Rhephaim was also the name of a very ancient 
people of Palestine. 

Rhesus ('Pfjaog). 1. A river-god in Bithynia, 
one of the sons of Oceanus and Tethys. — 2. Son 
of King E'i'oneus in Thrace, marched to the as- 
sistance of the Trojans in their war with the 
Greeks. An oracle had declared that Troy 
would never be taken if the snow-white horses 
of Rhesus should once drink the water of the 
Xanthus, and feed upon the grass of the Trojan 
plain. But as soon as Rhesus had reached the 
Trojan territory, and had pitched his tents late 
at night, Ulysses and Diomedes penetrated into 
his camp, slew Rhesus himself, and carried off 
his horses. In later writers Rhesus is describ- 
ed as a son of Strymon and Euterpe, or Calliope, 
or Terpsichore. 

[Rhexenor ('Prj^/jvup), son of Nausithous, 
the king of the Phaeacians, and accordingly a 
brother of Alcinous.] • 

Rhianus (Via&dg), of Crete, a distinguished 
Alexandrean poet and grammarian, flourished 
B.C. 222. He wrote several epic poems, one 
of which was on the Messenian wars. He also 
wrote epigrams, ten of which are preserved in 
the Palatine Anthology, and one by Athenaeus. 
His fragments are printed in Gaisford's Pocta 
| Minorcs Graci ; and separately edited by Nic. 
Saal, Bonn, 1831. 

Rhidagus, a tributary of the River Ziobetis, 
in Parthia; [but vid. Ziobetis.] 

Rhinocolura or Rhimocorura (to, 'Plvok67.ov- 
pa or 'PivoKopovpa, and rj 'Pivo/col.ovpa or 'Pivo- 
Kopovpto. : now Kulat-el-Arish), the frontier town 
of Egypt and Palestine, lay in the midst of the 
desert, at the mouth of the brook (now El- Ar is h) 7 
which was the boundary between the countries, 
and which is called in Scripture the river of 
Egypt. It was sometimes reckoned to Syria, 
sometimes to Egypt. Its name, " Thc-cut-off- 
noscs," is derived from its having been the place 
of exile of criminals who had first been so mu- 
tilated under the ^Ethiopian dynasty of kings 
of Egypt. 

Rhinthon ('Plv6uv), of Syracuse or Taren- 
tum, said to have been the son of a potter, was 
a dramatic poet, of that species of burlesque 
tragedy which was called (p?.vanoypa(f)ia, or ila- 
porpayudia, and flourished in the reign of Ptol- 
emy L, king of Egypt. When he is placed at 
the head of the composers of this burlesque 
! drama, we are not to suppose that he actually 
j invented it, but that he was the first to develop 
in a written form, and to introduce into Greek 
literature, a species of dramatic composition, 
which had already long existed as a popular 
amusement among the Greeks of Southern Italy 
and Sicily, and especially at Tarentum. The 
species of drama which he cultivated may be 
described as an exhibition of the subjects of 
tragedy, in the spirit and style of comedy. A 
poet of this description was called (p?,va^. This 
name, and that of the drama itself, (plvanoypa- 
(pla, seem to have been the genuine terms 
used at Tarentum. Rhinthon wrote thirty-eight 
dramas. 

Rhip^ei Monte s (ru 'Pnraia opn, also 'Plnac), 

741 



RHIUM. 



RHODOPIS. 



the name of a lofty range of mountains in the 
northern part of the earth, respecting which 
there are diverse statements in the ancient 
writers. The name seems to have been given 
by the Greek poets quite indefinitely to all the 
mountains in the northern parts of Europe and 
Asia. Thus the Rhipsei Montes are sometimes 
called the Hyperborei Montes. Vid. Hvperbo- 
rei. The later geographical writers place the 
Rhipsan Mountains~northeast of Mount Alau- 
nus. on the frontiers of Asiatic Sarmatia, and 
state that the Tanais rises in these mountains. 
According to this account, the Rhipsan Mount- 
ains may be regarded as a western branch of 
the Ural Mountains. 

Rhium ('Piov : now Castello di Morca), a prom- 
ontory in Achaia, opposite the promontory of 
Antirrhium (now Castello di Romelia), on the 
borders of iEtolia and Locris, with which it 
formed the narrow entrance to the Corinthian 
Gulf, which straits are now called the Little 
Dardanelles. It is sometimes called Ajai'/cov 
'Piov, to distinguish it from the opposite prom- 
ontory, which was surnamed MokoKptnov or Ai- 
tuIlkov. On the promontory of Rhium there 
was a temple of Neptune (Poseidon). 

Rhizox or Rhizixicm ('Pi^ov : 'Pe&vcnjc'- now 
Risano), an ancient town in Dalmatia, situated 
at the upper end of the gulf, called after it Rhi- 
zonasus Sinus (now Gulf of Cattaro). [It is 
mentioned by Polybius as a strong place, to 
which Teuta, queen of the Illyrians. withdrew 
on being attacked by the Romans.] 

Rhoda or Rhodl-s ('Po6v, 'Podoc : now Rozas). 
a Greek emporium on the coast of the Indigeta?, 
in Hispania Tarraconensis, founded by the Rho- 
dians, and subsequently occupied by the inhab- 
itants of Massilia. 

Rhodanus (now Rhdne), one of the chief riv- 
ers of Gaul, rises in Mons Adula on the Pen- 
nine Alps, not far from the sources of the Rhine, 
flows first in a westerly direction, and, after 
passing through the Lacus Lemanus, turns to 
the south, passes by the towns of Lugdunum, 
Vienna, Avenio, and Arelate, receives several 
tributaries, and finally falls by several mouths 
into the Sinus Gallicus in the Mediterranean, j 
The number of the mouths of the Rhone is ■ 
stated differently by the ancient writers, which 
is not surprising, as the river has frequently al- 
tered its course near the sea. Pliny mentions \ 
three mouths, of which the most important was j 
called Os Massalioticum, while the two others 
bore the general name of Libyca ora, being dis- j 
tinguished from each other as the Os Hispani- \ 
ense and the Os Metapinum. Besides these 
moilths there was a canal to the east of the Os j 
Massalioticum, called Fosscz Mariana, which ! 
was dug by order of Marius during his war with 
the Cimbri, in order to make an easier connec- 
tion between the Rhone and the Mediterranean, j 
as the mouths of the river were frequently j 
choked up with sand. The Rhone is a very ; 
rapid river, and its upward navigation is there- j 
fore difficult, though it is navigable for large 
vessels as high as Lugdunum, and by means of j 
the Arar still further north. 

Rhode. Vid. Rhodos. 

[Rhodea (Todem), a daughter of Oceanus and j 
Tethys, was one of the playmates of Proser- ! 
pina (Persephone).] 
742 



j Rhodia and Rhodiopolis ('Podia, 'Podioiro'kic • 
i 'Podtevg, 'Podionol.t-yg : now Eski-Hissar, ruins), 
| a mountain city of Lycia, near Corydallus, with 

! a temple of .Esculapius (Asclepius). 

Rhodics ('Podtor : now probably the Brook of 
the Dardanelles), a small river of the Troad. 
mentioned by both Homer and Hesiod. It rose 
on the lower slopes of Mount Ida, and flowed 
northwest into the Hellespont, between Abydus 
and Dardanus, after receiving the Sellei's from 
the west. It is identified by some with the 
River Tlvoioc, which Thucydides mentions, be- 
tween Cynossema and Abydus. Some made it 
erroneously a tributary of the .Esepus. It is 

I found mentioned on the coins of Dardanus. 
[Rhodogune ('Podoyovvn). 1. A daughter of 

j Artaxerxes Mnemon, was given in marriage by 

'him to Orontes. Vid. Oeoxtes, No. 3. — 2. 

! Daughter of Mithradates I., king of Parthia, 
given by him in marriage to Demetrius Nicator. 

i Ring of Syria. Vid. Arsaces, No. 6.] 

[Rhodope ('PodoTrrj), a fountain nymph, daugh- 

\ ter of the river-god Strymon, wife of the Thra- 

| cian Heemus. and mother of Hebrus. She is 

; mentioned also among the playmates of Pro- 
serpina (Persephone).] 

Rhodope ('Po66~n), one of the highest ranges 

I of mountains in Thrace, extending from Mount 
Scomius, east of the River Nestus and the 

; boundaries of Macedonia, in a southeasterly di- 
rection almost down to the coast. It is highest 
in its northern part, and is thickly covered with 
wood. Rhodope, like the rest of Thrace, was 
sacred to Dionysus (Bacchus), and is frequently 
mentioned by the poets in connection with the 
worship of this god. 

[Rhodophox, a Rhodian statesman, who ex- 
erted himself when hostilities broke out between 
Perseus and the Romans to preserve unbroken 
the connection between his countrymen and thi. 
latter. He was one of the deputies sent. B.C 
167. to convey a golden crown to Rome.] 

Rhodopis ('Podumc), a celebrated Greek court- 
esan, of Thracian origin, was a fellow-slave with 
the poet JSsop, both of them belonging to the 
Samian Iadmon. She afterward became the 
property of Xanthes, another Samian, who car 
ried her to Naucratis in Egypt, in the reign of 
Amasis, and at this great sea-port she carried 
on the trade of an hetaera for the benefit of her 
master. While thus employed, Charaxus, the 
brother of the poetess Sappho, who had come 
to Naucratis as a merchant, fell in love with 
her, and ransomed her from slavery for a large 
sum of money. She was, in consequence, at- 
tacked by Sappho in a poem. She continued to 
live at Naucratis, and with the tenth part of her 
gains she dedicated at Delphi ten iron spits, 
which were seen by Herodotus. She is called 
Rhodopis by Herodotus, but Sappho in her poem 
spoke of her under the name of Doricha. It is 
therefore probable that Doricha was her real 
name, and that she received that of Rhodopis, 
which signifies the " rosy-cheeked," on account 
of her beauty. There was a tale current in 
Greece that Rhodopis built the third pyramid. 
It has been conjectured, with great probability, 
that in consequence of her name Rhodopis, the 
" rosy-cheeked," she was confounded with Nito- 
cris, the beautiful Egyptian queen, and the he- 
roine of many an Egyptian legend, who is said 



RHODOS. 



RHCECUS. 



toy the ancient chronologers to have built the j 
third pyramid. j 

Rhodos (Tddoj-), sometimes called Rhode, 
daughter of Neptune (Poseidon) and Halia, or 
of Helios and Amphitrite, or of Neptune (Posei- 
don) and Venus (Aphrodite), or, lastly, of Oce- 
anus. From her the island of Rhodes is said 
to have derived its name ; and in this island she 
bore to Helios seven sons. 

[Rhoduntia CPuihvvTca), a fortress on Mount 
(Eta, near Heraclea and Thermopylae ; accord- 
ing to Livy, one of the summits of CEta.] 

Rhodus (j) 'Pudoc : 'P(i&of,Rhodius: now Rho- 
dos, Rhodes), the easternmost island of the JEge- 
an, or, more specifically, of the Carpathian Sea, 
lies off the southern coast of Caria, due south of 
the promontory of Cynossema (now Cape Alou- 
po), at the distance of about twelve geographical 
miles. Its length, from northeast to southwest, 
is about forty-five miles ; its greatest breadth 
about twenty to twenty -five. In early times it 
was called ^Ethraea and Ophiussa, and several 
other names. The earliest Greek records make 
mention of it. Mythological stories ascribed 
its origin to the power of Apollo, who raised it 
from beneath the waves ; and its first peopling 
to the Telchines, children of Thalatta (ihe Sea), 
upon whose destruction by a deluge the He- 
liadae were planted in the island by Helios, 
where they formed seven tribes, and founded 
a kingdom, which soon became flourishing by 
their skill in astronomy and navigation, and 
other sciences and arts. These traditions ap- 
pear to signify the early peopling of the island 
by some of the civilized races of Western Asia, 
probably the Phoenicians. After other alleged 
migrations into the island, we come to its Hel- 
lenic colonization, which is ascribed to Tlepo- 
lemus, the son of Hercules, before the Trojan 
war, and after that war to Althaemenes. Ho- 
mer mentions the three Dorian settlements in 
Rhodes, namely, Lindus, Ialysus, and Camirus ; 
and these cities, with Cos, Cnidus, and Hali- 
carnassus, formed the Dorian Hexapolis, which 
was established, from a period of unknown 
antiquity, in the southwestern corner of Asia 
Minor. Rhodes soon became a great maritime 
state, or rather confederacy, the island being 
parcelled out between the three cities above 
mentioned. The Rhodians made distant voy- 
ages, and founded numerous colonies, of which 
the chief were Rhoda in Iberia ; Gelain Sicily; 
Parthenope, Salacia, Siris, and Sybaris in Italy ; 
settlements in the Balearic Islands; and, in 
their own neighborhood, Soli in Cilicia, and 
Gagae and Corydalla in Lycia. During this 
early period the government of each of the three 
cities seems to have been monarchical ; but 
about B.C. 660 the whole island seems to have 
been united in an oligarchical republic, the chief 
magistrates of which, called prytanes, were 
taken from the family of the Eratidae, who had 
been the royal family of Ialysus. Vid. Diago- 
ras, Dorieus. At the beginning of the Pelo- 
ponnesian war, Rhodes was one of those Dorian 
maritime states which were subject to Athens ; 
but in the twentieth year of the war, 412, it 
joined the Spartan alliance, and the oligarchical 
party, which had been depressed, and their lead- 
ers, the Eratidae, expelled, recovered their for- 
mer power under Dorieus. In 408, the new i 



i capital, called Rhodus, was built, and peopled 
from the three ancient cities of Ialysus, Lindus, 
and Camirus. The history of the island now 
presents a series of conflicts between the demo- 
cratical and oligarchical parties, and of subjec- 
tion to Athens and Sparta in turn, till the end of 
the Social war, 355, when its independence was 
acknowledged. Then followed a conflict with 
the princes of Caria, during which the island was 
for a time subject to Artemisia, and, nominally at 
least, to Idrieus. During this period there were 
great internal dissensions, which were at length 
composed by a mixed form of government, unit- 
ing the elements of aristocracy and democracy. 
At the Macedonian conquest, they submitted 
to Alexander; but, upon his death, they expelled 
the Macedonian garrison. In the ensuing wars 
they formed an alliance with Ptolemy, the son 
of Lagus, and their city, Rhodes, successfully 
endured a most famous siege by the forces of 
Demetrius Poliorcetes, who at length, in admi- 
ration of the valor of the besieged, presented 
them with the engines he had used against the 
city, from the sale of which they defrayed the 
cost of the celebrated Colossus, which is de- 
scribed under the name of its artist, Chares. 
The state now for a long time flourished, with 
an extensive commerce, and with such a mari- 
time power that it compelled the Byzantines to 
remit the toll which they levied on ships passing 
the Bosporus. At length they came into con- 
nection with the Romans, whose alliance they 
joined, with Attalus, king of Pergamus, in the 
war against Philip III. of Macedon. In the en- 
suing war with Antiochus, the Rhodians gave 
the Romans great aid with their fleet ; and, in 
the subsequent partition of the Syrian posses- 
sions of Asia Minor, they were rewarded by 
the supremacy of S. Caria, where they had 
had settlements from an early period. Vid. Pe- 
rmx Rhodioruii. A temporary interruption of 
their alliance with Rome was caused by their 
espousing the cause of Perseus, for which they 
were severely punished, 168 ; but they recov- 
ered the favor of Rome by the important naval 
aid they rendered in the Mithradatic war. In 
the civil wars they took part with Caesar, and 
suffered in consequence from Cassius, 42, but 
were afterward compensated for their losses by 
the favor of Antonius. They were at length 
deprived of their independence by Claudius ; 
and their prosperity received its final blow from 
an earthquake, which laid the city of Rhodes in 
ruins, in the reign of Antoninus Pius, A.D. 155. 
The celebrated medieval history of the island, 
as the seat of the Knights of St. John, does not 
belong to this work. The island is of great 
beauty and fertility, with a delicious climate. 
It was further celebrated as the home of dis- 
tinguished schools of Greek art and of Greek 
oratory. The city of Rhodes was famous for 
the beauty and regularity of its architecture, 
and the number of statues which adorned it; 
it was designed by Hippodamus of Miletus. 
(Comp. Ialysus, Lindus, and Camirus.) 

Rhcecus (Toi/cof ). 1. A Centaur, who, in con- 
junction with Hylaeus, pursued Atalanta in Ar- 
cadia, but was killed by her with an arrow. The 
Roman poets call him Rhcetus, and relate that 
he was wounded at the nuptials of Pirithous. — 
i 2. Son of Phileas or Philaeus, of Samos, an ar 

743 



RHGEMETALCES. 



RICIMER. 



chitect and statuary belonging to the earliest | 
period in the history of Greek art, is mentioned j 
as the head of a family of Samian artists. He •; 
flourished about B.C. 640. He was thefirst arch- 1 
itect of the great temple of Juno (Hera) at Sa- 
mos, which Theodorus completed. In conjunc- 
tion with Smilis and Theodoras, he constructed 
the labyrinth of Lemnos ; and he, and the mem- 
bers of his family who succeeded him, invented 
the art of casting statues in bronze and iron. 

[Rhcemetalces ('PoifirjTuTiKvc)- 1- I-i king of 
Thrace, was brother of Cotys, and uncle and 
guardian of Rhascuporis, at whose death, B.C. 
13, he was expelled from Thrace. About two 
years afterward Rhcemetalces received from 
Augustus his nephew's dominions, with some 
additions, since Tacitus calls him king of all 
Thrace. On his death Augustus divided his 
kingdom between his son Cotys and his brother 
Rhascuporis. — 2. II., King of Thrace, nephew 
of the preceding, and son of Rhascuporis, re- 
ceived a portion of the Thracian kingdom on 
the deposition of his father. He remained faith- 
ful to the Romans, and aided in putting down 
the Thracian malcontents in A.D. 26. Caligu- 
la, in A.D. 38, assigned the whole of Thrace to 
Rhcemetalces.] 

[Rhceo (Totw), a daughter of Staphylus, be- 
loved by Apollo, to whom she bore Anius : she 
had been put in a chest, and set afloat on the 
sea by her father, but was wafted safely to Eu- 
bcea (or Delos).] 

[Rhcesaces ('PoMTUKTig in Arrian and Plutarch ; 
'PuodKT]?, Diod.), a Persian, who deduced his 
lineage from one of the seven chiefs who over- 
threw the government of the Magi, was satrap 
of Ionia and Lydia about 350 B.C., and was as- 
sociated with the Theban Lacrates in the war 
against Egypt. In the battle at the Granicus, 
having assailed Alexander, he was slain by that 
monarch's own hand. Diodorus and Curtius, 
however, say that, having cleft the king's helmet 
with his sword, his hand was cut off by Clitus.] 

RHCETEUM (TO 'POLTEIOV UKpOV, 7] 'PoiTElUg UKT7] } 

'Poirr/iaL aurai : Virg. Rhcetea litora : now Cape 
Jntepeh or Barbieri), a promontory, or a strip of 
rocky coast breaking into several promontories, 
in Mysia, on the Hellespont, near JEantium, 
with a town of the same name (now probably 
Paleo Castro). 

Rhcetus. 1. A centaur. Vid. Rhceous. — 2. 
One of the giants, who was slain by Bacchus 
(Dionysus); he is usually called Eurytus. — [3. 
One of the companions of Phineus, slain by 
Perseus. — 4. King of the Marrubii in Italy, 
father of Anchemolus. Vid. Anchemolus. — 5. 
A Rutulian slain among the sine nomine plebem 
by Euryalus.] 

[Rhombites Magnus and Minor ('Po[j.6ltt](; 
uiyag and kldoouv), two rivers of Asiatic Sar- 
matia, which fell into two bays of the Palus 
Maeotis, both abounding in fish : of these the 
smaller, according to Strabo, was six hundred 
stadia from the Anticites ; the larger, eight hund- 
red stadia northeast of the smaller, and just as 
far southwest from the Tanals. The larger riv- 
er is the modern Jei, Jeisse, or Jea; the smaller, 
the Tschelbasch or the Beisu ; according to oth- 
ers, the Alschujef.] 

[Rhosus or Rhossus {'Puadg and 'Puaaog), a 
sea-port of Syria, on the Issicus Sinus, some- 
744 



what east of the promontory named after it 

(oKoneAog 6 'Puooinog, now Cape Torose or Dog's 
Cape), and at the southern point of the above- 
named gulf, in the neighborhood of the Syrian 
passes. At this mountain pass Pococke found 
ruins of ancient walls, which probably belonged 
to the city Rhosus.] 

[Rhotanus ('Pri-avof, now, according to Man- 
nert, Dalesani), a small river of Corsica, flowing 
into the Tyrrhenian Sea at about the middle 
of the eastern coast, not far from Aleria ] 

Rhoxolani or Roxolani, a warlike people in 
European Sarmatia, on the coast of the Palus 
Mseotis, and between the Borysthenes and the 
Tanais, usually supposed to be the ancestors of 
the modern Russians. They frequently attack- 
ed and plundered the Roman provinces south 
| of the Danube; and Hadrian was even obliged 
j to pay them tribute They are mentioned as 
late as the eleventh century. They fought with 
lances and with long swords wielded with both 
hands ; and their armies were composed chiefly 
of cavalry. 

[Rhubon ('Pov6o)v, now probably the Buna), a 
river of European Sarmatia, falling into the Oce- 
anus Sarmaticus between the Chronus and Tu- 
runtus] 

Rhyndacus ('Pvvdatiog : now Edrenos), or Ly- 
cus, a considerable river of Asia Minor. Rising 
in Mount Dindymene, opposite to the sources 
of the Hermus, it flows north through Phrygia, 
then turns northwest, then west, and then north, 
through the Lake Apolloniatis, into the Propon- 
! tis. From the point where it left Phrygia, it 
I formed the boundary of Mysia and Bithynia. 
I Its chief tributary, which joins it from the west 
J below the Lake Apolloniatis, was called Maces- 
tus. On the banks of the Rhyndacus Lucullus 
gained a great victory over Mithradates, B.C. 73. 

Rhypes ('Pvneg and other forms : 'Pwnacog), 
one of the twelve cities of Achaia, situated be- 
tween yEgium and Patrse. It was destroyed by 
Augustus, and its inhabitants removed to Patrae. 

RhytIum ('Pvtiov), a town in Crete, mention- 
ed by Homer, which is identified by modern 
writers, but without any sufficient reasons, with 
the later Ritymna. 

Ricimer, the Roman " King-Maker," was the 
son of a Suevian chief, and was brought up at 
the court of Valentinian III. He served with 
distinction under Aetius, in the reign of Valen- 
tinian III. In A.D. 456 he commanded the 
fleet of the Emperor Avitus, with which he 
gained a great victory over the Vandals, and in 
the same year he deposed Avitus ; but as he 
was a barbarian by birth, he would not assume 
the title of emperor, but gave it to Majorian, in- 
tending to keep the real power in his own hands. 
But as Majorian proved more able and ener 
getic than Ricimer had expected, he was put t 
death in 461 by order of Ricimer, who no- 
raised Libius Severus to the throne. On th 
death of Severus in 465, Ricimer kept the gov- 
ernment in his own hands for the next eighteen 
months ; but in 467 Anthernius was appointed 
Emperor of the West by Leo, emperor of the 
East. Ricimer acquiesced in the appointment, 
and received the daughter of Anthernius in mar- 
riage ; but in 472 he made war against his 
father-in-law, and took Rome by storm. An- 
thernius perished in the assault, and Olybrius 



MAP OF ANCIENT ROME, SHOWING THE WALLS OF SERVIUS AND 
THOSE OF AURELIAN. 



[To face p. 745. 








19. 


Porta Clausa. 




Gates in the Walk of Serviv*. 


20. 


Porta Tiburtina (S. Lorenzo). 


1. 


Porta Collina. 


21. 


Porta Praenestina (Maggiore). 


2. 


Porta Viminalis. 


22. 


Porta Asinaria. 


3. 


Porta Esquilina. 


23. 


Porta Metrovia? 


4. 


Porta Querquetulana? 


24. 


Porta Latina. 


5. 


Porta Caelimontana. 


25. 


Porta Appia (jS\ Sebcutiono). 


6. 


Porta Capena. 


26. 


Porta Ardcatina ? 


7. 


Porta Raudusculana ? 


27. 


Porta Ostiensis. 


8. 


Porta Naeyia. 


28. 


Porta Portuensis. 


9. 


Porta Minucia. 


29. 


Porta Aurelia (S. Pa-nerasio). 


10. 


Porta Trigemina. 


30. 


Porta Septimiana. 


11. 


Porta Flumentana. 


31. 


Porta Aurelia of Procopius. 


12. 


Porta Carmentalis. 




Bridget. 


13. 


Porta Ratumena? 




14. 


Porta Fontinalis. 


32. 
33. 


Pons iElius (Ponte S. Angelo). 
Pons Vaticanus ? 




Gates in the Wall* of AwrelUn. 


34. 


Pons Janiculensis ? 


15. 


Porta Flaminia. 


35. 


Pons Fabricius. 


16. 


Porta Pinciana. 


36. 


Pons Cestius. 


17. 


Porta Sal aria. 


37. 


Pons Palatinus ( JSmilius ?). 


18. 


Porta Nomentana. 


38. 


Supposed remains of the Sublician Bridge 



RICINA. 



ROMA. 



was proclaimed emperor by Ricimer, who died, 
however, only forty days after the sack of Rome. 

Ricina. 1. (Ricinensis), a town in Picenum, 
colonized by the Emperor Severus. Its mines 
are on the River Potenza, near Macerata. — 2. 
One of the Ebudae Insulae, or the Hebrides. 

Rigodulum (now Rcol), a town of the Treviri 
in Gallia Belgica, distant three days' march 
from Mogontiacum. 

[Ripheus, or, more correctly, Rhipeus ('Pitt- 
*v<-),aTrojan warrior, who joined the band of 
iEneas the night that Troy was burned, and 
fought with great bravery until he was at length 
overpowered by superior numbers : he is com- 
mended for his piety and justice.] 

Robigus or RobIgo, is described by some 
Latin writers as a divinity worshipped for the 
purpose of averting blight or too great heat 
from the young corn-fields. The festival of the 
Robigalia was celebrated on the twenty-fifth of 
April, and was said to have been instituted by 
Numa. But considering the uncertainty of the 
ancients themselves as to whether the divinity 
was masculine or feminine, and that the Ro- 
mans did not pay divine honors to any evil de- 
mon, it is probable that the divinity Robigus or 
Robigo is only an abstraction of the later Ro- 
mans from the festival of the Robigalia. 

Robus, a fortress in the territory of the Rau- 
raci, in Gallia Belgica, which was built by Va- 
lentinian near Basilia, A.D. 374. 

Roma (Romanus : now Rome), the capital of 
Italy and of the world, was situated on the left 
bank of the River Tiber, on the northwestern 
confines of Latium, about sixteen miles from 
the sea. — A. Histoby of the City. Rome is 
said to have been a colony from Alba Longa, 
and to have been founded by Romulus about 
B.C. 753. Vid. Romulus. All traditions agree 
that the original city comprised only the Mons 
Palatinus or Palatium, and some portion of the 
ground immediately below it. It was surround- 
ed by walls, which followed the line of the Po- 
mcerium {vid. Diet, of Antiq., s. v.), and was built 
in a square form, whence it was called Roma 
Quadrata. This city on the Palatine was in- 
habited only by Latins. On the neighboring 
hills there also existed from the earliest times 
settlements of Sabines and Etruscans. The 
Sabine town, probably called Quirium, and in- 
habited by Quirites, was situated on the hills to 
the north of the Palatine, that is, the Quirinalis 
and Capitolinus, or Capitolium, on the latter of 
which hills was the Sabine Arx or citadel. 
These Latin and Sabine towns afterward be- 
came united, according to tradition, in the reign 
of Romulus, and the two nations formed one 
collective body, known under the name of 
" Populus Romanus (ct) Quirites." The Etrus- 
cans were settled on Mons Calms, and extend- 
ed over Mons Cispius and Mo?is Oppius, which 
are part of the Esquiline. These Etruscans 
were at an early period incorporated in the 
Roman state, but were compelled to abandon 
their seats on the hills, and to take up their 
abode in the plains between the Caelius and the 
Esquiline, whence the Vicus Tuscus derived its 
name. Under the kings the city rapidly grew 
in population and in size. Ancus Marcius add- 
ed the Mons Avcntinus to the city. The same 
king also built a fortress on the Janiculus, a hill 



on the other side of the Tiber, as a protection 
against the Etruscans, and connected it with 
the city by means of the Pons Sublicius. Rome 
was still further improved and enlarged by Tar- 
quinius Priscus and Servius Tullius. The for- 
mer of these kings constructed the vast sewers 
(cloacce), by which the lower part of the city be- 
tween the Palatine and Capitol was drained, 
and which still remain without a stone dis- 
placed. He also laid out the Circus Maximus 
and the Forum, and, according to some tradi- 
tions, commenced the erection of the Oapitoline 
temple, which was finished by Tarquinius Su- 
perbus. The completion of the city, however, 
was ascribed to Servius Tullius. This king 
added the Mons Virninalis and Mons Esquilinus, 
and surrounded the whole city with a line of 
fortifications, which comprised all the seven 
hills of Rome (Palatinus, Capitolinus, Quiri- 
nalis, Ccelius, Aventinus, Virninalis, Esquilinus). 
Hence Rome was called Urbs Septicollis. These 
fortifications were about seven miles in circum- 
ference. At the same time, Servius extended 
the pomcerium so as to make the sacred in- 
closure of the city identical with its walls. In 
B.C. 390 Rome was entirely destroyed by the 
Gauls, with the exception of a few houses on 
the Palatine. On the departure of the barbari- 
ans it was rebuilt in great haste and confusion, 
without any attention to regularity, and with 
narrow and crooked streets. After the con- 
quest of the Carthaginians and of the monarchs 
of Macedonia and Syria, the city began to be 
adorned with many public buildings and hand- 
some private houses; and it was still further 
embellished by Augustus, who introduced great 
improvements into all parts of the city, and both 
erected many public buildings himself, and in- 
duced all the leading nobles of his court to fol- 
low his example. So greatly had the appear- 
ance of the city improved during his long and 
prosperous reign, that he used to boast that he 
had found the city of brick, and had left it of 
marble. Still the main features of the city re- 
mained the same ; and the narrow streets and 
mean houses formed a striking and disagreeable 
contrast to the splendid public buildings and 
magnificent palaces which had been recently 
erected. The great fire at Rome in the reign of 
Nero (A.D. 64) destroyed two thirds of the city. 
Nero availed himself of this opportunity to in- 
dulge his passion for building ; and t he city now 
assumed a more regular and stately appearance. 
The new streets were made both wide and 
straight ; the height of the houses was restrict- 
ed ; and a certain part of each was required to 
be built of Gabian or Alban stone, which was 
proof against fire. Rome had long since ex- 
tended beyond the walls of Servius Tullius ; 
but down to the third century of the Christian 
era the walls of this monarch continued to mark 
the limits of the city properly so called. These 
walls, however, had long since been rendered 
quite useless, and the city was therefore left 
without any fortifications. Accordingly, the Em- 
peror Aurelian determined to surround Rome 
with new walls, which embraced the city of 
Servius Tullius and all the suburbs which had 
subsequently grown up around it, such as the 
M. Janiculus on the right bank of the Tiber ; 
and the Collis Hortulorum or Mons Pincianus on 

745 



ROMA. 

the left bank of the river, to the north of the 
Quirinalis. The walls of Aurelian were com- 
menced by this emperor before he set out on 
his expedition against Zenobia (A.D. 271), and 
were terminated by his successor Probus. They 
were about eleven miles in circumference. They 
were restored by Honorius, and were also part- 
ly rebuilt by Belisarius. — B. Divisions of the 
City. Rome was divided by Servius Tullius 
into four Regioncs or districts, corresponding to 
the four city tribes. Their names were, 1. Sub- 
urana, comprehending the space from the Sub- 
ura to the Caelius, both inclusive. 2. Esqui- 
lina, comprehending the Esquiline Hill. 3. Col- 
Una, extending over the Quirinal and Viminal. 
4. Palatina, comprehending the Palatine Hill. 
The Capitoline, as the seat of the gods, and the 
Aventine, were not included in these regiones. 
These regiones were again subdivided into 
twenty-seven Sacella Argasoruro, which were 
probably erected where two streets {compita) 
crossed each other. It is probable that each of 
the four regiones contained six of these sacella, 
and that the remaining three belonged to the 
Capitoline. The division of Servius Tullius 
into four regiones remained unchanged till the 
time of Augustus : but this emperor made a 
fresh division of the city into fourteen regiones, 
which comprised both the ancient city of Ser- 
vius Tullius and all the suburbs which had been 
subsequently added. This division was made 
by Augustus to facilitate the internal govern- 
ment of the city. The names of the regiones 
were, 1. Porta Capena, at the southeast corner 
of the city, by the Porta Capena. 2. Cadimon- 
iium, northeast of the preceding, embracing M. 
Caelius. 3. Isis tt Scrapis, northwest of No. 2, 
in the valley between the Caelius, the Palatine 
and Esquiline. 4. Via Sacra, northwest of No. 

3, embracing the valley between the Esquiline, 
Viminal, and Quirinal, toward the Palatine. 5. 
Esquilina cum Colic Viminali. northeast of No. 

4, comprehending the whole of the Esquiline 
and Viminal. 6. Aha Semita, northwest of No. 

5, comprising the Quirinal. 7. Via Lata, west 
of No. 6, between the Quirinal and Campus 
Martius. 8. Forum Romanum, south of No. 7. 
comprehending the Capitoline and the valley 
between it and the Palatine. 9. Circus Fla- 
minius, northwest of No. S, extending as far as 
the Tiber, and comprehending the whole of the 
Campus Martius. 10. Palatium, southeast of 
No. S, containing the Palatine. 11. Circus 
Maximus, southwest of No. 10, comprehending 
the plain between the Palatine, Aventine, and 
Tiber. 12. Piscina PuLlica, southeast of No. 
11. 13. Ate?itinus T northwest of No. 12, em- 
bracing the Aventine. 14. Trans Tiberim, the 
only region on the right bank of the river, con- 
taining the Insula Twerina, the valley between 
the river and the Janicuius, and a part of this 
mountain. Each of these regiones was subdi- 
vided into a certain number of Vici, analogous 
to the sacella of Servius Tullius. The houses 
were divided into two different classes, called 
respectively domus and insulce. The former 
were the dwellings of the Roman nobles, cor- 
responding to the modern palazzi : the latter 
were the habitations of the middle and lower 
classes. Each insula contained several apart- 
ments or sets of apartments, which were let to 

746 



ROMA. 

different families, and it was frequently sur- 
rounded with shops. The insula? contained 
several stories ; and as the value of ground in- 
creased in Rome, they were frequently built of 
a dangerous height. Hence Augustus restrict- 
ed the height of all new houses to seventy feet, 
and Trajan to sixty feet. No houses of any de- 
scription were allowed to be built close together 
at Rome, and it was provided by the Twelve 
Tables that a space of at least five feet should 
be left between every house. The number of 
insula?, of course, greatly exceeded that of the 
domi. It is stated that there were forty-six 
thousand six hundred and two insulae at Rome, 
but only one thousand seven hundred and nine- 
ty domus. — C. Size and Population of thb 
Citv. It has been already stated that the cir- 
cumference of the walls of Servius Tullius was 
about seven miles ; but a great part of the space 
included within these walls was at first not cot- 
ered with buildings. Subsequently, as we have 
seen, the city greatly extended beyond these 
limits ; and a measurement has come down to 
us, made in the reign of Vespasian, by which it 
appears to have been about thirteen miles in 
circumference. It was probably about this 
time that Rome reached its greatest size. The 
walls of Aurelian were only about eleven miles 
in circuit. It is more difficult to determine the 
population of the city at any given period. We 
learn, however, from the Monumentum Ancy- 
ranum, that the plebs urbana in the time of Au- 
gustus was three hundred and twenty thousand. 
This did not include the women, nor the sen- 
ators, nor knights ; so that the free population 
could not have been less than six hundred and 
fifty thousand. To this number we must add 
the slaves, who must have been at least as nu- 
merous as the free population. Consequently, 
the whole population of Rome in the time of 
Augustus must have been at least one million 
three hundred thousand, and in all probability 
greatly exceeded that number. Moreover, as 
we know that the city continued to increase in 
size and population down to the time of Vespa- 
sian and Trajan, we shall not be far wrong in 
supposing that the city contained nearly two 
millions of inhabitants in the reigns of those 
emperors — D. Walls and Gates. I. Walls 
of Romulus. The direction of this wall is de- 
scribed by Tacitus. Commencing at the Forum 
Boarium, the site of which is marked by the 
arch erected there to Septimius Severus, it ran 
along the foot of the Palatine, having the valley 
afterward occupied by the Circus Maximus on 
the right, as far as the altar of Census, nearly 
opposite to the extremity of the Circus ; thence 
it turned round the southern angle of the Pala- 
tine, followed the foot of the hill nearly in a 
straight line to the Curiae Veteres, which stood 
not far from the site of the Arch of Constan- 
tine ; thence ascended the steep slope, at the 
summit of which stands the Arch of Titus, and 
descended again on the other side to the angle 
of the Forum, which was then a morass. la 
this wall there were three gates, the number 
prescribed by the rules of the Etruscan religion. 
1. Porta Mugonia or Mugionis, also called Porta 
tctus Palatit, at the northern slope of the Pala- 
tine, at the point where the Via Sacra and the 
Via Nova met. 2. Porta Romanula, at the 



ROMA. 



ROMA. 



western angle of the hill, near the temple of 
Victory, and between the modern churches of 
S. Teodoro and Santa Anastasia. 3. The name 
and position of the third gate is not mentioned, 
for the Porta Janualis appears to be identical 
with the Janus or archway, commonly known 
as the temple of Janus, which stood on the other 
side of the Forum, and could have had no con- 
nection with the original city of Romulus. — II. 
Walls of Servile Tlllius. It is stated that 
this king surrounded the whole city with a wall 
of hewn stone ; but there are many reasons for 
questioning this statement. The seven hills on 
which Rome was built were most of them of 
great natural strength, having sides actually 
I precipitous, or easily rendered so by cutting 
away the soft tufo rock. Instead, therefore, of 
i building a wall around the whole circuit of the 
i city, Servius Tullus appears only to have con- 
nected the several hills by walls or trenches 
drawn across the narrow valleys which separ- 
ated them. The most formidable part of these 
fortifications was the agger or mound which ex- 
i tended across the broad table-land formed by 
the junction of the Quirinal, Esquiline, and Vim- 
inal, since it was on this side that the city was 
most open to the attacks of the enemy. The 
agger was a great rampart or mound of earth, 
fifty feet wide and above sixty high, faced with 
flagstones and flanked with towers, and at its 
. foot was a moat one hundred feet broad and 
thirty deep. There are fetill traces of this work. 
I Starting from the southern extremity of this 
, mound at the Porta Esquilina, the fortifications 
of Servius ran alon^ the outside edge of the Ca?- 
i lian and Aventine Hills to the River Tiber by the 
, Porta Trigemina. From this point to the Porta 
; Flumentana, near the southwestern extremity 
1 of the Capitoline Hdl, there appears to have 
been no wall, the river itself being considered a 
sufficient defence. At the Porta Flumentana 
the fortifications again commenced, and ran 
along the outside edge of the Capitoline and 
i Quirinal Hills till they reached the northern ex- 
, tremity of the agger at the Porta Colli na. The 
j number of the gates in the walls of Servius is un- 
, certain, andthe position of many of them isdoubt- 
. ful. Pliny, indeed, states that their number was 
■ thirty-seven; but it is almost certain that this 
number includes many mere openings made 
i through the walls to connect different'parts of 
I the city with the suburbs, since the walls of Ser- 
vius had long since ceased to be regarded. The 
following is a list of the gates as far as they can 
be ascertained : 1. Porta Coliina, at the northerly 
extremity of the aggor, and the most northern 
of all the gates, stood at the point of junction of 
the Via Salaria and Via Nomentana, just above 
the northern angle of the Vigna dei Certosini. 
2. P. Viminalis, south of No. 1, and in the centre 
of the agger. 3. P. Esquilina, south of No. 2, 
on the site of the arch of Galhcnus, which proba- 
bly replaced it; the Via Pramcstina and Labi- 
cana began here. 4. P. Qucrquctulana, south 
of No. 3. 5. P. Calwmontana, south of No. 4, 
on the heights of Mons Caelius, behind the hos- 
pital of S. Giovanni in Laterano, at the point of 
junction of the two modern streets which bear 
the name of S. Stefano Rotondo, and the SS. 
Quattro Coronati. 6. P. Capena, one of the most 
celebrated of all the Roman gates, from which 



issued the Via Appia. It stood southwest of 
No. 5, and at the southwest foot of the Caelian, 
on the spot now occupied by the grounds of the 
Villa Mattei. 7, 8, 9. P. Lavcrnalis, P. Rau- 
dusculana, and P. Ncevia, three of the most 
southerly gates of Rome, lying between the 
Cajlian and the Aventine. The walls of Ser- 
vius probably here took a great bend to the 
south, inclosing the heights of Sta Balbina and 
Sta Saba. 10. P. Minucia, probably west of the 
three preceding, and on the south of the Aven- 
tine. 11. P. Trigemina, on the northwest of 
the Aventine, near the Tiber and the great salt 
magazines. 12. P. Flumentana, north of the pre- 
ceding, near the southwestern slope of the Capi- 
tol and close to the Tiber. 13. P. Carmentalis, 
north of No. 12, and at the foot of the south- 
western slope of the Capitoline, near the altar 
of Carmenta, and leading to the Forum Olitori- 
um and the Theatre of Marcellus. This gate 
contained two passages, of which the right-hand 
one was called Porta Scelerata from the time 
that the three hundred Fabii passed through it, 
and was always avoided. 14. P. Ratumenalis, 
north of No. 13, and at the northwestern slope 
of the Capitoline, leading from the Forum of 
Trajan to the Campus Martius. 15. P. Fonti- 
nalis, north of No. 14, on the western slope of 
the Quirinal, also leading to the Campus Mar- 
tius. 16. P. Sanqualis, north of No. 15, also 
on the western slope of the same hill. 17. P. 
Salutaris, north of No. 16, on the northwestern 
slope of the same hill, near the temple of Salus. 
18. P. Triumphaiis. The position of this gate is 
quite uncertain, except that it led, more or less 
directly, to the Campus Martius. — III. Walls 
of Aurelian. These walls are essentially the 
same as those which surround the modern city 
of Rome, with the exception of the part beyond 
the Tiber. The Janiculus and the adjacent 
suburb was the only portion beyond the Tiber 
which was included within the fortifications of 
Aurelian ; for the Vatican was not surrounded 
with walls till the time of Leo IV., in the ninth 
century. On the left bank of the Tiber the 
walls of Aurelian embraced on the north the 
Collis Hortulorum or Pincianus, on the west 
the Campus Martius, on the east the Campus 
Esquilinus, and on the south the Mons Testa- 
ceus. There were fourteen gates in the Aure- 
lian walls, most of which derived their names 
from the roads issuing from them. These were,, 
on the northern side, 1. P. Aurelia, on the Tiber 
in front of the Pons iElius. 2. P. Pinciana, on 
the hill of the same name. 3. P. Salans, ex- 
tant under the same name, but restored in mod- 
ern times. 4. P. Nomentana, leading to the an- 
cient P. Coliina. On the eastern side, 5. P. 
Tiburtina, leading to the old Porta Esquilina, 
now Porta S. Lorenzo. 6. P. Prancstina, now 
Porta Maggiore. On the southern side, 7. P. 
Asinaria, on the site of the modern Porta S 
Giovanni. 8. P. Metronis, or Metronii, or Me- 
trovia, which has now disappeared, probably at 
the entrance to the Caelian, between S. Stefano 
Rotondo and the Villa Mattei. 9. P. Latina, 
now walled up. 10. P. Appia, now Porta S. 
Pancrazio. The roads through this gate and 
through No. 9 both led to the old Porta Capena. 
11. P. Ostiensis, leading to Ostia, now Porta S 
Paolo. On the western side, 12. P. Portuensis, 

747 



ROMA. 



ROMA. 



on the other side of the Tiber, near the river, 
from which issued the road to Portus. 13. A 
second P. Aurelia, on the western slope of the 
Janiculus, now Porta S. Pancrazio. 14. P. Sep- 
timiana, near the Tiber, which was destroyed 
by Alexander VI. — E. Bridges. There were 
eight bridges across the Tiber, which probably 
ran in the following order from north to south : 

1. Pons Mlius, which was built by Hadrian, and 
led from the city to the mausoleum of that em- 
peror, now the bridge and castle of St. Angelo. 

2. P. Neronianus, or Vaticanus, which led from 
the Campus Martius to the Vatican and the gar- 
dens of Caligula and Nero. The remains of its 
piers may still be seen, when the waters of the 
Tiber are low, at the back of the Hospital of 
San Spirito. 3. P. Aurelius, sometimes, but 
erroneously, called Janiculensis, which led to 
the Janiculus and the Porta Aurelia. It occu- 
pied the site of the present " Ponte Sisto," 
which was built by Sixtus IV. upon the ruins of 
the old bridge. 4, 5. P. Fabricius and P. Ces- 
iius, the two bridges which connected the In- 
sula Tiberina with the opposite sides of the 
river, the former with the city, the latter with 
the Janiculus. Both are still remaining. The 
P. Fabricius, which was built by one L. Fabri- 
cius, curator viarum, a short time before the 
conspiracy of Catiline, now bears the name of 
" Ponte Quattro Capi." The P. Cestius, which 
was built at a much later age, is now called 
" Ponte S. Bartolommeo." 6. P. Senatorius or 
Palatinus, below the island of the Tiber, form- 
ed the communication between the Palatine 
and its neighborhood and the Janiculus. 7. P. 
Sublicius, the oldest of the Roman bridges, said 
to have been built by Ancus Marcius when he 
erected a fort on the Janiculus. It was built 
of wood, whence its name, which comes from 
subliccs, " wooden beams." It was carried 
away several times by the river, but from a 
feeling of religious respect was always rebuilt 
of wood down to the latest times. 8. P. Mil- 
vius or Mulvius, now i; Ponte Molle," was sit- 
uated outside the city, north of the P. iElius, 
and was built by /Emilius Scaurus the censor. — 
F. Interior of the City. I. Fora and Campi. 
The Fora were open spaces of ground, paved 
with stones, surrounded by buildings, and used 
as market places, or for the transaction of pub- 
lic business. An account of the Fora is given 
elsewhere. Vid. Forum. The Campi were 
also open spaces of ground, but much larger, 
covered with grass, planted with trees, and 
adorned with works of art. They were used 
by the people as places of exercise and amuse- 
ment, and may be compared with the London 
parks. These Campi were, 1. Campus Mar- 
tius, the open plain lying between the city walls 
and the Tiber, of which the southern part, in 
the neighborhood of the Circus Flaminius, was 
called Campus Flaminius. or Prata Flaminia. 
This plain, which was by far the most celebrated 
of all, is spoken of separately. Vid. Campus 
Martius. 2. Campus Scelcratus, close to the 
Porta Collina and within the w r alls of Servius, 
where the vestals who had broken their vows 
of chastity were entombed alive. 3. Campus 
Agrippaz, probably on the southwestern slope 
of the Pincian Hill, east of the Campus Martius, 
on the right of the Corso, and north of the Piazza 

748 



| degli Apostoli. 4. Campus Esquilinus, outside 
! of the agger of Servius and near the Porta Es- 
| quilina, where criminals were executed, and 
| the lower classes were buried. The greatei 
part of this plain was afterward converted into 
pleasure grounds belonging to the palace of 
, Maecenas. 5. Campus Viminalis, on the east- 
! em slope of the Viminal, near the Villa Negroni. 
— II. Streets and Districts. There are said 
to have been, in all, two hundred and fifteen 
streets in Rome. The broad streets were call- 
ed Via. and Vicif the narrow streets Angipor- 
tus. The chief streets were, 1. Via Sacra, the 
principal street in Rome. It began near the 
j Sacellum Strenias, in the valley between the 
I Caelian and the Esquiline, and, leaving the Fla- 
j vian Amphitheatre (Colosseum) on the left, ran 
j along the northern slope of the Palatine, pass- 
j ing under the arch of Titus, and past the Forum 
I Romanum, till it reached the Capitol. 2. Via 
I Lata, led from the northern side of the Capitol 
j and the Porta Ratumena to the Porta Flaminia, 
whence the northern part of it was called Via 
Flaminia. 3. Via Nova, by the side of the west- 
ern slope of the Palatine, led from the ancient 
Porta Romanula and the Velabrum to the Forum, 
and was connected by a side street with the Via 
Sacra. 4. Vims Jugarius, led from the Porta 
Carmentalis. under the Capitol, to the Forum 
Romanum, which it entered near the Basilica 
Julia and the Lacus Servilius. 5. Viciis.Tuscus, 
connected the Velabrum with the Forum, run- 
ning west of, and nearly parallel with, the Via 
Nova. It contained a great number of shops, 
where articles of luxury were sold, and its in- 
habitants did not possess the best of characters 
(Tusci turba impia vici, Hor., Sat., ii., 3, 228). 
6. Vicus Cyprius, ran from the Forum to the 
Esquiline. The upper part of it, turning on the 
right to the Urbius Clivus, was called Scclcra- 
tus Vicus, because Tullia here drove her chariot 
over the corpse of her father Servius. 7. Vicus 
Patricius, in the valley between the Esquiline 
and the Viminal, in the direction of the modern 
Via Urbana and Via di S. Pudenziana. 8. Vicus 
Africus, in the district of the Esquiline, but the 
exact situation of which can not be determined, 
said to have been so called because African 
hostages were kept here during the first Punic 
war. 9. Vicus Sandalarius, also in the district 
of the Esquiline. extending as far as the heights 
of the Carina?. Besides the shops of the shoe- 
makers, from whom it derived its name, it con- 
tained several booksellers' shops. 10. Vicus 
Vitriarius or Vitrarius, in the southeastern part 
of the city, near the Porta Capena. 11. Vicus 
Longus, in the Vallis Quirini, between the Quir- 
inal and Viminal, now S. Vitale. 12. Caput 
Africa, near the Colosseum, the modern Via de 
S". Quattro Coronati. 13. Subura or Suburra, a 
district, through which a street of the same 
name ran, was the whole valley between the 
Esquiline, Quirinal, and Viminal. It was one 
of the most frequented parts of the town, and 
contained a great number of shops and brothels. 
14. Velia, a height near the Forum, which ex- 
tended from the Palatine, near the arch of Ti- 
tus, to the Esquiline, and which separated the 

" ; Vicus properly signified a quarter of the city, but the 
principal street in a vicus was frequently called by the 
name of the vicus to which it belonged. 



ROMA. 



ROM A. 



valley of the Forum from that of the Colosseum. 
On the Velia were situated the Basilica of Con- ; 
stantine and the temple of Venus and Rome, j 
15. Carina, a district on the southwestern part 
of the Esquiline, or the modern height of S. | 
Pietro in Vincoli, where Pompey, Cicero, and 
many distinguished Romans lived. 16. Vela- j 
bmm, a district on the western slope of the I 
Palatine, between the Vicus Tuscus and the 
Forum Boarium, was originally a morass. 17. 
jE'/uunelium, a place at the eastern foot of the 
Capitol and by the side of the Vicus Jugarius, 
where the house of Sp. Melius once stood. 
(Vid. p. 467, b.) 18. Argilctum, a district of un- 
certain site, but probably at the southern ex- 
tremity of the Quirinal, between the Subura, the 
Forum of Nerva, and the Temple of Peace. 
The etymology of the name is uncertain ; some 
of the ancients derived it from argilla, "white 
clay;" others from a hero Argus, a friend of 
Evander, who is said to have been buried here. 
19. Lautumia, a district near the Argiletum and 
the Forum Piscatorium, on which subsequently 
the Basilica Porcia was built. In this district 
was one of the state prisons, called Lautumia, 
or Career Laulumiarum. — III. Temples. There 
are said to have been four hundred temples in 
Rome. Of these the following, enumerated for 
the most part in chronological order, were the 
principal : 1. Templum Jovis Feretrii, on the 
Capitoline, the oldest of all the Roman temples, 
built, according to tradition, by Romulus, and 
restored by Augustus. 2. T. Fidei, likewise on 
the Capitoline, built by Numa, and restored suc- 
cessively by A. Atilius Collatinus and M. ^Emil- 
ius Scaurus. 3. T. Jani, also called Janus Bi- 
frons or Biformis, Janus Gemimis, and Janus 
Quirinus, also built by Numa, was, properly I 
speaking, not a temple, but a passage with an ! 
extrance at each end, the gates of which were j 
opened during war and closed in times of peace. 
It was situated northeast of the Forum toward 
the Quirinal. There were also other temples 
of Janus at Rome, of which one was near the 
Theatre of Marcellus, and the other near the 
Forum of Nerva. 4. Md.es Vesta, a round tem- 
ple built by Numa, in the southern part of the 
forum, or on the slope of the Palatine adjoining 
the Regia Numa, probably near Sta Maria Lib- 
eratrice. The Atrium Vesta, also called Atrium 
Regium, probably formed a part of the Regia 
Numse, which may be regarded as forming a 
portion of the building sacred to Vesta. 5. T. 
Diana, on the Aventine, which hill is hence 
called by Martial Collis Diana, built by Servius 
Tullius, as the place of meeting for the Romans 
and the members of the Latin league, and re- 
stored by Augustus, probably near the modern 
church S. Prisca. 6. T. Luna, frequently con- 
founded with the preceding, also built by Servius 
Tullius, and on the Aventine, probably on the 
side adjoining the Circus. 7. T. Jovis, Usually 
called the Capitolium, situated on the southern 
summit of the Capitoline Hill, was vowed by 
Tarquinius Priscus and built by Tarquinius Su- j 
perbus. It was the most magnificent of all the 
temples in Rome, and is described elsewhere. 
Vid. Capitolium. 8. T. Saturni, which was also j 
used as the ^Erarium, on the Clivus Capitolinus 
and by the Forum, to which it is supposed that the j 
three pillars in the Forum belong. It was built by 



Tarquinius Supcrbus, and restored successively 
by L. Munatius Plancus and Septimius Severus. 
9. jEdcs Castoris or T. Castoris ct Pullucis. by the 
Forum, near the fountain of Juturna, in which 
the senate frequently assembled. It was vowed 
by the dictator A. Postumius in the great battle 
with the Latins near the Lake Regillus, and was 
successively restored by L. Metellus Dalmati- 
cus, Tiberius, Caligula, and Claudius. 10. T. 
Mercurii, between the Circus Maximus and the 
Aventine. 11. T. Cerens, on the slope of the 
Aventine, near the circus. 12. T. Apolluus, be- 
tween the Circus Maximus and the theatre of 
Marcellus, near the Porticus Octavia?, where the 
senate often assemhled. 13. T. Junonis Rc- 
gina, on the Aventine. 14. T. Mortis Extra- 
muranei, before the Porta Capena, on the Via 
Appia. 15. T. Junonis Moncta, on the area of 
the Capitoline, where the house of M. Manlius 
had stood. 16. T. Junonis Lucina, on the west- 
ern summit of the Esquiline. 17. T Concor- 
dia, on the slope of the Capitoline, above the 
Forum, in which the senate frequently assem- 
bled. There were probably two temples of Con- 
cordia, both by the Forum, of which the more 
ancient was consecrated by Camillus. and the 
other by L. Opimius after the death of C. Grac- 
chus. The remains of the ancient temple of 
Concordia are to be seen behind the arch of Sep- 
timius Severus. 18. T. Salutis, on the slope of 
the Quirinal, near the Porta Salutaris, adorned 
with paintings by Fabius Pictor, burned down in 
the reign of Claudius. 19. T. Bellona, before 
the Circus Flaminius, and near the confines of 
the Campus Martius, in which the senate as- 
sembled in order to give audience to foreign 
ambassadors, and to receive applications from 
generals who solicited the honor of a triumph. 
20. T. Jovis Victoris, on the Palatine, between the 
Domus Augusti and the Curia Vetus. 21. T. 
Victoria, on the summit of the Palatine, or the 
Clivus Victoriae, above the Porta Romanula and 
the circus, in which the statue of the mother of 
the gods was at first preserved. 22. T Magna 
Matris Idaa, near the preceding and the Casa 
Romuli, in which the above-named statue of the 
goddess was placed thirteen years after its ar- 
rival in Rome. 23. T. Jovis Statoris, near the 
arch of Titus on the Via Sacra, where the senate 
frequently assembled. 24. T. Quirini, on the 
Quirinal, where also the senate frequently as- 
sembled, enlarged and adorned by Augustus. 
25. T. Fortuna, built by Servius Tullius in the 
Forum Boarium. 26 T. Msculapii, in the isl- 
and of the Tiber, which was called after it. In- 
sula iEsculapii. 27. T. Mentis and Veneris Ery- 
cina, both of which were built at the same time, 
and close to one another, on the Capitoline. 
There was also another temple of Venus Ery- 
cina before the Porta Collina. 28. T. Honoris 
and Virtutis, which were built, close to one an- 
other, near the Porta Capena and Via Appia, by 
Marcellus, and adorned with Greek works of art 
brought from Syracuse. 29. T. Jovis, in the isl- 
and of the Tiber, near the temple of /Esculapius. 
30. T. Fauni, in the island of the Tiber. 31 T. 
Spei, in the Forum Olitorium. 32. T. Junonis 
Sospita or Matuta, in the Forum Olitorium, near 
the theatre of Marcellus. 33. T. Ptetatis. in the 
Forum Olitorium, which was pulled down in or- 
der to make room for the theatre of Marcellus. 

749 



ROMA. 



ROMA. 



34. Mdes Fortunes Equcstris, in the Campus Fla- 
minius, near the theatre of Pompey, built by 
Fulvius Flaccus, the roof of which, made of" 
marble, was brought from a temple of Juno Lu- 
cina in Bruttium. It was probably burned down 
in the reign of Augustus or Tiberius, since in 
A.D. 22 we are told there was no temple of 
Fortuna Equestris at Rome. There were other 
temples of Fortuna on the Palatine, Quirinal, 
&c. 35. Mdes Herculis Musarum, close to the 
Porticus Octaviae, and between the theatre of 
Marcellus and the Circus Flaminius, built by M. 
Fulvius Nobilior, and adorned with the statues 
of the Muses brought from Ambracia. 36. T. 
Honoris et Virtutis, built by Marius, but of un- 
certain site : some modern writers suppose it to 
have been on the Esquiline, others on the Capi- 
toline. 37. T. Martis, in the Campus Martius, 
near the Circus Flaminius, built by D. Brutus 
Callaicus, and adorned with a colossal statue 
of the god. 38. T. Veneris Genetricis, in the 
Forum of Caesar, before which Caesar's equestri- 
an statue was placed. 39. T. Martis Ulioris, in 
the Forum of Augustus, to which belong the 
three splendid Corinthian pillars near the con- 
vent S. Annunziata. 40. T. Apollinis, on the 
Palatine, surrounded by a porticus, in which was 
the celebrated Palatine library. 41. Pantheon, 
a celebrated temple in the Campus Martius, built 
by Agrippa : it is described in a separate arti- 
cle. Vid. Pantheon. 42. T. Augusti, founded 
by Tiberius and completed by Caligula, on the 
slope of the Palatine toward the Via Nova. It 
stood before the temple of Minerva, from which 
it was probably separated by the Via Nova. 

43. T. Pacts, one of the most splendid temples 
in the city, buiit by Vespasian on the Velia. 

44. T. Isidis et Scrapidis, in the third Regio, 
which was named after the temple. 45. T. Ves- 
pasiani et Titi, in the Forum alongside of the 
temple of Concordia. 46. T. Antonini et Faus- 
tina, at the further end of the northern side of 
the Forum, under the Velia. The remains of this 
temple are in the modern church of S. Lorenzo 
in Miranda. 47. T. Minerva, on the southern 
side of the Forum, behind the temple of Au- 
gustus, built by Domitian. 48. T. Bona Dea, 
a very ancient temple on a spot of the Aventine, 
which was called Saxum Sacrum* but removed 
by Hadrian, undoubtedly on the southeastern 
side of the hill, opposite the heights of S. Sabba 
and S. Balbina. 49. T. Roma et Veneris, subse- 
quently called T. Urbis, a large and splendid 
temple, built by Hadrian, between the Esquiline 
and Palatine, northeast of the Colosseum. It 
was burned down in the reign of Maxentius, but 
was subsequently restored. Its remains are be- 
tween the Colosseum and the Church of S. Maria 
or S. Francesca Romana. 50. T. Solis, at the 
upper end of the Circus Maximus. 51. T. Her- 
culis, in the Forum Boarium, probably the round 
temple still extant of S. Maria del Sole, which 
used to be erroneously regarded as the temple 
of Vesta. There was another temple of Her- 
cules by the Circus Maximus, near the Porta 
Trigemina. 52. T. Solis, a splendid temple, 
built by Aurelian, east of the Quirinal. 53. T. 
Flora, an ancient temple on the southern point 
of the Quirinal, but the time of its foundation is 
not recorded. 54. Vulcanale was not a temple, 
but only an area dedicated to the god, with an 

750 



altar, on the northern side of the Forum above 
the Comitium : it was so large that not only 
were the Curia Hostilia and the JEdes Concordiae 
built there, but also a fish-market was held in 
I the place. — IV. Circi. The Circi were places 
; for chariot-races and horse-races. 1. Circus, 
\ Maximus, frequently called simply the Circus, 
was founded by Tarquinius Priscus, in the plain 
between the Palatine and Aventine, and was 
successively enlarged by Julius Caesar and Tra- 
jan. Under the emperors it contained seats for 
three hundred and eighty-five thousand persons. 
It was restored by Constantine the Great, and 
games were celebrated in it as late as the sixth 
century. 2. C. Flaminius, erected by Flaminius 
j in B.C. 221, in the Prata Flaminia, before the 
| Porta Carmentalis ; it was not sufficiently large 
for the population of Rome, and was therefore 
seldom used. 3. C. Neronis, erected by Caligula 
in the gardens of Agrippina on the other side of 
the Tiber. There was also another C. Neronis 
j on the other side of the Tiber, near the Moles 
| Hadriani, in the gardens of Domitia. 4. C. Pal- 
atinus, on the Palatine, in which the Ludi Pala- 
tini were celebrated. There are traces of it in 
the Orto Roncioni, on the southern part of the 
hill. 5. C. Heliogabali, in the gardens of this 
! emperor, behind the Amphitheatrum Castrense, 
| at the eastern point of the Aurelian Walls. 6. C. 
Maxentii, commonly called Circo di Caracalla, 
before the Porta Appia, in the southern part of 
the city. Among the Circi we may reckon, 
7. The Stadium, likewise called C. Agonalis and 
C. Alezandri, in the Campus Martius, erected by 
! Domitian in place of the wooden stadium built 
' by Augustus. It contained seats for thirty-three 
| thousand eight hundred and eighty-eight per- 
sons. Its remains still exist in the Piazza Na- 
vona. — V. Theatres. Theatres were not built 
at Rome till a comparatively late period, and 
long after the Circi. At first they were only 
made of wood for temporary purposes, and were 
afterward broken up; but many of these wood- 
en theatres were, notwithstanding, constructed 
with great magnificence. The splendid wooden 
theatre of M. vEmilius Scaurus was capable of 
containing eighty thousand spectators. 1. Thea- 
trum Pompeii, the first permanent stone theatre, 
was erected by Cneius Pompey, B.C. 55, in the 
Campus Martius, northeast of the Circus Fla- 
minius, after the model of the theatre of Myti- 
lene. It contained seats for forty thousand spec- 
tators. It was restored successively by Au- 
gustus, Tiberius, Caligula, Diocletian, and The- 
odoric. Its ruins are by the Palazzo Pio, not 
far from the Campo di Fiore. 2. Th. Comelu 
Balbi, southeast of the preceding, near the Tiber, 
on the site of the Palazzo Cenci. It was dedi- 
cated by Cornelius Balbus in B.C. 13, was partly 
burned down under Titus, but was subsequently 
restored. It contained seats for eleven thou- 
; sand six hundred persons. 3. Th. Marcclli, in 
I the Forum Olitorium, west of the preceding, be- 
i tween the slope of the Capitoline and the island 
; of the Tiber, on the site of the temple of Pietas. 
' It was begun by Julius Caesar, and dedicated 
: by Augustus, in B.C. 13, to the memory of his 
nephew Marcellus. It was restored by Vespa- 
I sian, and perhaps also by Alexander Severus. 
I It contained seats for twenty thousand specta- 
j tors. The remains of its cavea exist near the 



ROMA. 



ROMA. 



Piazza Montanara. These were the only three 
theatres at Rome, whence Ovid speaks of tenia 
(titalra. There was, however, an Odeum or 
concert-house, which may be classed among the 
theatres. 4. Odeum, in the Campus Martius, 
built by Domitian, though some writers attribute 
its erection to Trajan. It contained seats for 
about eleven thousand persons. — VI. Amphi- 
theatres. The amphitheatres, like the thea- 
tres, were originally made of wood for tempo- 
rary purposes. They were used for the shows 
of gladiators and wild beasts. The first wooden 
amphitheatre was built by C. Scribonius Curio 
(the celebrated partisan of Caesar), and the next 
by Julius Caesar during his perpetual dictator- 
ship, B.C. 46. 1. Amph. Statilii Tauri, in the 
Campus Martius, was the first stone amphithe- 
atre in Rome, and was built by Statilius Taurus, 
B.C. 30. This edifice was the only one of the 
kind until the building of the Flavian amphi- 
theatre. It did not satisfy Caligula, who com- 
menced an amphitheatre near the Septa ; but 
the work was not continued by Claudius. Nero 
too, A.D. 57, erected a vast amphitheatre of 
wood, but this was only a temporary building. 
The amphitheatre of Taurus was destroyed in 
the burning of Rome, A.D. 64, and was proba- 
bly never restored, as it is not again mentioned. 
2. Amph. Flavium, or, as it has been called since 
the time of Bede, the Colosseum or Colisceum, a 
name said to be derived from the Colossus of 
Nero, which stood close by. It was situated in 
the valley between the Caelius, the Esquiline, 
and the Velia, on the marshy ground which was 
previously the pond of Nero's palace. It was 
commenced by Vespasian, and was completed 
by Titus, who dedicated it in A.D. 80, when five 
thousand animals of different kinds were slaugh- 
tered. This wonderful building, of which there 
are still extensive remains, covered nearly six 
acres of ground, and furnished seats for eighty- 
seven thousand spectators. In the reign of 
Macrinus it was struck by lightning, and so 
much damage was done to it that the games 
were for some years celebrated in the Stadium. 
Its restoration was commenced by Elagabalus, 
and completed by Alexander Severus. 3. Amph. 
Castrensc, at the southeast of the Aurelian Walls. 
— VII. Naumachia. These were buildings of a 
kind similar to the amphitheatres. They were 
used for representations of sea-fights, and con- 
sisted of artificial lakes or ponds, with stone 
seats around them to accommodate the specta- 
tors. 1. Naumachia Julii Ccesaris, in the middle 
part of the Campus Martius, called the "Lesser 
Codeta." This lake was filled up in the time 
of Augustus, so that we find in later writers 
mention of only two naumachiae. 2. iV. Au- 
gusts, constructed by Augustus on the other side 
of the Tiber, under the Janiculus, and near the 
Porta Portuensis. It was subsequently called 
the Vetus Naumachia, to distinguish it from the 
following one. 3. N. Domitiani, constructed by 
the Emperor Domitian, probably on the other 
side of the Tiber, under the Vatican and the 
Circus Neronis. — VIII. Therm.e. The thermae 
were some of the most magnificent buildings of 
imperial Rome. They were distinct from the 
Balnea, or common baths, of which there were 
a great number at Rome. In the thermae the 
baths constituted a small part of the building. 



They were, properly speaking, a Roman adapta- 
tion of the Greek gymnasia, and besides the 
baths, they contained places for athletic games 
and youthful sports, exedrae or public halls, por- 
ticoes and vestibules for the idle, and libraries 
for the learned. They were decorated with 
the finest objects of art, and adorned with 
fountains, and shaded walks and plantations, 
j 1. Thermce Agrippa, in the Campus Martius, 
j erected by M. Agrippa. The Pantheon, still 
existing, is supposed by some, but without suf- 
ficient reason, to have served originally as a 
vestibule to these Thernuz. 2. Th. Neronis, 
erected by Nero in the Campus Martius, along- 
side of the Thermae of Agrippa : they were 
restored by Alexander Severus, and were from 
that time called Th. Alexandrine. 3. Th. Titi, 
on the Esquiline, near the amphitheatre of 
this emperor, of which there are still consid- 
erable remains. 4. Th. Trajani, also on the 
Esquiline, immediately behind the two pre- 
ceding, toward the northeast. 5. Th. Com- 
modiance. and Th. Scvcriana, close to one an- 
other, near S. Balbina, in the southeastern 
part of the city. 6. Th. Antoniniance, also in 
the southeastern part of the city, behind the 
two preceding, one of the most magnificent of 
all the Thermae, in which two thousand three 
hundred men could bathe at the same time. 
The greater part of it was built by Caracalla, 
and it was completed by Elagabalus and Alex- 
ander Severus. There are still extensive re- 
mains of this immense building below S. Bal- 
bina. 7. Th. Diocletiani, in the northeastern 
part of the city, between the Agger of Servius 
and the Viminal and Quirinal. It was the most 
extensive of all the Thermae, containing a li- 
brary, picture gallery, Odeum, &c, and such im- 
mense baths that three thousand men could 
bathe in them at the same time. There are 
still extensive remains of this building near S. 
Maria d'Angeli. 8. Th. Constantini, on the Qui- 
rinal, on the site of the modern Palazzo Ros- 
pigliosi, but of which all traces have disappear- 
ed. The following Thermae were smaller and 
less celebrated. 9. Th. Deciance, on the Aven- 
tine. 10. Th. Surana, erected by Trajan to the 
memory of his friend Sulpicius Sura, also in the 
neighborhood of the Aventine, probably the same 
as the Th. Variance. 11. Th. Philippi, near S. 
Matteo in Merulana. 12. Th. Agrippina, on the 
Viminal, behind S. Lorenzo. 13. Th. Caii et 
Lucii, on the Esquiline, called in the Middle 
Ages the Terme di Galluccio. — IX. Basilica. 
The Basilicas were buildings which served as 
courts of law, and exchanges or places of meet- 
ing for merchants and men of business. 1. Ba- 
silica Porcia, erected by M. Porcius Cato, in the 
Forum adjoining the Curia, B.C. 184. It was 
burned down along with the Curia in the riots 
which followed the death of Clodius, 52. 2. 
B. Fulvia, also called Mmilia et Fulvia, because 
it was built by the censors L. iEmilius Lepidus 
and M. Fulvius Nobilior in 179. It was situ- 
ated in the Forum near the preceding one. It 
was restored by iEmilius Paulus in the time of 
Caesar, and was hence called B. Mmilia or Fault. 
It was dedicated by his son Paulus iEmilius Lep- 
idus in his consulship, 34. It was burned down 
twenty years afterward (14), and was rebuilt 
nominally by Paulus Lepidus, but in reality by 

751 



ROMA 



ROMA. 



Augustus and the friends of Paulus. The new- 
building was a most magnificent one ; its col- 
umns of Phrygian marble were especially cele- 
brated. It was repaired by another Lepidus in 
the reign of Tiberius, A.D. 22. 3. B. Sempronia, 
built by Ti. Sempronius Gracchus, B.C. 171, in 
the Forum at the end of the Vicus Tuscus. 4. 
B. Opimia, in the Forum near the temple of Con- 
cordia. 5. B. Julia, commenced by Julius Cae- 
sar and finished by Augustus, in the Forum be- 
tween the temples of Castor and Saturn, prob- 
ably on the site of the B. Sempronia mentioned 
above. Some writers suppose that iEmilius 
Paulus built two Basilica?, and that the B. Julia 
occupied the site of one of them. 6. B. Argcn- 
taria, in the Forum near the Clivus Argentarius 
and before the temple of Concordia, probably 
the same as the one mentioned under the name 
of B. Vascularia. The remains of this building 
are behind S. Martina, alongside of the Salita 
di Marforio. 7. B. Ulpia, in the middle of the 
Forum of Trajan, of which there are still con- 
siderable remains. 8. B. Constantiana, between 
the temple of Peace and the temple of Rome 
and Venus. — X. Porticoes. The porticoes 
(Portions) were covered walks, supported by 
columns, and open on one side. There were 
several public porticoes at Rome, many of them 
of great size, which were used as places of rec- 
reation, and for the transaction of business. 
I. Porticus Pompeii, adjoining the theatre of 
Pompey, and erected to afford shelter to the 
spectators in the theatre during a shower of 
rain. It was restored by Diocletian, and was 
hence called P. Jovia. 2. P. Argonautarum, or 
Neptu?ii or Agrippce, erected by Agrippa in the 
Campus Martius around the temple of Neptune, 
and adorned with a celebrated painting of the 
Argonauts. 3. P. Philippi, by the side of the 
T. Herculis Musarum and the Porticus Octaviae, 
built by M. Philippus, the father-in-law of Au- 
gustus, and adorned with splendid works of art. 
4. P. Minucii, in the Campus Martins, near the 
Circus Flaminius, built by Q. Minucius Rums 
in B.C. 109, to commemorate his victories over 
the Scordisci and Triballi in the preceding year. 
There appear to have been two porticoes^of this 
name, since we find mention of a Minucia Vetus 
et Frumentaria. It appears that the tesserae, or 
tickets, which entitled persons to a share in the 
public distributions of corn, were given to them 
in the P. Minucia. 5. P. Metelli, built by Q. 
Metellus after his triumph over Perseus, king 
of Macedonia, B.C. 146. It was situated in the 
Campus Martius, between the Circus Flaminius 
and the theatre of Marcellus, and surrounded 
the two temples of Jupiter Stator and Juno Re- 
gina. 6. P. Octavia, built by Augustus on the 
site of the P. Metelli just mentioned, in honor 
of his sister Octavia. It was a magnificent 
building, containing a vast number of works of 
art and a puolic library, in which the senate 
frequently assembled ; hence it is sometimes 
called Curia Octavia. It was burned down in 
the reign of Titus. Its ruins are near the church 
of S. Angelo in Pescaria. 7. P. Octavia, which 
must be carefully distinguished from the P. Oc- 
tavia) just mentioned, was built by Cn. Octa- 
vius, who commanded the Roman fleet in the 
war against Perseus, king of Macedonia. It 
•vas situated in the Campus Martius, between 
752 



! the theatre of Pompey and the Circus Flaminius. 
j It was rebuilt by Augustus, and contained two 
J rows of columns of the Corinthian order, with 
! brazen capitals, whence it was also called P. 
j Corinthia. 8. P. Europe, probably at the foot 
of the Pincius, in which the foot-races took 
place. 9. P. Polce, built by the sister of Agrippa 
in the Campus Agrippae, in which also foot- 
races took place. 10. P. Livia, on the Esqui- 
j line, surrounding a temple of Concordia. 11. 
I P. Julia, or P. Caii et Lucii, built by Julia in 
I honor of these two sons of Agrippa, was prob- 
ably also situated on the Esquiline near the 
Thermae Caii et Lucii. The following porticoes 
were less celebrated : 12. P. Vipsania, supposed 
by some waiters to be only a later name of the 
P. Argonautarum. 13. P. Claudia, on the Es- 
I quiline. — XL Triumphal Arches. The tri- 
; umphal arches (Arcus) were structures peculiar 
; to the Romans, and were erected by victorious 
j generals in commemoration of their victories, 
j They were built across the principal streets of 
the city, and, according to the space of their re- 
I spective localities, consisted either of a single 
1 arch-way, or of a central one for carriages, with 
j two smaller ones on each side for foot pas- 
j sengers. Ancient writers mention twenty-one 
| arches in the city of Rome. Of these the most 
j important were, 1. Arcus Fabianus, also called 
I Fornix Fabianus, near the beginning of the Via 
j Sacra, built by Fabius Maximus in B C. 121, in 
commemoration of his victory over the Allo- 
broges. 2. A. Drusi, erected by the senate in 
B.C. 9, in honor of Nero Claudius Drusus. It 
was situated on the Via Appia, and still exists, 
forming the inner gate of the Porta di S. Sebas- 
tiano. 3. A. Augusti, in the Forum near the 
house of Julius Caesar. 4. A. Tiberii, near the 
temple of Saturn, on the Clivus Capitolinus, 
( erected by Tiberius, A.D. 16, in honor of the 
; victories of Germanicus in Germany. 5. A. 
\ Claudii, in the plain east of the Quirinal, erect- 
ed A.D. 51, to commemorate the victories of 
Claudius in Britain. Remains of it have been 
dug up at the beginning of the Piazza di Sciarra, 
by the Via di Pietra. 6. A Titi, in the middle 
| of the Via Sacra, at the foot of the Palatine, 
which still exists. It was erected to the honor 
of Titus, after his conquest of Judaea, but was 
i not finished till after his death, since in the 
; inscription upon it he is called " Divus," and he 
is also represented as being carried up to heaven 
upon an eagle. The bas-reliefs of this arch rep- 
resent the spoils from the temple of Jerusalem 
carried in triumphal procession. 7. A. Trajani, 
in the Forum of this emperor, at the point where 
you enter it from the Forum of Augustus. 8. A. 
I Veri, on the Via Appia, erected to the honor of 
| Verus after his victory over the Parthians. 9. 
I A. Marci Aurelii, in the seventh Regio, probably 
I erected to commemorate the victory of this cm- 
| peror over the Marcomanni. It existed under 
i different names near the Piazzo Fiano down to 
\ 1662, when it was broken up by order of Alex- 
1 ander VII. 10. A. Septimii Severi, in the Forum 
! at the end of the Via Sacra and the Clivus Cap- 
I itolinus, before the temple of Concordia, and still 
! extant near the church of SS. Sergio e Bacco, 
; was erected by the senate, A.D. 203, in honor 
: of Septimius Severus and his two sons, Cara- 
j calla and Geta, on account of his victories over 



ROMA. 



ROMA. 



the Parthians and Arabians. 11. A. Gordiani, 
on the Esquiline. 12. A. Galium, erected to 
the honor of Gallienus by a private individual, 
M. Aurelius Victor, also on the Esquiline, south- 
east of the Porta Esquilina. It is still extant 
near the Church of S. Vito. 13. A. Diocletiani, 
probably identical with the A. Novus in the sev- 
enth Regio. 14. A. Constantini, at the entrance 
to the valley between the Palatine and the Cae- 
lius, is still extant. It was erected by the sen- 
ate in honor of Constantine after his victory 
over Maxentius, A.D. 312. It is profusely or- 
namented, and many of the bas-reliefs which 
adorn it were taken from one of the arches 
erected in the time of Trajan. 15. A. Theodo- 
siani, Gratiani et Valentiniani, opposite the Pons 
.-Elius and the Moles Hadriani. — XII. Curiae or 
Senate-Houses. 1. Curia Hostilia, frequently 
called Curia simply, was built by Tullus Hos- 
tilius, and was used as the ordinary place of 
assembly for the senate down to the time of 
Julius Caesar. It stood in the Forum, on the 
northern side of the Comitium. It was burned 
to the ground in the riots which followed the 
death of Clodius, B.C. 52. It was, however, 
soon rebuilt, the direction of the work being in- 
trusted to Faustus, the son of the dictator Sulla ; 
but scarcely had it been finished, when the sen- 
ate, at the suggestion of Caesar, decreed that it 
should be destroyed, and a temple of Fortune 
erected on its site, while a new curia should 
be erected, which should bear the name of Julia. 
( Vid. below.) 2. C. Pompcia or Pompeii, attach- 
ed to the Portico of Pompey in the Campus 
Martius. It was in this curia that Caesar was 
assassinated on the Ides of March. 3. C. Julia, 
the decree for the erection of which has been 
mentioned above, was finished and consecrated 
by Augustus. It did not stand on the site of 
the Curia Hostilia, as many modern writers 
have supposed, but at the southwestern angle 
of the Comitium, between the temple of Vesta 
and that of Castor and Pollux. 4. C. Pompili- 
ana, built by Domitian and restored by Diocle- 
tian, was the usual place of the senate's meet- 
ing from the time of Domitian. It was situated 
alongside of the temple of Janus, which was 
said to have been built by Numa Pompilius, 
whence this curia was called Pompiliana. — 
XIII. Prisons. There were two public prisons 
(carceres) in Rome. The more ancient one, 
called Career Mamcrtinus (a name, however, 
which does not occur in any ancient author), 
was built by Ancus Maicius on the slope of the 
Capitoline overhanging the Forum. It was en- 
larged by Servius Tullius, who added to it a 
dismal subterranean dungeon, called from him 
Tullianum, where the conspirators of Catiline 
were put to death. This dungeon was twelve 
feet under ground, walled on each side, and 
arched over with stone-work. It is still extant, 
and serves as a subterranean chapel to a small 
church built on the spot called S. Pietro in Car- 
cere. Near this prison were the Scala. Gcmonia, 
or steps, down which the bodies of those who 
had been executed were thrown into the Forum, 
to be exposed to the gaze of the Roman popu- 
lace. The other state prison was called Lau- 
tumice, and was probably situated toward the 
northern side of the Forum, near the Curia 
Hostilia and Basilica Porcia. Some writers, 
48 



however, suppose Lautumiae to be only anothei 
name of the Career Mamertinus.— XI V. Castra 
or Barracks. 1. Castra Pretoria, in the north- 
eastern corner of the city, on the slope of the 
Quirinal and Viminal, and beyond the Thermae 
of Diocletian, were built by the Emperor Tibe- 
rius in the form of a Roman camp. Here the 
praetorian troops or imperial guards were always 
quartered. 2. Castra Peregrina, on the Caelius, 
probably built by Septimius Severus for the use 
of the foreign troops, who might serve as a coun- 
terpoise against the praetorians. — XV. Aque- 
ducts. The aqueducts (Aqv.ceductus) supplied 
Rome with an abundance of pure water trom 
the hills which surround the Campagna. The 
Romans at first had recourse to the Tiber and 
to wells sunk in the city. It was not till B.C. 
313 that the first aque.duct was constructed, but 
their number was gradually increased till they 
amounted to fourteen in the time of Procopius, 
that is, the sixth century of the Christian era. 
1. Aqua Appia, was begun by the censor Ap- 
pius Claudius Caecus in B.C. 313. Its sources 
were near the Via Praenestina, between the 
seventh and eighth mile-stones, and its termina- 
tion was at the Salinae by the Porta Trigemina. 
Its length was eleven thousand one hundred 
i and ninety passus, for eleven thousand one 
hundred and thirty of which it was carried un- 
der the earth, and for the remaining sixty pas- 
sus, within the city, from the Porta Capena to 
the Porta Trigemina, it was on arches. No 
traces of it remain. 2. Anio Vetus, commenced 
B.C. 273, by the censor M'. Curius Dentatus, 
and finished by M. Fulvius Flaccus. The wa- 
ter was derived from the River Anio, above Ti- 
bur, at a distance of twenty Roman miles from 
the city; but, on account of its windings, its ac- 
tual length was forty-three miles, of which length 
less than a quarter of a mile only (viz., two 
hundred and twenty-one passus) was above the 
ground. There are considerable remains of this 
aqueduct on the Aurelian wall, near the Porta 
Maggiore, and also in the neighborhood of Ti- 
voli. 3. Aqua Marcia, which brought the coldest 
and most wholesome water to Rome, was built 
by the praetor Q. Marcius Rex, by command of 
the senate, in B.C. 144. It commenced at the 
side of the Via Valeria, thirty-six miles from 
Rome ; its length was sixty-one thousand seven 
hundred and ten and a half passus, of which 
only seven thousand four hundred and sixty- 
three were above ground ; namely, five hundred 
and twenty-eight on solid substructions, and 
six thousand nine hundred and thirty-five on 
arches. It was high enough to supply water to 
j the summit of the Capitoline Mount. It was 
I repaired by Agrippa in his aedileship, B.C. 33 
(vid. below, No. 5), and the volume of its water 
was increased by Augustus, by means of the 
water of a spring eight hundred passus from it : 
the short aqueduct which conveyed this water 
was called Aqua Augusta, but is never enumer- 
ated as a distinct aqueduct. Several arches of 
the Aqua Marcia are still standing. 4. Aqua 
Tcpula, which was built by the censors Cn. Ser- 
vilius Caepio and L. Cassius Longinus in B.C. 
127, began in a spot in the Lucullan or Tuscu- 
lan land, two miles to the right of the tenth 
mile-stone on the Via Latina. It was afterward 
connected with, — 5. Aqua Julia. Among the 

753 



ROMA. 



ROMA. 



splendid public works executed by Agrippa in 
his sedileship, B C. 33, was the formation of a 
new aqueduct, and the restoration of all the old 
ones. From a source two miles to the right of 
the twelfth mile-stone of the Via Latina, he con- 
structed his aqueduct (the Aqua Julia) first to 
the Aqua Tepula, in which it was merged as 
far as the reservoir {piscina) on the Via Latina, 
seven miles from Rome. From the reservoir 
the water was carried along two distinct chan- 
nels, on the same substructions (which were 
probably the original substructions of the Aqua 
Tepula newly restored), the lower channel be- 
ing called the Aqua Tepula, and the upper the 
Aqua Julia ; and this double aqueduct again 
was united with the Aqua Marcia, over the 
water-course of which the other two were car- 
ried. The monument erected at the junction 
of these three aqueducts is still to be seen close 
to the Porta S Lorenzo. It bears an inscrip- 
tion referring to the repairs under Caracalla. 
The whole course of the Aqua Julia, from its 
source, amounted to fifteen thousand four hund- 
red and twenty-six passus, partly on massive 
substructions and partly on arches. 6. Aqua 
Virgo, built by Agrippa to supply his baths. Its 
water was as highly esteemed for bathing as 
that of the Aqua Marcia was for drinking. It 
commenced by the eighth mile-stone on the Via 
Collatina, and was conducted by a very circuit- 
ous route, chiefly under the ground, to the M. 
Pincius, whence it was carried on arches to the 
Campus Martins : its length was fourteen thou- 
sand one hundred and five passus, of which 
twelve thousand eight hundred and sixty-five 
were under ground. 7. Aqua Alsietina, some- 
times called also Aqua Augusta, on the other 
side of the Tiber, was constructed by Augustus 
from the Lacus Alsietinus (Lago di Martignano), 
which lay six thousand five hundred passus to 
the right of the fourteenth mile-stone, on the 
Via Claudia, and was brought, to the part of the 
Regio Transtiberina below the Janiculus. Its 
length was twenty-two thousand one hundred 
and seventy-two passus, of which only three 
hundred and fifty-eight were on arches ; and 
its water was so bad that it could only have 
been intended for the supply of Augustus's Nau- 
machia, and for watering gardens. 8, 9. Aqua 
Claudia and Anio Novus (or Aqua Aniena Nova), 
the two most magnificent of all the aqueducts, 
both commenced by Caligula in A.D. 36, and 
finished by Claudius in A.D. 50. The Aqua 
Claudia commenced near the thirty-eighth mile- 
stone on the Via Sublacensis. Its water was 
reckoned the best after the Marcia. Its length 
was forty-six thousand four hundred and six 
passus (nearly forty-six and a half miles), of 
which nine thousand five hundred and sixty- 
seven were on arches. The Anio Novus began 
at the forty-second mile-stone on the Via Sub- 
lacensis. Its length was fifty-eight thousand 
seven hundred passus (nearly fifty-nine miles), 
and some of its arches were one hundred and 
nine feet high. In the neighborhood of the city 
these two aqueducts were united, forming two 
channels on the same arches, the Claudia below 
and the Anio Novus above. An interesting 
monument connected with these aqueducts is 
the gate now called Porta Maggiore, which was 
originally a magnificent double arch, by means 
754 



j of which the aqueduct was carried over the Via 
| Labicana and the Via Praenestina. Over the 
I double arch are three inscriptions, which record 
' the names of Claudius as the builder, and of 
Vespasian andTitus as the restorers of the aque- 
duct. By the side of this arch the aqueduct 
passes along the wall of Aurelian for some dis- 
tance, and then it is continued upon the Arcus 
Neroniani or Ceelimontani, which were added 
by Nero to the original structure, and which 
terminated at the temple of Claudius, which 
was also built by Nero on the Cselius, where 
the water was probably conveyed to a castel- 
lum already built for the Aqua Julia, and for a 
branch of the Aqua Marcia, which had been at 
some previous time continued to the Cgelius. 
10. Aqua Crabra, which had its source near that 
of the Julia, and which was originally carried 
right through the Circus Maximus ; but the 
water was so bad that Agrippa would not bring 
it into the Julia, but abandoned it to the people 
of the Tusculan land. Hence it was called 
Aqua Damnata. At a later period, part of the 
water was brought into the Aqua Julia. Con- 
siderable traces of it remain. 11. Aqua Traja- 
na, was brought by Trajan from the Lacus Sa- 
batinus (now Bracciano) to supply the Janiculus 
and the Regio Transtiberina. 12. Aqua Alex- 
andria, constructed by Alexander Severus ; its 
source was in the lands of Tusculum, about 
fourteen miles from Rome, between Gabii and 
the Lake Regillus. Its small height shows that 
it was intended for the baths of Severus, which 
were in one of the valleys of Rome. 13. Aqua 
Septimiana, built by Septimius Severus, was per- 
haps only a branch of the Aqua Julia, formed by 
the emperor to bring water to his baths. 14. 
Aqua Algentia had its source at Mount Algidus 
by the Via Tusculana. Its builder is unknown. 
Three of these aqueducts still supply the modem 
city of Rome with water. (1.) The Acqua Ver- 
ging, the ancient Aqua Virgo, which was re- 
stored by Pope Pius IV., and further embellish- 
ed by Benedict XIV. and Clement XIII. The 
chief portion of its waters gush out through the 
beautiful Fontana di Trevi, but it also supplies 
twelve other public fountains and the greater 
part of the lower city. (2.) The Acqua Felice, 
named after the conventual name of its re- 
storer, Sixtus V. (Fra Felice), is probably a part 
of the ancient Aqua Claudia, though some take 
it for the Alexandria. It supplies twenty-seven 
public fountains and the eastern part of the 
city. (3.) The Acqua Paola, the ancient Alsie- 
tina, supplies the Transtevere and the Vatican, 
and feeds, among others, the splendid fountains 
before St. Peter's. —XVI. Sewers. Of these 
the most celebrated was the Cloaca Maxima, 
constructed by Tarquinius Priscus, which was 
formed to carry off the waters brought down 
from the adjacent hills into the Velabrum and 
valley of the Forum. It empties itself into the 
Tiber nearly opposite one extremity of the In- 
sula Tiberina. This cloaca was formed by 
three arches, one within the other, the inner- 
most of which is a semicircular vault about 
fourteen feet in diameter. It is still extant in 
its original state, with not a stone displaced.— 
XVII. F'alaces. 1. Palathan, or the imperial pal- 
ace, was situated on the northeast side of the 
! Palatine, between the arch of Titus and the 



ROMA. 



ROMA. 



sanctuary of Vesta ; its front was turned toward i 
the Forum, and the approach to it was from the j 
Via Sacra, close by the arch of Titus. It was 
originally the house of the orator Hortensius, 
and was enlarged by Augustus, who made it the j 
imperial residence. A part of the Palatium ' 
was called Domus Tiberiana, which was origin- \ 
ally a separate house of Tiberius on the Pala- ; 
tine, and was afterward united to the palace of I 
Augustus. It was on the side of the hill turned j 
toward the Circus and the Velabrum, and is | 
sometimes called Postica Pars Palatii. It was 
through this part of the palace that the Emperor j 
Otho fled into the Velabrum. We read of the j 
Domus Tiberiana even after the imperial palace J 
had been burned to the ground in the reign of j 
Nero ; whence it follows that when the palace j 
was rebuilt a portion of it still continued to bear j 
this name. The Palatium was considerably en- J 
larged by Caligula ; but it did not satisfy Nero's i 
love of pomp and splendor. Nero built two ; 
magnificent palaces, which must be distinguish- 
ed from one another. The first, called the Do- 
mus Transitoria Neronis, covered the whole of 
the Palatine, and extended as far as the Esqui- 
line to the gardens of Maecenas. This palace 
was burned to the ground in the great fire of 
Rome, whereupon Nero commenced a new pal- 
ace, know 7 n by the name of Domus Aurea, which 
embraced the whole of the Palatine, the Velia, I 
the valley of the Colosseum, and the heights of 
the Thermae of Titus, extended near the Esqui- ! 
line gate, and was cut through not only by the 
Via Sacra, but also by other streets. The whole 
building, however, was not finished at the time 
of Nero's death ; and Vespasian confined the 
imperial palace to the Palatine, converting the \ 
other parts of the Domus Aurea into public or 
private buildings. The palace itself was not ' 
finished till the time of Domitian, who adorned ! 
it with numerous works of art. The Emperor | 
Septimius Severus added on the south side of I 
the Palatine a building called the Septizonium, j 
which was probably intended as an Atrium, j 
There were considerable remains of this Sep- j 
tizonium down to the end of the sixteenth cen- i 
tury, when Sixtus V. caused them to be destroy- j 
ed, and the pillars brought to the Vatican, j 
Among the numerous private palaces at Rome ! 
the following were some of the most important. J 
2. Domus Ciceroni.9, close to the Porticus Catuli, ' 
probably on the norJ heastern edge of the Palatine, | 
was built by M. Livius Drusus, and purchased ; 
by Cicero of one of the Crassi. It was destroy- 
ed by Claudius aft( r the banishment of Cicero. ! 
but was subsequently rebuilt at the public ex- 
pense. 3. D. Pompeii, the palace of Pompey, 
was situated in the Carinae near the temple of 
Tellus. It was afterward the residence of M. 
Antonius. 4. D. Crassi, the palace of L. Cras- j 
sus the orator, on the Palatine. 5. D. Scauri, 
also on the Palatine, celebrated for its magnifi- j 
cence, subsequently belonged to Clotlius. 6. D. \ 
Later anor am, on the eastern confines of the Cae- j 
lius, was a palace originally belonging to the 
distinguished family of the Plautii Laterani ; but j 
after the execution of Plautius Lateranus under ■ 
Nero, it became imperial property. It was given 
by Septimius Severus to his friend Lateranus, 
and was subsequently the palace of Constantine, 
who adorned it with great magnificence. The 



modern palace of the Lateran occupies its site. 
— XVIII. Horti. The Horti were parks or gar- 
dens, which were laid out by wealthy Roman 
nobles on the hills around the city, and were 
adorned with beautiful buildings and works of 
art. 1. Horti Luculliani, on Mount Pincius, 
which hill was hence called Collis Hortorum. 
They were laid out by Lucullus, the conqueror 
of Mithradates. In the reign of Claudius they 
belonged to Valerius Asiaticus, who was put 
to death through the influence of Messalina, 
chiefly because she coveted the possession of 
these gardens. From this time they appear to 
have belonged to the imperial house. 2. H. 
Sallusliani, laid out by the historian Sallust, on 
his return from Numidia, in the valley between 
the Quirinal and the Pincius. 3. H. Casaris, 
bequeathed by Julius Caesar to the people, were 
situated on the right bank of the Tiber, at the 
foot of the Janiculus, probably on t he spot where 
Augustus afterward constructed his great Nau- 
machia. 4. H. Mcecenatts, in the Campus Esqui- 
linus, bequeathed by Maecenas to Augustus, and 
frequently used by the imperial family. 5. H. 
Agrippinaz, on the right bank of the Tiber, in 
which Caligula built his Circus. It was here 
that Nero burned the Christians to serve as 
lights for his nocturnal games, after previously 
wrapping them up in pitch. 6 H. Domxtia, also 
on the right bank of the Tiber, in which Hadrian 
built his Mausoleum. 7. H. Pallantiani, on the 
Esquiline, laid out by Pallas, the powerful freed- 
man of Claudius. 8. H. Gcta, on the other side 
of the Tiber, laid out by Septimius Severus. 
— XIX. Sepulchral Monuments. 1. Mausole- 
um Augusti, was situated in the Campus Mar- 
tius, and was built by Augustus as the burial- 
place of the imperial family. It was surround- 
ed with an extensive garden or park, and was 
considered one of the most magnificent build- 
ings of his reign ; but there are only some in- 
significant ruins of it still extant. 2. Mausoleum 
Hadriani, was commenced by Hadrian in the 
gardens of Domitia, on the right bank of the 
Tiber, and was connected with the city by the 
Pons ^Elius ; it was finished and dedicated by 
Antoninus Pius, A.D. 140. Here were buried 
Hadrian, Antoninus Pius, L. Verus, Commodus, 
and probably also Septimius Severus, Geta, and 
Caracalla. This building, stripped of its orna- 
ments, still forms the fortress of modern Rome 
(the castle of S. Angelo). 3. Mausoleum Hel- 
ena', a round building on the Esquiline, of con- 
siderable extent, erected by Constantine as the 
sepulchre of his mother. Its remains, situated 
in the street on the right of the Porta Maggiore, 
are now called Torre Pignattara. 4. Sepulcrum 
Scipiojium, the burial-place of the Scipios, was 
situated, left of the Via Appia, near the Porta 
Capena. Most of the tombs of the distinguish- 
ed Roman families during the Republican pe- 
riod lay on the Via Appia. The tomb of the 
Scipios was discovered in 1780, about four 
hundred paces within the modern Porta S. Se- 
bastiano. It contained many interesting mon- 
uments and inscriptions, which are now de- 
posited in the Museo Pio-Clementino. 5. Se- 
pulcrum CceciltcB Mctellat, erected to the memory 
of Caecilia Metella, the daughter of Metellus Cre- 
ticus, not far from the Circus Maxentii. This 
imposing monument is still extant, and known 

755 



ROMA. 



ROMULUS. 



by the name of Capo di Bove. 6. Scpulcrum 
Opsin, situated south of the Aventine, near the 
Porta Ostiensis, being partly within and partly 
without the walls of Aurelian. This monument, 
which is still extant, is in the form of a Pyra- 
mid, and was built in the time of Augustus for 
a certain C. Cestius. 7. Sepulcrum Septimii 
Severi, on the Via Appia, built by Septimius Se- 
verus in his life-time, after the model of his Sep- 
tizonium. (Vid. above, XVI., No. 1). — XIX. 
Columns. Columns (Columna) were frequently 
erected at Rome to commemorate persons and 
events. 1. Columna Mania, near the end of the 
Forum, toward the Capitol, was erected to the 
honor of the consul C. Maenius, who conquered 
the Latins and took the town of Antium, B.C. 
338. 2. Col. Rostrata, also in the Forum, erect- 
ed in honor of the consul C. Duilius, to com- 
memorate his victory over the Carthaginian 
fleet, B.C. 260. The name of Rostrata was 
given to it from its being adorned with the 
beaks of the conquered ships. The inscription 
upon this column, written in obsolete Latin, is 
still preserved. 3. Col. Trajani, in the Forum, 
in which the ashes of the Emperor Trajan were 
deposited. This column is still extant, and is 
one of the most interesting monuments of an- 
cient Rome. It is, including the pedestal, one 
hundred and seventeen feet high. The top was 
originally crowned with the statue of the em- 
peror ; it is now surmounted by that of the 
apostle Peter. A spiral bas-relief is folded 
round the pillar, which represents the emperors 
wars against Decebalus and the Dacians, and 
is one of the most valuable authorities for 
archaeological inquiries. 4. Col. Antonini Pii, 
erected in honor of Antoninus Pius after his 
death, consisted of a column of red granite on 
a pediment of white marble, and was situated 
in the Campus Martius, near the temple dedi- 
cated to this emperor. It stood at an earlier 
period not far from the Curia Innocenziana on 
Monte Citorio, in the garden of the Casa della 
Missione. At present the basis only is extant, 
and is preserved in the garden of the Vatican. 
5. Col. M. Aurelii Antonini, generally called the 
Antonine Column, erected to the memory of the 
Emperor M. Aurelius, also in the Campus Mar- 
tius, and still extant. It is an imitation of the 
Column of Trajan, and contains bas-reliefs rep- 
resenting the wars of M. Aurelius against the 
Marcomanni. — XX. Obelisks. The Obelisks 
(Obclisci) at Rome were mostly works of Egypt- 
ian art, which were transported from Egypt to 
Rome in the time of the emperors. Augustus 
caused two obelisks to be brought to Rome, one 
of which was erected in the Circus and another 
in the Campus Martius. The former was re- 
stored in 1589, and is called at present the Fla- 
minian Obelisk. Its whole height is about one 
hundred and sixteen feet, and without the base 
about seventy-eight feet. The obelisk in the 
Campus Martius was set up by Augustus as a 
sun-dial. It stands at present on the Monte 
Citorio, where it was placed in 1792. Its whole 
height is about one hundred and ten feet, and 
without the base about seventy-one feet. An- 
other obelisk w T as brought to Rome by Caligula, 
and placed on the Vatican in the Circus of Ca- 
ligula. It stands at present in front of St. Pe 
ter's, where it was placed in 1586, and its whole 
756 



height is about one hundred and thirty-two feet, 
! and without the base and modern ornaments at 
j top about eighty-three feet. But the largest 
; obelisk at Rome is that which was originally 
j transported from Heliopolis to Alexandrea by 
1 Constantine, and conveyed to Rome by his son 
Constantius, who placed it in the Circus Max- 
1 imus. Its present position is before the north 
portico of the Lateran church, where it was 
placed in 1588. Its whole height is about one 
hundred and forty-nine feet, and without the 
base about one hundred and five feet. There 
are eight other obelisks at Rome, besides those 
mentioned above, but none of them are of his- 
torical importance. — G. Roads leading out of 
Rome. Of these the most important were, 1. 
Via Latina, the most ancient of the south roads, 
which issued at first from the Porta Capena, and 
after the time of Aurelian from the Porta Latina. 
It joined the Via Appia at Beneventum. 2. Via 
Appia, the Great South Road, also issued from 
the Porta Capena, and was the most celebrated 
of all the Roman roads. It was commenced by 
Appius Claudius when censor, and was event- 
ually carried to Brundisium. Vid. Appia Via. 
3. Via Ostie?isis, originally passed through the 
Porta Trigemina, afterward through the Porta 
Ostiensis, and kept the left bank of the Tiber to 
Ostia. 4. Via Portuensis, issued from the same 
gate as the Via Ostiensis, and kept the right 
bank of the Tiber to Portus, the new harbor 
founded by Claudius, near Ostia. 5. Via Labi- 
cana, issued from the Porta Esquilina, and pass- 
ing Labicum, fell into the Via Latina at the 
station ad Bivium, thirty miles from Rome. 6. 
Via Prcencstina, originally the Via Gatnna,issueA 
at first from the Porta Esquilina, and subse- 
quently from the Porta Praenestina. Passing 
through Gabii and Praeneste, it joined the Via 
Latina just below Anagnia. 7. Via Tiburtina, 
issued originally from the Porta Esquilina, or 
from the Porta Viminalis, and subsequently 
from the Porta Tiburtina, and proceeded to Ti- 
bur, from which it was continued under the 
name of the Via Valeria, past Corfininm to Adria. 
8. Via Nomentana, anciently Ficulnensis, ran 
from the Porta Collina, subsequently from the 
Porta Nomentana, across the Anio to Nomen- 
tum, and a little beyond fell into the Via Salaria 
at Eretrum. 9. Via Salaria, ran from the Porta 
Collina, subsequently from the Porta Salaria, 
past Fidenae to Reate and Asculum Picenum. 
At Castrum Truentinum it reached the coast, 
which it followed until it joined the Via Fla- 
minia at Ancona. 10. Via Flaminia, the Great 
North Road, commenced in the censorship of 
C. Flaminius, issued from the Porta Flaminia, 
and proceeded past Ocriculum, Narnia, and Pi- 
saurum to Ariminum, from which town it was 
continued under the name of the Via .Emilia to 
Placentia and Aquileia. 11. Via Aurelia, the 
Great Coast Road, issued originally from the 
Porta Janiculensis. It reached the coast at 
Alsium, and followed the shore of the Lower 
Sea along Etruria and Liguria by Genoa, as far 
as Forum Julii in Gaul. 

Romulea, an ancient town of the Hirpini in 
Samnium, on the road from Beneventum to Ta- 
rentum, destroyed at an early period by the Ro- 
mans. 

Romulus, the founder of the city of Rome, 



ROMULUS. 



ROMULUS. 



must not be regarded as a real personage. The 
stories about him are mythical, and represent 
the traditional belief of the Roman people re- 
specting their origin. Romulus, which is only 
a lengthened form of Romus, is the Roman peo- 
ple represented as an individual. The common 
legend about Romulus ran as follows : At Alba 
Longa there reigned a succession of kings, de- 
scended from lulus, the son of ^Eneas. One 
of the last of these kings left two sons, Numi- 
tor and Amulius. The latter, who was the 
younger, deprived Numitor of the kingdom, but 
allowed him to live in the enjoyment of his 
private fortune. Fearful, however, lest the 
heirs of Numitor might not submit so quietly to 
his usurpation, he caused his only son to be 
murdered, and made his daughter Silvia, or 
Rhea Silvia, one of the Vestal virgins. Silvia 
was violated by Mars, and in course of time 
gave birth to twins. Amulius doomed the 
guilty Vestal and her babes to be drowned in 
the river. In the Anio Silvia exchanged her 
earthly life for that of a goddess, and became 
the wife of the river god. The stream carried 
the cradle in which the children were lying into 
the Tiber, which had overflowed its banks far 
and wide. It was stranded at the foot of the 
Palatine, and overturned on the root of a wild 
fig-tree, which, under the name of the Ficus 
Ruminalis, was preserved and held sacred for 
many ages after. A she-wolf, which had come 
to drink of the stream, carried them into her 
den hard by, and suckled them, where they 
were discovered by Faustulus, the king's shep- 
herd, who took the children to his own house, 
and gave them to the care of his wife, Acca 
Larentia. They were called Romulus and Re- 
mus, and were brought up with the other shep- 
herds on the Palatine Hill. As they grew up, 
they became distinguished by the beauty of their 
person and the bravery of their deeds, and 
fought boldly against wild beasts and robbers. 
A quarrel having arisen between these shep- 
herds and the herdsmen of Numitor, who stalled 
their cattle on the neighboring hill of the Aven- 
tine, Remus was taken by a stratagem, during 
the absence of his brother, and carried off to 
Numitor. This led to the discovery of the [ 
parentage both of Romulus and Remus, who j 
now slew Amulius, and placed their grand- ! 
father Numitor on the throne. Romulus and ' 
Remus loved their old abode, and therefore left i 
Alba to found a city on the banks of the Tiber. 
A strife arose between the brothers where the ' 
city should be built, and after whose name it : 
should be called. Romulus wished to build it 
on the Palatine, Remus on the Aventine. It I 
was agreed that the question should be decided ! 
by augury ; and each took his station on the top 
of his chosen hill. The night passed away, and 
as the day was dawning Remus saw six vul- 
tures ; but at sun-rise, when these tidings were j 
brought to Romulus, twelve vultures flew by 
him. Each claimed the augury in his own I 
favor ; but the shepherds decided for Romulus, 
and Remus was obliged to yield. Romulus now j 
proceeded to mark out the pornocrium of his city 
(vid. Diet, of Antiq., s. v.), and to raise the wall. I 
Remus, who still resented the wrong he had | 
suffered, leaped over the wall in scorn, where- 1 
upon he was slain by his brother. As soon as ' 



the city was built, Romulus found his people too 
few in numbers. He therefore set apart, on the 
Capitoline Hill, an asylum or a sanctuary, in 
which homicides and runaway slaves might 
take refuge. The city thus became filled with 
men, but they wanted women. Romulus, there- 
fore, tried to form treaties with the neighbor- 
ing tribes, in order to obtain connubium, or the 
right of legal marriage with their citizens ; but 
his offers were treated with disdain, and he 
accordingly resolved to obtain by force what 
he could not gain by entreaty. In the fourth 
month after the foundation of the city, he pro- 
claimed that games were to be celebrated in 
honor of the god Consus, and invited his neigh- 
bors, the Latins and Sabines, to the festival. 
Suspecting no treachery, they came in num- 
bers, with their wives and children. But the 
Roman youths rushed upon their guests and 
carried off the virgins. The parents of the vir- 
gins returned home and prepared for vengeance. 
The inhabitants of three of the Latin towns, 
Caenina, Antemnae, and Crustumerium, took up 
arms, one after the other, and were successive- 
ly defeated by the Romans. Romulus slew with 
his own hand Acron, king of Caenina, and ded- 
icated his arms and armor, as spolia opima, to 
Jupiter. At last the Sabine king, Titus Tatius, 
advanced with a powerful army against Rome. 
The fortress of the Saturnian, afterward called 
the Capitoline Hill, was surrendered to the Sa- 
bines by the treachery of Tarpeia, the daughter 
of the commander of the fortress. Vid. Tak- 
peia. On the next day the Romans endeavored 
to recover the hill, and a long and desperate 
battle was fought in the valley between the Pal- 
atine and the Capitoline. At length, when both 
parties were exhausted with the struggle, the 
Sabine women rushed in between them, and 
prayed their husbands and fathers to be recon- 
ciled. Their prayer was heard ; the two peo- 
ple not only made peace, but agreed to form 
only one nation. The Romans continued to 
dwell on the Palatine under their king Romu- 
lus ; the Sabines built a new town on the Cap- 
itoline and Quirinal Hills, where they lived un- 
der their king Titus Tatius. The two kings 
and their senates met for deliberation in the 
valley between the Palatine and Capitoline Hills, 
which was hence called comitium, or the place 
of meeting. But this union did not last long. 
Titus Tatius was slain at a festival at Lavin- 
ium by some Laurentines, to whom he had re- 
fused satisfaction for outrages which had been 
committed by his kinsmen. Henceforward 
Romulus ruled alone over both Romans and 
Sabines. After reigning thirty-seven years, he 
was at length taken away from the world. One 
day, as he was reviewing his people in the Cam- 
pus Martius, near the Goat's Pool, the sun 
was suddenly eclipsed, darkness overspread the 
earth, and a dreadful storm dispersed the peo- 
ple. When daylight had returned Romulus had 
disappeared, for his father Mars had carried him 
up to heaven in a fiery chariot (Quirinus Mor- 
tis equis Acheronta fugit. Hor., Carm., hi., 3). 
Shortly afterward he appeared in more than 
mortal beauty to Proculus Julius, and bade him 
tell the Romans to worship him as their guard- 
ian god under the name of Quirinus. Such was 
the glorified end of Romulus in the genuine le- 

757 



ROMULUS AUGUSTULUS. 



RUBELLIUS PLAUTUS. 



gend. But as it staggered the faith of a later 
age, a tale was invented to account for his mys- 
terious disappearance. It was related that the 
senators, discontented with the tyrannical rule 
of their king, murdered him during the gloom 
of a tempest, cut up his body, and carried home 
the mangled pieces under their robes. As Rom- 
ulus was regarded as the founder of Rome, its 
most ancient political institutions and the or- 
ganization of the people were ascribed to him. 
Thus he is said to have divided the people into 
three tribes, which bore the names Ramnes, Ti- 
tles, and Luceres. The Ramnes were supposed 
to have derived their name from Romulus, the 
Tities from Titus Tatius the Sabine king, and 
the Luceres from Lucumo, an Etruscan chief, 
who had assisted Romulus in the war against 
the Sabines. Each tribe contained ten curiae, 
which received their names from the thirty Sa- 
bine women who had brought about the peace 
between the Romans and their own people. 
Further, each curia contained ten gentes, and 
each gens one hundred men. Thus the people, 
according to the general belief, were divided orig- 
inally into three tribes, thirty curiae, and three 
hundred gentes, which mustered three thou- 
sand men, who fought on foot, and were called 
a legion. Besides those there were three hund- 
red horsemen, called Celeres, the same body as 
the Equites of a later time. To assist him in 
the government of the people, Romulus is said 
to have selected a number of the aged men in 
the state, who were called Patres or Senatores. 
The council itself, which was called the senatus, 
originally consisted of one hundred members ; 
but this number was increased to two hundred 
when the Sabines were incorporated in the state. 
In addition to the senate, there was another as- 
sembly, consisting of the members of the gentes, 
which bore the name of comitia curiata, because 
they voted in it according to their division into 
curiae. 

Romulus Augustulus. Vid. Augustulus. 

Romulus Silvius. Vid. Silvius. 

Roscianum (now Rossano), a fortress on the 
eastern coast of Bruttium, between Thurii and 
Paternum. 

Roscillus. Vid. ^Egus. 

Roscius. 1. L., a Roman ambassador sent 
to Fidenae in B.C. 438. He and his three col- 
leagues were killed by the inhabitants of Fide- 
nae, at the instigation of Lar Tolumnius, king 
of the Veientes. The statues of all four were 
erected in the Rostra at Rome. — 2. Sex., of 
Ameria, a town in Umbria. The father of this 
Roscius had been murdered at the instigation 
of two of his relations and fellow-townsmen, T. 
Roscius Magnus and T. Roscius Capito, who 
coveted the wealth of their neighbor. These 
two Roscii struck a bargain with Chrysogonus, 
the freedman and favorite of Sulla, to divide the 
property of the murdered man between them. 
But as the proceeding excited the utmost in- 
dignation at Ameria, and the magistrates of the 
town made an effort to obtain from Sulla the 
restitution of the property to the son, the rob- 
bers accused young Roscius of the murder of 
his father, and hired witnesses to swear to the 
fact. Roscius was defended by Cicero (B.C. 
80) in an oration which is still extant, and was 
acquitted. Cicero's speech was greatly admired 
758 



at the time, and though at a later period he found 
fault with it himself, as bearing marks of youth- 
ful exaggeration, it displays abundant evidence 
of his great oratorical powers. — 3. Q., the most 
celebrated comic actor at Rome, was a native 
of Solonium, a small place in the neighborhood 
of Lanuvium. His histrionic powers procured 
him the favor of many of the Roman nobles, 
and, among others, of the dictator Sulla, who 
presented him with a gold ring, the symbol of 
equestrian rank. Roscius enjoyed the friend- 
ship of Cicero, who constantly speaks of him in 
terms both of admiration and affection. Ros- 
cius was considered by the Romans to have 
reached such perfection in his own profession, 
that it became the fashion to call every one 
who became particularly distinguished in his 
own art by the name of Roscius. In his youn- 
ger years Cicero received instruction from Ros- 
cius ; and at a later time he and Roscius often 
used to try which of them could express a 
thought with the greatest effect, the orator by 
his eloquence, or the actor by his gestures. 
These exercises gave Roscius so high an opin- 
ion of his art, that he wrote a work in which he 
compared eloquence and acting. Like his cel- 
ebrated contemporary, the tragic actor ^Esopus, 
Roscius realized an immense fortune by his 
profession. He died in 62. One of Cicero's 
extant orations is entitled Pro Q. Roscio Comoc- 
do. It was delivered before the judex C. Piso, 
probably in 6S, and relates to a claim for fifty 
thousand sesterces, which one C. Fannius Chae- 
rea brought against Roscius. — 4. Fabatus. Vid. 
Fabatus. — 5. Otho. Vid. Otho. 

Rotomagus. Vid. Ratomagus. 

R ox an a {"PuijdvT)), daughter of Oxyartes the 
Bactrian, fell into the hands of Alexander on 
his capture of the hill-fort in Sogdiana, named 
" the rock,' : B.C. 327. Alexander was so cap- 
tivated by her charms that he married her. 
Soon after Alexanders death (323) she gave 
birth to a son (Alexander JBgus), who was ad- 
mitted to share the nominal sovereignty with 
Arrhidaeus, under the regency of Perdiccas. 
Before the birth of the boy she had drtiwn Sta- 
tira, or Barsine, to Babylon by a friendly letter, 
and there caused her to be murdered. Roxana 
afterward crossed over to Europe with her son. 
and placed herself under the protection of Olym- 
pias. She shared the fortunes of Olympias, and 
threw herself into Pydna along with the latter, 
where they were besieged by Cassander. In 
316 Pydna was taken by Cassander, Olympias 
was put to death, and Roxana and her son were 
placed in confinement in Amphipolis. Here 
they were detained under the charge of Glau- 
cias till 311, in which year, soon after the gen- 
eral peace then concluded, they were murdered 
in accordance with orders from Cassander. 

Roxolaxi. Vid. Rhoxolani. 

[Rubeas Pkomontorium, a promontory of 
Sarmatia Europaea, in the vicinity of the mouth 
of the Rubon. Mannert regards it as the north 
point of Curland.] 

[Rcbellius Plautus. C, son of Rubellius 
and of Julia, great-grandson of the Emperor Ti- 
berius, was involved in the accusations which 
Junia Silana brought against Agrippina A.D- 55 : 
he was ordered by Nero to withdraw from Rome 
to his estates in Asia, where he employed him- 



RUBI. 



RUFUSi L. C.ECILIUS. 



aelf in the study of the Stoic philosophy; but in j 
A.D. 62, Nero's fears having been again excited j 
against Rubellius, the latter was murdered by i 
order of the emperor.] 

Rubi (Rubustinus : now Ruvo), a town in I 
Apulia, on the road from Canusium to Brundis- | 
ium. 

Rubico, a small river in Italy, falling into the 
Adriatic a little north of Ariminum, formed the 
boundary in the republican period between the 
province of Gallia Cisalpina and Italia Proper. 
It is celebrated in history on account of Caesar's 
passage across it at the head of his army, by 
which act he declared war against the republic. 
A papal decree, issued in 1756, declared the 
modern Lusa to be the ancient Rubico, but the 
Pisatello, a little further north, has better claims 
to this honor. 

Rubra Saxa, called Rubra? Breves (sc. Pe- 
trae) by Martial, a small place in Etruria only a 
few miles from Rome, near the River Cremera, 
and on the Via Flaminia. It was near this spot 
that the great battle was fought in which Max- 
entius was defeated by Constantine, A.D. 312. 

[Rubrenus Lappa, a later Roman tragic writ- 
er, whose Atreus is mentioned by Juvenal (vii., 
72).] 

Rubresus Lacus. Vid. Narbo. 

Rubricatus. 1. Or Ubus (now Seibous), a 
considerable river of Numidia in Northern Af- 
rica, rising in the mountains southeast of Cirta 
(now Constantineh), flowing northeast, and fall- 
ing into the Mediterranean east of Hippio Regi- 
us (now Bonah). — 2. (Now Llobrcgat), a small 
river of Hispania Tarraconensis, flowing into 
the sea west of Barcino. 

[Rubrius. 1. Tribune of the plebs along with 
C. Gracchus, proposed the law for founding the 
colony at Carthage, which was carried into ef- 
fect. — 2. Q. Rubrius Varro, who was declared 
a public enemy along with Marius in B.C. 88, 
is mentioned by Cicero as an energetic and pas- 
sionate accuser. — 3. One of the companions of 
Verres in his iniquities. — 4. L., a senator, was 
taken prisoner by Caesar at the capture of Cor- 
flnium B.C. 49, and was dismissed by him un- 
injured.] 

Rubrum Mare. Vid. Erythr^um Mare. 

Rudi^: (Rudlnus : now Rotigliano or Ruge), 
a town of the Pucetii in Apulia, on the road 
from Brundisium to Venusia, was originally a 
Greek colony, and afterward a Roman muni- 
cipium. Rudiae is celebrated as the birth-place 
of Ennius. 

Ruesium, a town of the Vellavi or Velauni, 
hence called simply Civitas Vellavorum, in Gal- 
lia Aquitanica (in the modern Velay), probably 
the modern St. Paulicn or Paulhan, on the front- 
iers of Auvergne. 

Rufinus. 1. P.Cornelius Rufinus, was con- 
sul B C. 290 with M\ Curius Dentatus, and, in 
conjunction with his colleague, brought the Sam- 
nite war to a conclusion, and obtained a tri- 
umph in consequence. He was consul a sec- 
ond time in 277, and carried on the war against 
the Samnites and the Greeks in Southern Italy. 
The chief event of his second consulship was 
the capture of the important town of Croton. 
In 275 Rufinus was expelled from the senate 
by the censors C. Fabricius and Q. ^Emilius Pa- 
pus, on account of his possessing ten pounds of 



silver plate. The dictator Sulla was descend- 
ed from this Rufinus. His grandson was the 
first of the family who assumed the surname of 
Sulla. — 2. Licinius Rufinus, a jurist, who lived 
under Alexander Severus. There are in the 
Digest seventeen excerpts from twelve books 
of Regulai by Rufinus. — 3. The chief minister 
of state under Theodosius the Great, was an 
able, but, at the same time, a treacherous and 
dangerous man. He instigated Theodosius to 
those cruel measures which brought ruin upon 
Antioch, A.D. 390. After the death of Theo- 
dosius in 395, Rufinus exercised paramount in- 
fluence over the weak Arcadius ; but toward 
the end of the year a conspiracy was formed 
against him by Eutropius and Stilicho, who in- 
duced Gainas, the Gothic ally of Arcadius, to 
join in the plot. Rubinus was, in consequence, 
slain by the troops of Gainas. — 4. Surnamed 
Tyrannius, or Turranius, orTop.ANus, a cele- 
brated ecclesiastical writer, was probably born 
about A.D. 345 in Italy. He was at first an in- 
mate of the monastery at Aquileia, and he aft- 
erward resided many years at a monastery in 
Palestine, where he became very intimate with 
St. Jerome. The two friends afterward quar- 
reled, and Jerome attacked Rufinus with the 
utmost vehemence on account of his support- 
ing the tenets of Origen. After remaining in 
the East for about twenty-six years, Rufinus 
returned to Italy in 397, where he published a 
Latin translation of the Apology for Origen by 
Pamphilus, and of the books of "Origen De Prin- 
cipiis, together with an original tract De Adul- 
ter atione Librorum Origenis. In the preface to 
the De Principiis, he quoted a panegyric, which 
Jerome had at an earlier period pronounced 
upon Origen. This led to a bitter correspond- 
ence between the two former friends, which 
was crowned by the Apologia of the one advcr- 
sus Hieronymum, and the Apologia, of the other 
adversus Rufinum. Rufinus died in Sicily in 
410, to which island he had fled upon the inva- 
sion of Italy by Alaric. Several of his works are 
extant, but there is no complete edition of them. 
— 5. The author of a little poem in twenty-two 
lines, Pasiphaes Fabula ex omnibus Metris Hora- 
tianis, which, as the name imports, contains an 
example of each of the different metres em- 
ployed by Horace. His date is quite uncertain, 
but he may be the same person with the fol- 
lowing. — 6. A grammarian of Antioch, whose 
treatise De Metris Comicis, or, rather, extracts 
from it, is contained in the Grammaticcz La/ince 
Auctorcs Antiqui of Putschius, Hannov., 1605. 
— 7. The author of thirty-eight epigrams in the 
Greek Anthology. His date is uncertain ; but 
there can be no doubt that he was a Byzantine. 
His verses are of the same light, amatory char- 
acter as those of Agathias, Paulus, Macedonius, 
and others. 

RuFR.ffi, a town in Campania, frequently con- 
founded with Rufrium. 

Rufrium, a town of the Hirpini in Samnium. 
Rufus, Curtius. Vid. Curtius. 
Rufus EphesTus, so called from the place of 
; his birth, a celebrated Greek physician, lived in 
the reign of Trajan (A.D. 98-117), and wrote 
several medical works, some of which are still 
i extant. 

i Rufus, L. Cecilius, brother of P. Sulla by 

759 



RUFUS, M. CAELIUS. 



RUTENI. 



the same mother, but not by the same father. 
He was tribune of the plebs B.C. 63, when he 
rendered warm support to Cicero, and, in par- 
ticular, opposed the agrarian law of Rullus. In 
his prsstorship, 57, he joined most of the other 
magistrates in proposing the recall of Cicero 
from banishment. 

Rufus, M. C^lius, a young Roman noble, 
distinguished as an elegant writer and eloquent 
speaker, but equally conspicuous for his profli- 
gacy and extravagance. Notwithstanding his 
vices, he lived on intimate terms with Cicero, 
"who defended him in B.C. 56 in an oration still 
extant. The accusation was brought against 
him by Sempronius Atratinus, at the instigation 
of Clodia Quadrantaria, whom he had lately de- 
serted. Clodia charged him with having bor- 
rowed money from her in order to murder Dion, 
the head of the embassy sent by Ptolemy Au- 
letes to Rome ; and with having made an at- 
tempt to poison her. In 52 Caelius was tribune 
of the plebs, and in 50 aedile. During the years 
51 and 50 he carried on an active correspond- 
ence with Cicero, who was then in Cilicia, and 
many of the letters which he wrote to Cicero 
at that time are preserved in the collection of 
Cicero's Letters. On the breaking out of the 
civil war in 49 he espoused Caesar's side, and 
was rewarded for his services by the praetor- 
ship in 48. Being at this time overwhelmed 
with debt, he availed himself of Caesar's ab- 
sence from Italy to bring forward a law for the 
abolition of debts. He was, however, resisted 
by the other magistrates and deprived of his 
office, whereupon he went into the south of 
Italy to join Milo, whom he had secretly sent 
for from Massilia. Milo was killed near Thurii 
before Caelius could join him (vid. Milo), and 
Caelius himself was put to death shortly after- 
ward at Thurii. 

Rufcs, Sextus. Vid. Sextus Rtjfus. 

Rugii, an important people in Germany, orig- 
inally dwelt on the coast of the Baltic, between 
the Viadus (now Oder) and the Vistula. After 
disappearing a long time from history, they are 
found at a later time in Attila's army ; and after 
Attila's death they founded a new kingdom on 
the northern bank of the Danube, in Austria 
and Hungary, the name of which is still pre- 
served in the modern Rugiland. They have 
left traces of their name in the country which 
they originally inhabited in the modern Rugen, 
Rugemcalde, Rega, Regenwalde. 

Rullus, P. SeryIlius, tribune of the plebs 
B.C. 63, proposed an agrarian law, which Cicero 
attacked in three orations which have come 
down to us. It was the most extensive agra- 
rian law that had ever been brought forward ; 
but as it was impossible to cany such a sweep- 
ing measure, it was withdrawn by Rullus him- 
self. 

Rupilius, P., consul B.C. 132, prosecuted 
with the utmost vehemence all the adherents 
of Tiberius Gracchus, who had been slain in the 
preceding year. In his consulship he was sent 
into Sicily against the slaves, and brought the 
servile war to a close. He remained in the isl- 
and as proconsul in the following year ; and, 
with ten commissioners appointed by the senate, 
he made various regulations for the government 
of the province, which were known by the name 
760 



! of Leges Rupiliae. Rupilius was condemned in 
| the tribunate of C. Gracchus, 123, on account 
! of his illegal and cruel acts in the prosecution 
' of the friends of Tiberius Gracchus. He was 
an intimate friend of Scipio Africanus the youn- 
\ ger, who obtained the consulship for him, but 
who failed in gaining the same honor for his 
brother Lucius. He is said to have taken his 
brother's failure so much to heart as to have 
died in consequence. 

[Rupilius Rex, P., of Praeneste, having been 
driven from his native city, is said to have 
j served in Africa under Atius Varus, and later, 
when praetor, A.U.C. 711, being proscribed by 
Augustus, to have fled to the camp of Brutus : 
here his arrogance made Horace a bitter ene- 
'. my to him, and the poet subsequently took his 
revenge in a bitter satire on Rupilius.] 

Ruscixo, a town of the Sordones or Sordi in 
! the southeastern part of Gallia Narbonensis, at 
the foot of the Pyrenees, on the River Ruscino 
(now Tct), and on the road from Spain to Narbo 
j A tower of the ancient town is still extant near 
Perpignan, called la Tour dc Rousillon. 

Rusell^ (Rusellanus : ruins near Grosseto), 
; one of the most ancient cities of Etruria, situ- 
ated on an eminence east of the Lake Prelius 
! and on the Via Aurelia. It is first mentioned 
! in the time of Tarquinius Priscus. It was taken 
by the Romans in B.C. 294, when two thousand 
j of its inhabitants were slain, and as many more 
I made prisoners. It was subsequently a Roman 
colony, and continued in existence till 113&, 
when its inhabitants were removed to Grosseto. 
j The walls of Rusellae still remain, and are some 
i of the most ancient in Italy. They are formed 
! of enormous masses of travertine, piled up with- 
out regard to form, with small stones inserted 
; in the interstices. The masses vary from six 
: to eight feet in length, and from four to eight 
! in height. The area inclosed by the walls forms 
an irregular quadrangle, between ten thousand 
; and eleven thousand feet, or about two miles in 
circuit. 

Rusicada (southeast of the modern Storah, 
ruins), a sea-port and Roman colony in Numid- 
ia, used especially as the port of Cirta. 

Ruspixum, a town of Africa Propria (Byza- 
: cium), two miles from the sea, between Leptis 
Parva and Hadrumetum. 

Russadir (now Ras-ud-Dir, or Capo di Tres 
Forcas : Rus in ancient Punic, and Ras in Ara- 
bic, alike mean cape), a promontory of Maure- 
taniaTingitana, in Northern Africa, on the coast 
of the Metagcnitae. Southeast of it was a city 
■. of the same name (now probably Melillah). 

Rusticus, Fabius, a Roman historian, and a 
contemporary of Claudius and Nero. 

Rusticus, L. Junius Arulenus, more usually 
called Arulenus Rusticus, but sometimes Junius 
Rusticus. He was a friend and pupil of Paetus 
Thrasea, and an ardent admirer of the Stoic 
philosophy. He was put to death by Domitian, 
; because he had written a panegyric upon Thra- 
j sea. 

PvUsucuerum (now Colcah, opposite Algier), a 
considerable sea-port in the eastern part of Mau- 
! retania Caesariensis, constituted a Roman col- 
! ony under Claudius. 

Ruteni, a people in Gallia Aquitanica, on the 
I frontiers of Gallia Narbonensis, in the modern 



RUTILIA. 



SAB.EI. 



Rpoergne. Their chief town was Segodunum, 
afterward Civitas Rutenorum (now Rodez). The 
country of the Ruteni contained silver mines, 
and produced excellent flax. 

[Rutilia, the mother of C. Cotta, the orator, 
accompanied her son into exile in B.C. 91, and 
remained with him abroad till his return some 
years afterward ] 

Rutilius Lupus. Vid. Lupus. 

Rutilius Numatianus, Claudius, a Roman 
poet, and a native of Gaul, lived at the begin- 
ning of the fifth century of the Christian era. 
He resided at Rome a considerable time, where 
he attained the dignity of prsefectus urbi about 
A;D. 413 or 414. He afterward returned to his 
native country, and has described his return to 
Gaul in an elegiac poem, which bears the title 
of Itinerariurn, or De Reditu. Of this poem the 
first book, consisting of six hundred and forty- 
four lines, and a small portion of the second, 
have come down to us. It is superior both in 
poetical coloring and purity of language to most 
of the productions of the age ; and the passage 
in which he celebrates the praises of Rome is 
not unworthy of the pen of Claudian. Rutilius 
was a heathen, and attacks the Jews and monks 
with no small severity. The best edition is by 
A. W. Zumpt, Berlin, 1840. 

Rutilius Rufus, P., a Roman statesman and 
orator. He was military tribune under Scipio 
in the Numantine war, praetor B.C. Ill, consul 
105, and legatus in 95 under Q. Mucius Sca3- 
vola, proconsul of Asia. While acting in this 
capacity, he displayed so much honesty and 
firmness in repressing the extortions of the pub- 
licani, that he became an object of fear and | 
hatred to the whole body. Accordingly, on his 
return to R,ome, he was impeached of malversa- 
tion (de rcpetundis), found guilty, and compelled 
to withdraw into banishment, 92. He retired 
first to Mytilene, and from thence to Smyrna, 
where he fixed his abode, and passed the re- 
mainder of his days in tranquillity, having re- 
fused to return to Rome, although recalled by 
Sulla. Besides his orations, Rutilius wrote an 
autobiography, and a History of Rome in Greek, 
which contained an account of the Numantine 
war, but we know not what period it embraced. 

Rutilus, C. Marcius, was consul B.C. 357, 
when he took the town of Privernum. In 356 
he was appointed dictator, being the first time 
that a plebeian had attained this dignity. In 
his dictatorship he defeated the Etruscans with 
great slaughter. In 352 he was consul a sec- 
ond time ; and in 351 he was the first plebeian 
censor. He was consul for the third time in 
344, for the fourth time in 342. The son of this 
Rutilus took the surname of Censorinus, which 
in the next generation entirely supplanted that 
of Rutilus, and became the name of the family. 
Vid. Censorinus. 

Rutuba (now Roya), a river on the coast of 
Liguria, which flows into the sea near Albium 
Intemelium. 

Rutuli, an ancient people in Italy, inhabit- 
ing a narrow slip of country on the coast of 
Latium, a little to the south of the Tiber. Their 
chief town was Ardea, which was the residence 
of Turnus. They were subdued at an early pe- 
riod by the Romans, and disappear from history. 

Rutup^e or Rutupi.^e (now Richborough), a 



port-town of the Cantii in the southeast of Brit- 
ain, from which persons frequently passed over 
to the harbor of Gessoriacum in Gaul. Excel- 
lent oysters were obtained in the neighborhood 
of this place (Rutupino edita /undo ostrea, Juv., 
iv., 141). There are still several Roman re- 
mains at Richborough. 

S. 

Saba (Sofia). 1 . (In the Old Testament, Sheba), 
the capital of the Sab^ei in Arabia Felix, lay or. 
a high woody mountain, and was pointed out by 
an Arabian tradition as the residence of the 
" Queen of Sheba," who went to Jerusalem to 
hear the wisdom of Solomon. Its exact site is 
doubtful. — 2. There was another city of the 
same name in the interior of Arabia Felix, where 
a place Sabca is still found, about in the centre 
of El-Yemen. — 3. A sea-port town of .-Ethiopia, 
on the Red Sea, south of Ptolemai's Theron. A 
town called 2a6d> and SuCfiara is mentioned by 
Ptolemy, who places it on the Sinus Adulitanus ; 
and about in the same position Strabo mentions 
a town Saba (2a6ai) as distinct from Saba. 
The sites of these places (if they are really dif- 
ferent) are sought by geographers at Noimrat. 
or Port Mornington, in the southern part of the 
coast of Nubia, and Massawah on Foul Bay, on 
the northeastern coast of Ahjssinia. 

Sabacon (2a6aKibv), a king of Ethiopia, who 
invaded Egypt in the reign of the blind king 
Anysis, whom he dethroned and drove into the 
marshes. The /Ethiopian conqueror then reign- 
ed over Egypt for fifty years, but at length quit- 
| ted the country in consequence of a dream, 
whereupon Anysis regained his kingdom. This 
is the account which Herodotus received from 
the priests (ii., 137-140) ; but it appears from 
Manetho that there were three /Ethiopian kings 
who reigned over Egypt, named Sabacon, Sc- 
bichus, and Taracus, whose collective reigns 
amount to forty or fifty years, and who form 
the twenty-fifth dynasty of that writer. The 
account of Manetho is to be preferred to that 
of Herodotus. It appears that this /Ethiopian 
dynasty reigned over Egypt in the latter half 
of the eighth century before the Christian era. 
They are mentioned in the Jewish records 
The So, king of Egypt, with whom Hosea, king 
of Israel, made an alliance about B C. 722 (2 
Kings, xvii., 4), was probably the same as Sebi- 
chus ; and the Tirhakah, king of the /Ethiopi- 
ans, who was preparing to make war against 
Sennacherib in 711 (Is., xxxvii., 9), is the same 
as Taracus. 

SXBiEi or Sab^e (2a6aloi, Hu6ai : in the Old 
Testament, Shebaii'm), one of the chief people 
of Arabia, dwelt in the southwestern corner of 
the peninsula, in the most beautiful part of Ara- 
bia Felix, the north and centre of the province 
of El- Yemen. So, at least, Ptolemy places them ; 
but the earlier geographers give them a wider 
extent, quite to the south of El-Yemen. The 
fact seems to be that they are the chief repre- 
sentatives of a race which, at an early period, 
was widely spread on both sides of the south- 
ern part of the Red Sea, where Arabia and 
^Ethiopia all but joined at the narrow strait of 
Bab-el- Mandeb ; and hence, probably, the con- 
fusion often made between the Sheba and Sela. 

761 



SABATE. 



SABINI. 



of Scripture, or between the Shebaiim of Arabia 
and the Sebaiim of ^Ethiopia. Another proof 
of the wide extent of this race is furnished by 
the mention, in the book of Job, of Sabeans as 
far north, probably, as Arabia Deserta (Job, i., 
15). The Sabeans of El- Yemen were celebrated 
for their wealth and luxury. Their country 
produced all the most precious spices and per- 
fumes of Arabia, and they carried on an exten- 
sive trade with the East. Their capital was at ! 
Saba, where we are told that their king was i 
kept a close prisoner in his palace. The mon- 
archy was not hereditary, but descended ac- 
cording to an order of succession arranged 
among the chief families of the country. 

Sabate, a town of Etruria, on the road from 
Cosa to Rome, and on the northwestern corner 
of a lake, which was named after it Lacus Sa- 
batinus (now Lago di Bracciano). 

[Sabatia Vada or Sabatium Vadum. Vid. 
Savo.] 

Sabatini, a people in Campania, who derived 
their name from the River Sabatus (now Sab- \ 
bato), a tributary of the Calor, which flows into j 
the Vulturous. 

[Sabatra or Soatra, a town of Lycaonia, j 
where, according to Strabo, water was so scarce j 
as to be an article of sale. On the neighboring , 
downs were numerous wild asses.] 

Sabazius CEaSd^cog), a Phrygian divinity, com- 
monly described as a son of Rhea or Cybele. j 
In later times he was identified with the mystic j 
Dionysus (Bacchus), who hence is sometimes j 
called Dionysus Sabazius. For the same reason, J 
Sabazius is called a son of Zeus (Jupiter) by I 
Persephone (Proserpina), and is said to have ] 
been reared by a nymph Nyssa ; though others, I 
by philosophical speculations, were led to con- | 
sider him a son of Cabirus, Dionysus (Bacchus), j 
or Cronos (Saturn). He was torn by the Titans { 
into seven pieces. The connection of Sabazius : 
with the Phrygian mother of the gods accounts 
fear the fact that he was identified, to a certain j 
extent, with Zeus (Jupiter) himself, who is men- j 
tioned as Zeus (Jupiter) Sabazius, both Zeus i 
(Jupiter) and Dionysus (Bacchus) having been 
brought up by Cybele or Rhea. His worship j 
and festivals (Sabazia) were also introduced 
into Greece ; but. at least in the time of Demos- 
thenes, it was not thought reputable to take 
part in them, for they were celebrated at night 
by both sexes in a licentious manner. Serpents, J 
which were sacred to him, acted a prominent j 
part at the Sabazia and in the processions : the 
god himself was represented with horns, be- 
cause, it is said, he was the first that yoked I 
oxen to the plough for agriculture. 

[Sabbata. Vid. Savo.] 

Sabelli. Vid. Sabini. 

Sabellius, an heresiarch of the third century, j 
of whose personal history hardly any thing is 
known. He broached his heresies in the Libyan 
Pentapolis, of which he appears to have been a 
native. His characteristic dogma related to the 
Divine Nature, in which he conceived that there j 
was only one hypostasis or person, identifying i 
with each other the Father, the Son, and the ! 
Spirit, " so that in one hypostasis there are three j 
designations''' (cjf elvai iv uia v-oardaei rpeig dvo- ■ 
uaaiag). 

Sabina, the wife of the Emperor Hadrian, I 
762 



was the grand-niece of Trajan, being the daugh- 
ter of Matidia, who was the daughter of Mar- 
ciana, the sister of Trajan. Sabina was mar- 
ried to Hadrian about A.D. 100 through the in- 
fluence of Plotina, the wife of Trajan. The 
marriage did not prove a happy one. Sabina at 
length put an end to her life, and there was a 
report that she had even been poisoned by her 
husband. She was certainly alive in 136, and 
probably did not die till 138, a few months be- 
fore Hadrian. She was enrolled among the gods 
after her decease. 

Sabina, Poppaea, a woman of surpassing beau- 
ty, but licentious morals, was the daughter of 
T. Ollius, but assumed the name of her mater- 
nal grandfather Poppagus Sabinus, who had been 
consul in A.D. 9. She was first married to 
Rufius Crispinus, and afterward to Otho, who 
was one of the boon companions of Nero. The 
latter soon became enamored of her; and, in 
order to get Otho out of the way, Nero sent him 
to govern the province of Lusitania (58). Pop- 
paea now became the acknowledged mistress of 
Nero, over whom she exercised absolute sway. 
Anxious to become the wife of the emperor, 
she persuaded Nero first to murder his mother 
Agrippina (59), who was opposed to such a dis- 
graceful union, and next to divorce and shortly 
afterward put to death his innocent and virtu- 
ous wife Octavia (62). Immediately after the 
divorce of Octavia, Poppaea became the wife of 
Nero. In the following year she gave birth to 
a daughter at Antium, but the infant died at the 
age of four months. In 65 Poppaea was preg- 
nant again, but was killed by a kick from her 
brutal husband in a fit of passion. She was 
enrolled among the gods, and a magnificent 
temple was dedicated to her by Nero. Poppaea 
was inordinately fond of luxury and pomp, and 
took immense pains to preserve the beauty of 
her person. Thus we are told that all her 
mules were shod with gold, and that five hund- 
red asses were daily milked to supply her with 
a bath. 

Sabini, one of the most ancient and power- 
ful of the nations of Central Italy. The an- 
cients usually derived their name from Sabinus, 
a son of the native god Sancus. The different 
tribes of the Sabine race were widely spread 
over the whole of Central Italy, and were con- 
nected with the Opicans, Umbrians, and those 
other nations whose languages were akin to the 
Greek. The earliest traces of the Sabines are 
found in the neighborhood of Amiternum, at 
the foot of the main chain of the Apennines, 
whence they spread as far south as the con- 
fines of Lucania and Apulia. The Sabines may 
be divided into three great classes, called by 
the names of Sabini, Sabelli, and Samnites re- 
spectively. The Sabini proper inhabited the 
country between the Nar, the Anio, and the Ti- 
ber, between Latium, Etruria, Umbria, and Pi- 
cenum. This district was mountainous, and 
better adapted for pasturage than corn. The 
chief towns were Amiternum, Reate, Nursia, 
Cutiliae, Cures, Eretum, and Nomentum. The 
Sabelli were the smaller tribes who issued 
from the Sabines. To these belong the Ves- 
tini, Marsi, Marrucini, Peligni, Frentani, and 
Hirpini. In addition to these communities, to 
whom the name of Sabellians is usually re- 



SABINUS. 



SABINUS. 



stricted, the Picentes in Picenum, the Picenti- 
ni, who were transplanted from the latter coun- 
try to Campania, and the Lucani, were also of 
Sabine origin. The Samnites, who were by far 
the most powerful of all the Sabine communi- 
ties, are treated of in a separate article. Vid. 
Samnium. There were certain national charac- 
teristics which distinguished the whole Sabine 
race. They were a people of simple and vir- 
tuous habits, faithful to their word, and imbued 
with deep religious feeling. Hence we find fre- 
quent mention of omens and prodigies in their 
country. They were a migratory race, and 
adopted a peculiar system of emigration. In 
times of great danger and distress they vowed 
a Ver Sacrum, or Sacred Spring; and all the 
children born in that spring were regarded as 
sacred to the god, and were compelled, at the 
end of twenty years, to leave their native coun- 
try and seek a new home in foreign lands. The 
form of government among the Sabines was re- 
publican, but in war they chose a sovereign 
ruler (Embratur), whom the Romans sometimes 
call dictator and sometimes king. With the ex- 
ception of the Sabines in Lucania and Campa- 
nia, they never attained any high degree of civ- 
ilization or mental culture ; but they were al- 
ways distinguished by their love of freedom, 
which they maintained with the greatest brave- 
ry. Of this the Samnites were the most stri- 
king example. After the decline of the Etrus- 
can power, the Samnites were for a long time 
the greatest people in Italy ; and if they had re- 
mained united, they might have conquered the 
whole peninsula. The Sabines formed one of 
the elements of which the Roman people was 
composed. In the time of Romulus, a portion 
of the Sabines, after the rape of their wives and j 
daughters, became incorporated with the Ro- 
mans, and the two nations were united into one i 
under the general name of Quirites. The re- 
mainder of the Sabini proper, who were less 
warlike than the Samnites and Sabellians, were 
finally subdued by M'. Curius Dentatus, B.C.I 
290, and received the Roman franchise, sine 
suffragio. The Sabellian tribes concluded a I 
treaty with the Romans at an early period, i 
namely, the Vestini in 328, and the Marsi, Mar- j 
rucini, Peligni, and Frentani in 304; but these i 
communities again took up arms against the 
Romans in the Social war (90-S8), which ended 
in the complete subjugation of all the Sabellian 
tribes. The history of the wars between the | 
Samnites and the Romans is given under Sam- 
nium. 

Sabinus. 1. A contemporary poet and a I 
friend of Ovid. Ovid informs us that Sabinus 
had written answers to six of the Epistola Hero- \ 
idum of Ovid. Three answers enumerated by 
Ovid in this passage are printed in many edi- 1 
tions of the poefs works as the genuine poems 
of Sabinus ; but they were written by a modern 
scholar, Angelus Sabinus, about the year 1467. 
— 2. M. Colics, a Roman jurist, who succeed- 
ed Cassius Longinus, was consul A.D. 69. He 
was not the Sabinus from whom the Sabiniani 
took their name. He wrote a work, Ad Edic- 1 
turn JEdilium Curulium. There are no extracts j 
from Caelius in the Digest, but he is often cited, j 
sometimes as Caelius Sabinus, sometimes by the 
name of Sabinus onlv. — 3. C. Galvisius, one of 



Caesar's legates in the civil war, B.C. 48. Ik 
45 he received the province of Africa from Cae- 
sar. Having been elected praetor in 44, he ob- 
tained from Antony the province of Africa again; 
but he did not return to Africa, as the senate, 
after the departure of Antony for Mutina, con- 
ferred it upon Q. Cornificius. Sabinus was con- 
sul 39, and in the following year commanded 
the fleet of Octavianus in the war with Sextus 
Pompey. He was superseded by Agrippa in the 
command of the fleet. He is mentioned, too, 
at a later time as one of the friends of Octavia- 
nus. — 4. T. Flavius, father of the Emperor Ves- 
pasian, was one of the farmers of the taxes in 
Asia, and afterward carried on business as a 
money-lender among the Helvetians. — 5. Fla- 
vius, elder son of the preceding, and brother of 
the Emperor Vespasian. He governed Mcesia 
for seven years during the reign of Claudius, 
and held the important office of prasfectus urbis 
during the last eleven years of Nero's reign. 
He was removed from this office by Galba, but 
was replaced in it on the accession of Otho, 
who was anxious to conciliate Vespasian, who 
commanded the Roman legions in the East. 
He continued to retain the dignity under Vi- 
tellius ; but when Vespasian was proclaimed 
general by the legions in the East, and Anto- 
nius Primus and his other generals in the West, 
after the defeat of the troops of Vitellius, were 
marching upon Rome, Vitellius, despairing of 
success, offered to surrender the empire, and 
to place the supreme power in the hands of Sa- 
binus till the arrival of his brother. The Ger- 
man soldiers of Vitellius, however, refused sub- 
mission to this arrangement, and resolved to 
support their sovereign by arms. Sabinus 
thereupon took refuge in the Capitol, where he 
was attacked by the Vitellian troops. In the 
assault the Capitol was burned to the ground, 
Sabinus was taken prisoner, and put to death 
by the soldiers in the presence of Vitellius, who 
endeavored in vain to save his life. Sabinus 
was a man of distinguished reputation and of 
unspotted character. He left two sons, Flavius 
Sabinus and Flavius Clemens. Vid. Clemens. 
— 6. Flavius, son of the preceding, married Ju- 
lia, the daughter of his cousin Titus. He was 
consul 82, with his cousin Domitian, but was 
afterward slain by the latter. — 7. Massurius, a 
hearer of Ateius Capito, was a distinguished 
jurist in the time of Tiberius. This is the Sa- 
binus from whom the school of the Sabiniani 
took its name. Vid. Capito. There is no di- 
rect excerpt from Sabinus in the Digest, but he 
is often cited by other jurists, who commented 
upon his Libri trcs Juris Civilis. It is conjec- 
tured that Persius means to refer to this work 
(Sat., v., 90) when he says, " Excepto si quid 
Masuri rubrica vetavit." Massurius also wrote 
numerous other works, which are cited by name 
in the Digest. — 8. Nymphidius. Vid. Nymphid- 
ius. — 9. Poppjeus, consul A.D. 9, was appoint- 
ed in the lifetime of Augustus governor of Mce- 
sia, and was not only confirmed in this govern- 
ment by Tiberius, but received from the latter 
the provinces of Achaia and Macedonia in ad- 
dition. He continued to hold these provinces 
till his death in 35, having ruled over Mcesia 
for twenty-four years. He was the maternal 
grandfather of Poppjea Sabina, the mistress 

763 



SABIS. 



SAGALASSUS. 



and afterward the wife of Nero. — 10. Q. Titu- 
bxits, one of Caesar's legates in Gaul, who per- 
ished along with Aurunculeius Cotta in the at- 
tack made upon them by Ambiorix in B.C. 54. 

Sabis (now Sambre). 1. A broad and deep 
river in Gallia Belgica and in the territory of 
the Ambiani, falling into the River Mosa. — 2. 
A small river on the coast of Carmania. — 3. Vid. 
Sapis. 

Sabrata. Vid. Abrotonum. 

Sabrina, also called Sabriana (now Severn), 
a river in the west of Britain, which flowed by 
Venta Silurum into the ocean. 

[Sabrina ^Estuarium or Sabriana ^Estca- 
rium (2a6piava elcxvaic), the estuary formed by 
the River Sabrina (now Severn). Vid. Sabrina.] 

[Sabura or Saburra, the commander of Ju- 
ba's forces in Africa, defeated C. Curio, Caesar's 
general, in B.C. 49. He was destroyed, with all 
his forces, in B.C. 46, by P. Sittius.] 

Sacadas (landdag), of Argos, an eminent 
Greek musician, was one of the masters who 
established at Sparta the second great school 
of music, of which Thaletas was the founder, 
as Terpander had been of the first. He gained 
the prize for flute-playing at the first of the mu- 
sical contests which the Amphictyons estab- 
lished in connection with the Pythian games 
(B.C. 590), and also at the next two festivals in 
succession (586, 582). Sacadas was a compo- 
ser of elegies as well as a musician. 

Sacje CEaKai), one of the most numerous and 
most powerful of the Scythian nomad tribes, 
had their abodes east and northeast of the 
Massagetae, as far as Serica, in the steppes of 
Central Asia, which are now peopled by the 
Kirghiz Khasaks, in whose name that of their 
ancestors is traced by some geographers. They 
were very warlike, and excelled especially as 
cavalry, and as archers both on horse and foot. 
Their women shared in their military spirit ; 
and, if we are to believe Julian, they had the 
custom of settling before marriage whether the 
man or woman should rule the house, by the 
result of a combat between them. In "early 
times they extended their predatory incursions 
as far west as Armenia and Cappadocia. They 
were made tributary to the Persian empire, to 
the army of which they furnished a large force 
of cavalry and archers, who were among the 
best troops that the kings of Persia had. It 
should be remembered that the name of the 
Sacae is often used loosely for other Scythian 
tribes, and sometimes for the Scythians in gen- 
eral. 

Sacasene {lanaoiivT]), a fertile district of Ar- 
menia Major, on the River Cyrus and the con- 
fines of Albania, so called from its having been 
at one period conquered by the Sacae. A dis- 
trict of Drangiana bore the same name for a 
similar reason. 

Sacer Mons. 1. An isolated hill in the coun- 
try of the Sabines, on the right bank of the Anio, 
and west of the Via Nomentana, three miles 
from Rome, to which the plebeians repaired in 
their celebrated secessions. The hill is not 
called by any special name at the present day, 
but there is upon its summit the Torre di Spec- 
chio. — 2. A mountain in Hispania Tarraconen- 
sis, near the Minius, probably the modern Puer- 
to de Rabanon, near Ponferrada. 
764 



j Sacili, with the surname Martialium, a town 

i of the Turduli in Hispania Baetica. 

Sacra Via. Vid. Roma, p. 748, b. 

Sacraria, a town in Umbria, on the road be- 
tween Treba and Spoletium, supposed by some 
to be identical with Clitumni Fanum on tke 
River Clitumnus. 

[Sacrativir, M., of Capua, a Roman eques. 
who fell fighting on Caesar's side at the battle 
of Dyrrachium, B.C. 48.] 

Sacriportus, a small place in Latium, of un- 
certain site, memorable for the victory of Sulla 
over the younger Marius, B.C. 82. 

[Sacrovir, Julius, and Julius Florus, two 
Gauls, the former an Jiduan, the latter a Trevi- 
ran, were both of noble family, and had received 
the Roman citizenship on account of their serv- 
ices. These chiefs, in the reign of Tiberius, 

A. D. 21, excited an insurrection among the 
Gauls. Florus, who had excited the Belgae to 
revolt, was soon overthrown, while Sacrovir, 
who had stirred up the ^Edui, though at first in 
a measure successful, was defeated by the Ro- 
man legate Silius : they both, after their defeat, 
put themselves to death.] 

Sacrum Flumen. 1. (Now Vias), a river on 
the western coast of Sardinia. — 2. (Now Tavig- 
na.no), a river on the eastern coast of Corsica, 
which flowed into the sea at Aleria. 

Sacrum Promontorium. 1. (Now Cape St. 
Vincent), on the western coast of Spain, said 
by Strabo to be the most westerly point in the 
whole earth. — 2. (Now Cape Corso), the north- 
eastern point of Corsica. — 3. (NowCa^e Iria, also 
Makri, Eft a Kavi, or Jedi Burun, i. e., the seven 
points), the extreme point of the mountain Cra- 
gus in Lycia, between Xanthus and Telmissus. 
— 4. (Now Cape Khelidom), another promontory 
in Lycia, near the confines of Pamphylia, and 
opposite the Chelidonian islands, whence it is 
also called Promontorium Chelidonium. 

[Sadales, the son of Cotys, king of Thrace, 
was sent by his father to the assistance of Pom- 
pey, and fought on his side against Caesar in 

B. C. 48. In conjunction with Scipio, he de- 
feated L. Cassius Longinus, one of Caesar's le- 
gates. He was pardoned by Caesar after the bat- 
tle of Pharsalia. He died in B.C. 42, leaving 
his dominions to the Romans.] 

Sadyattes (ZadvuTTnc), king of Lydia, suc- 
ceeded his father Ardys, and reigned B.C. 629- 
617. He carried on war with the Milesians for 
six years, and at his death bequeathed the war 
to his son and successor Alyattes. Vid. Al- 

YATTES. 

S^pinum or Sepinum (Sepinas, -atis: now Se- 
pino), a municipium in Samniurn, on the road 
from Allifae to Beneventum. 

Sjstabis. 1. (Now Alcoyl), a river on the 
southern coast of Hispania Tarraconensis, west 
of the Sucro. — 2. Or Setabis (Setabitanus : now 
Jativa), an important town of the Contestaniin 
Hispania Tarraconensis, and a Roman muni- 
cipium, was situated on a hill south of the Su- 
cro, and was celebrated for its manufacture of 
linen. 

Sagalassus (layaXaaaoc : now ruins at Al- 
lahshun), a large fortified city of Pisidia, near 
the Phrygian border, a days journey southeast 
of Apamea Cibotus. It lay, as its large ruins 
still show, in the form of an amphitheatre on 



SAGANUS. 



SALAMIS. 



the side of a hill, and had a citadel on a rock 
thirty feet high. Its inhabitants were reckoned 
the bravest of the Pisidians, and seem, from the 
word \aKt6aifiuv on their coins, to have claimed 
a Spartan origin. Among the ruins of the city 
i are the remains of a very fine temple, of an 
amphitheatre, and of fifty-two other large build- 
ings. 

Saganus (Zayavoc), a small river on the coast 
of Carmania. 

i Sagapa, one of the mouths of the Indus. 
Sagaris (Ovid, Ex Pont., iv., 10,47), a river 
of Sarmatia Europaea, falling into a bay in the 

I northwest of the Euxine, which was called after 
& | it Sagaricus Sinus, and which also received the 
* j River Axiaces. The bay appears to be that on 
1 ) which Odessa now stands, and the rivers the 
Bol-Kouialnik and the Mal-Kouialnik. 

[Sagaris, one of the companions of ^Eneas, 
slain by Turnus in Italy.] 

Sagartii (laydpnot), according to Herodo- 
tus, a nomad people of Persis. Afterward they 
i j are found, on the authority of Ptolemy, in Me- 
dia and the passes of Mount Zagros. 

Sagra, a small river in Magna Graecia, on the 
southeastern coast of Bruttium, falling into the 
sea between Caulonia and Locri, on the banks 
of which a memorable victory was gained by 
ten thousand Locrians over one hundred and 
twenty thousand Crotoniats. This victory ap- 
peared so extraordinary, that it gave rise to the 
proverbial expression, " It is truer than what 
happened on the Sagra," when a person wished 
to make any strong asseveration. 

Saguntia. 1. (Now Xigonza or Gigonza, 
northwest of Medina Sidonia), a town in the 
i ! western part of Hispania Baetica, south of the 
Baetis. — 2. A town of the Arevaci in Hispania 

I Tarraconensis, southwest of Bilbilis, near the 
Mons Solarius. 

Saguntum, more rarely Saguntus (Sagunti- 
nus : now Murviedro), a town of the Edetani or 

I Sedetani in Hispania Tarraconensis, south of 

, the Iberus, on the River Palantias, about three 

| miles from the coast. It is said to have 
been founded by Greeks from Zacynthus, with 
whom Rutulians from Ardea were intermingled, 
whence it is sometimes called Ausonia Sagun- 
tus. It was situated on an eminence in the 
midst of a fertile country, and became a place 
of great commercial importance. Although 
south of the Iberus, it had formed an alliance 
with the Romans ; and its siege by Hannibal, 
B.C. 219, was the immediate cause of the second 
Punic war. The inhabitants defended their 
city with the utmost bravery against Hannibal, 

. who did not succeed in taking the place till 
after a siege of nearly eight months. The 
greater part of the city was destroyed by Han- 

I nibal ; but it was rebuilt by the Romans eight 
years afterward, and made a colony. Sagun- 

i turn was celebrated for its manufacture of 
beautiful drinking-cups ; and the figs of the sur- 
rounding country were much valued in antiqui- 
ty. The ruins of the ancient town, consisting 
of a theatre and a temple of Bacchus, are extant 
at Murviedro, which is a corruption of Muri 
veteres. 

Sms (2dif, lalrnc : ruins at Sa-cl-Hajjar), a 
great city of Egypt, in the Delta, on the eastern 
■svle of the Canopic branch of the Nile. It was 



the ancient capital of Lower Egypt, and con- 
tained the palace and burial-place of the Pha- 
raohs, as well as the tomb of Osiris. It was 
the chief seat of the worship of the Egyptian 
goddess Neith (also called Sals), who had here 
a splendid temple in the middle of an artificial 
lake, where a great feast of lamps was cele- 
brated yearly by worshippers from all parts of 
Egypt. The city gave its name to the Saites 
Nomos. 

Saitis (Sah-if), a surname of Minerva (Athe- 
na), under which she had a sanctuary on Mount 
Pontinus, near Lerna, in Argolis. The name 
was traced by the Greeks to the Egyptians, 
among whom Minerva (Athena) was said to 
have been called Sais. 

Sala. 1. (Now Saalc), a river of Germany, 
between which and the Rhine Drusus died. It 
was a tributary of the Albis.— 2. (Now Saale), 
also a river of Germany and a tributary of the 
Mcenus, which formed the boundary between 
the Hermunduri and Chatti, with great salt 
springs in its neighborhood, for the possession 
of which these tw r o communities frequently con- 
tended. —3. (Now Burargag), a river in the 
northern part of the western coast of Maureta- 
nia Tingitana, rises in the Atlas Minor, and falls 
into the Atlantic, north of a town of the same 
name. — 4. A river in the same province, south 
of the one last mentioned, rises in the Atlas 
Major, and falls into the Atlantic near the south- 
ern boundary of Mauretania. — 5. A Samothra- 
cian town in Thrace, on the coast of the iEgean 
Sea, west of the mouth of the Hebrus. — 6. A 
town in Pannonia, on the road from Sabaria to 
Pcetovio. — 7. (Now Shclla), a town in the north- 
ern part of the western coast of Mauretania Tin- 
gitana, south of the mouth of the river of the 
same name mentioned under No. 3. This town 
was the furthest place in Mauretania toward 
the south possessed by the Romans ; for, al- 
though the province nominally extended further 
south, the Romans never fully subdued the no- 
mad tribes beyond this point. 

Salacia, the female divinity of the sea among 
the Romans, and the wife of Neptune. The 
name is evidently connected with sal (aAc), and 
accordingly denotes the wide, open sea. 

Salacia (now Alcacer do Sal), a municipium 
of Lusitania, in the territory of the Turdetani, 
northwest of Pax Julia and southwest of Ebora. 
with the surname of Urbs Imperatoria, cele- 
brated for its woollen manufactures. 

Salamis CZaXafiic • HaAa^mof). 1. (Now Ko- 
luri), an island off the western coast of Attica, 
from which it is separated by a narrow channel. 
It forms the southern boundary of the Bay of 
Eleusis. Its form is that of an irregular semi- 
circle toward the west, with many small inden- 
tations along the coast. Its greatest length, 
from north to south, is about ten miles, and its 
width, in its broadest part, from east to west, is 
a little more. In ancient times it is said to 
have been called Pityussa, from the pines which 
grew in it, and also Sciras and Cychrea, from 
the names of two native heroes. It is further 
said to have been called Salamis from a daugh- 
ter of Asopus of this name. It was colonized 
at an early time by the ^Eacidae of ^Egina. 
Telamon, the son of ^Eacus, fled thither after 
the murder of his half-brother Phocus, and be- 

765 



SALAPIA. 



SALERNUM. 



came sovereign of the island. His son Ajax ' rison stationed in the town. The original site 
accompanied the Greeks with twelve Salaminan of Salapia was at some distance from the coast ; 
ships to the Trojan war. Salamis continued an but, in consequence of the unhealthy exhalations 
independent state till about the beginning of the arising from the lake above mentioned, the in- 
fortieth Olympiad (B.C. 620), when a dispute habitants removed to a new town on the sea- 
arose for its possession between the Megarians coast, which was built by M. Hostilius with the 
and the Athenians. After a long struggle, it approbation of the Roman senate, about B.C. 
first fell into the hands of the Megarians, but 200. This new town served as the harbor of 
was finally taken possession of by the Atheni- Arpi. The ruins of the ancient town still exist 
ans through a stratagem of Solon (vid. Solon), ' at some distance from the coast at the village 
and became one of the Attic demi. It contin- of Salpi. 

ued to belong to Athens till the time of Cas- Salapixa Palus (now Lago di Salpi), a lake 
sander, when its inhabitants voluntarily surren- 1 of Apulia, between the mouths of the Cerbalus 
dered it to the Macedonians, 318. The Athe- ; and Aufidus, which derived its name from the 
riians recovered the island in 232 through means town of Salapia situated upon it, and which M. 
of Aratus, and punished the Salaminians for ; Hostilius connected with the Adriatic by means 
their desertion to the Macedonians with great ; of a canal. 

severity. The old city of Salamis stood on the ! Salaria, a town of the Bastetani in Hispania 
south side of the island, opposite JSgina ; but Tarraconensis, and a Roman colony, 
this was afterward deserted, and a new city of i Salaria Via. Vid. Roma, p. 756, b 
the same name built on the eastern coast, oppo- ' Salassi, a brave and warlike people in Gallia 
site Attica, on a small bay now called Ambela- j Transpadana, in the valley of the Duna, at the 
kia. Even this new city was in ruins in the foot of the Graian and Pennine Alps, whom 
time of Pausanias. At the extremity of the some regarded as a branch of the Salyes or Sal- 
southern promontory forming this bay was the | luvii in Gaul. They defended the passes of the 
small island of Psyttalia (now Lypsokutali), Alps in their territory with such obstinacy and 
which is about a mile long, and from two hund- ] courage that it was long before the Romans 
red to three hundred yards wide. Salamis is i were able to subdue them. At length, in the 
chiefly memorable on account of the great battle reign of Augustus, the country was permanently 
fought off its coast, in which the Persian fleet of occupied by Terentius Varro with a powerful 
Xerxes was defeated by the Greeks, B.C. 480. I Roman force ; the greater part of the Salassi 
The battle took place in the strait between the were destroyed in battle, and the rest, amount- 
eastern part of the island and the coast of Attica, ing to thirty-six thousand, were sold as slaves, 
and the Greek fleet was drawn up in the small Their chief town was Augusta Praetoria (now 
bay in front of the town of Salamis. The battle Aosta), which Augustus colonized with soldiers 
was witnessed from the Attic coast by Xerxes, ' of the Praetorian cohorts, 
who had erected for himself a lofty throne on i Sald^s (2d/.<5<u : ruins at Boujayah or Del- 
one of the projecting declivities of Mount .-Ega- | lyz ?), a large sea-port town of Northern Africa, 
leos. — 2. A city of Cyprus, situated in the mid- j originally the eastern frontier town of the king- 
die of the eastern coast, a little north of the j dom of Mauretania, afterward in Mauretania 
River Pediaeus. It is said to have been founded \ Caesariensis, and, after the division of that prov- 
by Teucer, the son of Telamon, who gave it the ! ince, the western frontier town of Mauretania 
name of his native island, from which he had J Sitifensis. Augustus made it a colony, 
been banished by his father. Salamis possess- j Salduba. 1. (Now Rio Verde), a river in the 
ed an excellent harbor, and was by far the most ' territory of the Turduli in Hispania Baetica, at 
important city in the whole of Cyprus. It be- j the mouth of which was situated a town of the 
came subject to the Persians with the rest of j same name. — 2. Vid. C^esaraugusta. 
the island ; but it recovered its independence | Sale (Sua7?), a town on the coast of Thrace, 
about 385, under Evagoras, who extended his ! Salebro, a place in Etruria between Cosa 
sovereignty over the greater part of the island. ; and Populonium. 
Vid. Cyprus. Under the Romans the whole of ' Saleius Bassus. Vid. Bassus. 
the eastern part of the island formed part of the Salem, i. e., peace, the original name of Jeru- 
territory of Salamis. In the time of Trajan a salem (Gen., xiv., 18). 

great part of the town was destroyed in an in- Salentini or Sallentini, a people in the 
surrection of the Jews ; and under Constantine southern part of Calabria, who dwelt around the 
it suffered still more from an earthquake, which promontory Iapygium, which is hence called 
buried a large portion of the inhabitants beneath Salentixcm or Salentina. They laid claim to 
its ruins. It was, however, rebuilt by Constan- a Greek origin, and pretended to have come 
tine, who gave it the name of Constantia, and from Crete into Italy under the guidance of Ido- 
made it the capital of the island. There are meneus. They were subdued by the Romans 
still a few ruins of this town. at the conclusion of their war with Pyrrhus, and 

Salapia (Salapinus : now Salpi), an ancient having revolted in the second Punic war, were 
town of Apulia, in the district Daunia, was sit- again easily reduced to subjection, 
uated south of Sipontum, on a lake named after [Salextixcm Promontoricm. Vid. Salex 
it. According to the common tradition it was tixi.] 

founded byDiomedes, though others ascribe its Salerxcm ( Salernitanus : now Salerno), as 
foundation to the Rhodian Elpias. It is not ancient town in Campania, at the innermost 
mentioned till the second Punic war, when it corner of the Sinus Paestanus, was situated on 
revolted to Hannibal after the battle of Cannae, a height not far from the coast, and possessed 
but it subsequently surrendered to the Romans, a harbor at the foot of the hill. It was made a 
and delivered to the latter the Carthaginian gar- Roman colony at the same time as Puteoh, B.C 
766 



SALGANEUS. 



SALLUSTIUS CRISPUS. 



194; but it attained its greatest prosperity in 
the Middle Ages, after it had been fortified by 
the Lombards. 

Salganeus or Salganea (Sa/lyavevf •' 'Zakyu- 
vios, laTiyaveiTTjc), a small town of Bceotia, on 
the Euripus, and on the road from Anthedon to 
Chalcis. 

[Salienus, T., a centurion in Caesar's army 
in Africa, in B.C. 4G, induced the two Titii to 
surrender their ship to C. Virgilius, the Pom- 
peian leader. He was subsequently dismissed 
from the army by Caesar with disgrace. — 2. Cle- 
mens, a senator in the reign of Nero.] 

Salin^e, salt-works, the name of several 
towns which possessed salt-works in their vicin- 
ity. 1. A town in Britain, on the eastern coast, 
in the southern part of Lincolnshire. — 2. A town 
of the Suetrii, in the Maritime Alps, in Gallia 
Narbonensis, east of Reii. — 3. (Now Torre delle 
Saline), a place on the coast of Apulia, near Sa- 
lapia. — 4. A place in Picenum, on the River San- 
nus (now Salino). — 5. (Now Torda), a place in 
Dacia — 6. Saline Hercules, near Hercula- 
num, in Campania. 

Salinator, Livius. 1. M., consul B.C. 219 
with L. ^Emilius Paulus, carried on war along 
with his colleague against the Illyrians. On 
their return to Rome, both consuls were brought 
to trial on the charge of having unfairly divided 
the booty among the soldiers. Paulus escaped 
with difficulty, but Livius was condemned. The 
sentence seems to have been an unjust one, and 
Livius took his disgrace so much to heart that 
he left the city and retired to his estate in the 
country, where he lived some years without 
taking any part in public affairs. In 210 the 
consuls compelled him to return to the city, and 
in 207 he was elected consul a second time with 
C. Claudius Nero. He shared with his col- 
league in the glory of defeating Hasdrubal on 
the Metaurus. (For details, vid. Nero, Clau- 
dius, No. 2). Next year (206) Livius was sta- 
tioned in Etruria as proconsul, with an army, 
and his imperium was prolonged for two suc- 
cessive years. In 204 he was censor with his 
former colleague in the consulship, Claudius 
Nero. The two censors had long been ene- 
mies ; and their long-smothered resentment 
now burst forth, and occasioned no small scan- 
dal in the state. Livius, in his censorship, im- 
posed a tax upon salt, in consequence of which 
he received the surname of Salinator, which 
seems to have been given him in derision, but 
which became, notwithstanding, hereditary in 
his family. — 2. C, curule aedile 203, and praetor 
202, in which year he obtained Bruttium as his 
province. In 193 he fought under the consul 
against the Boii, and in the same year was an 
"unsuccessful candidate for the consulship. — 3. 
C, praetor 191, when he had the command of 
the fleet in the war against Antiochus. He was 
consul 188, and obtained Gaul as his province. 

Sallentini. Vid. Salentini. 

Sallustius or Salustius (SaXot'arioe). 1. 
Praefectus Praetorio under the Emperor Julian, 
with whom he was on terms of friendship. Sal- 
lustius was a heathen, but dissuaded the em- 
peror from persecuting the Christians. He was 
probably the author of a treatise Uepl deuv nai 
KoopLov, which is still extant. If so, he was at- \ 
tached to the doctrines of the Neo-Platonists. ! 



The best edition of this treatise is by Orellius, 
Turici, 1821. — 2. A Cynic philosopher of some 
note, who lived in the latter part of the fifth 
century after Christ. He was a native of Erne- 
sa in Syria, and studied successively at Emesa, 
Alexandrea, and Athens. Sallustius was sus- 
pected of holding somewhat impious opinions 
regarding the gods. He seems, at least, to have 
been unsparing in his attacks upon the fanat- 
ical theology of the Neo-Platonists. 

Sallustius Crispus, C, or Salustius. 1. 
The Roman historian, belonged to a plebeian 
family, and was born B.C. 86 at Amiternum, in 
the country of the Sabines. He was quaestor 
about 59, and tribune of the plebs in 52, the 
year in which Clodius was killed by Milo. In 
his tribunate he joined the popular party, and 
took an active part in opposing Milo. It is said 
that he had been caught by Milo in the act of 
adultery with his wife Fausta, the daughter of 
the dictator Sulla ; that he had received a sound 
whipping from the husband, and that he had 
been let off only on payment of a sum of money. 
In 50 Sallust was expelled from the senate by 
the censors, probably because he belonged to 
Caesar's party, though some give as the ground 
of his ejection from the senate the act of adul- 
tery already mentioned. In the civil war he 
followed Caesar's fortune. In 47 we find him 
praetor elect, by obtaining which dignity he was 
restored to his rank. He nearly lost his life in 
a mutiny of some of Caesar's troops in Campa- 
nia, who had been led thither to pass over into 
Africa. He accompanied Caesar in his African 
war, 46, and was left by Caesar as the governor 
of Numidia, in which capacity he is charged 
with having oppressed the people, and enriched 
himself by unjust means. He was accused of 
maladministration before Caesar, but it does not 
appear that he was brought to trial. The charge 
is somew T hat confirmed by the fact of his be- 
coming immensely rich, as was shown by the 
expensive gardens which he formed (horti Sal- 
lustiani) on the Quirinalis. He retired into priv- 
acy after he returned from Africa, and he pass- 
ed quietly through the troublesome period after 
Caesar's death. He died 34, about four years 
before the battle of Actium. The story of his 
marrying Cicero's wife Terentia ought to be 
rejected. It was probably not till after his re- 
turn from Africa that Sallust wrote his histor- 
ical works. 1. The Catilina, or Bellum Catili- 
narium, is a history of the conspiracy of Cati- 
line during the consulship of Cicero, 63. The 
introduction to this history, which some critics 
admire, is only a feeble and rhetorical attempt 
to act the philosopher and moralist. The his- 
tory, however, is valuable. Sallust was a liv- 
ing spectator of the events which he describes, 
and, considering that he was not a friend of 
Cicero, and was a partisan of Caesar, he wrote 
with fairness. The speeches which he has in- 
serted in his history are certainly his own com- 
position ; but we may assume that Caesar's 
speech w r as extant, and that he gave the sub- 
stance of it. 2. The Jugurtha, or Bellum Ju- 
gurthinum, contains the history of the war of 
the Romans against Jugurtha, king of Numidia,. 
which began 111 and continued until 106. It 
is likely enough that Sallust was led to write 
this work from having resided in Africa, and 

767 



SALMACIS. 



SALONINUS, P. LICINIUS 



that he collected some materials there. He 
cites the Punic Books of King Hiempsal as 
authority for his general geographical descrip- 
tion {Jug., c. 17). The Jugurthine war has a 
philosophical introduction of the same stamp as 
that to the Catilina. As a history of the cam- 
paign, the Jugurthine war is of no value : there 
is a total neglect of geographical precision, and 
apparently not a very strict regard to chronol- j 
ogy. 3. Sallustius also wrote Historiarum Libri 
Quinque, which were dedicated to Lucullus, a 
son of L. Licinius Lucullus. The work is sup- 
posed to have comprised the period from the 
consulship of M JDmilius Lepidus and Q. Luta- 
tius Catulus, 78, the year of Sulla's death, to 
the consulship of L. Vulcatius Tullus and M. 
_Emilius Lepidus, 66, the year in which Cicero 
was praetor. This work is lost, with the excep- 
tion of fragments which have been collected 
and arranged. The fragments contain, among 
other things, several orations and letters. Some 
fragments belonging to the third book, and re- ! 
lating to the war with Spartacus, have been j 
published from a Vatican MS. in the present j 
century. 4. Du<z Epistolce de Re Publico, ordi- ! 
nanda, which appear to be addressed to Caesar ; 
at the time when he was engaged in his Span- I 
ish campaign (49) against Petreius and Afra- ' 
nius, and are attributed to Sallust ; but the opin- ' 
ions of critics on their authenticity are divided. 
5. The Declamatio in Sallustium, which is at- 
tributed to Cicero, is generally admitted to be 
the work of some rhetorician, the matter of 
which is the well-known hostility between the 
orator and the historian. The same opinion is 
generally maintained as to the Declamatio in 
Ciceronern, which is attributed to Sallust. Some 
of the Roman writers considered that Sallustius 
imitated the style of Thucydides. His language 
is generally concise and perspicuous : perhaps 
his love of brevity may have caused the am- 
biguity that is sometimes found in his senten- 
ces. He also affected archaic words. Though 
he has considerable merit as a writer, his art 
is always apparent. He had no pretensions to 
great research or precision about facts. His 
reflections have often something of the same 
artificial and constrained character as his ex- 
pressions. One may judge that his object was 
to obtain distinction as a writer ; that style was 
what he thought of more than matter. He has, 
however, probably the merit of being the first 
Roman who wrote what is usually called histo- 
ry. He was not above his contemporaries as a 
politician ; he was a party man, and there are 
no indications of any comprehensive views, 
which had a whole nation for their object. He 
hated the nobility, as a man may do, without 
loving the people. The best editions of Sallust 
are by Corte, Lips., 1724 ; Gerlach, Basil., 1823- 
1831, 3 vols. ; and by Kritz, Lips., 1828-1834, 
2 vols. ; [second edition, 1847, 2 vols.]— 2. The 
grandson of the sister of the historian, was 
adopted by the latter, and inherited his great 
wealth. In imitation of Maecenas, he prefer- 
red remaining a Roman eques. On the fall of 
Maecenas he became the principal adviser of 
Augustus. He died in A.D. 20, at an advanced 
age. One of Horace's odes (Carm., ii., 2) is 
addressed to him. 

[Salmacis (Za/MdKLg), a fountain in Halicar- 
768 



nassus, the water of which was believed to nave 
the property of rendering those who bathed in 

it effeminate.] 

SalmantIca (now Salamanca), called Hel- 
mantica or Hermandica by Livy, and Elmah- 
tica by Polybius, an important town of the Vet- 
tones in Lusitania, south of the Durius, on the 
road from Emerita to Caesaraugusta. It was 
taken by Hannibal. A bridge was built here by 
Trajan, of which the piers still exist. 

Salmone or Salmonia {^a/.fxdvn, 2afy*wv/a), 
a town of Elis, in the district Pisatis, on the 
River Enipeus, said to have been founded by 
Salmoneus. 

Salmoneus (Za/Muvevc), son of ^Eolus and 
Enarete, and brother of Sisyphus. He was first 
married to Alcidice and afterward to Sidero ; 
by the former of whom he became the father 
of Tyro. He originally lived in Thessaly, but 
emigrated to Elis, where he built the town of 
Salmone. His presumption and arrogance were 
so great that he deemed himself equal to Jupi- 
ter (Zeus), and ordered sacrifices to be offered 
to himself ; nay, he even imitated the thunder 
and lightning of Jupiter (Zeus), but the father 
of the gods killed him with his thunderbolt, de- 
stroyed his town, and punished him in the low- 
er world. His daughter Tyro bears the patro- 
nymic Salmonis. 

Salmonium or Salmone {*La7.uuviov, 1a?.jiuvr) : 
now Cape Salmon), the most easterly promon- 
tory of Crete. 

Salmydessus, called Halmydessus also in 
later times {la/.uvdrjoaoc, 1 Alfivdnacoc: I,a?.fiv- 
6f]GGLoq : now Midja or Midjch), a towm of Thrace, 
on the coast of the Euxine, south of the prom- 
ontory Thynias. The name was originally ap- 
plied to the whole coast from this promontory 
to the entrance of the Bosporus ; and it was 
from this coast that the Black Sea obtained the 
name of Pontus Axenos ("Afrvor), or inhospita- 
ble. The coast itself was rendered dangerous 
by shallows and marshes, and the inhabitants 
were accustomed to plunder any ships that were 
driven upon them. 

Salo (now Xalon), a tributary of the Iberus 
in Celtiberia, which flowed by Bilbilis, the birth- 
place of Martial, who accordingly frequently 
mentions it in his poems. 

[Salodurum. Vid. Salordurum.] 
Salona, Salons, or Salon (1d?.uv : now »Sa- 
lona), an important town of Iilyria and the cap- 
ital of Dalmatia, was situated on a small bay of 
the sea. It was strongly fortified by the Ro- 
mans after their conquest of the country, and 
was at a later time made a Roman colony, and 
the seat of a conventus juridicus. The Emper- 
or Diocletian was born at the small village Dio- 
i clea near Salona; and after his abdication he 
retired to the neighborhood of this town, and 
here spent the rest of his days. The remains 
of his magnificent palace are still to be seen at 
' the village of Spalatro, the ancient Spolatum, 
three miles south of Salona. 

Salonina, Cornelia, wife of Gallienus and 
mother of Saloninus. She witnessed with her 
own eyes the death of her husband before Mi- 
lan in A.D. 268. 

Saloninus. P. Licinics Cornelius Valeria- 
! nus, son of Gallienus and Salonina, grandson 
| of the Emperor Valerian. When his father and 



SALORDURUM. 



SAMARIA. 



grandfather assumed the title of Augustus in 
A.D. 253, the youth received the designation of 
Caesar. Some years afterward he was left in 
Gaul, and was put to death upon the capture of 
Colonia Agrippina by Postumus in 259, being 
about seventeen years old. 

Salordurum (now Soleure or Sololhurn), a 
town of the Helvetii, on the road from Aventi- 
cum to Vindonissa. was fortified by the Romans 
about A.D. 350. 

[Salsul^e Fons, a fountain in the neighbor- 
hood of the Sordice Lacus, in Gallia Narbonen- 
sis, south from Narbo : it corresponds to the 
Fountain of Salscs near the Etang de Leucate.~\ 
Salsum Flumen, a tributary of the Bastis, in 
Hispania Baetica, between Attegua and Attubis. 

Salvianus, an accomplished ecclesiastical 
writer of the fifth century, was born in the vi- 
cinity of Treves, and passed the latter part of his | 
life as a presbyter of tbe church at Marseilles, j 
The following works of Salvianus are still ex- j 
tant : 1. Adversus Avaritiam LibrilV., ad Eccle- 
nam Catholicam, published under the name of 
Timotheus about A.D. 440. 2. Dc Providentia s. 
de Gubernatione Dei et de Justo Dei prccsentique 
Judicio Libri, written during the inroads by the 
barbarians upon the Roman empire, 451-455. 
3. E-pislola IX., addressed to friends upon fa- 
miliar topics. Tbe best edition of these works 
is by Baluzius, 8vo, Paris, 1684. 

Salvidienus Rufus, Q., one of the early 
friends of Octavianus (Augustus), whose fleet 
he commanded in the war against Sextus Pom- 
peius, B.C. 42. In the Perusinian war (41-40) 
he took an active part as one of Octavianus's 
legates against L. Antonius and Fulvia. He 
was afterward sent into Gallia Narbonensis, 
from whence he wrote to M. Antonius, offering 
to induce the troops in his province to desert 
from Octavianus. But Antonius, who had just 
been reconciled to Octavianus, betrayed the 
treachery of Salvidienus. The latter was forth- 
with summoned to Rome on some pretext, and 
on his arrival was accused by Octavianus in the 
senate, and condemned to deatb, 40. 

Salvius, the leader of the revolted slaves in 
Sicily, better known by the name of Tryphon, 
which he assumed. Vid. Tryphon. 
Salvius Julianus. Vid. Julianus. 
Salvius Otho. Vid. Otho. 
[Salvius or Sylvius, otherwise called Pole- 
mius, the author of a sacred calendar, drawn up 
A.D. 448, which is entitled Laterculus s. Index 
Dierum Festorum, and which includes heathen 
as well as Christian festivals, is generally be- 
lieved to have been Bishop of Martigny, in the 
Valais.] 

Salus, a Roman goddess, the personification 
of health, prosperity, and the public welfare. 
In the first of these three senses she answers 
closely to the Greek Hygieia, and was accord- 
ingly represented in works of art with the same 
attributes as the Greek goddess. In the sec- 
ond sense she represents prosperity in general. 
In the third sense she is the goddess of the pub- 
lic welfare (Salus publica or Romana). In this 
capacity a temple had been vowed to her, in the 
year B.C. 397, by the censor C.Junius Bubul- 
cus, on the Quirinal Hill, which was afterward 
decorated with paintings by C. Fabius Pictor. 
She was worshipped publicly on the 30th of 
49 



April, in conjunction with Pax, Cotvoordia, and 
Janus. It had been customary at Rome every 
year, about the time when the consuls entered 
upon their office, for the augurs and other high- 
priests to observe the signs for the purpose of 
ascertaining the fortunes of the republic dur- 
ing the coming year: this observation of the 
signs was called augurium Saluhs. In the time 
of Cicero this ceremony had become neglected ; 
but Augustus restored it, and the custom after- 
ward remained as long as paganism was the re- 
ligion of the state. Salus was represented, like 
Fortuna, with a rudder, a globe at her feet, and 
sometimes in a sitting posture, pouring from a 
patera a libation upon an altar, around which a 
serpent is winding. 

Salustius. Vid. Sallustius. 

Salyes or Salluvii, the most powerful and 
most celebrated of all the Ligurian tribes, inhab- 
ited the southern coast of Gaul from the Rhone 
to the Maritime Alps. They were troublesome 
neighbors to Massilia, with which city they fre- 
quently carried on war. They were subdued 
by the Romans in B.C. 123 after a long and ob- 
stinate struggle, and the colony of Aquae Sex- 
tiae was founded in their territory by the con- 
sul Sextius. 

Samachonitis Lacus. Vid. Semechonitis La- 
cus. 

Samara. Vid. Samarobriva. 

Samaria (la^upeia : Heb. Shomron ; Chaldee, 
Shamrai'n : "Zafiapevc, 2 a/nap etrrjc, Samarites, pi. 
'Zaij.apetc, Za/iapeirai, Samaritae), afterward Se- 
baste (^,e6aarf] : ruins at Scbustieh), one of the 
chief cities of Palestine, was built by Omri, 
king of Israel (about B.C. 922), on a hill in the 
midst of a plain surrounded by mountains, just 
in the centre of Palestine, west of the Jordan. 
Its name was derived from Shemer, the owner 
of the hill which Omri purchased for its site. 
It was the capital of the kingdom of Israel, and 
the chief seat of the idolatrous worship to which 
the ten tribes were addicted, until it was taken 
by Shalmaneser, king of Assyria (about B.C. 
720), who carried away the inhabitants of the 
city and of the surrounding country, which is 
also known in history as Samaria (vid. below), 
and replaced them by heathen tribes from the 
eastern provinces of his empire. These set- 
tlers, being troubled with the wild beasts, who 
had become numerous in the depopulated coun- 
try, sought to propitiate the god of the land ; 
and Esarhaddon sent them a priest of the tribe 
of Levi, who resided at Bethel, and taught them 
the worship of the true God. The result was 
a strange mixture of religions and of races. 
When the Jews returned from the Babylonish 
captivity, those of the Samaritans who wor- 
shipped Jehovah offered to assist them in re- 
building the temple at Jerusalem ; but their aid 
was refused, and hence arose the lasting hatred 
between the Jews and the Samaritans. This 
religious animosity reached its height when, in. 
the reign of Darius Nothus, the son of the Jew- 
ish high-priest, having married the daughter of 
Sanballat, governor of Samaria, went over to 
the Samaritans and became high-priest of a 
temple which his father-in-law built for him on 
Mount Gerizim, near Sichem. The erection of 
this temple had also the effect of diminishing 
the importance of the city of Samaria. Under 

769 



SAMAROBRIVA. 



SAMNIUM. 



lie Syrian kings and the Maccabean princes, 
we find the name of Samaria used distinctly as 
that of a province, which consisted of the dis- 
trict between Galilee on the north and Judaea 
on the south. In the persecution of Antiochus 
Epiphanes, the Samaritans escaped by conform- 
ing to the king's edicts and dedicating the tem- 
ple on Mount Gerizim to Jupiter (Zeus) Helle- 
nius, B.C. 167. As the power of the Asmonean 
princes increased, they attacked the Samari- 
tans ; and, about B.C. 129, John Hyrcanus took 
and destroyed the temple on Mount Gerizim and 
the city of Samaria. The latter seems to have 
been soon rebuilt. Pompey assigned the dis- 
trict to the province of Syria, and Gabinius for- 
tified the city anew. Augustus gave the dis- 
trict to Herod, who greatly renovated the city 
of Samaria, which he called Sebaste, in honor 
of his patron. Still, as the Samaritans contin- 
ued to worship on Mount Gerizim, even after 
their temple had been destroyed, the neighbor- 
ing city of Sichem was regarded as their cap- 
ital, and, as it grew, Samaria declined ; and, by 
the fourth century of our era, it had become a 
place of no importance. Its beautiful site is 
now occupied by a poor village, which bears the 
Greek name of the city, slightly altered, viz., 
Sebustieh. As a district of Palestine, Samaria 
extended from Ginaea (now Jenin) on the north, 
to Bethhoron, northwest of Gibeon, on the south ; 
or, along the coast, from a little south of Caes- 
area on the north, to a little north of Joppa on 
the south. It was intersected by the mountains 
of Ephraim, running north and south through its 
middle, and by their lateral branches, which 
divide the country into beautiful and fertile val- 
leys. For its political history after the time of 
Herod the Great, vid. Pal^estina. A remnant 
of the ancient Samaritans have remained in the 
country to the present day, especially at Nablous 
(the ancient Sichem), and have preserved their 
ancient version of the Five Books of Moses, the 
only part of the Old Testament which they ac- 
knowledge. This version is known as the Sa- 
maritan Pentateuch, and is of vast importance 
in biblical criticism. 

Samarobriva, afterward Ambiani (now Ami- 
ens), the chief town of the Ambiani in Gallia 
Belgica, on the River Samara ; whence its name, 
which signifies Samara-Bridge. 

Sambana (IdfiBava), a city of Assyria, two 
days' journey north of Sittace. In its neigh- 
borhood dwelt the people called Sambatae (2a/*- 
Sdrai). 

Sambast.-e (Lafi^aaraL), a people of India intra 
Gangem, on the Lower Indus, near the island 
Pattalene. The fort of Sevistan or Sehoun in 
the same neighborhood has been thought to pre- 
serve their name, and is by some identified with 
the Brahman city taken by Alexander. 

[Sambus (2d/z6of : now Tschumbul or Sambul), 
a tributary of the Jornanes in India intra Gan- 
gem.] 

[Sambus CEdpSog, An. ; 2d6o£*, Diod. • 2d66ac, 
Plut.), an Indian prince, whose kingdom bor- 
dered on Pattalene. When Alexander penetrat- 
ed into India, Sambus hastened to make his sub- 
mission to him, and was accordingly left in the 
possession of his kingdom ] 

Same or Samos ("Ldurj, 2d/£0f), the ancient 
name of Cephallenia. Vid. Cephallenia. It 
770 



was also the name of one of the four towns of 
Cephallenia. The town Same or Samos was 
situated on the eastern coast, opposite Ithaca, 
and was taken and destroyed by the Romans 
B.C. 189. 

Samia (Safiia : now Khaiaffa), a town of Elis 
in the district Triphylia, south of Olympia, be- 
tween Lepreum and the Alpheus, with a citadel 
called Samicum {Zauitiov), the same as the Ho- 
meric Arene. 

[Samicum. Vid. Samia.] 

Saminthus {IdfiLvdog : near Phiklia), a place 
in Argolis, on the western edge of the Argive 
plain, opposite Mycenae. 

Samnium (Samnites, more rarely Samnitae, 
pi.), a country in the centre of Italy, bounded 
on the north by the Marsi, Peligni, and Marru- 
cini, on the west by Latium and Campania, on 
the south by Lucania, and on the east by the 
Frentani and Apulia. The Samnites were an 
offshoot of the Sabines, who emigrated from 
their country between the Nar, the Tiber, and 
the Anio, before the foundation of Rome, and 
settled in the country afterward called Sam- 
nium. Vid. Sabini. This country was at the 
time of their migration inhabited by Opicans, 
whom the Samnites conquered, and whose lan- 
guage they adopted ; for we find, at a later time, 
that the Samnites spoke Opican or Oscan. 
Samnium is a country marked by striking phys- 
ical features. The greater part of it is occupied 
by a huge mass of mountains, called at the pres- 
ent day the Matese, which stands out from the 
central line of the Apennines. The circum- 
ference of the Matese is between seventy and 
eighty miles, and its greatest height is six thou- 
sand feet. The two most important tribes of 
the Samnites were the Caudini and Pentri, of 
whom the former occupied the southern side, 
and the latter the northern side of the Matese. 
To the Caudini belonged the towns of Allifae, 
Telesia, and Beneventum ; to the Pentri, those 
of JSsernia, Bovianum, and Sepinum. Besides 
these two chief tribes, we find mention of the 
Caraceni, who dwelt north of the Pentri, and 
to whom the town of Aufidena belonged ; and 
of the Hirpini, who dwelt southeast of the Cau- 
dini, but who are sometimes mentioned as dis- 
tinct from the Samnites. The Samnites were 
distinguished for their bravery and love of free- 
dom. Issuing from their mountain fastnesses, 
they overran a great part of Campania ; and it 
was in consequence of Capua applying to the 
Romans for assistance against the Samnites 
that war broke out between the two nations in 
B.C. 343. The Romans found the Samnites the 
most warlike and formidable enemies whom 
they had yet encountered in Italy ; and the war, 
which commenced in 343, was continued with 
few interruptions for the space of fifty-three 
years. It was not till 290, when all their brav- 
est troops had fallen, and their country had 
been repeatedly ravaged in every direction by 
the Roman legions, that the Samnites sued for 
peace and submitted to the supremacy of Rome. 
They never, however, lost their love of free- 
dom ; and, accordingly, they not only joined the 
other Italian allies in the war against Rome (90), 
but, even after the other allies had submitted, 
they still continued in arms. The civil war be- 
tween Marius and Sulla gave them hopes of re- 



SAMOLAS. 



SAMOS. 



covering their independence ; but they were de- 
feated before the gates of Rome (82), the great- 
er part of their troops fell in battle, and the re- 
mainder were put to death. Their towns were 
laid waste, the inhabitants sold as slaves, and 
their place supplied by Roman colonists. 

[Samolas (Za/i6Aaf), an Achaean, one of the 
three commissioners sent by the Greek auxili- 
aries of Cyrus from Cotyora to Sinope in B.C. 
400 for ships to convey the army to Heraclea. 
Not long after, when the Greeks were afCalpe, 
we find Samolas commanding a division of the 
reserve in the successful engagement with the 
allied troops of the Bithynians and Pharnaba- 
zus.] 

Samos or Samus (Sojuoc: Sdfitoc, Samius: now 
Grk. Samo, Turk. Susam Adassi), one of the 
principal islands of the iEgean Sea, lying in 
that portion of it called the Icarian Sea, off the 
coast of Ionia, from which it is separated only 
by a narrow strait formed by the overlapping 
of its eastern promontory Posidium (now Cape 
Colonna) with the westernmost spur of Mount 
Mycale, Promontorium Trogilium (now Cape S. 
Maria). This strait, which is little more than 
three fourths of a mile wide, was the scene of 
the battle of Mycale. The island is formed by 
a range of mountains extending from east to 
west, whence it derived its name ; for Su/zo^ 
was an old Greek word signifying a mountain : 
and the same root is seen in Same, the old 
name of Cephallenia, and Samothrace, i. e., the 
Thracian Samos. The circumference of the 
island is about eighty miles. It was and is very 
fertile ; and some of its products are indicated 
by its ancient names, Dryusa, Anthemura, Me- 
lamphyllus, and Cyparissia. According to the 
earliest traditions, it was a chief seat of the 
Carians and Leleges, and the residence of their 
first king, Ancaeus ; and was afterward colo- 
nized by zEolians from Lesbos, and by Ionians 
from Epidaurus. In the earliest historical rec- 
ords, we find Samos decidedly Ionian, and a 
powerful member of the Ionic confederacy. 
Thucydides tells us that the "Samians were the 
first of the Greeks, after the Corinthians, who 
paid great attention to naval affairs. They early 
acquired such power at sea, that, besides ob- 
taining possession of parts of the opposite coast 
of Asia, they founded many colonies ; among 
which were Bisanthe and Perinthus, in Thrace ; 
Celenderis and Nagidus, in Cilicia; Cydonia, 
in Crete ; Dicaearchia (Puteoli), in Italy ; and 
Zancle (Messana), in Sicily. After a transition 
from the state of an heroic monarchy, through 
an aristocracy, to a democracy, the island be- 
came subject to the most distinguished of the 
so-called tyrants, Polycrates (B.C. 532), under 
whom its power and splendor reached their 
highest pitch, and Samos would probably have 
become the mistress of the iEgean but for the 
murder of Polycrates. At this period the Sa- 
mians had extensive commercial relations with 
Egypt, and they obtained from Amasis the priv- 
ilege of a separate temple at Naucratis. Their 
commerce extended into the interior of Africa, 
partly through their relations with Cyrene, and 
also by means of a settlement which they effect- 
ed in one of the Oases, seven days' journey 
from Thebes. The Samians now became sub- 
ject to the Persian empire, under which they 



were governed by tyrants, with a brief interval 
at the time of the Ionic revolt, until the battle 
of Mycale, which made them independent, B.C. 
479. They now joined the Athenian confeder- 
acy, of which they continued independent mem- 
bers until B.C. 440, when an opportunity arose 
for reducing them to entire subjection and de- 
priving them of their fleet, which was effected 
by Pericles after an obstinate resistance of nine 
months' duration. (For the details, vid. the his- 
tories of Greece.) In the Peloponnesian war, 
Samos held firm to Athens to the last ; and in 
the history of the latter part of that war, the 
island becomes extremely important as the head- 
quarters of the exiled democratical party of the 
Athenians. Transferred to Sparta after the 
battle of ^Egospotami, 405, it was soon restored 
to Athens by that of Cnidus, 394, but went 
over to Sparta again in 390. Soon after, it fell 
into the hands of the Persians, being conquered 
by the satrap Tigranes ; but it was recovered 
by Timotheus for Athens. In the Social war, 
the Athenians successfully defended it against 
the attacks of the confederated Chians, Rho- 
dians, and Byzantines, and placed in it a body 
of two thousand cleruchi, B.C. 352. After Alex- 
ander's death, it was taken from the Athenians 
by Perdiccas, 323, but restored to them by 
Polysperchon, 319. In the subsequent period, 
it seems to have been rather nominally than 
really a part of the Greco-Syrian kingdom : we 
find it engaged in a long contest with Priene on 
a question of boundary, which was referred to 
Antiochus II., and afterward to the Roman sen- 
ate. In the Macedonian war, Samos was taken 
by the Rhodians again, B.C. 200. In the Syrian 
war, the Samians took part with Antiochus the 
Great against Rome. Little further mention is 
made of Samos till the time of Mithradates, with 
whom it took part in his first war against Rome, 
on the conclusion of which it was finally united 
to the province of Asia, B.C. 84. Meanwhile it 
had greatly declined, and during the war it had 
been wasted by the incursions of pirates. Its 
prosperity was partially restored under the pro- 
prastorship of Q. Cicero, B.C. 62, but still more 
by the residence in it of Antony and Cleopatra, 
32, and afterward of Octavianus, who made Sa- 
mos a free state. It was favored by Caligula, 
but was deprived of its freedom by Vespasian, 
and it sank into insignificance as early as the 
second century, although its departed glory is 
found still recorded, under the Emperor Decius, 
by the inscription on its coins, 2o/iiwv Tzpuruv 
luviag- Samos may be regarded as almost the 
chief centre of Ionian manners, energies, lux- 
ury, science, and art. In very early times there 
was a native school of statuary, at the head of 
which was Rhoecus, to whom tradition ascribed 
the invention of casting in metal. Vid. Rhoe- 
cus, Telecles, Theodorus. In the hands of 
the same school architecture flourished greatly ; 
the Heraeum, one of the finest of Greek temples, 
was erected in a marsh, on the western side of 
the city of Samos ; and the city itself, especially 
under the government of Polycrates, was fur- 
nished with other splendid works, among which 
was an aqueduct pierced through a mountain. 
Samian architects became famous also beyond 
their own island ; as, for example, Mandrocles, 
who constructed Darius's bridge over the Bos- 

771 



SAMOSATA. 



SANCUS. 



porns. In painting, the island produced Calli- 
phon, Theodorus, Agatharchus, and Timanthes. 
Its pottery was celebrated throughout the an- 
cient world. In literature, Samos was made 
illustrious by the poets Asius, Choerilus, and 
„Eschrion ; by the philosophers Pythagoras and 
Melissus ; and by the historians Pagasus and 
Duris. The capital city, also called Samos, 
stood on the southeastern side of the island, 
opposite Promontorium Trogilium, partly on the 
shore, and partly rising on the hills behind in 
the form of an amphitheatre. It had a magnif- 
icent harbor, and numerous splendid buildings, 
among which, besides the Heraeum and other 
temples, the chief were the senate-house, the 
theatre, and a gymnasium dedicated to Eros. 
In the time of Herodotus, Samos was reckoned 
•one of the finest cities of the world. Its ruins 
are so considerable as to allow its plan to be 
traced : there are remains of its walls and 
towers, and of the theatre and aqueduct. The 
Heraeum already mentioned, celebrated as one 
of the best early specimens of the Doric order 
of architecture, and as the chief centre of the 
worship of Juno (Hera) among the Ionian 
Greeks, stood about two miles west of the city. 
Its erection is ascribed to Rhcecus and his sons. 
It was burned by the Persians, but soon rebuilt, 
probably in the time of Polycrates. This second 
temple was of the Ionic order, decastyle dipte- 
Tal, three hundred and forty-six feet long by one 
hundred and eighty-nine wide, and is spoken 
of by Herodotus as the largest temple that he 
knew. It was gradually filled with works of 
sculpture and painting, of which it was plunder- 
ed, first by the pirates in the Mithradatic war, 
then by Vterres, and lastly by Marcus Antonius. 
Nothing is left of it but traces of the founda- 
tions and a single capital and base. 

Samosata (tu 'Lafj.ooa.Ta : ^a/noGa-evc, Samo- 
satensis : now Somcisat), the capital of the prov- 
ince, and afierward kingdom, of Commagene, 
in the north of Syria, stood on the right bank 
of the Euphrates, northwest of Edessa. It was 
strongly fortified as a frontier post against Os- 
roene. In the first century of our era it was 
the capital of the kings of Commagene. It is 
celebrated in literary history as the birth-place 
of Lucian, and in church history as that of the 
heretic Paul, bishop of Antioch, in the third 
century. Nothing remains of it but a heap of 
ruins on an artificial mound. 

Samothrace ( I,a/j.odpaK7j, 2, apod pan la, Ep. tj 
Za/zof Qp-qlKLT] : 2 afiod 'paxes : now Samothraki), 
a small island in the north of the JEgean Sea, 
opposite the mouth of the Hebrus in Thrace, 
from which it was thirty-eight miles distant. 
It is about thirty-two miles in circumference, 
and contains in its centre a lofty mountain, call- 
ed Saoce, from which Homer says that Troy 
could be seen. Samothrace bore various names 
in ancient times. It is said to have been called 
Melite, Saonnesus. Leucosia, and more frequent- 
ly Dardania, from Dardanus, the founder of 
Troy, who is reported to have settled here. Ho- 
mer calls the island simply Samos ; sometimes 
the Thracian Samos, because it was colonized, 
according to some accounts, from Samos on the 
coast of Asia Minor. Samothrace was the chief 
seat of the worship of the Cabiri (vid. Cabiri), 
and was celebrated for its religious mysteries, 
772 



j which were some of the most famous in the 
! ancient world. Their origin dates from the 
time of the Pelasgians, who are said to have 
i been the original inhabitants of the island ; and 
J they enjoyed great celebrity down to a very late 
! period. Both Philip of Macedon and his wife 
j Olympias were initiated in them. The political 
! history of Samothrace is of little importance. 
! The Samothracians fought on the side of Xerxes 
; at the battle of Salamis ; and at this time they 
: possessed on the Thracian main land a few 
places, such as Sale, Serrhion, Mesambria, and 
j Tempyra. In the time of the Macedonian kings, 
: Samothrace appears to have been regarded as 
: a kind of asylum, and Perseus accordingly fled 
thither after his defeat by the Romans at the 
; battle of Pydna. 

Sampsiceramus, the name of a petty prince 
| of Emesa in Syria, a nickname given by Cicero 
' to Cneius Pompeius. 

[Sana (Idvrj), a town on the west coast of 
Pallene, south of Potidaea, a colony of Andros.] 
Sanchuniathon (Zayxowiaduv), said to have 
been an ancient Phoenician writer, whose works 
were translated into Greek by Philo Byblius, 
who lived in the latter half of the first century 
of the Christian era. A considerable fragment 
of the translation of Philo is preserved by Eu- 
sebius in the first book of his Prmparatio Evan- 
gelica. The most opposite opinions have been 
held by the learned respecting the authenticity 
and value of the work of Sanchuniathon ; but 
it is now T generally agreed among modern 
scholars that the work was a forgery of Philo. 
Nor is it difficult to see with what object the 
forgery was executed. Philo was one of the 
many adherents of the doctrine of Euhemerus, 
that all the gods were originally men, who had 
distinguished themselves in their lives as kings, 
warriors, or benefactors of man, and became 
worshipped as divinities after their death. This 
doctrine Philo applied to the religious system 
of the Oriental nations, and especially of the 
Phoenicians ; and in order to gain more credit 
for his statements, he pretended that they were 
taken from an ancient Phoenician writer. San- 
chuniathon, he says, was a native of Berytus, 
lived in the time of Semiramis, and dedicated 
his work to Abibalus, king of Berytus The 
fragments of this work have been published 
separately by J. C. Orelli, Lips., 1826. In 1835 
a manuscript, purporting to be the entire trans- 
lation of Philo Byblius, was discovered in a 
convent in Portugal. The Greek text was pub- 
lished by Wagenfeld, Bremae, 1837. It was at 
first regarded as genuine, but is now universal- 
ly agreed to have been the forgery of a later age. 

Sancus, Sangus, or Semo Sancus, a Roman 
divinity said to have been originally a Sabine 
god, and identical with Hercules and Dius Fid 
ius. The name, which is etymologically the 
same as Sanctus, and connected with Snncire. 
seems to justify this belief, and characterizes 
Sancus as a divinity presiding over oaths. San 
cus also had a temple at Rome, on the Quirinal, 
opposite that of Quirinus, and close by the gate, 
which derived from him the name of Sanqualis 
porta. This sanctuary was the same as that 
of Dius Fidius, which was consecrated B.C. 465 
by Sp. Postumius, but was said to have been 
founded by Tarquinius Superbus. 



SANDROCOTTUS. 



SAPPHO. 



Sandrocottus (lavtipoicoTToe), an Indian king 
at the time of Seleucus Nicator, ruled over the 
powerful nation of the Gangaridae and Prasii on 
the banks of the Ganges. He was a man of 
mean origin, and was the leader of a band of 
robbers before he obtained the supreme power. 
In the troubles which followed the death of 
Alexander, he extended his dominions over the 
greater part of Northern India, and conquered 
the Macedonians, who had been left by Alexan- 
der in the Punjab. His dominions were in- 
vaded by Seleucus, who did not, however, suc- 
ceed in the object of his expedition ; for, in the 
peace concluded between the two monarchs, 
Seleucus ceded to Sandrocottus not only his 
conquests in the Punjab, but also the country 
of the Paropamisus. Seleucus, in return, re- 
ceived five hundred war elephants. Megas- 
thenes subsequently resided for many years at 
the court of Sandrocottus as the ambassador of 
Seleucus. Vid. Megasthenes. Sandrocottus 
is probably the same as the Chandragupia of 
the Sanscrit writers. The history of Chandra- 
gupta forms the subject of a Hindoo drama, en- 
titled Mudra Rakshasa, which has been trans- 
lated from the Sanscrit by Prof. Wilson. 

[Sanga Fabius, Q., the patronus of the Al- 
lobroges, to whom the ambassadors of that peo- 
ple disclosed the treasonable designs of Cati- 
line and his accomplices. Sanga communicated 
the intelligence to Cicero, who was thus ena- 
bled to obtain the evidence which led to the 
apprehension and execution of Lentulus and his 
associates, B.C. 63. Q. F. Sanga is mentioned 
as one of the friends of Cicero who besought 
the consul L. Piso, in B.C. 58, not to support 
Clodius in his measures against Cicero.] 

Sangarius, Sangaris, or Sagaris CLayydpioc, 
Suyyapif, TSdypayoc : now Sakariych), the larg- 
est river of Asia Minor after the Halys, had its 
source in a mountain called Adoreus, near the 
little town of Sangia, on the borders of Gala- 
tia and Phrygia, whence it flowed first north 
through Galatia, then west and northwest 
through the northeastern part of Phrygia, and 
then north through Bithynia, of which it orig- 
inally formed the eastern boundary. It fell at 
last into the Euxine, about half way between 
the Bosporus and Heraclea. It was navigable 
in the lower part of its course. Its chief trib- 
utaries were the Thymbres or Thymbrus, the 
Bathys, and the Gallus. flowing into it from the 
west. 

Sangia. Vid. Sangarius. 

Sannio, a name of the buffoon in the mimes, 
derived from sanna, whence comes the Italian 
Zanni (hence our Zany). 

Sannyrion (^avvvpU.w), an Athenian comic 
poet, belonging to the latter years of the Old 
Comedy, and the beginning of the Middle. He 
flourished B.C. 407" and onward. We know 
nothing of his personal history except that his 
excessive leanness was ridiculed by Strattis and 
Aristophanes. 

Santones or Sabtoni, a powerful people in 
Gallia Aquitanica, dwelt on the coast of the 
ocean, north of the Garumna. Under the Ro- 
mans they were a free people. Their chief 
town was Mediolanum, afterward Santones 
(now Saint is). Their country produced a spe- 
cies of wormwood which was much valued. 



I [Saoce. Vid. Samothrace.] 

Saocoras. Vid. Mascas. 

Sap^ei (2a~aioi, "Zdnaiot), a people in Thrace, 
I dwelt on Mount Pangaeus, between the Lake 
I Bistonis and the coast. 

Saphar, Sapphar, or Taphar (ld<pap or "A^cp, 
I,uiT(bap, Td(papov : ruins at D ha far), one of the 
chief cities of Arabia, stood on the southern 
coast of Arabia Felix, opposite to the Aromata 
Promontorium (now Cape Guardafui) in Africa. 
It was the capital of the Homeritae, a part of 
which tribe bore the name of Sapharitae or Sap- 
pharitae (Zan<papi-aL). 

Sapis (now Savio), a small river in Gallia Cis- 
alpina, rising in the Apennines, and flowing into 
the Adriatic south of Ravenna, between the Po 
and the Aternus. 

Sapor. Vid. Sassanid^e. 

Sappho (San-pw, or, in her own /Folic dialect, 
^dtrya), one of the two great leaders of the JEo- 
lian school of lyric poetry (Alcaeus being the 
other), was a native of Mytilene, or, as some 
said, of Eresos in Lesbos. Her father's name 
was Scamandronymus, who died when she was 
only six years old. She had three brothers, 
Charaxus, Larichus, and Eurigius. Charaxus 
was violently upbraided by his sister in a poem 
because he became so enamored of the courte- 
san Rhodopis at Naucratis, in Egypt, as to ran- 
som her from slavery at an immense price. Vid. 
Charaxus. Sappho was contemporary with Al- 
caeus, Stesichorus, and Pittacus. That she was 
not only contemporary, but lived in friendly in- 
tercourse with Alceeus, is shown by existing 
fragments of the poetry of both. Of the events 
of her life we have no other information than 
an obscure allusion in the Parian Marble, and 
in Ovid (Her.,xv., 51), to her flight from Myti- 
lene to Sicily to escape some unknown danger, 
between 604 and 592 ; and the common story 
that, being in love with Phaon, and finding her 
love unrequited, she leaped down from the Leti- 
cadian rock. This story, however, seems to 
have been an invention of later times. The 
name of Phaon does not occur in one of Sap- 
pho's poems, and there is no evidence that it 
was mentioned in her poems. As for the leap 
from the Leucadian rock, it is a mere metaphor, 
which is taken from an expiatory rite connected 
with the worship of Apollo, which seems to 
have been a frequent poetical image. At Myti- 
lene Sappho appears to have been the centre of 
a female literary society, most of the members 
of which were her pupils in poetry, fashion, 
and gallantry. Modern writers have indeed at- 
tempted to prove that the moral character of 
Sappho was free from all reproach ; but it is 
impossible to read the fragments which remain 
of her poetry without being forced to come to 
the conclusion that a female who could write 
such poetry could not be the pure and virtuous 
woman which her modern apologists pretend. 
Of her poetical genius, however, there can not 
be a question. The ancient writers agree in 
expressing the most unbounded admiration for 
her poetry. Already in her own age the reci- 
tation of one of her poems- so affected Solon 
that he expressed an earnest desire to learn it 
before he died. Her lyric poems formed nine 
books, but of these only fragments have come 
down to us. The most important is a splendid 

773 



SAR ANCLE. 



SARDINIA. 



ode to Aphrodite (Venus), of which we perhaps : 
possess the whole. The best separate edition j 
of the fragments is by Neue, Berol, 1827. 

Sarakcjk, Sarang^e, or Saranges {"Lapayyai, 
Sapayyeeg, Herod.), a people of Sogdiana. 

SarIvus (now Saar), a small river in Gaul, 
flowing into the Mosella on its right bank. 

Sardanapalus (E,apdavu7ra?Log), the last king 
of the Assyrian empire of Ninus or Nineveh, 
noted for his luxury, licentiousness, and effem- 
inacy. He passed his time in his palace un- 
seen by any of his subjects, dressed in female 
apparel, and surrounded by concubines. At j 
length Arbaces, satrap of Media, and Belesys, i 
the noblest of the Chaldaean priests, resolved to 
renounce allegiance to such a worthless mon- ! 
arch, and advanced at the head of a formidable j 
army against Nineveh. But all of a sudden the j 
effeminate prince threw off his luxurious hab- ' 
its, and appeared an undaunted warrior. Placing ; 
himself at the head of his troops, he twice de- j 
feated the rebels, but was at length worsted and j 
obliged to shut himself up in Nineveh. Here 
he sustained a siege for two years, till at length, ' 
finding it impossible to hold out any longer, he j 
collected all his treasures, wives, and concu- J 
bines, and placing them on an immense pile j 
which he had constructed, set it on fire, and 
thus destroyed both himself and them. The 
enemies then obtained possession of the city, j 
This is the account of Ctesias, which has been j 
preserved by Diodorus Siculus, and which has 
been followed by most subsequent writers and 
chronologists. The death of Sardanapalus and 
the fall of the Assyrian empire is placed B.C. 
876. Modern writers, however, have shown ! 
that the whole narrative of Ctesias is mythical, 
and must not be received as a genuine history. 
The legend of Sardanapalus, w T ho so strangely 
appears at one time sunk in the lowest effem- 
inacy, and immediately afterward an heroic war- 
rior, has probably arisen from his being the same 
with the god Sandon, who was worshipped ex- 
tensively in Asia, both as a heroic and a fe- 
male divinity. The account, of Ctesias is also 
in direct contradiction to Herodotus and the 
writers of the Old Testament. Herodotus places 
the revolt of the Medes from the Assyrians about 
710, but relates that an Assyrian kingdom still 
continued to exist, which was not destnwed 
till the capture of Nineveh by the Median king 
Cyaxares, about 608. Further, the writers of ' 
the Old Testament represent the Assyrian em- j 
pire in its glory in the eighth century before the ! 
Christian era. It was during this period that ; 
Pul,Tiglath-piieser, Shalmaneser, and Sennach- j 
erib appear as powerful kings of Assyria, who. 
not contented with their previous dominions, 
subdued Israel, Phoenicia, and the surrounding j 
countries. In order to reconcile these state- j 
ments with those of Ctesias, modern writers j 
have invented two Assyrian kingdoms at Nin- 1 
eveh, one which was destroyed on the death 
of Sardanapalus, and another which was estab- j 
lished after that event, and fell on the capture 
of Nineveh by Cyaxares. But this is a purely 
gratuitous assumption, unsupported by any evi- 
dence. We nave only records of one Assyrian ! 
empire and of one destruction of Nineveh. 

Sardemisus, a branch of Mount Taurus, ex- 
tending southward on the borders of Pisidia 
774 



and Pamphylia as far as Phaselis in Lycia, 
whence it was continued in the chain called 
Climax. It divided the district of Milyas from 

Pisidia Proper. 

Sardene [lapdevi]), a mountain of Mysia, 
north of the Hermus, near Cyme. The town 
of Neontichos was built on its side. 

[Sardes. Vid. Sardis.] 

Sardi. Vid. Sardinia. 

[Sardica, also called Ulpia Sardica (novr 
Tnaditza, near Sophia), a city of Mcesia Supe- 
rior, in a plain watered by the River CEscus. It 
derived its name Ulpia from the inhabitants of 
Ulpia, in Dacia Trajani, having been transfer- 
red thither. In its vicinity the Emperor Max- 
imian was born, and it was also famous for a 
council held there.] 

Sardinia (tj Sap&j or Sapduv, G. Sapdovor, 
D. lapdol, A. SapJw : subsequently lapduvia, 
^Lapdavia, or ^apd^via : 2ap(5wof, 2,apd6viog, Zao- 
duvioc, Sardus : now Sardinia), a large island 
in the Mediterranean, is in shape in the form of 
a parallelogram, upward of one hundred and 
forty nautical miles in length from north to 
south, with an average breadth of sixty. It 
was regarded by the ancients as the largest of 
the Mediterranean islands, and this opinion, 
though usually considered an error, is now 
found to be correct, since it appears by actual 
admeasurement that Sardinia is a little larger 
than Sicily. Sardinia lies in almost a central 
position between Spain, Gaul, Italy, and Africa. 
The ancients derived its name from Sardus, a 
son of Hercules, who was worshipped in the 
island under the name of Sardus pater. The 
Greeks called it Ichnusa (Tjyoiaa), from its re- 
semblance to the print of a foot, and Sandalid- 
tis CLavda/.itiric), from its likeness to a sandal. 
A chain of mountains runs along the whole of 
the eastern side of the island from north to 
south, occupying about one third of its surface. 
These mountains were called by the ancients 
Insani Montes, a name which they probably de- 
rived from their wild and savage appearance, 
and from their being the haunt of numerous 
robbers. In the western and southern parts of 
Sardinia there are numerous plains, intersected 
by ranges of smaller hills .; but this part of the 
island was in antiquity, as in the present day, 
exceedingly unhealthy. The principal rivers 
are the Termus (now Termo) in the north, the 
Thyrsus (now Oristano) on the west (the larg- 
est river in the island), and the Flumen Sacrum 
(now Vras) and the S<eprus (now Flurnendoso) 
on the east. The chief towns in the island 
were, on the northern coast, Tibula (now Porte 
Polio) and Turris Libyssonis : on the southern 
coast, Sulci and Caralis (now Cagliari) ; on the 
eastern coast, Olbia ; and in the" interior, Cor- 
nus (now Corneto) and Nora (now Nurri). Sar- 
dinia was very fertile, but was not extensively 
cultivated, in consequence of the uncivilized 
character of its inhabitants. Still, the plains in 
the western and southern parts of the island 
produced a great quantity of corn, of which a 
large quantity was exported to Rome every 
year. Among the products of the island, one of 
the most celebrated was the Sardomca hcrba, a 
poisonous plant, which was said to produce fa- 
tal convulsions in the person who ate of it 
These convulsions agitated and distorted the 



SARDINIA. 



SARDOUM. 



mouth so that the person appeared to laugh, | 
though in excruciating pain ; hence the well- 
known risus Sardomcus. No plant possessing 
these properties is found at present in Sardinia ; 
and it is not impossible that the whole tale may 
have arisen from a piece of bad etymology, since 
we find mention in Homer of the Zapduvioc yi- 
2<jf which can not have any reference to Sar- 
dinia, but is probably connected with the verb 
naipeLv, "to grin." Another of the principal 
productions of Sardinia was its wool, which was 
obtained from a breed of domestic animals be- 
tween a sheep and a goat, called mtismones. 
The skins of these animals were used by the 
inhabitants as clothes, whence we find them 
often called PelLiti and Mastrucati. Sardinia 
also contained a large quantity of the precious 
metals, especially silver, the mines of which 
were worked in antiquity to a great extent. 
There were likewise numerous mineral springs, 
and large quantities of salt were manufactured 
on the western and southern coasts. The pop- 
ulation of Sardinia was of a very mixed kind. 
To what race the original inhabitants belonged 
we are not informed ; but it appears that Phoe- 
nicians, Tyrrhenians, and Carthaginians settled 
in the island at different periods. The Greeks 
are also said to have planted colonies in the 
island, but this account is very suspicious. The 
first Greek colony is said to have been led by 
Iolaus, a son of Hercules, and from him a tribe 
in the island, called Max ( , lo?.aoi, 'loXdetoi, 'Io- 
TUzeif), or Menses ('IXutc) derived their name. 
These were some of the most ancient inhabit- 
ants of Sardinia, and were probably not of Greek, 
but Tyrrhenian origin. Their name is still pre- 
served in the modern town of llwla, in the mid- 
dle of the western coast. We also find in the 
island Corsi, who had crossed over from Corsi- 
ca, and Balari, who were probably descendants 
of the Iberian and Libyan mercenaries of the 
Carthaginians, who revolted from the latter in 
ihe first Punic war, and settled in the mount- 
ains. At a later time all these names became 
merged under the general appellation of Sardi, 
although, even in the Roman period, we still 
find mention of several tribes in the island un- 
der distinct names. The Sardi are described 
as a rude and savage people, addicted to thiev- 
ery and lying. Sardinia was known to the 
Greeks as early as B.C. 500, since we find that 
Histiaeus of Miletus promised Darius that he 
would render the island of Sardo tributary to 
his power. It was conquered by the Carthagin- 
ians at an early period, and continued in their 
possession till the end of the first Punic war. 
Shortly after this event, the Romans availed 
themselves of the dangerous war which the 
Carthaginians were carrying on against their 
mercenaries in Africa to take possession of 
Sardinia, B.C. 238. It was now formed into a 
Roman province, under the government of a 
praetor ; but a large portion of it was only nom- 
inally subject to the Romans, and it was not 
till after many years and numerous revolts that 
the inhabitants submitted to the Roman domin- 
ion. It was after one of these revolts that so 
many Sardinians were thrown upon the slave- 
market as to give rise to the proverb " Sardi 
venales," to indicate any cheap and worthless 
commodity. In fact, the inhabitants of the 



mountains in the eastern side of the island 
were never completely subdued, and gave trou- 
ble to the Romans even in the time of Tibe- 
rius. Sardinia continued to belong to the Ro- 
man empire till the fifth century, when it was 
taken possession of by the V T andals. 

SardIs or Sardes (at Sdpdeir, Ion. Zupdiec, 
contracted Zupfof : Idpdiac, lapdidvoc, Ion. lap- 
6it)v6c, Sardianus : ruins at Sart), one of the 
most ancient and famous cities of Asia Minor, 
and the capital of the great Lydian monarchy, 
stood on the southern edge of the rich valley 
of the Hermus, at the northern foot of Mount 
Tmolus, on the little River Pactolus, thirty sta- 
dia (three geographical miles) south of the junc- 
tion of that river with the Hermus. On a lofty 
precipitous rock, forming an outpost of the range 
of Tmolus, was the almost impregnable citadel, 
which some suppose to be the Hyde of Homer, 
who, though he never mentions the Lydians or 
Sardis by name, speaks of Mount Tmolus and 
the Lake of Gyges. The erection of this cita- 
del was ascribed to Meles, an ancient king of 
Lydia. It was surrounded by a triple wall, and 
contained the palace and treasury of the Lyd- 
ian kings. At the downfall of the Lydian em- 
pire it resisted all the attacks of Cyrus, and 
was only taken by surprise. The story is told 
by Herodotus, who relates other legends of the 
fortress. The rest of the city, which stood on 
the plain on both sides of the Pactolus, was 
very slightly built, and was repeatedly burned 
down, first by the Cimmerians, then by the 
Greeks in the great Ionic revolt, and again, in 
part at least, by Antiochus the Great ; but on 
each occasion it was restored. For its history 
as the capital of the Lydian monarchy, vid. 
Lydia. Under the Persian and Greco-Syrian 
empires, it was the residence of the satrap of 
Lydia. The rise of Pergamus greatly dimin- 
ished its importance ; but under the Romans it 
was still a considerable city, and the seat of a 
conventus juridicus. In the reign of Tiberius 
it was almost entirely destroyed by an earth- 
quake, but it was restored by the emperor's aid. 
It was one of the earliest seats of the Christian 
religion, and one of the seven churches of the 
province of Asia, to which St. John addressed 
the Apocalypse ; but the apostle's language im- 
plies that the church at Sardis had already sunk 
into almost hopeless decay (Rev., iii., 1, foil.). 
In the wars of the Middle Ages the city was 
entirely destroyed, and its site now presents one 
of the most melancholy scenes of desolation to 
be found among the ruins of ancient cities. 
Though its remains extend over a large sur- 
face on the plain, they scarcely present an ob- 
ject of importance, except two or three Ionic 
columns, belonging probably to a celebrated 
temple of Cybele. The chief of the other re- 
mains are those of a theatre, stadium, and a 
building supposed to be the senate-house. The 
! triple wall of the acropolis can still be traced, 
and some of its lofty towers are standing. The 
necropolis of the city stood on the banks of the 
Lake of Gyges (vid. Gyg.-eus Lacus), near which 
the sepulchre of Alyattes may still be seen. Vid 
Alyattes. 

Sardoum or SardonIcum Mare (to Zapdyov 
j or ZapAuviov rreXayos), the part of the Mediter- 
i ranean Sea on the west and south of Sardinia, 

775 



SARDUS. 



SARPEDON. 



separated from the Libyan Sea by a line drawn 
from the promontory Lilybaeum in Sicily. 

[Sardus, a son of Hercules. Vid. Sardinia.] 

[Sare, a village of the Maronitae in Thrace, 
mentioned by Livy (xxxviii., 41).] 

Sarepta or Sarephtha (Zdpe<pda, ^apexTa, 
Sapairra: in the Old Testament, Zarephath: 
now Surafcnd, Scrphant, or Tzarphand), a city 
of Phoenicia, about ten miles south of Sidon, to 
the territory of which it belonged ; well known 
as the scene of two miracles of Elijah (1 Kings, 
xvii.). It was celebrated for its wine. 

Sargetia (now Strel or St.rey), a tributary of 
the Marosch), a river in Dacia, on which was 
situated the residence of Decebalus. 

Sariphi Montes (ra Sdpjpa opn : now Haza- 
reh Mountains), a mountain- range of Central 
Asia, separating Margiana on the north from 
Aria on the south, and forming a western part 
of the great chain of the Indian Caucasus, 
which may be regarded as a prolongation 
through Central Asia of the chain of Anti-Tau- 
rus. 

SARaiXTiE or Sauromat^e (Zapfidrat, Strabo ; 
lavpofxdrai, Herod.), a people of Asia, dwelling 
on the northeast of the Palus Maeotis (now Sea 
of Azov), east of the River Tanais (now Don), 
which separated them from the Scythians of 
Europe. This is the account of Herodotus, 
who tells us that the Sarmatians were allied 
to the Scythians, and spoke a corrupted form 
of the Scythian language ; and that their origin 
was ascribed to the intercourse of Scythians 
with Amazons. Strabo also places the Sau- 
romatae between the Tanais and the Caspian ; 
but he elsewhere uses the word in the much 
more extended sense, in which it was used by 
the Romans and by the later geographers. Vid. 
Sarmatia. 

Sarmatia (jy ~Za.pp.a7ia : "Eapfid-ai, Savpopd- 
rai • the eastern part of Poland, and southern 
part of Russia in Europe), a name first used by 
Mela for the part of Northern Europe and Asia 
extending from the Vistula (now Wisla) and the 
Sarmatici Montes on the west, w r hich divided 
it from Germany, to the Rha (now Volga) on 
the east, which divided it from Scythia ; bound- 
ed on the southwest and south by the rivers 
Ister (now Danube), Tibiscus (now Theiss), and 
Tyras (now Dniester), which divided it from 
Pannonia and Dacia, and, further, by the Euxine, 
and beyond it by Mount Caucasus, which di- 
vided it from Colchis, Iberia, and Albania ; and 
extending on the north as far as the Baltic and 
the unknown regions of Northern Europe. The 
part of this country which lies in Europe just 
corresponds to the Scythia of Herodotus. The 
people from whom the name of Sarmatia was 
derived inhabited only a small portion of the 
country. Vid. Sarmat^. The greater part of 
it was peopled by Scythian tribes ; but some 
of the inhabitants of its western part seem to 
have been of German origin, as the Venedi on 
the Baltic, and the Iazyges, Rhoxolani, and 
Hamaxobii in Southern Russia ; the chief of the 
other tribes west of the Tanais were the Alauni 
or Alani Scythae, a Scythian people who came 
out of Asia and settled in the central parts of , 
Russia. Vid. Alani. The people east of the I 
Tanais were not of sufficient importance in an- | 
cient history to require specific mention. The ! 
776 



whole country was divided by the River Tanais 
(now Don) into two parts, called respectively 
Sarmatia Europaea and Sarmatia Asiatica {jj kv 
RvpioTry and q kv 'Atrw Sap/uarta) ; but it should 
be observed that, according to the modern di- 
vision of the continent, the whole of Sarmatia 
belongs to Europe. It should also be noticed 
that the Chersonesus Taurica (now Crimea), 
though falling within the specified limits, was 
not considered as a part of Sarmatia, but as a 
I separate country. 

Sarmatic^e Port.*: (at ZapfiarcKal 7tv?mi : 
now Pass of Dariel), the central pass of the 
Caucasus, leading from Iberia to Sarmatia. It 
was more commonly called Caucasian Portae. 
Vid. Caucasus. It was also called Caspise Por- 
tfe, apparently through a confusion with the pass 
of that name at the eastern end of the Cauca- 
sus. Vid. Gxspije Portae. The remains of 
an ancient wall are still seen in the pass. 

Sarmatici Montes (ra ZapjxaTLKa opn : part 
of the Carpathian Mountains), a range of mount- 
ains in Central Europe, extending from the 
sources of the Vistula to the Danube, between' 
Germany on the west and Sarmatia on the east. 

Sarmaticus Oceanus and Pontus, Sarmati- 
cum Mare (EapfiaTiKog uiteavoc : now Baltic), a 
great sea, washing the northern coast of Euro- 
pean Sarmatia. 

[Sarmentus, a runaway slave, employed by 
Maecenas as a scribe, and forming one of his 
train on the Brundisian journey so humorous- 
ly described by Horace (Sat., i., 5, 52, sgq.).~\ 

[Sarmia (now Guernsey), an island of the At- 
lantic Ocean, lying in the channel between Gal- 
lia and Britannia.] 

Sarmizegethusa (near Vacheiy, also called 
Gradischte, ruins), one of the most important 
towns of Dacia, and the residence of its kings, 
was situated on the River Sargetia (now Strel 
or Strey). It was subsequently a Roman colo- 
ny under the name of Colonia Ulpia Trajana 
Aug., and the capital of the province in which 
a legion had its head-quarters. 

Sarnus (now Sarno), a river in Campania, 
flowing by Nuceria, and falling into the Sinus 
Puteolanus near Pompeii. Its course was 
changed by the great eruption of Vesuvius, 
A.D. 79. On its banks dwelt a people named 
Sarrastes, who are said to have migrated fiom 
Peloponnesus. 

Sar6n(2upwv : in the Old Testament, Sharon), 
a most beautiful and fertile plain of Palestine, 
extending along the coast north of Joppa toward 
Caesarea ; celebrated for its pastures and its 
flowers. 

Saronicus Sinus (Zapuvuibc koXttoc, also 7ro- 
poc, TTslayoc, and rcovrog : now Gulf of Egina) r 
a bay of the iEgean Sea lying between Attica 
and Argolis, and commencing between the 
promontory of Sunium in Attica and that of 
Scyllaeum in Argolis. It contains within it the 
islands of iEgina and Salami's. Its name was 
usually derived from Saron, king of Troezene, 
who was supposed to have been drowned in 
this part of the sea while swimming in pursuit 
of a stag. 

Sarpedon (lapTrrjduv). 1. Son of Jupiter 
(Zeus) and Europa, and brother of Minos and 
Rhadamanthus. Being involved in a quarrel 
with Minos about Miletus, he took refuge with 



SARPEDON PROMONTORIUM. 



SASSANID^E. 



Cilix, whom he assisted against the Lycians. 
Vid. Miletus. He afterward became king of 
the Lycians, and Jupiter (Zeus) granted him the 
privilege of living three generations. — 2 Son of 
Jupiter (Zeus) and Laodamia, or, according to 
others, of Evander and Deidamia, and a brother 
of Clarus and Themon, was a Lycian prince. 
In the Trojan war he was an ally of the Tro- 
jans, and distinguished himself by his valor, 
but was slain by Patroclus. Apollo, by the com- 
mand of Jupiter (Zeus), cleansed Sarpedon's 
body from blood and dust, covered it with am- 
brosia, and gave it to Sleep and Death to carry 
into Lycia, there to be honorably buried. 

Sabpedon Promontorium (2apTr7]dovia uitpa : 
now Cape Lissan cl Kapeh), a promontory of 
Cilicia, in longitude 34° east, eighty stadia west 
of the mouth of the Calycadnus. In the peace 
between the Romans and Antiochus the Great, 
the western boundary of the Syrian kingdom 
was fixed here. 

SaRPEDONIUM PROMONTORIUM (?) ^apTT7]6o)Vtf} 

aupa), a promontory of Thrace, between the 
mouths of the rivers Melas and Erginus, oppo- 
site the island of Imbros. 

Sarrastes. Vid. Sarnus. 

Sars (now Sar), a small river on the western 
coast of Hispania Tarraconensis, between the 
Promontorium Nerium and the Minius. 

Sarsina (Sarsinas, -atis : now Sarsina), an 
ancient town of Umbria, on the River Sapis, 
southwest of Ariminum, and subsequently a Ro- 
man municipium, celebrated as the birth-place 
of the comic poet Plautus. 

Sarus (o Zdpoc : now Seihan), a considerable 
river in the southeast of Asia Minor. Rising 
in the Anti-Taurus, in the centre of Cappadocia, 
it flows south past Comana to the borders of 
Cilicia, where it receives a western branch that 
has run nearly parallel to it ; and thence, flow- 
ing through Cilicia Campestris in a winding 
course, it falls into the sea a little east of the 
mouth of the Cydnus, and southeast of Tarsus. 
Xenophon gives three plethra (three hundred 
and three feet) for its width at its mouth. 

[Saserna. 1. The name of two writers, fa- 
ther and son, on agriculture, who lived in the 
time between Cato and Varro. — 2. C. and P., 
two brothers, who served under Julius Caesar 
in the African war, B.C. 46, and one of whom 
is mentioned by Cicero as a friend of Antonius 
and Octavianus after the death of Caesar.] 

Saso or Sasonis Insula (now Sascno, Sasso- 
no, Sassa), a small rocky island off the coast of 
Illyria, north of the Acroceraunian promontory, 
much frequented by pirates. 

SaspIres, or -i, or Sapires CZdo-eipec, 2acr- 
Tretpoi, SaTmpec, 2<'nrKeipec), a Scythian people 
of Asia, south of Colchis and north of Media, in 
an inland position (i. c. in Armenia) according 
to Herodotus, but, according to others, on the 
coast of the Euxine. 

Sassanid^s, the name of a dynasty which 
reigned in Persia from A D. 226 to A.D. 651. 
1. Artaxkrxes (the Ardishir or Aedshir of 
the Persians), the founder of the dynasty of the 
Sassanidae, reigned A.D. 226-240. He was a 
son of one Babek, an inferior officer, who was 
the son of Sassan, perhaps a person of some 
consequence, since his royal descendants chose 
to call themselves after him. Artaxerxes had 



served with distinction in the army of Ar- 
tabanus, the king of Parthia, was rewarded 
with ingratitude, and took revenge in revolt. 
He obtained assistance from several grandees, 
and having met with success, claimed the 
throne on the plea of being descended from the 
ancient kings of Persia, the progeny of the great 
Cyrus. The people warmly supported his cause, 
as he declared himself the champion of the an- 
cient Persian religion. In 226 Artabanus was 
defeated in a decisive battle, and Artaxerxes 
thereupon assumed the pompous but national 
title of " King of Kings." One of his first leg- 
islative acts was the restoration of the pure re- 
ligion of Zoroaster and the worship of fire. The 
reigning branch of the Parthian Arsacidae was 
exterminated, but some collateral branches were 
suffered to live and to enjoy the privileges of 
Persian grandees, who, along with the Magi, 
formed a sort of senate. Having succeeded in 
establishing his authority at home, Artaxerxes 
demanded from the Emperor Alexander Severus 
the immediate cession of all those portions of 
the Roman empire that had belonged to Persia 
in the time of Cyrus and Xerxes, that is, the 
whole of the Roman possessions in Asia as 
well as Egypt. An immediate war between 
the two empires was the direct consequence. 
After a severe contest, peace was restored, 
shortly after the murder of Alexander in 237, 
each nation retaining the possessions which 
they held before the breaking out of the war. — 
2. Sapor I. (Siiapur), the son and successor of 
Artaxerxes I., reigned 240-273. He carried on 
war first against Gordian and afterward against 
Valerian. The latter emperor was defeated by 
Sapor, taken prisoner, and kept in captivity for 
the remainder of his life. After the capture of 
Valerian, Sapor conquered Syria, destroyed An- 
tioch, and, having made himself master of the 
passes in the Taurus, laid Tarsus in ashes, and 
took Caesarea. His further progress was stop- 
ped by Odenatlms and Zenobia, who drove the 
king back beyond the Euphrates, and founded a 
new empire, over which they ruled at Palmyra. 
In his reign lived the celebrated Mani, who, en- 
deavoring to amalgamate the Christian and Zo- 
roastrian religions, gave rise to the famous sect 
of the Manichaeans, who spread over the whole 
East, exposing themselves to most sanguinary 
persecutions from both Christians and fire-wor- 
shippers. — 3. Hormisdas I. (Hormuz), son of 
the preceding, who reigned only one year, and 
died 274. — 4. Varanes or Vararanes I. (Bah- 
e am or Baharam), son of Hormisdas I., reign- 
ed 274-277. He carried on unprofitable wars 
against Zenobia, and, after her captivity, was 
involved in a contest with Aurelian, which, 
however, was not attended with any serious re- 
sults, on account of the sudden death of Aure- 
lian in 275. In his reign the celebrated Mani 
was put to death. — 5. Varanes II. (Bahram),. 
son of Varanes I., reigned 277-294. He was 
defeated by Cams, who took both Seleucia and 
Ctesiphon, and his dominions were only saved 
from further conquests by the sudden death of 
Carus (283).— 6. Varanes III. (Baheam), elder 
son of Varanes II., died after a reign of eight 
months, 294. — 7. Naeses (Narsi), younger son 
of Varanes II., reigned 294-303. He carried 
on a formidable war against the Emperor Dio- 

777 



SASSANID/E. 



SASSANID.E. 



cletian. The Roman army was commanded by 
Galerius Caesar, who in the first campaign (296) 
sustained most signal defeats in Mesopotamia, 
and fled in disgrace to Antioch. In the second 
campaign Narses was defeated with great loss, 
and was obliged to conclude a peace with the 
Romans, by which he ceded to Diocletian Mes- 
opotamia, five small provinces beyond the Ti- 
gris, the kingdom of Armenia, some adjacent 
Median districts, and the supremacy over Iberia, 
the kings of which were henceforth under the 
protection of Rome. In 303 Narses abdicated 
in favor of his son, and died soon afterward. — 
8. Hormisdas II. (Hormuz), son ofNarses, reign- 
ed 303-310. Daring his reign nothing of im- 
portance happened regarding Rome. — 9. Sapor 
II. Postumus (Shapur), son of Hormisdas II., 
was born after the death of his father, and was 
crowned in his mother's womb, the Magi plac- 
ing the diadem with great solemnity upon the 
body of his mother. He reigned 310-381. His 
reign was signalized by a cruel persecution of 
the Christians. He carried on war for many 
years against Constantius II. and his successors. 
The armies of Constantius were repeatedly de- 
feated ; Julian, as is related elsewhere (vid. 
Julianus), perished in battle ; and the war was 
at length brought to a conclusion by Jovian 
ceding to the Persians the five provinces be- 
yond the Tigris, and the fortresses of Nisibis, 
Singara, &c. Iberia and Armenia were left to 
their fate, and were completely reduced by Sa- 
por in 365 and the following year. Sapor has 
been surnamed the Great, and no Persian king 
had ever caused such terror to Rome as this 
monarch. — 10. Artaxerxes II. (Ardishir), the 
successor of Sapor II., reigned 381-385. He 
was a prince of royal blood, but was not a son 
of Sapor. — 11. Sapor III. (Shapur), reigned 385 
-390. He sent an embassy to Theodosius the 
Great, with splendid presents, which was re- 
turned by a Greek embassy headed by Stilicho 
going to Persia. Owing to these diplomatic 
transactions, an arrangement was made in 384, 
according to which Armenia and Iberia recov- 
ered their independence. — 12. Varanes IV. 
(Bahram), reigned A.D. 390-404, or perhaps not 
so long. He was the brother of Sapor III., and 
founded Kermanshah, still a flourishing town. 
— 13. YesdigerdI. (Yezdijird), surnamed Ula- 
thim, or the Sinner, son or brother of the pre- 
ceding, reigned 404-420 or 421. He was on 
friendly terms with the Emperor Arcadius, who 
is said to have appointed him the guardian of 
his infant son and successor, Theodosius the 
Younger. He concluded a peace with Arcadius 
for one hundred years. — 14. Varanes V. (Bah- 
ram), son of Yesdigerd I., surnamed Gour, or 
the "Wild Ass," on account of his passion for 
the chase of that animal, reigned 420 or 421- 
448. He persecuted his Christian subjects with 
such severity that thousands of them took ref- 
uge within the Roman dominions. He carried 
on war with Theodosius, which was terminated 
by a peace for one hundred years, which peace 
lasted till the twelfth year of the reign of the 
Emperor Anastasius. During the latter part 
of his reign Varanes carried on wars against 
the Huns, Turks, and Indians, in which he is 
said to have achieved those valorous deeds for 
which he has ever since continued to be a fa- 
778 



vorite hero in Persian poetry. He was acci- 
dentally drowned in a deep well together with 
his horse, and neither man nor beast ever rose 
again from the fathomless pit. — 15. Yezdigerd 
II., son of the preceding, reigned 448-458. The 
persecutions against the Christians were re- 
newed by him with unheard-of cruelty. His re- 
lations with Rome were peaceful. — 16. Hor- 
misdas III. (Hormuz), and, 17. Peroses (Firoze), 
sons of the preceding, claimed the succession, 
and rose in arms against each other. Peroses 
gained the throne by the assistance of the White 
Huns, against whom he turned his sword in 
after years. He perished in a great battle with 
them in 484, together with all of his sons ex- 
cept Pallas and Cobades. — 18. Pallas (Pal- 
lash), who reigned 484-488, had to contest the 
throne with Cobades. He perished in a battle 
with his brother Cobades in 488. — 19. Cobades 
(Kodad). reigned 488-498, and again 501 or 502- 
531. The years from 498 till 502 were filled up 
by the short reign of, 20. Zames (Jamaspes). 
The latter was the brother of Cobades, whom 
he dethroned, and compelled to fly to the Huns, 
with whose assistance Cobades recovered his 
throne about 502. He carried on war with suc- 
cess against the Emperor Anastasius ; but in 
consequence of the Huns, who had previously 
been his auxiliaries, turning their arms against 
him, he made peace with Anastasius in 505, on 
receiving eleven thousand pounds of gold as an 
indemnity. He also restored Mesopotamia and 
his other conquests to the Romans, being un- 
able to maintain his authority there on account 
of the protracted war with the Huns. About 
this time the Romans constructed the fortress 
of Dara, the strongest bulwark against Persia, 
and situated in the very face of Ctesiphon. The 
war with Constantinople was renewed in 521. 
in the reign of the Emperor Justin I. — 21. Chos- 
roes I. (Khosru or Khosrew), surnamed Nu- 
shirwan, or " the generous mind," reigned 531- 
579. He carried on several wars against the 
Romans. The first war was finished in 532 oi 
533, Justinian having purchased peace by an 
annual tribute of four hundred and forty thou- 
sand pieces of gold. One of the conditions of 
Chosroes was, that seven Greek, but pagan 
philosophers, who had resided some time at the 
Persian court, should be allowed to live in the 
Roman empire without being subject to the im- 
perial laws against pagans. The second war 
lasted from 540 to 561. Peace was concluded 
on condition of Justinian promising an annual 
tribute of forty thousand pieces of gold, and re- 
ceiving, in return, the cession of the Persian 
claims upon Colchis and Lazica. The third 
war broke out in 571, in the reign of Justin II., 
but Chosroes died before it was concluded. 
Chosroes was one of the greatest kings of Per- 
sia. In his protracted wars with the Romans 
he disputed the field with the conquerors of 
Africa and Italy, and with those very generals,. 
Tiberius and Mauricius, who brought Persia to 
the brink of ruin but a few years after his death. 
His empire extended from the Indus to the Red 
Sea, and large tracts in Central Asia, perhaps 
a portion of Eastern Europe, recognized him 
for a time as their sovereign. He received em- 
bassies and presents from the remotest kings 
of Asia and Africa. His internal government 



SASSULA. 



SATURNINUS. 



was despotic and cruel, but of that firm descrip- 
tion which pleases Orientals, so that he still 
lives in the memory of the Persians as a model 
of justice. He provided for all the wants of 
his subjects ; and agriculture, trade, and learn- 
ing were equally protected by him. He caused 
the best Greek,' Latin, and Indian works to be 
translated into Persian. — 22. Hormisdas IV. 
(Hormuz), son of Chosroes, reigned 579-590. 
He continued the war with the Romans, which 
had been bequeathed him by his father, but was 
defeated successively by Mauricius and Hera- 
clius. Hormisdas was deprived of his sight, 
and subsequently put to death by the Persian 
aristocracy. — 23. Varanes VI. (Bahram) Shu- 
bin, a royal prince, usurped the throne on the 
death of Hormisdas, and reigned 590-591. Un- 
able to maintain the throne against Chosroes, 
who was supported by the Emperor Mauricius. 
he fled to the Turks — 24. Chosroes II. (Khos- 
ru) Purwiz, reigned 590 or 591-628. He was 
the son of Hormisdas IV., and recovered his 
father's throne with the assistance of the Em- 
peror Mauricius. After the murder of Mauri- 
cius, Chosroes declared war against the tyrant 
Phocas, and met with extraordinary success. 
In several successive campaigns he conquer- 
ed Mesopotamia, Syria, Palestine, Egypt, Asia 
Minor, and finally pitched his camp at Chalce- 
don, opposite Constantinople. At length Herac- 
Iius saved the empire from the brink of ruin, 
and in a series of splendid campaigns not only 
recovered the provinces which the Romans had 
lost, but carried his victorious arms into the ! 
heart of the Persian empire. Borne down by ! 
his misfortunes, and worn out by age and fa- 
tigue, Chosroes resolved, in 628, to abdicate in ! 
favor of his son Merdaza ; but Shirweh, or 
Siroes, his eldest son, anticipated his design. ■ 
and at the head of a band of conspirators seized 
upon the person of his father, deposed him, and i 
put him to death. The Orientals say that Chos- ; 
roes reigned six years too long. No Persian ; 
king lived in such splendor as Chosroes ; and \ 
however fabulous the Eastern accounts respect- 
ing his magnificence may be, they are true in ! 
the main, as is attested by the Western writers, j 
— 25. Siroes (Shirweh), reigned only eight! 
months, 628. He concluded peace with the ! 
Emperor Heraclius. The numerous captives i 
were restored on both sides. Siroes also re- ! 
stored the holy cross which had been taken at 
the conquest of Jerusalem. — 26. Artaxerxes 
III. (Ardishir), the infant son of Siroes, was 
murdered a few days after the death of his fa- i 
ther. He was the last male Sassanid. After 
him the throne was disputed by a host of candi- 
dates of both sexes and doubtful descent, who 
had no sooner ascended the throne than they 
were hurried from it into death or captivity. 
The last king was Yesdigerd III., who was de- 
feated and slain in 651 by Kaleb, the general 
of the khalif Abu-Bekr. Persia now became a 
Mohammedan country. 

Sassula, a town in Latium, belonging to the 
territory of Tibur. 

Satai.a (rd 2dra?ta, ri laraXa), a considerable 
town in the northeast of Armenia Minor, im- 
portant as the key of the mountain passes into 
Pontus. It stood at the junction of four roads 
leading to places on the Euxine, a little north 



of the Euphrates, in a valley surrounded by 
mountains, three hundred and twenty-five Ro- 
man miles from Caesarea in Cappadocia, and 
one hundred and thirty-five from Trapezus 
Under the later Roman empire it was the sta- 
tion of the fifteenth legion. Notwithstanding 
the above indications, its site has not yet been 
identified with certainty. 

Satarch^e, a Scythian tribe on the eastern 
coast of the Tauric Chersonesus. 

[Sataspes (2a-«<77n7f), a Persian, son of Te- 
aspes, sentenced by Xerxes to be impaled for 
having offered violence to the daughter of Zo- 
pyrus, the son of Megabyzus : this punishment- 
was remitted on condition of his circumnavi- 
gating Africa. He set sail accordingly from 
Egypt, passed through the Straits of Gibraltar, 
and continued his voyage for a considerable 
time southward, but at length became discour- 
aged, and returned home. Xerxes thereupon 
caused the original sentence to be executed.] 

Saticula (Saticulanus), a town of Samnium, 
situated upon a mountain on the frontiers of 
Campania, probably upon one of the furthest 
heights of the mountain chain of Cajazzo. It 
was conquered by the Romans and colonized 
B.C. 313. 

Satniois (ZaTVLoeic : now Tuzla), a river in 
the south of the Troad, rising in Mount Ida, 
and flowing west into the JSgean north of Prom- 
ontorium Ledum, between Larissa and Hamax- 
itus. 

[Satnius CZdrvior), son of Enops and of a 
river-nymph of the Satniois, slain by Ajax, son 
of O'ileus, in the Trojan war.] 

[Satr^e CEurpai), a people of Thrace, on Mount 
Pangasus, between the Nestus and the Strymon, 
a very brave race, and hence never deprived 
of their freedom ; they dwelt upon lofty heights 
covered with forests and snow. On one of their 
hills was an oracle of Bacchus (Dionysus), 
whose priests were the Bessi, whence it is prob- 
able that they themselves were only a branch 
of the Bessi.] 

Satricum (Satricanus : now Casalc di Conca), 
a town in Latium, near Antium, to the terri- 
tory of which it belonged. It was destroyed 
by the Romans. 

Saturn Palus (now Lago di Paola), a lake 
or marsh in Latium, formed by the River Nym- 
phaeus, and near the Promontory Circeium. 

Saturium or Satureium (now Saturo), a town 
in the south of Italy, near Tarentum, celebrated 
for its horses. (Hor., Sat., i., 6, 59). 

Saturn! a. 1. An ancient name of Italy. Vid. 
Italia. — 2. (Saturninus : now Saturnia), for- 
merly called Aurinia, an ancient town of Etru- 
ria, said to have been founded by the Pelasgians, 
was situated in the territory of Caletra, on the 
road from Rome to Cosa, about twenty miles 
from the sea. It was colonized by the Romans, 
B.C. 183. The ancient town was rather more 
than two miles in circuit, and there are still re- 
mains of its walls and tombs. 

Saturninus I., one of the Thirty Tyrants, 
was a general of Valerian, by whom he was 
much beloved. Disgusted by the debauchery 
of Gallienus, he accepted from the soldiers the 
title of emperor, but was put to death by the 
troops, who could not endure the sternness of 
his discipline. The country, however, in which 

779 



SATURNINUS. 



SATURNUS. 



these events took place is not mentioned. — II. A 
native of Gaul, and an able officer, was appoint- 
ed by Aurelian commander of the Eastern fron- 
tier, and was proclaimed emperor at Alexan- 
dre a during the reign of Probus. He was event- 
ually slain by the soldiers of Probus, although 
the emperor would willingly have spared his life. 

Saturxixus, L. Antonius, governor of Upper 
Germany in the reign of Domitian, raised a re- 
bellion against thatf emperor A. D. 91, but was 
defeated and put to death by Appius Maximus, 
the general of Domitian. 

Saturxixus, L. Appcleius, the celebrated 
demagogue, was quaestor B.C. 104, and tribune 
of the plebsfor the first time, 102. He entered 
into a close alliance with Marius and his friends, 
and soon acquired great popularity. He be- 
came a candidate for the tribunate for the sec- 
ond time, 100. At the same time, Glaucia, who, 
next to Saturninus, was the greatest demagogue 
of the day, offered himself as a candidate for 
the praetorship, and Marius for the consulship. 
Marius and Glaucia carried their elections ; but 
A. Nonius, a partisan of the aristocracy, was 
chosen tribune instead of Saturninus. Nonius, 
however, was murdered on the same evening 
by the emissaries of Glaucia and Saturninus, 
and early the following morning Saturninus 
was chosen to fill up the vacancy. As soon as 
he had entered upon his tribunate, he brought 
forward an agrarian law, which led to the ban- 
ishment of Metellus Numidicus, as is related 
elsewhere. Vid. Metellus, No. 10. Saturni- 
nus proposed other popular measures, such as 
a Lex Frumentaria. and a law for founding new 
colonies in Sicily, Achaia, and Macedonia. In 
the comitia for the election of the magistrates 
for the following year, Saturninus obtained the 
tribunate for the third time, and along with him 
there was chosen a certain Equitius, a runaway 
slave, who pretended to be a son of Tiberius 
Gracchus. Glaucia was at the same time a 
candidate for the consulship; the two other 
candidates were M. Antonius and C. Memmius. 
The election of M. Antonius was certain, and 
the struggle lay between Glaucia and Memmius. 
As the latter seemed likely to carry his election, 
Saturninus and Glaucia hired some ruffians who 
murdered him openly in the comitia. This last 
act produced a complete reaction against Satur- 
ninus and his associates. The senate declared 
them public enemies, and ordered the consuls 
:o put them down by force. Marius was un- 
willing to act against his friends, but he had no 
alternative, and his backwardness was compen- 
sated by the zeal of others. Driven out of the 
forum, Saturninus, Glaucia, and the quasstor 
Saufeius took refuge in the Capitol, but the par- 
tisans of the senate cut off the pipes which sup- 
plied the Capitol with water. Unable to hold 
out any longer, they surrendered to Marius. 
The latter did all he could to save their lives : 
as soon as they descended from the Capitol, he 
placed them for security in the Curia Hosiilia, 
but the mob pulled off the tiles of the senate- 
house, and pelted them with the tiles till they 
died. The senate gave their sanction to these 
proceedings by rewarding with the citizenship 
a slave of the name of Sceeva, who claimed the 
honor of having killed Saturninus. Nearly forty 
years after these events, the tribune T. Labie- 
780 



nus accused an aged senator Rabirius of having 
been the murderer of Saturninus. An account 
of this trial is given elsewhere. Vid. Rabir- 

! ius. 

Saturxixus, Claudius, a jurist from whose 
Liber Singularis de Poems Paganorum there is a 
single excerpt in the Digest. He was praetor 
under Antoninus Pius. 

Saturninus, Pompeius, a contemporary of 
the younger Pliny, is praised by the latter as a 
; distinguished orator, historian, and poet. Sev- 
! eral of Pliny's letters are addressed to him. 

Saturxixus, C. Sextius. 1. Propraetor of 
Macedonia during the Social war, and probably 
for some time afterward. He defeated the 
Thracians, who had invaded his province. — 2. 
: One of the persons of distinguished rank who 
; deserted Sextus Pompeius in B.C. 35, and pass- 
ed over to Octavianus. He was consul in 19. 
and afterward appointed to the government of 
Syria. Three sons of Saturninus accompanied 
him as legati to Syria, and were present with 
their father at the trial of Herod's sons at Berv- 
tus in B.C. 6. 

Saturxixus, Venuleius, a Roman jurist, is 
said to have been a pupil of Papinianus, and a 
consiliarius of Alexander Severus. There are 
seventy-one excerpts from his writings in the 
Digest. 

SaturnIus, that is, a son of Saturnus, and ac- 
cordingly used as a surname of Jupiter, Nep- 
tune, and Pluto. For the same reason, the name 
of Saturxia is given both to Juno and Vesta. 

Saturn us, a mythical king of Italy, to whom 
was ascribed the introduction of agriculture and 

, the habits of civilized life in general. The 
name is connected with the verb sero, seci, sa- 
tum. The Romans invariably identified Satur- 

! nus with the Greek Cronos, and hence made 
the former the father of Jupiter, Neptune, Pluto, 
Juno, &c. {vid. Ckoxos) ; but there is, in reality, 
no resemblance between the attributes of the 
two deities, except that both were regarded as 
the most ancient divinities in their respective 
countries. The resemblance is much stronger 
between Demeter and Saturn, for all that the 
Greeks ascribe to their Demeter is ascribed by 
the Italians to Saturn. Saturnus, then, deriving 
his name from sowing, is justly called the in- 
troducer of civilization and social order, both, 
of which are inseparably connected with agri- 
culture. His reign is conceived for the same 
reason to have been the golden age of Italy, and 
more especially of the Aborigines, his subjects. 
As agricultural industry is the source of wealth 
and plenty, his wife was Ops, the representative 
of plenty. The story ran that the god came to 
Italy, in the reign of Janus, by whom he was 
hospitably received, and that he formed a set- 
tlement on the Capitoline Hill, which was hence 
called the Saturnian Hill. At the foot of that 
hill, on the road leading up to the Capitol, there 
stood in after times the temple of Saturn. Sat. 
urn then taught the people agriculture, sup- 
pressed their savage mode of life, and intro- 
duced among them civilization and morality. 
The result was, that the whole country was 
called Saturnia, or the land of plenty. Saturn 
was suddenly removed from earth to the abodes 
of the gods, whereupon Janus erected an altar 
to him in the forum. It is further related that 



SATYRI. 



SAXONES. 



Latium received its name (from lateo) from this j 
disappearance of Saturn, who for the same rea- 
mm was regarded by some as a divinity of the 
nether world. Respecting the festival solem- j 
nized by the Romans in honor of Saturn, vid. \ 
Diet, of Antiq., s. v. Saturnalia. The statue of j 
Saturnus was hollow and filled with oil, proba- j 
bly to denote the fertility of Latium in olives ; 
in his hand he held a crooked pruning knife, 
and his feet were surrounded with a woollen 
ribbon. In the pediment of the temple of Sat- 
urn were seen two figures resembling Tritons 
with horns, and whose lower extremities grew 
out of the ground ; the temple itself was used 
as the treasury of the state, and many laws also 
were deposited in it. 

Satyri (Zarvpcu), the name of a class of be- 
ings in Greek mythology who are inseparably 
connected with the worship of Bacchus (Dio- 
nysus), and represent the luxuriant vital pow- 
ers of nature. Homer does not. mention the 
Satyrs. Hesiod describes them as a race good 
for nothing and unfit for work. They are com- 
monly said to be the sons of Mercury (Hermes) 
and Iphthima, or of the Naiads. The Satyrs 
are represented with bristly hair, the nose round 
and somewhat turned upward, the ears pointed 
at the top like those of animals, with two small 
horns growing out of the top of the forehead, 
and with a tail like that of a horse or goat. In 
works of art they are represented at different 
stages of life ; the older ones were commonly 
called Sileni, and the younger ones are termed 
Satyrisci. The Satyrs are always described as 
fond of wine (whence they often appear either 
with a cup or a thyrsus in their hand), and of 
every kind of sensual pleasure, whence they 
are seen sleeping, playing musical instruments, 
or engaged in voluptuous dances with nymphs. 
Like all the gods dwelling in forests and fields, 
they were greatly dreaded by mortals. Later 
writers, especially the Roman poets, confound 
the Satyrs with the Italian Fauni, and accord- 
ingly represent them with larger horns and 
goats' feet, although originally they were quite 
distinct kinds of beings. Satyrs usually appear 
with flutes, the thyrsus, syrinx, the shepherd's 
staff, cups or bags filled with wine ; they are 
dressed with the skins of animals, and wear 
wreaths of vine, ivy, or fir. Representations 
of them are still very numerous, but the most 
celebrated in antiquity was the Satyr of Praxit- 
eles at Athens. 

Satyrus (Sdn-pof). 1. I. King of Bosporus, 
was a son of Spartacus I., and reigned B.C. 407 
or 406-393. He maintained friendly relations 
with Athens. He was slain at the siege of 
Theudosia in 393, and was succeeded by his 
son Leucon. — 2. II. King of Bosporus, was the 
eldest of the sons of Paerisades I., whom he 
succeeded in 311, but reigned only nine months. 
— 3. A distinguished comic actor at Athens, is 
said to have given instructions to Demosthenes 
in the art of giving full effect to his speeches 
by appropriate action. — 4. A distinguished Per- 
ipatetic philosopher and historian, who lived in 
the time of Ptolemy Philopator, if not later. 
He wrote a collection of biographies, among 
which were lives of Philip and Demosthenes, 
and which is frequently cited by ancient writ- 
ers. — 5. A physician in the second century after 



Christ, who wrote some works which are no 
longer extant. 

Saucoxna. Fill. Arar. 

Saufeius. 1. C, qua?stor B.C. 100, was one 
of the partisans of Saturninus, took refuge with 
him in the Capitol, and was slain along with his 
leader when they were obliged to surrender to 
Marius. — 2. L., a Roman eques, was an inti- 
mate friend of Atticus, and a warm admirer of 
the Epicurean philosophy. He had very val- 
uable property in Italy, which was confiscated by 
the triumvirs, but was restored to him through 
the exertions of Atticus. 

Saulo'e Parthaunisa (Sav/wj?/ UapGavvica), 
the later capital of Parthia, called by the Greeks 
Nisaea. Its site is not known. 

Sauromatve. Vid. Sarmatm. 

Sauromates {lavpofiuTTjg), the name of sev- 
eral kings of Bosporus, who are for the most 
part known only from their coins. We find 
kings of this name reigning over Bosporus from 
the time of Augustus to that of Constantine. 

Saverrio, P. Sulpicius. 1. Consul B.C. 304, 
when he carried on the war against the Sam- 
nites. He was censor in 219 with Sempronius 
Sophus, his former colleague in the consulship 
In their censorship two new tribes were form- 
ed, the Aniensis and Terentina. — 2. Son of the 
preceding, consul 279 with P. Decius Mus, com- 
manded, with his colleague, against Pyrrhus. 

Savo (now Saone), a river in Campania, which 
flows into the sea south of Sinuessa. 

Savus (now Save or Sau), a navigable trib- 
utary of the Danube, which rises in the Carnic 
Alps, forms first the boundary between Noricum 
and Italy, and afterward between Pannonia and 
Illy ria, and falls into the Danube near Singidu- 
num. 

Saxa, Decidius, a native of Celtiberia, was 
originally one of Cassar's common soldiers. He 
was tribune of the plebs in B.C. 44, and after 
Caesar's death in this year he took an active 
part in supporting the friends of his murdered 
patron. He served under M. Antonius in the 
siege of Mutina, and subsequently under both 
Antonius and Octavianus in their war against 
Brutus and Cassius. After the battle of Philip- 
pi Saxa accompanied Antony to the East, and 
was made by the latter governor of Syria. Here 
he was defeated by the younger Labienus and 
the Parthians, and was slain in the flight after 
the battle (B.C. 40). 

Saxa, Q. Voconius, tribune of the plebs B.C. 
169, proposed the Voconia lex, which was sup- 
ported by the elder Cato, who spoke in its fa- 
vor when he was sixty-five years of age. Re- 
specting this lex, vid. Diet, of Antiq., s. v. 

Saxa Rubra. Vid. Rubra Saxa. 

Saxones, a powerful people in Germany, who 
originally dwelt in the southern part of the Cim- 
bric Chersonesus, between the rivers Albis and 
Chalusus (now Trave), consequently in the mod- 
ern Holstein. They are not mentioned by Tac- 
itus and Pliny, since these writers appear to 
have comprehended all the inhabitants of the 
Cimbric Chersonesus under the general name 
of Cimbri. The Saxones first occur in history 
in A.D. 286, when they are mentioned as brave 
and skillful sailors, who often joined the Chau- 
ci in piratical expeditions against the coast of 
Gaul. The Saxones afterward appear at the 

781 



SOMA PORTA. 



SCLEYOLA, MUCIUS. 



head of a powerful confederacy of German com- 
munities, who became united under the general 
name of Saxons, and who eventually occupied 
the country between the Elbe, the Rhine, the 
Lippe, and the German Ocean. A portion of 
the Saxons, in conjunction with the Angli, led 
by Hengist and Horsa, conquered Britain, as is 
well known, about the middle of the fifth cen- 
tury. The Romans never came into close con- 
tact with the Saxons. 

[Sc^ea Porta (2kcu?/ -xvItj, usually in pi. 2kcu- 
al TTv/Mi), a celebrated gate of Troy, on the 
west side, toward the sea : near it was the tomb 
of Laomedon. Vid. Troja.] 

Sc^eva, Cassius, a centurion in Caesar's army, 
who distinguished himself by his extraordinary 
feats of valor at the battle of Dyrrhachium. He 
survived the battle, and is mentioned as one of 
the partisans of Caesar after the death of the 
latter. 

Sc^etola, Q. Cervidics, a Roman jurist, lived 
under Antoninus Pius. He wrote several works, 
and there are three hundred and seven excerpts 
from him in the Digest. 

Sc^vola, Mucins. 1. C, the hero of a cel- 
ebrated story in early Roman history. When 
King Porsenna was blockading Rome, C. Mu- 
cius, a young man of the patrician class, re- 
solved to rid his country of the invader. He 
went out of the city, with a dagger hid beneath 
his dress, and approached the place where Por- 
senna was sitting, with a secretary by his side, 
dressed nearly in the same style as the king 
himself. Mistaking the secretary for the king, 
Mucius killed him on the spot. He was seized 
by the king's guards, and brought before the 
royal seat, when he declared his name, and his 
design to kill the king himself, and told him 
that there were many more Romans ready to 
attempt his life. The king, in his passion and 
alarm, ordered him to be burned alive unless he 
explained more clearly what he meant by his 
vague threats, upon which Mucius thrust his 
right hand into a fire which was already lighted 
for a sacrifice, and held it there without flinch- 
ing. The king, who was amazed at his firm- 
ness, ordered him to be removed from the al- 
tar, and bade him go away free and uninjured. 
To make some return to the king for his gen- 
erous behavior, Mucius told him that there were 
three hundred of the first youths of Rome who 
had agreed with one another to kill the king, 
that the lot fell on him to make the first at- 
tempt, and that the rest would do the same 
when their turn came. Mucius received the 
name of Scaevola, or left-handed, from the cir- 
cumstance of the loss of his right hand. Por- 
senna, being alarmed for his life, which he could 
not secure against so many desperate men, made 
proposals of peace to the Romans, and evacu- 
ated the territory. The patricians gave Mucius 
a tract of land beyond the Tiber, which was 
thenceforth called Mucia Prata. The Mucius 
of this story was a patrician, but the Mucii of 
the historical period were plebeians. — 2. Q., 
praetor B.C. 215, had Sardinia for his province, 
where he remained for the next three years. 
He was decemvir sacrorum, and died 209. — 3. 
Q., probably son of No. 2, was praetor 179, with 
Sicily for his province, and consul 174. — 4. P., 
brother of No. 3, was praetor with his brother 
782 



179, and consul 175. In his consulship he gained 
;a victory over the Ligurians. — 5. P., probably 
j son of No. 4, was tribune of the plebs 141, prae- 
jtor urbanus 136, and consul 133, the year in 
| which Tiberius Gracchus lost his life. In 131 
j he succeeded his brother Mucianus (uirf.Mucu- 
! nus) as pontifex maximus. Scaevola was dis- 
tinguished for his knowledge of the Jus Ponti- 
\ficwm. He was also famed for his skill in play- 
! ing at ball, as well as at the game called Duo- 
! decim Scripta. His fame as a lawyer is re- 
corded by Cicero in several passages. There 
; is no excerpt from his writings in the Digest. 
! but he is cited several times by the jurists whose 
j works were used for that compilation. — 6. Q. t 
j called the Augur, was son of No. 3, and mar 
ried the daughter of C. Laelius, the friend of 
| Scipio Africanus the younger. He was tribune 
; of the plebs 128, plebeian aedile 125, and as prae- 
j tor was governor of the province of Asia in 121, 
| the year in which C. Gracchus lost his life. He 
j was prosecuted after his return from his prov- 
j ince for the offence of repetundae in 120 by T. 
! Albucius, but was acquitted. He was consul 
i 117. He lived at least to the tribunate of P. 
! Sulpicius Rufus SS. Cicero, who was born 106, 
! informs us that, after he had put on the toga 
! virilis, his father took him to Scaevola, who was 
; then an old man, and that he kept as close to 
| him as he could, in order to profit by his re- 
! marks. After his death Cicero became a hear- 
j er of Q. Mucius Scaevola, the pontifex. The au- 
i gur was distinguished for his knowledge of the 
I law ; but none of his writings are recorded. Mu- 
j cia, the augur's daughter, married L. Licinius 
I Crassus, the orator, who was consul 95, with Q. 
j Mucius Scaevola, the pontifex maximus ; whence 
it appears that the Q. Mucius, who is one of the 
speakers in the treatise de Oratore, is not the 
pontifex and the colleague of Crassus, but the 
augur, the father-in-law of Crassus. He is 
also one of the speakers in the Lalius sive de 
I Amicitia (c. 1), and in the de Republica (i., 12). 
| — 7. Q., Pontifex Maximus, was son of No. 5, 
and is quoted by Cicero as an example of a son 
who aimed at excellence in that which had 
given his father distinction. He was tribune 
of the plebs in 106, curule aedile in 104, and con- 
sul 95, with Licinius Crassus, the orator, cs his 
colleague. After his consulship Scaevola was 
the governor (proconsul) of the province of Asia, 
in which capacity he gained the esteem of the 
people who were under his government. Sub- 
sequently he was made pontifex maximus, by 
which title he is often distinguished from Q. 
Mucius the augur. He lost his life in the con- 
sulship of C. Marius the younger and Cn. Pa- 
pirius Carbo (82), having been proscribed by the 
Marian party, from which we may conclude that 
he belonged to Sulla's party. His body was 
thrown into the Tiber. The virtues of Scaevola 
are recorded by Cicero, who, after the death of 
the augur, became an attendant (auditor) of the 
pontifex. The purity of his moral character, 
his exalted notions of equity and fair dealing, 
his abilities as an administrator, an orator, and 
a jurist, place him among the first of the illus- 
trious men of all ages and countries. He was,, 
says Cicero, the most eloquent of jurists, and 
the most learned jurist among orators. Q. Scae- 
vola the nontifex is the first Roman to whom 



SCALABIS. 



SCAURUS, ^EMILIUS. 



we can attribute a scientific and systematic j 
handling of the Jus Civile, which he accom- 
plished in a work in eighteen books. He also 
wrote a Liber Stngularis nepi opav, a work on 
Definitions, or perhaps, rather, short rules of 
law, from which there are four excerpts in the 
Digest. This is the oldest work from which 
there are any excerpts in the Digest, and even 
these may have been taken at second hand. 

Scalabis (now Santarcm), a town in Lusita- 
nia, on the road from Olisipo to Emerita and 
Bracara, also a Roman colony with the sur- 
name Presidium Julium, and the seat of one of 
the three Conventus Juridici of the province. 
The town is erroneously called Scalabiscus by 
Ptolemy. 

Scaldis (now Scheldt), an important river in 
the north of Gallia Bclgica, flowing into the 
ocean, but which Ca:sar erroneously makes a 
tributary of the Mosa. Ptolemy calls this river 
Tabudas or Tabullas, which name it continued 
to bear in the Middle Ages under the form of 
Tabul or Tabula. 

Scamander (2 K d/xavdpoc). 1. A river in the 
western part of the northern coast of Sicily, 
falling into the sea near Segesta. — 2. The cel- 
ebrated river of the Troad. Vid.TnoAS. Asa 
mythological personage, the river-god was call- 
ed Xanthus by the gods. His contest with 
Achilles is described by Homer (II. f xxi., 136, 
foil.). 

ScamandrIus (2/ca/iavJpiOf). 1. Son of Hec- 
tor and Andromache, whom the people of Troy 
called Astyanax, because his father was the 
protector of the city of Troy. — [2. A Trojan 
warrior, son of Strophius, slain by Menelaus.] 

ScambonidjE (2,Kafj.6uvidai), a demus in Atti- 
ca, between Athens and Eleusis, belonging to 
the tribe Leontis. 

Scampa (2/cd/z7ra : now Skumbi or Iscampi), a 
town in the interior of Greek Illyria, on the Via 
Egnatia, between Clodiana and Lychnidus. 

Scandea (Hii&vdeia), a port-town on the east- 
ern side of the island Cythera, forming the har- 
bor of the town of Cythera, from which it was 
ten stadia distant. 

Scandia or Scandinavia, the name given by 
the ancients to Norway, Sweden, and the sur- 
rounding islands. Even the later Romans had 
a very imperfect knowledge of the Scandinavian 
peninsula. They supposed it to have been sur- 
rounded by the ocean, and to have been com- 
posed of several islands called by Ptolemy Scan- 
dia;. Of these the largest bore especially the 
name of Scandia or Scandinavia, by which the 
modern Sweden was undoubtedly indicated. 
This country was inhabited by the Hilleviones, 
of whom the Suiones and Sitones appear to 
have been tribes. 

Scandil a (now Scandole), a small island in 
the northeast of the yEgean Sea, between Pepa- 
rethos and Scyros. 

Scantia Silva, a wood in Campania, in which 
were probablv the Aqua; Scantiee mentioned by 
Pliny. 

[Scantilla, Manlia, the wife of Didius Ju- 
lianus, whom she urged to buy the empire when 
set up for sale : she enjoyed the title Augusta 
during the brief period of her husband's reign.] 

Scapte Hvle (2/ca7TT77 vlj)), also called, but 
tess correctly, ScAPTESYLE(2Ka7m7ffvA77),a small 



town on the coast of Thrace, opposite the isl- 
and of Thasos. It contained celebrated gold 
mines, which were originally worked by the 
Thasians. Thucydides, who had some proper- 
ty in these mines, retired to this place after his 
banishment from Athene, and here arranged the 
materials for his history. 

ScaptIa (Scaptiensis or Scaptius), an ancient 
town in Latium, which gave its name to a Ro- 
man tribe, but which disappeared at an early 
period. 

[Scapula Qdintios, T., a Roman officer, pass- 
ed over into Spain with Cn. Pompeius, and took 
an active part against Caesar: he fought at the 
battle of Munda, B.C. 45, and after the battle, 
seeing that all was lost, fled to Corduba, and 
there burned himself to death on a pyre which 
he had erected for that purpose.] 

Scapula, P. Ostorius, succeeded A. Plautius 
as governor of Britain about A.D. 50. He de- 
feated the powerful tribe of the Silures, took 
prisoner their king Caractacus, and sent him in 
chains to Rome. In consequence of this suc- 
cess he received the insignia of a triumph, but 
died soon afterward in the province. 

Scarabantia (now OEdenburg), a town in Pan- 
nonia Superior, on the road from Vindobona to 
Poetovio, and a municipium with the surname 
Flavia Augusta. 

Scardona CZicapd&va or Znupduv). 1. (Now 
Skardona or Skardin), the chief town of Libur- 
nia in Illyria, on the right bank of the Titius, 
twelve miles from its mouth, the seat of a Con- 
ventus Juridicus. — 2. (Now Arbc), a small isl- 
and off the coast of Liburnia, also called Arba ? 
which was the name of the principal town. 

Scardus or Scordus Mons (rd txapdov opof), 
a small range of lofty mountains, forming the 
boundary between Mcesia and Macedonia. 

SCARPHE, SCARPHEA, Or SCARPHIA (2/CUppJ?. 

"Lnupfyeia, TZtcapipia : 'LuapQevc, 2/cap0££i>f, 2/cap- 
<j>aloc, 2/cdp0ioc), a town of the Epicnemidii Lo- 
cri, ten stadia from the coast, at which the roads 
united leading through Thermopylae. It pos- 
sessed a harbor on the coast, probably at the 
mouth of the River Boagrius. 

Scarponna (now Charpeigne), a town in Gallia 
Belgica, on the Mosella, and on the road from 
Tullum to Divodurum. 

Scato or Cato, Vettius, one of the Italian 
generals in the Marsic war, B.C. 90. He de- 
feated the consuls, L. Julius Caesar and P. Rutil- 
ius Lupus, in two successive battles. He was 
afterward taken prisoner, and was stabbed to 
death by his own slave as he was being dragged 
before the Roman general, being thus delivered 
from the ignominy and punishment that await- 
ed him. 

Scaurus, .'Emilius. 1. M., raised his family 
from obscurity to the highest rank among the 
Roman nobles. He was born in B.C. 163. His 
father, notwithstanding his patrician descent, 
had been obliged, through poverty, to carry on 
the trade of a coal merchant, and left his son a 
very slender patrimony. The latter had thought 
at first of carrying on the trade of a money-lend- 
er ; but he finally resolved to devote himself to 
the study of eloquence, with the hope of rising 
to the honors of the state. He likewise served 
in the army, where he appears to have gained 
some distinction. He was curule aedile in 123 

783 



SCAURUS, ^EMILIUS. 



SCEPSIS. 



He obtained the consulship in 115, when he car- 
ried on war with success against several of the 
Alpine tribes. In 112 he was sent at the head 
of an embassy to Jugurtha; and in 111 he ac- 
companied the consul L. Calpurnius Bestia, as 
one of his legates, in the war against Jugurtha. 
The Numidian king bestowed large sums of 
money upon both Bestia and Scaurus, in conse- 
quence of which the consul granted the king 
most favorable terms of peace. This disgrace- 
ful transaction excited the greatest indignation 
at Rome ; and C. Mamilius, the tribune of the 
plebs, 110, brought forward a bill by which an 
inquiry was to be instituted against all those 
who had received bribes from Jugurtha. Al- 
though Scaurus had been one of the most guilty, 
such was his influence in the state that he con- 
trived to be appointed one of the three quae- 
sitores who were elected under the bill for 
the purpose of prosecuting the criminals. But, 
though he thus secured himself, he was unable 
to save any of his accomplices. Bestia and 
many others were condemned. In 109, Scaurus 
was censor with M. Livius Drusus. In his con- 
sulship he restored theMilvian bridge, and con- 
structed the yEmilian road, which ran by Pisae 
and Luna as far as Dertona. In 107 he was 
elected consul a second time, in place of L. Cas- 
sius Longinus, who had fallen in battle against 
the Tigurini. In the struggles between the 
aristocratical and popular parties, Scaurus was 
always a warm supporter of the former. He 
was several times accused of different offences, 
chiefly by his private enemies ; but such was 
his influence in the state that he was always 
acquitted. He died about 89. By his wife Cae- 
cilia Scaurus had three children, two sons men- 
tioned below, and a daughter ^Emilia, first mar- 
ried to M'. Glabrio, and next to Cn. Pompey, 
subsequently the triumvir. — 2. M., eldest son of 
the preceding, and step-son of the dictator Sul- 
la, whom his mother Caecilia married after the 
death of his father. In the third Mithradatic 
war he served under Pompey as quaestor. The 
latter sent him to Damascus with an army, and 
from thence he marched into Judaea to settle 
the disputes between the brothers Hyrcanus and 
Aristobulus. Scaurus was left by Pompey in 
the command of Syria with two legions. Dur- 
ing his government of Syria he made a preda- 
tory incursion into Arabia Petraea, but with- 
drew on the payment of three hundred talents 
by Aretas, the king of the country. He was 
curule aedile in 58, when he celebrated the pub- 
lic games with extraordinary splendor. The 
temporary theatre which he built accommoda- 
ted eighty thousand spectators, and was adorned 
in the most magnificent manner. Three hund- 
red and sixty pillars decorated the stage, ar- 
ranged in three stories, of which the lowest was 
made of white marble, the middle one of glass, 
and the highest of gilt wood. The combats of 
wild beasts were equally astonishing. One 
hundred and fifty panthers were exhibited in the 
circus, and five crocodiles and a hippopotamus 
were seen for the first time at Rome. In 56 he 
was pra?tor, and in the following year governed 
the province of Sardinia, which he plundered 
without mercy. On his return to Rome he was 
accused of the crime of repetundae. He was 
defended by Cicero, Hortensius, and others, and 
784 



was acquitted, notwithstanding his guilt. He 
was accused again in 52, under Pompey's new 
law against ambitus, and was condemned. He 
married Mucia, who had been previously the 
wife of Pompey, and by her he had one son 
(No. 4). — 3. Younger son of No. 1, fought under 
the proconsul, Q. Catulus, against the Cimbri at 
the Athesis, and, having fled from the field, was 
indignantly commanded by his father not to come 
into his presence, whereupon the youth put an 
end to his life. — 4. M., son of No. 2, and Mucia, 
the former wife of Pompey the triumvir, and 
consequently the half-brother of Sextus Pom- 
pey. He accompanied the latter into Asia after 
the defeat of his fleet in Sicily, but betrayed him 
into the hands of the generals of M. Antonius in 
35. After the battle of Actium he fell into the 
power of Octavianus, and escaped death, to 
which he had been sentenced, only through the 
intercession of his mother, Mucia. — 5. Mamer- 
cus, son of No. 4, was a distinguished orator 
and poet, but of a dissolute character. He was 
a membe~ of the senate at the time of the ac- 
cession of Tiberius, A.D. 14, when he offend- 
ed this suspicious emperor by some remarks 
which he made in the senate. Being accused 
of majestas in 34, he put an end to his own 
life. 

Scaurus, M. Aurelius, consul suffectus B.C. 
108, was three years afterward consular legate 
in Gaul, where he was defeated by the Cimbri, 
taken prisoner, and put to death. 

Scaurus, Q. Terentius, a celebrated gram- 
marian who flourished under the Emperor Ha- 
drian, and whose son was one of the preceptors 
of the Emperor Verus. He was the author of 
an Ars Grammatica, and of commentaries upon 
Plautus, Virgil, and the Ars Poetica of Horace, 
which are known to us from a few scattered 
notices only, for the tract entitled Q. Terentn 
Scauri de Orthographia ad Theseum included in 
the " Grammatical Latinae Auctores Antiqui' 
of Putschius (Hannov., 1605), is not believed to 
be a genuine production of this Scaurus. 

Sceleratus Campus. Vid. Roma, p. 748, a. 

Scen^e {liK.rjvai, i. e., the tents), a town of 
Mesopotamia, on the borders of Babylonia, on 
a canal of the Euphrates, twenty-five days' jour- 
ney below Zeugma. It belonged to the Sceni- 
tve, and was evidently only a collection of tents 
or huts. 

Scenit^e CEKnvlraL, i. e., dwellers in tents), the 
general name used by the Greeks for the Beda- 
wee (Bedouin) tribes of Arabia Deserta. It was 
also applied to nomad tribes in Africa, who like- 
wise lived in tents. 

Scepsis (S/c^i/uj- : now probably ruins at Eski- 
Upshi or Esfci-Shupshe), an ancient city in the in- 
terior of the Troad, southeast of Alexandrea, in 
the mountains of Ida. Its inhabitants were re- 
moved by Antigonus to Alexandrea ; but, being 
permitted by Lysimachus to return to their 
homes, they built a new city, called ij vea kuut,, 
and the remains of the old town were then call- 
ed UahaicKf/ipic. Scepsis is celebrated in lit- 
erary history as the place where certain MSS 
of Aristotle and Theophrastus were buried, to 
prevent their transference to Pergamus. When 
dug up again, they were found nearly destroyed 
by mould and worms, and in this condition they 
were removed by Sulla to Athens. The philos- 



SCERDILAIDAS. 



SCIPIO. 



opher Metrodorus and the grammarian Deme- j 
trius were natives of Scepsis. 

Scerdilaidas or Scekdil^dus (2/cepfoAcutJaf j 
or Znepdaaido<; ), king of Illyria, was in all prob- j 
ability a son of Pleuratus, and younger brother j 
of Agron, both of them kings of that country. 
After the defeat and abdication of Teuta (B.C. 
229), he probably succeeded to a portion of her 
dominions, but did not assume the title of king 
till after the death of his nephew Pinnes. He 
carried on war for some years against Philip, 
king of Macedonia, and thus appears as an ally 
of the Romans. He probably died about 205, 
and was succeeded by his son Pleuratus. 

[Schedia (2^e(h'a), a large village of Lower 
Egypt, on the great canal which united Alex- 
andra with the Canobic mouth of the Nile, four 
schceni from Alexandrea, was the station of the 
splendid galleys in which the prefects visited the 
upper districts ] 

SchedIus (S^echoc). 1. Son of Iphitus and 
Hippolyte, commanded the Phocians in the war 
against Troy, along with his brother Epistro- 
phus. He was slain by Hector, and his remains 
were carried from Troy to Anticyra in Phocis. 
— 2. Son of Perimedes, likewise a Phocian who 
was killed at Troy by Hector. 

Schera (Scherinus), a town in the interior of 
Sicily, in the southwest part of the island. 

Scheria. Vid. Ph^eaces. 

[Schiste (Via, i] ox lOT W odo^, now Zimcno or 
Zcmino), a road leading from Delphi over a de- 
clivity of Parnassus to Daulis, and still further 
northward, deriving its name from the fact that 
it began in a mountain gorge, and then, two ge- 
ographical miles east of Delphi, at a place called 
Tpelg KeXevdoi, divided itself into two roads, one 
to the northeast toward Daulis, the other to the 
southeast toward Lebadea or Helicon. At the 
point where the three roads met was erected 
the tumulus to commemorate the murder of 
Laius by CEdipus, which was said to have oc- 
curred there.] 

Scho3nus (S^oZVoc: Zxoivisvc), a town of 
Bceotia, on a river of the same name, and on 
the road from Thebes to Anthedon. 

Schcenus (S^oivoOf, -ovvros). 1. A harbor of 
Corinth, north of Cenchreae, at the narrowest 
part of the isthmus. — 2. A place in the interior 
of Arcadia, near Methydrium. 

Sciathus (2/aa0of : 2/ad0iOf : now Skiatho), 
a small island in the .-Egean Sea, north of Eu- 
bcea and east of the Magnesian coast of Thes- 
saly, with a town of the same name upon it. It is 
said to have been originally colonized by Pelas- 
gians from Thrace. It is frequently mentioned 
in the history of the invasion of Greece by Xerx- 
es, since the Persian and Grecian fleets were 
stationed near its coasts. It subsequently be- 
came one of the subject allies of Athens, but at- 
tained such little prosperity that it only had to 
pay the small tribute of two hundred drachmae 
yearly. Its chief town was destroyed by the 
last Philip of M acedonia. At a later time it was 
restored by Antonius to the Athenians. Scia- 
thus produced good wine. 

Scidrus (2>ct<5pof), a place in the south of 
Italy, of uncertain site, in which some of the 
Sybarites settled after the destruction of their 
own city. 

Scillus ( 1kiA?>ov"c, -ovvtoc : ZkiAAovvtioc, 
50 



Lklaaovglo^ ), a town of Elis, in the district Tri- 
phylia, on the River Selinus, twenty stadia 
south of Olympia. It was destroyed by the 
Eleans in the war which they carried on against 
the Pisaeans, whose cause had been espoused 
by the inhabitants of Scillus. The Lacedaemo- 
nians subsequently took possession of the ter- 
ritory of Scillus ; and, although the Eleans still 
laid claim to it, they gave it to Xenophon after 
his banishment from Athens. Xenophon re- 
sided at this place during the remainder of his 
life, and erected here a sanctuary to Diana (Ar- 
temis), which he had vowed during the retreat 
of the Ten Thousand. 

Scingomagus, a small place in the southeast- 
ern part of Gallia Transpadana, in the kingdom 
of Cottius, west of Segusio, at the pass across 
the Alps. 

Scione CZkiuvt] : iKiuvaloc, 2/acjvruf), the 
chief town in the Macedonian peninsula of Pal- 
lene, on the western coast. It is said to have 
been founded by some Pellenians of Achaia, 
who settled here after their return from Troy. 
It revolted from the Athenians in the Pelopon- 
nesian war, but was retaken by Cleon ; where- 
upon all the men were put to death, the women 
and children sold as slaves, and the town given 
to the Plataeans. 

Scipio, the name of an illustrious patrician 
family of the Cornelia gens. This name, which 
signifies a stick or staff, is said to have been 
given to the founder of the family, because he 
served as a staff in directing his blind father. 
This family produced some of the greatest men 
in Rome, and to them she was more indebted 
than to any others for the empire of the world. 
The family tomb of the Scipios was discovered 
in 1780, on the left of the Appia Via, about four 
hundred paces within the modern Porta S. Se- 
bastiano. The inscriptions and other curiosi- 
ties are now deposited in the Museo Pio-Clem- 
entino at Rome. 1. P. Cornelius Scipio, ma- 
gister equitum B.C. 396, and consular tribune 
395 and 394.-2. L. Corn. Scipio, consul 350. 
— 3. P. Corn. Scipio Barbatus, consul 328, and 
dictator 306. He was also pontifex maximus. — 
4. L. Corn. Scipio Barbatus, consul 298, when 
he carried on war against the Etruscans, and de- 
feated them near Volaterrae. He also served 
under the consuls in 297, 295, and 293, against 
the Samnites. This Scipio was the great-grand- 
father of the conqueror of Hannibal. The gen- 
ealogy of the family can be traced with more 
certainty from this time. — 5. Cn. Corn. Scipio 
Asina, son of No. 4, was consul 260, in the first 
Punic war. In an attempt upon the Liparaean 
islands, he was taken prisoner with seventeen 
ships. He probably recovered his liberty when 
Regulus invaded Africa, for he was consul a sec- 
ond time in 254. In this year he and his col- 
league, A. Atilius Calatinus, crossed over into 
Sicily and took the town of Panormus. — 6. L. 
Corn. Scipio, also son of No. 4, was consul 259. 
He drove the Carthaginians out of Sardinia and 
Corsica, defeating Hanno, the Carthaginian 
commander. He was censor in 258. — 7. P. 
Corn. Scipio Asina, son of No. 5, was consul 
221, and carried on war, with his colleague M. 
Minucius Rufus, against the Istri, who were 
subdued by the consuls. He is mentioned again 
in 211, when he recommended that the senate 

785 



SCIPIO. 



SCIPIO. 



should recall all the generals and armies from 
Italy for the defence of the capital, because Han- 
nibal was marching upon the city. — 8. P. Corn. 
Scipio, son of No. 6, was consul, with Ti. Sem- 
pronius Longus, in 218, the first year of the sec- 
ond Punic war. He sailed with an army to 
Gaul, in order to encounter Hannibal before 
crossing the Alps ; but, finding that Hannibal 
had crossed the Rhone, and had got the start of 
him by a three days' march, he resolved to sail 
back to Italy and await Hannibal's arrival in 
Cisalpine Gaul. But as the Romans had an 
army of twenty -five thousand men in Cisalpine 
Gaul, under the command of two praetors, Scip- 
io sent into Spain the army which he had brought 
with him, under the command of his brother 
Cn. Scipio. On his return to Italy, Scipio took 
the command of the army in Cisalpine Gaul, 
and hastened to meet Hannibal. An engage- 
ment took place between the cavalry and light- 
armed troops of the two armies. The Romans 
were defeated ; the consul himself received a 
severe wound, and was only saved from death 
by the courage of his young son Publius, the 
future conqueror of Hannibal. Scipio now re- 
treated across the Ticinus, crossed the Po also, 
first took up his quarters at Placentia, and sub- 
sequently withdrew to the hills on the left bank 
of the Trebia, where he was joined by the oth- 
er consul, Sempronius Longus. The latter re- 
solved upon a battle, in opposition to the advice 
of his colleague. The result was the complete 
defeat of the Roman army, which was obliged 
to take refuge within the walls of Placentia. 
In the following year, 217, Scipio, whose impe- 
rium had been prolonged, crossed over into 
Spain. He and his brother Cneius continued in 
Spain till their death in 211 ; but the history of 
their campaigns, though important in their re- 
sults, is full of confusions and contradictions. 
They gained several victories over the enemy, 
and they felt themselves so strong by the be- 
ginning of 212, that they resolved to cross the 
Iberus, and to make a vigorous effort to drive 
the Carthaginians out of Spain. They accord- 
ingly divided their forces, but they w^ere defeat- 
ed and slain in battle by the Carthaginians.— 9. 
Cn. Corn. Scipio Calvus, son of No. 6, and 
brother of No. 8, was consul 222, with M. Clau- 
dius Marcellus. In conjunction with his col- 
league, he carried on war against the Insu- 
brians. In 218 he carried on war as the legate 
•of his brother Publius for eight years in Spain, 
as has been related above. — 10. P. Corn. Scipio 
Africanus Major, son of No. 8, was born in 234. 
He was unquestionably one of the greatest men 
of Rome, and he acquired at an early age the 
confidence and admiration of his countrymen. 
His enthusiastic mind led him to believe that 
he was a special favorite of the gods, and he 
never engaged in any public or private business 
without first going to the Capitol, where he sat 
some time alone, enjoying communication from 
the gods. For all he proposed or executed, he 
alleged the divine approval ; and the Roman 
people gave credit to his assertions, and re- 
garded him as a being almost superior to the 
common race of men. There can be no doubt 
that Scipio believed himself in the divine reve- 
lations, which he asserted to have been vouch- 
safed to him, and the extraordinary success 
786 



which attended all his enterprises must have 
deepened this belief. He is first mentioned in 
218 at the battle of the Ticinus, when he saved 
the life of his father, as has been already re- 
lated. He fought at Cannae two years after- 
ward (216), when he was already a tribune of 
the soldiers, and was one of the few Roman of- 
ficers who survived that fatal day. He was 
chosen, along with Appius Claudius, to com- 
mand the remains of the army, which had taken 
refuge at Canusium ; and it was owing to his 
youthful heroism and presence of mind that the 
Roman nobles, who had thought of leaving It- 
aly in despair, were prevented from carrying 
their rash project into effect. He had already 
gained the favor of the people to such an extent 
that he was elected aedile in 212, although he 
had not yet reached the legal age. In 210, after 
the death of his father and uncle in Spain, the 
Romans resolved to increase their army in that 
country, and to place it under the command of 
a proconsul. But when the people assembled 
to elect a proconsul, none of the generals of ex- 
perience ventured to sue for so dangerous a com- 
mand. At length Scipio, who was then barely 
twenty four, offered himself as a candidate, and 
was chosen with enthusiasm to take the com- 
mand. His success in Spain was striking and 
rapid. In the first campaign (210) he took the 
important city of Carthago Nova, and in the 
course of the next three years he drove the 
Carthaginians entirely out of Spain, and became 
master of that country. He returned to Rome 
in 206, and was elected consul for the follow- 
ing year (205), although he had not yet filled 
the office of praetor, and was only thirty years 
of age. He was anxious to cross over at once 
to Africa, and bring the contest to an end at 
the gates of Carthage ; but the oldest members 
of the senate, and among them Q. Fabius Max- 
imus, opposed his project, partly through timid- 
ity and partly through jealousy of the youthful 
conqueror. All that Scipio could obtain was 
the province of Sicily, with permission to cross 
over to Africa ; but the senate refused him an 
army, thus making the permission of no prac- 
tical use. But the allies had a truer view of 
the interests of Italy than the Roman senate, 
and from all the towns of Italy volunteers flock- 
ed to join the standard of the youthful hero. 
The senate could not refuse to allow him to en- 
list volunteers ; and such was the enthusiasm 
in his favor, that he was able to cross over to 
Sicily with an army and a fleet contrary to the 
expectations and even the wishes of the sen- 
ate. After spending the winter in Sicily, and 
completing all his preparations for the invasion 
of Africa, he crossed over to the latter country 
in the course of the following year. Success 
again attended his arms. The Carthaginians 
and their ally Syphax were defeated with great 
slaughter, and the former were compelled to 
recall Hannibal from Italy as the only hope of 
saving their country. The long struggle be- 
tween the two nations was at length brought 
to a close by the battle fought near the city of 
Zama on the 19th of October, 202, in which 
Scipio gained a decisive and brilliant victory 
over Hannibal. Carthage had no alternative 
but submission ; but the final treaty was not 
concluded till the following year (201). Scipio 



SCIPIO. 



SCIPIO. 



returned to Italy in 201, and entered Rome in 
triumph. He was received with universal en- 
thusiasm, and the surname of Africanus was 
conferred upon him. The people wished to 
make him consul and dictator for life, and to 
erect his statue in the comitia, the rostra, the 
curia, and even in the Capitol, but he prudently 
declined all these invidious distinctions. As 
he did not choose to usurp the supreme power, 
and as he was an object of suspicion and dis- 
like to the majority of the senate, he took no 
prominent part in public affairs during the next 
few years. He was censor in 199 with P. yEli- 
us Paetus, and consul a second time in 194 with 
Ti. Sempronius Longus. In 193 he was one 
of the three commissioners who were sent to 
Africa to mediate between Masinissa and the 
Carthaginians ; and in the same year he was 
one of the ambassadors sent to Antiochus at 
Ephesus, at whose court Hannibal was then re- 
siding. The tale runs that he had there an in- 
terview with the great Carthaginian, who de- 
clared him the greatest general that ever lived. 
The compliment was paid in a manner the most 
flattering to Scipio. The latter had asked, 
■"Who was the greatest general?" "Alexan- 
der the Great," was Hannibal's reply. " Who 
was the second ?" " Pyrrhus." " Who the 
third V "Myself," replied the Carthaginian. 
" What would you have said, then, if you had 
conquered mel" asked Scipio, in astonishment. 
-"I should then have placed myself before Alex- 
ander, before Pyrrhus, and before all other gen- 
erals." In 190 Africanus served as legate un- 
der his brother Lucius in the war against An- 
tiochus the Great. Shortly after his return, he 
and his brother Lucius were accused of having 
received bribes from Antiochus to let the mon- 
arch off too leniently, and of having appropria- 
ted to their own use part of the money which 
had been paid by Antiochus to the Roman state. 
The details of the accusation are related with 
such discrepancies by the ancient authorities, 
that it is impossible to determine with certainty 
the true history of the affair, or the year in 
which it occurred. It appears, however, that 
there were two distinct prosecutions, and the 
following is perhaps the most probable history 
of the transaction. In 187, two tribunes of the 
people of the name of Petillii, instigated by Cato 
and the other enemies of the Scipios, required 
L. Scipio to render an account of all the sums 
of money which he had received from Antio- 
chus. L. Scipio accordingly prepared his ac- 
counts, but as he was in the act of delivering 
them up, the proud conqueror of Hannibal in- 
dignantly snatched them out of his hands and 
tore them up in pieces before the senate. But 
this haughty conduct appears to have produced 
an unfavorable impression, and his brother, 
when brought to trial in the course of the same 
year, was declared guilty, and sentenced to pay 
a heavy fine. The tribune C. Minucius Augu- 
rinus ordered him to be dragged to prison and 
there detained till the money was paid ; where- 
upon Africanus rescued his brother from the 
hands of the tribune's officer. The contest 
would probably have been attended with fatal 
results had not Tib. Gracchus, the father of the 
celebrated tribune, and then tribune himself, had 
the prudence to release Lucius from the sentence 



of imprisonment. The successful issue of the 
prosecution of Lucius emboldened his enemies 
to bring the great Africanus himself before the 
people. His accuser was M. Naevius, the trib- 
une of the people, and the accusation was 
brought in 185. When the trial came on, and 
Africanus was summoned, he proudly remind 
ed the people that this was the anniversary 
of the day on which he had defeated Hannibal 
at Zama, and called upon them to follow him 
to the Capitol, in order there to return thanks 
to the immortal gods, and to pray that they 
would grant the Roman state other citizens like 
himself. Scipio struck a chord which vibrated 
on every heart, and was followed by crowds to 
the Capitol. Having thus set all the laws at 
defiance, Scipio immediately quitted Rome, and 
retired to his country seat at Liternum. The 
tribunes wished to renew the prosecution, but 
Gracchus wisely persuaded them to let it drop. 
Scipio never returned to Rome. He passed his 
remaining days in the cultivation of his estate 
at Liternum ; and, at his death, is said to have 
requested that his body might be buried there, 
and not in his ungrateful country. The year 
of his death is equally uncertain, but he prob- 
ably died in 183. Scipio married Emilia, the 
daughter of L. iErnilius Paulus, who fell at the 
battle of Cannae, and by her he had four chil- 
dren, two sons (Nos. 12, 13) and two daugh- 
ters, the elder of whom married P. Scipio Nasica 
Corculum (No. 17), and the younger Tib. Grae- 
chus, and thus became the mother of the two- 
celebrated tribunes. Vid. Cornelia. — ILL. 
Corn. Scipio Asiaticus, also called Asiagenes 
or Asiagenus, was the son of No. 8, and the 
brother of the great Africanus. He served un- 
der his brother in Spain ; was praetor in 193, 
when he obtained the province of Sicily ; and 
consul in 190 with C. Laelius. The senate had 
not much confidence in his abilities, and it was 
only through the offer of his brother Africanus 
to accompany him as a legate that he obtained 
the province of Greece and the conduct of the 
war against Antiochus. He defeated Antio- 
chus at Mount Sipylus in 190, entered Rome in 
triumph in the following year, and assumed the 
surname of Asiaticus. The history of his accu- 
sation and condemnation has been already re- 
lated in the life of his brother. He was a can- 
J didate for the censorship in 184, but was de 
j feated by the old enemy of his family, M. Por- 
I cius Cato, who deprived Asiaticus of his horse 
! at the review of the equites. It appears, there- 
| fore, that even as late as this time an eques did 
j not forfeit his horse by becoming a senator. — 
12. P. Corn. Scipio Africanus, elder son of the 
' great Africanus, was prevented by his weak 
I health from taking any part in public affairs. 
| Cicero praises his oratiunculae and his Greek 
history, and remarks that, with the greatness of 
his father's mind, he possessed a larger amount 
of learning. He had no son of his own, but 
adopted the son of L. /Emilius Paulus (vid. be- 
low, No. 15). — 13. L. or Cn. Corn. Scipio Af- 
ricanus, younger son of the great Africanus. 
He accompanied his father into Asia in 190, and 
was taken prisoner by Antiochus. This Scipio 
was a degenerate son of an illustrious sire, and 
j only obtained the praetorship in 174 through 
j Cicereius, who had been a scriba of his ather, 

787 



SCIPIO. 



SCIPIO. 



giving way to him. In the same year he was 
expelled from the senate by the censors. — 14. 
L. Corn. Scipio Asiaticus, a descendant of No. 
11, belonged to the Marian party, and was con- 
sul 83 with C. Norbanus. In this year Sulla 
returned to Italy : Scipio was deserted by his 
troops, and taken prisoner in his camp along 
with his son Lucius, but was dismissed by Sulla 
uninjured. He was, however, included in the 
proscription in the following year (82), where- 
upon he fled to Massilia, and passed there the 
remainder of his life. His daughter was mar- 
ried to P. Sestius. — 15. P. Corn. Scipio ^Emili- 
aniis Africanus Minor, was the younger son 
of L. iEmilius Paulus, the conqueror of Mace- 
donia, and was adopted by P. Scipio (No. 12), 
the son of the conqueror of Hannibal. He was 
born about 185. In his seventeenth year he 
accompanied his father Paulus to Greece, and 
fought under him at the battle of Pydna, 168. 
Scipio devoted himself with ardor to the study 
of literature, and formed an intimate friendship 
with Polybius when the latter came to Rome 
along with the other Achaean hostages in 167. 
Vid. Polybius. At a later period he also cultiva- 
ted the acquaintance of the philosopher Panae- 
tius, and he likewise admitted the poets Lucilius 
and Terence to his intimacy, and is said to have 
assisted the latter in the composition of his com- 
edies. His friendship with Laelius, whose tastes 
and pursuits were so congenial to his own, has 
been immortalized by Cicero's celebrated treat- 
ise entitled " Laelius sive de Amicitia." Al- 
though thus devoted to the study of polite liter- 
ature, Scipio is said to have cultivated the vir- 
tues which distinguished the older Romans, and 
to have made Cato the model of his conduct. 
If we may believe his panegyrists, he possessed 
all the simple virtues of an old Roman, mellow- 
ed by the refining influences of Greek civiliza- 
tion. Scipio first served in Spain with great 
distinction as military tribune under the consul 
L. Lucullus in 151. On the breaking out of the 
third Punic war in 149, he accompanied the Ro- 
man army to Africa, again with the rank of 
military tribune. Here he gained still more re- 
nown. By his personal bravery and military 
skill he repaired, to a great extent, the mistakes 
of the consul Manilius, whose army on one oc- 
casion he saved from destruction. He returned 
to Rome in 148, and had already gained such 
popularity, that when he became a candidate for 
the aedileship for the following year (147), he 
was elected consul, although he was only thirty- 
seven, and had not, therefore, attained the legal 
age. The senate assigned to him Africa as his 
province, to which he forthwith sailed, accom- 
panied by his friends Polybius and Laelius. He 
prosecuted the siege of Carthage with the ut- 
most vigor. The Carthaginians defended them- 
selves with the courage of despair, and the Ro- 
mans were unable to force their way into the 
city till the spring of the following year (146). 
The inhabitants fought from street to street, 
and from house to house, and the work of de- 
struction and butchery went on for days. The 
fate of this once magnificent city moved Scipio 
to tears, and, anticipating that a similar catas- 
trophe might one day befall Rome, he repeated 
the lines of the Iliad (vi., 448-9), in which Hec- 
tor bewails the approaching fall of Troy. After 
788 



! reducing Africa to the form of a Roman pro* 
j ince, Scipio returned to Rome in the same year, 
and celebrated a splendid triumph on account 
of his victory. The surname of Africanus. 
which he had inherited by adoption from the 
conqueror of Hannibal, had been now acquired 
by him by his own exploits. In 142 Scipio 
was censor, and in the administration of the 
j duties of his office he attempted to repress the 
! growing luxury and immorality of his contem- 
] poraries. His efforts, however, were thwart- 
| ed by his colleague Mummius, who had him- 
J self acquired a love for Greek and Asiatic lux- 
' uries. In 139 Scipio was accused by Ti. Clau- 
I dius Asellus of majestas. Asellus attacked him 
j out of private animosity, because he had been 
deprived of his horse, and reduced to the con- 
dition of an aerarian by Scipio in his censorship. 
Scipio was acquitted, and the speeches which 
| he delivered on the occasion obtained great 
l celebrity, and were held in high esteem in a 
j later age. It appears to have been after this 
event that Scipio was sent on an embassy to 
J Egypt and Asia to attend to the Roman inter- 
| ests in those countries. The long continuance 
I of the war in Spain again called Scipio to the 
I consulship. He was appointed consul in his 
; absence, and had the province of Spain assigned 
to him in 134. His operations were attended 
j with success ; and in 133 he brought the war 
j to a conclusion by the capture of the city of Nu- 
| mantia after a long siege. He now received 
I the surname of Numantinus in addition to that 
of Africanus. During his absence in Spain Ti- 
! berius Gracchus had been put to death. Scipio 
j was married to Sempronia, the sister of the 
| fallen tribune, but he had no sympathy with his 
i reforms, and no sorrow for his fate. Upon his 
I return to Rome in 132, he did not disguise his 
sentiments, and when asked in the assembly of 
the tribes by C. Papirius Carbo, the tribune, 
what he thought of the death of Tiberius Grac- 
chus, he boldly replied that he was justly slain 
' (jure ccesum). The people loudly expressed 
j their disapprobation ; whereupon Scipio proudly 
bade them to be silent. He now took the lead 
in opposing the popular party, and endeavored 
to prevent the agrarian law of Tiberius Grac- 
chus from being carried into effect. Ir order 
to accomplish this object, he proposed in the 
senate (129) that all disputes respecting the 
lands of the allies should be taken out of the 
hands of the commissioners appointed under 
the law of Tiberius Gracchus, and should be 
committed to other persons. This would have 
been equivalent to an abrogation of the law ; 
and accordingly, Fulvius Flaccus, Papirius Car- 
bo, and C. Gracchus, the three commissioners, 
j offered the most vehement opposition to his pro- 
i posal. In the forum he was accused by Carbo 
I with the bitterest invectives as the enemy of 
J the people, and upon his again expressing his 
{ approval of the death of Tiberius Gracchus, the 
j people shouted out, "Down with the tyrant." 
j In the evening he went home with the intention 
I of composing a speech for the following day; 
but next day he was found dead in his room. 
! The most contradictory rumors were circulated 
respecting his death, but it was generally be- 
| lieved that he was murdered. Suspicion fell 
j upon various persons ; his wife Sempronia and 



SCIPIO. 



SCIRONIA SAXA. 



ner mother Cornelia were suspected by some ; 
Carbo, Fulvius, and C. Gracchus by others. Of 
all these, Carbo was most generally believed to 
have been guilty, and is expressly mentioned 
as the murderer by Cicero. The general opin- 
ion entertained by the Romans of a subsequent 
age respecting Scipio is given by Cicero in his 
work on the Republic, in which Scipio is intro- 
duced as the principal speaker. — 16. P. Corn. 
Scipio Nasica, that is, " Scipio with the pointed 
nose," was the son of Cn. Scipio Calvus, who 
fell in Spain in 211. (Vid. No. 9). He is first 
mentioned in 204 as a young man who was 
judged by the senate to be the best citizen in the 
state, and was therefore sent to Ostia along with 
the Roman matrons to receive the statue of the 
Idaean Mother, which had been brought from 
Pessinus. He was curule eedile 196 ; praetor 
in 194, when he fought with success in Further 
Spain ; and consul 191, when he defeated the 
Boii, and triumphed over them on his return to 
Rome. Scipio Nasica was a celebrated jurist, 
and a house was given him by the state in the 
Via Sacra, in order that he might be more easily 
consulted. — 17. P. Corn. Scipio Nasica Cor- 
culum, son of No. 16, inherited from his father 
a love of jurisprudence, and became so cele- 
brated for his discernment and for his knowl- 
edge of the pontifical and civil law, that he re- 
ceived the surname of Corculum. He married 
a daughter of Scipio Africanus the elder. He 
was consul for the first time 162, but abdicated, 
together with his colleague, almost immediately 
after they had entered upon their office, on ac- 
count of some fault in the auspices. He was 
censor 159 with M. Popilius Lamas, and was 
consul a second time in 155, when he subdued 
the Dalmatians. He was a firm upholder of 
the old Roman habits and manners, and in his 
second consulship he induced the senate to order 
the demolition of a theatre, which was near 
completion, as injurious to public morals. When 
Cato repeatedly expressed his desire for the de- 
struction of Carthage, Scipio, on the other hand, 
declared that he wished for its preservation, 
since the existence of such a rival would prove 
a useful check upon the licentiousness of the 
multitude. He was elected pontifex maximus 
in 150. — 18. P. Corn. Scipio Nasica Serapio, 
son of No. 17, is chiefly known as the leader of 
the senate in the murder of Tiberius Gracchus. 
He was consul in 138, and in consequence of 
the severity with which he and his colleague 
conducted the levy of troops, they were thrown 
into prison by C. Curiatius, the tribune of the 
plebs. It was this Curiatius who gave Nasica 
the nickname of Serapio, from his resemblance 
to a person of low rank of this name ; but, though 
given him in derision, it afterward became his 
distinguishing surname. In 133, when the tribes 
met to re-elect Tiberius Gracchus to the tribu- 
nate, and the utmost confusion prevailed in the 
Forum, Nasica called upon the consuls to save 
the republic ; but as they refused to have re- 
course to violence, he exclaimed, " As the con- 
sul betrays the state, do you who wish to obey 
the laws follow me and, so saying, he rushed 
forth from the temple of Fides, where the senate 
was sitting, followed by the greater number of 
the senators. The people gave way before 
them, and Gracchus was assassinated as he at- 



tempted to escape. In consequence of his con- 
duct on this occasion, Nasica became an object 
of such detestation to the people, that the senate 
found it advisable to send him on a pretended 
mission to Asia, although he was pontifex max- 
imus, and ought not, therefore, to have quitted 
Italy. He did not venture to return to Rome, 
and after wandering about from place to place, 
died soon afterward at Pergamum. — 19. P. 
Corn. Scipio Nasica, son of No. 18, was consul 
111, and died during his consulship. — 20. P. 
Corn. Scipio Nasica, son of No. 19, praetor 94, 
is mentioned by Cicero as one of the advocates 
of Sextus Roscius of Ameria. He married Li- 
cinia, the second daughter of L. Crassus, the 
orator. He had two sons, both of whom were 
adopted, one by his maternal grandfather L. 
Crassus in his testament, and is therefore called 
L. Licinius Crassus Scipio, and the other by 
Q. Caecilius Metellus Pius, consul 80, and is 
therefore called Q. Cascilius Metellus Pius Scip- 
io. This Scipio became the father-in-law of 
Cn. Pompey the triumvir, and fell in Africa in 
46. His life is given under Metellus, No. 15. 
— 21. Cn. Corn. Scipio Hispallus, son of L. 
Scipio, who is only known as a brother of the 
two Scipios who fell in Spain. Hispallus was 
praetor 179, and consul 171. — 22. Cn. Corn. 
Scipio Hispallus, son of No. 21, was praetor 
139, when he published an edict that all Chal- 
daeans (i. c, astrologers) should leave Rome and 
Italy within ten days. 

1 [Sciradium (ZKLpaSiov), a promontory of Sala- 
j mis, on the north side of the island, with a tem- 
j pie of Minerva (Athena) Sciras.] 

Sciras or Sclertas (2/c/paf, 2,i;?.7]piag), of Ta- 
rentum, was one of the followers of Rhinthon 
in that peculiar sort of comedy, or rather bur- 
lesque tragedy, which was cultivated by the Do- 
rians of Magna Gracia, and especially at Ta- 
| rentum. Vid. Rhinthox. 

Sciras (Eicipdg), a surname of Minerva (Athe- 
na), under which she had a temple in the Attic 
port of Phalerum, and in the island of Salamis 
The foundation of the temple at Phalerum is 
ascribed by Pausanias to a soothsayer, Scirus 
of Dodona, who is said to have come to Attica 
at the time when the Eleusinians were at war 
with Erechtheus. 

Sciritis (2/e«pzrtf), a wild and mountainous 
district in the north of Laconia, on the borders 
| of Arcadia, with a town called Scirus CZtcipop), 
I which originally belonged to Arcadia. Its in- 
habitants, the SciElT-*: (iKiplrai), formed a spe- 
cial division of the Lacedeemonian army. This 
] body, which, in the time of the Peloponnesian 
war, was six hundred in number, was stationed 
in battle at the extreme left of the line, formed 
on march the vanguard, and was usually em- 
! ployed on the most dangerous kinds of service, 
j Sciron (Zicipuv or Lkeioov), a famous robber 
| who infested the frontier between Attica and 
j Megaris. He not only robbed the travellers 
I who passed through the country, but compelled 
j them, on the Scironian rock, to wash his feet, 
j and kicked them into the sea while they were 
j thus employed. At the foot of the rock there 
was a tortoise which devoured the bodies of 
| the robber's victims. He was slain by Theseus 
Scironia Saxa (Lnipuvidec nerpai, also 2/« 
i pddeg : now Dcrvcni Bouno), large rocks on the- 

789 



SCIRRI. 



SCORDISCI. 



eastern coast of Megaris, between which and j 
the sea there was only a narrow dangerous pass, ' 
called the Scironian road (fj Iklpuvt} or Itcipuvig ' 
066s : now Kaki Skala). This road was after- j 
ward enlarged by the Emperor Hadrian. The 
name of the rocks was derived from the cele- : 
brated robber Sciron. 

Scirri orSciRi, a people in European Sarma- 
da, on the northern coast, immediately east of! 
the Vistula, in the modern Curland and Samo- \ 
gitien. The Sciri afterward joined the Huns; ; 
and to this people belonged Odoacer, the con- ! 
queror of Italy. 

Scirtonium (ZfiLpTuvtov), a town in the south j 
of Arcadia, belonging to the district ^Egytis, the j 
-inhabitants of which removed to Megalopolis j 
upon the foundation of the latter. 

Scirtcs (I,KLpTog: now Jillab), a river in Mes- j 
opotamia, flowing past Edessa into a small lake ! 
siear Charrae. Its name, which signifies leap- | 
ing, was derived from its rapid descent in a se- j 
ries of small cascades. 

[Scirus {Inlpoc, 6). 1. A soothsayer of Do- j 
dona. Vid. Sciras.— 2. (2/apof, 57), a town of! 
Laconia. Vid. Sciritis. — 3. (2/apoo, 6), a brook I 
near Scirum, which traversed the sacred road 
northwest of Athens, and watered the gardens 
north of Dipylon.] 

Sclerias. Vid. Sciras. 

Scodra (Scodrensis : now Scodar or Scutari), j 
one of the most important towns in Illyricum, * 
on the left bank of the River Barbana, at the 
southeastern corner of the Lacus Labeatis, and 
about seventeen miles from the coast. It was 
strongly fortified, and was the residence of the 
Ulyrian king Gentius. It subsequently contain- j 
ed many Roman inhabitants. 

Scodrus. Vid. Scardus. 

ScOSDISES, ScYDISSES, 01* ScORDISCCS (2/C0£- ! 

•6tGrjc,I l KvdiaGT]c, SnopdioKoc : now Dassim Dagh, • 
or Chambu-Bcl Dagh), a mountain in the north- 
east of Asia Minor, dividing Pontus Cappado- ' 
cius from Armenia Minor, and forming a part j 
of the same range as Mount Paryades. 

Scollis (SwdAAif : now Sandameri), a rocky 
mountain between Elis and Achaia, three thou- 
sand three hundred and thirty-three feet high, : 
which joins on the east the mountain Lampea. j 

Scoloti (2,Ko?.o-ot), the native name of the 
Scythians, according to Herodotus, is in all prob- ' 
ability the Greek form of Slave -me or Slove-?iie, I 
the generic name of the Slavonian race. Vid. \ 
Scvthia. The later Greek writers call them 

Scolus (2/ccjAof : ^kuAlgc, 1. An j 

ancient town in Boeotia, on the road from 
-Thebes to Aphidnae in Attica, was situated on i 
the northern slope of Mount Cithaeron, and forty | 
stadia south of the River Asopus. — 2. A small 
place in Macedonia, near Olynthus. 

Scombr aria (now Islote), an island in front of 
the bay, on the southeast coast of Spain, which 
formed the harbor of Carthago Nova. It re- 
ceived its name from the scombri or mackerel 
taken off its coast, from which the Romans pre- 
pared their garum. 

Scomius Mons (ro I.KOficov upor), a mountain j 
in Macedonia, which runs east of Mount Scar- j 
<lus, in the direction of north to south toward '■ 
Mount Haemus. 

Scopas (Z/coTrao). 1. An ^Etolian, who held ' 
790 



a leading position among his countrymen at the 
period of the outbreak of the war with Philip 
and the Achaeans, B.C. 220. He commanded 
the ^Etolian army in the first year of the war ; 
and he is mentioned again as general of the 
JEtolians, when the latter people concluded an 
alliance with the Romans to assist them against 
Philip (211). After the close of the war with 
Philip, Scopas and Dorimachus were appointed 
to reform the JEtolian constitution (204). Sco- 
pas had only undertaken the charge from mo- 
tives of personal ambition ; on finding himself 
disappointed in this object, he withdrew to 
Alexandrea. Here he was received with the 
utmost favor by the ministers of the young 
king, Ptolemy V., and appointed to the chief 
command of the army against Antiochus the 
Great. At first he was successful, but was aft- 
erward defeated by Antiochus at Panium, and 
reduced to shut himself up within the walls of 
Sidon, where he was ultimately compelled by 
famine to surrender. Notwithstanding this ill 
success, he continued in high favor at the Egyp- 
tian court ; but, having formed a plot in 196 to 
obtain by force the chief administration of the 
kingdom, he was arrested and put to death. — 
2. A distinguished sculptor, was a native of 
Paros, and appears to have belonged to a fam- 
ily of artists in that island. He flourished from 
B.C. 395 to 350. He was probably somewhat 
older than Praxiteles, with whom he stands at 
the head of that second period of perfected art 
which is called the later Attic school (in con- 
tradistinction to the earlier Attic school of 
Phidias), and which arose at Athens after the 
Peloponnesian war. Scopas was an architect 
and a statuary as well as a sculptor. He was 
the architect of the temple of Minerva (Athe- 
na) Alea at Tegea, in Arcadia, which was com- 
menced soun after B.C. 3y4. He was one of 
the artists employed in executing the bas-re- 
liefs which decorated the frieze of the Mauso- 
leum at Halicarnassus in Caria. A portion of 
these bas-reliefs is now deposited in the Brit- 
ish Museum. Among the single statues and 
groups of Scopas, the best known in modern 
times is his group of figures representing the 
destruction of the sons and daughters of Niobe. 
In Pliny's time the statues stood in the temple 
of Apollo Sosianus. The remaining statues of 
this group, or copies of them, are all in the 
Florence Gallery, with the exception of the so- 
called Ilioneus at Munich, which some suppose 
to have belonged to the group. There is a head 
of Niobe in the collection of Lord Yarborough 
which has some claim to be considered as the 
original. But the most esteemed of all the 
works of Scopas, in antiquity, was his group 
which stood in the shrine of Cn. Domitius in 
the Flaminian circus, representing Achilles con- 
ducted to the island of Leuce by the divinities 
of the sea. It consisted of figures of Neptune 
(Poseidon), Thetis, and Achilles, surrounded by 
Nereids, and attended by Tritons, and by an as- 
semblage of sea monsters. 

Scopas (2/cd^af : now Aladan), a river of Ga- 
latia, falling into the Sangarius, from the east, 
at Juliopolis. 

Scordisci, a people in Pannonia Superior, 
are sometimes classed among the Illyrians. but 
were the remains of an ancient and powerful 



SCORDISCUS. 



SCYLLA. 



Celtic tribe. They dwelt between the Savus 
and Dravus. 

SCORDISCUS. Vid. Sc<EDISES. 

Scoti, a people mentioned, together with the 
Picti, by the later Roman writers as one of the 
chief tribes of the ancient Caledonians. They 
dwelt in the south of Scotland and in Ireland ; 
and from them the former country has derived 
Us name. 

Scotitas (2/fou'Tof), a woody district in the 
north of Laconia, on the frontiers of Tegea- 
tis. 

Scotussa (lnoTovooa : licoTovooaloe), a very 
ancient town of Thessaly, in the district Pelas- 
giotis, near the source of the Onchestus, and not 
far from the hills Cynoscephalaj, where Flami- 
ninus gained his celebrated victory over Philip, 
B.C. 197. 

Scribonia, wife of Octavianus, afterward the | 
Emperor Augustus, had been married twice be- 
fore. By one of her former husbands, P. Scip- 
io, she had two children, P. Scipio, who was 
consul B.C. 16, and a daughter, Cornelia, who 
was married to Paulus JSmilius, censor B.C. 
22. Scribonia was the sister of L. Scribonius 
Libo, who was the father-in-law of Sextus Pom- 
pey. Augustus married her in 40, on the ad- 
vice of Maecenas, because he was then afraid 
that Sextus Pompey would form an alliance 
with Antony to crush him ; but, having re- 
newed his alliance with Antony, Octavianus 
divorced her, in order to marry Livia, in the 
following year (39), on the very day on which 
she had borne him a daughter, Julia. Scribonia 
long survived her separation from Octavianus. 
In A.D. 2 she accompanied, of her own accord, 
her daughter Julia into exile, to the island of 
Pandataria. 

Scribonius Curio. Vid. Curio. 

Sribonius Largus.. Vid. Largus. 

Scribonius Libo. Vid Libo. 

Scribonius Proculus. Vid. Proculus. 

Scultenna (now Panaro), a river in Gallia 
Cispadana, rising in the Apennines, and flow- 
ing to the east of Mutina into the Po. 

Scupi (now Uskub), a town in Mcesia Supe- 
rior, on the Axius, and the capital of Dardania. 
It was the residence of the Archbishop of Illyr- 
icum, and in the Middle Ages of the Servian 
kings. 

SCYDISSES. Vid. SCOEDISES. 

Scylace (2/ci>Auk*7), or Scylacejon, an an- 
cient ciiy on the coast of Mysia Minor, at the 
foot of Mount Olympus, said to have been found- 
ed by the Pelasgians. 

ScYLACiUM, alsO ScYLACEUM Or ScYLLETIUM 

(ZkvTlukiov, 2nv?M«tiov, IkvI^tjtlov : now Squii- 
iace), a Greek town on the eastern coast of 
Bruttium, was situated on two adjoining hills 
at a short distance from the coast, between the 
rivers Caecinus and Carcines. It is said to have 
been founded by the Athenians. It belonged 
to the territory of Croton, but was subsequently 
given by the elder Dionysius to the Locrians, 
and came eventually into the possession of the 
Romans. It had no harbor, whence Virgil (JEn., 
iii., 553) speaks of it as navi/ragum Scyiaceum. 
From this town the Scylacius or Scylleticus 
Sinus CZuv/./^TiKog KoAizoq) derived its name. 
The isthmus which separated this bay from the 
Sinus Hipponiates, on the western coast of i 



Bruttium, was only twenty miles broad, and 
formed the ancient boundary of GEnotria. 

Scylax (2/cuAaf) 1. Of Caryanda in Caria, 
was sent by Darius Hystaspis on a voyage of 
discovery down the Indus. Setting out from 
the city of Caspatyrus and the Pactyican dis- 
trict, Scylax reached the sea, and then sailed 
west through the Indian Ocean to the Red Sea, 
performing the whole voyage in thirty months. 
— 2. Of Halicarnassus, a friend of Pana?tius, 
distinguished for his knowledge of the stars, 
and for his political influence in his own state. 
There is still extant a Periplus, containing a 
brief description of certain countries in Europe, 
Asia, and Africa, and bearing the name of Scy- 
lax of Caryanda. This work has been ascribed 
by some writers to the Scylax mentioned by 
Herodotus, and by others to the contemporary 
I of Panaetius and Polybius ; but most modern 
scholars suppose the writer to have lived in the 
first half of the reign of Philip, the father of 
Alexander the Great, about B.C. 350. It is 
clear from internal evidence that the Periplus 
must have been composed after the time of He- 
rodotus ; while, from its omitting to mention any 
of the cities founded by Alexander, such as Al- 
exandra in Egypt, we may conclude that it 
was drawn up before the reign of Alexander. 
It is probable that the author prefixed to his 
work the name of Scylax of Caryanda on ac- 
count of the celebrity of this navigator. This 
Periplus is printed by Hudson, in his Gcographi 
Graci Minores, and by Klausen, attached to his 
fragments of Heeataeus, Berlin, 1831. 

Scylax now Choterlek-Irmak), a riv- 

er in the southwest of Pontus, falling into the 
Iris, between Amasia and Gaziura. 

Scylitzes or Scylitza, Joannes, a Byzantine 
historian, surnamed, from his office, Curopa- 
lates, flourished A.D. 1081. His work extends 
from the death of Nicephorus I. (811) down to 
the reign of Nicephorus Botaniotes (1078-1081). 
The portion of the history of Cedrenus, which 
extends from the death of Nicephorus I. (811) 
to the close of the work (1057), is found almost 
verbatim in the history of Scylitzes. Hence it 
has been supposed that Scylitzes copied from 
Cedrenus, and consequently the entire work of 
Scylitzes has not been published separately, 
but only the part extending from 1057 to 1080, 
which has been printed as an appendix to Cedre- 
nus. Vid. Cedrenus. It is now, however, gen- 
erally admitted that Cedrenus copied from Scy- 
litzes. 

Scylla (Znv/J.a) and Charybdis, the names 
of two rocks between Italy and Sicily, and only 
a short distance from one another. In the one 
of these rocks which was nearest to Italy, there 
was a cave, in which dwelt Scylla, a daughter 
of Crataeis, a fearful monster, barking like a dog, 
with twelve feet, and six long necks and heads, 
each of which contained three rows of sharp 
teeth. The opposite rock, which was much 
lower, contained an immense fig-tree, under 
which dwelt Charybdis, who thrice every day 
swallowed down the waters of the sea, and 
thrice threw them up again : both were formi- 
dable to the ships which had to pass between 
them. This is the Homeric account. Later 
traditions give different accounts of Scylla's 
i parentage. Some describe her as a monster 

791 



SCYLLA. 



SCYTHIA. 



with six heads of different animals, or with only 
three heads. One tradition relates that Scylla 
was originally a beautiful maiden, who often 
played with the nymphs of the sea, and was be- 
loved by the marine god Glaucus. The latter 
applied to Circe for means to make Scylla re- 
turn his love ; but Circe, jealous of the fair 
maiden, threw magic herbs into the well in 
which Scylla was wont to bathe, by means of 
which the lower part of her body was changed 
into the tail of a fish or serpent, surrounded by 
dogs, while the upper part remained that of a 
woman. Another tradition related that Scylla 
was beloved by Neptune (Poseidon), and that 
Amphitrite, from jealousy, metamorphosed her 
into a monster. Hercules is said to have killed 
her because she stole some of the oxen of Ge- 
ryon ; but Phorcys is said to have restored her 
to life. Virgil (JEn., vi., 286) speaks of several 
Scyllae, and places them in the lower world. 
Charybdis is described as a daughter of Nep- 
tune (Poseidon) and Terra (Gaea), and a vora- 
cious woman, who stole oxen from Hercules, 
and was hurled by the thunderbolt of Jupiter 
(Zeus) into the sea. 

Scylla, daughter of King Nisus of Megara, 
who fell in love with Minos. For details, vid. 
Nisus and Minos. 

Scyll^eum (2kv?Jmiov). 1. (Now Sciglio), a 
promontory on the coast of Bruttium, at the 
northern entrance to the Sicilian Straits, where 
the monster Scylla was supposed to live. Vid. 
Scylla. — 2. (Now Scilla or Sciglio), a town 
in Bruttium, on the above-named promontory. 
There are still remains of the ancient citadel. 
— 3. A promontory in Argolis, on the coast of 
Trcezen, forming, with the promontory of Su- 
nium in Attica, the entrance to the Saronic 
Gulf. It is said to have derived its name from 
Scylla, the daughter of Nisus. Vid. Nisus. 

ScYLLETICUS SlNUS. Vid. SCYLACIUM. 

Scylletium. Vid. Scylacium. 

[Scyllias or Scyllis (ZnvlJurie (Ion.), Hdt. ; 
2kvX?>ic, Paus.), a celebrated diver of Scione in 
Macedonia. When the Persian fleet of Xerxes 
was wrecked off Mount Pelion and the Prom- 
ontory of Sepias, much treasure was sunk with 
the vessels that were overtaken by the storm ; 
Scyllias recovered much of this treasure for the 
Persians, and also obtained considerable for him- 
self. Wishing to escape from the Persians, he 
is said to have swum under water from Aphe- 
tae to Artemisium, where the Greek fleet lay, a 
distance of eighty stadia (nearly ten miles), and 
to have communicated to the Greeks the plans 
of the Persians. This is the account of He- 
rodotus, who, in relating the story, ranks the 
latter part among the ipevdeai e'iK£?.a irspl rov 
avdpbc rovrov. Pausanias relates that Scyllis 
(as he calls him) had his daughter Cyana (al. 
Hydna) taught swimming, and that they two, 
on occasion of the storm off Pelion, dove under 
water and tore up the anchors of the Persian 
fleet, thereby causing much loss to the Per- 
sians : for this exploit, the Amphictyons conse- 
crated at Delphi statues of Scyllis and his daugh- 
ter. The statue of Cyana (Hydna) was among 
those that were carried from Delphi to Rome 
by Nero.] 

Scyllis. Vid. Dipcenus. 
Scymn-us (Zkvuvoc), of Chios, wrote a Pcric- 
792 



ges'ts, or description of the earth, which is re- 
ferred to by later writers. This work was in 
prose, and consequently different from the Pe- 
riegesis in Iambic metre which has come down 
to us, and which many modern writers have er- 
roneously ascribed to Scym»»us of Chios. The 
poem is dedicated to Nicomedes III., king of 
Bithynia, who died B.C. 74; but this is quite 
uncertain. The best edition of the poem is by 
Meineke, Berlin, 1846. 

[Scyras (Znvpac : now River of Dhikova), a 
river in the southwest of Laconia, which rises 
in Mount Taygetus, flows in an easterly direc- 
tion, and empties into the Laconicus Sinus 
south of Gytheum.] 

Scyros (Etcvpog : "EtivpLoc : now Scyro), an isl- 
and in the iEgean Sea, east of Eubcea, and one 
of the Sporades. It contained a town of the 
same name, and a river called Cephisus. Its 
ancient inhabitants are said to have been Pe- 
lasgians, Carians, and Dolopians. The island 
is frequently mentioned in the stories of the 
mythical period. Here Thetis concealed her 
son Achilles in woman's attire among the daugh- 
ters of Lycomedes, in order to save him from 
the fate which awaited him under the walls of 
Troy. It was here, also, that Pyrrhus, the son 
of Achilles by Deidamla, was brought up, and 
it was from this island that Ulysses fetched him 
to the Trojan war. According to another tra- 
dition, the island was conquered by Achilles, in 
order to revenge the death of Theseus, who is 
said to have been treacherously destroyed in 
Scyros by Lycomedes. The bones of Theseus 
were discovered by Cimon in Scyros, after his 
conquest of the island in B.C. 476, and were 
conveyed to Athens, where they were preserv- 
ed in the Theseum. From this time Scyros 
continued subject to Athens till the period of 
the Macedonian supremacy ; but the Romans 
compelled the last Philip to restore it to Ath- 
ens in 196. The soil of Scyros was unpro- 
ductive ; but it was celebrated for its breed 
of goats, and for its quarries of variegated 
marble. 

Scythia (?) ^avdiK-fj, % Zavdia, Ion. Exv0%, 7 
ruv 2icvdeuv x&PVi Herod. : SkvOtjc, Scythes, 
Scytha, pi. 'Znvdai, Scythse ; fem. 2/ct'0/r, Scythis, 
Scythissa), a name applied to very different 
countries at different times. The Scythia of 
Herodotus comprises, to speak generally, the. 
southeastern parts of Europe, between the Car- 
pathian Mountains and the River Tana'is (now 
Don). The Greeks became acquainted with 
this country through their settlements on the 
I Euxine ; and Herodotus, who had himself vis- 
j ited the coasts of the Euxine, collected all the 
j information he could obtain about the Scythians 
J and their country, and embodied the results in 
I a most interesting digression, which forms the 
I first part of his fourth book. The details, for 
i which there is not room in this article, must be 
j read in Herodotus. He describes the country 
! as a square of four thousand stadia (four hund- 
j red geographical miles) each way, the western 
j boundary being the Ister (now Danube) and the 
| mountains of the Agathyrsi ; the southern, the 
j shores of the Euxine and Palus Maeotis, from 
i the mouth of the Ister to that of the Tana'is, 
this side being divided into two equal parts, of 
j two thousand stadia each, by the mouth of the 



SCYTHIA. 



SCYTH0TAUR1. 



Borysthenes mow Dnieper); the eastern bound- 
ary was the Tanais, and on the north Scythia 
was divided by deserts from the Melanchlaeni, 
Androphagi, and Budini. It corresponded to 
the southern part of Russia in Europe. The 
people who inhabited this region were called by 
the Greeks iKvdat, a word of doubtful origin, 
which first occurs in Hesiod ; but, in their own 
language, 2k6\otoi, i.e., Slavonians. They were 
believed by Herodotus to Be of Asiatic origin ; 
and his account of them, taken in connection 
with the description given by Hippocrates of 
their physcial peculiarities, leaves no doubt that 
they were a part of the great Mongol race, who 
have wandered, from unknown antiquity, over 
the steppes of Central Asia. Herodotus says 
further that they were driven out of their abodes 
in Asia, north of the Araxes, by the Massage- 
tse ; and that, migrating into Europe, they drove 
out the Cimmerians. If this account be true, 
it can hardly but have some connection with the 
irruption of the Cimmerians into Asia Minor, in 
the reign of the Lydian king Ardys, about B C. 
640. The Scythians were a nomad people, that 
is, shepherds or herdsmen, who had no fixed 
habitations, but roamed over a vast tract of 
country at their pleasure, and according to the 
wants of their cattle. They lived in a kind of 
covered wagons, which ^Eschylus descrihes as 
"lofty houses of wicker work, on well- wheeled 
chariots." They kept large troops of horses, 
and were most expert in cavalry exercises and 
archery ; and hence, as the Persian king Da- 
rius found, when he invaded their country (B.C. 
507), it was almost impossible for an invading 
army to act against them. They simply re- 
treated, wagons and all, before the enemy, har- j 
assing him with their tight cavalry, and leaving 
famine and exposure, in their bare steppes, to j 
do the rest. Like all the Mongol race, they 
were divided into several hordes, the chief of 
whom were called the Royal Scythians ; and to 
these all the rest owned some degree of alle- 
giance. Their government was a sort of pa- 
triarchal monarchy or chieftainship. An im- 
portant modification of their habits had, how- 
ever, taken place, to a certain extent, before 
Herodotus described them. The fertility of the 
plains on the north of the Euxine, and the in- 
fluence of the Greek settlements at the mouth 
of the Borysthenes and along the coast, had led 
the inhabitants of this part of Scythia to settle 
down as cultivators of the soil, and had brought 
them into commercial and other relations with 
the Greeks. Accordingly, Herodotus mentions 
two classes or hordes of Scythians who had 
thus abandoned their nomad life ; first, on the \ 
west of the Borysthenes, two tribes of Hellen- I 
ized Scythians, called Callipidae and Alazones ; 
then, beyond these, H the Scythians who are 
ploughers (XKvdaL dpoTf/ptc), who do not grow 
their corn for food, but for sale ;" these dwelt 
about the River Hypanis (now Bout?), in the re- j 
gion now called the Ukraine, which is still, as 
it was to the Greeks, a great corn-exporting 
eountry. Again, on the east of the Borysthenes 
were "tne acytnians who are nusnanamen 
(2/ct)0at yeupyoi), i. who grew corn for their j 
own consumption : these were called Borys- ! 
thenitae by the Greeks ; their country extended ! 
three days' journey east of the Borysthenes to | 



the River Panticapes. Beyond these, to the 
east, dwelt 11 the nomad Scythians (vofiudec. Zkv 
Oai), who neither sow nor plough at all." He- 
rodotus expressly states that the tribes east of 
the Borysthenes were not Scythian. Of the his- 
tory of these Scythian tribes there is little to 
state, beyond the tradition already mentioned, 
that they migrated from Asia and expelled the 
Cimmerians ; their invasion of Media, in the 
reign of Cyaxares, when they held the suprem- 
acy of Western Asia for twenty-eight years 
and the disastrous expedition of Darius into 
their country. In later times they were gradu 
ally overpowered by the neighboring people, es 
pecially the Sarmatians, who gave their name 
to the whole country. Vid. Sarmatia. Mean- 
while, the conquests of Alexander and his suc- 
cessors in Central Asia had made the Greeks 
acquainted with tribes beyond the Oxus and 
the Jaxartes, who resembled the Scythians, and 
belonged, in fact, to the same great Mongol 
race, and to whom, accordingly, the same name 
was applied. Hence, in writers of the time ot 
the Roman empire, the name of Scythia denotes 
the whole of Northern Asia, from the River Rh? 
(now Volga) on the west, which divided it from 
Asiatic Sarmatia, to Serica on the east, ex 
tending to India on the south. It was divided 
by Mount Imaus into two parts, called respect- 
ively Scythia intra Imaum, i. e., on the north- 
western side of the range, and Scythia extra 
Imaum, on its southeastern side. Of the peo- 
ple of this region nothing was known except 
some names ; but the absence of knowledge 
was supplied by some marvellous and not unin- 
teresting fables. 

Scythini {Zavdivoi), a people on the western 
border of Armenia, through whose country the 
Greeks under Xenophon marched four days' 
journey. Their territory was bounded on the 
east by the River Harpasus, and on the west by 
the River Apsarus. 

Scythinus (lnvdivog), of Teos, an iambic 
poet, turned into verse the great work of the 
philosopher Heraclitus, of which a considerable 
fragment is preserved by Stobaeus. 

Scythopolis (2kv66tto'Alc : in the Old Test- 
ament, Bethshean : ruins at Beisan), an im- 
portant city of Palestine, in the southeast of 
Galilee, according to the usual division, bul 
sometimes also reckoned to Samaria, some- 
times to Decapolis, and sometimes to Coele 
syria. It stood on a hill in the Jordan valley, 
west of the river, and near one of its fords. Its 
site was fertilized by numerous springs ; and to 
this advantage, as well as to its being the centre 
of several roads, it owed its great prosperity 
and its importance in the history of Palestine 
It is often mentioned in Old Testament his 
tory, in the time of the Maccabees, and undei 
the Romans. It had a mixed population of Ca 
naanites, Philistines, and Assyrian settlers; Jo 
sephus adds Scythians, but this is perhaps an 
error, founded on a false etymology of the name. 
Under the later Roman empire it became the 
seat of the Archbishop of Palasstina Secunda. 
ana it continued a flourishing city to the time 
of the first Crusade. 

ScYTHOTAURI, TaURI ScYTH^, Or TaURO- 

scyth^:, a people of Sarmatia Europaea, just 
without the Chersonesus Taurica, between the 

793 



SEBASTE. 



SEGNI. 



rivers Carcinites and Hypanis, as far as the 
tongue of land called Dromos Achilleos. 

SEBASTE(2c6acrr^ = Augusta : 2e6acTT]v6s). 1. 
(Now ruins at Ayash), a city on the coast of 
Cilicia x\spera, built for a residence by Arche- 
laus, king of Cappadocia, to whom the Romans 
had granted the sovereignty of Cilicia, and 
named in honor of Augustus. It stood west of 
the River Lamus, on a small island called Ele- 
ousa, the name of which appears to have been 
afterward transferred to the city. — 2. (Now Se- 
gikler), a city of Phrygia, northwest of Eume- 
nia. — 3. Vid. Cabiea. This city was also call- 
ed ZeSdareia. — 4. Vid. Samaria. 

Sebastopolis (ZeCaoroiro/ar : now Tarkhal), a 
city of Pontus, on the Iris, southeast of Ama- 
sia, by some identified with Gaziuea. There 
were some other places of the name, which do 
not require particular notice. 

Sebennytus (^edivvvToe, r; 'ZeCevvvTiKri tzo- 
/.if : now ruins at Semennout), a considerable 
city of Lower Egypt, in the Delta, on the west- 
ern side of the branch of the Nile called after it 
the Sebennytic Mouth, just at the fork made by 
this and the Phatnitic Mouth, and south of Busi- 
ris. It was the capital of the Nomos Sebenny- 
tes or Sebennyticus. 

Sebethus (now Maddalena), a small river in 
Campania, flowing round Vesuvius, and falling 
into the Sinus Puteolanus at the eastern side 
of Neapolis. 

Sebixus Lac us (now Lago Seo or Iseo), a lake 
in Gallia Cisalpina, formed by the River Ollius 
between the lakes Larius and Benacus. 

[Sebosus, Statius, a writer on geography, 
cited by Pliny. He is, perhaps, the same as Se- 
bosus, the friend of Catulus.] 

Secuxdus, Pomfonius. 1. A distinguished 
poet in the reigns of Tiberius, Caligula, and 
Claudius. He was one of the friends of Seja- 
nus, and on the fall of that minister in A.D. 31. 
was thrown into prison, where he remained till 
the accession of Caligula in 37, by whom he 
was released. He was consul in 41, and in the 
reign of Claudius commanded in Germany, when 
he defeated the Chatti. Secundus was an in- 
timate friend of the elder Pliny, who wrote his 
life in two books. His tragedies were the most 
celebrated of his literary compositions. — [2. Ju- 
lius, a Roman orator, and a friend of Quintil- 
ian, is one of the speakers in the Dialogus de 
Oratoribus, usually ascribed to Tacitus.} 

Sedetani. Vid. Edetani. 

Sedigitus, Volcatius, from whose work'De 
Po'etis A. Gellius (xv., 24) has preserved thir- 
teen iambic sesarians, in which the principal 
Latin comic dramatists are enumerated in the 
order of merit. In this " Canon," as it has 
been termed, the first place is assigned to Ca3- 
cilius Statius, the second to Plautus, the third 
to Naevius, the fourth to Licinius, the fifth to 
Attilius, the sixth to Terentius, the seventh to 
Turpilius, the eighth to Trabea, the ninth to 
Luscius, the tenth, " causa antiquitalis," to En- 
nius. 

Sedulius, Coblius, of Seville, a Christian po- 
et, flourished about A.D. 450. Of his personal 
history we know nothing. His works are: I. 
Paschale Carmen s. Mirabilium Divinorum Libri 
V., in heroic measure. 2. Veteris et Noci Tes- 
lamenti Collatio, a sort of hvmn containing a 
794 



j collection of texts from the Old and New Tes- 
j taments, arranged in such a manner as to en- 
j able the reader to compare the two dispensa- 
i tions. 3. Hymnus de Christo, an account of the 
j life and miracles of Christ. 4. De Verbi Incar- 
natiorie, a Cento Virgilianus. The best edition* 
are by Cellarius, Hal., 1704 and 1739 ; by Arnt- 
zenius. Leovard., 1761 ; and bv Arevalus, Rom. 
! 1794. 

Seduxi, an Alpine people in Gallia Belgica. 
' east of the Lake of Geneva, in the valley of the 
| Rhone, in the modern Vallais. Their chief 
| town was called Civitas Sedunorum, the rnoderi 

i Sion. 

Sedusii, a German people, forming part of the 
| army of Ariovistus when he invaded Gaul, B.C 
j 58. They are not mentioned at a later period. 
I and consequently their site can not be deterro 

; ined. 

[Segallaum or Segovellauni, a people of 
; Gallia Narbonensis, between the Vocontii and 
; Allobroges, to whom Ptolemy assigns the city 
| Valentia.j 

Segesama or Segisamo (Segisamonensis : no* 
Sasamo), a town of the Murbogi or Turmodigl 
in Hispania Tarraconensis. on the road from 
Tarraco to Asturica. 

Segesta (Segestanus : ruins near Aleamo) 
the later Roman form of the town, called by the 
Greeks Egesta or ^Egesta ("Eyeora, Aiyeora, 
in Virg. Acesta : 'HyEo-aior, AlyeoTavoc, Aces 
taeus), situated in the northwest of Sicily, neai 
: the coast, between Panormus and Drepanum 
j It is said to have been founded by the Trojan& 
; on two small rivers, to which they gave the 
names of Simois and Scamander ; hence the 
: Romans made it a colony of iEneas. One tra- 
; dition, indeed, ascribed to it a Greek origin j but 
j in later times it was never regarded as a Greek 
; city. Its inhabitants were constantly engaged 
! in hostilities with Selinus ; and it was at theii 
solicitation that the Athenians were led to em- 
bark in their unfortunate expedition against Si- 
; cily. The town was taken by Agathocles, who 
; destroyed or sold as slaves all its inhabitants, 
I peopled the city with a body of deserters, and 
j changed its name into that of Dicaeopolis : but 
' after^the death of this tyrant, the remains of 
I the ancient inhabitants returned to the city and 
| resumed their former name. In the neighbor- 
; hood of the city, on the road to Drepanum, were 
! celebrated mineral springs, called Aqua Seges- 
I tan<z or Aqua. Pinliancz. 

Segestes, a Cheruscan chieftain, the oppo- 
nent of Arminius. Private injuries embittered 
, their political feud, for Arminius carried off and 
; forcibly married the daughter of Segestes. In 
\ A.D. 9 Segestes warned Quintilius Varus of the 
conspiracy of Arminius and other Cheruscan 
chiefs against him ; but his warning was disre- 
garded, and Varus perished. In 14 Segestes 
was forced by his tribesmen into a war with 
Ptome ; but he afterward made his peace with 
the Romans, and was allowed to reside at Nar- 
bonne. 

Segetia, a Roman divinity, who, togethei 
; with Setia or Seja and Semonia, was invoked 
: by the early Italians at seed-time, for Segetia, 
I like the two other names, is connected with 
i sero and seges. 

i Segni, a German people in Gallia Belgica. 



SEGOBRIGA. 



SELEUCIA. 



oetween the Treveri and Eburones, the name 
of whom is still preserved in the modern town 
i of Sinei or Signet. 

i Segobriga, the chief town of the Celtiberi, in 
flispania Tarraconcnsis, southwest of Caesarau- 
gusta, probably in the neighborhood of the mod- 
lern Priego. 

[Segodunlm. Vtd. Rutexi.J 

[Segonax. Vid. Segovax.] 
\ Segontia or Sbquntia, a town of the Celti- 
iberi, in Hispania Tarraconensis, sixteen miles 
from Caesaraugusta. 

[Segontiaci, according to Caesar (B. G., v., 
21), a people in the extreme south of Britannia.] 

[Segontium, a town of Britain, from which a 
road led to Deva : its ruins are found near Caer- 
narvon, on the little river Seiont] 

[Segovax (where the common text has Sego- 
sax), one of the kings of the nations in the south 
of Britannia, who aided Cassivellaunus against 
the Romans under Caesar.] 

Segovia. 1. (Now Segovia), a town of the 
Arevaci, on the road from Emerita to Caesarau- 
gusta. A magnificent Roman aqueduct is still 
extant at Segovia. — 2. A town in Hispania Bae- 
tica, on the Flumen Silicense, near Sacili. 

Segusiani, one of the most important com- 
munities in Gallia Lugdunensis, bounded by the 
Allobroges on the south, by the Sequani on the 
east, by the jEdui on the north, and by the Ar- 
verni on the west. In the time of Caesar they 
were dependent on the ^dui. In their terri- 
tory was the town of Lugdunum, the capital of 
the province. 

Segusio (now Susa), the capital of the Segu- 
sini and the residence of King Cottius, was sit- 
uated in Gallia Transpadana, at the foot of the 
Cottian Alps. The triumphal arch erected at 
this place by Cottius in honor of Augustus is 
still extant. 

Seius Stkabo. Vid. Skjancs. 

Sejanus, ^Elil>, was born at Vulsinii, in 
Etruria, and was the son of Seius Strabo, who 
was commander of the pra'torian troops at the 
close of the reign of Augustus, A.D. 14. In the 
same year Sejanus was made the colleague of 
his father in the command of the praetorian 
bands ; and upon his father being sent as gov- 
ernor to Egypt, he obtained the sole command 
of these troops. He ultimately gained such in- 
fluence over Tiberius, that this suspicious man, 
who was close and reserved to all mankind, 
opened his bosom to Sejanus, and made him his 
confidant. For many years he governed Tibe- 
rius ; but, not content with this high position, 
he formed the design of obtaining the imperial 
power. With this view he sought to make him- 
self popular with the soldiers, and gave posts 
of honor and emolument to his creatures and 
i favorites. With the same object, he resolved 
to get rid of all the members of the imperial 
family. He debauched Livia, the wife of Dru- 
sus, the son of Tiberius ; and by promising her 
marriage and a participation in the imperial 
power, he was enabled to poison Drusus with 
her connivance and assistance (23). An acci- 
dent increased the credit of Sejanus, and con- 
firmed the confidence of Tiberius. The emper- 
or, with Sejanus and others, was feasting in a 
natural cave, between Amyclae, which was on 
the sea-coast, and the hills of Fundi. The en- 



trance of the cave suddenly fell in and crushed 
some of the slaves ; and all the guests, in alarm, 
tried to make their escape. Sejanus, resting 
his knees on the couch of Tiberius, and placing 
his shoulders under the falling rock, protected 
his master, and was discovered in this posture 
by the soldiers who came to their relief. After 
Tiberius had shut himself up in the island of 
Capreae, Sejanus had full scope for his machina- 
tions ; and the death of Livia, the mother of 
Tiberius (29), was followed by the banishment 
of Agrippina and her sons Nero and Drusus. 
Tiberius at last began to suspect the designs of 
Sejanus, and felt that it was time to rid himself 
of a man who was almost more than a rival. 
To cover his schemes and remove Sejanus from 
about him, Tiberius made him joint consul with 
himself in 31. He then sent Sertorius Macro 
to Rome, with a commission to take the com- 
mand of the praetorian cohorts. Macro, after 
assuring himself of the troops, and depriving 
Sejanus of his usual guard, produced a letter 
from Tiberius to the senate, in which the em- 
peror expressed his apprehensions of Sejanus. 
The consul Regulus conducted him to prison, 
and the people loaded him with insult and out- 
rage. The senate on the same day decreed his 
death, and he was immediately executed. His 
body was dragged about, the streets, and finally 
thrown into the Tiber. Many of the friends of 
Sejanus perished at the same time ; and his son 
and daughter shared his fate. 

[Selemnus (2eAe//w)f, now River of Kastritza), 
a river of Achaia, emptying near the promon- 
tory Rhium, to the waters of which tradition 
ascribed the power of curing the pangs of love.] 
Selene (ZzHivq), called Luna by the Romans, 
■ was the goddess of the moon, or the moon per- 
| sonified as a divine bHng. She is called a 
daughter of Hyperion and Thia, and according- 
ly a sister of Helios (Sol) and Eos (Aurora) j 
i but others speak of her as a daughter of Hype- 
j rion by Euryphaessa, or of Pallas, or of Jupiter 
(Zeus) and Latona. She is also called Phcebe, 
' as the sister of Phoebus, the god of the sun. By 
Endymion, whom she loved, and whom she sent 
! to sleep in order to kiss him, she became the 
I mother of fifty daughters ; and to Jupiter (Zeus) 
j she bore Pandia, Ersa, and Nemea. Pan also 
j is said to have had connection with her in the 
! shape of a white ram. Selene is described as 
j a very beautiful goddess, with long wings and 
I a golden diadem. She rode, like her brother 
j Helios, across the heavens in a chariot drawn 
I by two white horses. In later times Selene 
\ was identified with Artemis or Diana, and the 
| worship of the two became amalgamated. In 
works of art, however, the two divinities are 
| usually distinguished : the face of Selene being 
! more full and round, her figure less tall, and 
\ always clothed in a long robe ; her veil forms 
j an arch over her head, and above it there is the 
| crescent. At Rome Luna had a temple on the 
j Aventine. 

Selene. Vid. Cleopatra, No. ( J. 
Seleucia, and rarely Seleucea (Ze/.evKeia i 
I lefovKevc : Seleucensis, Seleucenus), the name 
! of several cities in Asia, built by Seleucus I., 
j king of Syria. 1. S. ad Tig kin (t) em tuv T/- 
I ypijTog izorafiov, Trpdf Tiypei, and Tiypioc), also 
: called S. Babylonia (2. 7j h Ba6v\uvi), S. As- 

795 



SELEUCIA. 



SELEUCUS. 



syri^e, and S. Parthorum, a great city on the 
confines of Assyria and Babylonia, and for a 
long time the capital of Western Asia, until it 
was eclipsed by Ctesiphon. Its exact site has 
been disputed ; but the most probable opinion 
is that it stood on the western bank of the Ti- 
gris, north of its junction with the Royal Canal, 
opposite to the mouth of the River Delas or 
Silla (now Diala), and to the spot where Ctesi- 
phon was afterward built by the Parthians. It 
was a little to the south of the modern city of 
Bagdad. Perhaps a better site could not be 
found in Western Asia. It commanded the nav- 
igation of the Tigris and Euphrates, and the 
whole plain of those two rivers ; and it stood at 
the junction of all the chief caravan roads by 
which the traffic between eastern and western 
Asia was carried on. In addition to these ad- 
vantages, its people had, by the gift of Seleucus, 
the government of their own affairs. It was 
built in the form of an eagle with expanded 
wings, and was peopled by settlers from Assyria, 
Mesopotamia, Babylonia, Syria, and Judaea. It 
rapidly rose, and eclipsed Babylon in wealth and 
splendor. Even after the Parthian kings had 
become masters of the banks of the Tigris, and 
had fixed their residence at Ctesiphon. Seleu- 
cia, though deprived of much of its importance, 
remained a very considerable city. In the reign 
of Titus, it had, according to Pliny, six hundred 
thousand inhabitants. It was burned by Trajan 
in his Parthian expedition, and again by L. Ve- 
rus, the colleague of M. Aurelius Antoninus, 
when its population is given by different au- 
thorities as three hundred thousand or four 
hundred thousand, it was again taken by Se- 
verus ; and from this blow it never recovered. 
In Julian's expedition it was found entirely de- 
serted. — 2. Seleucia Pieria (2. Uiepia, ij h Hu- 
pia, i} Tzpbq ' kvrioxt'iG, t) Trp&c daJAccr), r) £7n6a'/,- 
lacata, ruins, called Sclcukeh or Ke-pse, near 
Suadeiah), a great city and fortress of Syria, 
founded by Seleucus in April, B.C. 300, one 
month before the foundation of Antioch. It 
stood on the site of an ancient fortress, on the 
rocks overhanging the sea, at the foot of Mount 
Pieria, about four miles north of the Orontes, 
and twelve miles west of Antioch. Its natural 
strength was improved by every known art of 
fortification, to which were added all the works 
of architecture and engineering required to 
make it a splendid city and a great sea-port, 
while it obtained abundant supplies from the 
fertile plain between the city and Antioch. The 
remains of Seleucus I. were interred at Seleu- 
cia, in a mausoleum surrounded by a grove. In 
the war with Egypt, which ensued upon the 
murder of Antiochus II., Seleucia surrendered 
to Ptolemy III. Euergetes (B.C. 246). It was 
afterward recovered by Antiochus the Great 
(219). In the war between Antiochus VIII. 
and IX., the people of Seleucia made themselves 
independent (109 or 108). Afterward, having 
successfully resisted the attacks of Tigranes for 
fourteen years (84-70), they were confirmed in 
their freedom by Pompey. The city had fallen 
entirely into decay by the sixth century of our 
era. There are considerable ruins of the har- 
bor and mole, of the walls of the city, and of its 
necropolis. The surrounding district was called 
Seleucis. — 3. Seleucia ad Belum, a city of 
796 



! Syria, in the valley of the Orontes, near Apa- 
; mea. Its site is doubtful. — 4. Seleucia Tra- 
i cheotis (now ruins at Selefkeh), an important city 
1 of Ciiicia Aspera, was built by Seleucus I. on 
j the western bank of the River Calycadnus, 
j about four miles from its mouth, and peopled 
i with the inhabitants of several neighboring 
cities. It had an oracle of Apollo, and annual 
games in honor of Jupiter (Zeus) Olympius. h 
vied with Tarsus in power and splendor, and 
was a free city under the Romans. It has re- 
i markable claims to renown both in political and 
! literary history : in the former, as the place 
i where Trajan and Frederic Barbarossa died ; 
! in the latter, as the birth-place of the philoso- 
phers Athenaeus and Xenarchus, of the sophist 
Alexander, the secretary of M. Aurelius Anto- 
ninus, and of other learned men. On its site 
are still seen the ruins of temples, porticoes, 
aqueducts, and tombs. — 5. Seleucia in Meso- 
potamia (now Bir), on the left bank of the Eu- 
phrates, opposite to the ford of Zeugma, was a 
fortress of considerable importance in ancient 
military history. — 6. A considerable city of Mar- 
giana, built by Alexander the Great, in a beau- 
tiful situation, and called Alexandrea ; destroy- 
ed by the barbarians, and rebuilt by Antiochus 

I. , who named it Seleucia after his father Se- 
leucus I. The Roman prisoners taken at the 
defeat of Crassus by the Parthians were settled 
here by King Orodes. — 7. Seleucia in Caria. 
{Vid. Tralles.) There were other cities of the 
name, of less importance, in Pisidia, Pamphylia, 
Palestine, and Elymals. 

Seleucis (I,e?,eviclc). 1. The most beautiful 
and fertile district of Syria, containing the north- 
western part of the country, between Mount 
Amanus on the north, the Mediterranean on the 
west, the districts of Cyrrhestice and Chaly- 
bonitis on the northeast, the desert on the east, 
and Ccelesyria and the mountains of Lebanon 
on the south. It included the valley of the 
Lower Orontes, and contained the four great 
cities of Antioch, Seleucia. Laodicea, and Apa- 
mea, whence it was also called Tetrapolis. In 
later times the name was confined to the small 
district north of the Orontes, the southern part 
of the former Seleucis being divided into Cas- 
siotis, west of the Orontes, and Apamene, east 
of the river. — 2. A district of Cappadocia. — 3. 
A name which Selecus I. endeavored to give to 
the Caspian Sea, in memory of a voyage of ex- 
ploration made round it by his command. 

Seleucus (SeAet/foc). the name of several 
kings of Syria. I. Surnamed Nicator, the found- 
er of the Syrian monarchy, reigned B.C. 312- 
280. He was the son of Antiochus, a Macedo- 
nian of distinction among the officers of Philip 

II. , and was born about 358. He accompanied 
Alexander on his expedition to Asia, and dis- 
tinguished himself particularly in the Indian 
campaigns. After the death of Alexander (323) 
he espoused the side of Perdiccas, whom he ac- 
companied on his expedition against Egypt ; but 
he took a leading part in the mutiny of the sol- 
diers, which ended in the death of Perdiccas 
(321). In the second partition of the provinces 
which followed, Seleucus obtained the wealthy 
and important satrapy of Babylonia. In the war 
between Antigonus and Eumenes, Seleucus af- 
forded efficient support to the former ; but after 



SELEUCUS. 



SELEUCUS. 



ihe death of Eumenes (316), Antigonus began to j 
treat the other satraps as his subjects. There- 
upon Seleucus fled to Egypt, where he induced 
Ptolemy to unite w ith Lysimachus and Cassan- 
der in a league against their common enemy. 
In the war that ensued Seleucus took an active 
part. At length, in 312, he recovered Babylon ; 
and it is from this period that the Syrian mon- 
archy is commonly reckoned to commence. 
This era of the Seleucidae, as it is termed, has 
been determined by chronologers to the 1st of 
October, 312. Soon afterward Seleucus defeat- 
ed Nicanor, the satrap of Media, and followed 
up his victory by the conquest of Susiana, Me- 
dia, and some adjacent districts. For the next 
few years he gradually extended his power over 
all the eastern provinces which had formed part 
of the empire of Alexander, from the Euphrates 
to the banks of the Oxus and the Indus. In 306 
Seleucus followed the example of Antigonus 
and Ptolemy, by formally assuming the regal 
title and diadem. In 302 he joined the league 
formed for the second time by Ptolemy, Ly- 
simachus, and Cassander, against their com- 
mon enemy Antigonus. The united forces of 
Seleucus and Lysimachus gained a decisive vic- 
tory over Antigonus at Ipsus (301), in which 
Antigonus himself was slain. In the division 
of the spoil, Seleucus obtained the largest share, 
being rewarded for his services with a great 
part of Asia Minor (which was divided between 
him and Lysimachus), as well as with the whole 
of Syria, from the Euphrates to the Mediterra- 
nean. The empire of Seleucus was now by far 
the most extensive and powerful of those which 
had been formed out of the dominions of Alex- 
ander. It comprised the whole of Asia, from 
the remote provinces of Bactria and Sogdiana 
to the coasts of Phoenicia, and from the Paro- 
pamisus to the central plains of Phrygia, where 
the boundary which separated him from Lysim- 
achus is not clearly defined. Seleucus appears 
to have felt the difficulty of exercising a vigilant 
control over so extensive an empire, and ac- 
cordingly, in 293, he consigned the government 
of all the provinces beyond the Euphrates to 
his son Antiochus, upon whom he bestowed the 
title of king, as well as the hand of his own 
youthful wife, Stratonice, for whom the prince 
had conceived a violent attachment. In 288, 
the ambitious designs of Demetrius (now be- 
come king of Macedonia) once more aroused 
the common jealousy of his old adversaries, and 
led Seleucus again to unite in a league with 
Ptolemy and Lysimachus against him. After 
Demetrius had been driven from his kingdom 
by Lysimachus, he transported the seat of war 
into Asia Minor, but he was compelled to sur- 
render to Seleucus in 286. The Syrian king 
kept Demetrius in confinement till three years 
afterward, but during the whole of that time 
treated him in a friendly and liberal manner. 
For some time jealousies had existed between 
Seleucus and Lysimachus ; but the immediate 
cause of the war between the two monarchs, 
which terminated in the defeat and death of 
Lysimachus (281), is related in the life of the 
latter. Seleucus now crossed the Hellespont 
in order to take possession of the throne of 
Macedonia, which had been left vacant by the 
death of Lysimachus ; but he had advanced no 



farther than Lysimachia, when he was assas- 
I sinated by Ptolemy Ceraunus, to whom, as the 
son of his old friend and ally, he had extended 
a friendly protection. His death took place in 
the beginning of 280, only seven months after 
that of Lysimachus, and in the thirty-second 
year of his reign. He was in his seventy-eighth 
year. Seleucus appears to have carried out, 
with great energy and perseverance, the pro- 
jects originally formed by Alexander himself 
for the Hellcnization of his Asiatic empire ; and 
we find him founding, in almost every province, 
Greek or Macedonian colonies, which became 
so many centres of civilization and refinement. 
Of these no less than sixteen are mentioned as 
bearing the name of Antiochia, after his father ; 
five that of Laodicea, from his mother; seven 
were called after himself, Seleucia ; three from 
the name of his first wife, Apamea ; and one 
Stratonicea, from his second wife, the daughter 
of Demetrius. Numerous other cities, whose 
names attest their Macedonian origin— Bercea, 
Edessa. Pella, &c.— likewise owed their first 
foundation to Seleucus. — II. Surnamed Cal- 
linicus (246-226), was the eldest son of Antio- 
chus II. by his first wife Laodice. The first 
measure of his administration, or rather that 
of his mother, was to put to death his step- 
mother Berenice, together with her infant son. 
This act of cruelty produced the most disastrous 
effects. In order to avenge his sister, Ptolemy 
Euergetes, king of Egypt, invaded the domin- 
ions of Seleucus, and not only made himself 
master of Antioch and the whole of Syria, but 
carried his arms unopposed beyond the Euphra- 
tes and the Tigris. During these operations 
Seleucus kept wholly aloof; but when Ptolemy 
had been recalled to his own dominions by do- 
mestic disturbances, he recovered possession 
of the greater part of the provinces which he 
had lost. Soon afterward Seleucus became in- 
volved in a dangerous war with his brother An- 
tiochus Hierax, who attempted to obtain Asia 
Minor as an independent kingdom for himself. 
This war lasted several years, but was at length 
terminated by the decisive defeat of Antiochus, 
who was obliged to quit Asia Minor and take 
refuge in Egypt. Seleucus undertook an expe- 
dition to the East, with the view of reducing 
the revolted provinces of Parthia and Bactria, 
which had availed themselves of the disordered 
state of the Syrian empire to throw off its yoke. 
He was, however, defeated by Arsaces, king of 
Parthia, in a great battle, which was long after 
celebrated by the Parthians as the foundation 
of their independence. After the expulsion of 
Antiochus, Attalus, king of Pergamus, extend- 
ed his dominions over the greater part of Asia 
Minor ; and Seleucus appears to have been en- 
gaged in an expedition for the recovery of these 
provinces, when he was accidentally killed by 
a fall from his horse, in the twenty-first year 
of his reign, 226. He left two sons, who suc- 
cessively ascended the throne, Seleucus Cerau- 
nus and Antiochus, afterward surnamed the 
Great. His own surname of Callinicus was 
probably assumed after his recovery of the prov- 
inces that had been overrun by Ptolemy.— III. 
Surnamed Ceraunus (226-223), eldest son and 
successor of Seleucus II. The surname of Ce- 
raunus was given him by the soldiery, appar- 

797 



SELGE. 



SEMECHONITIS. 



ently in derision, as he appears to have been 
feeble both in mind and body. He was assas- 
sinated by two of his officers, after a reign of 
only three years, and was succeeded by his 
brother, Antiochus the Great. — IV. Surnamed 
Philopator (187-175), was the son and suc- 
cessor of Antiochus the Great. The defeat of 
his father by the Romans, and the ignominious 
peace which followed it, had greatly diminished 
the power of the Syrian monarchy, and the 
reign of Seleucus was, in consequence, feeble 
and inglorious, and was marked by no striking 
events. He was assassinated in 175 by one of 
his own ministers. He left two children : De- 
metrius, who subsequently ascended the throne; 
and Laodice, married to Perseus, king of Mace- 
donia. — V. Eldest son of Demetrius II., assum- 
ed the royal diadem on learning the death of 
his father, 125 ; but his mother Cleopatra, who 
had herself put Demetrius to death, was indig- 
nant at hearing that her son had ventured to 
take such a step without her authority, and 
caused Seleucus also to be assassinated. — VI. 
Surnamed Epiphanes, and also Nicator (95- 
93), was the eldest of the five sons of Antio- 
chus VIII. Grypus. On the death of his father 
in 95, he ascended the throne, and defeated 
and slew in battle his uncle Antiochus Cyzice- 
nus, who had laid claim to the kingdom. But 
shortly after Seleucus was in his turn defeated 
by Antiochus Eusebes, the son of Cyzicenus, 
and expelled from Syria. He took refuge in 
Cilicia, where he established himself in the city 
of Mopsuestia; but, in consequence of his tyr- 
anny, he was burned to death by the inhabit- 
ants in his palace. 

Selge (2eA)'J7 : ^eXytvg : now Surk ? ruins), 
one of the chief of the independent mountain 
cities of Pisidia, stood on the southern side of 
Mount Taurus, on the Eurymedon, just where 
the river breaks through the mountain chain. 
On a rock above it was a citadel named Ke<r- 
6e5iov, in which was a temple of Juno (Hera). 
Its inhabitants, who were the most warlike of 
all the Pisidians, claimed descent from the La- 
cedaemonians, and inscribed the name Aaxedal- 
fiuv on their coins. They could bring an army 
of twenty thousand men into the field, and, as 
late as the fifth century, we find them beating 
back a horde of Goths. In a valley near the 
city, in the heart of lofty mountains, grew wine, 
and oil, and other products of the most luxuri- 
ant vegetation. 

[Selgovve CZelyoovai, Ptol.), a people on the 
western coast of Britannia Barbara, in the east- 
ern part of the modern Galloway and in Dum- 
friesshire.'] 

Selinus (Zelivovc, -ovvroe, contraction of ce- 
Xivoeic, from ci?uvov, "parsley"). 1. A small 
river on the southwestern coast of Sicily, flow- 
ing by the town of the same name. — 2. (Now 
Crcstena), a river of Elis, in the district Tri- 
phylia, near Scillus, flowing into the Alpheus 
west of Olympia. — 3. (Now Vostitza), a river of 
Achaia, rising in Mount Erymanthus. — 4. A 
tributary of the Caicus in Mysia, flowing by the 
town ofPergamum. — 5. (Ze/iivovvTioc, I,e?>jvov- 
ffiof : near the modern Castelvctrano, ruins), one 
of the most important towns in Sicily, situated 
upon a hill on the southwestern coast, and upon 
a river of the same name. It was founded by 
798 



the Dorians from Megara Hyblaea, on the east- 
ern coast of Sicily, B.C. 628. It soon attained 
great prosperity ; but it was taken by the Car- 
thaginians in 409, when most of its inhabitants 
were slain or sold as slaves, and the greater 
part of the city destroyed. The population of 
Selinus must at that time have been very con- 
siderable, since we are told that sixteen thou- 
sand men fell in the siege and conquest of the 
town, five thousand were carried to Carthage 
as slaves, two thousand six hundred fled toAg- 
rigentum, and many others took refuge in the 
surrounding villages. The Carthaginians, how- 
ever, allowed the inhabitants to return to Seli- 
nus in the course of the same year, and it con- 
tinued to be a place of secondary importance 
till 249, when it was again destroyed by the 
Carthaginians, and its inhabitants transferred to 
Lilybaeum. The surrounding country produced 
excellent wheat. East of Selinus, on the road 
to Agrigentum, were celebrated mineral springs 
called Aqua. Selinuntia, subsequently Aqua. La- 
bod(Z or Labodcs, the modern Baths of Sciacca. 
There are still considerable ruins of Selinus. — 
6. (Now Selenti), a town in Cilicia, situated on 
the coast, and upon a rock which was almost 
entirely surrounded by the sea. In consequence 
of the death of the Emperor Trajan in this 
town, it was for a longtime called Trajanopolis. 

Sellasia C2£?.?Mo'ia or 2,e?.aoia), a town in 
Laconia, north of Sparta, was situated near the 
River CEnus, and commanded one of the princi- 
pal passes leading to Sparta. Here the cele- 
brated battle was fought between Cleomenes 
III. and Antigonus Doson, B.C. 221, in which 
the former was defeated. 

Selleis (leMiijeH;). 1. A river in Elis, on 
which the Homeric Ephyra stood, rising in 
Mount Pholoe, and falling into the sea south 
of the Peneus.— 2. A river near Sicyon. — 3. A 
river in Troas, near Arisbe, and a tributary of 
the Rhodius. 

Selli or Helli. Vid. Dodona. 

Selvmeria or Selybria (ZTjlvpSpta. 2ij7.v6pia t 
Dor. 2a?iOju6p/a : 27]?>vfi6piav6c : now Selivria), 
an important town in Thrace, situated on the 
Propontis. It was a colony of the Megarians, 
and was founded earlier than Byzantium. It 
perhaps derived its name from its founder Se- 
lys and the Thracian word Bria, a town. It 
continued to be a place of considerable import- 
ance till its conquest by Philip, the father of 
Alexander, from which time its decline may be 
dated. Under the later emperors it was called 
Eudoxiupolis, in honor of Eudoxia, the wife of 
Arcadius ; but it afterward recovered its an- 
cient name. 

SSmechonitis or Samachoxitis Lacus (S^e- 
Xovi-tc, SafiaxuvtTic, and -ituv ?Juvtj : in the 
Old Testament, Waters of Merom : now Nahr- 
el-Huleh), a small lake in the north of Palestine, 
the highest of the three formed by the Jordan, 
both branches of which fall into its northern 
end, while the river flows out of its southern 
end in one stream. The valley in which it lies 
is inclosed on the west and east by mountains 
belonging to the two ranges of Lebanon, form- 
ing a position which has been of military im- 
portance both in ancient and modern times, es- 
pecially as the great Damascus road crosses the 
Jordan just below the lake. According to the 



SEMELE. 



SENEGA. 



division of Palestine under the Roman empire, 
it belonged to Galilee, but in earlier times, un- 
der the Syrian kings, it was reckoned to Ccele- 
syria. 

Semki.k (Sf/xcXj/), daughter of Cadmus and 
Harmonia, at Thebes, and accordingly sister of 
Ino, Agave, Autonoe, and Polydorus. She was 
beloved by Jupiter (Zeus). Juno (Hera), stim- 
ulated by jealousy, appeared to her in the form 
of her aged nurse Beroe, and induced her to ask 
Jupiter (Zeus) to visit her in the same splendor 
and majesty with which he appeared to Juno 
(Hera). Jupiter (Zeus) warned her of the dan- 
ger of her request ; but as he had sworn to 
grant whatever she desired, he was obliged to 
comply with her prayer. He accordingly ap- 
peared before her as the god of thunder, and 
Semele was consumed by the lightning ; but 
Jupiter (Zeus) saved her child Bacchus (Dio- 
nysus), with whom she was pregnant. Her son 
afterward carried her out of the lower world, 
and conducted her to Olympus, where she be- 
came immortal under the name of Thyone. 

Semiramis (ZepipafXLs) and Ninus (Nivoc), the 
mythical founders of the Assyrian empire of 
Ninus or Nineveh. Ninus was a great war- 
rior, who built the town of Ninus or Nineveh 
about B.C. 2182, and subdued the greater part 
of Asia. Semiramis was the daughter of the 
fish-goddess Derceto of Ascalon in Syria by a 
Syrian youth ; but, being ashamed of her frail- 
ty, she made away with the youth, and exposed 
her infant daughter. But the child was mirac- 
ulously preserved by doves, who fed her till she 
was discovered by the shepherds of the neigh- 
borhood. She was then brought up by the chief i 
shepherd of the royal herds, whose name was 
Simmas, and from whom she derived the name 
of Semiramis. Her surpassing beauty attracted 
the notice of Onnes, one of the king's friends 
and generals, who married her. He subse- 
quently sent for his wife to the army, where 
the Assyrians were engaged in the siege of 
Bactra, which they had long endeavored in vain 
to take. Upon her arrival in the camp she 
planned an attack upon the citadel of the town, 
mounted the walls with a few brave followers, 
and obtained possession of the place. Ninus 
was so charmed by her bravery and beauty that 
he resolved to make her his wife, whereupon 
her unfortunate husband put an end to his life. 
By Ninus Semiramis had a son, Ninyas, and on 
the death of Ninus she succeeded him on the 
throne. According to another account, Semi- 
ramis had obtained from her husband permis- 
sion to rule over Asia for five days, and availed 
herself of this opportunity to cast the king into 
a dungeon, or, as is also related, to put him to 
death, and thus obtained the sovereign power. 
Her fame threw into the shade that of Ninus ; 
and later ages loved to tell of her marvellous 
deeds and her heroic achievements. She built 
numerous cities, and erected many wonderful 
buildings ; and several of the most extraordi- 
nary works in the East, which were extant in 
a later age, and the authors of which were un- 
known, were ascribed by popular tradition to 
this queen. In Nineveh she erected a tomb for 
her husband, nine stadia high and ten wide ; 
she built the city of Babylon, with all its won- 
ders ; and she constructed the hanging gardens 



in Media, of which later writers give us such 
strange accounts. Besides conquering many 
nations of Asia, she subdued Egypt and a great 
part of Ethiopia, but was unsuccessful in an 
attack which she made upon India. After a 
reign of forty-two years she resigned the sov- 
ereignty to her son Ninyas, and disappeared 
from the earth, taking her flight to heaven in 
the form of a dove. The fabulous nature of 
this narrative is apparent. It is probable that 
Semiramis was originally a Syrian goddess, per- 
haps the same who was worshipped at Asca- 
lon under the name of Astarte, or the Heavenly 
Aphrodite, to whom the dove was sacred. Hence 
the stories of her voluptuousness, which were 
current even in the time of Augustus (Ov.,Am., 
i., 5, 11). 

Semnones, more rarely Sennones, a German, 
people, described by Tacitus as the most pow- 
erful tribe of the Suevic race, dwelt between 
the rivers Viadus (now Oder) and Albis (now 
Elbe), from the Riesengebirge in the south as 
far as the country around Frankfurt on the Oder 
and Potsdam in the north. 

Semo Sancus. Vid. Sancus. 

Sempronia. 1. Daughter of Tib. Gracchus, 
censor B.C. 169, and sister of the two celebra- 
ted tribunes, married Scipio Africanus minor. 
— 2. Wife of D. Junius Brutus, consul 77, was 
a woman of great personal attractions and lit- 
erary accomplishments, but of a profligate char- 
acter. She took part in Catiline's conspiracy, 
though her husband was not privy to it. 

Sempronia Gens, was of great antiquity, and 
one of its members, A. Sempronius Atratinus, 
obtained the consulship as early as B.C. 497, 
twelve years after the foundation of the repub- 
lic. The Sempronii were divided into many 
families, of which the Atratini were patrician, 
but all the others were plebeian : their names 
are Asellio, Bl^esus, Gracchus, Sophus, Tu- 
ditanus. 

Sena (Senensis). 1. (Now Scnigaglia), sur 
named Gallica, and sometimes called Seno 
gallia, a town on the coast of Umbria, at the 
mouth of the small river Sena, was founded 
by the Senones, a Gallic people, and was made 
a colony by the Romans after the conquest of 
the Senones, B.C. 283. In the civil war it es- 
poused the Marian party, and was taken and 
sacked by Pompey. — 2. (Now Siena), a town in 
Etruria and a Roman colony, on the road from 
Clusium to Florentia, is only mentioned in the 
times of the emperors. 

Seneca. 1. M. Ann^eus, the rhetorician, was 
born at Corduba (now Cordova), in Spain, about 
B.C. 61. Seneca was at Rome in the early pe- 
riod of the power of Augustus, for he says that 
he had seen Ovid declaiming before Arellius 
Fuscus. He afterward returned to Spain, and 
married Helvia, by whom he had three sons, L. 
Annaeus Seneca, L. Anneeus Mela or Mella, the 
father of the poet Lucan, and M.Novatus. Nova- 
tus was the eldest son, *nd took the name of Ju- 
nius Gallio upon being adopted by Junius Gallio. 
Seneca was rich, and he belonged to the eques- 
trian class. At a later period Seneca returned 
to Rome, where he resided till his death, which 
probably occurred near the end of the reign of 
Tiberius. Two of Seneca's works have come 
down to us. 1. Con trover star um Libri decern? 

799 



SENECA. 



SENECA. 



which he addressed to his three sons. The j 
first, second, seventh, eighth, and tenth books j 
only are extant, and these are somewhat mu- 
tilated : of the other books only fragments re- 
main. These Controversial are rhetorical ex- 
ercises on imaginary cases, filled with common- 
places, such as a man of large verhal memory j 
and great reading carries about with him as his j 
ready money. 2. Suasoriarum Liber, which is 
probably not complete. We may collect from 
its contents what the subjects were on which 
the rhetoricians of that age exercised their wits : 
one of them is, " Shall Cicero apologize to M. 
Antonius 1 Shall he agree to burn his Philip- 
pics, if Antonius requires it ?" Another is, 
«* Shall Alexander embark on the ocean ?" If 
there are some good ideas and apt expressions 
in these puerile declamations, they have no val- 
ue where they stand, and probably most of them 
are borrowed. No merit of form can compen- 
sate for worthlessness of matter. The best edi- 
tion of these works is by A. Schottus, Heidel- 
berg, 1603, frequently reprinted. — 2. L. Ann^e- 
us, the philosopher, the son of the preceding, 
was born at Corduba, probably a few years B.C., 
and brought to Rome by his parents when he 
was a child. Though he was naturally of a weak 
body, he was a hard student from his youth, and 
he devoted himself with great ardor to rhetoric 
and philosophy. He also soon gained distinc- 
tion as a pleader of causes, and "he excited the 
jealousy and hatred of Caligula by the ability j 
with which he conducted a case in the senate j 
before the emperor. In the first year of the 
reign of Claudius (A.D. 41), Seneca was ban- j 
ished to Corsica on account of his intimacy 
with Julia, the niece of Claudius, of whomMes- 
salina was jealous. After eight years' residence 
in Corsica, Seneca was recalled (59) by the in- 
fluence of Agrippina, who had just married her 
uncle the Emperor Claudius. He now obtained 
a praetorship, and was made the tutor of the 
young Domitius, afterward the Emperor Nero, 
who was the son of Agrippina by a former hus- 
band. On the accession of his pupil to the im- 
perial throne (54) after the death of Claudius, 
Seneca became one of the chief advisers of the 
young emperor. He exerted his influence to 
check Nero's vicious propensities, but at the 
same time he profited from his position to amass 
an immense fortune. He supported Nero in 
his contests with his mother Agrippina, and I 
was not only a party to the death of the latter 
(60), but he wrote the letter which Nero ad- 
dressed to the senate in justification of the mur- 
der. After the death of his mother Nero aban- 
doned himself without any restraint to his vi- 
cious propensities ; and the presence of Seneca 
soon became irksome to him, while the wealth 
of the philosopher excited the emperor's cupid- 
ity. Burrus, the praefect of the praetorian guards, 
who had always been a firm supporter of Sen- 
eca, died in 63 His death broke the power of j 
Seneca; and Nero now fell into the hands of j 
persons who were exactly suited to his taste. | 
Tigellinus and Fennius Rufus, w r ho succeeded 
Burrus in the command of the praetorians, be- 1 
gan an attack on Seneca. His enormous wealth, 
his gardens and villas, more magnificent than : 
those of the emperor, his exclusive claims to 
eloquence, and his disparagement of Nero's skill I 
800 



in driving and singing, were all urged against 
him ; and it was time, they said, for Nero to get 
rid of a teacher. Seneca heard of the charges 
against him : he was rich, and he knew that 
Nero wanted money. He asked the emperor 
for permission to retire, and offered to surren- 
der all that he had. Nero affected to be grate- 
ful for his past services, refused the proffered 
gift, and sent him away with perfidious assur- 
ances of his respect and affection. Seneca now 
altered his mode of life, saw little company, and 
seldom visited the city, on the ground of feeble 
health, or being occupied with his philosophical 
studies. The conspiracy of Piso (65) gave the 
emperor a pretext for putting his teacher to 
death, though there was not complete evidence 
of Seneca being a party to the conspiracy. Sen- 
eca was at the time returning from Campania, 
and had rested at a villa four miles from the 
city. Nero sent a tribune to him with the or- 
der of death. Without showing any sign of 
alarm, Seneca cheered his weeping friends by 
reminding them of the lessons of philosophy. 
Embracing his wife Pompeia Paulina, he prayed 
her to moderate her grief, and to console her- 
self for the loss of her husband by the reflection 
that he had lived an honorable life. But as 
Paulina protested that she would die with him, 
Seneca consented, and the same blow opened 
the veins in the arms of both. Seneca's body 
was attenuated by age and meagre diet; the 
blood jWould not flow easily, and he opened the 
veins in his legs. His torture was excessive ; 
and, to save himself and his wife the pain of 
seeing one another suffer, he bade her retire to 
her chamber. His last words were taken down 
in writing by persons who were called in for the 
purpose, and were afterward published. Sen- 
eca's torments being still prolonged, he took 
hemlock from his friend and physician, Statius 
Annasus, but it had no effect. At last he en- 
tered a warm bath, and as he sprinkled some 
of the water on the slaves nearest to him, he 
said that he made a libation to Jupiter the Lib- 
erator. He was then taken into a vapor stove, 
where he was quickly suffocated. Seneca died, 
as was the fashion among the Romans, with 
the courage of a stoic, but with somewhat of a 
theatrical affectation, which detracts from the 
dignity of the scene. Seneca's great misfor- 
tune was to have known Nero ; and though we 
can not say that he was a truly great or a truly 
good man, his character will not lose by com- 
parison with that of many others who have been 
placed in equally difficult circumstances. Sen- 
eca's fame rests on his numerous writings, of 
which the following are extant: 1. De Ira, in 
three books, addressed to Novatus, probably 
the earliest of Seneca's works. In the first 
book he combats what Aristotle says of Anger 
in his Ethics. 2. De Consolatione ad Helviam 
Matrem Liber, a consolatory letter to his moth- 
er, written during his residence in Corsica. It 
is one of his best treatises. 3. De Consolatione 
ad Polybium Liber, also written in Corsica. If 
it is the w^ork of Seneca, it does him no credit. 
Polybius was the powerful freedman of Clau- 
dius, and the Consolatio is intended to comfort 
him on the occasion of the loss of his brother. 
But it also contains adulation of the emperor, 
and many expressions unworthy of a true stoic, 



SENECA. 



SENECIO. 



•or of an honest man. 4. Liber de Consolatione 
ad Marciam, written after his return from exile, 
was designed to console Marcia for the loss of 
her son. Marcia was the daughter of A. Cre- 
mutius Cordus 5. De Providentia Liber, or 
Quare bonis vtns mala accidant cum sit Provi- 
dentia, is addressed to the younger Lucilius, 
procurator of Sicily. The question that is here 
discussed often engaged the ancient philoso- 
phers : the stoical solution of the difficulty is 
that suicide is the remedy when misfortune has 
become intolerable. In this discourse Seneca 
says that he intends to prove " that Providence 
hath a power over all things, and that God is 
always present with us." 6. De Animi Tran- 
quillitate, addressed to Serenus, probably writ- 
ten soon after Seneca's return from exile. It 
is in the form of a letter rather than a treatise : 
the object is to discover the means by which 
tranquillity of mind can be obtained. 7. De Con- 
stantia Sapientis seu quod in saptentem non cadit \ 
injuria, also addressed to Serenus, is founded 
on the stoical doctrine of the impassiveness of 
the wise man. 8. De Clementia ad Neronem 
CcEsarem Libri duo, written at the beginning of 
Nero's reign. There is too much of the flat- 
terer in this ; but the advice is good. The sec- 
ond book is incomplete. It is in the first chap- 
ter of this second book that the anecdote is told 
of Nero's unwillingness to sign a sentence of 
execution, and his exclamation, " I would I 
could neither read nor wiite." 9. De Brevitate 
Vita ad Paulinum Liber, recommends the proper 
employment of time and the getting of wisdom 
as the chief purpose of life. 10. De Vita Beata 
ad Gallionem, addressed to his brother, L. Junius 
Gallio, is probably one of the later works of 
Seneca, in which he maintains the stoical doc- 

; trine that there is no happiness without virtue ; 

! but he does not deny that other things, as health 
and riches, have their value. The conclusion 

i of the treatise is lost. 11. De Otto aut Secessu 

: Sapientis, is sometimes joined to No. 10. 12. 

' De Bencficiis Libri septcm, addressed to JEbn- 
cius Liberalis, is an excellent discussion of the j 
way of conferring a favor, and of the duties of I 
the giver and of the receiver. The handling is j 
not very methodical, but it is very complete, j 
It is a treatise which all persons might read ! 
with profit. 13. Epistolae ad Lucilium, one hund- 
red and twenty-four in number, are not the cor- 
respondence of daily life, like that of Cicero, | 
but a collection of moral maxims and remarks J 
without any systematic order. They contain j 
much good matter, and have been favorite read- 
ing with many distinguished men. It is pos- j 
sible that these letters, and, indeed, many of ; 
Seneca's moral treatises, were written in the 
latter part of his life, and probably after he had 

, lost the favor of Nero. That Seneca sought j 
consolation and tranquillity of mind in literary 
occupation is manifest. 14. Apocolocyntosis, is 

• a satire against the Emperor Claudius. The 
word is a play on the term Apotheosis or deifi- 
cation, and is equivalent in meaning to Pump- 
kinification, or the reception of Claudius among 
the pumpkins. The subject was well enough, 
but the treatment has no great merit ; and Sen- 
eca probably had no other object than to gratify 
his spite against the emperor. 15. Quaestionum 
Naturalium kxbri septem, addressed to Lucilius 



Junior, is not a systematic work, but a collec 
tion of natural facts from various writers, Greek 
and Roman, many of which are curious. The 
first book treats of meteors, the second of thun- 
der and lightning, the third of water, the fourth 
of hail, snow, and ice, the fifth of winds, the 
sixth of earthquakes and the sources of the 
Nile, and the seventh of comets. Moral re- 
marks are scattered through the work ; and, in- 
deed, the design of the whole appears to be to 
find a foundation for ethic, the chief part of 
philosophy, in the knowledge of nature (Physic). 
16. Tragcedia, ten in number. They are en- 
titled Hercules Furc?is, Thyestcs, Thebais or Pha- 
nissa, Hippolytus or Phcedra, (Edipus, Troades 
or Hecuba, Medea, Agamemnon, Hercules CEtaus, 
and Octavia. The titles themselves, with the 
exception of the Octavia, indicate sufficiently 
what the tragedies are, Greek mythological sub- 
jects treated in a peculiar fashion. They are 
written in Iambic senarii, interspersed with 
choral parts, in anapaestic and other metres. 
The subject of the Octavia is Nero's ill-treat- 
ment of his wife, his passion for Poppaea, and 
the exile of Octavia. These tragedies are not 
adapted, and certainly were never intended for 
the stage. They were designed for reading or 
for recitation after the Roman fashion, and they 
bear the stamp of a rhetorical age. They con- 
tain many striking passages, and have some 
merit as poems. Moral sentiments and maxims 
abound, and the style and character of Seneca 
are as conspicuous here as in his prose works. 
The judgments on Seneca's writings have been 
as various as the opinfons about his character, 
and both in extremes. It has been said of him 
that he looks best in quotations ; but this is an 
admission that there is something worth quot- 
ing, which can not be said of all writers. That 
Seneca possessed great mental powers can not 
be doubted. He had seen much of human life, 
and he knew well what man was. His philos- 
ophy, so far as he adopted a system, was the 
stoical, but it was rather an eclecticism of stoi- 
cism than pure stoicism. His style is antithet- 
ical, and apparently labored ; and when there is 
much labor, there is generally affectation. Yet 
his language is clear and forcible ; it is not 
mere words : there is thought always. It would 
not be easy to name any modern writer who 
has treated on morality, and has said so much 
that is practically good and true, or has treated 
the matter in so attractive a way. The best edi- 
tions of Seneca are by J. F. Gronovius, Leiden, 
1649-1658, 4 vols. 12mo ; by Ruhkopf, Leipzig, 
1797-181 1, 5 vols. 8vo ; and the Bipont edition, 
Strassburg, 1809, 5 vols. 8vo. [A new edition 
is in course of publication by Fickert, of which 
three volumes have appeared, Leipzig, 1842-5.] 
Senecio, Herennius. 1. Was a native of 
Baetica in Spain, where he served as quaestor. 
He was put to death by Domitian on the accusa- 
tion of Metius Carus, in consequence of his 
having written the life of Helvidius Priscus, 
which he composed at the request of Fannia, 
the wife of Helvidius.— [2. C. Sosius, consul 
suffectus A.D. 98, and consul A.D. 99, 102, and 
107. — 3. Tullius, a friend of Nero, neverthe- 
less took part in Piso's conspiracy against the 
emperor, and on its detection was obliged to 
put an end to his life.] 

801 



SENIA. 



SERAPION 



Sexia (Senensis : now Segna or Zengg), a 
Roman colony in Liburnia in Illyricum, on the 
coast, and on the road from Aquileia to Siscia. 

Senoxes, a powerful people in Gallia Lugdu- 
nensis, dwelt along the upper course of the Se- 
quana (now Seine), and were bounded on the 
north by the Parisii, on the west by the Car- 
nutes, on the south by the .-Edui, and on the 
east by the Lingones and Mandubii. Their 
chief town was Agendicum, afterward called 
Senones (now Se?is). A portion of this people 
crossed the Alps about B.C. 400, in order to 
settle in Italy ; and as the greater part of Upper 
Italy was already occupied by other Celtic tribes, 
the Senones were obliged to penetrate a con- 
siderable distance to the south, and took up 
their abode on the Adriatic Sea, between the 
Rivers Utis and ^sis (between E.avenna and 
Ancona), after expelling the Umbrians. In this 
country they founded the town of Sena. They 
extended their ravages into Etruria ; and it was 
in consequence of the interference of the Ro- 
mans while they were laying siege to Clusium 
that they marched against Rome and took the 
city, B.C. 390. From this time we find them 
engaged in constant hostilities with the Ro- 
mans, till they were at length completely sub- 
dued, and the greater part of them destroyed 
by the consul Dolabella, 283. 

SextIxum (Sentinas, Sentinatis : ruins near 
Sassoferrato), a fortified town in Umbria, not 
far from the River -'Esis. 

[Sextius Augurixus, an epigrammatic poet 
in the time of the younger Pliny, whom he 
praised in his verses. One of his poems in 
praise of Pliny is preserved in a letter of the 
latter.] 

Sextius Saturxixus. Vid. Saturxixus. 

Sepias (Zr)~iac : now St. George), a promon- 
tory in the southeast of Thessaly, in the district 
Magnesia, on which a great part of the fleet of 
Xerxes was wrecked. 

[Sepixem (now Attilia, about ten miles from 
Sepino), a city of the Samnites, to the south- 
east of Bovianum: it became a Roman colony 
in the reign of Nero.] 

Seplasia, one of the principal streets in Cap- 
ua, where perfumes and luxuries of a similar 
kind were sold. 

Sepphoris (2f^owp/f : now Sefurieh), a city 
of Palestine, in the middle of Galilee, about 
half way between Mount Carmel and the Lake 
of Tiberias, was an insignificant place until 
Herod Antipas fortified it, and made it the cap- 
ital of Galilee, under the name of Diocesarea. 
It was the seat of one of the five Jewish San- 
hedrim, and continued to flourish until the 
fourth century, when it was destroyed by the 
Caesar Gallus on account of a revolt of its in- 
habitants. 

Septem Aquje, a place in the territory of the 
Sabini, near Reate. 

Septem Fratres ('Etto udeAdol : now Jcbel 
Zatout, i. e., Apes' Hill), a mountain on the 
northern coast of Mauretania Tingitana, at the 
narrowest part of the Fretum Gaditanum (now 
Straits of Gibraltar), connected by a low tongue 
of land with the promontory of Abyla, which is 
also included under the modern name. 

Septem Maria, the name given by the an- 
cients to the lagoons formed at the mouth of 
802 



the Po by the frequent overflows of this river. 
Persons usually sailed through these lagoons 
from Ravenna to Altinum, 

Septempeda (Septempedanus: now San Set- 
erino), a Roman municipium in the interior of 
Picenum, on the road from Auximum to Urbs 
Salvia. 

Septimius Geta. Vid. Geta. 

Septimius Serenes. Vid. Serenus. 

Septimius Seyerus. Vid. Severus. 

Septimius Titius, a Roman poet, whom Hor- 
ace (i., 3, 9-14) represents as having ventured 
to quaff a draught from the Pindaric spring, and 
as having been ambitious to achieve distinction 
in tragedy. In this passage Horace speaks of 
him under the name of Titus ; and he is prob- 
ably the same individual with the Septimius 
who is addressed in the sixth ode of the second 
book, and who is introduced in the ninth epistle 
of the first book. 

[Septimius, Q., the translator of the work on 
the Trojan war, bearing the name of Dictys 
Cretensis.] 

[Septra, a city of Cilicia, at the base of 
Mount -Aman us, near Arae Alexandri, taken by 
Cicero while proconsul in that province.] 

SequIxa (now Seine), one of the principal 
rivers of Gaul, rising in the central parts of that 
country, and flowing through the province of 
Gallia Lugdunensis into the ocean opposite 
Britain. It is three hundred and forty-six miles 
in length. Its principal affluents are the Ma- 
trona (now Marne), Esia (now Oisc), with its trib- 
utary the Axona (now Aisne) and Incaunus (now 
Yonne). This river has a slow current, and 
is navigable beyond Lutetia Parisiorum (now 
| Paris). 

Sequaxi, a powerful Celtic people in Gallia 
! Belgica, separated from the Helvetii by Mons 
: Jurassus, from the JEdui by the Arar, and from 
j the province Narbonensis by the Rhone, inhab- 
| iting the country called Franche Compte and 
| Burgundy. In the later division of the prov- 
inces of the empire, the country of the Sequani 
formed a special province under the name of 
Maxima Sequanorum. They derived their name 
from the River Sequana, which had its source 
in the northwestern frontiers of their territory ; 
but their country was chiefly watered by the 
rivers Arar and Dubis. Their chief town was 
Vesontio (now Bcsan$on). They were govern- 
ed by kings of their own, and were constantly 
at war with the iEdui. 

Sequester, Vibius, the name attached to a 
glossary which professes to give an account of 
the geographical names contained in the Roman 
poets. The tract is divided into seven sections : 
1. Flumina. 2. Fontes. 3. Lacus. 4. Nenwra. 
5. Paludes. 6. Montes. 7. Gentes. To which, 
in some MSS., an eighth is added, containing a 
list of the seven wonders of the world. Con- 
cerning the author personally we know nothing ; 
and he probably lived not earlier than the mid- 
dle of the fifth century. The best edition is by 
Oberlinus, Argent., 177S. 
Sera. Vid. Serica. 

Serapio, a surname of P. Cornelius Scipio 
Nasica, consul B.C. 138. Vid. Scipio. No. 18. 

Serapiox (lepa-ncuv), a physician of Alexan- 
dra, who lived in the third century B.C. He 
belonged to the sect of the En^irici, and so 



SERAPIS. 



SERIPHUS. 



much extended and improved the system of 1 
Philinus, that the invention of it is by some au- 
thors attributed to him. Serapion wrote against 
Hippocrates with much vehemence; but neither j 
this, nor any of his other works, is now extant. 
He is several times mentioned and quoted by 
Celsus, Galen, and others. 

Serapis or Sarapis (Supamc), an Egyptian 
divinity, whose worship was introduced into 
Greece in the time of the Ptolemies. His wor- 
ship was introduced into Rome together with 
that of Isis. For details, vid. Isis. 

[Serbonis Lacus. Vid. Sirbonis Lacus.] 

Serdica or Sarpica, an important town in 
Upper Moesia, and the capital of Dacia Interior, 
situated in a fertile plain near the sources of 
the GEscus, and on the road from Naissus to 
Philippopolis. It was the birth-place of the 
Emperor Maximianus ; it was destroyed by At- 
tila, but was soon afterward rebuilt ; and it bore 
in the Middle Ages the name of Triaditza. Its 
extensive ruins are to be seen south of Sophia. 
Serdica derived its name from the Thracian 
people Serdi. 

Serena, niece of Theodosius the Great, fos- 
ter-mother of the Emperor Honorius, and wife 
of Stilicho. 

Serenus, Annjeos, one of the most intimate 
friends of the philosopher Seneca, who dedi- 
cated to him his work De Tranquillitate and De 
Constantia. He was prajfectus vigilum under 
Nero, and died in consequence of eating a pois- 
onous kind of fungus. 

Serenus, Q. Sammonicus, (or Samonicus), en- 
joyed a high reputation at Rome, in the early 
part of the third century after Christ, as a man 
of taste and varied knowledge. As the friend 
of Geta, by whom his compositions were studied 
with great pleasure, he was murdered while at 
supper, by command of Caracalla, A.D. 212, 
leaving behind him many learned works. His 
son, who bore the same name, was the precep- 
tor of the younger Gordian, and bequeathed to 
his pupil the magnificent library which he had 
inherited from his father. A medical poem, ex- 
tending to one hundred and fifteen hexameter 
lines, has descended to us under the title Q. 
Sereni Sammo?iici de Medicina prcecepta saluber- 
ri?na, or Prcecepta de Medicina parvo prclio para- 
bili, which is usually ascribed to the elder Sam- 
monicus. It contains a considerable amount of 
information, extracted from the best authorities, 
on natural history and the healing art, mixed up 
with a number of puerile superstitions, the 
whole expressed in plain and almost prosaic 
language. The best edition is that of Burmann, 
in his Polta, Latnu Minores (4to, Leid., 1731, 
vol. ii., p. 187-388). 

Serenus, A. SeptimIus, a Roman lyric poet, 
who exercised his muse chiefly in depicting the 
charms of the country and the delight of rural 
pursuits. His works are lost, but are frequent- 
ly quoted by the grammarians. 

Seres. Vid. S eric a. 

[Sergestus, a Trojan warrior, who accom- 
panied ^Eneas to Italy after the destruction of 
Troy, and from whom the Sergia gens were 
fabled to have derived their name and lineage.] 

[Sergia, sister of Catiline, was married to 
Q. Caecilius, a Roman eques, who was slain by j 
his brother-in-law during the proscription of 



j Sulla. Sergia, like her brother, bore a bad char- 
acter.] 

Sergia Gens, patrician. The Sergii traced 
I their descent from the Trojan Sergestus (Virg., 
JEn., v., 121). The Sergii were distinguished 
in the early history of the republic, and the first 
member of the gens who obtained the consul- 
I ship was L. Sergius Fidenas, in B.C. 437. Cat- 
iline belonged to this gens. Vid. Catilina. 
The Sergii bore also the surnames of Esquili- 
nus, Fidenas, Orata, Paulus, Plancus, and Silus ; 
but none of them are of sufficient importance 
to require a separate notice. 

Sergius, a grammarian of uncertain date, but 
later than the fourth century after Christ, the 
author of two tracts ; the first entitled In pri- 
mam Donati Editionem Commentarium ; the sec- 
ond, In secundam Donati Editionem Commcnta- 
ria. They are printed in the Grammatica Lati- 
na auctores antiqui of Putschius (Hannov., 1605, 
p. 1816-1838). 

Serica (tj j,r]piKr), 2fjpec ; Seres, also rarely in 
the sing. 2^p, Ser), a country in the extreme 
east of Asia, famous as the native region of the 
silk-worm, which was also called arip ; and hence 
the adjective " sericus" for silken. The name 
was known to the western nations at a very early 
period, through the use of silk, first in Western 
Asia, and afterward in Greece. It is clear, 
however, that, until some time after the com- 
mencement of our era, the name had no distinct 
geographical signification. Serica and Seres 
were simply the unknown country and people 
in the far East, from whom the article of com- 
merce, silk, was obtained. At a later period, 
some knowledge of the country was obtained 
from the traders, the results of which are re- 
corded by Ptolemy, who names several posi- 
tions that can be identified with reasonable 
probability, but the detailed mention of which 
does not fall within the object of this work. 
The Serica of Ptolemy corresponds to the north- 
western part of China, and the adjacent por- 
tions of Thibet and Chinese Tartary. The cap- 
ital, Sera, is supposed by most to be Singan, on 
the Hoang-ho, but by some Peking. The coun- 
try was bounded, according to Ptolemy, on the 
north by unknown regions, on the west by 
Scythia, on the south and southeast by India 
and the Sinae. The people were said by some 
to be of Indian, by others of Scythian origin, 
and by others to be a mixed race. The Great 
Wall of China is mentioned by Ammianus Mar- 
cellinus under the name of Aggeres Serium. 

SerIphus (2epL(j>oc : ^LepityLoc : now Serpho), 
an island in the iEgean Sea, and one of the Cyc- 
lades, lying between Cythnus and Siphnus. It 
was a small rocky island about twelve miles in 
circumference. It is celebrated in mythology as 
the island where Danae and Perseus landed 
after they had been exposed by Acrisius, where 
Perseus was brought up, and where he after- 
ward turned the inhabitants into stone with 
the Gorgon's head. Seriphus was colonized by 
Ionians from Athens, and it was one of the 
few islands which refused submission to Xerx- 
es. At a later time the inhabitants of Seri- 
phus were noted for their poverty and wretch- 
edness ; and for this reason the island was 
I employed by the Roman emperors as a place 
of banishment for state criminals. The an- 

803 



SERMYLA. 



SERVILIA. 



dent writers relate that the frogs in Seriphos 
were mute. 

Sermyla (1epu.v7.ri : 2,epfxvXiog), a town in 
Macedonia, on the isthmus of the peninsula Si- 
lhonia. 

Serranus, Atilius. Serranus was originally 
an agnomen of C. Atilius Regulus, consul B.C. 
257, but afterward became the name of a dis- 
tinct family of the Atilia gens. Most of the an- 
cient writers derive the name from serere, and 
relate that Regulus received the surname of 
Serranus, because he was engaged in sowing 
when the news was brought him of his eleva- 
tion to the consulship (Virg., JEn., vi., 845). It 
appears, however, from coins, that Saranus is 
the proper form of the name, and some modern 
writers think that it is derived from Saranum, 
a town of Umbria.— 1. C, praetor B.C. 218, the 
first year of the second Punic war, and was sent 
into Northern Italy. At a later period of the 
year he resigned his command to the consul P. 
Scipio. He was an unsuccessful candidate for 
the consulship for 216. — 2. C, curule aedile 193, 
with L. Scribonius Libo. They were the first 
aediles who exhibited the Megalesia as ludi sce- 
nici. He was praetor 185. — 3. A., praetor 192, 
w r hen he obtained, as his province, Macedonia 
and the command of the fleet. He was praetor 
a second time in 173. He was consul in 170. 
— 4. Mi, praetor 174, when he obtained the prov- 
ince of Sardinia. — 5. M., praetor 152, in Further 
Spain, defeated the Lusitani. — 6. Sex., consul 
136.— 7. C, consul 106 with Q. Servilius Cae- 
pio, the year in which Cicero and Pompey were 
born. Although a " stultissimus homo" ac- 
cording to Cicero, he was elected in preference 
to Q. Catulus. He was one of the senators who 
took up arms against Saturninus in 100.— 8. 
Sex , surnamed Gavianus, because he original- 
ly belonged to the Gavia gens. He was quaes- 
tor in 63 in the consulship of Cicero, who treat- 
ed him with distinguished favor; but in his 
tribunate of the plebs, 57, he took an active part 
in opposing Cicero's recall from banishment. 
After Cicero's return to Rome he put his veto 
upon the decree of the senate restoring to Ci- 
cero the site on which his house had stood, but 
he found it advisable to withdraw his opposition. 

Sebrhium (Uppetov), a promontory of Thrace 
in the iEgean Sea, opposite the island of Samo- 
thrace, with a fortress of the same name upon it. 

Sertorius, Q., one of the most extraordinary 
men in the later times of the republic, was a 
native of Nursia, a Sabine village, and was born 
of obscure but respectable parents. He served 
under Marius in the war against the Teutones ; 
and before the battle of Aquae Sextiae (now Aix), 
B.C. 102, he entered the camp of the Teutones 
in disguise as a spy, for which hazardous un- 
dertaking his intrepid character and some knowl- 
edge of the Gallic language well qualified him. 
He also served as tribunus militum in Spain 
under T. Didius (97). He was quaestor in 91, 
and had before this time lost an eye in battle. 
On the outbreak of the civil war in 88, he de- 
clared himself against the party of the nobles, 
though he was by no means an admirer of his 
old commander, C. Marius, whose character he 
well understood. He commanded one of the 
four armies which besieged Rome under Marius 
and Cinna. He was, however, opposed to the 



bloody massacre which ensued after Marius 
and Cinna entered Rome ; and he was so in- 
dignant at the horrible deeds committed by the 
slaves whom Marius kept as guards, that he fell 
upon them in their camp, and speared four thou- 
sand of them. In 83 Sertorius was praetor, and 

] either in this year or the following he went into 
Spain, which had been assigned to him as his 
province by the Marian party. After collecting 
a small body of troops in Spain, he crossed over 
to Mauretania. where he gained a victory over 

i Paccianus, one of Sulla's generals. In conse- 
quence of his success in Africa, he was invited 
by the Lusitani, who were exposed to the inva- 

■ sion of the Romans, to become their leader. He 

■ gained great influence over the Lusitanians and 
; the other barbarians in Spain, and soon succeed- 
ed in forming an army which for some years 
successfully opposed all the power of Rome. 
He also availed himself of the superstitious 
character of the people among whom he was 

; to strengthen his authority over them. A fawn 
j was brought to him by one of the natives as a 
! present, which soon became so tame as to ac- 
company him in his walks, and attend him on 
all occasions. After Sulla had become master 
of Italy, Sertorius was joined by many Romans 
! who had been proscribed by the dictator ; and 
; this not only added to his consideration, but 
''■ brought him many good officers. In 79 Metel- 
lus Pius was sent into Spain with a considera- 
ble force against Sertorius ; but Metellus could 
i effect nothing against the enemy. He was un- 
j able to bring Sertorius to any decisive battle, 
but was constantly harassed by the guerilla war- 
: fare of the latter. In 77 Sertorius was joined 
by M. Perperna with fifty-three cohorts. Vid. 
Perperna. To give some show of form to his 
i formidable power, Sertorius established a sen- 
ate of three hundred, into which no provincial 
was admitted ; but, to soothe the more distin- 
\ guished Spaniards, and to have some security 
j for their fidelity, he established a school at Hu- 
! esca (now Osca), in Aragon, for the education 
: of their children in Greek and Roman learning 
j The continued want of success on the part of 
j Metellus induced the Romans to send Pompev 
to his assistance, but with an independent com 
mand. Pompey arrived in Spain in 76 with 
thirty thousand infantry and one thousand cav- 
alry, but even with this formidable force he was 
unable to gain any decisive advantages over 
Sertorius. For the next five years Sertorius 
i kept both Metellus and Pompey at bay, and cut 
! to pieces a large number of their forces. Ser- 
I torius was at length assassinated in 72 at a 
banquet by Perperna and some other Roman 
| officers, who had long been jealous of the au- 
j thority of their commander. 

Servilia. 1. Daughter of Q. Servilius Cae- 
J pio and the daughter of Livia, the sister of the 
! celebrated M. Livius Drusus, tribune of the 
! plebs B.C. 91. Servilia was married twice; 
j first to M. Junius Brutus, by whom she became 
the mother of the murderer of Caesar, and sec- 
ondly to D. Junius Silanus, consul 62. She was 
the favorite mistress of the dictator Caesar ; and 
it is reported that Brutus was her son by Caesar, 
This tale, however, can not be true, as Caesar 
was only fifteen years older than Brutus, the 
former having been born in 100, and the latter 



SERVILIA GENS. 



SETIA. 



in 85. She survived both her lover and her 
son. After the battle of Philippi, Antony sent 
her the ashes of her son.— 2. Sister of the pre- 
ceding, was the second wife of L. Lucullus, 
consul 74. She bore Lucullus a son, but, like 
her sister, she was faithless to her husband ; 
and the latter, after putting up with her conduct 
for some time from regard to M. Cato Uticen- 
sis, her half-brother, at length divorced her. 

ServilIa Gens, was one of the Alban houses 
removed to Rome by Tullus Hostilius. This 
gens was very celebrated during the early ages 
of the republic, and it continued to produce men 
of influence in the state down to the imperial 
period. It was divided into numerous families, 
of which the most important bore the names of 
Ahala, C-epio, Casca, Glaucia, Rullus, Vatia. 

Servius Maurus Honoratus, or Servius Ma- 
rius Honoratus, a celebrated Latin gramma- 
rian, contemporary with Macrobius, who intro- 
duces him among the dramatis personee of the 
Saturnalia. His most celebrated production 
was an elaborate commentary upon Virgil. 
This is, nominally at least, still extant ; but, 
from the widely different forms which it as- 
sumes in different MSS., it is clear that it must 
have been changed and interpolated to such an 
extent by the transcribers of the Middle Ages 
that it is impossible to determine how much 
belongs to Servius and how much to later hands. 
Even in its present condition, however, it is 
deservedly regarded as the most important and 
valuable of all the Latin Scholia. It is attach- 
ed to many of the earlier editions of Virgil, but 
it will be found under its best form in the edi- 
tion of Virgil by Burmann. [A separate edition 
was published by Lion, Gottingen, 1825, 2 vols. 
8vo.] We possess also the following treatises 
bearing the name of Servius: 1. hi sccundam 
Donati Editionem Interprctalio. 2. De Ratione 
ultimatum Syllabarum ad Aquilinum Liber. 3. 
Ars de centum Metris s. Centime trum. 

Servius Tullius. Vid. Tullius. 

Sesamus (Zrjoaiioc), a little coast river of 
Paphlagonia, with a town of the same name : 
both called afterward Amastris. 

Sesostris (ZeooGTpic), the name given by the 
Greeks to the great King of Egypt, who is call- 
ed in Manetho and on the monuments Ramses 
or Ramesses. Ramses is a name common to 
several kings of the eighteenth, nineteenth, and 
twentieth dynasties ; but Sesostris must be iden- 
tified with Ramses, the third king of the nine- 
teenth dynasty, the son of Seti, and the father 
of Menephthah. Sesostris was a great con- 
queror. He is said to have subdued ^Ethiopia, 
the greater part of Asia, and the Thracians in 
Europe ; and in all the countries which he con- 
quered he erected stcl<e, on which he inscribed 
his own name. He returned to Egypt after an 
absence of nine years, and the countless cap- 
tives whom he brought back with him were 
employed in the erection of numerous public 
works. Memorials of Ramses-Sesostris still 
exist throughout the whole of Egypt, from the 
mouth of the Nile to the south of Nubia. In the 
remains of his palace-temple at Thebes we see 
his victories and conquests represented on the 
walls, and we can still trace there some of the 
nations of Africa and Asia whom he subdued. 
The name of Sesostris is not found on monu- 



ments, and it was probably a popular surname 
given to the great hero of the nineteenth dy- 
nasty, and borrowed from Sesostris, one of the 
renowned kings of the twelfth dynasty, oi per- 
haps from Sesorthus, a king of the third dy- 
nasty. 

[Sessites (now Sessia or Sesia), a small river 
of Gallia Cisalpina, flowing past Vercellas, and 
emptying into the Padus (now Po).] 

Sestian^e Ar^e (now Cape Villano), the most 
westerly promontory on the northern coast of 
HispaniaTarraconensis in Gallaecia, with three 
altars consecrated to Augustus. 

Sestinum (Sestinas, -atis : now Sestino), a 
town in Umbria, on the Apennines, near the 
sources of the Pisaurus. 

Sestius. Vid. Sextius. 

Sestus {Inarog : l^criog : now Ialova), a town 
in Thrace, situated at the narrowest part of the 
Hellespont, opposite Abydos in Asia, from which 
it was only seven stadia distant. It was found- 
ed by the ^Eolians. It was celebrated in Gre- 
cian poetry on account of the loves of Leander 
and Hero (vid. Leander), and in history on ac- 
count of the bridge of boats which Xerxes here 
built across the Hellespont. Sestus was always 
reckoned a place of importance in consequence 
of its commanding, to a great extent, the passage 
of the Hellespont. It was for some time in the 
possession of the Persians, but was retaken 
by the Greeks, B.C. 478, after a long siege. It 
subsequently formed part of the Athenian em- 
pire. 

[Sesuvii, a people of Gallia Celtica, inhabit- 
ing part of the department de VOrne and of that 
of Calvados: Seez, in the former of these, recalls 
the ancient name.] 

Setabis. Vid. S^TABIS. 
Sethon CZeduv), a priest of Vulcan (Hephaes- 
tus), made himself master of Egypt after the ex- 
pulsion of Sabacon, king of the ^Ethiopians, and 
was succeeded by the Dodecarchia, or govern- 
ment of the twelve chiefs, which ended in the 
sole sovereignty of Psammitichus. Herodotus 
relates (ii., 141) that in Sethon's reign, Sana- 
charibus, king of the Arabians and Assyrians, 
advanced against Egypt, at which Sethon was 
in great alarm, as he had insulted the warrior 
class, and deprived them of their lands, and 
they now refused to follow him to the war. But 
the god Vulcan (Hephaestus) came to his assist- 
ance ; for while the two armies were encamped 
near Pelusium, the field-mice in the night gnaw- 
I ed to pieces the bow-strings, the quivers, and the 
J shield-handles of the Assyrians, who fled on the 
I following day with great loss. The recollection 
of this miracle was perpetuated by a statue of 
the king in the temple of Vulcan (Hephaestus), 
holding a mouse in his hand, and saying, " Let 
every man look at me and be pious." This San- 
acharibus is the Sennacherib of the Scriptures, 
and the destruction of the Assyrians at Pelu- 
sium is evidently only another version of the 
miraculous destruction of the Assyrians by the 
I angel of the Lord, when they had advanced 
) against Jerusalem in the reign of Hezekiab. 
I According to the Jewish records, this event 
happened in B.C. 711. 

Setia (Setinus : now Sezza or Sesse), an an- 
cient town of Latium, in the east of the Pontine 
Marshes, originally belonged to the Volscian 

805 



SETIUM PROMONTORIUM. 



SEVERUS, SEPTIMTUS. 



confederacy, but was subsequently taken by the 
Romans and colonized. It was here that the 
Romans kept the Carthaginian hostages. It 
was celebrated for the excellent wine grown in 
the neighborhood of the town, which was reck- 
oned in the time of Augustus the finest wine in 
Italy. 

[Setium Promo ntori cm (now Cape Cette), a 
promontory on the south coast of Gallia, north- 
east of Agatha (now Agde), and near the island 
Blascon (now Brescon).~\ 

Severus, M. Aurelius Alexander, usually 
called Alexander Severus, Roman emperor 
A.D. 222-235, the son of Gessius Marcianus and 
Julia Mamaea, and first cousin of Elagabalus, 
was born at Arce, in Phoenicia, in the temple of 
Alexander the Great, to which his parents had 
repaired for the celebration of a festival, the 1st 
of October, A.D. 205. His original name ap- 
pears to have been Alexianus Bassianus, the 
latter appellation having been derived from his 
maternal grandfather. Upon the elevation of 
Elagabalus, he accompanied his mother and the 
court to Rome, a report having been spread 
abroad that he also, as well as the emperor, 
was the son of Caracalla. In 221 he was adopt- 
ed by Elagabalus and created Caesar. The 
names Alexianus and Bassianus were laid aside, 
and those of M. Aurelius Alexander substituted ; 
M. Aurelius in virtue of his adoption ; Alexan- 
der in consequence, as was asserted, of a direct 
revelation on the part of the Syrian god. On 
the death of Elagabalus, on the 11th of March, 
A.D. 222, Alexander ascended the throne, add- 
ing Severus to his other designations, in order 
to mark more explicitly the descent which he 
claimed from the father of Caracalla. After 
reigning in peace some years, during which he 
reformed many abuses in the state, he was in- 
volved in a war with Artaxerxes, king of Per- 
sia, who had lately founded the new empire of 
the Sassanidae on the ruins of the Parthian mon- 
archy. Alexander gained a great victory over 
Artaxerxes in 232 ; but he was unable to pros- 
ecute his advantage in consequence of intelli- 
gence having reached him of a great movement 
among the German tribes. He celebrated a tri- 
umph at Rome in 233, and in the following year 
(234) set out for Gaul, which the Germans were 
devastating ; but, before he had made any prog- 
ress in the campaign, he was waylaid by a small 
band of mutinous soldiers, instigated, it is said, 
by Maximinus, and slain, along with his moth- 
er, in the early part of 235, in the thirtieth year 
of his age and the fourteenth of his reign. Al- 
exander Severus was distinguished by justice, 
wisdom, and clemency in all public transactions, 
and by the simplicity and purity of his private 
life. 

Severus, A. CasciKA. Vid. C^ecina. 

Severus, Cassius, a celebrated orator and 
satirical writer in the time of Augustus and Ti- 
berius, was born about B.C. 50, at Longula, in 
Latium. He was a man of low origin and dis- 
solute character, but was much feared by the 
severity of his attacks upon the Roman nobles. 
He must have commenced his career as a pub- 
lic slanderer very early, if he is the person 
against whom the sixth epode of Horace is di- 
rected, as is supposed by many ancient and mod- 
ern commentators. Toward the latter end of 
806 



the reign of Augustus, Severus was banished 
by Augustus to the island of Crete on account 
of his libellous verses ; but as he still continued 
to write libels, he was removed by Tiberius, in 
in A.D. 24, to the desolate island of Seriphos, 
' where he died in great poverty in the twenty- 
; fifth year of his exile, A.D. 33. 

Severus, Cornelius, the author of a poem 
entitled Bellum Siculum,\vas contemporary with 
, Ovid, by whom he is addressed in one of the 
1 Epistles written from Pontus. 

Severus, Flavius Valerius, Roman emper- 
; or A.D. 306-307. He was proclaimed Caesar 
; by Galerius in 305 ; and on the death of Con- 
stantius Chlorus in the following year, he was 
| further proclaimed Augustus by Galerius. Soon 
afterward he was sent against Maxentius, who 
| had assumed the imperial title at Rome. The 
j expedition, however, was unsuccessful ; and 
i Severus, having surrendered at Ravenna, was 
j taken prisoner to Rome and compelled to put 
. an end to his life. 

Severus, Libius, R,oman emperor A.D. 461- 
| 465, was a Lucanian by birth, and owed his ac- 
j cession to Ricimer, who placed him on the 
' throne after the assassination of Majorian. 
' During his reign the real government was in 
the hands of Ricimer. Severus died a natural 
death. 

Severus, Septimius L., Roman emperor A.D. 
193-211, was born 146, near Leptis in Africa. 
After holding various important military com- 
: mands under M. Aurelius and Commodus, he 
was at length appointed commander-in-chief of 
j the army in Pannonia and Illyria. By this army 
he w-as proclaimed emperor after the death of 
Pertinax (193). He forthwith marched upon 
Rome, where Julianus had been made emperor 
by the praetorian troops. Julianus was put to 
death upon his arrival before the city. Vid. Ju- 
lianus. Severus then turned his arms against 
Pescennius Niger, who had been saluted em- 
peror by the eastern legions. The struggle was 
brought to a close by a decisive battle near Is- 
sus, in which Niger was defeated by Severus, 
and, having been shortly afterward "taken pris- 
oner, was put to death by order of the latter 
(194). Severus then laid siege to Byzantium, 
which refused to submit to him even after the 
death of Niger, and which was not taken till 
196. The city was treated with great severity 
by Severus. Its walls were levelled with the 
earth, its soldiers and magistrates put to death, 
j and the town itself, deprived of all its political 
! privileges, made over to the Perinthians. Dur- 
; ing the continuance of this siege, Severus had 
\ crossed the Euphrates (195) and subdued the 
Mesopotamian Arabians. He returned to Italy 
in 196, and in the same year proceeded to Gaul 
to oppose Albinus, who had been proclaimed 
J emperor by the troops in that country. Albinus 
I was defeated and slai^ in a terrible battle fought 
near Lyons on the 19th of February, 197. Se- 
' verus returned to Rome in the same year ; but 
| after remaining a short time in the capital, he 
set out for the East in order to repel the inva- 
sion of the Parthians, who were ravaging Mes- 
opotamia. He crossed the Euphrates early in 
198, and commenced a series of operations which 
were attended with brilliant results. Seleucia 
and Babylon were evacuated by the enemy, and 



SEVERUS, SULPICIUS. 



SIBYLLA. 



Ctesiphon was taken and plundered after a short 
siege. After spending three years in the East, 
and visiting Arabia, Palestine, and Egypt, Se- 
verus returned to Rome in 202. For the next 
seven years he remained tranquilly at Rome, 
but in 208 he went to Britain with his sons 
Caracalla and Gcta. Here he carried on war 
against the Caledonians, and erected the cele- 
brated wall, which bore his name, from the Sol- 
way to the mouth of the Tyne. After remain- 
ing two years in Britain, he died at Eboracum 
(York) on the 4th of February, 211, in the six- 
ty-fifth year of his age and the eighteenth of 
his reign. 

Severus, Sulpicius, chiefly celebrated as an 
ecclesiastical historian, was a native of Aquita- 
nia, and flourished toward the close of the fourth 
century under Arcadius and Honorius. He was 
descended from a noble family, and was orig- 
inally an advocate ; but he eventually became 
a presbyter of the church, and attached himself 
closely to St. Martin of Tours. The extant 
works of Severus are, 1. Historia Sacra, an epit- 
ome of sacred history, extending from the crea- 
tion of the world to the consulship of Stilicho 
and Aurelianus, A.D. 400. 2. Vita S. Martini 
Turonensis. 3. Tres Epistolce. 4. Dialogi duo, 
containing a review of the dissensions which 
had arisen among ecclesiastics in the East re- 
garding the works of Origen. 5. Epistolce Sex. 
The best edition of the complete works of Se- 
verus is by Hieronymus de Prato, 4to, 2 vols., 
Veron., 1741-1754. 

[Severus, the architect, with Celer, of Ne- 
ro's golden house.] 

[Severus Mons, a rocky eminence in the land 
of the Sabini, on the borders of Picenum, prob- 
ably belonged to Mons Fiscellus (now Monti 
delta Sibilla).] 

[Sevinus Lacus. Vid. Sebinus Lacus. 

[Sevo Mons (now Mount Kjdlen), an exten- 
sive and lofty range of mountains in Scandi- 
navia.] 

Seuthes (Zevdnq), the name of several kings 
of the Odrysians in Thrace. Of these the most 
important was the nephew of Sitalces, whom he 
succeeded on the throne in 424. During a long 
reign he raised his kingdom to a height of pow- 
er and prosperity which it had never previously 
attained. 

Sextia or Sestia Gens, plebeian, one of whose 
members, namely, L. Sextius Sextinus Latera- 
nus, was the first plebeian who obtained the 
consulship, B.C. 366. 

Sextia Aqu^e. Vid. Aqu^e Sexti^e. 

Sextius or Sestius. 1. P., quaestor B.C. 63, 
and tribune of the plebs 57. In the latter year 
he took an active part in obtaining Cicero's re- 
call from banishment. Like Milo, he kept a 
band of armed retainers to oppose P. Clodius 
and his partisans ; and in the following year 
(56) he was accused of Vis on account of his 
violent acts during his tribunate. He was de- 
fended by Cicero in an oration still extant, and 
was acquitted on the 14th of March, chiefly in 
consequence of the powerful influence of Pom- 
pey.- In 53 Sextius was praetor. On the break- 
ing out of the civil war in 49, Sextius first es- 
poused Pompey's party, but he afterward joined 
Caesar, who sent him, in 48, into Cappadocia. 
He was alive in 43, as appears from Cicero's 



correspondence. — 2. L., son of the preceding by 
his first wife, Postumia. He served under M. 
Brutus in Macedonia, but subsequently became 
the friend of Augustus. Or.e of Horace's odes 
is addressed to him.— 3. T., one of Caesar's le- 
gates in Gaul, and afterward governor of the 
province of Numidia or New Africa, at the time 
of Cajsar's death (44). Here he carried on war 
against Q. Cornificius, who held the province of 
Old Africa, and whom he defeated and slew in 
battle. 

Sextius Calvinus. Vid. Calvinus. 

Sextus Empiricus, was a physician, and re- 
ceived his name Empiricus from belonging to 
the school of the Empirici. He was a contem- 
porary of Galen, and lived in the first half of 
the third century of the Christian era. Noth- 
ing is known of his life. He belonged to the 
Skeptical school of philosophy. Two of his 
works are extant : 1. Ilvpfiuvcat 'Tnorvrruasic rj 
cketttlku vnofivrj/iara, containing the doctrines 
of the Skeptics in three books. 2. Ilpbc rovg 
(iadrjpi.arLK.ovc avTipprjTtKol, against the Mathe- 
matici, in eleven books, is an attack upon all 
positive philosophy. The first six books are a 
refutation of the six sciences of grammar, rhet- 
oric, geometry, arithmetic, astrology, and mu- 
sic. The remaining five books are directed 
against logicians, physical philosophers, and 
ethical writers, and form, in fact, a distinct 
work, which may be viewed as belonging to the 
'YTTOTwrcuaeic. The two works are a great re- 
pository of doubts; the language is as clear and 
perspicuous as the subject will allow. Edited 
by Fabricius, Lips., 1718. [A reimpression of 
this edition appeared at Leipzig, 1842, 2 vols. 
8vo : a new edition, with an amended text, was 
published by Bekker at Berlin, 1842.] 

[Sextus, of Chaeronea, Plutarch's sister's 
son, a Stoic philosopher, instructor of the Em- 
peror Antoninus.] 

Sextus Rufus. 1. The name prefixed to a 
work entitled De Regionibus Urbis Roma, pub- 
lished by Onuphrius Panvinius at Frankfort in 
1558. This work is believed by the best to- 
I pographers to have been compiled at a late pe- 
riod, and is not regarded as a document of au- 
thority. — 2. Sextus Rufus is also the name pre- 
fixed to an abridgment of Roman History in 
twenty-eight short chapters, entitled Breviarium 
de Victoriis et Provinciis Populi Romani, and ex- 
ecuted by command of the Emperor Valens, to 
whom it is dedicated. This work is usually- 
printed with the larger editions of Eutropius, 
and of the minor Roman historians. There are 
no grounds for establishing a connection be- 
tween Sextus Rufus the historian and the au- 
thor of the work De Regionibus. 

Sibje or Sibi (St'&ri, 2«&>0, a rude people in 
the northwest of India (in the Punjab), above 
the confluence of the Rivers Hydaspes (now 
Jelum) and Acesines (now Chenab), who were 
clothed in skins and armed with clubs, and 
whom, therefore, the soldiers of Alexander re- 
garded, whether seriously or in jest, as descend- 
ants of Hercules. 

Sibylla (HSvlXai), the name by which sev- 
eral prophetic women are designated. The first 
Sibyl, from whom all the rest are said to have 
derived their name, is called a daughter of Dar- 
I danus snd Neso. Some authors mention onlv 

807 



SICAMBRI. 



SICILIA 



four Sibyls, the Erythraean, the Samian, the 
Egyptian, and the Sardian ; but it was more 
commonly believed that there were ten, namely, 
the Babylonian, the Libyan, the Delphian (an 
elder Delphian, who was a daughter of Zeus 
and Lamia, and a younger one), the Cimmerian, 
the Erythraean (also an elder and a younger 
one, the latter of whom was called Herophile), 
the Samian, the Cumeean (sometimes identified 
with the Erythraean), the Hellespontian or Tro- 
jan, the Phrygian, and the Tiburtine. The 
most celebrated of these Sibyls is the Cumaean, 
who is mentioned under the names of Hero- 
phile, Demo, Phemonoe, Deiphobe, Demophile, 
and Amalthea. She was consulted by iEneas 
before he descended into the lower world. She 
is said to have come to Italy from the East, and 
she is the one who, according to tradition, ap- 
peared before King Tarquinius, offering him the 
Sibylline books for sale. Respecting the Sibyl- 
line books, vid. Diet, of Antiq., art. Sibyllini 
Libri. 

Sicambri. Vid. Sygambri. 

[Sic ana (ZinavT)), a city of Iberia, on the River 
Sicanus, whence tradition made the Sicani to 
have emigrated to Sicily. Vid. Sicilia.] 

Sicani, Siceli, Siceliot^e. Vid. Sicilia. 

[Sicanus. Vtd. Sicana.] 

[Sicanus CZucavog), a Syracusan, son of Exe- 
cestus, one of the generals of the Syracusans 
at the time of the Athenian expedition, B.C. 
415. He was sent to Agrigentum, which he 
endeavored to regain by stratagem from the 
party who had seized upon it and driven out 
those favorable to Syracuse. At the great bat- 
tle in the harbor of Syracuse he commanded a 
wing of the Syracusan fleet.] 

Sicarii (i. e., assassins), the name given by 
the Romans to certain savage mountain tribes 
of the Lebanon, who were, like the Thugs of 
India, avowed murderers by profession. In the 
same mountains there existed, at the time of 
the Crusades, a branch of the fanatic sect call- 
ed Assassins, whose habits resembled those of 
the Sicarii, and whose name the Crusaders im- 
ported into Europe ; but these were of Arabian 
origin. 

Sicca Veneria (now probably A l-Kaff), a con- 
siderable city of Northern Africa, on the fron- 
tier of Numidia and Zeugitana, built on a hill 
near the River Bagradas. It derived its name 
from a temple of Venus, in which the goddess 
w 7 as worshipped with rites peculiar to the cor- 
responding Eastern deity Astarte, whence it 
may be inferred that the place was a Phoenician 
settlement. 

Sich^eus, also called Acerbas. Vid. Acerbas. 

Sicilia (now Sicily), one of the largest islands 
in the Mediterranean Sea. It was supposed by 
the ancients to be the same as the Homeric isl- 
and Thrinacia {QpLvaKia), and it was therefore 
frequently called Thrinacia, Trinacia, or Tri- 
nacris, a name which was believed to be de- 
rived from the triangular figure of the island. 
For the same reason, the Roman poets called it 
Triquetra. Its more usual name came from 
its later inhabitants, the Siceli, whence it was 
called Sicelia (ZlkeTi'lo), which the Romans 
changed into Sicilia. As the Siceli also bore 
the name of Sicani, the island was also called 
Sicania CZiicav'ia). Sicily is separated from the 
808 



southern coast of Italy by a narrow channel 
called Fretum Siculum, sometimes simply Fre- 
tum (Uopd/ioc), and also Scyll^eum Fretcm, of 
which the modern name is Faro di Messina. 
The sea on the east and south of the island was 
also called Mare Siculum. The island itself is 
in the shape of a triangle. The northern and 
southern sides are about one hundred and sev- 
enty-five miles each in length, not including the 
windings of the coast ; and the length of the 
eastern side is about one hundred and fifteen 
miles. The northwestern point, the Promonto- 
rium Lilybaum, is about ninety miles from Cape 
Bon, on the coast of Africa ; the northeastern 
point, Promontorium Pclorus, is about three miles 
from the coast of Calabria in Italy ; and the 
southeastern point, Promontorium Pachynus, is 
sixty miles from the island of Malta. Sicily 
formed originally part of Italy, and was torn 
away from it by some volcanic eruption, as the 
ancients generally believed. A range of mount- 
ains, which are a continuation of the Apen- 
nines, extends throughout the island from east 
to west. The general name of this mountain 
range was Nebrodi Montes (now Madonia), of 
which there were several offshoots known by 
different names. Of these the most important 
were the celebrated volcano .-Etna on the east- 
ern side of the island, Eryx (now St. Giuliano) 
in the extreme west, near Drepanum, and the 
Heraei Montes (now Monti Sori) in the south, 
running down to the promontory Pachynus. A 
large number of rivers flow down from the 
mountains, but most of them are dry, or nearly 
so, in the summer. The soil of Sicily was very- 
fertile, and produced in antiquity an immense 
quantity of wheat, on which the population of 
Rome relied to a great extent for their subsist- 
ence. So celebrated was it even in early times 
on account of its corn, that it was represented 
as sacred to Demeter (Ceres), and as the favor- 
ite abode of this goddess. Hence it was in this 
island that her daughter Persephone (Proser- 
pina) was carried away by Pluto. Besides corn 
the island produced excellent wine, saffron, 
honey, almonds, and the other southern fruits. 
The earliest inhabitants of Sicily are said to 
have been the savage Cyclopes and Laestry- 
gones ; but these are fabulous beings, and the 
first inhabitants mentioned in history are the 
Sicani CLikclvol) or Siculi (IikeIo'i.), who cross- 
ed over into the island from Italy. Some writ- 
ers, indeed, regard the Sicani and Siculi as two 
distinct tribes, supposing the latter only to have 
migrated from Italy, and the former to have 
been the aboriginal inhabitants of the country ; 
but there is no good reason for making any dis- 
tinction between them. They appear to have 
been a Celtic people. According to Thucyd- 
ides, their original settlement was on the River 
Sicanus in Iberia ; but as Thucydides extends 
Iberia as far as the Rhone, it is probable that 
Sicanus was a river of Gaul, and it may have 
been the Sequana, as some modern writers sup- 
pose. The ancient writers relate that these 
Sicani, being hard pressed by the Ligyes (Li- 
gures), crossed the Alps and settled in Latinm , 
that, being driven out of this country by the 
Aborigines with the help of Pelasgians, they 
migrated to the south of the peninsula, where 
they lived for a considerable time along with 



SICILIA. 



SICULUS FLACCUS. 



the CEnotrians; and that at last they crossed 
over to Sicily, to which they gave their name. 
They spread over the greater part of the island, 
but in later tunes were found chiefly in the in- 
terior and in the northern part ; some of the 
most important towns belonging to them were 
Herbita, Agyrium, Adranum, and Enna. The 
next immigrants into the island were Cretans, 
who are said to have come to Sicily under their 
king, Minos, in pursuit of Daedalus, and to have 
settled on the southern coast in the neighbor- 
hood of Agrigentum, where they founded Minoa 
(afterward Heraclea Minoa). Then came the 
Elymaei, a small band of fugitive Trojans, who 
are said to have built Entella, Eryx, and Egesta. 
These Cretans and Elymeei, however, if indeed 
they ever visited Sicily, soon became incorpo- 
rated with the Siculi. The Phoenicians, like- 
wise, at an early period formed settlements, for 
the purposes of commerce, on all the coasts of 
Sicily, but more especially on the northern and 
northwestern parts. They were subsequently 
obliged to retire from the greater part of their 
settlements before the increasing power of the 
Greeks, and to confine themselves to Motya, 
Solus, and Panormus. But the most important 
of all the immigrants into Sicily were the 
Greeks. The first body of Greeks who landed 
in the island were Chalcidians from Eubcea, and 
Megarians led by the Athenian Thucles. These 
Greek colonists built the town of Naxos, B.C. 
735. They were soon followed by other Greek 
colonists, who founded a number of very flour- 
ishing cities, such as Syracuse in 734, Leontini 
and Catana in 730, Me^ara Ilybla in 726, Gela 
in 690, Selinus in 626, Agrigentum in 579, etc. 
The Greeks soon became the ruling race in the 
island, and received the name of Siceliot^e 
(I,tKe?aC>rat) to distinguish them from the earlier 
inhabitants. At a later time the Carthaginians 
obtained a firm footing in Sicily. Their first 
attempt was made in 480 ; but they were de- 
feated by Gelon of Syracuse, and obliged to re- 
tire with great loss. Their second invasion in 
409 was more successful. They took Selinus 
in this year, and four years afterward (405) the 
powerful city of Agrigentum. They now be- 
came the permanent masters of the western 
part of the island, and were engaged in frequent 
wars with Syracuse and the other Greek cities. 
The struggle between the Carthaginians and 
Greeks continued, with a few interruptions, 
down to the first Punic war ; at the close of 
which (241) the Carthaginians were obliged to 
evacuate the island, the western part of which 
now passed into the hands of the Romans, and 
was made a Roman province. The eastern 
part still continued under the rule of Hieron of 
Syracuse as an ally of Rome ; but after the re- 
volt of Syracuse in the second Punic war, and 
the conquest of that city by Marcellus, the whole 
island was made a Roman province, and was 
administered by a praetor. Under the Roman 
dominion more attention was paid to agricul- 
ture than to commerce ; and, consequently, the 
Greek cities on the coast gradually declined in 
prosperity and in wealth. The inhabitants of 
the province received the Jus Latii from Julius 
Caesar ; and Antony conferred upon them, in 
accordance, as it was said, with Caesar's will, 
the full Roman franchise. Augustus, after his 



conquest of Sex. Pompey, who had held the isl- 
and for several years, founded colonies at Mes- 
sana, Tauromenium, Catana, Syracuse, Ther- 
mae, and Panormus. On the downfall of tho 
Roman empire, Sicily formed part of the king- 
dom of the Ostrogoths ; but it was taken from 
them by Belisarius in A.D. 536, and annexed 
to the Byzantine empire. It continued a prov- 
ince of this empire till 828, when it was con- 
quered by the Saracens. Literature and the 

' arts were cultivated with great success in the 

j Greek cities of Sicily. It was the birth-place 
of the philosophers Empedocles, Epicharmus, 

I and Dica3archus; of the mathematician Archi- 
medes ; of the physicians Herodicus and Acron ; 
of the historians Diodorus, Antiochus, Philis- 

i tus, and Timaeus ; of the rhetorician Gorgias ; 

j and of the poets Stesichorus and Theocritus. 
Sicima. Vid. Neapolis, No. 5. 
Sicinius. 1. L. Sicinius Bellutus, the leader 

I of the plebeians in their secession to the Sa- 

j cred Mount in B.C. 494. He was chosen one 

j of the first tribunes. — 2. L. Sicinius Dentatus, 

; called by some writers the Roman Achilles. He 

| is said to have fought in one hundred and twenty 
battles, to have slain eight of the enemy in sin- 
gle combat, to have received forty-five wounds 
on the front of his body, and to have accom- 
panied the triumphs of nine generals, whose 
victories were principally owing to his valor. 
He was tribune of the plebs in 454. He was 
put to death by the decemvirs in 450, because 
he endeavored to persuade the plebeians to se- 
cede to the Sacred Mount. The persons sent 
to assassinate him fell upon him in a lonely 
spot, but he killed most of them before they suc- 
ceeded in dispatching him. 

[Sicinnus or Sicinus (Si/ctvvof, 'Zlklvoq), a 
Persian, according to Plutarch, a slave of The- 
mistocles, and 7rai6ayuy6c to his children. In 
B.C. 480 he was employed by his master to con- 
vey to Xerxes the intelligence of the intended 
flight of the Greeks from Salamis ; and after 

1 the battle, when the Greeks had desisted from 
the further pursuit of the Persians, Themisto- 
cles again sent Sicinnus, with others, to Xerxes, 

] to claim merit with him for having dissuaded 
the Greeks from intercepting his flight. As a 
reward for his services, Themistocles afterward 

: enriched Sicinnus, and obtained for him the 
citizenship of Thespiae.] 

Sicinus (Sc/avoc : Zckivittic : now Sikino), a 

| small island in the ^Egean Sea, one of the Spo- 
rades, between Pholegandrus and Ios, with a 
town of the same name. It is said to have been 
originally called GEnoe from its cultivation of 
the vine, but to have been named Sicinus after 

! a son of Thoas and GEnoe. It was probably 

J colonized by the Ionians. During the Persian 
war it submitted to Xerxes, but it afterward 
formed part of the Athenian maritime empire. 
Sicoris (now Segrc), a river in Hispania Tar- 

; raconensis, which had its source in the terri- 
tory of the Cerretani, divided the Ilergetes and 
Lacetani, flowed by Ilerda, and after receiving 

; the River Cinga (now Cinca), fell into the Ibe- 

| rus near Octogesa. 

| Siculi. Vid. Sicilia. 

Siculum Fretum, Siculum Mare. Vid. Si- 
cilia. 

i Siculus Flaccus. Vid. Flaccus. 

809 



SICUM. 



SIDON. 



[Sicum (Zikovv), the northernmost maritime 
city of Dalmatia, where the Emperor Claudius, 
according to Pliny, planted a colony of veter- 
ans.] 

SicyonIa (ZtKvovla), a small district in the 
northeast of Peloponnesus, bounded on the east 
by the territory of Corinth, on the west by Ach- 
aia, on the south by the territory of Phlius and 
Cleonas, and on the north by the Corinthian 
Gulf. The area of the country was probably 
somewhat less than one hundred square miles. 
It consisted of a plain near the sea, with mount- 
ains in the interior. Its rivers, which ran in a 
northeasterly direction, were Sythas on the fron- 
tier of Achaia, Helisson, Sellei's, and Asopus in 
the interior, and Nemea on the frontier of the 
territory of Corinth. The land was fertile, and 
produced excellent oil. Its almonds and its fish 
were also much prized. Its chief town was Sic- 
foH (Iikvuv : Hlkvuvios), which was situated a 
little to the west of the River Asopus, and at 
the distance of twenty, or, according to others, 
twelve stadia from the sea. The ancient city, 
which was situated in the plain, was destroyed 
by Demetrius Poliorcetes, and a new city, which 
bore for a short time the name of Demetrias, was 
built by him on the high ground close to the 
Acropolis. The harbor, which, according to 
some, was connected with the city by means of 
long walls, was well fortified, and formed a town 
of itself. S icy on was one of the most an- 
cient cities of Greece. It is said to have been 
originally called iEgialea or iEgiali (AlyialeLa, 
A'r/La?.oL), after an ancient king, iEgialeus ; to 
have been subsequently named Mecone (M77- 
KuvT]), and to have been finally called Sicyon 
from an Athenian of this name. Sicyon is rep- 
resented by Homer as forming part of the em- 
pire of Agamemnon ; but on the invasion of Pe- 
loponnesus it became subject to Phalces, the 
son of Temenus, and was henceforward a Do- 
rian state. The ancient inhabitants, however, 
were formed into a fourth tribe called iEgialeis, 
which possessed equal rights with the three 
tribes of the Hylleis, Pamphyli, and Dymanatee, 
into which the Dorian conquerors were divided. 
Sicyon, on account of the small extent of its 
territory, never attained much political impor- 
tance, and was generally dependent either on 
Argos or Sparta. At the time of the second 
Messenian war it became subject to a succes- 
sion of tyrants, who administered their power 
with moderation and justice for one hundred 
years. The first of these tyrants was Andreas, 
who began to rule B.C. 676. He was followed 
in succession by Myron, Aristonymus, and Clis- 
thenes, on whose death, about 576, a republican 
form of government was established. Clisthe- 
nes had no male children, but only a daughter, 
Agariste, who was married to the Athenian 
Megacles. In the Persian war the Sicyonians 
sent fifteen ships to the battle of Salamis, and 
three hundred hoplites to the battle of Plateeae. 
In the interval between the Persian and the Pe- 
loponnesian wars, the Sicyonians were twice 
defeated and their country laid waste by the 
Athenians, first under Tolmides in 456, and 
again under Pericles in 454. In the Pelopon- 
nesian war they took part with the Spartans. 
From this time till the Macedonian supremacy 
their history requires no special mention ; but 



in the middle of the third century Sicyon took 
an active part in public affairs, in consequence 
of its being the native town of Aratus, who 
united it to the Achaean league in 251. Under 
the Romans it gradually declined ; and in the 
time of Pausanias, in the second century of the 
Christian era, many of its public buildings were 
in ruins. Sicyon was for a long time the chief 
seat of Grecian art. It gave its name to one of 
! the great schools of painting, which was found- 
! ed by Eupompus, and which produced Pamphi- 
! lus and Apelles. It is also said to have been 
! the earliest school of statuary in Greece, which 
j was introduced into Sicyon by Dipcenus and 
j Scyllis from Crete about 560 ; but its earliest 
native artist of celebrity was Canachus. Ly- 
sippus was also a native of Sicyon. The town 
was likewise celebrated for the taste and skill 
I displayed in the various articles of dress made 
j by its inhabitants, among which we find men- 
I tion of a particular kind of shoe, which was 
: much prized in all parts of Greece. 

Sida, Side (Sid?, Zidiriic, and Sid^r^f, Sidltes 
: and Sidetes). 1. (Ruins at Eski Adalia), a city 
of Pamphylia, on the coast, a little west of the 
River Melas. It was an ^Eolian colony from 
j Cyme in J2olis, and was a chief seat of the 
I worship of Minerva (Athena), who is repre- 
: sented on its coins holding a pomegranate {glStj) 
i as the emblem of the city. In the division of 
I the provinces under Constantine, it was made 
the capital of Pamphylia Prima.— 2. The old 
name of Polemonium, from which a flat district 
\ in the northeast of Pontus Polemoniacus, along 
the coast, obtained the name of Sidene (lidrivfj). 

[Sidexe CLtdr/vri), a town of Mysia, on the 
' Granicus, already, in Strabo's time, destroyed.] 
[Sidero (2id7/pu), wife of Salmoneus, step- 
mother of Tyro, was slain by Pelias in the grove 
, and at the altar of Juno.] 

Sidenus. Vid. Polemonium. 
Sidicini, an Ausonian people in the north- 
! west of Campania and on the borders of Sam- 
nium, who, being hard pressed by the Samnites, 
united themselves to the Campanians. Their 
chief town was Teanum. 

Sidon, gen. -oNis (1l66v, gen. Ziduvoc, some- 
times also lidovoc, in the Old'Testament Tsidon, 
or, in the English form, Zidon : Ziduv, 2i66vioc, 
Zidovioc, Sidonius : ruins at Saida), for a long 
time the most powerful, and probably the most 
ancient of the cities of Phcenice. As early as 
the conquest of Canaan by the Israelites it is 
1 called ' ; Great Zidon" (Joshua, xi., 8). It stood 
in a plain, about a mile wide, on the coast of the 
Mediterranean, two hundred stadia (twenty ge- 
ographical miles) north of Tyre, four hundred 
stadia (forty geographical miles) south of Bery- 
tus, sixty-six miles west of Damascus, and a 
day's journey northwest of the source of the 
Jordan at Paneas. It had a fine double harbor, 
now almost filled with sand, and was strongly 
I fortified. It was the chief seat of the maritime 
power of Phcenice, until eclipsed by its own col- 
ony, Tyre (vid. Tyrus) ; and its power on the 
land side seems to have extended over all Phce- 
nice, and at one period (in the time of the 
Judges) over at least a part of Palestine. In 
the lime of David and Solomon, Sidon appears 
to have been subject to the King of Tyre. It 
j probably regained its former rank, as the first 



SIDONIUS APOLLINARIS. 



SILANION. 



of the Phoenician cities, by its submission to 
Shalmanezer at the time of the Assyrian con- 
quest of Syria, for we find it governed by its 
own king under the Babylonians and Persians. 
In the expedition of Xerxes against Greece, the 

' Sidonians furnished the best ships in the whole 
fleet, and their king obtained the highest place, 
next to Xerxes, in the council, and above the 
King of Tyre. Sidon received the great blow to 
her "prosperity in the reign of Artaxerxes III. 
Ochus, when the Sidonians, having taken part 

: in the revolt of Phoeniee and Cyprus, and being 

. betrayed to Ochus by their own king Tennes, 
burned themselves with their city, B.C. 351. 
The city was rebuilt, but the fortifications were 
not restored, and the place was therefore of 

I no further importance in military history. It 
shared the fortunes of the rest of Phcenice, and 
under the Romans it retained much of its com- 
mercial importance, which it has not yet en- 
tirely lost. In addition to its commerce, Sidon 
was famed for its manufactures of glass, the 
invention of which was said to have been made 
in Phoenicia. 

Sidonius Apollinaris, whose full name was 
C. Sollius Sidonius Apollinaris, was born at Lug- 
dunum (now Lyons) about A D. 431. At an 
early age he married Papianilla, the child of 
Flavius Avitus ; and upon the elevation of his 
father-in-law to the imperial dignity (456) he 
accompanied him to Rome, and celebrated his 
consulship in a poem still extant. Avitus raised 
Sidonius to the rank of a senator, nominated 
him prefect of the city, and caused his statue 
to be placed among the effigies which graced 
the library of Trajan. The downfall of Avitus 
threw a cloud over the fortunes of Sidonius, 
who, having been shut up in Lyons, and having 
endured the hardships of the siege, purchased 
pardon by a complimentary address to the vic- 
torious Majorian. The poet was not only for- 
given, but was rewarded with a laurelled bust, 
and with the title of count. After passing some 
years in retirement daring the reign of Severus, 
Sidonius was dispatched to Rome (467) in the 
character of ambassador from the Arverni to An- 
themius, and on thi's occasion delivered a third 
panegyric in honor of a third prince, which 
proved not less successful than his former ef- 
forts, for he was now raised to the rank of a 
patrician, again appointed prefect of the city, 
and once more honored with a statue. But a 
still more remarkable, tribute was soon after- 
ward rendered to his talents ; for, although not 
a priest, the vacant see of Clermont in Auvergne 
was forced upon his reluctant acceptance (472) 
at the death of the bishop Eparchius. During 
the remainder of his life he devoted himself to 
the duties of his sacred office, and especially re- 
sisted with energy the progress of Arianism. 
He died in 482, or, according to others, in 484. 
The extant works of Sidonius are, 1. Carmina, 
twenty-four in number, composed in various 
measures upon various subjects. Of these the 
most important are the three panegyrics already 
mentioned. 2. Epistolarum Libri IX., contain- 
ing one hundred and forty-seven letters, many 
of them interspersed with pieces of poetry. 
They are addressed to a wide circle of relatives 
and friends upon topics connected with politics, 
literature, and domestic occurrences, but sel- 



dom touch upon ecclesiastical matters. The 
writings of Sidonius are characterized by great 
subtlety of thought, expressed in phraseology 
abounding with harsh and violent metaphors. 
Hence he is generally obscure ; but his works 
throughout bear the impress of an acute, vigor- 
ous, and highly-cultivated intellect. The best 
edition of his works is that of Sirmond, 4to, 
Paris, 1652 —[2. A sophist in Athens in the 
second century after Christ ] 

Sidus (StooOc, -ovvrog : Zidovvrior), a fortified 
place in the territory of Corinth, on the bay of 
Cenchrea?, and a little to the east of Crommyon. 
It was celebrated for its apples. 

Sidussa (lidovaaa), a small place in Lydia, 
belonging to the territory of the Ionian city of 
Erythrae. 

Sidvma (to. 2tdvfia: ruins at Tortoorcar Hi- 
sar), a town in the interior of Lycia, on a mount- 
ain, north of the mouth of Xanthus. 

Siga (2t'ya), a considerable sea-port town of 
Mauretania Cassariensis, on a river of the same 
name, the mouth of which opened into a large 
bay, which formed the harbor of the town. Its 
site has not been identified with certainty. 

[Sigei Campi, in the iEneid of Virgil (vii., 
294), the region around the Sigeum Promonto- 
rium.] 

Sigeum (now Yenisheri), the northwestern 
promontory of the Troad, of Asia Minor, and of 
all Asia, and the southern headland at the en- 
trance of the Hellespont, opposite to the Prom- 
ontorium Mastusium (now Cape Hcllcs), at the 
extremity of the Thracian Chersonese. It is 
here that Homer places the Grecian fleet and 
camp during the Trojan war. Near it was a 
sea-port town of the same name, which was the 
object of contention between the iEolians and 
the Athenians in the war in which Pittacus dis- 
tinguished himself by his valor, and in which Al- 
caeus lost his shield. Vid. Pittacus. Alc^eus. 
It was afterward the residence of the Pisistra- 
tidse, when they were expelled from Athens. It 
was destroyed by the people of Ilium soon after 
the Macedonian conquest. 

Signia (Signinus : now Scg?ii), a town in La- 
tium, on the east side of the Volscian Mount- 
ains, founded by Tarquinius Priscus. It was 
celebrated for its temple of Jupiter Urius, for 
! its astringent wine, for its pears, and for a par- 
ticular kind of pavement for the floors of houses, 
called opus Signinum, consisting of plaster made 
of tiles beaten to powder and tempered with 
mortar. There are still remains of the polygo- 
nal walls of the ancient town. 

[Sigriane CEtyptavrj), an extensive tract of 
country in the southeast of Media.] 

Sigrium (liypiov. now Sigri), the western 
promontory of the island of Lesbos. 

Sila Silva (now Sila), a large forest in Brut- 
tium, on the Apennines, extending south of Con- 
sentia to the Sicilian Straits, a distance of seven 
I hundred stadia. It was celebrated for the ex- 
; cellent pitch which it yielded. 

[Silana (now probably Poliana), a city in the 
\ western part of Thessaly, south of the Peneus.] 

Silanion- (I,i?mviiov), a distinguished Greek 
j statuary in bronze, was an Athenian and a con- 
temporary of Lysippus, and flourished 324. The 
statues of Silanion belonged to two classes, ideal 
and actual portraits. Of the former the most 

811 



SILANUS, JUNIUS. 

celebrated was his dying Jocasta, in which a 
deadly paleness was given to the face by the 
mixture of silver with the bronze. His statue 
of Sappho, which stood in the prytaneum at Syr- 
acuse in the time of Verres, is alluded to by 
Cicero in terras of the highest praise. 

Silanus, Junius. 1. M., was praetor 212 B.C. 
In 210 he accompanied P. Scipio to Spain, and 
served under him with great distinction during 
the whole of the war in that country. He fell 
in battle against the Boii in 196, fighting under 
the consul M. Marcellus. — 2. D., surnamed Man- 
lianus, son of the jurist T. Manlius Torquatus, 
but adopted by a D. Junius Silanus. He was 
praetor 142, and obtained Macedonia as his prov- 
ince. Being accused of extortion by the inhab- 
itants of the province, the senate referred the 
investigation of the charges to his own father 
Torquatus, who condemned his son, and banish- 
ed him from his presence ; and when Silanus 
hanged himself in grief, his father would not at- 
tend his funeral. — 3. M., consul 109, fought in 
this year against the Cimbri in Transalpine 
Gaul, and was defeated. He was accused in 
104, by the tribune Cn. Domitius Ahenobarbus, 
in consequence of this defeat, but was acquitted. 
— 4. D., stepfather of M. Brutus, the murderer 
of Caesar, having married his mother Servilia. 
He was elected consul in 63 for the following 
year ; and in consequence of his being consul 
designatus, he was first asked for his opinion by 
Cicero in the debate in the senate on the pun- 
ishment of the Catilinarian conspirators. He 
was consul 62, with L. Licinius Murena, along 
with whom he proposed the Lex Licinia Julia. 
— 5. M., son of No. 4 and of Servilia, served in 
Gaul as Caesar's legatus in 53. After Caesar's 
murder in 44, he accompanied M. Lepidus over 
the Alps ; and in the following year Lepidus 
sent him with a detachment of troops into Cis- 
alpine Gaul, where he fought on the side of 
Antony. He was consul in 25. He had two 
sisters, one married to M. Lepidus, the triumvir, 
and the other to C. Cassius, one of Caesar's mur- 
derers. — 6. M., consul A.D. 19, with L. Norbanus 
Balbus. In 33 his daughter Claudia was mar- 
ried to C. Caesar, afterward the Emperor Calig- 
ula. Silanus was governor of Africa in the 
reign of Caligula, but was compelled by his 
fathei-in-law to put an end to his life. Julius 
Graecinus, the father of Agricola, had been or- 
dered by Caligula to accuse Silanus, but he de- 
clined the odious task. — 7. App., consul A.D. 28, 
with P. Silius Nerva. Claudius, soon after his 
accession, gave to Silanus in marriage Domitia 
Lepida, the mother of his wife Messalina, and 
treated him otherwise with the greatest dis- 
tinction. But shortly afterward, having refused 
the embraces of Messalina, he was put to death 
by Claudius, on the accusations of Messalina 
and Narcissus. The first wife of Silanus was 
.Emilia Lepida, the proncptis or great-grand- 
daughter of Augustus. — 8. M., son of No. 7, con- 
sul 46. Silanus was proconsul of Asia at the 
succession of Nero in 54, and was poisoned by 
command of Agrippina, who feared that he might 
avenge the death of his brother (No. 9), and 
that his descent from Augustus might lead him 
to be preferred to the youthful Nero. — 9. L., 
also a son of No 7, was betrothed to Octavia, 
the daughter of the Emperor Claudius ; but 
812 



SILICIUS. 

when Octavia was married to Nero in 48, Sila- 
nus knew that his fate was sealed, and there- 
fore put an end to his life. — 10. D. Junius Tor- 
quatus Silanus, probably also a son of No. 7, 
was consul 53. He was compelled by Nero in 
64 to put an end to his life, because he had 
boasted of being descended from Augustus.— 
11. L. Junius Torquatus Silanus, son of No. 8, 
and consequently the atnepos, or great-great- 
great-grandson of Augustus. His descent from 
Augustus rendered him an object of suspicion 
to Nero. He was accordingly accused in 65 ; 
was sentenced to banishment ; and was shortly 
afterward put to death at Barium in Apulia. 

Silarus (now Silaro), a river in Lower Italy, 
forming the boundary between Lucania and 
Campania, rises in the Apennines, and, after 
receiving the Tanager (now Negri) and Calor 
(now Colore), falls into the Sinus Paestanus a 
little to the north of Paestum. Its water is said 
to have petrified plants. 

Silenus (leilrjvog). 1. (Mythological.) It is 
remarked in the article Satyri that the older 
Satyrs were generally termed Sileni; but one 
of these Sileni is commonly the Silenus, who 
always accompanies the god, and whom he is 
said to have brought up and instructed. Like 
the other Satyrs, he is called a son of Mercury 
(Hermes) ; but others make him a son of Pan 
by a nymph, or of Terra (Gaea). Being the con- 
stant companion of Bacchus (Dionysus), he is 
said, like the god, to have been born at Nysa. 
Moreover, he took part in the contest with the 
Giants, and slew Enceladus. He is described 
as a jovial old man, with a bald head, a puck 
nose, fat and round like his wine bag, which he 
always carried with him, and generally intox- 
icated. As he could not trust his own legs, he 
is generally represented riding on an ass, or 
supported by other Satyrs. In every other re- 
spect he is described as resembling his brethren 
in their love of sleep, wine, and music. He is 
mentioned, along with Marsyas and Olympus, 
| as the inventor of the flute, which he is often 
seen playing; and a special kind of dance was 
called after him Silenus, while he himself is 
designated as the dancer. But it is a peculiar 
feature in his character that he was conceived 
also as an inspired prophet, who knew all the 
past and the most distant future, and as a sage 
who despised all the gifts of fortune. When 
he was drunk and asleep, he was in the power 
of mortals, who might compel him to prophesy 
and sing by surrounding him with chains of 
flowers. — 2. (Literary.) A native of Calatia, 
[wrote a work entitled ZtKeliKa in at least three 
books ; he also wrote an account of the cam- 
paigns of Hannibal, in whose camp he was, and 
with whom he lived as long as fortune permit- 
! ted, says Cornelius Nepos : he was also] a writ- 
i er upon Roman history.— 3. It was probably a 
different writer from the last, who is quoted 
several times by Athenaeus and others as the 
| author of a work on foreign words. [Silenus 
: also compiled a collection of fabulous histories.] 
i Silicense Flumen, a river in Hispania Bae- 
tica, in the neighborhood of Corduba, probably 
the Guadajoz. or a tributary of the latter, 
i [Silicius, P. (Coronas), one of the judices 
1 appointed to try the conspirators against the 
! life of Caesar in B.C. 43, according to the Lex 



SILIUS ITALICUS. 



S1MARISTUS. 



Pedia. He voted for the acquittal of M. Brutus, 
and was, on this account, afterward proscribed 
by the triumvirs.] 

Silius Italicus, C, a Roman poet, was born 
about A.D. 25 The place of his birth is uncer- 
tain, as is also the import of his surname Ital- 
icus. From his early years he devoted himself 
to oratory and poetry, taking Cicero as his mod- 
el in the former and Virgil in the latter. He 
acquired great reputation as an advocate, and 
was afterward one of the Centumviri. He was 
consul in 68, the year in which Nero perished ; 
he was admitted to familiar intercourse with 
Vitellius, and was subsequently proconsul of 
Asia. His two favorite residences were a man- 
sion near Puteoli, formerly the Academy of 
Cicero, and the house in the vicinity of Naples 
once occupied by Virgil; and here he continued 
to reside until he had completed his seventy- 
fifth year, when, in consequence of the pain 
caused by an incurable disease, he starved him- 
self to death. The great work of Silius Ital- 
icus was a heroic poem in seventeen books, en- 
titled Punica, which has descended to us en- 
tire. It contains a narrative of the events of 
the second Punic war, from the capture of Sa- 
guntum to the triumph of Scipio Africanus. 
The materials are derived almost entirely from 
Livy and Polybius. It is a dull, heavy per- 
formance, and hardly deserves the name of a 
poem. The best editions are by Drakenborch, 
4to, Traj. ad Rhen , 1717, and Ruperti, 2 vols. 
8vo, Goetting., 1795. 

[Silo Abronius. Vid. Abroxius Silo.] 
Silo, Q. Pomp^dius, the leader of the Marsi 
in the Social war, and the soul of the whole un- 
dertaking. He fell in battle against Q. Metellus 
Pius, B.C. 88, and with his death the war came 
to an end. 

Silo (SiZcj, 2?//l£j, S^Auv, "Lrtovv : in the Old 
Testament, Shiloh and Shilon : ruins at Sei- 
lun), a city of Palestine, in the mountains of 
Ephraim, in the district afterward called Sama- 
ria ; important as the seat of the sacred ark and 
the tabernacle from the time of Joshua to the 
capture of the ark in the time of Eli, after which 
itseems to have fallen into insignificance, though 
it is occasionally mentioned in the Old Testa- 
ment. 

Sil5ah, Siloam (Si^wa, SiAw^u : in the Old 
Testament, Shiloah : now Siloah), a celebrated 
fountain in the southeast of Jerusalem, just 
without the city, at the southern entrance of 
the valley called Tyropoeon, between the hills of 
Zion and Moriah. It is remarkable for the ebb 
and flow of its waters at the different seasons. 

[Silpia, a city of Hispania Baetica, north of 
the Baetis, to be sought for in the Sieira More- 
na. Reichard considers it as identical with the 
'HAtjya of Polybius, which lay in this same re- 
gion, and as corresponding to the modern Li- 
nares.] 

Silsilis (likes i7uc : now ruins at Hajjar Sel- 
selth or Jebel Selsclch), a fortified station in Up- 
per Egypt, on the western bank of the Nile, 
south of Apollinopolis the Great. The name 
signifies the Rock or Hill of a Chain, and is de- 
rived from the circumstance of the river flow- 
ing here in a ravine so narrow that a chain can 
easily be stretched across it to command the 
navigation. 



Silures, a powerful people in Britain, inhab- 
iting South Wales, long offered a formidable re- 
sistance to the Romans, and were the only peo- 
ple in the island who at a later time maintained 
their independence against the Saxons 

[Silus, Ai.bucius C, a Roman rhetorician, a 
native of Novaria, in the north of Italy, was 
zedile in his native town Having left Novaria 
in consequence of a public insult, he repaired 
to Rome in the time of Augustus, and there 
acquired great renown by his oratory in the 
school of Plancus. Failing in one of his causes 
as a pleader, he left Rome for Milan, but finally 
retired to his native XQjwn, and there put an end 
to his life.] 

[Silus Domitius, the former husband of Ar- 
ria Galla, whom he quietly surrendered to 
Piso.] 

Silvanus, a Latin divinity of the fields and 
forests, to whom in the earliest times the Tyr- 
rhenian Pelasgians are said to have dedicated 
a grove and a festival. He is also called the 
protector of the boundaries of fields. In con- 
nection with woods (sylvestris deus), he espe- 
cially presided over plantations, and delighted 
in trees growing wild ; whence he is represent- 
ed as carrying the trunk of a cypress. Respect- 
ing his connection with cypress, moreover, the 
following story is told. Silvanus, or, accord- 
ing to others, Apollo, once killed by accident a 
hind belonging to the youth Cyparissus, with 
whom the god was in love : the youth, in con- 
sequence, died of grief, and was metamorphosed 
into a cypress. Silvanus is further described 
as the divinity protecting the flocks of cattle, 
warding off wolves, and promoting their fertil- 
ity. Being the god of woods and flocks, he is 
also described as fond of music ; the syrinx 
was sacred to him, and he is mentioned along 
with the Pans and Nymphs. Later writers even 
identified Silvanus with Pan, Faunus, Inuus, 
and ^Egipan. In the Latin poets, as well as in 
works of art, he always appears as an old man, 
but as cheerful and in love with Pomona. The 
sacrifices offered to him consisted of grapes, 
corn-ears, milk, meat, wine, and pigs. 

Silvium (Silvinus), a town of the Peucetii in 
Apulia, on the borders of Lucania, twenty miles 
southeast of Venusia. 

Silvius, the son of Ascanius, is said to have 
been so called because he was born in a wood. 
All the succeeding kings of Alba bore the cog- 
nomen Silvius. The series of these mythical 
kings is given somewhat differently by Livy, 
Ovid, and Dionysius, as the following list will 
show : 



Livy. 

1. JSneas. 

2. Ascanius. 

3. Silvius. 

4. iEneas Silvius. 

5. Latinus Silvius. 

6. Alba. 

7. Atys. 

8. Capys. 

9. Capetus. 

10. Tiberinus. 

11. Agrippa. 



Ovid. Dionysius. 

JEne&s. iEneas. 

Ascanius. Ascanius. 

Silvius. Silvius. 

jEneas Silvius. 

Latinus. Latinus Silviua. 

Alba. Alba. 

Epytus. Capetus. 

Capys. Capys Silvius. 

Capetus. Calpetus. 

Tiberinus. Tiberinus. 

Remulus. Asrippa. 



12. Romulus Silvius. Acrota. Alladius. 

13. Aventinus. Aventinus. Aventinus. 

14. Proca. Palatinus. Procas. 

15. Amulius. Amulius. Amulius. 
[Simaristus (ZifiupioToc), a Greek gramma- 

813 



SIMBRIVII LACUS. 



SIMPLICIUS. 



rian, author of a work entitled I,vv6vvfia in at 
least four books.] 

[Simbritii Lacus, called by Tacitus Simbrui- 
na Stagna, three small lakes formed by the 
Anio, in Latium, between Sublaqueum and Tre- 
ba, famed for the coolness and salutary proper- 
ties of their waters. They were used by Clau- 
dius to increase the volume of the Aqua Clau- 
dia (vid. Roma, p. 754, a), and by Nero to irrigate 
and beautify his Sublaquean villa.] 

Simmias (2i/i// £ 'af). 1. Of Thebes, first the 
disciple of the Pythagorean philosopher Philo- 
laiis, and afterward the friend and disciple of 
Socrates, at whose deatlyhe was present, hav- 
ing come from Thebes with his brother Cebes. 
The two brothers are the principal speakers, 
besides Socrates himself, in the Phadon. Sim- 
mias wrote twenty-three dialogues on philo- 
sophical subjects, all of which are lost. — 2. Of 
Rhodes, a poet and grammarian of the Alexan- 
drean school, flourished about B.C. 300. The 
Greek Anthology contains six epigrams ascribed 
to Simmias, besides three short poems of that 
fantastic species called griphi or carmina figu- 
rata, that is, pieces in which the lines are so 
arranged as to make the whole poem resemble 
the form of some object ; those of Simmias are 
entitled, from their forms, the Wings (irTipvyeg), 
the Egg (wdv), and the Hatchet (TreXenvg). 

[Simmias (Zinfiiac), a Macedonian, son of An- 
dromenes, phalanx-leader in the army of Alex- 
ander the Great at the battle of Arbela. He 
was charged, along with his brothers Amyntas, 
Polemon, and Attalus, with being concerned in 
the conspiracy of Philotas, but was acquitted.] 

Simois. Fz^.Troas. As a mythological per- 
sonage, the river-god Simois is the son of Ocea- 
nus and Tethys, and the father of Astyochus 
and Hieromneme. 

[Simoisius (Ltfioeloioc), a Trojan warrior, son 
of Anthemion, slain in battle by Ajax, son of 
Telamon. He was called Simoisius because he 
was born on the banks of the Simois.] 

Simox (LifMiov). 1. One of the disciples of 
Socrates, and by trade a leather-cutter. Soc- 
rates was accustomed to visit his shop, and 
converse with him on various subjects. These 
conversations Simon afterward committed to 
writing, in thirty-three dialogues, all of which 
are lost. — 2. Of iEgina, a celebrated statuary in 
bronze, who flourished about B.C. 475. 

Simonides (Li/iuvidnc). 1. Of Amorgos, was 
the second, both in time and in reputation, of 
the three principal iambic poets of the early pe- 
riod of Greek literature, namely, *\rchilochus, 
Simonides, and Hipponax. He was a native 
of Samos, whence he led a colony to the neigh- 
boring island of Amorgos, where he founded 
three cities, Minoa, JEgialus, and Arcesine, in 
the first of which he fixed his own abode. He 
flourished about B.C. 664. Simonides was most 
celebrated for his iambic poems, which were of 
two species, gnomic and satirical. The most 
important of his extant fragments is a satire 
upon women, in which he derives the various, 
though generally bad qualities of women from 
the variety of their origin ; thus the uncleanly 
woman is formed from the swine ; the cunning 
woman, from the fox ; the talkative woman, 
from the dog, and so on. The nest separate 
edition of the fragments of Simonides of Amor- 
814 



gos is by Welcker, Bonn, 1835.— 2. Of Ceos, 
one of the most celebrated lyric poets of Greece, 
was the perfecter of the Elegy and Epigram, 
and the rival of Lasus and Pindar in the Dithy- 
ramb and the Epinician Ode. He was born at 
Iulis, in Ceos, B.C. 556, and was the son of 
Leoprepes. He appears to have been brought 
up to music and poetry as a profession. From 
his native island he proceeded to Athens, prob- 
ably on the invitation of Hipparchus, who at- 
tached him to his society by great rewards. 
After remaining at Athens some time, probably 
even after the expulsion of Hippias, he went to 
Thessaly, where he lived under the patronage 
of the Aleuads and Scopads. He afterward re- 
turned to Athens, and soon had the noblest op- 
portunity of employing his poetic powers in the 
celebration of the great events of the Persian 
wars. In 489 he conquered ^Eschylus in the 
contest for the prize which the Athenians of- 
fered for an elegy on those who fell at Mara- 
thon. Ten years later he composed the epi- 
i grams which were inscribed upon the tomb of 
I the Spartans who fell at Thermopylae, as well 
j as an encomium on the same heroes ; and he 
I also celebrated the battles of Artemisium and 
\ Salamis, and the great men who commanded in 
j them. He had completed his eightieth year, 
when his long poetical career at Athens was 
crowned by the victory which he gained with 
the dithyrambic chorus (477), being the fifty- 
j sixth prize which he had carried off. Shortly 
! after this he was invited to Syracuse by Hiero. 
at whose court he lived till his death' in 467. 
Simonides was a great favorite with Hiero, and 
was treated by the tyrant with the greatest mu- 
nificence. He still continued, when at Syra- 
cuse, to employ his muse occasionally in the 
service of other Grecian states. Simonides is 
said to have been the inventor of the mnemonic 
! art, and of the long vowels and double letters in 
! the Greek alphabet. He made literature a pro- 
j fession, and is said to have been the first who 
took money for his poems ; and the reproach 
J of avarice is too often brought against him by 
i his contemporary and rival, Pindar, as well as 
j by subsequent writers, to be altogether discred- 
ited. The chief characteristics of the poetry 
of Simonides were sweetness (whence bis sur- 
name of Melicertes) and elaborate finish, com- 
bined with the truest poetic conception and per- 
fect power of expression, though in originality 
and fervor he w^as far inferior, not only to the 
j early lyric poets, such as Sappho and Alcaeus, 
j but also to his contemporary Pindar. He was 
! probably both the most prolific and the most 
| generally popular of all the Grecian lyric poets, 
j The general character of his dialect is the Epic, 
I mingled with Doric and ^Eolic forms. The best 
I edition of his fragments in a separate form is 
by Schneidewin, Bruns., 1835.— [3. An Athe- 
nian general, who seized upon Eion, in Thrace, 
! in the course of the Peloponnesian war, B.C. 
425, but held it for a short time, since he was 
soon expelled with loss by the Chalcidians and 
Bottiaeans.] 

Simplicius (Iiutt?ukioc), one of the last phi- 
losophers of the Neo-Platonic school, was a na- 
tive of Cilicia, and a disciple of Ammonius and 
Damascius. In consequence of the persecu- 
tions to which the pagan philosophers were ex- 



SIMYRA. 



SINON. 



posed in the reign of Justinian, Simplicius was 
one of the seven philosophers who took refuge 
at the court of the Persian king Chosroes. 
These philosophers returned home about A.D. 
533, in consequence of a treaty of peace con- 
cluded between Chosrocs and Justinian, in 
which the former had stipulated that the phi- 
losophers should be allowed to return without 
risk, and to practice the rites of their paternal 
faith. Of the subsequent fortunes of the seven 
philosophers we learn nothing, nor do we know 
where Simplicius lived and taught. Simplicius 
wrote commentaries on several of Aristotle's 
works. His commentaries on the Categories, 
on the De Ccelo, on the Physica Auscultatio, 
and on the De Amma, are extant. In explain- 
ing Aristotle, Simplicius endeavors to show that 
Aristotle agrees with Plato even on those points 
which the former controverts ; but, though he 
attaches himself too much to the Neo-Plato- 
nists, his commentaries are marked by sound 
sense and real learning. He also wrote a com- 
mentary on the Enchiridion of Epictetus, which 
is likewise extant, [and published in Schweig- 
haeuser's Epictctca. Philosophice Monumental ol. 
iv. ; and in Didot's Scriptores Ethici Grceci, Par- 
is, 1840.] 

Simyra (ra 2i//vpa : now Zamura or Sumore), 
a fortress on the coast of Phoenice, between Or- 
thosias and the mouth of the Eleutherus, of no 
importance except as being the point from which 
the northern part of Lebanon was usually ap- 
proached. 

Sin^e (2£vai), the easternmost people of Asia, 
of whom nothing but the name was known to 
the western nations till about the time of Ptol- 
emy, who describes their country as bounded on 
the north by Serica, and on the south and west 
by India extra Gangem. It corresponded to the 
southern part of China and the eastern part of 
the Burmese peninsula. The detailed descrip- 
tion of the knowledge of the ancient geographers 
concerning it does not fall within the province 
of this work. 

*« Sinai or Sina (LXX. Siva : now Jebel-ct-Tur), 
a cluster of dark, lofty, rocky mountains in the 
southern angle of the triangular peninsula in- 
closed between the two heads of the Red Sea, 
and bounded on the north by the deserts on the 
borders of Egypt and Palestine. The name, 
which signifies a region of broken and cleft rocks, 
is used in a wider sense for the whole penin- 
sula, which formed a part of Arabia Petraea, and 
was peopled, at the time of the Exodus, by the 
Amalekites and Midianites, and afterward by 
the Nabathaean Arabs. On the other hand, the 
name is applied, in a narrower sense, to one 
particular ridge in the Sinaitic group of mount- 
ains running north and south, and terminated by 
two summits, of which the one on the north is 
called Horeb, and the one on the south Sinai or 
Jebel Musa, i. e., Moses" Mount. From the lat- 
ter name, assigned by tradition, it has usually, 
but too hastily, been inferred that the southern 
summit was that on which God gave the law to 
Moses. The fact seems, however, to be that 
Sinai and Horeb in the Old Testament are both | 
general names for the whole group, the former j 
being used in the first four books of Moses, and j 
the latter in Deuteronomy ; and that the sum- j 
mit on which the law was given w as probably ! 



j that on the north, or the one usually calleu 

j Horeb. 

Sinda (2i'v(5a : 'Livdeve, Sindensis). 1. A city 
of Pisidia, north of Cibyra, near the River Cau- 
laris— 2, 3. Vid. Sindi. 

Sindi (livdoi). 1. A people of Asiatic Sar- 
matia, on the eastern coast of the Euxine, and 
at the foot of the Caucasus. They probably 
dwelt in and about the peninsula of Taman (be- 
tween the Sea of Azov and the Black Sea), and 
to the south of the River Hypanis (now Kou- 
ban). They had a capital called Sinda (now 
Anapa?), with a harbor C2iv6uibc ?autiv). Their 
country is called ZtvdiK?}. They are also men- 
tioned by the names of Sindones and Sinpiam 
— 2. A people on the eastern coast of India ex- 
tra Gangem (in Cochin China), also called Sixdje 
i^Lvdac), and with a capital city, Sinda. 
Sindice. Vid. Sindi. 

Sindomana (now Sehwun ?), a city of India, 
on the lower course of the Indus, near the isl- 
and of Pattalene. 

Sindus CZivdoe), a town in the Macedonian, 
district of Mygdonia, on the Thermaic Gulf, and 
at the mouth of the Echedorus. 

Singara (ra Ziyyapa : now Sinjar?), a strong- 
ly fortified city and Roman colony in the inte- 
rior of Mesopotamia, eighty-four Roman miles 
south of Nisibis. It lay in a dry plain, at the 
foot of Mount Singaras (now Sinjar), an east- 
ern prolongation of Mount Masius. It was the 
scene of the defeat of Constantius by Sapor, 
through which the place was lost to the Ro- 
mans. 

Singidunum (now Belgrad), a town in Mcesia 
Superior, at the confluence of the Savus and the 
Danube, was a strong fortress, and the head- 
quarters of a legion. 

[Singili or Singilis, a town of Hispania Bae- 
tica, on a river of the same name, the ruins of 
which are found at Castillon.] 
Singiticus Sinus. Vid. Singus. 
Singus (2,'t.yyoe : Ziyyacoc), a town in Mace- 
donia, on the eastern coast of the peninsula Si- 
thonia, w 7 hich gave its name to the Sinus Sin- 
giticus. 

Sinis or Sinnis (Si'vff or 2/wtc), son of Poly- 
pemon, Pemon or Neptune (Poseidon) by Sylea, 
the daughter of Corinthus. He was a robber, 
who frequented the isthmus of Corinth, and 
killed the travellers whom he captured by fast- 
ening them to the top of a fir-tree, which he 
curbed, and then let spring up again. He him- 
self was "killed in this manner by Theseus. The 
name is connected with oivofxai. 

Sinon (2/vwv), son of ^Esimus, or, according 
to Virgil (^Ew., ii., 79), of Sisyphus, and grand- 
son of Autolicus, was a relation of Ulysses, 
whom he accompanied to Troy. After the 
Greeks had constructed the wooden horse, Si- 
non mutilated his person in order to make the 
Trojans believe that he had been maltreated by 
the Greeks, and then allowed himself to be 
taken prisoner by the Trojans. He informed 
the Trojans that the wooden horse had been 
constructed as an atonement for the Palladium 
which had been carried off by the Greeks, and 
that if they would drag it into their own city, 
Asia would gain the supremacy over Greece. 
The Trojans believed the deceiver, and dragged 
the horse into the city ; whereupon Sinon, in 

815 



SINOPE. 



SIRBONIS LACUS. 



the dead of night, let the Greeks out of the horse, 
who thus took Troy. 

Sinope (Zivutt?] : ^ivurcevg, Sinopensis : ruins 
at Sinope, Sinoub), the most important of all the 
Greek colonies on the shores of the Euxine, 
stood on the northern coast of Asia Minor, on 
the western headland of the great bay of which 
the delta of the River Halys forms the eastern 
headland, and a little east of the northernmost 
promontory of Asia Minor. Thus placed, and 
built on a peninsula, the neck of which formed 
two Cne harbors, it had every advantage for be- 
coming a great maritime city. Its foundation 
was referred mythically to the Argonaut Auto- 
lycus, who was worshipped in the city as a 
hero, and had an oracle ; but it appears in his- 
tory as a very early colony of the Milesians. 
Having been destroyed in the invasion of Asia 
by the Cimmerians, it was restored by a new 
colony from Miletus, B.C. 632, and soon became 
the greatest commercial city on the Euxine. 
Several colonies were established by the Sino- 
pians on the adjacent coasts, the chief of which 
were Cotyora, Trapezus, and Cerasus. Its ter- 
ritory, called Sinopis (livu-ic, also ZLvu-rriTig), 
extended to the banks of the Halys. It remain- 
ed an independent state till it was taken by 
Pharnaces I., king of Pontus. It was the birth- 
place and residence of Mithradates the Great, 
who enlarged and beautified it. After an ob- 
stinate resistance to the Romans under Lucul- 
lus, it was taken and plundered, and proclaimed 
a free city. Shortly before the murder of Julius 
Caesar, it was colonized by the name of Julia 
Caesarea Felix Sinope, and remained a flourish- 
ing city, though it never recovered its former 
importance. At the time of Constantine, it had 
declined so much as to be ranked second to 
Amasia. In addition to its commerce, Sinope 
was greatly enriched by its fisheries. It was 
the native city of the renowned cynic philoso- 
pher Diogenes, of the comic poet Diphilus, and 
of the historian Baton. 

Sixtica, a district in Macedonia, inhabited by 
the Thracian people Sinti, extended east of 
Crestonia and north of Bisaltia as far as the 
Strymon and the Lake Prasias. Its chief town 
was Heraclea Sintica. The Sinti were spread 
over other parts of ancient Thrace, and are 
identified by Strabo with the Sintians (Ilvtus) 
of Homer, the ancient inhabitants of Lemnos. 

Sinuessa (Sinuessanus : now Rocca di Man- 
dragone), the last city of Latium on the confines 
of Campania, to which it originally Selonged, 
was situated on the sea-coast and on the Via 
Appia, in the midst of a fertile country. It was 
colonized by the Romans, together with the 
neighboring town of Minturnae, B.C. 296. It 
possessed a good harbor, and was a place of 
considerable commercial importance. In its 
neighborhood were celebrated warm baths, called 
Aqu^e Sintjessan^e. 

Sion. Vid. Jerusalem. 

[Siph^ (lldai) or Tiph^e, a port town of Bce- 
otia, on the Mare Alcyonium, in the neighbor- 
hood of Thisbe and the port Eutretus, where, 
according to Pausanias, was a temple of Her- 
cules, at which yearly games were celebrated. 
It was famed, also, as the birth-place of Tiphys, 
the pilot of the Argo ; Miiller and Kiepert iden- 
tify it with the modern Aliki.] 
816 



Siphn'us (Si^i-'Of : liioviog : now Siphno), an 
island in the JEgean Sea, forming one of the 
Cyclades, southeast of Seriphus. It is of an 
oblong form, and about forty miles in circum- 
ference. Its original name was Merope ; and 
it was colonized by Ionians from Athens. In 
consequence of their gold and silver mines, of 
which the remains are still visible, the Siphnians 
attained great prosperity, and were regarded in 
the time of Herodotus as the wealthiest of the 
islanders. Their treasury at Delphi, in which 
they deposited the tenth of the produce of their 
mines, was equal in wealth to that of any other 
Greek state. Their riches, however, exposed 
them to pillage ; and a party of Samian exiles 
in the time of Polycrates invaded the island, 
and compelled them to pay one hundred talents 
Siphnus was one of the few islands which re 
fused tribute to Xerxes ; and one of its ships 
fought on the side of the Greeks at Salamis. 
At a later time the mines were less productive ; 
and Pausanias relates that in consequence of 
the Siphnians neglecting to send the tithe of 
their treasure to Delphi, the god destroyed their 
mines by an inundation of the sea. The moral 
character of the Siphnians stood low, and hence 
to act like a Siphnian {I,i<j>vid^etv) became a 
term of reproach. 

Sipontum or Sipuntum (Sipontinus : now Si~ 
ponto), called by the Greeks Sipus (Strove, -ovv- 
rog), an ancient town in Apulia, in the district 
of Daunia, on the southern slope of Mount Gar- 
ganus, and on the coast. It is said to have been 
founded by Diomedes, and was of Greek origin. 
It was colonized by the Romans, under whom 
it became a place of some commercial import- 
ance. The inhabitants were removed from the 
town by King Manfred in the thirteenth century, 
in consequence of the unhealthy nature of the 
locality, and were settled in the neighboring 
town of Manfredonia, founded by this monarch. 

SiPYLUs(2t7ruAof : now Sipuli-Dagh), a mount- 
ain of Lydia, in Asia Minor, of volcanic forma- 
tion, and rent and splintered by frequent earth- 
quakes. It is a branch of the Tmolus, from the' 
main chain of which it proceeds northwest along 
the course of the River Hermus as far as Mag- 
nesia and Sipylum. It is mentioned by Homer. 
The ancient capital of Maeonia was said to have 
been situated in the heart of the mountain chain, 
and to have been called by the same name ; but 
it was early swallowed up by an earthquake, 
and its site became a little lake called Sale or 
Saloe, near which was a tumulus, supposed to 
be the grave of Tantalus. The mountain was 
rich in metals, and many mines were worked 
in it. 

Siracene (IcpaKvvri). 1. A district of Hyr- 
cania. — 2. A district of Armenia Major. — 3. Vid. 

Siraceni. 

SlRACENI, SlRACI, SlRACES (ZtpCLKTJVOt, lipdKOl, 

2ipaK.es), a powerful people of Sarmatia Asiatica, 
dwelt in the district of Siracene, east of the 
Palus Maeotis, as far as the River Rha (now 
Volga). The Romans were engaged in a war 
with them in A.D. 50. 

Sirbonis Lacus (2tp6uvidoc Xlfivij, afterward 
1,ip6uvic ?upvri and 2ip6uv : now Sabakat Bar- 
dowal), a large and deep lake on the coast of 
Lower Egypt, east of Mount Casius. Its circuit 
was one thousand stadia. It was strongly im- 



SIRENES. 



SISYGAMBIS. 



pregnated with asphaltus. A connection (called 
to cupe-ftta) existed between the lake and the 
Mediterranean ; but this being stopped up, the 
lake grew continually smaller by evaporation, 
and it is now nearly dry. 

Sirenes (2cip;;vcf), sea-nymphs who had the 
power of charming by their songs all who heard 
them. When Ulysses came near the island on 
the beach of which the Sirens were sitting, and 
endeavoring to allure him and his companions, 
he stuffed the ears of his companions with wax, 
and tied himself to the mast of his vessel, until 
he was so far off that he could no longer hear 
their song. According to Homer, the island 
of the Sirens was situated between JEeea. and 
the rock of Scylla, near the southwestern coast 
of Italy ; but the Roman poets place them on 
the Campanian coast. Homer says nothing of 
their number, but later writers mention both 
their names and number ; some state that they 
■were two, Aglaopheme and Thelxiepla ; and 
others that there were three, Pisinoe, Aglaope, 
and Thelxiepla, or Parthenope, Ligia, and Leu- 
cosia. They are called daughters of Phorcus, 
of Achelous and Sterope, of Terpsichore, of 
Melpomene, of Calliope, or of Gaea. The Sirens 
are also connected with the legends of the Ar- 
gonauts and the rape of Proserpina (Perseph- 
one). When the Argonauts sailed by the Si- 
rens, the latter began to sing, but in vain, for 
Orpheus surpassed them ; and as it had been 
decreed that they should live only till some one 
hearing their song should pass by unmoved, they 
threw themselves into the sea, and were meta- 
morphosed into rocks. Later poets represent 
them as provided with wings, which they are 
said to have received at their own request, in 
order to be able to search after Proserpina (Per- 
sephone), or as a punishment from Ceres (De- 
meter) for not having assisted Proserpina (Per- 
sephone), or from Venus (Aphrodite), because 
they wished to remain virgins. Once, how- 
ever, they allowed themselves to be prevailed 
upon by Juno (Hera) to enter into a contest with 
the Muses, and, being defeated, were deprived 
of their wings. 

Sirenus^:, called by Virgil (JEn., v., 864) Si- 
renum scopuli, three small uninhabited and 
rocky islands near the southern side of the 
Promontorium Misenum, off the coast of Cam- 
pania, which were, according to tradition, the 
abode of the Sirens. 

[Siricius (LipiKios), of Neapolis in Palestine, 
a sophist of the fourth century A.D., a pupil of 
Andromachus, lived and taught a considerable 
time at Athens, and wrote a work entitled Pro- 
gymnasmata.] 

Siris. 1. (Now Sinno), a river in Lucania, 
flowing into the Tarentine Gulf, memorable for 
the victory which Pyrrhus gained on its banks 
over the Romans. — 2 (Now Torre di Senna), an 
ancient Greek town in Lucania, at the mouth 
of the preceding river. Its locality was un- 
healthy ; and after the foundation of the neigh- 
boring town of Heraclea by the Tarentines, the 
inhabitants of Siris were removed to the new 
town, of which Siris now became the harbor. 

Sirmio (now Sirmione), a beautiful promon- 
tory on the southern shore of the Lacus Bena- 
cus (now Lago di Garda), on which Catullus 
had an estate. 

52 



Sirmium (now Mitrovitz), an important city in 
Pannonia Inferior, was situated on the left bank 
of the Savus. It was founded by the Taurisci, 
and under the Romans became the capital of 
Pannonia, and the head-quarters of all their 
operations in their wars against the Dacians 
and the neighboring barbarians. It contained 
a large manufactory of arms, a spacious forum, 
an imperial palace, etc. It was the residence 
of the admiral of the first Flavian fleet on the 
Danube, and the birth-place of the Emperor 
Probus. 

[Sisamnes (2iCTauv??f), a Persian judge under 
Cambyses, who caused him to be put to death 
for allowing himself to be bribed to an unjust 
decision, and then had his skin stripped off and 
fastened on the judicial bench where he had sat 
in judgment. To this bench he appointed his 
son Otanes, enjoising upon him to keep his 
father's fate ever in mind.] 

Sisapon (now Almaden in the Sierra Morena), 
an important town in. Hispania Baetica, north 
of Corduba, between the Ba3tis and Anas, cele- 
brated for its silver mines and Cinnabar. 

[Siscennius Iacchus, an early Roman gram- 
marian, who taught in Gallia Togata.] 

Siscia (now Sissck), called Segesta by Ap- 
pian, an important town in Pannonia Superior, 
situated upon an island formed by the rivers 
Savus, Colapis, and Odra, and on the road from 
JEmona to Sirmium. It was a strongly-fortified 
place, and was conquered by Tiberius in the 
reign of Augustus, from which time it became 
the most important town in all Pannonia. It 
was probably made a colony by Tiberius, and 
was colonized anew by Septimius Severus. At 
a later time its importance declined, and Sir- 
mium became the chief town in Pannonia. 

Sisenna, L. Cornelius, a Roman annalist, 
was praetor in the year when Sulla died (B.C. 
78), and probably obtained Sicily for his prov- 
ince in 77. From the local knowledge thus ac- 
quired he was enabled to render good service 
to Verres, whose cause he espoused. During 
the piratical war (67) he acted as the legate of 
Pompey, and having been dispatched to Crete 
in command of an army, died in that island at 
the age of about fifty-two. His great work, en- 
titled Historic?, which contained the history of 
his own time, extended to at least fourteen or 
nineteen books, [though the number is uncer- 
tain]. Cicero pronounces Sisenna superior as 
an historian to any of his predecessors. In ad- 
dition to his Histories, Sisenna translated the 
Milesian fables of Aristides, and he also com- 
posed a commentary upon Plautus. [The frag- 
ments of his Historic are collected by Krause 
in his Historicorum Romanorum Fragmenta, p. 
303-315.] 

Sisygambis (liGvya^iq), mother of Darius 
Codomannus, the last king of Persia, fell into 
the hands of Alexander after the battle of Issus, 
B.C. 333, together with the wife and daughters 
of Darius. Alexander treated these captives 
with the greatest generosity and kindness, and 
displayed toward Sisygambis, in particular, a 
reverence and delicacy of conduct, which is one 
of the brightest ornaments of his character. 
On her part, Sisygambis became so strongly at- 
tached to her conqueror, that she felt his death 
as a blow not less severe than that of her own 

817 



SISYPHIDES. 



SMERDIS: 



son ; and, overcome by this long succession of 
misfortunes, she put an end to her own life by 
voluntary starvation. 

[Sisyphides. Vid. Sisyphus.] 

Sisyphus (Si'o-t>^oc), son of iEolus and Ena- 
rete, whence he is called JEolidcs. He was 
married to Merope, a daughter of Atlas or a 
Pleiad, and became by her the father of Glaucus, 
Ornytion (or Porphyrion), Thersander, and Hal- 
mus. In later accounts he is also called a son 
of Autolycus, and the father of Ulysses by An- 
ticlea (vid. Anticlea), whence we find Ulysses 
sometimes called Sisyphides. He is said to have 
built the town of Ephyra, afterward Corinth. 
As king of Corinth he promoted navigation and 
commerce, but he was fraudulent, avaricious, 
and deceitful. His wickedness during life was 
severely punished in the lower world, where he 
had to roll up hill a huge marble block, which, 
as soon as it reached the top, always rolled down 
again. The special reasons for this punishment 
are not the same in all. authors; some relate 
that it was because he had betrayed the designs 
of the gods ; others, because he attacked trav- 
ellers, and killed them with a huge block of 
stone ; and others, again, because he had be- 
trayed to Asopus that Jupiter (Zeus) had car- 
ried off ^Egina, the daughter of the latter. The 
more usual tradition related that Sisyphus re- 
quested his wife not to bury him, and that, when 
she complied with his request, Sisyphus in the 
lower world complained of this seeming neg- 
lect, and obtained from Pluto (Hades) or Proser- 
pina (Persephone) permission to return to the 
upper world to punish his wife. He then re- 
fused to return to the lower world, until Mer- 
cury (Hermes) carried him off by force ; and 
this piece of treachery is said to have been the 
cause of his punishment. 

Sitace or Sittace (ZiTaur], I.CTTUK7] s ruins at 
Eski- Bagdad), a great and populous city of 
Babylonia, near but not on the Tigris, and eight 
parasangs within the Median wall. Its prob- 
able site is marked by a ruin called the Tower 
of Nimrod. It gave the name of Sittacene 
to the district on the lower course of the Ti- 
gris east of Babylonia and northwest of Susi- 
ana. 

Sitalces (StrdA/c^f), king of the Thracian 
tribe of the Odrysians, was a son of Teres, 
whom he succeeded on the throne. He increas- 
ed his dominions by successful wars, so that 
they ultimately comprised the whole territory 
from Abdera to the mouths of the Danube, and 
from Byzantium to the sources of the Strymon. 
At the commencement of the Peloponnesian 
war he entered into an alliance with the Athe- 
nians, and in 429 he invaded Macedonia with a 
vast army, but was obliged to retire through 
failure of provisions. 

[Sithon CEidcjv), king of Thrace, and father 
of Pallene. Vid. Sithonia.] 

Sithonia CZiduvia), the central one of the 
three peninsulas running out from Chalcidice in 
Macedonia, between the Toronaic and Singitic 
Gulfs. The Thracians originally extended over 
the greater part of Macedonia ; and the ancients 
derived the name of Sithonia from a Thracian 
king Sithon. We also find mention of a Thra- 
cian people, Sithonii, on the shores of the Pon- 
tus Euxinus; and the poets frequently use Si- 
818 



I thonis and Sitho7iius in the general sense of 

I Thracian. 

Sitifi (liTiipa : ruins at Setif), an inland city 
I of Mauretania Caesariensis, on the borders of 
Numidia, stood upon a hill, in an extensive and 
j beautiful plain. It first became an important 
\ place under the Romans, who made it a colony; 
1 and, upon the subdivision of Mauretania Cae- 
sariensis into two provinces, it was made the 
capital of the eastern province, which was call- 
ed after it Mauretania Sitifensis. 

[Sitius. Vid. Sittius.] 

Sitones, a German tribe in Scandinavia, be- 
longing to the race of the Suevi. 

Sittace, Sittacene. Vid. Sitace. 

Sittius or Sitius, P., of Nuceria in Campa- 
nia, was connected with Catiline, and went to 
Spain in B.C. 64, from which country he cross- 
ed over into Mauretania in the following year. 
It was said that P. Sulla had sent him into 
Spain to excite an insurrection against the Ro- 
man government ; and Cicero accordingly, when 
he defended Sulla in 62, was obliged to deny 
the truth of the charges that had been brought 
against Sittius. Sittius did not return to Rome. 
His property in Italy was sold to pay his debts, 
and he continued in Africa, where he fought in 
the wars of the kings of the country. He join- 
ed Caesar when the latter came to Africa, in 46, 
to prosecute the war against the Pompeian 
party. He was of great service to Caesar in 
this war, and at its conclusion was rewarded 
by Caesar with the western part of Numidia, 
where he settled down, distributing the land 
among his soldiers. After the death of Caesar, 
Arabio, the son of Masinissa, returned to Af- 
rica, and killed Sittius by stratagem. 

Siuph (2iov(j>), a city of Lower Egypt, in the 
Saitic nome, only mentioned by Herodotus (ii., 
172). 

Smaragdus Mons (2fxdpaydoc opof : now Jehel 
Zaburah), a mountain of Upper Egypt, near the 
coast of the Red Sea, north of Berenice. The 
extensive emerald mines, from which it obtain- 
ed its name, were worked under the ancient 
kings of Egypt, under the Ptolemies, and under 
the Romans. They seem to have been ex- 
hausted, as only very few emeralds are now and 
then found in the neighborhood. 

[Smenus (2/27}voc, now River of Passava), a 
small stream of Laconia, rising in Mount Tay- 
getus, flowing by Las, and emptying into the 
Sinus Laconicus near Gytheum.] 

Smerdis the son of Cyrus, was mur- 

dered by order of his brother Cambyses. The 
death of Smerdis was kept a profound secret ; and 
accordingly, when the Persians became weary 
of the tyranny of Cambyses, one of the Magians, 
named Patizithes, who had been left by Cam- 
byses in charge of his palace and treasures, 
availed himself of the likeness of his brother to 
the deceased Smerdis to proclaim this brother 
as king, representing him as the younger son 
of Cyrus. Cambyses heard of the revolt in 
Syria, but he died of an accidental wound in the 
thigh as he was mounting his horse to march 
against the usurper. The false Smerdis was ac- 
knowledged as king by the Persians, and reign- 
ed for seven months without opposition. The 
leading Persian nobles, however, were not quite 
free from suspicion ; and this suspicion was in- 



SMERDOMENES. 



SMYRNA. 



creased by the king never inviting any of them j 
to the palace, and never appearing in public. 
Among the nobles who entertained these suspi- 
cions was Otanes, whose daughter Phsedima had 
been one of the wives of Cambyses, and had been 
transferred to his successor. The new king 
had some years before been deprived of his ears 
by Cyrus for some offence ; and Otanes per- 
suaded his daughter to ascertain whether her 
master had really lost his ears. Phaedima found 
out that such was the fact, and communicated 
the decisive information to her father. Otanes 
thereupon formed a conspiracy, and, in conjunc- 
tion with six other noble Persians, succeeded 
in forcing his way into the palace, where they 
slew the false Smerdis and his brother Pati- 
zithes in the eighth month of their reign, B.C. 
521. The usurpation of the false Smerdis was 
an attempt on the part of the Medes, to whom 
the Magians belonged, to obtain the supremacy, 
of which they had been deprived by Cyrus. The 
assassination of the false Smerdis and the ac- 
cession of Darius Hystaspis again gave the as- 
cendency to the Persians ; and the anniversary 
of the day on which the Magians were massa- 
cred was commemorated among the Persians 
by a solemn festival, called Magophonia, on 
which no Magian was allowed to show himself 
in public. The real nature of the transaction 
is also shown by the revolt of the Medes which 
followed the accession of Darius. 

[Smerdomenes (Z[iepdo[xiv7]s), son of Otanes, 
was one of the generals who had the supreme 
command of the land forces of Xerxes in his in- 
vasion of Greece.] 

[Smilax, a beautiful nymph enamoured of 
Crocus : she was changed by the gods into a 
flower. Vid. Crocus.] 

Smilis (2/it/Uf), son of Euclides, of ^Egina, 
a sculptor of the legendary period, whose name 
appears to be derived from cfitfaj, a knife for 
carving wood, and afterward a sculptor's chisel. 
Smilis is the legendary head of the ./Eginetan 
school of sculpture, just as Daedalus is the le- 
gendary head of the Attic and Cretan schools. 

Smintheus CLuivdevc), a surname of Apollo, 
which is derived by some from o/j,ivdog, a mouse, 
and by others from the town of Sminthe in 
Troas. The mouse was regarded by the an- 
cients as inspired by the vapors arising from 
the earth, and as the symbol of prophetic power. 
In the temple of Apollo at Chryse there was a 
statue of the god by Scopas, with a mouse under 
its foot, and on coins Apollo is represented car- 
rying a mouse in his hands. Temples of Apol- 
lo Smintheus and festivals (Sminthla) existed 
in several parts of Greece. 

Smyrna (2/xvpva) or Myrrha. For details, 
vid. Adonis. 

Smyrna, and in many MSS. Zmyrna (2,/j.vpva : 
Ion. 'L/xvpvn : ZfivpvaZoc, Smyrnaeus : now Smyr- 
na, Turk. Izmir), one of the most ancient and 
flourishing cities of Asia Minor, and the only 
one of the great cities on its western coast 
which has survived to this day, stood in a po- 
sition alike remarkable for its beauty and for 
other natural advantages. Lying just about the 
centre of the western coast of Asia Minor ; on 
the banks of the little River Meles, at the bot- 
tom of a deep bay, the Sinus Hermaeus or Smyr- 
naeus (now Gulf of Smyrna), which formed a 



| safe and immense harbor for the largest ships 
up to the very walls of the city 5 at the foot of 
the rich slopes of Tmolus and at the entrance 
to the great and fertile valley of the Hermus, in 
which lay the great and wealthy city of Sardis; 
and in the midst of the Greek colonies on the 
eastern shore of the JEgean ; it was marked out 
by nature as one of the greatest emporiums for 
the trade between Europe and Asia, and has 
preserved that character to the present day. 
There are various accounts of its origin. The 
most probable is that which represents it as an 
iEolian colony from Cyme. At an early period 
it fell, by a stratagem, into the hands of the Io- 
nians of Colophon, and remained an Ionian city 
from that time forth : this appears to have hap- 
pened before 01. 23 (B.C. 688). As to the time 
when it became a member of the Panionic con- 
federacy, we have only a very untrustworthy 
account, which refers its admission to the reign 
of Attalus, king of Pergamus. Its early history 
is also very obscure. There is an account in 
Strabo that it was destroyed by the Lydian 
king Sadyattes, and that its inhabitants were 
compelled to live in scattered villages until after 
the Macedonian conquest, when the city was 
rebuilt, twenty stadia from its former site, by 
Antigonus ; but this is inconsistent with Pin- 
dar's mention of Smyrna as a beautiful city. 
Thus much is clear, however, that at some pe- 
riod the old city of Smyrna, which stood on the 
northeastern side of the Hermaean Gulf, was 
abandoned, and that it was succeeded by a new 
city, on the southeastern side of the same gulf 
(the present site), which is said to have been 
built by Antigonus, and which was enlarged and 
beautified by Lysimachus. This new city stood 
partly on the sea-shore and partly on a hill called 
Mastusia. It had a magnificent harbor, with 
such a depth of water that the largest ships 
could lie alongside the quays. The streets were 
paved with stone, and crossed one another at 
right angles. The city soon became one of the 
greatest and most prosperous in the world. It 
was especially favored by the Romans on ac- 
count of the aid it rendered them in the Syrian 
and Mithradatic wars. It was the seat of a con- 
ventus juridicus. In the Civil Wars it was 
taken and partly destroyed by Dolabella, but it 
soon recovered. It occupies a distinguished 
place in the early history of Christianity, as one 
of the only two among the seven churches of 
Asia which St. John addresses in the Apoca- 
lypse without any admixture of rebuke, and as 
the scene of the labors and martyrdom of Poly- 
carp. In the years A D. 178-180, a succession 
of earthquakes, to which the city has always 
been much exposed, reduced it almost to ruins ; 
but it was restored by the Emperor M. Antoni- 
nus. In the successive wars under the Eastern 
empire it was frequently much injured, but al- 
ways recovered ; and, under the Turks, it has 
survived repeated attacks of earthquake, fire, 
and plague, and still remains the great commer- 
cial city of the Levant. There are but few 
ruins of the ancient city. In addition to all her 
other sources of renown, Smyrna stood at the 
head of the cities which claimed the birth of 
Homer. The poet was worshipped as a Hero 
in a magnificent building called the Homereum. 
('Ourjpetov). Near the sea-shore there stood a 

819 



SMYRNA TRACHEA. 



SOCRATES. 



magnificent temple of Cybele, whose head ap- j 
pears on the coins of the city. The other di- 
vinities chiefly worshipped here were Nemesis 
and the nymph Smyrna, the heroine eponymus ! 
of the place, who had a shrine on the banks of 
the River Meles. 

Smyrxa Trachea. Vid. Ephesus. 

Smyrx^sus Sinus (ZfLvpvaiuv k67vtto<;, 'Lfi.vp- | 
vaiicbc koXkos : now Gulf of Ismir or Smyrna), j 
the great gulf on the western coast of Asia j 
Minor, at the bottom of which Smyrna stands. 
Its entrance lies between Promontorium Me- j 
lasna (now Cape Kara Burnu) on the west, and j 
Phocaea (now Fokia) on the east. Its depth was j 
reckoned at three hundred and fifty stadia. It [ 
received the River Hermus, whence it was | 
called Hermeus Sinus ("Ep/iEiog koattos). It is j 
sometimes also called Me/^-ov k6?.t?oc, from the j 
little river Meles, on which Old Smyrna stood. | 

Soaxes {liOavEg), a powerful people of the 
Caucasus, governed by a king who could bring 
two hundred thousand soldiers into the field, i 
The mountain streams of the country contained 
gold, which was separated by collecting the j 
water in sheep-skins, whence the matter-of-fact ! 
interpreters derived the legend of the golden I 
fleece. According to Strabo, the habits of the \ 
people were such that they stood in remarkable 
need of other "washings." They are also called ; 
Scant, and Suanocolchi (Zovavoi, "Zovavono?.- I 
Xol), and their land Suania (lovavia). 

[Soatra CEoarpa, "Lavarpa), a small town of 
Lycaonia, in the neighborhood of Apamea Ci- 
botus, very scantily supplied with water. Ac- 
cording to Texier, its site corresponds to the 
modern village Su Vermess, which means, " here j 
is no water to be found."] 

Socrates (2oKpaTj]g). 1. The celebrated 
Athenian philosopher, was born in the demus ; 
Alopece, in the immediate neighborhood of 
Athens, B.C. 469. His father Sophroniscus 
was a statuary ; his mother Phaenarete was a j 
midwife. In his youth he followed the profes- 
sion of his father, and attained sufficient pro- 
ficiency to have executed the group of clothed ' 
Graces which was preserved in the Acropolis, j 
and was shown as his work down to the time i 
of Pausanias. The personal qualities of Soc- j 
rates were marked and striking. His physical ! 
constitution was healthy, robust, and enduring J 
to an extraordinary degree. He was capable 
of bearing fatigue or hardship, and indifferent 
to heat or cold, in a measure which astonished 
all his companions. He went barefoot in all 
seasons of the year, even during the winter 
campaign at Potidaea, under the severe frosts I 
of Thrace ; and the same homely clothing suf- 
ficed for him in winter as well as in summer. \ 
His ugly physiognomy excited the jests both of 
his friends and enemies, who inform us that he | 
had a flat nose, thick lips, and prominent eyes ; 
like a satyr or Silenus. Of the circumstances 
of his life we are almost wholly ignorant : he 
served as an hoplite at Potidaea, Delium, and \ 
Amphipolis with great credit to himself. He 
seems never to have filled any political office '■ 
until 406, in which year he was a member of ' 
the senate of Five Hundred, and one of the Pry- ! 
tanes, when he refused, on the occasion of the j 
trial of the six generals, to put an unconstitu- , 
tional question to the vote, in spite of all per- I 



sonal hazard. He displayed the same moral 
courage in refusing to obey the order of the 
Thirty Tyrants for the apprehension of Leon 
the Salaminian. At what time Socrates re- 
linquished his profession as a statuary we do 
not know ; but it is certain that all the middle 
and later part of his life at least was devoted 
exclusively to the self-imposed task of teach- 
ing ; excluding all other business, public or 
private, and to the neglect of all means of for- 
tune. But he never opened a school, nor did 
he, like the sophists of his time, deliver public 
lectures. Every where, in the market-place, 
in the gymnasia, and in the work-shops, he 
sought and found opportunities for awakening 
and guiding, in boys, youth, and men, moral 
consciousness and the impulse after self-knowl- 
edge respecting the end and value of our ac- 
tions. His object, however, was only to aid 
them in developing the germs of knowledge 
which were already present in them, not to com- 
municate to them ready-made knowledge ; and 
he therefore professed to practice a kind of 
mental mid wifery, just as his mother Phaenarete 
exercised the corresponding corporeal art Un- 
weariedly and inexorably did he fight against 
all false appearance and conceit of knowledge, 
in order to pave the way for correct knowledge. 
Consequently to the mentally proud and the 
mentally idle he appeared an intolerable bore, 
and often experienced their bitter hatred and 
calumny. This was probably the reason why 
he was selected by Aristophanes, and the other 
comic writers, to be attacked as a general rep- 
resentative of philosophical and rhetorical teach- 
ing ; the more so, as his marked and repulsive 
physiognomy admitted so well of being imitated 
in the mask which the actor wore. The audi- 
ence at the theatre would more readily recog- 
nize the peculiar figure which they were ac- 
customed to see every day in the market-place, 
than if Prodicus or Protagoras, whom most of 
them did not know by sight, had been brought 
on the stage ; nor was it of much importance 
either to them or to Aristophanes whether Soc- 
rates was represented as teaching what he did 
really teach, or something utterly different. At- 
tached to none of the prevailing parties, Socra- 
tes found in each of them his friends and his 
enemies. Hated and persecuted by Cntias, 
Charicles, and others among the Thirty Tyrants, 
who had a special reference to him in the de- 
cree which they issued, forbidding the teaching 
of the art of oratory, he was impeached after 
their banishment and by their opponents. An 
orator named Lycon, and a poet (a friend of 
Thrasybulus) named Meletus, had united in the 
impeachment with the powerful demagogue 
Anytus, an embittered antagonist of the soph- 
ists and their system, and one of the leaders 
of the band which, setting out from Phyle, forced 
their way into the Piraeus, and drove out the 
Thirty Tyrants. The judges also are described 
as persons who had been banished, and who had 
returned with Thrasybulus. The chief articles 
of impeachment were, that Socrates was guilty 
of corrupting the youth, and of despising the 
tutelary deities of the state, putting in their 
place other new divinities. At the same time 
it had been made a matter of accusation against 
him, that Critias, the most ruthless of the Ty- 



SOCRATES. 



SOCRATES. 



rants, had come forth from his school. Some 
expressions of his, in which he had found fault 
with the democratical mode of electing by lot, 
had also been brought up against him ; and there 
can be little doubt that use was made of his 
friendly relations with Theramenes, one of the 
most influential of the Thirty, with Plato's uncle 
Charmides, who fell by the side of Critias in 
the struggle with the popular party, and with 
other aristocrats, in order to irritate against him 
the party which at that time was dominant. 
The substance of the speech which Socrates 
delivered in his defence is probably preserved 
by Plato in the piece which goes under the name 
of the "Apology of Socrates." Being con- 
demned by a majority of only six votes, he ex- 
presses the conviction that he deserved to be 
maintained at the public cost in the Prytaneum, 
and refuses to acquiesce in the adjudication of 
imprisonment, or a large fine, or banishment. 
He will assent to nothing more than a fine of 
sixty minae, on the security of Plato, Crito, and 
other friends. Condemned to death by the 
judges, who were incensed by this speech, by a 
majority of eighty votes, he departs from them 
with the protestation that he would rather die 
after such a defence than live after one in which 
he should have endeavored to excite their pity. 
The sentence of death could not be carried into 
execution until after the return of the vessel 
which had been sent to Delos on the periodical 
Theoric mission. The thirty days which inter- 
vened between its return and the condemnation 
of Socrates were devoted by him to poetic at- 
tempts (the first he had ever made), and to his us- 
ual conversation with his friends. One of these 
conversations, on the duty of obedience to the 
laws, Plato has reported in the Crito, so called 
after the faithful follower of Socrates, who had 
endeavored without success to persuade him to 
make his escape. In another, imitated or work- 
ed up by Plato in the Pfuzdo, Socrates, immedi- 
ately before he drank the cup of hemlock, de- 
veloped the grounds of his immovable convic- 
tion of the immortality of the soul. He died 
with composure and cheerfulness in his seven- 
tieth year, B.C. 399. Three peculiarities dis- 
tinguished Socrates : 1. His long life, passed in 
contented poverty and in public dialectics, of 
which we have already spoken. 2. His persua- 
sion of a special religious mission. He had 
been accustomed constantly to hear, even from 
his childhood, a divine voice — interfering, at 
moments when he was about to act, in the way 
of restraint, but never in the way of instiga- 
tion. Such prohibitory warning was wont to 
come upon him very frequently, not merely on 
great, but even on small occasions, intercepting 
what he was about to do or to say. Though 
later writers speak of this as the Daemon or Ge- 
nius of Socrates, he himself does not personify 
it, but treats it merely as a " divine sign, a pro- 
phetic or supernatural voice." He was accus- 
tomed not only to obey it implicitly, but to speak 
of it publicly and familiarly to others, so that 
the fact was well known both to his friends and 
to his enemies. 3. His great intellectual orig- 
inality, both of subject and of method, and his 
power of stirring and forcing the germ of in- 
quiry and ratiocination in others. He was the 
first who turned his thoughts and discussions 



distinctly to the subject of ethics, and was the 
first to proclaim that " the proper study of man- 
kind is man." With the philosophers who pre- 
ceded him, the subject of examination had been 
Nature, or the Kosmos as one undistinguishable 
whole, blending together cosmogony, astrono- 
my, geometry, physics, metaphysics, &c. In 
discussing ethical subjects, Socrates employed 
the dialectic method, and thus laid the founda- 
tion of formal logic, which was afterward ex- 
panded by Plato, and systematized by Aristotle. 
The originality of Socrates is shown by the re- 
sults he achieved. Out of his intellectual school 
sprang, not merely Plato, himself a host, but all 
the other leaders of Grecian speculation for the 
next half century, and all those who continued 
the great line of speculative philosophy down 
to later times. Euclid and the Megaric school 
of philosophers — Aristippus and the Cyrenaic 
Antisthenes and Diogenes, the first of those 
called the Cynics — all emanated more or less 
directly from the stimulus imparted by Socrates, 
though each followed a different vein of thought. 
Ethics continued to be what Socrates had first 
made them, a distinct branch of philosophy, 
alongside of which politics, rhetoric, logic, and 
other speculations relating to man and society, 
gradually arranged themselves ; all of them more 
popular, as well as more keenly controverted, 
! than physics, which at that time presented com- 
j paratively little charm, and still less of attain- 
able certainty. There can be no doubt that the 
individual influence of Socrates permanently 
enlarged the horizon, improved the method, and 
multipled the ascendant minds of the Grecian 
j speculative world in a manner never since par- 
alleled. Subsequent philosophers may have had 
a more elaborate doctrine, and a larger number 
of disciples who imbibed their ideas ; but none 
of them applied the same stimulating method 
with the same efficacy, and none of them struck 
out of other minds that fire which sets light to 
original thought. (A great part of this article 
is taken from Mr. Grote's account of Socrates 
in his History of Greece.)— [2. An Athenian, son 
of Antigenes, was one of the three commanders 
sent out with a fleet in B.C. 431 to ravage the 
coasts of the Peloponnesus. They did not effect 
much, being foiled in an attack op Methone by 
the opportune arrival of Brasidas. — 3. An Ach- 
aean, one of the commanders of the Greek mer- 
cenaries of Cyrus the younger, joined that prince 
at Sardis with five hundred heavy-armed men. 
He was one of the generals who accompanied 
Clearchus to the tent of Tissaphernes. when 
they were all treacherously seized by that sa- 
trap, and subsequently put to death by order 
of Artaxerxes himself.]— 4. The ecclesiastical 
i historian, was born at Constantinople about A. D. 
j 379. He was a pupil of Ammonius and Hel- 
ladius, and followed the profession of an advo- 
cate in his native city, whence he is surnamed 
I Scholasticus. The Ecclesiastical History of Soc- 
J rates extends from the reign of Constantine the 
Great, 306, to that of the younger Theodosius, 
439. He appears to have been a man of less 
bigotry than most of his contemporaries, and 
the very difficulty of determining from internal 
i evidence some points of his religious belief 
! may be considered as arguing his comparative 
I liberality. His history is divided into seven 

821 



SODOMA. 



SOLINUS. 



books His work is included in the editions of 
the ancient Greek ecclesiastical historians by 
Valesius, Paris, 1668 ; reprinted at Mentz, 1677 ; 
by Reading, Camb., 1720. 

Sodoma, gen. -orum and -ae, also -um, gen. -i, 
and -i, gen. -orum (ra lodo/ia : J,o6o/xlttjc, So- 
domita), a very ancient city of Canaan, in the 
beautiful valley of Siddim (rj lodo/utrig), closely 
connected with Gomorrha, over which, and the 
other three " cities of the plain," the King of 
Sodom seems to have had a sort of supremacy. 
In the book of Genesis we find these cities as 
subject, in the time of Abraham, to the King of 
Elam and his allies (an indication of the early 
supremacy in Western Asia of the masters of 
the Tigris and Euphrates valley), and their at- 
tempt to cast off the yoke was the occasion of 
the first war on record. (Gen., xiv.) Soon aft- 
erward, the abominable sins of these cities call- 
ed down the divine vengeance, and they were 
all destroyed by fire from heaven, except Zoar, 
which was spared at the intercession of Lot. 
The beautiful valley in which they stood was 
overwhelmed by the Jordan and converted into 
the Dead Sea, whose bituminous waters still 
bear witness to the existence of the springs of 
asphaltus ("slime-pits" in our version) of which 
the valley of Siddim was full. It used to be 
assumed that, before the destruction of the cities 
of the plain, the Jordan flowed on into the Red 
Sea ; [and this opinion is supported by recent ob- 
servations on the nature of the country around 
the southern extremity of the Dead Sea ; while 
others maintain that] there was probably al- 
ways a lake which received the waters both of 
the Jordan and the river which still flows into 
the southern end of the Dead Sea ; and [that] 
the nature of the change seems to have con- 
sisted in the enlargement of this lake by a great 
depression of the whole valley. The site of 
Sodom was probably near the southern extrem- 
ity of the lake. 

Scemis or Sophias, Julia, daughter of Julia 
Massa, and mother of Elagabalus, either by her 
husband Sextus Varius Marcellus, or, according 
to the report industriously circulated with her 
own consent, by Caracalla. After the acces- 
sion of her son, she became his chosen coun- 
sellor, and seems to have encouraged and shared 
his follies and enormities. She took a place in 
the senate, which then, for the first time, wit- 
nessed the intrusion of a woman, and was her- 
self the president of a sort of female parliament, 
which held its sittings in the Quirinal, and pub- 
lished edicts for the regulation of all matters 
connected with the morals, dress, etiquette, and 
equipage of the matrons. She was slain by the 
praetorians, in the arms of her son, on the 11th 
of March, A.D. 222. 

Sogdiana (57 loydcav?} or 'Zovytiiavri : Old Per- 
sian, Sughda : Zoydiot, loydiavoi, Sovydiavot: 
parts of Turkestan and Bokhara, including the 
district still called Sogd), the northeastern prov- 
ince of the ancient Persian empire, separated 
on the south from Bactriana and Margiana by 
the upper course of the Oxus (now Jihoun); on 
the east and north from Scythia by the Sogdii 
Comedarum and Oxii Mountains (now Kara- 
Dagh, Alatan and Ak Tagh), and by the upper 
course of the Jaxartes (now Sihoun), and bound- 
ed on the northwest by the great deserts east 



j of the Sea of Aral. The southern part of the 
j country was fertile and populous. It was con- 
I quered by Cyrus, and afterward by Alexander, 
j both of whom marked the extreme limits of 
j their advance by cities on the Jaxartes, Cyres- 
chata and Alexandreschata. After the Mace- 
1 donian conquest it was subject to the kings, 
I first of Syria and then of Bactria, till it was 
j overrun by the barbarians. The natives of the 
I country were a wild, warlike people of the great 
! Arian race, resembling the Bactrians in their 
I character and customs. 

1 Sogdianus (Eoydiavoc), was one of the ille- 
gitimate sons of Artaxerxes I. Longimanus. 
j The latter, on his death in B.C. 425, was suc- 
I ceeded by his legitimate son Xerxes II., but this 
J monarch, after a reign of only two months, was 
! murdered by Sogdianus, who now became king. 
1 Sogdianus, however, was murdered in his turn, 
after a reign of seven months, by his brother 
Ochus. Ochus reigned under the name of Da- 
rius II. 

Sogdii Montes. Vid. Sogdiana. 
Sol. Vid. Helios. 

Soli or Soloe (26/.oi). 1. (Ethnic, 2oXevc, 
Solensis : ruins at Mezetlu), a city on the coast 
j of Cilicia, between the rivers Lamus and Cyd- 
nus, said to have been colonized by Argives and 
Lydians from Rhodes. It was a flourishing city 
in the time of Alexander, who fined its people 
\ two hundred talents for their adhesion to the 
Persians. The city was destroyed by Tigranes. 
who probably transplanted the inhabitants to Ti- 
granocerta. Pompey restored the city after his 
war with the pirates, and peopled it with the 
survivors of the defeated bands ; and from this 
time forth it was called PoiMpeiopolis (Uofnrni- 
ov-noliq). It was celebrated in literary history 
as the birth-place of the Stoic philosopher Chry- 
sippus, of the comic poet Philemon, and of the 
astronomer and poet Aratus. Its name has been 
curiously perpetuated in the grammatical word 
j solecism (solGecismus), which is said to have 
been first applied to the corrupt dialect of Greek 
spoken by the inhabitants of this city, or, as 
' some say, of Soli in Cyprus. — 2. (Ethnic, 16- 
j ?Aoq : ruins at Aligora, in the valley of Solea), a 
i considerable sea-port town in the western part 
j of the northern coast of Cyprus, on a little riv- 
I er. According to some, it was a colony of the 
I Athenians, while others ascribed its erection to 
I a native prince [Philocyprus] acting under the 
! advice of Solon, and others to Solon himself: 
j the last account is doubtless an error. It had 
, temples of Isis and Venus (Aphrodite), and there 
i were mines in its vicinity, 
j Solicinium, a town in Roman Germany (the 
! Agri Decumates), on the mountain Pirus, where 
j Valentinian gained a victory over the Alemanni 
j in A.D. 369, probably in the neighborhood of the 
j modern Heidelberg. 

Solinus, C. Julius, the author of a geo- 
| graphical compendium, divided into fifty-seven 
! chapters, containing a brief sketch of the world 
j as known to the ancients, diversified by histor- 
j ical notices, remarks on the origin, habits, re- 
i ligious rites, and social condition of various na- 
j tions enumerated. The arrangement, and fre- 
! quently the very words, are derived from the 
Natural History of Pliny, but little knowledge, 
! care, or judgment is displayed in the selection. 



SOLIS AQUA. 



SOLON. 



We know nothing of Solinus himself, but he 
must have lived after the reign of Alexander 
Severus and before that of Constantine. He 
may, perhaps, be placed about A.D. 238. We 
learn from the first of two prefatory addresses, 
that an edition of the work had already passed 
into circulation, in an imperfect state, without 
the consent or knowledge of the author, under 
the appellation Collectanea Rcrum Mcmorabxl- 
ium, while on the second, revised, corrected, 
and published by himself, he bestowed the more 
ambitious title of Polyhistor ; and hence we find 
the treatise designated in several MSS. as C. 
Julii Solini Grammatici Polyhistor ab ipso editus 
et recognitus. The most notable edition is that 
of Salmasius, published at Utrecht in 1689, pre- 
fixed to his " Plinianae Exercitationes," the 
whole forming two large folio volumes. 

[Solis Aqua ('H/Uoi> vdup), a fountain and 
stream of the island Panchaea, off the coast of 
Arabia Felix.] 

Solis Fons. Vid. Oasis, NO. 3. 

Solis Lacus (?Jftvn 'Hereto), a lake in the 
far East, from which, in the old mythical sys- 
tem of the world, the sun rose to make his daily 
course through heaven. Some of the matter- 
of-fact expositors identified it with the Caspian 
Sea. Another lake of the same name was im- 
agined by some of the poets in the far West, 
into which the sun sank at night. 

Solis Mons. Vid. Solois. 

Solis Promontorium (uKpa 'H?uov lepd : now 
Ras Anfir), a promontory of Arabia Felix, near 
the middle of the Persian Gulf. 

[Solmissus (So/l^iccrdf), a mountain of Ionia, 
in the neighborhood of Ephesus.] 

Soloe. Vid. Soli. 

Solois ("EoXoeic : now Cape Cantin, Arab. Ras 
cl Houdik), a promontory running far out into 
the sea, in the southern part of the western 
coast of Mauretania. Herodotus believed it 
to be the westernmost headland of all Libya. 
Upon it was a Phoenician temple of Neptune 
(Poseidon). The later geographers under the 
Romans mention a Mons Sous ('H?uov opoc), 
which appears to be the same spot, its name 
being probably a corruption of the Greek name. 

S5l6n (2dAwv), the celebrated Athenian leg- 
islator, was born about B.C. 638. His father 
Execestides was a descendant of Codrus, and 
his mother was a cousin of the mother of Pisis- 
tratus. Execestides had seriously crippled his 
resources by a too prodigal expenditure ; and 
Solon consequently found it either necessary 
or convenient in his youth to betake himself to 
the life of a foreign trader. It is likely enough 
that while necessity compelled him to seek a 
livelihood in some mode or other, his active and 
inquiring spirit led him to select that pursuit 
which would furnish the amplest means for its 
gratification. Solon early distinguished himself 
by his poetical abilities. His first effusions 
were in a somewhat light and amatory strain, 
which afterward gave way to the more digni- 
fied and earnest purpose of inculcating profound 
reflections or sage advice. So widely, indeed, 
did his reputation spread, that he was ranked 
3S one of the seven sages, and his name ap- 
pears in all the lists of the seven. The occa- 
sion which first brought Solon prominently for- 
ward as an actor on the political stage was the 



contest between Athens and Megara respecting 
the possession of Salamis. The ill success of 
the attempts of the Athenians to make them- 
selves masters of the island, had led to the en- 
actment of a law forbidding the writing or say- 
ing any thing to urge the Athenians to renew 
the contest. Solon, indignant at this dishonor- 
able renunciation of their claims, hit upon the 
device of feigning to be mad ; and, causing a 
report of his condition to be spread over the 
city, he rushed into the agora, and there recited 
a short elegiac poem of one hundred lines, in 
which he called upon the Athenians to retrieve 
their disgrace and reconquer the lovely island. 
Pisistratus (who, however, must have been ex- 
tremely young at the time) came to the sup- 
port of his kinsman ; the pusillanimous law was 
rescinded, war was declared, and Solon himself 
appointed to conduct it. The Megarians were 
driven out of the island, but a tedious war en- 
sued, which was finally settled by the arbitra- 
tion of Sparta. Both parties appealed, in sup- 
port of their claim, to the authority of Homer ; 
and it was currently believed in antiquity that 
Solon had surreptitiously inserted the line (//., 
ii., 558) which speaks of Ajax as ranging his 
ships with the Athenians. The Spartans de- 
cided in favor of the Athenians about B.C. 596. 
Solon himself, probably, was one of those who 
received grants of land in Salamis, and this may 
account for his being termed a Salaminian. 
Soon after these events (about 595) Solon took 
a leading part in promoting hostilities on behalf 
of Delphi against Cirrha, and was the mover of 
the decree'of the Amphictyons bv which was 
was declared. It does not appear, however, 
what active part he took in the war. Accord- 
ing to a common story, which, however, rests 
only on the authority of a late writer, Solon 
hastened the surrender of the town by causing 
the waters of the Plistus to be poisoned. It 
was about the time of the outbreak of this war, 
that, in consequence of the distracted state of 
Attica, which was rent by civil commotions, 
Solon was called upon by all parties to mediate 
between them, and alleviate the miseries that 
prevailed. He was chosen archon 594, and un- 
der that legal title was invested with unlimited 
power for adopting such measures as the ex- 
igencies of the state demanded. In fulfillment 
of the task intrusted to him, Solon addressed 
himself to the relief of the existing distress. 
This he effected with the greatest discretion 
and success by his celebrated disburdening or- 
dinance (ceiodxdsta), a measure consisting of 
various distinct provisions, calculated to re- 
lieve the debtors with as little infringement as 
possible on the claims of the wealthy creditors. 
The details of this measure, however, are in- 
volved in considerable uncertainty. We know 
that he depreciated the coinage, making the 
mina to contain one hundred drachmae instead 
of seventy-three ; that is to say, seventy -three 
of the old drachmae produced one hundred of 
the new coinage, in which obligations were to 
be discharged, so that the debtor saved rather 
more than a fourth in every payment. The 
success of the Seisachtheia procured for Solon 
such confidence and popularity that he was fur- 
ther charged with the task of entirely remod- 
elling the constitution. As a preliminary step, 

823 



SOLON. 



SOLYGIA. 



he repealed all the laws of Draco except those 
relating to bloodshed. Our limits only allow us 
to glance at the principal features of the constitu- 
tion established by Solon. This constitution was 
based upon the timocratic principle, that is, the 
title of citizens to the honors and offices of the 
state was regulated by their wealth. All the cit- 
izens were distributed into four classes. The 
first class consisted of those who had an an- 
nual income of at least five hundred medimni of 
dry or liquid produce (equal to five hundred drach- 
mae, a medimnus being reckoned at a drachma), 
and were called Penlacosiomedimni. The second 
class consisted of those whose incomes ranged 
between three hundred and five hundred medim- 
ni or drachmae, and were called Hippeis ('iTnretc, 
'Ittttt^), from their being able to keep a horse, 
and bound to perform military service as cav- 
alry. The third class consisted of those whose 
incomes varied between two hundred and three 
hundred medimni or drachmae, and were termed 
Zeugitce (ZevylTat). The fourth class included 
all whose property fell short of two hundred 
medimni or drachmae, and bore the name of 
Thetes. The first three classes were liable to 
direct taxation, in the form of a graduated in- 
come tax. A direct tax, however, was an ex- 
traordinary, and not an annual payment. The 
fourth class were exempt from direct taxes, but 
of course they, as well as the rest, were liable 
to indirect taxes. To Solon was ascribed the 
institution of the Boule (fiovXr}), or deliberative 
assembly of Four Hundred, one hundred mem- 
bers being elected from each of the four tribes. 
He greatly enlarged the functions of the Eccle- 
sia {cKK/inaia), which no doubt existed before 
his time, though it probably possessed scarcely 
more power than the assemblies which we find 
described in the Homeric poems. He gave it 
the right of electing the archons and other mag- 
istrates, and, what was even more important, 
made the archons and magistrates accountable 
directly to it when their year of office was ex- 
pired. He also gave it what was equivalent to 
a veto upon any proposed measure of the Boule, 
though it could not itself originate any measure. 
Besides the arrangement of the general political 
relations of the people, Solon was the author of 
a great variety of special laws, which do not 
seem to have been arranged in any systematic 
manner. Those relating to debtors and credit- 
ors have been already referred to. Several had 
for their object the encouragement of trade and 
manufactures. Foreign settlers were not to be 
naturalized as citizens unless they carried on 
some industrious pursuit. If a father did not 
teach his son some trade or profession, the son 
was not liable to maintain his father in his old 
age. The council of Areopagus had a general 
power to punish idleness. Solon forbade the 
exportation of all produce of the Attic soil ex- 
cept olive oil. He was the first who gave to 
those who died childless the power of disposing 
of their property by will. He enacted several 
laws relating to marriage, especially with re- 
gard to heiresses. The rewards which he ap- 
pointed to be given to victors at the Olympic 
and Isthmian games are for that age unusually 
large (five hundred drachmae to the former and 
one hundred to the latter). One of the most 
curious of his regulations was that which de- 
824 



nounced atimia against any citizen who, on the 
outbreak of a sedition, remained neutral. The 
laws of Solon were inscribed on wooden rollers 
(dfovcf) and triangular tablets (Kvp6eic), and were 
set up at first in the Acropolis, afterward in the 
Prytaneum. The Athenians were also indebt- 
ed to Solon for some rectification of the calen- 
dar. It is said that Solon exacted from the 
people a solemn oath, that they would observe 
his laws without alteration for a certain space 
— ten years according to Herodotus — one hund- 
red years according to other accounts. It is re- 
lated that he was himself aware that he had 
been compelled to leave many imperfections in 
his system and code. He is said to have spoken 
of his laws as being not the best, but the best 
which the Athenians would have received. 
After he had completed his task, being, we are 
told, greatly annoyed and troubled by those who 
came to him with all kinds of complaints, sug- 
gestions, or criticisms about his laws, in order 
that he might not himself have to propose any 
change, he absented himself from Athens for 
ten years, after he had obtained the oath above 
referred to. He first visited Egypt, and from 
thence proceeded to Cyprus, where he was re- 
ceived with great distinction by Philocyprus, 
king of the little town of ^Epea. Solon per- 
suaded the king to remove from the old site, 
and build a new town on the plain. The new- 
settlement was called Soli, in honor of the illus- 
trious visitor. He is further said to have visit- 
ed Lydia ; and his interview with Crcesus was 
one of the most celebrated stories in antiquity. 
Vid. Crgesus. During the absence of Solon the 
old dissensions were renewed, and shortly after 
his arrival at Athens, the supreme power was 
seized by Pisistratus. The tyrant, after his 
usurpation, is said to have paid considerable 
court to Solon, and on various occasions to have 
solicited his advice, which Solon did not with- 
hold. Solon probably died about 558, two years 
after the overthrow of the constitution, at the 
age of eighty. There was a story current in 
antiquity that, by his own directions, his ashes 
were collected and scattered round the island 
of Salamis. Of the poems of Solon several 
fragments remain. They do not indicate any 
great degree of imaginative power, but their 
style is vigorous and simple. Those that were 
called forth by special emergencies appear to 
have been marked by no small degree of energy. 
The fragments of these poems are incorporated 
in the collections of the Greek gnomic poets ; 
and there is also a separate edition of them by 
Bach, Lugd. Bat., 1825. 

[Solonius Campus, a tract of the Lanuvian 
district in Latium. Dionysius of Halicarnassus 
speaks of an Etruscan city named Solonium, 
from which Romulus received aid in his war 
with the Sabines.] 

[Solorius Mons, a mountain range of Hispa- 
nia, commencing at the sources of the Baetis, 
and stretching in a southern direction. It form- 
ed in a part of its course the boundary between 
Tarraconensis and Baetica.] 

Soltjs (Z,o?iovc, -ovvtoc, contraction of SoXoeic ■ 
liolevrlvog), called Soluntum (Solentinus) bythe 
Romans, an ancient town on the northern coast 
of Sicily, between Panormus and Thermae. 

[Solvgia (Zolvyua, now Galataki), a small 



SOLYMA. f 

place in the Corinthian territory on loXvyeioc 
Actyof, twelve stadia from the coast of the Bay 
of Cenchreae : Nicias here defeated a body of 
Corinthian troops in the Peloponnesian war.] 

Solyma (ra 26?.v{ia). 1 . (No w Taktalu-Dagh), 
the mountain range which runs parallel to the 
eastern coast of Lycia, and is a southern con- 
tinuation of Mount Climax. Sometimes the 
whole range is called Climax, and the name of 
Solyma is given to its highest peak. — 2. Another 
name of Jerusalem. 

Solymi. Vid. Lycia. 

Somnus (ynvoc), the personification and god 
of Sleep, is described as a brother of Death 
(ddvaroc, mors), and as a son of Night. In 
works of art, Sleep and Death are represented 
alike as two youths, sleeping or holding invert- 
ed torches in their hands. Vid. Mors. 

Sontius (now Isonzo), a river in Venetia, in 
the north of Italy, rising in the Carnic Alps, and 
falling into the Sinus Tergestinus east of Aqui- 
leia. 

[Sonus (Zuvoc, now Son, Sona, or Soned), a 
large tributary of the Ganges, on the right side ; 
at the junction of this river with the Ganges, 
Palibothra was situated.] 

[Sopater (lunarpoc). 1. One of the generals 
elected by the Syracusans on the murder of 
Hieronymus in B.C. 215. — 2. A general of Phil- 
ip V. of Macedonia, crossed over to Africa in 
B.C. 203 with a body of four thousand troops to 
assist the Carthaginians. He was taken pris- 
oner by the Romans with many of his soldiers. 
3. An Acarnanian, the commander of Philip's 
garrison at Chalcis, was slain with most of his 
troops in B.C. 200. — 4. One of the generals of 
Perseus, slain in battle with the Romans in 
B.C. 171. — 5. A native of Halicyse in Sicily, a 
man of wealth and consideration, condemned 
by Verres. — 6. Chief magistrate (proagorus) of 
Tyndaris in Sicily, a witness against Verres, 
who had treated him with indignity.] 

Sopater (Zuirarpoc). 1. Of Paphos, a writer 
of parody and burlesque (favapoypdfog), who 
flourished from B.C. 323 to 283.-2. Of Apamea, 
a distinguished sophist, the head for some time 
of the school of Plotinus, was a disciple of Iam- 
blichus, after whose death (before A.D. 330) he 
went to Constantinople. Here he enjoyed the 
favor and personal friendship of Constantine, 
who afterward, however, put him to death (be- 
tween A.D. 330 and 337), from the motive, as 
was alleged, of giving a proof of the sincerity of 
his own conversion to Christianity. There are 
several grammatical and rhetorical works ex- 
tant under the name of Sopater, but the best 
critics ascribe these to a younger Sopater, men- 
tioned below. — 3. The younger sophist, of Apa- 
mea or of Alexandrea, is supposed to have lived 
about two hundred years later than the former. 
Besides his extant works already alluded to, 
Photius has preserved an extract of a work en- 
titled the Historical Extracts (huloyri), which con- 
tained a vast variety of facts and figments, col- 
lected from a great number of authors. The 
remains of his rhetorical works are contained 
in Walz's Rhetores GracL 

[Soph^enetus (ZofyaivEToc), a native of Stym- 
phalus in Arcadia, who joined Cyrus the youn- 
ger in his expedition against Artaxerxes with 
one thousand heavy-armed men. He is called 



SOPHOCLES. 

I by Xenophon one of the oldest of the generals, 
I and was deputed to meet Ariaeus and the Per- 
sians after the treacherous seizure of Clearchus 
and his companions. On the arrival of the 
Greeks at Cotyora, Sophaenetus was fined for 
his negligence in allowing part of the cargoes 
of the vessels, which brought the old men, 
women, and children from Trapezus, to be pil- 
fered. In Stephanus of Byzantium, Sophaenetus 
is quoted four times as author of a Kvpov 'Avd- 
6aaic, and Muller supposes him to be the same 
with the general of Cyrus. Vid. Muller, Hi**. 
GrcRC Fragm., vol. ii., p. 74.] 

[Sophanes (Lu^dvvq), an Athenian, of the 
deme Decelea, slew in single combat Euryba- 
tes, the leader of the thousand Argives sent to 
aid the iEginetans against the Athenians in 
B.C. 491. At the battle of Plataeae, he distin- 
guished himself by his valor above all his coun- 
trymen. He was slain in battle, while engaged 
in an unsuccessful attempt to colonize Amphi- 
polis in B.C. 465.] 

Sophene (l,G)<p7]VT}, later I,o)<f>avT]V7/), a district 
of Armenia Major, lying between the ranges of 
Antitaurus and Masius ; separated from Meli- 
tene in Armenia Minor by the Euphrates, from 
Mesopotamia by the Antitaurus, and from the 
eastern part of Armenia Major by the River 
Nymphius. In the time of the Greek kings of 
Syria, it formed, together with the adjacent dis- 
trict of Acilisene, an independent western Ar- 
menian kingdom, which was subdued and united 
to the rest of Armenia by Tigranes. 

Sophilos (Sw^iAof), a comic poet of the mid- 
dle comedy, was a native of Sicyon or of Thebes, 
and flourished about B.C. 348. [A few frag- 
ments remain of his plays, collected inMeineke's 
Comic. GrcBc. Fragm. , vol. ii., p. 794-6, edit, min.] 

[Sophilus. Vid. Sophocles.] 

Sophocles (2o0o/cA^f). 1. The celebrated 
tragic poet, was born at Colonus, a village little 
more than a mile to the northwest of Athens, 
B.C. 495. He was thirty years younger than 
yEschylus, and fifteen years older than Euripi- 
des. His father's name was Sophilus or Sophil- 
lus, of whose condition in life we know nothing 
for certain ; but it is clear that Sophocles re- 
ceived an education not inferior to that of the 
sons of the most distinguished citizens of 
Athens. To both of the two leading branches 
of Greek education, music and gymnastics, he 
was carefully trained, and in both he gained the 
prize of a garland. Of the skill which he had 
attained in music and dancing in his sixteenth 
year, and of the perfection of his bodily form, 
we have conclusive evidence in the fact that, 
when the Athenians were assembled in solemn 
festival around the trophy which they had set 
up in Salamis to celebrate their victory over the 
fleet of Xerxes, Sophocles was chosen to lead, 
naked and with lyre in hand, the chorus which 
danced about the trophy, and sang the songs of 
triumph, 480. His first appearance as a dram- 
atist took place in 468, under peculiarly inter- 
esting circumstances ; not only from the fact 
that Sophocles, at the age of twenty-seven, 
came forward as the rival of the veteran iEschy • 
lus, whose supremacy had been maintained dur 
ing an entire generation, but also from the char- 
acter of the judges. The solemnities of the 
Great Dionysia were rendered more imposing 

825 



SOPHOCLES. 



SOPHOCLES. 



by the occasion of the return of Cimon from his 
expedition to Scyros, bringing with him the 
bones of Theseus. Public expectation was so 
excited respecting the approaching dramatic 
contest, and party feeling ran so high, that Ap- 
sephion, the archon eponymus, whose duty it 
was to appoint the judges, had not yet ventured 
to proceed to the final act of drawing the lots 
for their election, when Cimon, with his nine 
colleagues in the command, having entered the 
theatre, the archon detained them at the altar, 
and administered to them the oath appointed 
for the judges in the dramatic contests. Their 
decision was in favor of Sophocles, who re- 
ceived the first prize ; the second only being 
awarded to ^Eschylus, who was so mortified at 
his defeat that he left Athens and retired to 
Sicily. From this epoch Sophocles held the 
supremacy of the Athenian stage, until a formi- 
dable rival arose in Euripides, who gained the 
first prize for the first time in 441. The year 
440 is a most important era in the poet's life. 
In the spring of that year he brought out the 
earliest of his extant dramas, the Antigone, a 
play which gave the Athenians such satisfaction, 
especially on account of the political wisdom it 
displayed, that they appointed him one of the 
ten strategi, of whom Pericles was the chief, in 
the war against Samos. It would seem that in 
this war Sophocles neither obtained nor sought 
for any military reputation : he is represented 
as good-humoredly repeating the judgment of 
Pericles concerning him, that he understood 
the making of poetry, but not the commanding 
of an army. The family dissensions which 
troubled his last years are connected with a 
well-known and beautiful story. His family 
consisted of two sons, Iophon, the offspring of 
Nicostrate, who was a free Athenian woman, 
and Ariston, his son by Theoris of Sicyon ; and 
Ariston had a son named Sophocles, for whom 
his grandfather showed the greatest affection. 
Iophon, who was by the laws of Athens his 
father's rightful heir, jealous of his love for the 
young Sophocles, and apprehending that Sopho- 
cles purposed to bestow upon his grandson a 
large proportion of his property, is said to have 
summoned his father before the Phratores, who 
seem to have had a sort of jurisdiction in family 
affairs, on the charge that his mind was affect- 
ed by old age. As his only reply, Sophocles 
exclaimed, " If I am Sophocles, I am not beside 
myself ; and if I am beside myself, I am not 
Sophocles ;" and then he read from his CEdipus 
at Coionus, which was lately written, but not yet 
brought out, the magnificent parodos, beginning, 

Eiyt-ou, give, racds ^wpaf, 

whereupon the judges at once dismissed the 
«ase, and rebuked Iophon for his undutiful con- 
duct. Sophocles forgave his son, and it is prob- 
able that the reconciliation was referred to in 
the lines of the CEdipus at Coionus, where Antig- 
one pleads with her father to forgive Polyni- 
ces, as other fathers had been induced to for- 
give their bad children (v. 1192, foil.). Sopho- 
cles died soon afterward in 406, in his ninetieth 
year. All the various accounts of his death 
and funeral are of a fictitious and poetical com- 
plexion. According to some writers, he was 
choked by a grape ; another writer related that 
826 



I in a public recitation of the Antigone he sustain- 
ed his voice so long without a pause that, 
through the weakness of extreme age, he lost 
his breath and his life together ; while others 
ascribed his death to excessive joy at obtaining 
a victory. By the universal consent of the best 
critics, both of ancient and of modern times, the 
tragedies of Sophocles are the perfection of the 
Greek drama. The subjects and style of Sopho- 
cles are human, while those of ^Eschylus are 
essentially heroic. The latter excite terror, 
pity, and admiration, as we view them at a dis- 
tance ; the former bring those same feelings 
home to the heart, with the addition of sympa- 
thy and self-application. No individual human 
being can imagine himself in the position of 
Prometheus, or derive a personal warning from 
the crimes and fate of Clytemnestra ; but every 
one can, in feeling, share the self-devotion of 
Antigone in giving up her life at the call of 
fraternal piety, and the calmness which comes 
over the spirit of CEdipus when he is reconciled 
to the gods. In ^Eschylus, the sufferers are the 

| victims of an inexorable destiny ; but Sophocles 
brings more prominently into view those faults 
of their own, which form one element of the 

I destiny of which they are the victims, and is 
more intent upon inculcating, as the lesson 
taught by their woes, that wise calmness and 
moderation, in desires and actions, in prosperity 
and adversity, which the Greek poets and phi- 
losophers celebrate under the name of oaxppoavvr]. 
On the other hand, he never descends to that 
level to which Euripides brought down the art, 
the exhibition of human passion and suffering 
for the mere purpose of exciting emotion in the 
spectators, apart from a moral end. The dif- 
ference between the two poets is illustrated by 
the saying of Sophocles, that " he himself rep- 
resented men as they ought to be, but Euripides 
exhibited them as they are." The number of 
plays ascribed to Sophocles was one hundred 

| and thirty. He contended not only with JEs- 
chylus and Euripides, but also with Chosrilus, 
Aristias, Agathon, and other poets, among whom 
was his own son Iophon ; and he carried off the 
first prize twenty or twenty-four times, frequent 
ly the second, and never the third. It is re- 
markable, as proving his growing activity and 
success, that of his one hundred and thirteen 
dramas, eighty-one were brought out after his 
fifty-fourth year, and also that all his extant 
dramas, which of course, in the judgment of the 
grammarians, were his best, belong to this latter 
period of his life. The seven extant tragedies 
were probably brought out in the following 
chronological order : Antigone, Electra, Trachin- 
i(E, CEdipus Tyrannus, Ajaz, Philoctetes, CEdipus 
at Coionus : the last of these was brought out. 
after the death of the poet, by his grandson- 
Of the numerous editions of Sophocles, the 
most useful one for the ordinary student is that 
by Wunder, Gotha? et Erfurdt, 1831-1846, 2 vols , 
8vo. [Four parts have reached a second edi- 
tion, begun 1839 ; and the other three a third. 
A useful edition, comprising most of Wunder's 
notes in English, was published by Mitchell, 
London, 1841-4, 2 vols 8vo : a full and learn- 
ed commentary on Sophocles is contained in 
Ellendt's Lexicon Sophocleum, Kdnigsberg, 1835, 
2 vols. 8vo.]— 2. Son of Ariston and grandson 



SOPHONISBA. 



SORDICE. 



of the elder Sophocles, was also an Athenian 
tragic poet. The love of his grandfather toward 
him has been already mentioned. In 401 he 
brought out the (Edipus at Colonus of his grand- 
father ; but he did not begin to exhibit his own 
dramas till 396 — [3. An Athenian orator, whose 
oration for Euctemon is quoted by Aristotle. 
Ruhnken supposes that he is the same as the 
Sophocles mentioned bv Xenophon as one of 
the Thirty Tyrants.] 

Sophonisba, daughter of the Carthaginian 
general Hasdrubal, the son of Gisco. She had 
been betrothed by her father, at a very early 
age, to the Numidian prince Masinissa ; but, at 
a subsequent period, Hasdrubal being desirous 
to gain over Syphax, the rival monarch of Nu- 
midia, to the Carthaginian alliance, offered him 
the hand of his daughter in marriage. The 
beauty and accomplishments of Sophonisba pre- 
vailed over the influence of Scipio : Syphax 
married her, and became the zealous supporter 
and ally of Carthage. Sophonisba, on her part, 
was assiduous in her endeavors to secure his 
adherence to the cause of her countrymen. 
After the defeat of Syphax, and the capture of 
his capital city of Cirta by Masinissa, Sophonis- 
ba fell into the hands of the conqueror, upon 
whom, however, her beauty exercised so pow- 
erful an influence that he determined to marry 
her himself. Their nuptials were accordingly 
celebrated without delay, hut Scipio (who was 
apprehensive lest she should exercise the same 
influence over Masinissa which she had pre- 
viously done over Syphax) refused to ratify this 
arrangement, and, upbraiding Masinissa with 
his weakness, insisted on the immediate sur- 
render of the princess. Unable to resist this 
command, the Numidian king spared her the 
humiliation of captivity by sending her a bowl 
of poison, which she drank without hesitation, 
and thus put an end to her own life. 

Sophron (2(j0poy), of Syracuse, was the prin- 
cipal writer of that species of composition call- 
ed the Mime (fiiuor), which was one of the nu- 
merous varieties of the Dorian Comedy. He 
flourished about B.C. 460-420. When Sophron 
is called the inventor of mimes, the meaning is, 
that he reduced to the form of a literary com- 
position a species of amusement which the 
Greeks of Sicily, who were pre-eminent for 
broad humor and merriment, had practiced from 
time immemorial at their public festivals, and 
the nature of which was very similar to the 
Spartan Deicelesta. Such mimetic perform- 
ances prevailed throughout the Dorian states 
under various names. One feature of the Mimes 
of Sophron, which formed a marked distinction 
between them and comic poetry, was the na- 
ture of their rhythm. There is, however, some 
difficulty in determining whether they were in 
mere prose, or in mingled poetry and prose, or 
in prose with a peculiar rhythmical movement, 
but no metrical arrangement. With regard to 
the substance of these compositions, their char- 
acter, so far as it can be ascertained, appears 
to have been ethical ; that is, the scenes repre- 
sented were those of ordinary life, and the lan- 
guage employed was intended to bring out more 
clearly the characters of the persons exhibited 
in those scenes, not only for the amusement, 
but also for the instruction of the spectators. 



j Plato was a great admirer of Sophron, and the 
philosopher is said to have been the first who 
made the Mimes known at Athens. The se- 
rious purpose which was aimed at in the works 
of Sophron was always, as in the Attic Com- 
edy, clothed under a sportive form ; and it can 
easily be imagined that sometimes the latter 
element prevailed, even to the extent of ob- 
scenity, as the extant fragments and the paral- 
lel of the Attic Comedy combine to prove. The 
best collection of the fragments of Sophron is 
by Ahrens, Be Grcecce Lingua Dialectis. 

Sophroniscus. Vid. Socrates. 

[Sophrosyne (^otppoavvn), daughter of Dio- 
nysius the elder and of Aristomache, the sister 
of Dion, was married to her half-brother, the 
younger Dionysius.] 

Sophus, P. Sempronius, tribune of the plebs 
B.C. 310, and consul 304, is mentioned as one 
of the earliest jurists, and is said to have owed 
his name of Sophus or Wise to his great merits. 

Sopian.se (now Funfkirchen), a town in Pan- 
nonia Inferior, on the road from Mursa to Vin- 
dobona, the birth-place of the Emperor Max- 
iminus. 

[Sopolis (Zunolir). 1. Son of Hermodorus, 
commanded the Amphipolitan cavalry in the 
army of Alexander, in the battle against the 
Triballians, on the banks of the Lyginus, in B.C. 
335 ; he also commanded a troop of horse at 
the battle of Arbela in 331. — 2. A distinguished 
painter, flourished at Rome in the middle of the 
first century B.C., and is said by Cicero to have 
been the head of a school of painters.] 

Sora. 1. (Soranus : now Sora), a town in 
Latium, on the right bank of the River Liris, 
and north of Arpinum, with a strongly-fortified 
citadel. It was the most northerly town of the 
Volsci in Latium, and afterward joined the Sam- 
nites ; but it was conquered by the Romans, 
and was twice colonized by them, since the in- 

j habitants had destroyed the first body of col- 
onists. There are still remains of the polyg- 

! onal walls of the ancient town. — 2. A town in 

I Paphlagonia of uncertain site. 

Soracte (now Monte di S. Oreste), a celebra- 
ted mountain in Etruria, in the territory of the 

! Falisci, near the Tiber, about twenty-four miles 

I from Rome, but the summit of which, frequent- 
ly covered with snow, was clearly visible from 
the city. (Vides ut alta stet nive candidum So- 

\ racte, Hor., Carm., i., 9.) The whole mountain 
was sacred to Apollo, and on its summit was a 
temple of this god. At the festival of Apollo, 
celebrated on this mountain, the worshippers 
passed over burning embers without receiving 
any injury. (Virg., Ma., xi., 785, seq.) 

Soranus. 1. A Sabine divinity, usually iden- 
tified with Apollo, worshipped on Mount So- 
racte. Vid. Soracte. — 2. The name of several 
physicians, of whom the most celebrated seems 
to have been a native of Ephesus, and to have 
practiced his profession first at Alexandrea, and 
afterward at Rome, in the reigns of Trajan and 
Hadrian, A.D. 98-138. There are several med- 
ical works still extant under the name of Sora- 
nus, but whether they were written by the na- 
tive of Ephesus can not be determined. 

Sordice (now Etang de Leucate), a lake in 
Gallia Narbonensis, at the foot of the Pyrenees, 
formed by the River Sordis. 

827 



SORDONES. 



SOTION. 



Sordones or Sordi, a small people in Gallia 
Narbonensis, at the foot of the Pyrenees, whose 
chief town was Ruscino. 

[Sosia Galla, a favorite of Agrippina, the 
widow of Germanicus, was involved in the 
charge of treason against her husband C. Silius, 
and sent into exile by Tiberius.] 

Sosibicjs (Luaitioc), a distinguished Lacedae- 
monian grammarian, who flourished in the reign 
of Ptolemy Philadelphus (about B.C. 251), and 
was contemporary with Callimachus. 

[Sosicles (2uaLK?,7jg), a Corinthian deputy to 
the congress which had in consideration the 
restoration of Hippias to the tyranny of Athens. 
His earnest opposition to that measure induced 
the allies to abandon the project.] 

Sosigenes (LuoLyevrjs), the peripatetic phi- 
losopher, was the astronomer employed by Ju- 
lius Caesar to superintend the correction of the 
calendar (B.C. 46). He is called an Egyptian, 
but may be supposed to have been an Alexan- 
drean Greek. Vid. Diet, of Antiq., art. Calen- 

DARIUM. 

Sosiphanes (Zucubavrje), the son of Sosicles 
of Syracuse, was one of the seven tragedians 
who were called the Tragic Pleiad. He was 
born at the end of the reign of Philip, and flour- 
ished B.C. 284. [A few fragments remain, col- 
lected in Wagner's Tragic. Gtcec. Fragm., p. 
157-8.] 

[Sosis (Zuolc), a Syracusan, who joined Cy- 
rus the younger with three hundred Greek mer- 
cenaries.] 

Sositheus (locLdeog), of Syracuse or Athens, 
or Alexandrea in the Troad, was a distinguished 
tragic poet, one of the Tragic Pleiad, and the 
antagonist of the tragic poet Homer. He flour- 
ished about B.C. 284. [The fragments of his 
tragedies are collected in Wagner's Tragic. 
Graze. Fragm., p. 149-152.] 

Sosius. 1. C, quaestor B.C. 66, and praetor 
49. He was afterward one of Antony's princi- 
pal lieutenants in the East. He was appointed 
by Antony, in 38, governor of Syria and Cilicia 
in the place of Ventidius. Like his predeces- 
sor in the government, he carried on the mil- 
itary operations in his province with great suc- 
cess. In 37 he advanced against Jerusalem 
along with Herod, and after hard fighting be- 
came master of the city, and placed Herod upon 
the throne. In return tor these services, An- 
tony obtained for Sosius the honor of a triumph 
in 34, and the consulship in 32. Sosius com- 
manded the left wing of Antony's fleet at the 
battle of Actium. He was afterward pardoned 
by Octavianus, at the intercession of L. Arrun- 
tius.— 2. The name of two brothers (Sosii), 
booksellers at Rome in the time of Horace. 
They were probably freedmen, perhaps of the 
Sosius mentioned above. 

Sospita, that is, the " saving goddess," was 
a surname of Juno at Lanuvium and at Rome, 
in both of which places she had a temple. Her 
worship was very ancient in Latium, and was 
transplanted from Lanuvium to Rome. 

Sosthenes (I,G)Gd£v7}c), a Macedonian officer 
of noble birth, who obtained the supreme di- 
rection of affairs during the period of confusion 
which followed the invasion of the Gauls. He 
defeated the Gauls in 280. He is included by 
the chronologers among the kings of Macedo- 



nia, but it is very doubtful whether he ever as- 
sumed the royal title. 

Sostratus (Sworparof), the name of at least 
four, if not five, Grecian artists, who have been 
frequently confounded with one another. 1. A 
statuary in bronze, the sister's son of Pythago- 
ras of Rhegium, and his disciple, flourished 
about B.C. 424.-2. Of Chios, the instructor of 
Pantias, flourisned about B.C. 400.— 3. A stat- 
uary in bronze, whom Pliny mentions as a con- 
temporary of Lysippus, at 01. 114, B.C. 323, the 
date of Alexander's death. It is probable, how- 
ever, that he was identical with the following. 
— 4. The son of Dexiphanes, of Cnidus, w r as one 
of the great architects who flourished during 
and after the life of Alexander the Great. He 
built for Ptolemy I., the son of Lagus, the cel- 
ebrated Pharos of Alexandrea. He also em- 
bellished his native city, Cnidus, with a work 
which was one of the wonders of ancient archi- 
tecture, namely, a portico, or colonnade, sup- 
porting a terrace, which served as a promenade. 
— 5. An engraver of precious stones, whose 
name appears on several very beautiful cameos 
and intaglios. 

Sosus (Scjo-of), of Pergamus, a worker in mo- 
saic, and, according to Pliny, the most cele- 
brated of all who practiced that art. 

Sotades CZurddric). 1. An Athenian comic 
poet of the Middle Comedy, who must not be 
confounded with the more celebrated poet of 
Maronea. — 2. A native of Maronea in Thrace, 
flourished at Alexandrea about B.C. 280. He 
wrote lascivious poems (called favanEc or nivai- 
6oi) in the Ionian dialect, whence they were 
also called 'Iuvlkol loyoi. They were also call- 
ed Sotadean poems (Zu-ddeta aaiiara). It would 
seem that Sotades carried his lascivious and 
abusive satire to the utmost lengths ; and the 
freedoms which he took at last brought him 
into trouble. According to Plutarch, he made 
a vehement and gross attack on Ptolemy Phil- 
adelphus, on the occasion of his marriage with 
his sister Arsinog, and the king threw him into 
prison, where he remained for a long time. Ac- 
cording to Athenaeus, the poet attacked both 
Lysimachus and Ptolemy, and, having fled from 
Alexandrea, he was overtaken at Caunus by 
j Ptolemy's general Patroclus, who shut him up 
in a leaden chest and cast him into the sea. 

Soter (2oj777p), *■ e -j "the Saviour" (Lat. Ser- 
vator or Sospes), occurs as the surname of sev- 
eral divinities, especially of Zeus (Jupiter). It 
was also a surname of Ptolemaeus I., king of 
Egypt, as well as of several of the other later 
Greek kings. 

[Soterichus (loTTjptxoc), of the Oasis, an epic 
poet and historian of the time of the Emperor 
Diocletian. To him are ascribed an Encomium 
on Diocletian, a poem entitled BaaaapiKa fjroc 
AiowaiaKu, one on Pantheia of Babylon, anoth- 
er on Ariadne, a life of Apollonius of Tyana, 
! a poetical history of the capture of Thebes by 
Alexander the Great, entitled ILvduv r) 'A/U£av- 
dpiaaov, and others.] 

[Sotericus Marcius, a freedman, from whom 
L. Crassus purchased his Tusculan villa.] 

SotioxV (Lutluv). 1. A philosopher, and a 
native of Alexandrea, who flourished at the close 
I of the third century B.C. He is chiefly re- 
1 markable as the author of a work (entitled Aia 



SOTTIATES. 



SPARTA. 



doxat) on the successive teachers in the differ- 
ent philosophical schools. — 2. A philosopher, 
and also a native of Alexandrea, who lived in 
the age of Tiberius. He was the instructor of 
Seneca, who derived from him his admiration 
of Pythagoras. It was perhaps this Sotion who 
was the author of a treatise on anger, quoted 
by Stobaeus.— 3. A Peripatetic philosopher, men- 
tioned by A. Gellius, is probably a different per- 
son from either of the preceding. 

Sottiates or Sotiates, a powerful and war- 
like people in Gallia Aquitanica, on the frontiers 
of Gallia Narbonensis, were subdued by P. Cras- 
sus, Caesar's legate, after a hard-fought battle. 
The modern Sds probably represents the an- 
cient town of this people. 

[Sous (2dof), one of the earliest kings of 
Sparta, son of Procles, whom he succeeded on 
the throne, and father of Eurypon, from whom 
the Proclid kings were called Eurypontidae.] 

Sozomenus CZuCdfievoc), usually called Sozo- 
men in English, was a Greek ecclesiastical his- 
torian of the fifth century. He was probably a 
native of Bethelia or Bethel, a village near Gaza 
in Palestine. His parents were Christians. He 
practiced as an advocate at Constantinople, 
whence he is surnamed Scholasticus ; and he 
was still engaged in his profession when he 
wrote his history. His ecclesiastical history, 
which is extant, is in nine books, and is dedi- 
cated to the Emperor Theodosius II. It com- 
mences with the reign of Constantine, and 
comes down a little later than the death of Ho- 
norius, A.D. 423. The work is incomplete, and 
breaks off in the middle of a chapter. The au- 
thor, we know, had proposed to bring it down 
to 439, the year in which the history of Socra- 
tes ends. Sozomen excels Socrates in style, 
but is inferior to the latter in soundness of judg- 
ment. The history of Sozomen is printed along 
with the other Greek ecclesiastical historians. 
Vid. Socrates. 

Sozopolis, afterward Suscpolis (Sw^oTroAjf, 
'Lu^ovirolig : ruins at Susu), a considerable city 
of Pisidia, in a plain surrounded by fountains, 
north of Termessus. 

Sparta (Lndprri, Dor. 'LTzdpra: 27raprmr77f, 
Spartiates, Spartanus), also called Laced^mon 
(Aanedaifj.u)v: AaKedatfxoviog, Lacedaemonius), the 
capital of Laconia and the chief city of Pelo- 
ponnesus, was situated on the right bank of the 
Eurotas (now Iri), about twenty miles from the 
sea. It stood on a plain which contained within 
it several rising grounds and hills. It was 
bounded on the east by the Eurotas, on the 
northwest by the small river CEnus (now Kele- 
sina), and on the southeast by the small river 
Tiasa (now Magula), both of which streams fell 
into the Eurotas. The plain in which Sparta 
stood was shut in on the east by Mount Mene- 
laium, and on the west by Mount Taygetus ; 
whence the city is called by Homer " the hollow 
Lacedaemon." It was of a circular form, about 
six miles in circumference, and consisted of 
several distinct quarters, which were originally 
separate villages, and which were never united 
into one regular town. Its site is occupied by 
the modern villages of Magula and Psykhiko; 
and the principal modern town in the neighbor- 
hood is Mistra, which lies about two miles to 
the west, on the slopes of Mount Taygetus. 



During the flourishing times of Greek independ- 
ence, Sparta was never surrounded by walls, 
since the bravery of its citizens, and the diffi- 
culty of access to it, were supposed to render 
such defences needless. It was first fortified 
by the tyrant Nabis ; but it did not possess reg- 
ular walls till the time of the Romans. Sparta, 
unlike most Greek cities, had no proper Acropo- 
lis, but this name was only given to one of the 
steepest hills of the town^on the summit of 
which stood the temple of Athena Poliuchos 
or Chalcicecus. Five distinct quarters of the 
city are mentioned : 1. Pitane (Uiravn : Ethnic 
UiTavuTijg), which appears to have been the 
most important part of the city, and in which 
was situated the Agora, containing the council- 
house of the senate, and the offices of the pub- 
lic magistrates. It was also surrounded by va- 
rious temples and other public buildings. Of 
these the most splendid was the Persian Stoa 
or portico, originally built of the spoils taken in 
the Persian war, and enlarged and adorned at 
later times. A part of the Agora was called the 
Chorus or dancing place, in which the Spartan 
youths performed dances in honor of Apollo. 
2. Limnce (Aiuvai), a suburb of the city, on the 
banks of the Eurotas, northeast of Pitane, was 
originally a hollow spot covered with water. 3. 
Mesoa or Messoa (Mecoa, Meaooa : Eth. Meo^o- 
urTjg), also by the side of the Eurotas, southeast 
of the preceding, containing the Dromus and 
the Platanistas, which was a spot nearly sur- 
rounded with water, and so called from the plane- 
trees growing there. 4. Cynosura (Kvvogovpa : 
Kvvogovpevg), in the southwest of the city, and 
south of Pitane. 5. Mgi&a. (Alyeldai), in the 
northwest of the city, and west of Pitane. The 
two principal streets of Sparta ran from the 
Agora to the extreme end of the city : these 
were, i. Apheta or Aphetais ('Apc'rat, 'A^eraif, 
sc. 666c), extending in a southeasterly direction 
past the temple of Dictynna and the tombs of 
the Eurypontidae ; and, 2. Skias (Z/«uf), run- 
ning nearly parallel to the preceding one, but 
further to the east, and which derived its name 
from an ancient place of assembly, of a circular 
form, called Skias. The most important re- 
mains of ancient Sparta are the ruins of the 
theatre, which was near the Agora. Sparta is 
said to have been founded by Lacedaemon, a son 
of Zeus and Taygete, who married Sparta, the 
daughter of Eurotas, and called the city after 
the name of his wife. His son Amyclas is said 
to have been the founder of Amyclae, which 
was for a long time a more important town than 
Sparta itself. In the mythical period, Argos 
was the chief city in Peloponnesus, and Sparta 
is represented as subject to it. Here reigned 
Menelaus, the younger brother of Agamemnon ; 
and by the marriage of Orestes, the son of Aga- 
memnon, with Hermione, the daughter of Mene- 
laus, the two kingdoms of Argos and Sparta be- 
came united. The Dorian conquest of Pelo- 
ponnesus, which, according to tradition, took 
place eighty years after the Trojan war, made 
Sparta the capital of the country. Laconia fell 
to the share of the two sons of Aristodemus, 
Eurysthenes and Procles, who took up their 
residence at Sparta, and ruled over the kingdom 
conjointly. The old inhabitants of the country 
maintained themselves at Amyclae, which was 

829 



SPARTA. 



SPARTACUS. 



not conquered for a long time. After the com- 
plete subjugation of the country we find three 
distinct classes in the population : the Dorian 
conquerors, who resided in the capital, and who 
were called Spartiatae or Spartans ; the Peri- 
aeci or old Achaean inhabitants, who became 
tributary to the Spartans, and possessed no po- 
litical rights ; and the Helots, who were also a 
portion of the old Achaean inhabitants, but were 
reduced to a state of slavery. From various 
causes the Spartans became distracted by intes- 
line quarrels, till at length Lycurgus, who be- 
longed to the royal family, was selected by all 
parties to give a new constitution to the state. 
The date of Lycurgus is uncertain ; but it is 
impossible to place it later than B.C. 825. The 
constitution of" Lycurgus, which is described in 
a separate article {vid. Lyucrgus), laid the foun- 
dation of Sparta's greatness. She soon became 
aggressive, and gradually extended her sway 
over the greater part of Peloponnesus. In B.C. 
743 the Spartans attacked Messenia, and after 
a war of twenty years subdued this country, 
723. In 685 the Messenians again took up 
arms, but at the end of seventeen years were 
again completely subdued, and their country 
from this time forward became an integral por- 
tion of Laconia. For details, vid. Messexia. 
After the close of the second Messenian war 
the Spartans continued their conquests in Pelo- 
ponnesus. They defeated the Tegeans, and 
wrested the district of Thyreae from the Ar- 
gives. At the time of the Persian invasion, 
they were confessedly the first people in Greece ; 
and to them was granted by unanimous consent 
the chief command in the war. But after the 
final defeat of the Persians, the haughtiness of 
Pausanias disgusted most of the Greek states, 
particularly the Ionians, and led them to trans- 
fer the supremacy to Athens (477). From this 
time the power of Athens steadily increased, 
and Sparta possessed little influence outside of 
the Peloponnesus. The Spartans, however, 
made several attempts to check the rising great- 
ness of Athens, and their jealousy of the latter 
led at length to the Peloponnesian war (431). 
This war ended in the overthrow of Athens, 
and the restoration of the supremacy of Sparta 
over the rest of Greece (404). But the Spar- 
tans did not retain this supremacy more than 
thirty years. Their decisive defeat by the The- 
bans under Epaminondas at the battle of Leuc- 
tra (371) gave the Spartan power a shock from 
which it never recovered ; and the restoration 
of the Messenians to their country two years 
afterward completed the humiliation of Sparta. 
Thrice was the Spartan territory invaded by 
the Thebans, and the Spartan women saw for 
the first time the watch-fires of an enemy's 
camp. The Spartans now finally lost their su- 
premacy over Greece, but no other Greek state 
succeeded to their power ; and about thirty 
years afterward the greater part of Greece was 
obliged to yield to Philip of Macedon. The 
Spartans, however, kept haughtily aloof from 
the Macedonian conqueror, and refused to take 
part in the Asiatic expedition of his son Alex- 
ander the Great. Under the later Macedonian 
monarchs the power of Sparta still further de- 
clined ; the institutions of Lycurgus were neg- 
lected, luxury crept into the state, the number 
830 



of citizens diminished, and the landed property 
became vested in a few families. Agis endeav- 
ored to restore the ancient institutions of Ly- 
curgus, but he perished in the attempt (240). 
Cleomenes III., who began to reign 236, was 
more successful. He succeeded in putting the 
ephors to death, and overthrowing the existing 
government (225) ; and he then made a redis- 
tribution of the landed property, and augmented 
the number of the Spartan citizens by admit- 
ting some of the Periceci to this honor. His 
reforms infused new blood into the state, and 
for a short time he carried on war with success 
against the Achaeans. But Aratus, the general 
of the Achaeans, called in the assistance of An- 
tigonus Doson, the king of Macedonia, who de- 
feated Cleomenes at the decisive battle of Sel- 
lasia (221), and followed up his success by the 
capture of Sparta. Sparta now sank into insig- 
nificance, and was ruled by a succession of na- 
tive tyrants, till at length it was compelled to 
abolish its peculiar institutions, and to join the 
Achaean league. Shortly afterward it fell, with 
the rest of Greece, under the Roman power. 

Spartacus, the name of several kings of the 
Cimmerian Bosporus, i. Succeeded the dynasty 
of the Archeanactidae in B.C. 438, and reigned 
until 431. He was succeeded by his son Seleu- 
cus. — 2. Began to reign in 427, and reigned 
twenty years. He was succeeded in 407 by his 
son Satyrus. — 3. Succeeded his father Leucon 
in 353, and died, leaving his kingdom to his son 
Parysades in 348. — 4. Son of Eumelus, began 
to reign in 304, and reigned twenty years. 

Spartacus, by birth a Thracian, was success- 
ively a shepherd, a soldier, and a chief of ban- 
ditti. On one of his predatory expeditions he 
was taken prisoner, and sold to a trainer of glad- 
iators. In 73 he was a member of the company 
of Lentulus, and was detained in his school at 
Capua, in readiness for the games at Rome. 
He persuaded his fellow-prisoners to make an 
attempt to gain their freedom. About seventy 
of them broke out of the school of Lentulus, and 
took refuge in the crater of Vesuvius. Sparta- 
cus was chosen leader, and was soon joined by 
a number of runaway slaves. They were block- 
aded by C. Claudius Pulcher at the head of three 
thousand men, but Spartacus attacked the be- 
siegers and put them to flight. His numbers 
rapidly increased, and for two years (B.C. 73- 
71) he defeated one Roman army after another, 
and laid waste Italy, from the foot of the Alps 
to the southernmost corner of the peninsula. 
After both the consuls of 72 had been defeated 
by Spartacus, M. Licinius Crassus, the praetor, 
was appointed to the command of the war. 
Crassus carried on the contest with vigor and 
success, and, after gaining several advantages 
over the enemy, at length defeated them on the 
River Silarus in a decisive battle, in which Spar- 
tacus was slain. The character of Spartacus 
has been maligned by the Roman writers. Cic- 
ero compares the vilest of his contemporaries 
to him : Horace speaks of him as a common 
robber ; none recognize his greatness, but the 
terror of his name survived to a late period of 
the empire. Accident made Spartacus a shep- 
herd, a freebooter, and a gladiator ; nature form- 
ed him a hero. The excesses of his followers 
he could not always repress, and his efforts tc 



SPARTAR1US. 



SPITHRIDATES. 



restrain them often cost him his popularity. But 
ne was in himself not less mild and just than 
he was able and valiant. 

SpaetarIus Campus. Vid. Carthago Nova. 

Sparti (ZnapToi, from OTreipu), the Sown-Men, 
is the name given to the armed men who sprang 
from the dragon's teeth sown by Cadmus, and 
who were believed to be the ancestors of the 
five oldest families at Thebes. 

Spartianus, JSmits, one of the Scriptorcs His- 
tories. Augusta, lived in the time of Diocletian 
and Constantine, and wrote the biographies of, 
1. Hadrianus and ^Elius Verus ; 2. Didius Juli- 
anus ; 3. Severus ; 4. Pescennius Niger; 5. Car- 
acalla ; 6. Geta. For the editions of Spartia- 
nus, vid. Capitolinus. 

Spartolus (27rapTwAoc), a town in the Mace- 
donian peninsula of Chalcidice, north of Olyn- 
thus. 

Spauta (Z~avTa : now Lake of Urmi), a large 
salt-lake in the west of Media, whose waters 
were singularly bitter and acrid. It was also 
called Matiana (Manavrj Xi\ivr\) from the name 
of the people who dwelt around it. 

Spercheus CZirepxeioc : now Elladha), a river 
in the south of Thessaly, which rises in Mount 
Tymphrestus, runs in an easterly direction 
through the territory of the ^Enianes, and 
through the district Malis, and falls into the in- 
nermost corner of the Sinus Maliacus. As a 
river-god Spercheus is a son of Oceanus and 
Terra (Ge), and the father of Menesthius by 
Polydora, the daughter of Peleus. To this god 
Peleus dedicated the hair of his son Achilles, 
in order that he might return in safety from the 
Trojan war. 

Spes, the personification of Hope, was wor- 
shipped at Rome, where she had several tem- 
ples, the most ancient of which had been built 
in B.C. 354, by the consul Atilius Calatinus, 
near the Porta Carmentalis. The Greeks also 
worshipped the personification of Hope, Elpis, 
and they relate the beautiful allegory, that when 
Epimetheus opened the vessel brought to him 
by Pandora, from which all manner of evils 
were scattered over the earth, Hope alone re- 
mained behind. Hope was represented in 
works of art as a youthful figure, lightly walk- 
ing in full attire, holding in her right hand a 
flower, and with the left lifting up her garment. 

Speusippus ( ZirevonrTroc ), the philosopher, 
was a native of Athens, and the son of Eury- 
medon and Potone, a sister of Plato. He ac- 
companied his uncle Plato on his third journey 
to Syracuse, where he displayed considerable 
ability and prudence. He succeeded Plato as 
president of the Academy, but was at the head 
of the school for only eight years (B.C. 347- 
339). He died, as it appears, of a lingering 
paralytic illness. He wrote several works, all 
of which are lost, in which he developed the 
doctrines of his great master. 

Sphacteria. Vid. Pylos, No. 3. 

Sph^eria (loaipia : now JPoros), an island off 
the coast of Troezen in Argolis, and between it 
and the island of Calauria, with the latter of 
which it was connected by means of a sand- 
bank. Here Sphaerus, the charioteer of Pelops, 
is said to have been buried. 

[Sphaerus (Itpaipog). Vid. Sphveria.] 

Sph^rus (ttyaipoc), a Stoic philosopher, stud- 



ied first under Zeno of Citium, and afterward 
under Cleanthes. He lived at Alexandrea dur- 
ing the reigns of the first two Ptolemies. He 
also taught at Lacedaemon, and was believed to 
have had considerable influence in moulding the 
character of Cleomenes. He was in repute 
among the Stoics for the accuracy of his defini- 
tions. He was the author of several works, all 
of which are lost. 

Sphendale (2<pEvo°u?i7) : Itpevda/.evc), a demus 
of Attica belonging to the tribe Hippothoontis, 
on the frontiers of Bceotia, between Tanagra and 
Decelea. 

Sphettcs (S^rrof : S^rnof), a demus in 
the south of Attica, near the silver mines of 
Sunium, belonging to the tribe Acamantis. 

[Sphodrias (Itpodplag), Spartan harmost at 
Thespiae B.C. 378, attempted in a time of peace 
to seize upon the Piraeus. Having failed in the 
undertaking, he was tried by the Spartan ephors, 
but acquitted through the influence of Agesilaus. 
He was slain at the battle of Leuctra, B.C. 371.] 

Sphinx (S^'y^, gen. ZQiyyog), a she-monster,, 
daughter of Orthus and Chimaera, born in the 
country of the Arimi, or of Typhon and Echidna, 
or lastly of Typhon and Chimaera. She is said 
to have proposed a riddle to the Thebans, and 
to have murdered all who were unable to guess 
it. CEdipus solved it, whereupon the Sphinx 
slew herself. (For details, vid. CEdipus.) The 
legend appears to have come from Egypt, but 
the figure of the Sphinx is represented some- 
what differently in Greek mythology and art. 
The Egyptian Sphinx is the figure of a lion 
without wings in a lying attitude, the upper part 
of the body being that of a human being. The 
Sphinxes appear in Egypt to have been set up 
in avenues forming the approaches to temples. 
The common idea of a Greek Sphinx, on the 
other hand, is that of a winged body of a lion, 
the breast and upper part being the figure of a 
woman. Greek Sphinxes, moreover, are not 
always represented in a lying attitude, but ap- 
pear in different positions, as it might suit the 
fancy of the sculptor or poet. Thus they appear 
with the face of a maiden, the breast, feet, and 
claws of a lion, the tail of a serpent, and the 
wings of a bird. Sphinxes were frequently in- 
troduced by Greek artists as ornaments of ar- 
chitectural works. 

Spina. 1. (Now Spinazzino), a town in Gal- 
lia Cispadana, in the territory of the Lingones, 
on the most southerly of the mouths of the Po, 
which was called after it Ostium Spineticum. 
It was a very ancient town, said to have been 
founded by the Greeks, but in the time of Strabo 
had ceased to be a place of any importance. — 
2. (Now Spino), a town in Gallia Transpadana, 
on the River Addua. 

[Spino, a small stream in or near Rome, 
which, Cicero says, together with the Almo, 
Nodinus, Tiberinus, and other flowing waters, 
was invoked in the prayers of the augurs.] 

Spintharus (1-nLvdapoq), of Heraclea on the 
Pontus, a tragic poet, contemporary with Aris- 
tophanes, who designates him as a barbarian 
and a Phrygian. He was also ridiculed by the 
other comic poets. 

[Spithridates (ZTridpida-rjc), a Persian com- 
mander sent by Pharnabazus to oppose the pas- 
sage of the ten thousand through Bithynia, 

831 



SPOLATL'M. 



STATIUS. 



B.C. 400. He afterward revolted from the Per- 
sians, and joined AgesUaus. — 2. Satrap of Lydia 
and Ionia under Darius Codomannus, was one 
of the Persian commanders at the battle of the 
Granicus in B.C. 334, in which battle, while Al- 
exander was engaged with Rhcesaces, Spithri- 
dates attacked him from behind, and had raised 
his sword to strike, when Clitus, anticipating the 
blow, cut off his arm. (Compare Rhcesaces).] 

Spolatum. Vid. Saloxa. 

Spoleticm or Spoletum (Spoletinus : now 
Spoleto), a town in Umbria, on the Via Flaminia, 
colonized by the Romans B.C. 242. It suffered 
severely in the civil wars between Sulla and 
?\Iarius. At a later time it was taken by Toti- 
las ; but its walls, which had been destroyed by 
the Goths, were restored by Narses. 

Sporades (l-opddeg, sc. vrjcoc, from <7~elpo), 
a group of scattered islands in the .Egean Sea, 
off the island of Crete and the western coast of 
Asia Minor, so called in opposition to the Cyc- 
lades, which lay in a circle around Delos. The 
division, however, between these two groups 
of islands was not well defined ; and we find 
some of the islands at one time described as 
belonging to the Sporades, and at another time 
as belonging to the Cyclades. 

Spcrixxa, Vestritius. 1. The haruspex who 
warned Caesar to beware of the Ides of March. 
It is related that, as Caesar was going to the 
senate-house on the fatal day, he saidTto Spu- 
rinna in jest, " Well, the Ides of March are 
come," ? upon which the seer replied, h Yes, they 
are come, but they are not past." — 2. A Roman 
general, who fought on the side of Otho against 
the Vitellian troops in the north of Italy. In 
the reign of Trajan he gained a victory over the 
Bructeri. Spurinna lived on terms of the closest 
friendship with the younger Pliny, from whom 
we learn that Spurinna composed lyric poems. 
There are extant four odes, or rather fragments 
of odes, in choriambic measure, ascribed to Spu- 
rinna, and which were first published by Bar- 
thius in 1613. Their genuineness, however, is 
very doubtful. 

Spcrixus, Q. Petillius, praetor urbanus in 
B.C. 181, in which year the books of King Nu- 
ma Pompdius are said to have been discovered 
upon the estate of one L. Petdlius. Spurinus 
obtained possession of the books, and upon his 
representation to the senate that they ought not 
to be read and preserved, the senate ordered 
them to be burned. Vid. Numa. Spurinus 
was consul in 176, and fell in battle against the 
Ligurians. 

StabLs: (Stabianus : now Castell a Mare di 
Stabia), an ancient town in Campania, between 
Pompeii and Surrentum, which was destroyed 
by Sulla in the Social War, but which continued 
to exist as a small place down to the great erup- 
tion of Vesuvius in A.D. 79, when it was over- 
whelmed along with Pompeii and Herculaneum. 
It was at Stabiae that the elder Pliny perished. 

Stagirus, subsequently StagIra (Zrayetpoc, 
ru. Urdyetpa, ij I>Tayeipa: I,TayeioiTT}c : now Stav- 
ro), a town of Macedonia in Chalcidice, on the 
Strymonic Gulf, and a little north of the isthmus 
which unites the promontory of Athos to Chal- 
cidice. It was a colony of Andros, was found- 
ed B.C. 656, and was originally called Orthago- 
ria. It is celebrated as the birth-place of Arls- 
832 



! totle. and was in consequence restored by Phil- 
ip, by whom it had been destroyed. 

Staphylus (Sr'ioiv.oc). son of Bacchus (Dio- 

, nysus) and Ariadne, or of Theseus and Ariadne. 

j and was one of the Argonauts. By Chrysothe- 

,; mis he became the father of three daughters. 

i Molpadia, Rhceo, and Parthenos. 

[Staseas, of Iseapolis, a peripatetic philoso- 
pher, who lived many years at Rome with M. 
Piso, and was also on friendly terms with Ci- 
cero.] 

Stasixus {Iraatvog), of Cyprus, an epic poet, 
to whom some of the ancient writers attributed 
the poem of the Epic Cycle, entitled Cypria 
(K.v7:pia). In the earliest historical period of 
Greek literature the Cypria was accepted with- 
out question as a work of Homer ; and it is not 
till we come down to the times of Athenaeus 
and the grammarians that we find any mention 
of Stasinus. Stasinus was said to be the son- 
in-law of Homer, who, according to one story, 
composed the Cypria, and gave it to Stasinus as 
his daughter's marriage portion ; manifestly an 
attempt to reconcile the two different accounts, 
which ascribed it to Homer and Stasinus. The 
Cypria was the first, in the order of the events 
contained in it, of the poems of the Epic Cycle 
relating to the Trojan war. It embraced the 
period antecedent to the beginning of the Iliad, 
to which it was designed to form an introduc- 
tion. 

Statielli, Statiellates, or Statiellexses, 
a small tribe in Liguria, south of the Po, whose 
chief town was Statiellae Aquae (now Acqui), on 
the road from Genua to Placentia. 

Statilia Messalixa. Vid. Messalixa 

Statilics Taurus. Vid. Taurus. 

[Statilius, L., a man of equestrian rank, was 
one of CatUine's conspirators, and was put to 
death with Lentulus and the others in the Tul- 
lianum.] 

Statira (Zrdreipa). 1. Wife of Artaxerxes 
II., king of Persia, was poisoned by Parysatis. 
the mother of the king, who was a deadly ene- 
my of Statira. — 2. Sister and wife of Darius III., 
celebrated as the most beautiful woman of her 
time. She was taken prisoner by Alexander, 
together with her mother-in-law Sisygambis and 
her daughters, after the battle of Issus, B.C. 333. 
They were all treated with the utmost respect 
by the conqueror, but Statira died shortly be- 
fore the battle of Arbela, 331— 3. Also called 
Barsixe, elder daughter of Darius III. Vid. 
Barsixe. 

Statics Murcus. Vid. Murccs. 

[Statics. 1. A literary slave of Q. Cicero, 
whom he subsequently manumitted, had given 
offence to M. Cicero, as appears from the lat- 
ters letters. — 2. Gellics, a general of the Sam- 
nites, was defeated by the Romans and taken 
prisoner in B.C. 305.] 

StItics, P. Papixius, was born at Neapolis 
about A.D. 61, and was the son of a distinguish- 
ed grammarian. He accompanied his father to 
Rome, where the latter acted as the preceptor 
of Domitian, who held him in high honor. Un- 
der the skillful tuition of his father, the young 
Statius speedily rose to fame, and became pecu- 
liarly renowned for the brilliancy of his extem- 
poraneous effusions, so that he gained the prize 
three times in the Alban contests ; but having, 



STATONIA. 



STESICHORUS. 



after a long career of popularity, been vanquish- 
ed in the quinquennial games, he retired to Ne- 
apolis, the place of his nativity, along with his 
wife Claudia, whose virtues he frequently com- 
memorates. He died about A.D. 96. It has 
been inferred from a passage in Juvenal (vii., 
82), that Statius, in his earlier years at least, 
was forced to struggle with poverty ; but he 
appears to have profited by the patronage of 
Domitian (Sih., iv., 2), whom he addresses in 
strains of the most fulsome adulation. The ex- 
tant works of Statius are : 1. Silvarum Libri V., 
a collection of thirty-two occasional poems, 
many of them of considerable length, divided 
into five books. To each book is prefixed a 
dedication in prose, addressed to some friend. 
The metre chiefly employed is the heroic hex- 
ameter, but four of the pieces (i., 6 ; ii., 7 ; iv., 
3, 9) are in Phalaician hendecasyllabics, one 
(iv., 5) in the Alcaic, and one (iv., 7) in the 
Sapphic stanza. 2. Thebdidos Libri XII., an 
heroic poem in twelve books, embodying the 
ancient legends with regard to the expedition 
•of the Seven against Thebes. 3. Achille'idos 
Libri II, an heroic poem breaking off abruptly. 
According to the original plan, it would have 
comprised a complete history of the exploits of 
Achilles, but was probably never finished. Sta- 
tius may justly claim the praise of standing in 
the foremost rank among the heroic poets of the 
Silver Age. He is in a great measure free from 
extravagance and pompous pretensions; but, on 
the other hand, in no portion of his works do we 
find the impress of high natural talent and im- 
posing power. The pieces which form the Sil- 
va?, although evidently thrown ofT in haste, pro- 
duce a much more pleasing effect than the am- 
bitious poems of the Thebaid or the Achilleid. 
The best editions of the Silva are by Markland, 
Lond., 1728, and by Sillig, Dresd., 1827. The 
best edition of the complete works of Statius is 
by Lemaire, 4 vols. 8vo, Paris, 1825-1830. 

Statonia (Statoniensis), a town in Etruria, 
and a Roman praefectura, on the River Albinia, 
and on the Lacus Statoniensis, in the neighbor- 
hood of which were stone quarries, and excel- 
lent wine was grown. 

Stator, a Roman surname of Jupiter, describ- 
ing him as staying the Romans in their flight 
from an enemy, and generally as preserving the 
existing order of things. 

Stectorium (ZrEKTopiov : now Afioum Kara- 
Hisar ?), a city of Great Phrygia, between Pel- 
tee and Synnadia. 

Stentor CZtevtup), a herald of the Greeks in 
the Trojan war, whose voice was as loud as 
that of fifty other men together. His name has 
become proverbial for any one shouting with an 
unusually loud voice. 

Stentoris Lacus. Vid. Hebrus. 

Stenyclerus (2,TevvK?*7]po<;, Dor. Srevu/cAa- 
pog : ZTevvichrjpioc), a town in the north of Mes- 
senia, which was the residence of the Dorian 
kings of the country. After the time of the 
third Messenian war the town is no longer men- 
tioned ; but its name continued to be given to 
an extensive plain in the north of Messenia. 

Stephane or -is (ZreQdvT], Sre^aw'f '■ now Ste- 
fanio), a sea-port town of Paphlagonia, on the 
coast of the Mariandyni. 

Stephanus (Srepavof). 1. An Athenian com- 
53 



ic poet of the New Comedy, was probably the 
son of Antiphanes, some of whose plays he is 
said to have exhibited. — 2. Of Byzantium, the 
author of the geographical lexicon entitled Eth- 
nica {'EOviku), of which, unfortunately, we pos- 
sess only an epitome. Stephanus was a gram- 
marian at Constantinople, and lived after the 
time of Arcadius and Honorius, and before that 
of Justinian II. His work was reduced to an 
epitome by a certain Hermolaus, who dedica- 
ted his abridgment to the Emperor Justinian 
II. According to the title, the chief object of 
the work was to specify the gentile names de- 
rived from the several names of places and 
countries in the ancient world. But, while this 
is done in every article, the amount of informa- 
tion given went far beyond this. Nearly every 
article in the epitome contains a reference to 
some ancient writer, as an authority for the 
name of the place ; but in the original, as we 
see from the extant fragments, there were con- 
siderable quotations from the ancient authors, 
besides a number of very interesting particu 
lars, topographical, historical, mythological, and 
others. Thus the work was not merely what 
it professed to be, a lexicon of a special branch 
of technical grammar, but a valuable dictionary 
of geography. How great would have been its 
value to us, if it had come down to us unmuti- 
lated, may be seen by any one who compares 
the extant fragments of the original with the 
corresponding articles in the epitome. These 
fragments, however, are unfortunately very 
scanty. The best editions of the Epitome of 
Stephanus are by Dindorf, Lips., 1825, &c, 4 
vols. ; by Westermann, Lips., 1839, 8vo ; and 
by Meineke, Berlin, 1849, vol. i. 

Sterculius, StercutIus, or Sterquilinus, a 
surname of Saturnus, derived from Stercus, 
manure, because he had promoted agriculture 
by teaching the people the use of manure. This 
seems to have been the original meaning, though 
some Romans state that Sterculius was a sur- 
name of Picumnus, the son of Faunus, to whom 
likewise improvements in agriculture are as- 
cribed. 

Sterope CZrepoTTT}), one of the Pleiads, wife 
ofGEnomaus, and daughter of Hippodamla. 

Steropes. Vid. Cyclopes. 

[Stertinius, a Stoic philosopher, whom Hor- 
ace (Sat., ii., 3, 296), in derision, calls the eighth 
of the wise men : the scholiast says that he 
wrote two hundred and thirty books on the 
Stoic philosophy in the Latin language.] 

Stesichorus (Zrrioixopoq), of Himera in Sic- 
ily, a celebrated Greek poet, contemporary with 
Sappho, Alcaeus, Pittacus, and Phalaris, is said 
to have been born B.C. 632, to have flourished 
about 608, and to have died in 552, at the age 
of eighty. Of the events of his life we have 
only a few obscure accounts. Like other great 
poets, his birth is fabled to have been attended 
by an omen ; a nightingale sat upon the babe's 
lips, and sung a sweet strain. He is said to 
have been carefully educated at Catana, and 
afterward to have enjoyed the friendship of 
Phalaris, the tyrant of Agrigentum. Many writ- 
ers relate the fable of his being miraculously 
struck with blindness after writing an attack 
upon Helen, and recovering his sight when he 
had composed a Palinodia. He is said to have 



STESICLES. 



STILPO. 



been buried at Catana by a gate of the city, 
which was called after him the Stesichorean 
gate. Stesichorus was one of the nine chiefs 
of lyric poetry recognized by the ancients. He 
stands, with Alcman, at the head of one branch 
of the lyric art, the choral poetry of the Do- 
rians. He was the first to break the monotony 
of the strophe and antistrophe by the introduc- 
tion of the epode, and his metres were much 
more varied, and the structure of his strophes 
more elaborate, than those of Alcman. His 
odes contained all the essential elements of the 
perfect choral poetry of Pindar and the trage- 
dians. The subjects of his poems were chiefly 
heroic ; he transferred the subjects of the old 
epic poetry to the lyric form, dropping, of course, 
the continuous narrative, and dwelling on iso- 
lated adventures of his heroes. He also com- 
posed poems on other subjects. His extant re- 
mains may be classified under the following 
heads: 1. Mythical Poems. 2. Hymns, Enco- 
mia, Epithalamia, Paeans. 3. Erotic Poems, 
and Scholia. 4. A pastoral poem, entitled Daph- 
nis. 5. Fables. 6. Elegies. The dialect of Ste- 
sichorus was Dorian, with an intermixture of 
the epic. The best edition of his fragments is 
by Kleine, Berol., 1828. 

[Stesicles (I>TT]aiK?i7/c, called by Diodorus 
KTrjctK^), was sent by the Athenians with six 
hundred peltastae to aid the Corcyreans against 
the Lacedaemonians under Mnasippus, B.C. 373. 
He was successful, and caused the withdrawal 
of the Lacedaemonians from Corcyra.] 

Stesimbrotus (I,ttjgi{j.6poto(;), of Thasos, a 
rhapsodist and historian in the time of Cimon 
and Pericles, who is mentioned with praise by 
Plato and Xenophon, and who wrote a work 
upon Homer, the title of which is not known. 
He also wrote some historical works. 

Sthenebcea CLdeveSoia), called Antea by 
many writers, was a daughter of the Lycian 
king Iobates, and the wife of Prcetus. Respect- 
ing her love for Bellerophon, vid. Bellero- 
phontes. 

[SthenelaTdas (2#£T£/la£(Jaf), a Spartan ephor, 
who strongly urged the declaration of war against 
Athens in the assembly of the Spartans and 
their allies before the Peloponnesian war, and 
contributed greatly to that determination on the 
part of the assembly.] 

Sthenelus (ZdeveXoc). 1- Son of Perseus and 
Andromeda, king of Mycenae, and husband of 
Nicippe, by whom he became the father of Al- 
cinoe, Medusa, and Eurystheus. The latter, as 
the great enemy of Hercules (vid. Hercules), 
is called by Ovid Stheneleius hostis. — 2. Son of 
Androgeos and grandson of Minos. He accom- 
panied Hercules from Paros on his expedition 
against the Amazons, and, together with his 
brother Alcaeus, he was appointed by Hercules 
ruler of Thasos.— 3. Son of Actor, likewise a 
companion of Hercules in his expedition against 
the Amazons ; but he died, and was buried in 
Paphlagonia, where he afterward appeared to 
the Argonauts.— 4. Son of Capaneus and Evadne, 
belonged to the family of the Anaxagoridae in 
Argos, and was the father of Cylarabes ; but, 
according to others, his son's name was Come- 
tes. He was one of the Epigoni, by whom 
Thebes was taken, and he commanded the Ar- 
gives under Diomedes in the Trojan war, being 



the faithful friend and companion of Diomedes 
He was one of the Greeks concealed in the 
wooden horse, and at the distribution of the 
booty, he was said to have received an image 
of a three-eyed Jupiter (Zeus), which was in 
after times shown at Argos. His own statue 
and tomb also were believed to exist at Argos. 
— 5. Father of Cycnus, who was metamorph- 
osed into a swan. Hence we find the swan 
called by Ovid Sthencleis volucris and Stheneleia 
proles. — 6. A tragic poet, contemporary with 
Aristophanes, who attacked him in the Wasps. 

Stheno. Vid. Gorgones. 

[Stichius (LtlxLoc;), a leader of the Athe- 
nian forces in the Trojan war, was slain by Hec- 
tor.] 

Stilicho, son of a Vandal captain under the 
Emperor Valens, became one of the most dis- 
tinguished generals of Theodosius I. On the 
death of Theodosius, A.D. 395, Stilicho became 
the real ruler of the West under the Emperor Ho- 
norius ; and his power was strengthened by the 
death of his rival Rufinus (vid. Rufinus), and by 
the marriage of his daughter Maria to Honorius. 
His military abilities saved the Western em- 
pire ; and after gaining several victories over 
the barbarians, he defeated Alaric at the deci- 
sive battle of Pollentia, 403, and compelled him 
to retire from Italy. In 405 he gained another 
great victory over Radagaisus, who had invad- 
ed Italy at the head of a formidable host of bar- 
barians. These victories raised the ambition 
of Stilicho to so high a pitch that he aspired 
to make himself master of the Roman empire ; 
but he was apprehended and put to death at 
Ravenna in 408. 

Stilo, L. ./Elius Pr^econinus, a celebrated' 
Roman grammarian, one of the teachers of 
Varro and Cicero. He received the surname 
of Praeconinus because his father had been a 
praeco, and that of Stilo on account of his com- 
positions. He belonged to the aristocratical 
party, and accompanied Q. Metellus Numidicus 
into exile in B.C. 100. He wrote Commenta- 
ries on the Songs of the Salii and on the Twelve 
Tables, a work De Proloquiis, &c. He and his 
son-in-law, Ser. Claudius, may be regarded as 
the founders of the study of grammar at Rome. 
Some modern writers suppose that the work on 
Rhetoric ad C. Herennium, which is printed in 
the editions of Cicero, is the work of this ^Elius, 
but this is mere conjecture. 

Stilpo (iTilitov), a celebrated philosopher, 
was a native of Megara, and taught philosophy 
in his native town. According to one account, 
he engaged in dialectic encounters with Diodo- 
rus Cronus at the court of Ptolemaeus Soter ; 
while, according to another, he did not comply 
with the invitation of the king to visit Alexan- 
drea. He acquired a great reputation ; and so 
high was the esteem in which he was held, that 
Demetrius, the son of Antigonus, spared his 
house at the capture of Megara. He is said to 
have surpassed his contemporaries in inventive 
power and dialectic art, and to have inspired 
almost all Greece with a devotion to the Mega- 
rian philosophy. He seems to have made the 
idea of virtue the especial object of his consid- 
eration. He maintained that the wise man 
ought not only to overcome every evil, but not 
even to be affected by any. 



STIMO. 



STRABO. 



[Stimo, a village of Thessaly, near Gomphi, 
mentioned by Livy.] 

Stimula, the name of Semele, according to 
some critics, among the Romans. 

Stiria (Ireipia : Ireipievc : niins on the bay 
Porto Rafti), a dermis in Attica, southeast of 
Brauron, belonging to the tribe Pandionis, to 
which there was a road from Athens called 
^TeipiaKT] 666c. It was the birth-place of The- 
ramenes and Thrasybulus. 

Stob/eus, Joannks ('lu&vvnc 6 2ro6a?of), de- 
rived his surname apparently from being a na- 
tive of Stobi in Macedonia. Of his personal 
history we know nothing. Even the age in 
which he lived can not be fixed with accuracy, 
but he must have been later than Hierocles of 
Alexandrea, whom he quotes. Probably he did 
not live very long after him, as he quotes no 
writer of a later date. We are indebted to Sto- 
bseus for a very valuable collection of extracts 
from earlier Greek writers. Stobaeus was a 
man of extensive reading, in the course of which 
he noted down the most interesting passages. 
The materials which he had collected in this 
way he arranged, in the order of subjects, for 
the use of his son Septimius. This collection 
of extracts has come down to us, divided into 
two distinct works, of which one bears the title 
of 'E/cAoyai <j>vcLicai 6ia2.eKTtKal /cat 7]ducat (Ec- 
logcz PhysiccB, etc.), and the other the title of 
'Avdoloyiov (Florilegium or Sermones). The Ec- 
logce consist for the most part of extracts con- 
veying the views of earlier poets and prose writ- 
ers on points of physics, dialectics, and ethics. 
The Florilegium, or Sermones, is devoted to sub- 
jects of a moral, political, and economical kind, 
and maxims of practical wisdom. Each chap- 
ter of the Eclogae and Sermones is headed by 
a title describing its matter. The extracts quot- 
ed in illustration begin usually with passages 
from the poets, after whom come historians, 
orators, philosophers, and physicians. To Sto- 
baeus we are indebted for a large proportion of 
the fragments that remain of the lost works of 
poets. Euripides seems to have been an espe- 
cial favorite with him. He has quoted above 
five hundred passages from him in the Ser- 
mones, one hundred and fifty from Sophocles, 
and above two hundred from Menander. In ex- 
tracting from prose writers, Stobaeus sometimes 
quotes verbatim, sometimes gives only an epit- 
ome of the passage. The best editions of the 
Eclogae are by Heeren, Gotting., 1792-1801, 4 
vols. 8vo, [and by Gaisford, Oxford, 1850, 2 
vols. 8vo], and of the Florilegium by Gaisford, 
Oxon., 1822, 4 vols. 8vo. 

Stobi (2r66ot : I>ro6aloc), a town of Macedo- 
nia, and the most important place in the dis- 
trict Paeonia, was probably situated on the River 
Erigon, north of Thessalonica and northeast of 
Heraclea. It was made a Roman colony and a 
municipium, and under the later emperors was 
the capital of the province Macedonia II. or 
Salutaris. It was destroyed at the end of the 
fourth century by the Goths ; but it is still men- 
tioned by the Byzantine writers as a fortress 
under the name of Stypeum (Ltvkelov). Its site 
is unknown ; for the modern Istib, which is 
usually supposed to stand upon the site of Stobi, 
lies too far to the northeast. 

Stcechades Insula (now Isle d'Hieres), a I 



group of five small islands in the Mediterra- 
nean, off the coast of Gallia Narbonensis and 
east of Massilia, on which the Massiliotes kept 
an armed force to protect their trade against 
pirates. The three larger islands were called 
Prote, Mese or Pomponiana, and Hypaea, the 
modern Porqucrolle, Port Croz, and Isle de Le- 
vant or da Titan ; the two smaller ones are prob- 
ably the modern Ratoncau and Promegne. 

Stceni, a Ligurian people in the Maritime 
Alps, conquered by Q. Marcius Rex B.C. 118, 
before he founded the colony of Narbo Martius. 

Strabo, a cognomen in many Roman gentes, 
signified a person who squinted, and is accord- 
ingly classed with Patus, though the latter word 
did not indicate such a complete distortion of 
vision as Strabo. 

Strabo, the geographer, was a native of Ama- 
sia in Pontus. The date of his birth is un- 
known, but may perhaps be placed about B.C. 
54. He lived during the whole of the reign of 
Augustus, and during the early part, at least, 
of the reign of Tiberius. He is supposed to 
have died about A.D. 24. He received a care- 
ful education. He studied grammar under Aris- 
todemus at Nysa in Caria, and philosophy under 
Xenarchus of Seleucia in Cilicia and Boethus 
of Sidon. He lived some years at Rome, and 
also travelled much in various countries. We 
learn from his own work that he was with his 
friend ^Elius Gallus in Egypt in B.C. 24. He 
wrote an historical work ('laropiKa 'Y^o^/taTa) 
in forty-three books, which is lost. It began 
where the history of Polybius ended, and was 
probably continued to the battle of Actium. He 
also wrote a work on Geography (TeuypafyiK.6.), 
in seventeen books, which has come down to 
us entire, with the exception of the seventh, 
of which we have only a meagre epitome. Stra- 
bo's work, according to his own expression, 
was not intended for the use of all persons. It 
was designed for all who had had a good edu- 
cation, and particularly for those who were en- 
gaged in the higher departments of adminis- 
tration. Consistently with this view, his plan 
does not comprehend minute description, except 
when the place or the object is of great interest 
or importance ; nor is his description limited to 
the physical characteristics of each country ; it 
comprehends the important political events of 
which each country has been the theatre, a no- 
tice of the chief cities and the great men who 
have illustrated them ; in short, whatever was 
most characteristic and interesting in every 
country. His work forms a striking contrast 
with the geography of Ptolemy, and the dry list 
of names, occasionally relieved by something 
added to them, in the geographical portion of 
the Natural History of Pliny. It is, in short, a 
book intended for reading, and it may be read ; 
a kind of historical geography. Strabo's lan- 
guage is generally clear, except in those pas- 
sages where the text has been corrupted ; it is 
appropriate to the matter, simple and without 
affectation. The first two books of Strabo are 
an introduction to his Geography, and contain 
his views on the form and magnitude of the 
earth, and other subjects connected with math- 
ematical geography. In the third book he be- 
gins his description : he devotes eight books to 
Europe ; six to Asia ; and the seventeenth and 

835 



STRABO. 



STRATUS. 



last to Egypt and Libya. The best editions of 
Strabo are by Casaubon, Geneva, 1587, and 
Paris, 1620, fol. — reprinted by Almeloveen, Am- 
sterdam, 1707, and by Falconer, Oxford, 1807, 
2 vols. fol. — by Siebenkees, and Tzschucke, 
Lips., 1811,7 vols. 8vo ; by Coraes, Paris, 1815, 
seq., 4 vols. 8vo ; and by Kramer, Berlin, 1844, 
seq., of which only two volumes have yet ap- 
peared. This last is by far the best critical edi- 
tion. 

Strabo, Fannius. 1. C, consul B.C. 161 
with M. Valerius Messala. In their consulship 
the rhetoricians were expelled from Rome. — 2. 
C, son of the preceding, consul 122. He owed 
his election to the consulship chiefly to the in- 
fluence of C. Gracchus, who was anxious to pre- 
vent his enemy Opimius from obtaining the of- 
fice. But in his consulship Fannius supported 
the aristocracy, and took an active part in op- 
posing the measures of Gracchus. He spoke 
against the proposal of Gracchus, who wished 
to give the Roman franchise to the Latins, in 
a speech which was regarded as a master-piece 
in the time of Cicero. — 3. C, son-in-law of Lae- 
lius, and frequently confounded with No. 2. He 
served in Africa, under Scipio Africanus, in 146, 
and in Spain, under Fabius Maximus, in 142. 
He is introduced by Cicero as one of the speak- 
ers both in his work De Republica and in his 
treatise De Amicitia. He owed his celebrity in 
literature to his History, which was written in 
Latin, and of which Brutus made an abridg- 
ment. 

Strabo, Seius. Vid. Sejanus. 

Stratocles (2-pa-o/c?^f)> an Athenian orator, 
and a friend of the orator Lycurgus. He was 
a virulent opponent of Demosthenes, whom he 
charged with having accepted bribes from Har- 
palus. Stratocles especially distinguished him- 
self by his extravagant flattery of Demetrius. 

Stratox CZTpdruv). 1. Son of Arcesilaus of 
Lampsacus, was a distinguished peripatetic phi- 
losopher, and the tutor of Ptolemy Philadel- 
phus. He succeeded Theophrastus as head of 
the school in B.C. 288, and, after presiding over 
it eighteen years, was succeeded by Lycon. He 
devoted himself especially to the study of nat- 
ural science, whence he obtained the appella- 
tion of Physicus. Cicero, while speaking high- 
ly of his talents, blames him for neglecting the 
most necessary part of philosophy, that which 
has respect to virtue and morals, and giving 
himself up to the investigation of nature. Stra- 
ton appears to have held a pantheistic system, 
the specific character of which can not, how- 
ever, be determined. He seems to have denied 
the existence of any god out of the material uni- 
verse, and to have held that every particle of 
matter has a plastic and seminal power, but 
without sensation or intelligence ; and that life, 
sensation, and intellect are but forms, accidents, 
and affections of matter. Some modern writ- 
ers have regarded Straton as a forerunner of 
Spinoza, while others see in his system an an- 
ticipation of the hypothesis of monads. — 2. Of 
Sardis, an epigrammatic poet, and the compiler 
of a Greek Anthology, devoted to licentious 
subjects. Vid. Planudes. — 3. A physician of 
Berytus in Phoenicia, one of whose medical 
formulae is quoted by Galen. — 4. Also a phy- 
sician, and a pupil of Erasistratus in the third 



century B.C., who appears to have lived on 

| very intimate terms with his tutor. 

Stratonice (I>~paTovi.K7)). 1. Wife of Antigo- 
| nus, king of Asia, by whom she became the 
I mother of Demetrius Poliorcetes. — 2. Daughter 
i of Demetrius Poliorcetes and Phila, the daugh- 
| ter of Antipater. In 300, at which time she 
S could not have been more than seventeen years 
of age, she was married to Seleucus, king of 
Syria. Notwithstanding the disparity of their 
I ages, she lived in harmony with the old king for 
some years, when it was discovered that her 
step-son Antiochus was deeply enamored of 
her, and Seleucus, in order to save the life of 
his son, which was endangered by the vio- 
lence of his passion, gave up Stratonice in mar- 
riage to the young prince. She bore three chil- 
dren to Antiochus : 1. Antiochus II., surnamed 
Theos ; 2. Apama, married to Magas, king of 
Cyrene ; and, 3. Stratonice. — 3. Daughter of the 
preceding and of Antiochus I., was married to 
Demetrius II., king of Macedonia. She quitted 
j Demetrius in disgust on account of his second 
I marriage with Phthia, the daughter of Olym- 
| pias, and retired to Syria. Here she was put 
j to death by her nephew Seleucus II., against 
; whom she had attempted to raise a revolt. — 4. 
Daughter of Antiochus II., king of Syria, mar- 
ried to Ariarathes III., king of Cappadocia. — 5. 
One of the favorite wives of Mithradates the 
Great. 

Stratonicea (LTparovLKSLa, ^TparoviKT] : Srpa- 
ToviKEvg, Stratoniceus, Stratonicensis : now ru- 
ins at Eski-Hisar), one of the chief inland cities 
of Caria, built by Antiochus I. Soter, who forti- 
! fied it strongly, and named it in honor of his 
j wife Stratonice. It stood east of Mylasa, and 
south of Alabanda, near the River Marsyas, a 
southern tributary of the Maeander. Under the 
Romans it was a free city, and it was improved 
by Hadrian. Near it stood the great temple of 
Jupiter (Zeus) Chrysaoreus, the centre of the 
national worship of the Carians. There is some 
reason to believe that Stratonicea stood on the 
site of a former city, called Idrias, and, still ear- 
lier, Chrysaoris. 

[Stratonicus (^rpardviKog), of Athens, a dis- 
tinguished musician of the time of Alexander 
the Great, famed for his wit, and the large num- 
ber of pupils attending his musical instructions. 
He is said to have visited Nicocles in Cyprus, 
and there to have met his death by his too great 
independence.] 

Stratonis Turris. Vid. C^esarea, No. 3. 

Strattis C^Tpdrrtc or ZTpdrt-c), an Athenian 
poet of the Old Comedy, flourished from B.C. 
412 to 380. [His fragments are collected in 
Meineke's Comic. Grcec. Fragm., vol. i., p. 428- 
441, edit, minor.] 

Stratus (Irpdroc). 1. (2rpdnof : ruins near 
Lepenu or Lepanon), the chief town in Acarna- 
nia, ten stadia west of the Achelous. Its terri- 
tory was called Stratice. It was a strongly- 
fortified town, and commanded the ford of the 
Achelous on the high road from iEtolia to Acar- 
nania. Hence it was a place of military im- 
portance, and was at an early period taken pos- 
session of by the^Etolians. — 2. A town in Ach- 
aia, afterward called Dyme.— 3. A town in the 
west of Arcadia, in the territory of Thelpusa, 
perhaps the same as the Homeric Stratia. 



STRONGYLE. 



SUCCABAR. 



Strongyle. Vid. Naxos. 

Strongylion (ZrpoyyvXiuv), a distinguished 
Greek statuary, flourished during the last thirty 
or forty years of the fifth century B.C. 

Strophades Insula (2rpo0u(5cf), formerly 
called Plotje {UXurai : now Strofadia and 
Strivali), two islands in the Ionian Sea, off the 
coast of Messenia and south of Zacynthus. 
The Harpies were pursued to these islands by 
the sons of Boreas ; and it was from the cir- 
cumstance of the latter returning from these 
islands after the pursuit that they are supposed 
to have obtained the name of Strophades. 

Strophius (IrpoQiog) 1. King of Phocis, son 
of Crissus and Antiphatia, and husband of Cydra- 
gora, Anaxibia, or Astyochia, by whom he be- 
came the father of Astydamia and Pylades. Vid. 
Orestes. — [2. Father of Scamandrius, mention- 
ed in the Iliad (v., 49).] 

Struchates (Srpov^aref), a Median people, 
mentioned only by Herodotus (i., 101). 

[Stryme (Zrpv/xt) : Irpv/xTjvog, Lrpvfi^aiog, and 
2rpv/xialog), on the Lissus, a city of the Thasii 
in Thrace : also claimed as their own by the 
Maronitae, who contended with the Thasians 
for its possession.] 

Strymon (now Struma, by the Turks Karasu), 
an important river in Macedonia, forming the 
boundary between that country and Thrace 
down to the time of Philip. It rose in Mount 
Scomius, flowed first south and then southeast, 
passed through the Lake Prasias, and, imme- 
diately south of Amphipolis, fell into a bay of 
the ^Egean Sea, called after it Strymonicus Si- 
nus. The numerous cranes on its banks are 
frequently mentioned by ancient writers. 

Strymonii CZ-pvp.6vioi), the old name, accord- 
ing to Herodotus, of the Bithynians, who mi- 
grated into Asia Minor from the banks of the 
River Strymon. Bithynia was sometimes call- 
ed Strymonis. 

Stubera, a town of Macedonia, in the district 
Pasonia, probably on the River Erigon. 

Stymphalides. Vid. Stymphalus. 

Stymphalis (2ru/z0a/ltf). 1. A lake in Arca- 
dia. Vid. Stymphalus. — 2. A district in Mace- 
donia, between Atintania and Elimiotis. 

Stymphalus CErv/u^aXog, Lrvficprjlog : 2rv/z- 
pu/Uof), a town in the northeast of Arcadia, the 
territory of which was bounded on the north by 
Achaia, on the east by Sicyonia and Phliasia, on 
the south by the territory of Mantinea, and on 
the west by that of Orchomenus and Pheneus. 
The district was one of military importance, 
since it commanded one of the chief roads 
from Arcadia to Argolis. Its name is said to 
have been derived from Stymphalus, a son of 
Elatus and grandson of Areas. The town it- 
self was situated on a mountain of the same 
name, and on the northern side of the Lake 
Stymphalis (2ny/0a/U'f : now Zaraka), on which 
dwelt, according to tradition, the celebrated 
birds called Stymphalides CLrvfj.ipa2.ideg), de- 
stroyed by Hercules. (For details, vid. p. 357, 
b.) From this lake issued the River Stympha- 
lus, which, after a short course, disappeared un- 
der ground, and was supposed to appear again 
as the River Erasmus in Argolis. 

Styra (ra 2rvpa : Zrvpevg : now Stura), a 
town in Eubcea, on the southwestern coast, not 
far from Carystus, and nearly opposite Mara- 



thon in Attica. The inhabitants were originally 
Dryopes, though they subsequently denied their 
descent from this people. They took an active 
part in the Persian war, and fought at Artemis- 
ium, Salamis, and Plataeae. They afterward be- 
came subject to the Athenians, and paid a year- 
ly tribute of twelve hundred drachmas. The 
town was destroyed in the Lamian war by the 
Athenian general Phaedrus, and its territory was 
annexed to Eretria. 

Styx (2rv£), connected with the verb arvyeu, 
to hate or abhor, is the name of the principal 
river in the nether world, around which it flows 
seven times. Styx is described as a daughter 
of Oceanus and Tethys. As a nymph she dwelt 
at the entrance of Hades, in a lofty grotto which 
was supported by silver columns. As a river, 
Styx is described as a branch of Oceanus, flow- 
ing from its tenth source ; and the River Co- 
cytus, again, is a branch of the Styx. By Pallas 
Styx became the mother of Zelus (zeal), Nice 
(victory), Bia (strength), and Cratos (power). 
She was the first of all the immortals who took 
her children to Jupiter (Zeus) to assist him 
against the Titans ; and, in return for this, her 
children were allowed forever to live with Ju- 
piter (Zeus), and Styx herself became the di- 
vinity by whom the most solemn oaths were 
sworn. When one of the gods had to take an 
oath by Styx, Iris fetched a cup full of water 
from the Styx, and the god, while taking the 
oath, poured out the water. 

Styx (2rvf : now Mavra-neria), a river in the 
north of Arcadia, near Nonacris, descending 
from a high rock, and falling into the Crathis. 
The ancients believed that the water of this 
river was poisonous ; and, according to one tale, 
Alexander the Great was poisoned by it. It 
was said, also, to break all vessels made of glass, 
stone, metal, and any other material except of 
the hoof of a horse or a mule. 

Suada, the Roman personification of persua- 
sion, the Greek Pitho (YIelOu), also called by the 
diminutive Suadela. 

Suagela (Zovdyela), an ancient city of Caria, 
near Myndus, was the burial-place of the old 
kings of the country. 

Suasa (Suasanus : now S. Lorenzo), a mu- 
nicipium in Umbria, on the Sena. 

Suastus. Vid. Choaspes, No. 2. 

Subertum or Sudertum (Sudertanus : now 
Sovretto), a town in the interior of Etruria. 

Sublaqueum (Sublacensis : now Subiaco), a 
small town of the ^Equi in Latium, on the Anio, 
near its source. Near it stood the celebrated 
villa of Claudius and Nero (Villa Sublacensis) ; 
and from it was derived the name of the Via 
Sublacensis, which was a branch of the Via Ti- 
burtina. 

Sublicius Pons. Vid. Roma, p. 748, a. 

Subur. 1. A town of the Laeetani in Hispa- 
nia Tarraconensis, east of Tarraco, described by 
some as a town of the Cosetani, and by others, 
again, as a town of the Ilergetes.— 2. (Now 
Subu or Cubu), a river in Mauretania Tingitana, 
flowing past the colony Banasa into the At- 
lantic Ocean. 

Subura or Suburra. Vid. Roma, p. 748, b. 

Subzupara (now Zarvi), a town in Thrace, on 
the road from Philippopolis to Hadrianopolis. 

Succabar (lovxddappi, Ptol. : now Mazuna ?), 

837 



SUCCI. 



SUEVI. 



an inland city of Mauretania Caesariensis, south- j of whose letters are addressed to him. At tne 
east of the mouth of the Chinalaph. It was a | request of Pliny, Trajan granted to Suetonius 
colonia, and is mentioned by Ammianus Mar- • the jus trium liberorum ; for, though he was mar- 
cellinus under the name of oppidum Sugar-ba- J ried, he had not three children, which number 
ritanum. was necessary to relieve him from various legal 

Sccci or Succorum Axgitsti^e. Vid. H^mus. disabilities. Suetonius was afterward appoint- 

Sucro. 1. (Now Xucar), a river in Hispania ed private secretary (Magister Epistolarum) to 
Tarraconensis, rising in a southern branch of Hadrian, but was deprived of this office by the 
Mount Idubeda, in the territory of the Celtiberi, emperor, along with Septicius Clarus, the Prae- 
and falling south of Valentia into a gulf of the feet of the Praetorians, on the ground of asso- 
Mediterranean called after it Sinus Sucronensis ciating with Sabina, the emperor's wife, without 
(now Gulf of Valencia). — 2. (Now Cullera), a his permission. Suetonius wrote many works, 
town of the Edetani in Hispania Tarraconensis, of which the only ones extant are, Vita Duo- 
on the preceding river, and between the Iberus : decim Casarum, or the twelve emperors, of 
and Carthago Nova. \ whom the first is C. Julius Caesar, and the last 

Scdertum. Vid. Subertum. j is Domitian ; Liber de illustribus Grammaticis ; 

Sudeti Monte s, a range of mountains in the : Liber de claris Rhetoribus ; Vita Terentii, Hora- 
southeast of Germany, in which the Albis takes tii, Persii, Lucani, Juvenalis, Plinii Majoris. His 
its rise. ! chief work is his Lives of the Caesars. Sueto- 

Scel (now Fuengirola), a town in Hispania ; nius does not follow the chronological order in 
Baetica, on the road from Malaca to Gades. j his Lives, but he groups together many things 

Scessa AcRrxcA (Suessanus : now Sessa), a ; of the same kind. His language is very brief 
town of the Aurunci in Latium, east of the Via i and precise, sometimes obscure, without any 
Appia, between Minturnae and Teanum, on the ; affectation of ornament. He certainly tells a 
western slope of Mons Massicus. It was situ- j prodigious number of scandalous anecdotes 
ated in a beautiful district called Vescinus ager, about the Caesars, but there was plenty to tell 
whenee it has been supposed that the town about them ; and if he did not choose to sup- 
itself was at one time called Vescia. It was , press those anecdotes which he believed to be 
made a Roman colony in the Samnite wars, but true, that is no imputation on his veracity. As 
must have been afterward colonized afresh, a great collection of facts of all kinds, the work 
since we find it called in inscriptions Col. Julia on the Caesars is invaluable for the historian 
Felix. It was the birth-place of" the poet Lucil- ; of this period. His judgment and his honesty 
ias. have both been attacked by some modern critics"; 

Suessa Pometia (Suessanus), also called Po- : but we are of opinion that, on both grounds, a 
34etia simply, an ancient and important town of careful study of his work will justify him. The 
the Volsci in Latium, south of Forum Appii, friendship of the younger Pliny is evidence in 
conquered by the Romans under Tarquinius favor of his integrity. The treatise De illustri- 
Priscus, and taken a second time and sacked bus Grammaticis and that De claris Rhetoribus 
by the consul Servilius. It was one of the are probably only parts of a larger work. They 
twenty-three cities situated in the plain after- contain a few biographical and other notices, 
ward covered by the Pomptine Marshes, which that are occasionally useful. It has been con- 
are said indeed to have derived their name from jectured that the few scanty lives of the Latin 
this town. poets, already enumerated, belonged to a larger 

Scessetaxi, a people in Hispania Tarraconen- work De Poetis. If this conjecture be true, 
sis, mentioned in connection with the Sedetani. the short notice of the elder Pliny may not be 

Suessioxes or Scessoxes, a powerful people by Suetonius. A work entitled De Viris Illus- 
in Gallia Belgica, who were reckoned the bravest tribus, which has been attributed both to Sue- 
of all the Belgic Gauls after the Bellovaci, and tonius and the younger Plinius, is now unani- 
who could bring fifty thousand men into the field mously assigned to Aurelius.Victor. The best 
in Caesar's time. Their King Divitiacus, shortly editions of Suetonius are by P. Burmann, Am- 
before Caesars arrival in the country, was reck- sterdam, 1736, 2 vols. 4to, and by Baumgarten- 
oned the most powerful chief in all Gaul, and Crusius, Lips., 1816, 3 vols. 8vo. 
had extended his sovereignty even over Britain, \ Scevi, one of the greatest and most powerful 
The Suessiones dwelt in an extensive and fer- races of Germany, or, more properly speak- 
tile country east of the Bellovaci, south of the ing, the collective name of a great number of 
Veromandui, and west of the Remi. They pos- | German tribes, who were grouped together on 
sessed twelve towns, of which the capital was ; account of their migratory mode of life, and 
Noviodunum, subsequently Augusta Suessonum : spoken of in opposition to the more settled 
or Suessones (now Soissons). ; tribes, who went under the general name of In- 

Scesscla (Suessulanus: now Torre di Ses- i gaevones. The Suevi are described by all the 
sola), a town in Samnium, on the southern slope ancient writers as occupying the greater half 
of Mount Tifata. i of all Germany ; but the accounts vary respect- 

Scetonius Paulixus. Vid. Paclixcs. ■ ing the part of the country which they inhabit- 

Scetoxius Traxquillus, C, the Roman his- i ed. Caesar represents them as dwelling east 
torian, was born about the beginning of the of the Ubii and Sygambri, and west of the Che- 
Teign of Vespasian. His father was Suetonius rusci, and their country as divided into one 
ienis, who was a tribune of the thirteenth le- hundred cantons. Strabo makes them extend 
gion in the battle of Bedriacum, in which Otho in an easterly direction beyond the Albis, and 
was defeated. Suetonius practiced as an advo- j in a southerly as far as the sources of the Dan- 
cate at Rome in the reign of Trajan. He lived • ube. Tacitus gives the name of Suevia to the 
on intimate terms with the younger Plinv, manv whole of the east of Germany from the Danube 
838 



SUFENAS, M. NONIUS. 



SULLA, CORNELIUS. 



to the Baltic. At a later time the collective 
name of the Suevi gradually disappeared ; and 
the different tribes of the Suevic race were each 
called by their distinctive names. In the sec- 
ond half of the third century, however, we again 
find a people called Suevi, dwelling between 
the mouth of the Main and the Black Forest, 
whose name is still preserved in the modern 
Suabia ; but this people was only a body of bold 
adventurers from various German tribes, who 
assumed the celebrated name of the Suevi in 
consequence of their not possessing any distin- 
guishing appellation. 

Sufenas, M. Nonius, tribune of the plebs in 
B.C. 56, fought on Pompey's side at the battle 
of Pharsalia. 

Sufes (now Sbiba), a city of Northern Africa, 
in the Carthaginian territory (Byzacena). 

Sufetula (now Sfaitla), a city of Byzacena, 
south of Sufes, of which its name is a diminu- ' 
tive. It became, however, a much more im- J 
portant place, as a chief centre of the roads in 
the interior of the province of Africa. Its ruins | 
are magnificent. 

Suidas (I,ovtdac), a Greek lexicographer, of 
whom nothing is known. No certain conclu- 
sions as to the age of the compiler can be de- j 
rived from passages in the work, since it may \ 
have received numerous interpolations and ad- 
ditions. Eustathius, who lived about the end 
of the twelfth century of the Christian era, 
quotes the Lexicon of Suidas ; and there are 
passages in the Lexicon referring to Michael 
Psellus, who lived at the close of the eleventh 
century. The Lexicon of Suidas is a dictionary 
of words arranged in alphabetical order, with 
some few peculiarities of arrangement ; but it 
contains both words which are found in diction- 
aries of languages, and also names of persons 
and places, with extracts from ancient Greek 
writers, grammarians, scholiasts, and lexicog- 
raphers, and some extracts from later Greek 
writers. The names of persons comprehend 
both persons who are mentioned in sacred and 
in profane history, which shows that if the work 
is by one hand, it is by a Christian. No well- 
conceived plan has been the basis of this work ; 
it is incomplete as to the number of articles, 
and exceedingly irregular and unequal in the I 
execution. Some articles are pretty complete, j 
others contain no information at all. As to the 
biographical notices, it has been conjectured | 
that Suidas or the compiler got them all from 
one source, which, it is further supposed, may ; 
be the Onomatologos or Pinax of Hesychius of 
Miletus. The Lexicon, though without merit ! 
as to its execution, is valuable both for the liter- { 
ary history of antiquity, for the explanation of i 
words, and for the citations from many ancient ! 
writers. The best editions of the Lexicon are | 
by Kiister, Cambridge, 1705, 3 vols. fol. ; by I 
Gaisford, Oxford, 1834, 3 vols. fol. ; and by Bern- j 
hardy, 4to, Halle, 1834-50 (not yet complete). [ 

Suiones, the general name of all the German 
tribes inhabiting Scandinavia. 

SuismontIum, a mountain in Liguria. 
Sulci (Sulcitanus : now Sulci), an ancient 
town in Sardinia, founded by the Carthaginians, 
and a place of considerable maritime and com- 
mercial importance. It was situated on a prom- 
ontory on the southwestern corner of the island, j 



Sulgas (now Sorgue), a river in Gaul, de- 
scending from the Alps, and flowing into the 
Rhone near Vindalum. 

Sulla, Cornelius, the name of a patrician 
family. This family was originally called Ru 
finus (vid. Rufinus), and the first member of it 
who obtained the name of Sulla was P. Corne 
lius Sulla, mentioned below (No. 1 ). The origin 
of the name is uncertain. Most modern writers 
suppose that it is a word of the same significa- 
tion as Rufus or Rufinus, and refers simply to 
the red color of the hair or the complexion ; but 
it has been conjectured with greater probability 
that it is a diminutive of Sura, which was a cog- 
nomen in several Roman gentes. It would be 
formed from Sura on the same analogy as puella 
from pucra, and tenellus from tener. There is 
no authority for writing the word Sylla, as is 
done by many modern writers. On coins and 
inscriptions we always find Sula or Sulla, never 
Sylla. 1. P., great-grandfather of the dictator 
Sulla, and grandson of P. Cornelius Rufinus, 
who was twice consul in the Samnite w r ars. 
Vid. Rufinus, Cornelius. His father is not 
mentioned. He was flamen dialis, and likewise 
praetor urbanus and peregrinus in B.C. 212, 
when he presided over the first celebration of 
the Ludi Apollinares. — 2. P., son of No. 1, and 
grandfather of the dictator Sulla, was praetor in 
186.— 3. L., son of No. 2, and father of the dic- 
tator Sulla, lived in obscurity, and left his son 
only a slender fortune. — 4. L. surnamed Felix, 
the dictator, was born in 138. Although his 
father left him only a small property, his means 
were sufficient to secure for him a good educa- 
tion. He studied the Greek and Roman litera- 
ture with diligence and success, and appears 
early to have imbibed that love for literature 
and art by which he was distinguished through- 
out life. At the same lime he prosecuted pleas- 
ure with equal ardor, and his youth, as well as 
his manhood, was disgraced by the most sensual 
vices. Still his love of pleasure did not absorb 
all his time, nor did it emasculate his mind ; for 
no Roman during the latter days of the repub- 
lic, with the exception of Julius Caesar, had a 
clearer judgment, a keener discrimination of 
character, or a firmer will. The slender prop- 
erty of Sulla was increased by the liberality of 
his step-mother and of a courtesan named Ni- 
copolis, both of whom left him all their fortune. 
His means, though still scanty for a Roman no- 
ble, now enabled him to aspire to the honors of 
the state. He was quaestor in 107, when he 
served under Marius in Africa. Hitherto he 
had only been known for his profligacy ; but he 
displayed both zeal and ability in the discharge 
of his duties, and soon gained the approbation 
of his commander, and the affections of the sol- 
diers. It was to Sulla that Jugurtha was de- 
livered by Bocchus ; and the quaestor thus 
shared with the consul the glory of bringing 
this war to a conclusion. Sulla himself was so 
proud of his share in the success, that he had a 
seal ring engraved, representing the surrender 
of Jugurtha, which he continued to wear till the 
day of his death. Sulla continued to serve un- 
der Marius with great distinction in the cam- 
paigns against the Cimbri and Teutones ; but 
Marius becoming jealous of the rising fame of 
his officer, Sulla left Marius in 102, and took a 

839 



SULLA, CORNELIUS. SULLA, CORNELIUS. 

command under the colleague of Marius, Q. I the war against Mithradates to a conclusion. 
Catulus, who intrusted the chief management After driving the generals of Mithradates out 
of the war to Sulla. Sulla now returned to of Greece, Sulla crossed the Hellespont, and 
Rome, where he appears to have lived quietly ! early in 84 concluded a peace with the king of 
for some years. He was praetor in 93, and in j Pontus. He now turned his arms against Fim- 
the following year (92) was sent as propraetor bria, who had been appointed by the Marian 
into Cilicia, with special orders from the senate party as his successor in the command. But 
to restore Ariobarzanes to his kingdom of Cap- j the troops of Fimbria deserted their general, 
padocia, from which he had been expelled by ! who put an end to his own life. Sulla now pre- 
Mithradates. Sulla met with complete success, j pared to return to Italy. After leaving his le- 
He defeated Gordius, the general of Mithrada- ! gate, L. Licinius Murena, in command of the 
tes, in Cappadocia, and placed Ariobarzanes on province of Asia, with two legions, he set sail 
the throne. The enmity between Marius and with his own army to Athens. While prepar- 
Sulla now assumed a more deadly form. Sul- | ing for his deadly struggle in Italy, he did not 
la's ability and increasing reputation had already ' lose his interest in literature. He carried with 
led the aristocratical party to look up to him as him from Athens to Rome the valuable library 
one of their leaders ; and thus political animos- of Apellicon of Teos, which contained most of 
ity was added to private hatred. In addition the works of Aristotle and Theophrastus. Vid. 
to this, Marius and Sulla were both anxious to | Apellicox. He landed at Brundisium in the 
obtain the command of the impending war spring of 83. The Marian party far outnum- 
against Mithradates ; and the success which j bered him in troops, and had every prospect of 
attended Sulla's recent operations in the East i victory. By bribery and promises, however, 
had increased his popularity, and pointed him i Sulla gained over a large number of the Marian 
out as the most suitable person for this import- soldiers, and he persuaded many of the Italian 
ant command. About this time Bocchus erect- towns to espouse his cause. In the field his 
ed in the Capitol gilded figures, representing the efforts were crowned by equal success ; and he 
surrender of Jugurtha to Sulla, at which Marius was ably supported by several of the Roman 
was so enraged that he could scarcely be pre- nobles, who espoused his cause in different 
vented from removing them by force. The ex- parts of Italy. Of these one of the most dis- 
asperation of both parties became so violent that tinguished was the young Cn. Pompey, who 
they nearly had recourse to arms against each was at the time only twenty-three years of age. 
other ; but the breaking out of the Social war I Vid. Pompeius, No. 10. In the following year 
hushed all private quarrels for the time. Mari- I (82) the struggle was brought to a close by the 
us and Sulla both took an active part in the war decisive battle gained by Sulla over the Sam- 
against the common foe. But Marius was now ' nites and Lucanians under Pontius Telesinus 
advanced in years ; and he had the deep morti- before the Colline gate of Rome. This victory 
fication of finding that his achievements were was followed by the surrender of Praeneste and 
thrown into the shade by the superior energy the death of the younger Marius, who had taken 
of his rival. Sulla gained some brilliant vie- refuge in this town. Sulla was now master of 
tories over the enemy, and took Bovianum, the Rome and Italy ; and he resolved to take the 
chief town of the Samnites. He was elected most ample vengeance upon his enemies, and 
consul for 88, and received from the senate the \ to extirpate the popular party. One of his first 
command of the Mithradatic war. The events acts was to draw up a list of his enemies who 
which followed — his expulsion from Rome by were to be put to death, called a Proscriptio. It 
Marius, his return to the city at the head of his was the first instance of the kind in Roman 
legions, and the proscription of Marius and his history. All persons in this list were outlaws 
leading adherents— are related in the life of Ma- j who might be killed by any one with impunity, 
rius. Sulla remained at Rome till the end of the even by slaves ; their property was confiscated 
year, and set out for Greece at the beginning of to the state, and was to be sold by public auc- 
87, in order to carry on the war against Mithra- [ tion ; their children and grandchildren lost their 
dates. He landed at Dyrrhachium. and forth- ! votes in the comitia, and were excluded from 
with marched against Athens, which had be- all public offices. Further, all who killed a pro- 
come the head-quarters of the Mithradatic cause scribed person received two talents as a re- 
in Greece. After a long and obstinate siege, j ward, and whoever sheltered such a person was 
Athens was taken by storm on the 1st of March punished with death. Terror now reigned, not 
in 86, and was given up to rapine and plunder, only at Rome, but throughout Italy. Fresh lists 
Sulla then marched against Archelaus, the gen- j of the proscribed constantly appeared. No one 
eral of Mithradates, whom he defeated in the j was safe ; for Sulla gratified his friends by plac- 
neighborhood of Chaeronea in Bceotia ; and in ! ing in the fatal lists their personal enemies, or 
the following year he again gained a decisive persons whose property was coveted by his ad- 
victory over the same general near Orchome- : herents. The confiscated property, it is true, 
uus. But while Sulla was carrying on the war \ belonged to the state, and had to be sold by pub- 
with such success in Greece, his enemies had : lie auction, but the friends and dependents of 
obtained the upper hand in Italy. The consul Sulla purchased it at a nominal price, as no one 
Cinna, who had been driven out of Rome by his dared to bid against them. The number of per- 
colleague Octavius, soon after Sulla's departure sons who perished by the proscriptions is stated 
from Italy, had entered it again with Marius at differently, but it appears to have amounted to 
the close of the year. Both Cinna and Marius ; many thousands. At the commencement of 
were appointed consuls 86, and all the regula- ; these horrors Sulla had been appointed dictator 
tions of Sulla were swept away. Sulla, how- for as long a time as he judged to be necessary, 
ever, would not return to Italv til! he had brought This was toward the close of 81. Sulla's chief 
840 



SULLA, CORNELIUS. 



SULMO. 



object in being invested with the dictatorship 
was to carry into execution, in a legal manner, 
the great reforms which he meditated in the 
constitution and the administration of justice. 
He had no intention of abolishing the republic, 
and, consequently, he caused consuls to be elect- 
ed for the following year, and was elected to the 
office himself in 80, while he continued to hold 
the dictatorship. The general object of Sulla's 
reforms was to restore, as far as possible, the 
ancient Roman constitution, and to give back 
to the senate and the aristocracy the power 
which they had lost. Thus he deprived the 
tribunes of the plebs of all real power, and abol- 
ished altogether the legislative and judicial func- 
tions of the comitia tributa. At the beginning 
of 81, he celebrated a splendid triumph on ac- 
count of his victory over Mithradates. In a j 
speech which he delivered to the people at the j 
close of the ceremony, he claimed for himself 
the surname of Felix, as he attributed his suc- 
cess in life to the favor of the gods. In order 
to strengthen his power, Sulla established mili- j 
tary colonies throughout Italy. The inhabit- | 
ants of the Italian towns, which had fought 
against Sulla, were deprived of the full Roman 
franchise, and were only allowed to retain the j 
commercium : their land was confiscated and j 
given to the soldiers who had fought under him. 
Twenty-three legions, or, according to another ; 
statement, forty-seven legions, received grants 
of land in various parts of Italy. A great num- [ 
ber of these colonies was settled in Etruria, the j 
population of which was thus almost entirely ' 
changed. These colonies had the strongest in- j 
terest in upholding the institutions of Sulla, j 
since any attempt to invalidate the latter would 
have endangered their newly-acquired posses- 
sions. Sulla likewise created at Rome a kind 
of body-guard for his protection by giving the 
citizenship to a great number of slaves who had 
belonged to persons proscribed by him. The 
slaves thus rewarded are said to have been as 
many as ten thousand, and were called Cornelii 
after him as their patron. After holding the 
dictatorship till the beginning of 79, Sulla re- 
signed this office, to the surprise of all classes. 
He retired to his estate at Puteoli, and there, 
surrounded by the beauties of nature and art, 
he passed the remainder of his life in those lit- 
erary and sensual enjoyments in which he had 
always taken so much pleasure. His dissolute 
mode of life hastened his death. The imme- 
diate cause of his death was the rupture of a 
blood-vessel, but some time before he had been 
suffering from the disgusting disease, which is 
known in modern times by the name of Morbus 
Pediculosus, or Phthiriasis. He died in 78, in the 
sixtieth year of his age. He was honored with 
a public funeral, and a monument was erected 
to him in the Campus Martius, the inscription ! 
on which had been composed by himself. It 
stated that none of his friends ever did him a I 
kindness, and none of his enemies a wrong, | 
without being fully repaid. Sulla was married j 
five times : 1. To Ilia or Julia, who bore him a | 
daughter, married to Q. Pompeius Rufus, the I 
son of Sulla's colleague in the consulship in 88 ; 
2. To iElia ; 3. To Coelia ; 4. To Caecilia Me- | 
tella, who bore him a son, who died before Sulla, 
and likewise twins, a son and a daughter ; 5. j 



Valeria, who bore him a daughter after his 
death. Sulla wrote a history of his own life 
and times, called Memoirs (TTro/zv^ara). It 
was dedicated to L. Lucullus, and extended to 
twenty-two books, the last of which was finish- 
ed by Sulla a few days before his death. He 
also wrote Fabulae Atellanae, and the Greek 
Anthology contains a short epigram which is 
ascribed to him.— 5. Faobtus, son of the dic- 
tator by his fourth wife Caecilia Metella, and a 
twin brother of Fausta, was born not long be- 
fore 88, the year in which his father obtained 
the first consulship. He and his sister received 
the names of Faustus and Fausta respectively 
on account of the good fortune of their father. 
At the death of his father in 78, Faustus and 
his sister were left under the guardianship of 
L. Lucullus. Faustus accompanied Pompey 
into Asia, and was the first who mounted the 
walls of the temple of Jerusalem in 63. In 60 
he exhibited the gladiatorial games which his 
father in his last will had enjoined upon him. 
In 54 he was quaestor. In 52 he received from 
the senate the commission to rebuild the Curia 
Hostilia, which had been burned down in the 
tumults following the murder of Clodius, and 
which was henceforward to be called the Curia 
Cornelia, in honor of Faustus and his father. 
He married Pompey's daughter, and sided with 
his father-in-law in the civil war. He was 
present at the battle of Pharsalia, and subse- 
quently joined the leaders of his party in Africa. 
After the battle of Thapsus in 46, he attempted 
to escape into Mauretania, but was taken pris- 
oner by P. Sittius, and carried to Caesar. Upon 
his arrival in Caesar's camp he was murdered 
by the soldiers in a tumult. Faustus seems 
only to have resembled his father in his extrava- 
gance. We know from Cicero that he was 
overwhelmed with debt at the breaking out of 
the civil war. — 6. P., nephew of the dictator, 
was elected consul along with P. Autronius 
PaHus for the year 65, but neither he nor his 
colleague entered upon the office, as they were 
accused of bribery by L. Torquatus the younger, 
and were condemned. It was currently be- 
lieved that Sulla was privy to both of Catiline's 
conspiracies, and he was accordingly accused 
of this crime by his former accuser, L. Torqua- 
tus, and by C. Cornelius. He was defended by 
Hortensius and Cicero, and the speech of the 
latter on his behalf is still extant. He was ac- 
quitted ; but, independent of the testimony of 
Sallust {Cat., 17), his guilt may almost be in- 
ferred from the embarrassment of his advocate. 
In the civil war Sulla espoused Caesar's cause. 
He served under him as legate in Greece, and 
commanded along with Caesar himself the right 
wing at the battle of Pharsalia (48). He died 
in 45. — 7. Serv., brother of No. 6, took part in 
both of Catiline's conspiracies. His guilt was 
so evident that no one was willing to defend 
him ; but we do not read that he was put to 
death along with the other conspirators. 

Sulmo (Sulmonensis). 1. (Now Sulmona), a 
town of the Peligni, in the country of the Sa- 
bines, seven miles south of Corfinium, on the 
road to Capua, and situated on two small mount- 
ain streams, the water of which was exceed- 
ingly cold : hence we find the town called by 
the poets gelidus Sulmo. It is celebrated as the 

841 



SULPICIA. 



SUR1US. 



birth-place of Ovid. It was destroyed by Sulla, 
but was afterward restored, and is mentioned 
as a Roman colony. — 2. (Now Sermoneta), an 
ancient town of the Volsci in Latium, on the 
Ufens, which had disappeared in Pliny's time. 

Sclpicia, a Roman poetess, who flourished 
toward the close of the first century, celebrated 
for sundry amatory effusions, addressed to her 
husband Calenus. Their general character may 
be gathered from the expressions of Martial, 
Ausonius, and Sidonius Apollinaris, by all of 
whom they are noticed. There is extant a sa- 
tirical poem, in seventy hexameters, on the 
edict of Dornitian, by which philosophers were 
banished from Rome and from Italy, which is 
ascribed to Sulpicia by many modern critics. 
It is generally appended to the editions of Ju- 
venal and Persius. 

Sulpicia Gens, was one the most ancient 
Roman gentes, and produced a succession of 
distinguished men, from the foundation of the 
republic to the imperial period. The chief fam- 
ilies of the Sulpicii during the republican period 
bore the names of Camerixus, Galba, Gallcs, 
Rufus (given below), Saverrio. 

Sulpicius Apollixaris, a contemporary of 
A. Gellius, was a learned grammarian. There 
are two poems in the Latin Anthology purport- 
ing to be written by Sulpicius of Carthage, 
whom some identify with the above-named Sul- 
picius Apollinaris. One of these poems con- 
sists of seventy-two lines, giving the argument 
of the twelve books of Virgil's JEneid, six lines 
being devoted to each book. 

Sclpicius Rufus. 1. P., one of the most dis- 
tinguished orators of his time, was born B.C. 
124. He commenced public life as a supporter 
of the aristocratical party, and acquired great 
influence in the state by his splendid talents 
while he was still young. In 93 he was quaes- 
tor, and in 89 he served as legate of the consul 
Cn. Pompeius Strabo in the Marsic war. In 
88 he was elected to the tribunate ; but he de- 
serted the aristocratical party, and joined Ma- 
rius. The causes of this sudden change are 
not expressly stated ; but we are told that he 
was overwhelmed with debt ; and there can be 
little doubt that he was bought by Marius. Sul- 
picius brought forward a law in favor of Marius 
and his party, of which an account is given un- 
der Marius. When Sulla marched upon Rome 
at the head of his army, Marius and Sulpicius 
took to flight. Marius succeeded in making his 
escape to Africa, but Sulpicius was discovered 
in a villa and put to death. — 2. P., probably son 
or grandson of the last, was one of Caesar's le- 
gates in Gaul and in the civil war. He was 
praetor in 48. Cicero addresses him in 45 as 
irnperator. It appears that he was at that time 
in Illyricum, along with Vatinius. — 3. Serv., 
with the surname Lemonta, indicating the tribe 
~o which he belonged, was a contemporary and 
friend of Cicero, and of about the same age. 
He first devoted himself to oratory, and he 
studied this art with Cicero in his youth. He 
afterward studied law ; and he became one of 
the best jurists as well as most eloquent orators 
of his age. He was quaestor of the district of 
Ostia in 74 ; curule aedile 69 ; praetor 65 ; and 
consul 51 with M. Claudius Marcellus. He ap- 
pears to have espoused Caesar's side in the civil 
842 



| war, and was appointed by Caesar proconsul of 

! Achaia (46 or 45). He died in 43 in the camp 
of M. Antony, having been sent by the senate 
on a mission to Antony, who was besieging Dec. 
Brutus in Mutina. Sulpicius wrote a great num- 
ber of legal works. He is often cited by the 
jurists whose writings are excerpted in the Di- 
gest ; but there is no excerpt directly from him 
in the Digest. He had numerous pupils, the 
most distinguished of whom were A. Ofilius and 
Alfenus Varus. There are extant in the collec- 
tion of Cicero's Epistles (ad Fam., iv.) two let- 
ters from Sulpicius to Cicero, one of which is 
the well-known letter of consolation on the 
death of Tullia, the daughter of the orator. The 
same book contains several letters from Cicero 
to Sulpicius. He is also said to have written 
some erotic poetry. Sulpicius left a son Ser- 
vius, who is frequently mentioned in Cicero's 
correspondence. 

[Sumetia CEovfiTjTia), an ancient city in the 
eastern part of Arcadia, in the district Maena- 
lia, said to have derived its name from Suma- 
teus, a son of Lycaon : after the founding of 
Megalopolis, it fell into decay.] 

Summaxus. a derivative from summus, the 
highest, an ancient Roman or Etruscan divin- 

: ity, who was equal or even of higher rank than 
Jupiter. In fact, he may be regarded as the Ju- 
piter of the night ; for, as Jupiter was the god 
of heaven in the bright day, so Summanus was 
the god of the nocturnal heaven, and hurled his 
thunderbolts during the night. Summanus had 

, a temple at Rome near the Circus Maximus, and 
there was a representation of him in the pedi- 
ment of the Capitoline temple. 

SuxicM (Zovvlov : 2oi>v££t'c : now Cape Co- 
lonni), a celebrated promontory forming the 
southern extremity of Attica, with a town of 
the same name upon it. Here was a splendid 
temple of Minerva (Athena), elevated three 
hundred feet above the sea, the columns of 
which are still extant, and have given the mod- 
ern name to the promontory. It was fortified 
by the Athenians in the Peloponnesian war, 
and remains of the ancient walls, with the tem- 
ple of Minerva (Athena), are still extant. 

Suxoxexsis Lacus (now Lake Sabanjah), a 
lake in Bithynia, between the Ascania Palus 
and the River Sangarius, near Nicoinedia. 
Superbus, Tarqcixius. Vid. Tarquixius. 
[Superum, Mare. Vid. Adria.] 
Sura, Lextulus. Vid. Lextulus, No. 9. 
Sura, L. LicixIus, an intimate friend of Tra- 

| jan, and three times consul, in A.D. 98, 102, and 

I 107. On the death of Sura, Trajan honored him 

| with a public funeral, and erected baths to per- 

' petuate his memory. Two of Pliny's letters 

■ are addressed to him. 

Sura (Zovpa : now Surie), a town of Syria, 

i in the district Chalybonitis, on the Euphrates, 

1 a little west of Thapsacus. 

Scraxi or Suarxi (Zovpavoi), a people of Sar- 
matia Asiatica, near the Portae Caucasian and 

\ the River Rha. Their country contained many 
gold mines. 

Surexas, the general of the Parthians who 
defeated Crassus in B.C. 54. Vid. Crassls. 

j Scrics (lovpiog), a tributary of the Phasis in 
Colchis, the water of which had the power of 

j forming petrifactions. At its confluence with 



SURRENTINI COLLES. 



SYBARIS. 



the Phasis stood a town named Surium (Zov- 
piov). The plain through which it flows is still 
called Suram. 

SURRENTINI COLLES. Vid. SURRENTUM. 

Surrentum (Surrentinus : now Sorrento), an 
ancient town of Campania, opposite Capreaj, 
and situated on the promontory (Promontorium 
Minerva, now Punta della Campanella) sepa- 
rating the Sinus Paestanus from the Sinus Pu- 
teolanus. It was subsequently a Roman col- 
ony, and on the hills {Surrcntini Colles) in its 
neighborhood was grown one of the best wines 
in Italy, which was strongly recommended to 
convalescents on account of its thinness and ; 
wholesomeness. 

Susa, gen. -orum (ru Zovoa s in the Old Test- j 
ament, Shushan : Zovoioc, Susianus : ruins at 
Shus), the winter residence of the Persian kings, ' 
stood in the district Cissia of the province Su- 
siana, on the eastern bank of the River Cho- 
aspes. Its name in old Persian signifies Lily, 
and that flower is said to abound in the plain in : 
which the city stood. It was of a quadrangular j 
' form, one hundred and twenty (or, according to ' 
others, two hundred) stadia in circuit, and with- : 
out fortifications ; but it had a strongly-fortified 
citadel, containing the palace and treasury of j 
the Persian kings. The Greek name of this ! 
citadel, Memnonice or Memnonium, is perhaps j 
a corruption of the Aramaic Maaninon, a fort- ! 
ress ; and this easy confusion of terms gave rise j 
to the fable that the city was founded by Titho- ! 
nus, the father of Memnon. A historical tra- 
dition ascribes its erection to Darius, the son of : 
Hystaspes, but it existed already in the time of 1 
Daniel. (Dan., viii., 2.) (There is, however, a 
difficulty as to the identification of the Shushan 
of Daniel with the Susa of the Greeks, and as 
! to the true position of the River Ulai or Eu- ! 
laeus, which can not be discussed within the 
Umits of this article.) The climate of Susa was i 
very hot, and hence the choice of it for the win- I 
ter palace. It was here that Alexander and his 
. generals celebrated their nuptials with the Per- ; 
sian princesses, B.C. 325. The site of Susa is 1 
now marked by extensive mounds, on which 
are found fragments of bricks and broken pot- j 
tery, with cuneiform inscriptions. 

Susarion CZovaapujv), to whom the origin of j 
the Attic Comedy is ascribed, w T as a native of 
Megara, whence he removed into Attica, to the ; 
village of Icaria, a place celebrated as a seat of j 
the worship of Bacchus (Dionysus). This ac- 
count agrees with the claim which the Mega- j 
rians asserted to the invention of comedy, and 
which was generally admitted. Before the time 
of Susarion, there was, no doubt, practiced at 
Icaria and the other Attic villages, that extem- 
pore jesting and buffoonery which formed a 
marked feature of the festivals of Bacchus (Dio- 
nysus) ; but Susarion was the first who so reg- 
ulated this species of amusement as to lay the 
foundation of* Comedy, properly so called. The 
Megaric comedy appears to have flourished, in 
its full development, about B.C. 600 and on- 
ward ; and it was introduced by Susarion into 
Attica between 580-564. 

, [Susia (lovata : now Susen or Suseni), a city 
of Aria, on the borders of Parthia, probably iden- 
tical with the Suphtha of Ptolemy, and assigned 
by him to Parthia.] 



Susiana, -e, or Susis (tj TLovciavri, 7j Sovazf : 
nearly corresponding to Khuzislan), one of the 
chief provinces of the ancient Persian empire, 
lay between Babylonia and Persis, and between 
Mount Parachoatras and the head of the Per- 
sian Gulf. In this last direction, its coast ex- 
tended from the junction of the Euphrates with 
the Tigris to about the mouth of the River 
Oroatis (now Tab). It was divided from Per- 
sis on the southeast and east by a mountainous 
tract, inhabited by independent tribes, who made 
even the kings of Persia pay them for a safe 
passage. The chief pass through these mount- 
ains was called Susides or Persides Porta? (Sow- 
cidsg 7rv?.ai, at 7rv?,at at Ylepatdtq, 'Lovaiudeg Trt'- 
rpat) : its position is uncertain ; perhaps it was 
the pass of Kelahi Sefid, in the upper valley of 
the Tab. On the I >rth it was separated from 
Great Media by j\Jount Charbanus, an eastern 
branch of Mount Zagros, which contained the 
sources of the chief rivers of Susiana, the Cho- 
aspes, the Coprates, and the EuljEus (the Pa- 
sitigris came from the mountains on the east). 
On the west it was divided from Assyria by an 
imaginary line drawn south from near the Me- 
dian pass in Mount Zagros to the Tigris, and 
from Babylonia by the Tigris itself. The coun- 
try was mountainous and cool in the north, and 
low and very hot in the south, and the coast 
along the Persian Gulf was marshy. The mount- 
ains were inhabited by various wild and inde- 
pendent tribes, and the plains by a quiet agri- 
cultural people, of the Semitic race, called Su- 
sii or Susiani. 

Sutrium (Sutrinus : now Sutri), an ancient 
town of Etruria, on the eastern side of the Sal- 
tus Ciminius, and on the road from Vulsinii to 
Rome. It was taken by the Romans at an early 
period ; and in B.C. 383, or seven years after 
the capture of Rome by the Gauls, it was made 
a Roman colony. It was celebrated for its fidel- 
ity to Rome, and was, in consequence, besieged 
several times by the Etruscans. On one occa- 
sion it was obliged to surrender to the Etrus- 
cans, but was retaken by Camillus in the same 
day, whence arose the proverb ire Sutrium. 
There are still remains of the walls and tombs 
of the ancient town. 

Syager CLvaypoc) 1- One of the alleged ante- 
Homeric poets, is said to have flourished after 
Orpheus and Musaeus, and to have been the first 
who sang the Trojan war. — [2. A Lacedaemo- 
nian, deputy from Sparta when the Greeks sent 
to Gelon of Syracuse to ask his aid against 
Xerxes, rejected, on behalf of his state, Gelon's 
demand to have the supreme command of the 
expedition.] 

Syagrus (Suaypof a/cpa), the greatest promon- 
tory of Arabia, is described differently by differ- 
ent ancient writers, but is most probably to be 
identified with the easternmost headland of the 
whole peninsula, Ras-el-Had. 

Sybaris (I,v6api£). 1. (Now Coscile or Siba- 
ri), a river in Lucania, flowing by the city of 
the same name, and falling into the Crathis. 
It derived its name from the fountain Sybaris, 
near Bura, in Achaia. — 2. (2v6aptTTjc, Sybarita), 
a celebrated Greek town in Lucania, was sit- 
uated between the rivers Sybaris and Crathis, 
at a short distance from the Tarentine Gulf, and 
near the confines of Bruttium. It was founded 

843 



SYBOTA. 



SYMMACHUS, Q. AURELRTS. 



B.C. 720 by Achaeans and Trcezenians, and soon 
attained an extraordinary degree of prosperity 
and wealth. It carried on an extensive com- 
merce with Asia Minor and other countries on 
• he Mediterranean, and its inhabitants became 
so notorious for their love of luxury and pleas- 
ure, that their name was employed to indicate 
any voluptuary. At the time of their highest 
prosperity their city was fifty stadia, or upward 
of six miles in circumference, and they exer- 
cised dominion over twenty-five towns, so that 
we are told they were able to bring into the 
field three hundred thousand men, a number, 
however, which appears incredible. But their 
prosperity was of short duration. The Achaeans 
having expelled the Troszenian part of the pop- 
ulation, the latter took refuge at the neighbor- 
ing city of Croton, the inhabitants of which es- 
poused their cause. In the war which ensued 
between the two states, the Sybarites were com- 
pletely conquered by the Crotoniats, who fol- 
lowed up their victory by the capture of Syba- 
ris, which they destroyed by turning the waters 
of the River Crathis against the town, B.C. 510. 
The greater number of the surviving Sybarites 
took refuge in other Greek cities in Italy ; but 
a few remained near their ancient town, and 
their descendants formed part of the population 
of Thurii, which was funded in 443 near Syba- 
ris. Vid. Thurii. 

Sybota (rd 2v6oTa : 2v66tio<; : now Syvota), 
a number of small islands off the coast of Epi- 
rus, and opposite the promontory Leucimne in 
Corcyra, with a harbor of the same name on 
the main land. It was here that a naval battle 
was fought between the Corcyraeans and Co- 
rinthians, B.C. 432, just before the commence- 
ment of the Peloponnesian war. 

Sych^us or Sichjsus, also called Acerbas. 
Vid. Acerbas. 

Sychar, Sychem. Vid. Neapolis, No. 5. 

[Syccrium, according to Livy, a place in Thes- 
salian Pelasgiotis, at the base of Mount Ossa.] 

[Syedra (in Strabo 2v6p^), a town on the 
coast of Cilicia Aspera, between Coracesium 
and Selinus.] 

Syene (IvTjvr] : ZvTiviTTjc and Ivtjv^tijc, Sy- 
enites : ruins at Assouan), a city of Upper Egypt, 
on the eastern bank of the Nile, just below the 
First Cataract. It has been in all ages the 
southern frontier city of Egypt toward ^Ethio- 
pia, and under the Romans it was kept by a 
garrison of three cohorts. From its neighbor- 
hood was obtained the fine red granite called 
Syenites lapis. It was also an important point 
in the astronomy and geography of the ancients, 
as it lay just under the tropic of Cancer, and 
was therefore chosen as the place through which 
they drew their chief parallel of latitude. Of 
course the sun was vertical to Syene at the 
time of the summer solstice, and a well was 
shown in which the reflection of the sun was 
then seen at noon ; or, as the rhetorician Aris- 
tides expresses it, the disc of the sun covered 
the well as a vessel is covered by its lid. 

Syexnesis (Ivewecis), a common name of 
the kings of Cilicia. Of these the most import- 
ant are, 1. A king of Cilicia, who joined with 
Labynetus (Nebuchadnezzar) in mediating be- 
tween Cyaxares and Alyattes, the kings re- 
spectively of Media and Lvdia, probably in B.C. 
844 



610. — 2. Contemporary with Darius Hystaspis, 
to whom he was tributary. His daughter was 
married to Pixodarus. — 3. Contemporary with 
Artaxerxes II. (Mnemon), ruled over Cilicia, 
when the younger Cyrus marched through his 
country in his expedition against his brother 
Artaxerxes. {Vid. Epyaxa.] 

Sygambri, Sugambri, Sigambri, Sycambri or 
Sicambri, one of the most powerful tribes of 
Germany at an early time, belonged to the Is- 
taevones, and dwelt originally north of the Ubii 
on the Rhine, whence they spread toward the 
north as far as the Lippe. The Sygambri are 
mentioned by Caesar, w T ho invaded their terri- 
tory. They were conquered by Tiberius in the 
reign of Augustus, and a large number of them 
were transplanted to Gaul, where they received 
settlements between the Maas and the Rhine 
! as Roman subjects. The portion of the Sy- 
! gambri who remained in Germany withdrew 
i further south, probably to the mountainous 
; country in the neighborhood of the Taunus. 
I Shortly afterward they disappear from history, 
• and are not mentioned again till the time of 
! Ptolemy, who places them much further north, 
; close to the Bructeri and the Langobardi, some- 
where between the Vecht and the Yssel. At a 
j still later period we find them forming an im- 
portant part of the confederacy known under 
the name of Franci. 
Sylla. Vid. Sella. 
i Syllium {1v?'uov : probably, ruins near Bol- 
\ kassku, north of Legclahkoi), a strongly-fortified 
! town of Pamphylia, on a mountain forty stadia 
(four geographical miles) from the coast, be- 
tween Side and Aspendus. 

[Syloson (2v?,oo£)v), son of .Eaces, younger 
; brother of Poly crates, the tyrant of Samos. 
' Banished by his brother, he went to Egypt, and 
thence to Persia, after the accession of Darius, 
who rewarded him for some previous favor with 
the tyranny of the island of Samos. Syloson 
ruled Samos till his death, and was succeeded 
in the sovereignty by his son ^Eaces.] 
Sylyancs. Vid. Silvancs. 
Syl vies. Vid. Silvics. 
Sym^thus (IvfidLdoe : now Giaretta), a river 
! on the eastern coast of Sicily and at the foot of 
Mount .Etna, forming the boundary between 
Leontini and Catana, on which stood the town 
: of Centuripae. 

Syme (2vu7? : Iv/aatoc, *Lvfiev£ : now Symi), a 
small island off the southwestern coast of Caria, 
lay in the mouth of the Sinus Doridis, to the 
west of the promontory of Cynossema. It was 
! one of the early Dorian states, that existed in 
the southwest of Asia Minor before the time of 
j Homer. Its connection both with Cnidus and 
with Rhodes, between which it lay, is indicated 
by the tradition that it was peopled by a colony 
from Cnidus led by Chthonius, the son of Nep- 
tune (Poseidon) and of Syme, the daughter of 
Ialysus. Some time after the Trojan war, the 
Carians are said to have obtained possession of 
the island, but to have deserted it again in con- 
sequence of a severe drought. Its final settle- 
ment by the Dorians is ascribed to the time of 
their great migration. The island was reckon- 
ed at^thirty-five miles in circuit. It had eight 
harbors and a town, which was also called Syme. 
Symmachus, Q. ArRET.nrs, a distinguished 



SYMPLEGADES. 



SYRACUSE. 



scholar, statesman, and orator in the latter half 
of the fourth century of the Christian era. By 
his example and authority, he inspired for a time 
new life and vigor into the literature of his 
country. He was educated in Gaul ; and, hav- 
ing discharged the functions of quaestor and 
praetor, he was afterward appointed (A.D. 365) 
Corrector of Lucania and the Bruttii ; and in 
373 he was proconsul of Africa. His zeal for 
the ancient religion of Rome checked for a 
while the prosperous current of his fortunes, 
and involved him in danger and disgrace. Hav- 
ing been chosen by the senate to remonstrate 
with Gratian on the removal of the altar of Vic- 
tory (382) from their council hall, and on the 
curtailment of the sums annually allowed for 
the maintenance of the Vestal Virgins, and for 
the public celebration of sacred rites, he was 
ordered by the indignant emperor to quit his 
presence, and to withdraw himself to a distance 
of one hundred miles from Rome. Nothing 
daunted by this repulse, when appointed praefect 
of the city (384) after the death of his perse- 
cutor, he addressed an elaborate epistle to Va- 
lentinianus, again urging the restoration of the 
pagan deities to their former honors. This ap- 
plication was resisted by St. Ambrose, and was 
again unsuccessful. Symmachus afterward es- 
poused the cause of the usurper Maximus (387) ; 
but he was pardoned by Theodosius, and raised 
to the consulship in 391. His personal charac- 
ter seems to have been unimpeachable, as he 
performed the duties of the high offices which 
he filled in succession with a degree of mild- 
ness, firmness, and integrity seldom found 
among statesmen in that corrupt age. The ex- 
tant works of Symmachus are, 1. Epistolarum 
Libri X, published after his death by his son. 
The last book contains his official correspond- 
ence, and is chiefly composed of the letters pre- 
sented by him when pra?fect of the city to the 
emperors under whom he served. The remain- 
ing books comprise a multitude of epistles, ad- 
dressed to a wide circle of relations, friends, 
and acquaintances. 2. Novem Orationum Frag- 
menta, published for the first time by Mai from 
a palimpsest in the Ambrosian library, Mediolan., 
1815. The best editions of the epistles are by 
Juretus, Paris, 1604, and by Scioppius, Mogunt., 
1608. 

[Symplegades (Zvp-rchriyddec). Vid. Cyane^e 
Insula] 

Synesius (Suvec-ioc), one of the most elegant 
of the ancient Christian writers, was a native 
of Cyrene, and devoted himself to the study of 
Greek literature, first in his own city, and after- 
ward at Alexandrea, where he heard Hypatia. 
He became celebrated for his skill in eloquence 
and poetry, as well as in philosophy, in which 
he was a follower of Plato. About A.D. 397, 
he was sent by his fellow-citizens of Cyrene on 
an embassy to Constantinople, to present the 
Emperor Arcadius with a crown of gold, on 
which occasion he delivered an oration on the 
government of a kingdom (mpl ftaoiXeiae) 
which is still extant. Soon after this he em- 
braced Christianity, and in 410 was ordained 
bishop of Ptolemais, the chief city of the Libyan 
Pentapolis. He presided over his diocese with 
energy and success for about twenty years, and 
died about 430. His writings have been objects 



of admiration both to ancient and modern schol- 
ars, and have obtained for him the surname 
of Philosopher. The best edition of his works 
is by Morel, Paris, 1612; much improved and 
enlarged, Paris, 1633 ; reprinted, 1640. [His 
"Tfivot (Hymns), ten in number, are contained 
in Boissonade's Lyrici Graci, Paris, 1825, l8mo.] 
I Synnada, also Synnas (tu Zvvvada : Zvvva- 
devc, Synnadensis : now probably ruins at Afiam- 
Kara-Hisar), a city in the north of Phrygia Sal- 
| utaris, at first inconsiderable, but afterward a 
place of much importance, and, from the time 
i of Constantine, the capital of Phrygia Salutaris. 
It stood in a fruitful plain, planted with olives, 
i near a mountain from which was quarried the 
| very celebrated Synnadic marble, which was of 
a beautiful white, with red veins and spots (Ivv- 
J vadmbc Xtdoc, Synnadicus lapis, called also Do- 
j cimiticus, from a still nearer place, Docimia). 

Syphax (2v<paZ), king of the Massaesylians, 
the westernmost tribe of the Numidians. His 
1 history is related in the life of his contemporary 
I and rival, Masinissa. Syphax w^as taken pris- 
oner by Masinissa B.C. 203, and was sent by 
j Scipio, under the charge of Laelius, to Rome. 
1 Polybius states that he was one of the captives 
| who adorned the triumph of Scipio, and that he 
I died in confinement shortly after. Livy, on the 
contrary, asserts that he was saved from that 
[ ignominy by a timely death at Tibur, whither 
he had been transferred from Alba. 
Syraco. Vid. Syracuse. 
Syracuse (ILvpaaovoai or 'ZvpaKoacai, Ion. 
1>vp^K0vcai, also Hvpanovoat, ^vpaKovaij : 2vpa- 
kovoioc, ZvpaKociog, Syracusanus ; now Siracu- 
sa in Italian, Syracuse in English), the wealth- 
iest and most populous town in Sicily, was sit- 
uated on the southern part of the eastern coast, 
four hundred stadia north of the promontory 
Plemmyrium, and ten stadia northeast of the 
mouth of the River Anapus, near the lake or 
marsh called Syraco (2upa/co), from which it 
derived its name. It was founded B.C. 734, 
one year after the foundation of Naxos, by a 
colony of Corinthians and other Dorians, led 
by Archias the Corinthian. The town was orig- 
inally confined to the island Ortygia lying im- 
mediately off the coast ; but it afterward spread 
over the neighboring main land, and at the 
time of its greatest extension under the elder 
Dionysius it consisted of five distinct towns, 
each surrounded by separate walls. Some writ- 
ers, indeed, describe Syracuse as consisting of 
four towns, but this simply arises from the 
fact that Epipolae was frequently not reckoned 
a portion of the city. These five towns were, 
1. Ortygia ('Opruyta), frequently called simply 
the Island (Ndaoo or Nfjcroc), an island of an 
oblong shape, about two miles in circumfer- 
ence, lying between the Great Harbor on the 
west and the Little Harbor on the east. It 
was, as has been already remarked, the por- 
tion of the city first built, and it contained the 
citadel or Acropolis, surrounded by double walls, 
which Timoleon caused to be destroyed. Ia 
this island also was the celebrated fountain of 
Arethusa. It was originally separated from the 
main land by a narrow channel, which was sub- 
sequently filled up by a causeway ; but this 
causeway must at a still later time have been 
swept away since we find in the Roman period 

845 



SYRACUSE. 



SYRIA 



that the island was connected with the main land 
by means of a bridge. — 2. Achradina ('Axpa- 
divrj), occupied originally the high ground of the 
peninsula north of Ortygia, and was surrounded 
on the north and east by the sea. The lower 
ground between Achradina and Ortygia was at 
first not included in the fortifications of either, 
but was employed partly for religious proces- 
sions and partly for the burial of the dead. At 
the time of the siege of Syracuse by the Athe- 
nians in the Peloponnesian war (415), the city 
consisted only of the two parts already men- 
tioned, Ortygia forming the inner and Achra- 
dina the outer city, but separated, as explained 
above, by the low ground between the two. — 
3. Tyche (Tvxv), named after the temple of 
Tyche or Fortune, was situated northwest of 
Achradina, in the direction of the port called 
Trogilus. At the time of the Athenian siege 
of Syracuse it was only an unfortified suburb, 
but it afterward became the most populous part 
of the city. In this quarter stood the Gymna- 
sium. — 4. Neapolis (Nsa iroXts), nearly south- 
west of Achradina, was also, at the time of the 
Athenian siege of Syracuse, merely a suburb, 
and called Temenites, from having within it 
the statue and consecrated ground of Apollo 
Temenites. Neapolis contained the chief the- 
atre of Syracuse, which was the largest in all 
Sicily, and many temples. — 5. Epipol^: (at 'Eni- 
TroXat), a space of ground rising above the three 
quarters of Achradina, Tyche, and Neapolis, 
which gradually diminished in breadth as it 
rose higher, until it ended in a small conical 
mound. This rising ground was surrounded 
with strong walls by the elder Dionysius, and 
was thus included in Syracuse, which now be- 
came one of the most strongly fortified cities of 
the ancient world. The highest point of Epi- 
polae was called Euryelus (Evpv^Aof), on which 
stood the fort Labdalum (Aa6daXov). After Epi- 
polae had been added to the city, the circumfer- 
ence of Syracuse was one hundred and eighty 
stadia, or upward of twenty-two English miles ; 
and the entire population of the city is supposed 
to have amounted to five hundred thousand 
souls at the time of its greatest prosperity. Syr- 
acuse had two harbors. The Great Harbor, 
still called Porto Maggiore, is a splendid bay 
about five miles in circumference, formed by the 
island Ortygia and the promontory Plemmy- 
rium. The Small Harbor, also called Laccius 
(Aa/c/aoc), lying between Ortygia and Achradi- 
na, was capacious enough to receive a large 
fleet of ships of war. There were several stone 
quarries (lautumicz) in Syracuse, which are fre- 
quently mentioned by ancient writers, and in 
which the unfortunate Athenian prisoners were 
confined. These quarries were partly in Achra- 
dina, on the descent from the higher ground to 
the lower level toward Ortygia, and partly in 
Neapolis, under the southern cliff of Epipolse. 
From them was taken the stone of which the 
city was built. On one side of these quarries 
is the remarkable excavation, called the Ear of 
Dionysius, in which it is said that this tyrant 
confined the persons whom he suspected, and 
that he was able from a little apartment above 
to overhear the conversation of his captives. 
This tale, however, is clearly an invention. 
The city was supplied with water from an aque- 
846 



j duct, which was constructed by Gelon and lm 
I proved by Hieron. It was brought through 
I Epipolae and Neapolis to Achradina and Ortygia. 
j The modern city of Syracuse is confined to the 
| island. The remaining quarters of the ancient 
| city are now uninhabited, and their position 
j marked only by a few ruins. Of these the most 
I important are the remains of the great theatre, 
j and of an amphitheatre of the Roman period. 
! The government of Syracuse was originally an 
j aristocracy ; and the political power was in the 
hands of the landed proprietors, called Geomori 
or Gamori. In course of time the people, having 
increased in numbers and wealth, expelled the 
Geomori and established a democracy. But 
this form of government did not last long. Ge- 
lon espoused the cause of the aristocratical 
party, and proceeded to restore them by force 
of arms ; but on his approach the people opened 
the gates to him, and he was acknowledged 
without opposition tyrant or sovereign of Syr- 
j acuse, B.C. 485. Under his rule and that of 
j his brother Hieron, Syracuse was raised to an 
! unexampled degree of wealth and prosperity. 
| Hieron died in 467, and was succeeded by his 
j brother Thrasybulus ; but the rapacity and cru- 
| elty of the latter soon provoked a revolt among 
| his subjects, which led to his deposition and the 
I establishment of a democratical form of govern- 
ment. The next most important event in the 
history of Syracuse was the siege of the city by 
the Athenians, which ended in the total de- 
struction of the great Athenian armament in 
413. The democracy continued to exist in Syr- 
acuse till 406, when the elder Dionysius made 
himself tyrant of the city. After a long and 
prosperous reign, he was succeeded in 367 
by his son, the younger Dionysius, who was 
finally expelled by Timoleon in 343. A repub- 
lican form of government was again establish- 
ed; but it did not last long; and in 317 Syra- 
cuse fell under the sw r ay of Agathocles. This 
tyrant died in 289 ; and the city being distract- 
ed by factions, the Syracusans voluntarily con- 
ferred the supreme power upon Hieron II., with 
the title of king, in 270. Hieron cultivated 
friendly relations with the Romans ; but on his 
death in 216, at the advanced age of ninety-two, 
his grandson Hieronymus, who succeeded him, 
espoused the side of the Carthaginians. A Ro- 
man army under Marcellus was sent against 
Syracuse ; and after a siege of two years, during 
which Archimedes assisted his fellow-citizens 
by the construction of various engines of war 
(vid. Archimedes), the city was taken by Mar- 
cellus in 212. From this time Syracuse became 
a town of the Roman province of Sicily. 

[Syracusanus Portus (ZvpaKoaioQ 7u[irjv, now 
Porto Vecchio), a harbor on the eastern coast of 
Corsica, where the Syracusans had probably es- 
tablished a factory for their trade : according to 
Diodorus, it was the best harbor in the island.] 

Syrgis (Svpytc), according to Herodotus, a 
great river of European Sarmatia, rising in the 
country of the Thyssagetae, and flowing through 
the land of the Maeotae into the Palus Maeotis. 
It has not been identified with certainty. 

Syria Dea (2up^ #eof), "the Syrian god- 
dess," a name by which the Syrian Astarte or 
Aphrodite is sometimes designated. This As- 
tarte was a Syrian divinity, resembling in many 



SYRIA. 



SYRIA. 



points the Greek Aphrodite. It is not improb- j 
able that the latter was originally the Syrian 1 
Astarte ; for there can be no doubt that the j 
worship of Aphrodite came from the East to 
Cyprus, and thence was carried into the south 
of Greece. 

Syria (tj Ivpia, in Aramaean Surja : 2vpof, 
Syrus, and sometimes Zvpiog, Syrlus : now So- 
ristan, Arab. Esh-Sham, i. e., the land on the left, 
Syria), a country of Western Asia, lying along 
the eastern end of the Mediterranean Sea, be- 
tween Asia Minor and Egypt. In a wider sense 
the word was used for the whole tract of coun- 
try bounded by the Tigris on the east, the 
mountains of Armenia and Cilicia on the north, 
the Mediterranean on the west, and the Arabian 
Desert on the south ; the whole of which was 
peopled by the Aramaean branch of the great 
Semitic (or Syro- Arabian) race, and is included 
in the Old Testament under the name of Aram. 
This region may be well described physically 
as the great triangular depression of Western 
Asia encircled on the north and northeast by 
the Taurus and its prolongation to the south- 
east, or, in other words, by the highlands of 
Cilicia, Cappadocia, Armenia, and Aria ; and 
subsiding on the south and west into the Med- 
iterranean and the Great Desert of Arabia. 
Even a wider extent than this is often given to 
Syria, so as to include the eastern part of Asia 
Minor, as far as the River Halys and the Euxine. 
The people were of the same races, and those 
of the north of the Taurus in Cappadocia and 
Pontus are called White Syrians (vid. Leuco- 
syri), in contradistinction to the people of darker 
complexion in Syria Proper, who are sometimes 
even called Black Syrians (Ivpoc pi?iaves). 
Even when the name of Syria is used in its or- 
dinary narrower sense, it is often confounded 
with Assyria, which only differs from Syria by 
having the definite article prefixed. Again, in 
the narrower sense of the name, Syria still in- 
cludes two districts which are often considered 
as not belonging to it, namely, Phcenice and 
Palestine, and a third which is likewise often 
considered separate, namely, Ccelesyria ; but 
this last is generally reckoned a part of Syria. 
In this narrower sense, then, Syria was bound- 
ed on the west (beginning from the south) by 
Mount Hermon, at the southern end of Antilib- 
anus, which separated it from Palestine, by the 
range of Libanus, dividing it from Phcenice, 
by the Mediterranean, and by Mount Amanus, 
which divided it from Cilicia ; on the north 
(where it bordered on Cappadocia) by the main 
chain of Mount Taurus, almost exactly along 
the parallel of thirty-eight degrees of north lat- 
itude, and striking the Euphrates just below 
Juliopolis, and considerably above Samosata : 
hence the Euphrates forms the eastern bound- 
ary, dividing Syria first from a very small por- 
tion of Armenia, and then from Mesopotamia, 
to about or beyond the thirty-sixth parallel of 
north latitude, whence the southeastern and 
southern boundaries, toward Babylonia and Ara- 
bia, in the Great Desert, are exceedingly indefi- 
nite. (Compare Arabia.) The western part of 
the southern boundary ran just below Damas- 
cus, being formed by the highlands of Trachon- 
itis. The western part of the country was in- 
tersected by a series of mountains, running 



south from the Taurus, under the names of 
Amanus, Pieria, Casius, Bargylus, and Liba- 
nus, and Antilibanus; and the northern part, 
between the Amanus and the Euphrates, was 
also mountainous. The chief river of Syria 
was the Orontes, and the smaller rivers Cha- 
lus and Chrysorrhoas were also of importance. 
The valleys among the mountains were fertile, 
especially in the northern part : even the east, 
which is now merged in the great desert of 
Arabia, appears to have had more numerous 
and more extensive spaces capable of cultiva- 
tion, and supported great cities, the ruins of 
which now stand in the midst of sandy wastes. 
In the earliest historical period, Syria contained 
a number of independent kingdoms, of which 
Damascus was the most powerful. These were 
subdued by David, but became again independ- 
ent at the end of Solomon's reign ; from which 
time we find the kings of Damascus sometimes 
at war with the kings of Israel, and sometimes 
in alliance with them against the kings of Judah, 
till the reign of Tiglath-Pileser, king of Assyria, 
who, having been invited by Ahaz, king of Ju- 
dah, to assist him against the united forces of 
Rezin, king of Syria, and Pekah, king of Israel, 
took Damascus, and probably conquered all Syr- 
ia, about B.C. 740. Having been a part suc- 
cessively of the Assyrian, Babylonian, Persian, 
and Macedonian empires, it fell, after the battle 
of Ipsus (B.C. 301), to the share of Seleucus 
Nicator, and formed a part of the great king- 
dom of the Seleucidae, whose history is given in 
the articles Seleucus, Antiochus, Demetrius, 
&c. In this partition, however, Ccelesyria and 
Palestine went, not to Syria, but to Egypt, and 
the possession of those provinces became the 
great source of contention between the Ptole- 
mies and the Seleucids. By the irruptions of 
the Parthians on the east, and the unsuccessful 
war of Antiochus the Great with the Romans 
on the west, the Greek-Syrian kingdom was re- 
duced to the limits of Syria itself, and became 
weaker and weaker, until it was overthrown by 
Tigranes, king of Armenia, B.C. 79. Soon 
afterward, when the Romans had conquered 
Tigranes as well as Mithradates, Syria was 
quietly added by Pompey to the empire of the 
republic, and was constituted a province B.C. 
54 ; but its northern district, Commagene, was 
not included in this arrangement. As the east- 
ern province of the Roman empire, and with its 
great desert frontier, Syria was constantly ex- 
posed to the irruptions of the Parthians, and, 
after them, of the Persians ; but it long re- 
mained one of the most flourishing of the prov- 
inces. The attempt of Zenobia to make it the 
seat of empire is noticed under Palmyra and 
Zenobia. Wliile the Roman emperors defend- 
ed this precious possession against the attacks 
of the Persian kings with various success, a 
new danger arose, as early as the fourth centu- 
ry, from the Arabians of the Desert, who began 
to be known under the name of Saracens ; and, 
when the rise of Mohammed had given to the 
Arabs that great religious impulse which revo- 
lutionized the Eastern world, Syria was the first 
great conquest that they made from the Eastern 
empire, A.D. 632-638. In the time immediate- 
ly succeeding the Macedonian conquest, Syria 
was regarded as consisting of two parts ; the 

847 



SYRI/E PORT.E. 



SYRTIS. 



north, including the whole country down to the 
beginning of the Lebanon range, and the south, 
consisting of Coelesyria in its more extended 
sense. The former, which was called Syria 
Proper, or Upper Syria {7) uvu Zvpla, Syria Su- 
perior), was divided into four districts or tetrar- 
chies, which were named after their respective 
capitals, Seleucis, Antiochene, Laodicene, and 
Apamene. Under the Romans it was divided 
into ten districts, named (mostly after their cap- 
ital cities) Commagene, Cyrrhestlce, Pieria, Se- 
leucis, Chalcidlce, Chalybomtis, Palmyrene, Ap- 
amene, Cassiotis, and Laodicene ; but the last 
is sometimes included under Cassiotis. ( Vid. 
the several articles.) Constantine the Great 
separated from Syria the two northern districts, 
namely, Commagene and Cyrrhestice, and erect- 
ed them into a distinct province, called Euphra- 
tensis or Euphratesia ; and the rest of Syria 
was afterward divided by Theodosius II. into 
the two provinces of Syria Prima, including the 
sea-coast and the country north of Antioch, and 
having that city for its capital ; and Syria Se- 
cunda, the district along the Orontes, with Ap- 
amea for its capital : the eastern districts no 
longer formed a part of Syria, but had fallen un- 
der the power of the Persians. 

SyrLe PortxE (ai Ivpcat xv/.at : now Pass of 
Beilan), a most important pass between Cilicia 
and Syria, lying between the shore of the Gulf 
of Issus on the west, and Mount Amanus on 
the east. Xenophon. who called the pass (or, 
rather, its fortifications) the Gates of Cilicia and 
of Syria, describes it as three stadia in length 
and very narrow, with walls built from the 
mountains to the sea at both ends (the Cilician 
and the Syrian), and gates in the walls (Anab., 
i., 4). These walls and gates are not mention- 
ed by the historians of Alexander. 

SyriIncs (Zvpiavog), a Greek philosopher of 
the Neo-Platonic school, was a native of Alex- 
andra, and studied at Athens under Plutarchus, 
whom he succeeded as head of the Neo-Platonic 
school in the early part of the fifth century. 
The most distinguished of his disciples was 
Proclus, who regarded him with the greatest 
veneration, and gave directions that at his death 
he should be buried in the same tomb with Syr- 
ianus. Syrianus wrote several works, some of 
which are extant. Of these the most valuable 
are the commentaries on the Metaphysics of 
Aristotle. 

Syrinx, an Arcadian nymph, who, being pur- 
sued by Pan, fled into the River Ladon, and at 
her own request was metamorphosed into a 
reed, of which Pan then made his flute. 

Syrinx (Suptyf), a great and strongly-fortified 
city of Hyrcania, and the capital of the province 
under the Greek kings of Syria. Perhaps it is 
only the Greek name of the city called, in the 
native language, Zadrakarta. 

[Syro, an Epicurean philosopher at Rome, 
on friendly terms with Cicero : Baehr thinks he 
is the same as the Syro who instructed Virgil 
in the Epicurean philosophy ] 

Syros or Syrus {2vpoc, called Ivpin by Ho- 
mer, and Ivpa by a few writers : ILvpioc : now 
Syra), an island in the iEgean Sea, and one of 
the Cyclades, lying between Rhenea and Cyth- 
nus. It is described by the ancients as twenty 
Roman miles in circumference, and as rich in 
848 



pastures, w r ine, and corn. It contained two 
towns, one on the eastern side, and one on the 
western side of the island ; of the latter there 
are still remains near the modern harbor of Ma- 
ria della Grazia. The philosopher Pherecydes 
was a native of Syros. 

Syrtis, gen. -idos (^vpric, gen. -idoc and -euc, 
Ion. -loc), the Greek name for each of the two 
great gulfs in the eastern half of the northern 
coast of Africa, is derived by ancient writers 
from avpu, to draw, with reference to the quick- 
sands by which, in the Greater Syrtis at least, 
ships were liable to be swallowed up ; but 
modern scholars generally prefer the derivation 
from the Arabic sert=a sandy desert, which is 
at the present day applied to the country along 
this coast, the Regio Syrtica of the ancients. 
Both were proverbially dangerous, the Greater 
Syrtis from its sand-banks and quicksands, and 
its unbroken exposure to the northern winds, 
the Lesser from its shelving rocky shores, its 
exposure to the northeastern winds, and the 
consequent variableness of the tides in it. 1. 
Syrtis Major (?) fxsyd?.n 2vpric : now Gulf of 
Sidra), the eastern of the two. is a wide and 
deep gulf on the shores of Tripolita and Cyre- 
naica, exactly opposite to the Ionic Sea, or 
mouth of the Adriatic, between Sicily and Pelo- 
ponnesus. Its greatest depth, from north to 
south, is about one hundred and ten geograph- 
ical miles ; its width is about two hundred and 
thirty geographical miles, between Cephalae 
Promontorium (now Ras Kharra) on the west, 
and Boreum Promontorium (now Ras Teyonas) 
on the east. (Strabo gives its width as fifteen 
hundred stadia, its depth fifteen hundred to 
eighteen hundred, and its circuit four thousand 
to five thousand). ^The Great Desert comes 
down close to its shores, forming a sandy coast. 
Vid. Syrtica Regio. The terror of being driven, 
on shore in it is referred to in the narrative of 
Saint Paul's voyage to Italy (Acts, xxvii., 17, 
" fearing lest they should fall into the Syrtis") ; 
and the dangers of a march through the loose 
sand on its shores, sometimes of a burning heat, 
and sometimes saturated with sea-water, were 
scarcely less formidable. — Syrtis Minor (?) 
fiLKpa itvpnc : now Gulf of Khabs), lies in the 
southwestern angle of the great bend formed by 
the northern coast of Africa as it drops down 
to the south from the neighborhood of Car- 
thage, and then bears again to the east ; in 
other words, in the angle" between the eastern 
coast of Zeugitana and Byzacena (now Tunis) 
and the northern coast of Tripolitana (now 
Tripoli). Its mouth faces the east, between 
Caput Vada or Brachodes Promontorium (now 
Ras Kapoudiah) on the north, and the island 
called Meninx or Lotophagitis (now Jerbah) on 
the south. In its mouth, near the northern ex- 
tremity, lie the islands of Cercina and Cercini- 
tis, which were often regarded as its northern 
extremity. Its dimensions are differently given, 
partly, perhaps, on account of the different points 
from which they were reckoned. The Greek 
geographers give the width as six hundred 
stadia (sixty geographical miles), and the cir- 
cuit sixteen hundred stadia : the Romans give 
one hundred Roman miles for the width, and 
three hundred for the circuit. The true width 
(between Ras Kapoudiah and the eastern point 



* 



SYRTICA REGIO. 



TACITUS. 



of Jerbah) is about eighty geographical miles, 
and the greatest depth, measured westward 
from the line joining those points, is about 
sixty-five geographical miles. In Herodotus, 
the word Syrtis occurs in a few passages, with- 
out any distinction between the Greater and the 
Less. It seems most probable that he means 
to denote by this term the Greater Syrtis, and 
that he included the Lesser in the Lake Tri- 

TONIS. 

Syrtica Regio (7 IvpriKij : now the western 
part of Tripoli), the special name of that part of 
the northern coast of Africa which lay between 
the two Syrtes, from the River Triton, at the 
bottom of the Syrtis Minor, on the west, to the 
Philaenorum Ara?, at the bottom of the Syrtis 
Major, on the east. It was, for the most part, a 
very narrow strip of sand, interspersed with 
salt marshes, between the sea and a range of 
mountains forming the edge of the Great Desert 
(now Sahara), with only here and there a few 
spots capable of cultivation, especially about the 
River Cinyps. It was peopled by Libyan tribes, 
the chief of whom were the Lotophagi, Macae, 
Psylli, and Nasamones ; and several Egyptian 
and Phoenician colonies were settled on the 
coast at an early period. The Greeks of Cy- 
rene disputed with the Carthaginians the pos- 
session of this district until it was secured to 
Carthage by the self-devotion of the Phil^ni. 
Under the Romans it formed a part of the prov- 
ince of Africa. It was often called Tripolita- 
na, from its three chief cities, Abrotonum, CEa, 
and Leptis Magna ; and this became its usual 
name under the later empire, and has been 
handed down to our own time in the modern 
name of the Regency of Tripoli. 

Syrus, a slave brought to Rome some years 
before the downfall of the republic, and desig- 
nated, according to the usual practice, from the 
country of his birth. He attracted attention, 
while yet a youth, by his accomplishments and 
wit, was manumitted by his master, who prob- 
ably belonged to the Clodia gens, assumed the 
name of Publius, from his patron, and soon be- 
came highly celebrated as a mimographer. He 
may be said to have flourished B.C. 45. His 
mimes were committed to writing, and exten- 
sively circulated at an early period ; and a col- 
lection of pithy moral sayings, extracted from 
his works, appears to have been used as a 
school-book in the boyhood of St. Jerome. A 
compilation of this description, extending to up- 
ward of one thousand lines in iambic and tro- 
chaic measures, every apophthegm being com- 
prised in a single line, and the whole arranged 
alphabetically, according to the initial letter of 
the first word in each, is now extant under the 
title Publii Syri Scntentia. These proverbs have 
been drawn from various sources, and are evi- 
dently the work of many different hands ; but 
a considerable number may be ascribed to Sy- 
rus and his contemporaries. The best editions 
of the Sententia are by Havercamp, Lugd. Bat., 
1708, 1727; by Orelli, Lips., 1822 ; and by Bothe, 
in his Poetarum Latin. Scenicorum Fragmenta, 
Lips., 1834. 

Sythas (Ivdar), a river on the frontiers of 
Achaia and Sicyonia. 
54 



T. 

Tab^: (Td6ai: TaCyvor). 1. (Now Tavi), a 
small inland town of Sicily.— 2. (Now Dawas), 
a city of Caria, on the borders of Phrygia.— 3. 
A city of Persis, in the district of Parajtacene, 
on the road from Ecbatana to Persepolis. 

Tabern^e. Vid. Tres Tabernje. 

[Tabraca. Vid. Thabraca.] 

Taburnus (now Taburno), a mountain belong- 
ing half to Campania and half to Samnium. Its 
southern side was very fertile, and was cele- 
brated for its olive grounds. It shut in the 
Caudine Pass on its southern side. 

Tacape (TandirT} : now large ruins at Khabs), 
a city of Northern Africa, in the Regio Syrtica, 
at the innermost angle of the Syrtis Minor, to 
which the modern town gives its name. Under 
the Romans, it at first belonged to Byzacena, 
but it was afterward raised to a colony and 
made the western town of Tripolitana. It had 
an indifferent harbor. A little to the west was 
the bathing place, called, from its warm min- 
eral springs, Aquae Tacapitanae (now ElHammal- 
el-Khabs). 

Tacfarinas, a Numidian in the reign of Ti- 
berius, had originally served among the auxil- 
iary troops in the Roman army, but he desert- 
ed ; and, having collected a body of freeboot- 
ers, he became at length the acknowledged 
leader of the Musulamii, a powerful people in 
the interior of Numidia, bordering on Maureta- 
nia. For some years he defied the Roman arms, 
but was at length defeated and slain in battle 
by Dolabella, A.D. 24. 

Tachompso (Taxo/uipu, also Tacompsos, Plin., 
and MeraKo/i^u, Ptol.), afterward Contrapsel- 
cis, a city in the Dodecaschocuus, that is, the 
part of ^Ethiopia immediately above Egypt, 
built on an island (now Derar ?) near the east- 
ern bank of the river, a little above Pselcis, 
which stood on the opposite bank. Vid. Pselcis. 

Tachos (Ta^wf), king of Egypt, succeeded 
Acoris, and maintained the independence of his 
country for a short time during the latter end 
of the reign of Artaxerxes II. He invited Cha- 
brias, the Athenian, to take the command of his 
fleet, and Agesilaus to undertake the supreme 
command of all his forces. Both Chabrias and 
Agesilaus came to Egypt ; but the latter was 
much aggrieved in having only the command 
of the mercenaries intrusted to him. Accord- 
ingly, when Nectanabis laid claim to the Egyp- 
tian crown, Agesilaus deserted Tachos, and es- 
poused the cause of Nectanabis, who thus be- 
came King of Egypt B.C. 361. 

Tacitus. 1. C. Cornelius, the historian. 
The time and place of his birth are unknown. 
He was a little older than the younger Pliny, 
who was bern A.D. 61. His father was prob- 
ably Cornelius Tacitus, a Roman eques, who is 
mentioned as a procurator in Gallia Belgica, 
and who died in 79. Tacitus was first promo- 
ted by the Emperor Vespasian, and he received 
other favors from his sons Titus and Domitian. 
In 78 he married the daughter of C. Julius Agric- 
ola, to whom he had been betrothed in the pre- 
ceding year, while Agricola was consul. In the 
reign of Domitian, and in A.D 88, Tacitus was 
praetor, and he assisted as one of the quindecem- 

849 



TACITUS. 



TACITUS. 



viri at the solemnity of the Ludi Seculares 
which were celebrated in that year. Agricola 
died at Rome in 93, but neither Tacitus nor the 
daughter of Agricola was then with him. It is 
not known where Tacitus was during the last 
illness of Agricola. In the reign of Nerva, 97, 
Tacitus was appointed consul sufFectus, in the 
place of T. Virginius Rufus, who had died in 
that year, and whose funeral oration he deliv- 
ered. We know that Tacitus had attained ora- 
torical distinction when the younger Pliny was 
commencing his career. He and Tacitus were 
appointed in the reign of Nerva (99) to conduct 
the prosecution of Marius, proconsul of Africa. 
. Tacitus and Pliny were most intimate friends. 
In the collection of the letters of Pliny there 
are eleven letters addressed to Tacitus. The 
time of the death of Tacitus is unknown, but 
he appears to have survived Trajan, who died 
117. Nothing is recorded of any children of 
his, though the Emperor Tacitus claimed a de- 
scent from the historian, and ordered his works 
to be placed in all (public) libraries. The fol- 
lowing are the extant works of Tacitus: 1. Vita 
Agricola, the life of Agricola, which was writ- 
ten after the death of Domitian, 96, as we may 
probably conclude from the introduction, which 
was certainly written after Trajan's accession. 
This life is justly admired as a specimen of bi- 
ography. It is a monument to the memory of 
a good man, and an able commander and ad- 
ministrator, by an affectionate son-in-law, who 
has portrayed, in his peculiar manner and with 
many masterly touches, the virtues of one of 
the most illustrious of the Romans. 2. Histo- 
ries, which were written after the death of Ner- 
va, 98, and before the Annales. They compre- 
hended the period from the second consulship 
of Galba, 68, to the death of Domitian, 96, and 
the author designed to add the reigns of Nerva 
and Trajan. The first four books alone are ex- 
tant in a complete form, and they comprehend 
only the events of about one year. The fifth 
book is imperfect, and goes no further than the 
commencement of the siege of Jerusalem by Ti- 
tus, and the war of Civilis in Germany. It is 
not known how many books of the Histories 
there were, but it must have been a large work 
if it was all written on the same scale as the 
first five books. 3. Annales, which commence 
with the death of Augustus, 14, and comprise 
the period to the death of Nero, 68, a space of 
fifty-four years. The greater part of the fifth 
book is lost, and also the seventh, eighth, ninth, 
tenth, the beginning of the eleventh, and the 
end of the sixteenth, which is the last book. 
These lost parts comprised the whole of Calig- 
ula's reign, the first five years of Claudius, and 
the last two of Nero. 4. De Moribus et Populis 
Germanics, a treatise describing the Germanic 
nations. It is of no value as a geographical 
description ; the first few chapters contain as 
much of the geography of Germany as Tacitus 
knew. The main matter is the description of 
the political institutions, the religion, and the 
habits of the various tribes included under the 
denomination of Germani. The value of the 
information contained in this treatise has often 
been discussed, and its credibility attacked ; but 
we may estimate its true character by observ- 
ing the precision of the writer as to those Ger- ! 
850 



mans who were best known to the Romans 
from being near the Rhine. That the hearsay 
accounts of more remote tribes must partake 
of the defects of all such evidence, is obvious ; 
and we can not easily tell whether Tacitus em- 
bellished that which he heard obscurely told. 
But to consider the Germany as a fiction is one 
of those absurdities which need only be record- 
ed, not refuted. 5. Dialogus de Oratoribus. If 
this dialogue is the work of Tacitus, and it prob 
ably is, it must be his earliest work, for it was 
written in the sixth year of Vespasian (c. 17). 
The style is more easy than that of the Annals, 
more diffuse, less condensed ; but there is no 
obvious difference between the style of this 
Dialogue and the Histories, nothing so striking 
as to make us contend for a different author- 
ship. Besides this, it is nothing unusual for 
works of the same author, which are written at 
different times, to vary greatly in style, espe- 
cially if they treat of different matters. The 
old MSS. attribute this Dialogue to Tacitus. 
The Annals of Tacitus, the work of a mature 
age, contain the chief events of the period 
which they embrace, arranged under their sev- 
eral years. There seems no peculiar propriety 
in giving the name of Annales to this work* 
simply because the events are arranged in the 
order of time. The work of Livy may just as 
well be called Annals. In the Annals of Tac- 
itus, the Princeps or Emperor is the centre about 
which events are grouped. Yet the most im- 
portant public events, both in Italy and the prov- 
inces, are not omitted, though every thing is 
treated as subordinate to the exhibition of im- 
perial power. The Histories, which were writ- 
ten before the Annals, are in a more diffuse 
style, and the treatment of the extant part is 
different from that of the Annals. Tacitus 
wrote the Histories as a contemporary ; the 
Annals as not a contemporary. They are two 
distinct works, not parts of one, which is clear- 
ly shown by the very different proportions of 
the two works : the first four books of the His- 
tories comprise about a year, and the first four 
books of the Annals comprise fourteen years. 
The moral dignity of Tacitus is impressed 
upon his works ; the consciousness of a love 
of truth, of the integrity of his purpose. His 
great power is in the knowledge of the human 
mind, his insight into the motives of human 
conduct ; and he found materials for this study 
in the history of the emperors, and particular- 
ly Tiberius, the arch-hypocrite, and perhaps half 
madman. His Annals are filled with dramatic 
scenes and striking catastrophes. He labor- 
ed to produce effect by the exhibition of great 
personages on the stage ; but as to the mass 
of the people we learn little from Tacitus. The 
style of Tacitus is peculiar, though it bears 
some resemblance to Sallust. In the Annals it 
is concise, vigorous, and pregnant with mean- 
ing ; labored, but elaborated with art, and strip- 
ped of every superfluity. A single word some- 
times gives effect to a sentence, and if the 
meaning of the word is missed, the sense of 
the writer is not reached. Such a work is prob- 
ably the result of many transcriptions by the 
author. In the Annals Tacitus is generally 
brief and rapid in his sketches ; but he is some- 
! times minute, and almost tedious, when he 



TiENARUM. 



TAMARA. 



comes to work out a dramatic scene. Nor does 
he altogether neglect his rhetorical art when he 
has an opportunity for displaying it. The con- 
densed style of Tacitus sometimes makes him 
obscure, but it is a kind of obscurity that is dis- 
pelled by careful reading. Yet a man must read 
carefully and often in order to understand him ; 
and we can not suppose that Tacitus was ever 
a popular writer. His real admirers will per- 
haps always be few; his readers fewer still. 
The best editions of the complete works of 
Tacitus are by Oberlin, Lips., 1801, 2 vols. 8vo ; 
by Bekker, Lips., 1831, 2 vols. 8vo ; by Orelli, 
Zurich, 1846 and 1848, 2 vols. 8vo ; [and by 
Ritter, Cambridge, 1848, 4 vols. 8vo].— 2. M. 
Claudius, Roman emperor from the 25th of 
September, A.D. 275, until April, A.D. 276. He 
was elected emperor by the senate after the 
death of Aurelian, the army having requested 
the senate to nominate a successor to the im- 
perial throne. Tacitus was at the time seventy 
years of age, and was with difficulty persuaded 
to accept the purple. The high character which 
he had borne before his elevation to the throne, 
he amply sustained during his brief reign. He 
endeavored to repress the luxury and licentious- 
ness of the age by various sumptuary laws, and 
he himself set an example to all around by the 
abstemiousness, simplicity, and frugality of his 
own habits. The only military achievement of 
this reign was the defeat and expulsion from 
Asia Minor of a party of Goths, who had car- 
ried their devastation across the peninsula to 
the confines of Cilicia. He died either at Tar- 
sus or at Tyana, about the 9th of April, 276. 

T^enarum (Taivapov : now Cape Matapan), a 
promontory in Laconia, forming the southerly 
point of the Peloponnesus, on which stood a 
celebrated temple of Neptune (Poseidon), pos- 
sessing an inviolable asylum. A little to the 
north of the temple and the harbor of Achilleus 
was a town also called T.*:narum or T^enarus, 
and at a later time Cjenepous. It was situa- 
ted forty stadia from the extreme point of the 
promontory, and was said to have been built by 
Taenarus, a son of Jupiter (Zeus), or Icarius, or 
Elatus. On this promontory was a cave, through 
which Hercules is said to have dragged Cerbe- 
rus to the upper world. Here also was a stat- 
ue of Arion seated on a dolphin, since he is 
said to have landed at this spot after his mirac- 
ulous preservation by a dolphin. In the time 
of the Romans there were celebrated marble 
quarries on the promontory. 

Tag^s (Tayat : now Dameghan ?), a city men- 
tioned by Polybius as in Parthia, on the border 
toward Hyrcania, apparently the same place 
which Strabo calls Tape (Tann), and reckons to 
Hyrcania. 

Tagaste (ruins at Tagilt), an inland town 
of Numidia, on a tributary of the Bagradas, re- 
markable as the birth-place of St. Augustine. 

Tages, a mysterious Etruscan being, who is 
described as a boy with the wisdom of an old 
man. Once when an Etruscan, of the name of 
Tarchon, was ploughing in the neighborhood 
of Tarquinii, there suddenly rose out of the 
ground Tages, the son of a Genius Jovialis, and 
grandson of Jupiter. When Tages addressed 
Tarchon, the latter shrieked with fear, where- 
upon other Etruscans hastened to him, and in 



j a short time all the people of Etruria were as- 
sembled around him. Tages now instructed 
! them in the art of the haruspices, and died im- 
I mediately after. The Etruscans, who had lis- 
j tened attentively to his instructions, afterward 
I wrote down all he had said, and thus arose the 
books of Tages, which, according to some, were 
twelve in number. 

[Tagrus (now Yunto in the chain of Sierra de 
Albardos), a mountain of Lusitania, in the neigh- 
borhood of Olisippo.] 

Tag us (Spanish Tap, Portuguese Tejo, En- 
glish Tagus), one of the chief rivers in Spain, 
rising in the land of the Celtiberians, between 
the mountains Orospeda and Idubeda, and, after 
flowing in a westerly direction, falling into the 
Atlantic. The whole course of the Tagus ex- 
ceeds five hundred and fifty English miles. At 
its mouth stood Olisippo (now Lisbon). The 
ancient writers relate that much gold sand and 
precious stones were found in the Tagus. 

Talabriga, a town in Lusitania, between 
^Eminium and Lagobriga. 

Talassius or Talasses. Vid. Thalassius. 
Talaura (tu TdXavpa : now Turkhal ?), a for- 
tress in Pontus, used by Mithradates the Great 
as a residence, and supposed by some to be 
identical with Gaziura. 

Talaus (Td2aof), son of Bias and Pero, and 
king of Argos. He was married to Lysimache 
(Eurynome or Lysianassa), and was father of 
Adrastus, Parthenopaeus, Pronax, Mecisteus, 
Aristomachus, and Eriphyle. He occurs among 
the Argonauts, and his tomb was shown at Ar- 
gos. The patronymic Talaionidcs (Talaiovidric) 
is given to his sons, Adrastus and Mecisteus. 

Talmis (ruins at El-Kalabsheh), a city of the 
Dodecaschcenus, that is, the district ofiEthiopia 
immediately above Egypt, stood on the western 
bank of the Nile, south of Taphis, and north of 
Tutzis. Its ruins consist of an ancient rock- 
hewn temple, with splendid sculptures, and of 
a later temple of the Roman period, in the midst 
of which stands the modern village. There 
was a place on the opposite bank called Contra 
Talmis. 

Talna, Juventius. Vid. Thalna. 

Talos (Tdluc)- 1- Son of Perdix, the sister 
of Daedalus. For details, vid. Perdix. — 2. A 
man of brass, the work of Vulcan (Hephaestus). 
This wonderful being was given to Minos by Ju- 
piter (Zeus) or Vulcan (Hephaestus), and watch- 
ed the island of Crete by walking round the 
island thrice every day. Whenever he saw 
strangers approaching, he made himself red hot 
in fire, and then embraced the strangers when 
they landed. 

[Talthybiad^e, a family in Sparta, deducing 
their origin from Talthybius, holding the office 
of herald as an hereditary honor ] 

Talthybius (TaMMiog), the herald of Aga- 
memnon at Troy. He was worshipped as a 
hero at Sparta and Argos, where sacrifices also 
were offered to him. 

[Talus, a companion of .Eneas, slain by Tur- 
nus in Italy.] 

Tamara. 1. Or Tamaris (now Tambre), a 
small river in Hispania Tarraconensis, on the 
coast of Gallaecia, falling into the Atlantic be- 
tween the Minius and the Promontorium Ne- 
rium — 2. (Now Tamcrton, near Plymouth), a 

851 



TAMARICI. 



TAXIS. 



town of the Damnonii in the south of Britain, 
at the mouth of the Tamarus. 

Tamarici, a people in Gallaecia, on the River 
Tamara. 

Tamaris. Vid. Tamara. 

Tamarus (now Tamar), a river in the south 
cf Britain. 

Tamassts or TamIscs (Tauacaog, Tauacoc : 
Taftacirvc, TatxuGioe), probably the same as the 
Homeric Temese (Terser,), a town in the middle 
of Cyprus, northwest of Olympus, and twenty- 
nine miles southeast of Soloe, on the road from 
the latter place to Tremithus, was situated in 
a fertile country and in the neighborhood of ex- 
tensive copper mines. Near it was a celebrated 
plain (ager Tamaseus), sacred to Venus. (Ov., 
Met., 644.) 

Tambrax (Tdp6pa£), a great city of Hyrcania, 
on the northern side of "Mount Coronus, men- 
tioned by Polybius. It is perhaps the same 
place which Strabo calls Ta/.aSpoKn. 

Tamesis or Tamesa (now Thames), a river in 
Britain, flowing into the sea on the eastern 
coast, on which stood Londinium. Caesar cross- 
ed the Thames at the distance of eighty Roman 
miles from the sea, probably at Cowey Stakes, 
near Oatlands and the confluence of the Wey. 
There have been found in modern times in the 
ford of the river at this spot large stakes, which 
are supposed to have been the same as were 
fixed in the water by Cassivellaunus when he 
attempted to prevent Caesar from crossing the 
river. 

Tama (Tdui a). a very great city in the south- 
west of Arabia Felix, the capital of the Cataba- 
ni. It maintained a caravan traffic, in spices 
and other products of Arabia, with Gaza, from 
which its distance was reckoned one thousand 
four hundred and thirty-six Roman miles. 

Tamos (Taudjc), a native of Memphis in Egypt, 
was lieutenant governor of Ionia under Tissa- 
phernes. He afterward attached himself to the 
service of the younger Cyrus ; upon whose 
death he sailed to Egypt, where he hoped to 
find refuge with Psammetichus, on whom he 
had conferred an obligation. Psammetichus, 
however, put him to death, in order to possess 
himself of his money and ships. 

Tamphilus or Tampilus, B-ebics. 1. Cx., 
tribune of the plebs B.C. 204 ; praetor 199. 
when he was defeated by the Insubrians -, and 
consul 182, when he fought against the Liguri- 
ans with success. — 2. M., brother of the last, 
was praetor 192, and served in Greece both in 
this year and the following, in the war against 
Antiochus. In 181 he was consul, when he 
defeated the Ligurians. 

Tamyxje (Tauvvai), a town in Eubcea, on 
Mount Cotylaeum, in the territory of Eretria, 
with a temple of Apollo, said to have been built 
by Admetus. Here the Athenians under Pho- 
cion gained a celebrated victory over Callias of 
Chalcis, B.C. 354. 

TamtrIca (TauvpaKTj), a town and promon- 
tory of European Sarmatia, at the innermost 
corner of the Sinus Carcinites, which was also 
called from this town Sinus Tamyraces {Tau- 

1>p6.KJ}S KQ/.TTOC.). 

Tamtras or Damuras (Tauvpaq, Aauovpac : 
now Damur, or Nahr-el-Kadi), a little river of 
Phoenicia, rising on Mount Libanus, and falling 
852 



into the Mediterranean about half way between 

Sidon and Berytus. 

Taxager (now Negro), a river of Lucania, 
rising in the Apennines, which, after flowing in 
a northeasterly direction, loses itself under the 
earth near Polla for a space of about two miles, 
and finally falls into the Silarus near Forum 
Popilii. 

Taxagra (Tuvaypa : TavaypaZoc, : now Gri~ 
madha or Grimala). a celebrated town of Boeo- 
tia, situated on a steep ascent on the left bank 
of the Asopus, thirteen stadia from Oropus, and 
two hundred stadia from Plataeae, in the district 
Tanagraea, which was also called Pcemandris. 
Tanagra was supposed to be the same town as 
the Homeric Graea. The most ancient inhab- 
itants are said to have been the Gephyraei, who 
came with Cadmus from Phoenicia ; but it was 
afterward taken possession of by the JEolian 
Boeotians. It was a place of considerable com- 
mercial importance, and was celebrated, among 
other things, for its breed of fighting cocks. 
At a later time it belonged to the Boeotian con- 
federacy. Being near the frontiers of Attica, 
it was frequently exposed to the attacks of the 
Athenians ; and near it the Athenians sustain- 
ed a celebrated defeat, B.C. 457. 

TaxIis (Tdvaic). I. (Now Don, i. e., Water), 
sl great river, which rises in the north of Sar- 
matia Europaea (about the centre of Russia), and 
flows to the southeast till it comes near the 
Volga, when it turns to the southwest, and falls 
into the northeastern angle of the Palus Maeotis 
(now Sea of Azov) by two principal mouths and 
several smaller ones. It was usually consider- 
ed the boundary between Europe and Asia. Its 
chief tributary was the Hyrgis or Syrgis (now 
probably Donets). — 2. (Ruins near Kassatchei), 
a city of Sarmatia Asiatica, on the northern side 
of the southern mouth of the Tanais, at a little 
distance from the sea. It was founded by a 
colony from Miletus, and became a very flour- 
ishing emporium. It reduced to subjection sev- 
eral of the neighboring tribes, but in its turn it 
became subject to the kings of Bosporus. It 
was destroyed by Polemon on account of an at- 
tempted revolt, and, though afterward restored, 
it never regained its former prosperity. 

[Taxais. 1. A Rutulian warrior under Tur- 
nus, slain by .Eneas. — 2. A freedman of Maece- 
nas, or, as some say, of L. Munatius Plancus, 
mentioned by Horace (Sat., i., 1, 105).] 

TaxIquil. Vid. Tarqcixics. 

[Taxarcs, (now Tanaro), a river of Liguria, 
which flows down from the Alpes Maritimae, and 
after receiving the Stura, Fevos, and Urbis, falls 
into the Padus (now Po).] 

Taxetum (Tanetanus : now Taneto), a town 
of the Boii in Gallia Cispadana, between Mutina 
and Parma. 

Taxis (Tdvic : in the Old Testament, Zoan : 
TaviTTjc : ruins at San), a very ancient city of 
Lower Egypt, in the eastern part of the Delta, on 
the right bank of the arm of the Nile, which was 
called after it the Tanitic, and on the southwest- 
ern side of the great lake between this and the 
Pelusiac branch of the Nile, which was also 
called, after the city, Tanis (now Lake of Men- 
zaleh). It was one of the capitals of Lower 
Egypt under the early kings, and was said by 
tradition to have been the residence of the court 



TANTALIDES. 



TAPURI. 



in the time of Moses. It was the chief city of 
the Tanites Nomos. 

[TantalIdes. Vid. Tantalus, No. 1, ad Jin] 
Tantalus ( Tdvralog). 1. Son of Jupiter 
(Zeus) and Pluto. His wife is called by some 
Euryanassa, by others Taygete or Dione, and 
by others Clytia or Eupryto. He was the father 
of Pelops, Broteas, and Niobe. All traditions 
agree in stating that he was a wealthy king ; but 
while some call him King of Lydia, others de- 
scribe him as King of Argos or Corinth. Tan- 
talus is particularly celebrated in ancient story 
for the terrible punishment inflicted upon him 
after his death in the lower world, the causes 
of which are differently stated by the ancient 
authors. According to the common account, 
Jupiter (Zeus) invited him to his table, and com- 
municated his divine counsels to him. Tanta- 
lus divulged the secrets thus intrusted to him ; 
and he was punished in the lower world by be- 
ing afflicted with a raging thirst, and at the 
same time placed in the midst of a lake, the 
waters of which always receded from him as 
soon as he attempted to drink them. Over his 
head, moreover, hung branches of fruit, which 
receded in like manner when he stretched out 
his hand to reach them. In addition to all this, 
there was suspended over his head a huge rock, 
ever threatening to crush him. Another tradi- 
tion relates that, wishing to test the gods, he 
cut his son Pelops in pieces, boiled them, and 
set them before the gods at a repast. A third 
account states that Tantalus stole nectar and 
ambrosia from the table of the gods and gave 
them to his friends ; and a fourth, lastly, relates 
the following story. Rhea caused the infant 
Jupiter (Zeus) and his nurse to be guarded in 
Crete by a golden dog, whom Jupiter (Zeus) 
afterward appointed guardian of his temple in 
Crete. Pandareus stole this dog, and, carrying 
him to Mount Sipylus in Lydia, gave him to 
Tantalus to take care of. But when Pandareus 
demanded the dog back, Tantalus took an oath 
that he had never received it. Jupiter (Zeus) 
ihereupon changed Pandareus into a stone, and 
threw Tantalus down from Mount Sipylus. 
Others, again, relate that Mercury (Hermes) de- 
manded the dog of Tantalus, and that the per- 
jury was committed before Mercury (Hermes). 
Jupiter (Zeus) buried Tantalus under Mount 
Sipylus as a punishment ; and there his tomb 
was shown in later times. The punishment of 
Tantalus was proverbial in ancient times, and 
from it the English language has borrowed the 
verb "to tantalize," that is, to hold out hopes 
or prospects which can not be realized. The 
patronymic Tantalrdes is frequently given to the 
descendants of Tantalus. Hence we find not 
only his son Pelops, but also Atreus, Thyestes, 
Agamemnon, Menelaus, and Orestes called by 
this name. — 2. Son of Thyestes, who was killed 
by Atreus. Others call him a son of Broteas. 
He was married to Clytaemnestra before Aga- 
memnon, and is said by some to have been killed 
by Agamemnon. — 3. Son of Amphion and Niobe. 

Tanus or Tanaus (Tdvog oxTavaoc : now Ka- 
ni), a river in the district of Thyreatis, on the 
eastern coast of Peloponnesus, rising in Mount 
Parnon, and falling into the Thyreatic Gulf 
after forming the boundary between Argolis 
and Cynuria. 



] Taoce (TaoKT] : now Bunder- Rcight), a city on 
| the coast of Persis, near the mouth of the River 
J Granis, used occasionally as a royal residence. 
The surrounding district was called TaoK-nvri. 

Taochi (Tdoxoi), a people of Pontus, on the 
borders of Armenia, frequently mentioned by 
Xenophon in the Anabasis. 
Tape. Vid. Tag^e. 

Taphi^e Insula, a number of small islands 
in the Ionian Sea, lying between the coasts of 
Leucadia and Acarnania. They were also call- 
ed the islands of the Teleboae, and their inhab- 
itants were in like manner named TaphIi (Ta- 
<j)iot) or Teleboae (TrjZefioai). The largest of 
these islands is called Taphus {Td<pog) by Ho- 
mer, but Taphius (Taftovg) or Taphiusa (Ta^t- 
ovaa) by later writers. They are mentioned in 
Homer as the haunts of notorious pirates, and 
are celebrated in mythology on account of the 
war carried on between them and Electryon, 
king of Mycenae. 

Taphiassus (TafyiaoooQ : now Macrivoro and 
Rigani), a mountain in ^Stolia and Locris, prop- 
erly only a southwestern continuation of Mounts 
GEta and Corax. 

Taphis (ruins at Tapa), a city of the Dode- 
caschcenus, that is, the district of /Ethiopia im- 
mediately above Egypt, stood on the western 
bank of the Nile, south of Tzitzis, and north of 
Talmis. It is also called Tadig and Hairig. 
There was a town on the opposite bank called 
Contra Taphis. 

Taphr^e or Taphros (Tdfpat or Td(ppn<; : Tu- 
optof), a town on the isthmus of the Chersone- 
j sus Taurica, so called because a trench or ditch 
j was cut across the isthmus at this point. 
I Taphus. Vid. Taphi;e. 

I Taposiris (Taxooeipig, Ta-6aiptc, Ta<j>6aipiC, 
i. e., the tomb of Osiris : ruins at Abousir), a city 
of Lower Egypt, on the northwestern frontier, 
in the Libya Nomos, near the base of the long 
tongue of land on which Alexandrea stood, cel- 
ebrated for its claim to be considered the burial- 
place of Osiris. Mention is also made of a Less- 
er Taposiris (^ jmcpd TanoceipLc) near it. 

Taprobane {TaTTpoddvrj : now Ceylon), a great 
island of the Indian Ocean, opposite to the south- 
ern extremity of India intra Gangem. The 
Greeks first became acquainted with it through 
the researches of Onesicritus in the time of 
Alexander, and through information obtained 
by residents in India ; and the Roman geogra- 
phers acquired additional knowledge respecting 
the island through an embassy which was sent 
from it to Rome in the reign of Claudius. Of 
the accounts given of it by the ancients, it is 
only necessary here to state that Ptolemy makes 
it very much too large, while, on the other hand, 
he gives much too small a southward extension 
to the peninsula of India. 

Tapuri {TdTzovpoi or Ta-ovpoi), a powerful 
people, apparently of Scythian origin, who dwelt 
in Media, on the borders of Parthia, south of 
Mount Coronus. They also extended into Mar- 
giana, and probably further north on the east- 
ern side of the Caspian, where their original 
abodes seem to have been in the mountains 
called by their name. The men wore black 
clothes and long hair, and the women white 
clothes and hair cut close. They were much 

i addicted to drunkenness. 

853 



TAPURI MONTE S. 



TARPEIA. 



Tapuri Montes (ru Tdirovpa opt}), a range of 
mountains on the east of the Caspian Sea, in- 
habited by the Tapuri. 

Taras. Vid. Tarentum. 

Tarbelli, one of the most important people 
in Gallia Aquitanica, between the ocean (hence 
called Tarbellicum cequor and Tarbellus Oceanus) 
and the Pyrenees (hence called Tarbclla Py- 
rene). Their country was sandy and unpro- 
ductive, but contained gold and mineral springs. 
Their chief town was Aqu^s Tarbellic^e or 
Augusts, on the Aturus (now Dacqs on the 
Adour). 

Tarchon, son of Tyrrhenus, who is said to 
have built the town of Tarquinii. {Vid. Tar- 
quinii.) Virgil represents him as coming to the 
assistance of .'Eneas against Turnus. 

Tarentinus Sinus (Tapevrlvog noTi-nog : now 
Gulf of Tarentum), a great gulf in the south of 
Italy, between Bruttium, Lucania, and Calabria, 
beginning west near the Promontorium Lacini- 
um, and ending east near the Promontorium 
Iapygium, and named after the town of Taren- 
tum. According to Strabo, it is one thousand 
nine hundred and twenty stadia in circuit, and 
the entrance to it is seven hundred stadia wide. 

Tarentum, called Taras by the Greeks (Tu- 
pac, -avroc : TapevTLvog, Tarentinus : now Ta- 
ranto), an important Greek city in Italy, situa- 
ted on the western coast of the peninsula of 
Calabria, and on a bay of the sea, about one 
hundred stadia in circuit, forming an excellent 
harbor, and being a portion of the great Gulf of 
Tarentum. The city stood in the midst of a 
beautiful and fertile country, south of Mount 
Aulon and west of the mouth of the Galesus. 
It was originally built by the Iapygians, who are 
said to have been joined by some Cretan colo- 
nists from the neighboring town of Uria, and it 
derived its name from the mythical Taras, a son 
of Poseidon. The greatness of Tarentum, how- 
ever, dates from B.C. 708, when the original 
inhabitants were expelled, and the town was 
taken possession of by a strong body of Lace- 
daemonian Partheniae under the guidance of 
Phalanthus. Vid. Phalanthus. It soon be- 
came the most powerful and flourishing city in 
the whole of Magna Graecia, and exercised a 
kind of supremacy over the other Greek cities 
in Italy. It carried on an extensive commerce, 
possessed a considerable fleet of ships of war, 
and was able to bring into the field, with the 
assistance of its allies, an army of thirty thou- 
sand foot and three thousand horse. The city 
itself, in its most flourishing period, contained 
twenty-two thousand men capable of bearing 
arms. The government of Tarentum was dif- 
ferent at various periods. In the time of Da- 
rius Hystaspis, Herodotus speaks of a king (i. e., 
a tyrant) of Tarentum ; but at a later period the 
government was a democracy. Archytas, who 
was born at Tarentum, and who lived about 
B.C. 400, drew up a code of laws for his native 
city. With the increase of wealth the citizens 
became luxurious and effeminate, and being 
hard pressed by the Lucanians and other bar- 
barians in the neighborhood, they were obliged 
to apply for aid to the mother country. Archi- 
damus, son of Agesilaus, was the first who came 
to their assistance in B.C. 338 ; and he fell in 
battle fighting on their behalf. The next prince 
854 



whom they invited to succor them was Alex- 
ander, king of Epirus, and uncle to Alexander the 
Great. At first he met with considerable suc- 
cess, but was eventually defeated and slain by 
the Bruttii, in 326, near Pandosia, on the banks 
of the Acheron. Shortly afterward the Taren- 
tines had to encounter a still more formidable 
enemy. Having attacked some Roman ships, 
and then grossly insulted the Roman ambassa- 
dors who had been sent to demand reparation, 
war was declared against the city by the pow- 
erful republic. The Tarentines were saved for 
a time by Pyrrhus, king of Epirus, who came to 
their help in 280 ; but two years after the de- 
feat of this monarch and his withdrawal from 
Italy, the city was taken by the Romans (272). 
In the second Punic war Tarentum revolted 
from Rome to Hannibal (212) ; but it was re- 
taken by the Romans in 207, and was treated 
by them with great severity. From this time 
Tarentum declined in prosperity and wealth. 
It was subsequently made a Roman colony, and 
it still continued to be a place of considerable 
importance in the time of Augustus. Its in- 
habitants retained their love of luxury and ease ; 
and it is described by Horace as molle Tarentum^ 
and imbelle Tarentum. Even after the downfall 
of the Western Empire the Greek language was 
still spoken at Tarentum ; and it was long one 
of the chief strongholds of the Byzantine empire 
in the south of Italy. The town of Tarentum 
consisted of two parts, viz., of a peninsula or 
island at the entrance of the harbor, and of a 
town on the main land, which was connected 
with the island by means of a bridge. On the 
northwest corner of the island, close to the en- 
trance of the harbor, was the citadel ; the prin- 
cipal part of the town was situated southwest 
of the isthmus. The modern town is confined 
to the island or peninsula on which the citadel 
stood. The neighborhood of Tarentum pro- 
duced the best wool in all Italy, and was also 
celebrated for its excellent wine, figs, pears, and 
other fruits. Its purple dye was also much 
valued in antiquity. 

Tarichea, or -eje, or jeje (Tapiveia, -eat, aiai : 
ruins at El-Kerch), a town of Galilee, at the 
southern end of the Lake of Tiberias, strongly 
fortified, and with a turbulent population, who 
gave the Romans much trouble during the Jew- 
ish war. It obtained its name from the quanti- 
ties of the fish of the neighboring lakes which 
were salted here. 

Tarne (Tupvij), a city of Lydia, on Mount 
Tmolus, mentioned by Homer. Pliny mentions 
simply a fountain of the name. 

Tarpa, Sp. M^ecius, was engaged by Pom- 
peius to select the plays that were acted at his 
games exhibited in B.C. 55. Tarpa was like- 
wise employed by Augustus as a dramatic cen- 
sor. 

Tarpeia, daughter of Sp. Tarpeius, the gov- 
ernor of the Roman citadel on the Saturnian 
Hill, afterward called the Capitoline, was tempt- 
ed by the gold on the Sabine bracelets and col- 
lars to open a gate of the fortress to T. Tatius 
and his Sabines. As they entered, they threw 
upon her their shields, and thus crushed her to 
death. She was buried on the hill, and her 
memory was preserved by the name of the Tar- 
peian Rock, which w T as given to a part of the 



TARPHE. 

Capitoline. A legend still exists at Rome, 
which relates that the fair Tarpeia ever sits in 
the heart, of the hill, covered with gold and jew- 
els, and bound by a spell. 

Tarphe {Tdp<j>r)), a town in Locris, on Mount 
(Eta, mentioned by Homer, and subsequently 
called Pharygse. 

Tarquinia. Vid. Tarquinius. 

Tarquinii (Tarquinicnsis : now Turchina, 
near Corneto), a city of Etruria, situated on a hill 
and on the River Marta, southeast of Cosa and 
on a road leading from the latter town to Rome. 
It was one of the twelve Etruscan cities, and 
was probably regarded as the metropolis of the 
Confederation. It is said to have been founded 
by Tarchon, the son or brother of Tyrrhenus, 
who was the leader of the Lydian colony from 
Asia to Italy. It was in the neighborhood of 
Tarquinii that the seer Tages appeared, from 
whom the Etruscans learned their civil and re- 
ligious polity. Vid. Tages. According to one 
account, Tarquinii was founded by Thessalians, 
that is, Pelasgians ; but there can be no doubt 
that it was an original Etruscan city, and that 
Tarchon is merely a personification of the race 
of the Tyrrhenians. It was at Tarquinii that 
'Demaratus, the father of Tarquinius Priscus, 
settled ; and it was from this city that the Tar- 
quinian family came to Rome. After the ex- 
pulsion of Tarquinius Superbus from Rome, the 
Tarquinienses, in conjunction with the Veien- 
tes, espoused his cause, but they were defeated 
by the Romans. From this time the Tarquin- 
ienses were frequently engaged in war with the 
Romans ; but they were at length obliged to 
submit to Rome about B.C 310. Tarquinii was 
subsequently made a Roman colony and a mu- 
nicipium ; but it gradually declined in import- 
ance ; and in the eighth or ninth century of the 
Christian era it was deserted by its inhabit- 
ants, who founded Corneto on the opposite hill. 
There are few remains of the ancient city it- 
self; but the cemetery of Tarquinii, consisting 
of a vast number of subterraneous caves in the 
hill on which Corneto stands, is still in a state 
of excellent preservation, and contains numer- 
ous Etruscan paintings : here some of the most 
interesting remains of Etruscan art have been 
discovered in modern times. 

Tarquinius, the name of a family in early 
Roman history, to which the fifth and seventh 
kings of Rome belonged. The legend of the 
Tarquins ran as follows. Demaratus, their an- 
cestor, belonged to the noble family of the Bac- 
chiadae at Corinth, and fled from his native city 
when the power of his order was overthrown 
by Cypselus. He settled at Tarquinii in Etru- 
ria, where he had mercantile connections. He 
married an Etruscan wife, by whom he had two 
sons, Lucumo and Aruns. The latter died in 
the lifetime of his father, leaving his wife preg- 
nant ; but as Demaratus was ignorant of this 
circumstance, he bequeathed all his property to 
Lucumo, and died himself shortly afterward. 
But, although Lucumo was thus one of the most 
wealthy persons at Tarquinii, and had married 
Tanaquil, who belonged to a family of the high- 
est rank, he was excluded, as a stranger, from 
all power and influence in the state. Discon- 
tented with this inferior position, and urged on 
by his wife, he resolved to leave Tarquinii and 



TARQUINIUS. 

remove to Rome. He accordingly set out for 
Rome, riding in a chariot with his wife, and ac- 
companied by a large train of followers. When 
they had reached the Janiculus, an eagle seized 
his cap, and, after carrying it away to a great 
height, placed it again upon his head. Tana- 
quil, who was skilled in the Etruscan science 
of augury, bade her husband hope for the high- 
est honor from this omen. Her predictions 
were soon verified. The stranger was receiv- 
ed with welcome, and he and his followers were 
admitted to the rights of Roman citizens. He 
took the name of L. Tarquinius, to which Livy 
adds Priscus. His wealth, his courage, and 
his wisdom gained him the love both of Ancus 
Marcius and of the people. The former ap- 
pointed him guardian of his children ; and, when 
he died, the senate and the people unanimously 
elected Tarquinius to the vacant throne. The 
reign of Tarquinius was distinguished by great 
exploits in war and by great works in peace. 
He defeated the Latins and Sabines ; and the 
latter people ceded to him the town of Collatia, 
where he placed a garrison under the command 
of Egerius, the son of his deceased brother 
Aruns, who took the surname of Collatinus. 
Some traditions relate that Tarquinius defeated 
the Etruscans likewise. Among the important 
works which Tarquinius executed in peace, the 
most celebrated are the vast sewers by which 
the lower parts of the city were drained, and 
which still remain, with not a stone displaced, 
to bear witness to his power and wealth. He 
is also said in some traditions to have laid out 
the Circus Maximus in the valley which had 
been redeemed from water by the sewers, and 
also to have instituted the Great or Roman 
Games, which were henceforth performed in 
the Circus. The Forum, with its porticoes and 
rows of shops, was also his work, and he like- 
wise began to surround the city with a stone 
wall, a work which was finished by his success- 
or, Servius Tullius. The building of the Cap- 
itoline temple is, moreover, attributed to the 
elder Tarquinius, though most traditions as- 
cribe this work to his son, and only the vow to 
the father. Tarquinius also made some changes 
in the constitution of the state. He added 
one hundred new members to the senate, who 
were called patres minorum gentium, to distin- 
guish them from the old senators, who were 
now called patres majorum gentium. He wished 
to add to the three centuries of equites estab- 
lished by Romulus three new centuries, and to 
call them after himself and two of his friends. 
His plan was opposed by the augur Attus Na- 
vius, who gave a convincing proof that the gods 
were opposed to his purpose. Vid. Navius. Ac- 
cordingly, he gave up his design of establishing 
new centuries, but to each of the former centu- 
ries he associated another under the same name, 
so that henceforth there were the first and sec- 
ond Ramnes, Tities, and Luceres. He increased 
the number of Vestal Virgins from four to six. 
Tarquinius was murdered after a reign of thir- 
ty-eight years at the instigation of the sons of 
Ancus Marcius. But the latter did not secure 
the reward of their crime, for Servius Tullius, 
with the assistance of Tanaquil, succeeded to 
the vacant throne. Tarquinius left two sons 
and two daughters. His two sons, L. Tarquin- 

855 



TARQUINIUS. 



TARQUINIUS. 



ius and Aruns, were subsequently married to 
the two daughters of Servius Tullius. One of 
his daughters was married to Servius Tullius, 
and the other to M. Brutus, by whom she be- 
came the mother of the celebrated L. Brutus, 
the first consul at Rome. Servius Tullius, 
whose life is given under Tullius, was mur- 
dered, after a reign of forty-four years, by his 
son-in-law L. Tarquinius, who ascended the va- 
cant throne. — 2. L. Tarquinius Superbus com- 
menced his reign without any of the forms of 
election. One of the first acts of his reign was 
to abolish the rights which had been conferred 
upon the plebeians by Servius ; and, at the same 
time, all the senators and patricians whom he 
mistrusted, or whose wealth he coveted, were 
put to death or driven into exile. He surround- 
ed himself by a body-guard, by means of which 
he was enabled to do what he liked. His cru- 
elty and tyranny obtained for him the surname 
of Superbus. But, although a tyrant at home, 
he raised Rome to great influence and power 
among the surrounding nations. He gave his 
daughter in marriage to Octavius Mamilius of 
Tusculum, the most powerful of the Latin 
chiefs ; and under his sway Rome became the 
head of the Latin confederacy. He defeated 
the Volscians, and took the wealthy town of 
Suessa Pometia, with the spoils of which he 
commenced the erection of the Capitol which 
his father had vowed. In the vaults of this 
temple he deposited the Sibylline books, which 
the king purchased from a sibyl or prophetess. 
She had offered to sell him nine books for three 
hundred pieces of gold. The king refused the 
offer with scorn. Thereupon she went away 
and burned three, and then demanded the same 
price for the six. The king still refused. She 
again went away and burned three more, and 
still demanded the same price for the remaining 
three. The king now purchased the three books, 
and the sibyl disappeared. He next engaged 
in war with Gabii, one of the Latin cities, which 
refused to enter into the league. Unable to 
take the city by force of arms, Tarquinius had 
recourse to stratagem. His son, Sextus, pre- 
tending to be ill-treated by his father, and cov- 
ered with the bloody marks of stripes, fled to 
Gabii. The infatuated inhabitants intrusted him 
with the command of their troops ; whereupon* 
he sent a messenger to his father to inquire 
how he should deliver the city into his hands. 
The king, who was walking in his garden when 
the messenger arrived, made no reply, but 
kept striking off the heads of the tallest pop- 
pies with his stick. Sextus took the hint. 
He put to death or banished all the leading 
men of the place, and then had no difficulty 
in compelling it to submit to his father. In 
the midst of his prosperity, Tarquinius fell 
through a shameful outrage committed by one 
of his sons. Tarquinius and his sons were en- 
gaged in besieging Ardea, a city of the Rutu- 
lians. Here, as the king's sons, and their cous- 
in Tarquinius Collatinus, the son of Egerius, 
were feasting together, a dispute arose about 
the virtue of their wives. As nothing was do- 
ing in the field, they mounted their horses to 
visit their homes by surprise. They first went 
to Rome, where they surprised the king's daugh- 
ters at a splendid banquet. They then hasten- 
856 



ed to Collatia, and there, though it was late in 
the night, they found Lucretia, the wife of Col- 
latinus, spinning amid her handmaids. The 
beauty and virtue of Lucretia had fired the evil 
passions of Sextus. A few days afterward he 
returned to Collatia, where he was hospitably 
received by Lucretia as her husband's kinsman* 
In the dead of night he entered the chamber 
with a drawn sword : by threatening to lay a 
slave with his throat cut beside her, whom he 
would pretend to have killed in order to avenge 
her husband's honor, he forced her to yield to 
his wishes. As soon as Sextus had departed r 
Lucretia sent for her husband and father. Col- 
latinus came, accompanied by L. Brutus ; Lu- 
cretius, with P. Valerius, who afterward gained 
the surname of Publicola. They found her in 
an agony of sorrow. She told them what had 
happened, enjoined them to avenge her dis- 
honor, and then stabbed herself to death. They 
all swore to avenge her. Brutus threw off his 
assumed stupidity, and placed himself at their 
head. They carried the corpse to Rome. Bru- 
tus, who was tribunus celerum, summoned the 
people, and related the deed of shame. All 
classes were inflamed with the same indigna- 
tion. A decree was passed deposing the king, * 
and banishing him and his family from the city. 
The army, encamped before Ardea, likewise re- 
nounced their allegiance to the tyrant. Tar- 
quinius, with his two sons, Titus and Aruns, 
took refuge at Ca?re in Etruria. Sextus re- 
paired to Gabii, his own principality, where he 
was shortly after murdered by the friends of 
those whom he had put to death. Tarquinius 
reigned twenty-four years. He was banished 
B.C. 510. The people of Tarquinii and Veii 
espoused the cause of the exiled tyrant, and 
marched against Rome. The two consuls ad- 
vanced to meet them. A bloody battle was 
fought, in which Brutus and Aruns, the son of 
Tarquinius, slew each other. Tarquinius next 
repaired to Lars Porsena, the powerful king of 
Clusium, who marched against Rome at the 
head of a vast army. The history of this mem- 
orable expedition is related under Porsena. 
After Porsena quitted Rome, Tarquinius took 
refuge with his son-in-law, Mamilius Octavius 
of Tusculum. Under the guidance of the lat- 
ter, the Latin states espoused the cause of the 
exiled king, and declare! war against Rome. 
The contest was decideo )> the celebrated bat- 
tle of the Lake Regillus. in which the Romans 
gained the victory by the help of Castor and 
Pollux. Tarquinius himself was wounded, but 
escaped with his life ; his son Sextus is said to 
have fallen in this battle, though, according to 
another tradition, as we have already seen, he 
was slain by the inhabitants of Gabii. Tarquin- 
ius Superbus had now no other state to whom 
he could apply for assistance. He had already 
survived all his family ; and he now fled to 
Aristobulus at Cumae, where he died a wretch- 
ed and childless old man. Such is the story 
of the Tarquins, according to the ancient writ- 
ers ; but this story must not be received as a 
real history. The narrative contains numer- 
ous inconsistencies and impossibilities. The 
following is only one instance out of many. We 
are told that the younger Tarquinius, who was 
expelled from T?ome in mature age, was the son 



TARQUINIUS, L. 



TARSUS. 



of the king who ascended the throne one hund- 
red and seven years previously in the vigor of 
life ; and Servius Tullius, who married the 
daughter of Tarquinius Priscus shortly before 
he ascended the throne, is represented imme- 
diately after his accession as the father of two 
daughters whom he marries to the brothers of 
his own wife ! 

[Tarquinius, L., one of those engaged in the 
conspiracy of Catiline, turned informer, and ac- 
cused M. Crassus of being privy to the design.] 

[Tarquinius, Collatinus. Vid. Collatinus.] 

[Tarquitius, L., of a patrician family, but so 
poor that he had to serve in the army on foot ; 
was appointed by the dictator Cincinnatus his 
master of horse.] 

[Tarquitus, a Latin warrior, son of Faunus 
and Dryope, aided Turnus against .'Eneas, and 
was slain by the latter.] 

Tarracina (Tarracinensis : now Tcrracina), 
more anciently called Anxur (Anxurates, PL), 
an ancient town of Latium, situated fifty-eight 
miles southeast of Rome, on the Via Appia and 
upon the coast, with a strongly-fortified citadel 
upon a high hill, on which stood the temple of 
Jupiter Anxurus. It was probably a Pelasgian 
town originally ; but it afterward belonged to 
the Volsci, by whom it was called Anxur. It 
was conquered by the Romans, who gave it the 
name of Tarracina, and it was made a Roman 
colony B.C. 329. Three miles west of the town 
stood the grove of Feronia, with a temple of 
this goddess. The ancient walls of the citadel 
of Tarracina are still visible on the slope of 
Montecchio. 

Tarraco (Tarraconensis : now Tarragona), 
an ancient town on the eastern coast of Spain, 
situated on a rock seven hundred and sixty feet 
high, between the River Iberus and the Pyre- 
nees, on the River Tulcis. It was founded by 
the Massilians, and was made the head-quar- 
ters of the two brothers P. and Cn. Scipio, in 
their campaigns against the Carthaginians in 
the second Punic war. It subsequently became 
a populous and flourishing town ; and Augustus, 
who wintered here (B.C. 26) after his Canta- 
brian campaign, made it the capital of one of 
the three Spanish provinces (Hispania Tarra- 
conensis) and also a Roman colony. Hence 
we find it called Colonia Tarraconensis, also 
Col. Victrix Togala and Col. Julia Victrix Tar- 
raconensis. The modern town of Tarragona is 
built to a great extent with the remains of the 
ancient city ; and Roman inscriptions may fre- 
quently be seen imbedded in the walls of the 
modern houses. The ancient Roman aqueduct, 
having been repaired in modern times, still sup- 
plies the modern city with water ; and at a 
short distance to the northwest of Tarragona, 
along the sea-coast, is a Roman sepulchre call- 
ed the tower of the Scipios, although the real 
place of the burial of the Scipios is quite un- 
known. 

Tarruntenus Paternus. Vid. Paternus. 

Tarsia (Tapoin : now Ras Jird or Cape Cer- 
tes), a promontory of Carmania, on the coast of 
the Persian Gulf, near the frontier of Persis. 
The neighboring part of the coast of Carmania 
was called Tarsiana. 

Tarsius (6 Tdpctoc : now Tarza or Balikesri), 
a river of Mysia, rising in Mount Temnus, and 



flowing northeast, through the Miletopolites La- 
cus, into the Macestus. 

Tarsus, Tarsos (Tapadc, Tapooi, Tepooc, Qap- 
ooc : Tapaevc, Tarsensis : ruins at Tersus), the 
chief city of Cilicia, stood near the centre of 
Cilicia Campestris, on the River Cydnns, about 
twelve miles above its mouth, in a very large 
and fertile plain at the foot of Mount Taurus, 
the chief pass through which (Pylae Ciliciae) led 
down to Tarsus. Its position gave it the full 
benefit of the natural advantages of a fertile 
country, and the command of an important high- 
way of commerce. It had also an excellent 
harbor, twelve miles from the city, which is 
filled up with sand. The city was of unknown 
antiquity. Some ascribed its foundation to the 
Assyrian king Sardanapalus ; others to Perseus, 
in connection with whose legend the name of 
the city is fancifully derived from a hoof (rap- 
aoc) which the winged horse Pegasus lost here ; 
and others to the Argive chieftain Triptolemus, 
whose effigy appears on the coins of the city. 
All that can be determined with certainty seems 
to be that it was a very ancient city of the Syr- 
ians, who were the earliest known inhabitants 
of this part of Asia Minor, and that it received 
Greek settlers at an early period. In the time 
of Xenophon, who gives us the first historical 
notice of Tarsus, it was the capital of the Cili- 
cian prince Syennesis, and was taken by Cyrus. 
(Compare Cilicia.) At the time of the Mace- 
donian invasion, it was held by the Persian 
troops, who were about to burn it, when they 
were prevented by Alexander's arrival. After 
playing an important part as a military post in 
the wars of the successors of Alexander, and 
under the Syrian kings, it became, by the peace 
between the Romans and Antiochus the Great, 
the frontier city of the Syrian kingdom on the 
northwest. As the power of the Seleucidse de- 
clined, it suffered much from the oppression of 
its governors, and from the wars between the 
members of the royal family. At the time of 
the Mithradatic war, it suffered, on the one 
hand, from Tigranes, who overran Cilicia, and, 
on the other, from the pirates, who had their 
strongholds in the mountains of Cilicia Aspera, 
and made frequent incursions into the level 
country. From both these enemies it was res- 
cued by Pompey, who made it the capital of the 
new Roman province of Cilicia, B.C. 66. In 
the civil war it took part with Caesar, and as- 
sumed, in his honor, the name of Juliopolis. 
For this the inhabitants were severely punished 
by Cassius, but were recompensed by Antony, 
who made Tarsus a free city. Under Augus- 
tus the city obtained immunity from taxes, 
through the influence of the emperor's tutor, 
the Stoic Athenodorus, who was a native of the 
place. It enjoyed the favor, and was called by 
the names, of several of the later emperors. It 
was the scene of important events in the wars 
with the Persians, the Arabs, and the Turks, 
and also in the Crusades. The people of Tar- 
sus were celebrated for their mental power, 
their readiness in repartee, and their fondness 
for the study of philosophy. Among the most 
distinguished natives of the place were the Sto- 
ics Antipater, Archedemus, Heraclides, Nestor, 
Zeno, and the two Athenodori ; the Academic 
Nestor ; the Epicureans Diogenes, celebrated 



TARTARUS. 



TAUROSC^TH^. 



for his powers of improvising, Lysias, who was 
for a time tyrant of the city, and Plutiades ; the 
tragic poets Dionysides and Bion ; the satiric 
poets Demetrius and Boethes, who was also a 
troublesome demagogue ; the grammarians Ar- 
temidorus, Diodorus, and Hermogenes ; the his- 
torian Hermogenes ; the physicians Herodotus 
and Philo ; and, above all, the apostle Paul, who 
belonged to one of several families of Jews, who 
had settled at Tarsus in considerable numbers 
under the Persian and Syrian kings. 

Tartarus (Tdprapog), son of^Ether and Terra 
(Ge), and by his mother Terra (Ge) the father 
of the Gigantes Typhoeus and Echidna. In 
the Iliad Tartarus is a place beneath the earth, 
as far below Hades as Heaven is above the 
earth, and closed by iron gates. Later poets 
describe Tartarus as the place in the lower 
world in which the spirits of wicked men are 
punished for their crimes ; and sometimes they 
use the name as synonymous with Hades, or the 
lower world in general. 

[Tartarus (now Tartaro), a small river of 
Cisalpine Gaul, joining one of the mouths of the 
Po, and forming marshes (paludes T ar tar i flu- 
minis, Tacit.).~\ 

Tartessus (Taprrjaaog : TapTrjcoioc), an an- 
cient town in Spain, and one of the chief settle- j 
ments of the Phoenicians, probably the same as 
the Tarshish of Scripture. The position of this | 
town has occasioned much dispute. Most of 
the ancient writers place it at the mouth of the j 
River Beetis, which, they say, was originally j 
called Tartessus. Others identify it, with more 
probability, with the city of Carteia on Mount | 
Calpe, the Rock of Gibraltar. The whole coun- 
try west of Gibraltar was also called Tartessis. 

Taruscon or Tarascon (Tarusconienses : 
now Tarascon), a town of the Salyes in Gaul, 
on the eastern bank of the Rhone, north of Are- 
late, and east of Nemausus. 

Taevisium (Tarvisanus : now Treviso), a 
town of Venetia, in the north of Italy, on the 
River Silis, which became the seat of a bishop- 
ric, and a place of importance in the Middle 
Ages. 

Tatianus (Tariavoe ), a Christian writer of the 
second century, was born in Assyria, and was 
originally a teacher of rhetoric. He was after- 
ward converted to Christianity, according to 
some accounts, by Justin Martyr, with whom, 
at any rate, he was very intimate. After Jus- 
tin's death Tatian quitted Rome, where he had 
resided for some time, and returned into the 
East. There he imbibed and promulgated views 
of a Gnostic character, and gave rise to a new 
sect, called after him Tatiani. Tatian wrote 
numerous works, of which there is still extant 
an Address to the Greeks (Updg "E/Jinvac), in 
which he points out the superiority of Christi- 
anity to the heathen religion. The best edition 
of this work is by Worth, Oxford, 1700. 

Tatius, T., king of the Sabines. Vid. Rom- 
ulus. 

Tatta (tj Tdrra : now Tuz-Gol), a great salt 
lake in the centre of Asia Minor, on the Phryg- 
ian table-land, on the confines of Phrygia, Ga- 
latia, Cappadocia, and Lycaonia. It supplies 
the whole surrounding country with salt, as it 
doubtless did in ancient times. 

Tauchira or Teuchira (Tavxsipa, Tevxewa : 
858 



ruins at Taukra), a colony of Cyrene, on the 
northwestern coast of Cj renai'ca, in Northern 
Africa. Under the Ptolemies it was called Ar- 
sinoe, and was one of the five cities of the Lib- 
yan Pentapolis. It became a Roman colony, 
and was fortified by Justinian. It was a chief 
seat of the worship of Cybele, who had here a 
great temple and an annual festival. 

Taulantii (TavMvTcoi), a people of Illyria, in 
the neighborhood of Epidamnus, frequently men- 
tioned by the Greek and Roman writers. One 
of the most powerful kings was Glaucias, a con- 
temporary of Alexander the Great, who fought 
against the latter monarch, and at a later period 
afforded an asylum to the infant Pyrrhus, and 
refused to surrender him to Cassander. 

Taunus (now Taunus), a range of mountains 
in Germany, at no great distance from the con- 
fluence of the Mcenus (now Main) and the Rhine. 

Taurasia. Vid. Taurini. 

Taurentum and TauroIs (Tavpoevrcov, Tav 
poetg, -evtoc), a fortress belonging to Massilia, 
and near the latter city, on the southern coast 
of Gaul. 

Tauri, a wild and savage people in European 
Sarmatia, who sacrificed all strangers to a god- 
dess whom the Greeks identified with Artemis. 
An account of this goddess is given elsewhere 
(p. Ill, b). The Tauri dwelt in the peninsula 
which was called after them Chersonesus Tau- 
rica. Vid. Chersonesus, No. 2. 

Taurianum (now Tauretto), a town of Brut- 
tium, on the Via Popilia, twenty-three miles 
southeast of Vibo. 

Taurini, a people of Liguria dwelling on the 
upper course of the Po, at the foot of the Alps. 
Their chief town was Taurasia, afterward col- 
onized by Augustus, and called Augusta Tauri- 
norum (now Turin). 

Tauris (now Torcola), a small island off the 
coast of Illyria, between Pharus and Corcyra. 

Taurisci, a Celtic people in Noricum, and 
probably the old Celtic name of the entire popu- 
lation of the country. They were subsequently 
called Norici by the Romans, after their capital 
Noreia. 

Taurois. Vid. Taurentum. 

Tauromenium (Tavpo/uevLov : Tavpo/j.evtrnc, 
Tauromenitanus : now Taormina), a city on the 
eastern coast of Sicily, situated on Mount Tau- 
rus, from which it derived its name, and founded 
B.C. 358 by Andromachus with the remains of 
the inhabitants of Naxos, whose town had been 
destroyed by Dionysius nearly fifty years before. 
Vid. Naxos, No. 2. Tauromenium soon be- 
came a large and flourishing city ; but, in con- 
sequence of its espousing the side of Sex. Pom- 
pey against Augustus, most of its inhabitants 
were expelled from the city, and their place sup- 
plied by a colony of Roman veterans : hence we 
find the town called Col. Augusta Tauromenitana 
From this time Tauromenium became a place 
of secondary importance. The hills in the 
neighborhood produced excellent wine. There 
are still remains of the ancient town, of which 
the most important is a splendid theatre cut out 
of the rock, and capable of holding from thirty 
thousand to forty thousand spectators, from 
which we may form some idea of the populous- 
ness of Tauromenium. 

Tauroscyth^e. Vid. Sctthotauri. 



TAURUNUM. 



TECT.i : L S 



TaurOnum (now Semlin), a strongly-fortified 
town in Pannonia, at the confluence of the Sa- 
vus and the Danube. 

Taurus, Statilics, a distinguished general of 
Octavianus. At the battle of Actium, B.C. 31, 
he commanded the land forces of Octavianus, 
which were drawn up on the shore. In 29 he 
defeated the Cantabri, Vaccaei, and Astures. 
He was consul in 26 ; and in 16, when the em- 
peror went to Gaul, the government of the city 
and of Italy was left to Taurus, with the title 
of proefectus urbi. In the fourth consulship 
of Augustus, 30, Taurus built an amphitheatre 
of stone at his own expense. Vid. Roma, p. 
751, a. 

Taurus (o Tavpog, from the Aramaean Tur, a 
high mountain : now Taurus, Ala-Dagh, and 
other special names), a great mountain chain 
of Asia. In its widest extent, the name was 
applied, by the later geographers, to the whole 
of the great chain which runs through Asia 
from west to east, forming the southern margin 
of the great table-land of Central Asia, which it 
divides from the Mediterranean coast of Asia 
Minor, from Syria and the Tigris and Euphrates 
valley, from the low lands on the north shore 
of the Indian Ocean, and from the two great 
peninsulas of India. But this is not a common 
use of the name. In its usual signification, it 
denotes the mountain chain in the south of Asia 
Minor, which begins at the Sacrum or Chelido- 
nium Promontorium at the southeast angle of 
Lycia, surrounds the Gulf of Pamphylia, passing 
through the middle of Pisidia; then along the 
southern frontier of Lycaonia and Cappadocia, 
which it divides from Cilicia and Commagene ; 
thence, after being broken through by the Eu- 
phrates, it proceeds almost due east through the 
south of Armenia, forming the water-shed be- 



Taxila or Taxiala (ra TdfrXa, Taenia), an 
important city of India intra Gangem, stood in 
a large and fertile plain between the Indus and 
the Hydaspes, and was the capital of the Indian 
king Taxiles in the time of Alexander. Its 
position has not been identified. It is not, as 
Major Rennell supposed, Attock ; and there is 
no large city remaining which exactly answers 
to its position. 

Taxiles (Ta^?ng). 1. An Indian prince or 
king, who reigned over the tract between the 
Indus and the Hydaspes at the period of the ex- 
pedition of Alexander, B.C. 327. His real name 
was Mophis or Omphis, and the Greeks appear 
to have called him Taxiles orTaxilas, from the 
name of his capital city of Taxila, near the 
modern Attock. On the approach of Alexander 
he hastened to meet him with valuable presents, 
and was in consequence confirmed in his king- 
dom by the Macedonian monarch. — 2. A general 
in the service of Mithradates the Great, and one 
of those in whom he reposed the highest con- 
fidence. 

Taygete (Tavyerrj), daughter of Atlas and 
Pleione, one of the Pleiades, from whom Mount 
Taygetus in Laconia is said to have derived its 
name. By Zeus (Jupiter) she became the moth- 
er of Lacedaemon and of Eurotas. 

Taygetus, or Taygetum, or Taygeta (Tavye- 
TOf, Tavyerov, to, Tavyera, pi.), a lofty range of 
mountains of a wild and savage character, sep- 
arating Laconia and Messenia, and extending 
from the frontiers of Arcadia down to the Prom- 
ontorium Taenarum. Its highest points were 
called Taletus and Evoras, about three miles 
south of Sparta. Taygetus is said to have de- 
rived its name from the nymph Taygete. 

Teanum (Teanensis). 1. Apulum (nearJWc 
Rotto), a town of Apulia, on the River Frento, 



tween the sources of the Tigris on the south, \ and the confines of the Frentani, eighteen miles 
and the streams which feed the Upper Euphrates ! from Larinum. — 2. Sidicinum (now Tcano), an 



and the Araxes on the north ; thus it continues 
as far as the southern margin of the Lake Ar- 
sissa, where it ceases to bear the name of Tau- 
rus, and is continued in the cl :in which, under 
the names of Niphates, Zagros, &c., forms the 
northeastern margin of the Tigris and Euphra- 
tes valley. This main chain sends off branches 
which are nearly as important as itself. In the 
middle of the frontier between Cilicia and Cap- 
padocia, east of the Cilician Gates, the Anti- 
taurus branches off to the northeast. In the 



important town of Campania, and the capital of 
the Sidicini, situated on the northern slope of 
Mons Massicus and on the Via Praenestina, six 
miles west of Cales. It was made a Roman 
colony by Augustus ; and in its neighborhood 
were some celebrated medicinal springs. 

Tearus (Teapof : now Teara, Bear a, or Dcre), 
a river of Thrace, the waters of which were 
useful in curing cutaneous diseases. Herodo- 
tus relates that it rises from thirty-eight fount- 
ains, all flowing from the same rock, some warm 



east of Cilicia, the Amanus goes off to the south- i and others cold. It falls into the Contadesdus ; 



west and south. Immediately east of the Eu- 
phrates, a branch proceeds to the southeast, 
forming, under the name of Masius, the frontier 
between Armenia and Mesopotamia, and di- 



this into the Agrianes ; and the latter again into 
the Hebrus. 

Teate (Teatinus : now Chicti), the capital of 
the Marrucini, situated on a steep hill on the 



viding the valley of the Upper Tigris from the ! River Aternus, and on the road from Aternum 



waters which flow through Mesopotamia into 
the Euphrates. The Taurus is of moderate 
height, for the most part steep, and wooded to I 
the summit. Its general character greatly re- 
sembles the mountains of Central Germany. 

Tavicm (Taoviov, TavLov : now probably ruins 
at Boghaz Kieui), the capital of the Trocmi, in 
Galatia, stood on the eastern side of the Halys, 
but at some distance from the river, and formed 
the centre of meeting for roads leading to all 
parts of Asia Minor. It was therefore a place 
of considerable commercial importance. It had 
a temple and bronze colossus of Jupiter (Zeus). 



to Corfinium. 

Tecmessa (TsiiUT^aaa), the daughter of the 
Phrygian king Teleutas, whose territory was 
ravaged by the Greeks during a predatory ex- 
cursion from Troy. Tecmessa was taken pris- 
oner, and was given to Ajax, the son of Tela- 
mon, by whom she had a son, Eurysaces. 

Tecmon (Tenfiuv), a town of the Molossi in 
Epirus. 

Tect^eus and Angeliox {TeKralog koI 'Ayye- 
Xluv), early Greek statuaries, who are always 
mentioned together. They were pupils of Di- 
poenus and Scyllis, and instructors of Callon of 

859 



TECTOSAGES. 



TELECLIDES. 



JEgina ; and therefore they must have flourish- 
ed about B.C. 548. 

Tectosages (TeKTOGayec). 1. In Gallia. Vid 
Volc^:. — 2. In Asia Minor. Vid. Galatia. 

Tecum or Ticis (now Tecli), a river in Gallia 
Narbonensis, in the territory of the Sardones, 
called Illiberis by the Greeks, from a town of 
this name upon the river. 

Tedanius, a river in Illyricum, separating Ia- 
pydia and Liburnia. 

Tegea (Teyea). 1. (TeyeaTnc : now Piali), an 
important city of Arcadia, and the capital of the 
district Tegeatis (Teyedrig), which was bound- 
ed on the east by Argolis and Laconia, on the 
south by Laconia, on the west by Maenalia, and 
on the north by the territory of Mantinea. It 
was one of the most ancient towns of Arcadia, 
and is said to have been founded by Tegeates, 
the son of Lycaon. It was formed out of nine 
small townships, which were united into one 
city by Aleus, who was thus regarded as the 
real founder of the city. At a later time we 
find Tegea divided into four tribes, each of 
which possessed a statue of Apollo Agyieus, 
who was especially honored in Tegea. The 
Tegeatae long resisted the supremacy of Sparta ; 
and it was not till the Spartans discovered the 
hones of Orestes that they were enabled to 
conquer this people. The Tegeatae sent three 
thousand men to the battle of Plataeae, in which 
they were distinguished for their bravery. They 
remained faithful to Sparta in the Peloponne- 
sian war ; but after the battle of Leuctra they 
joined the rest of the Arcadians in establishing 
their independence. During the wars of the 
Achaean league Tegea was taken both by Cle- 
omenes, king of Sparta, and Antigonus Doson, 
king of Macedonia, and the ally of the Achaeans. 
It continued to be a place of importance in the 
time both of Strabo and Pausanias. Its most 
splendid public building was the temple of Mi- 
nerva (Athena), which was the largest and 
most magnificent building in the Peloponnesus. 
It was erected soon after B.C. 394, in place of a 
more ancient temple of this goddess, which was 
burned down in this year. The architect was 
Scopas, and the sculptures in the pediments 
were probably by the hand of Scopas himself. — 
2. A town in Crete, said to have been founded by 
Agamemnon 



Hercules also fought against the Meropes in 
Cos, on account of Chalciope, the beautiful 

. daughter of Eurypylus, the king of the Meropes, 
I and against the giant Alcioneus, on the isth- 
mus of Corinth. Telamon likewise accompa- 
nied Hercules on his expedition against the Am- 
azons, and slew Melanippe. 

Telamon (now Telamone), a town and harbor 
of Etruria, a few miles south of the River Um- 
bro, said to have been founded by Telamon on 
his return from the Argonautic expedition. In 
its neighborhood a great victory was gained 
over the Gauls in B.C. 225. It was here that 
Marius landed on his return from Africa in 87. 
Telamon was undoubtedly the port of the great 
Etruscan city recently discovered in its neigh- 
borhood, which is supposed to be the ancient 
Vetulonia. 

[Telamoniades. Vid. Telamon.] 
TelchInes (Te?<,xhec), a family or a tribe, 
said to have been descended from Thalassa or 
Poseidon. They are represented in three dif- 
ferent aspects: 1. As cultivators of the soil and, 
ministers of the gods. As such they came from 
Crete to Cyprus, and from thence to Rhodes, 
where they founded Camirus, Ialysus, and Lin- 
dus. Rhodes, which was named after them 
Telchinis, was abandoned by them, because 
they foresaw that the island would be inunda- 
ted. They then spread in different directions. 
Lycus went to Lycia, where he built the temple 
of the Lycian Apollo. This god had been wor- 
shipped by them at Lindus, and Juno (Hera) at 
Ialysus and Camirus. Nymphs, also, are called 
after them Telchiniae. Neptune (Poseidon) was 
intrusted to them by Rhea, and they brought 
him up in conjunction with Caphira, a daughter 
of Oceanus. Rhea, Apollo, and Jupiter (Zeus), 
however, are also described as hostile to the 
Telchines. Apollo is said to have assumed the 
shape of a wolf, and to have thus destroyed the 
Telchines, and Jupiter (Zeus) to have over- 
whelmed them by an inundation. 2. As sorcer- 
ers and envious dcemons. Their very eyes and 
aspect are said to have been destructive. They 
had it in their power to bring on hail, rain, and 
snow, and to assume any form they pleased ; 
they further mixed Stygian water with sulphur, 
in order thereby to destroy animals and plants. 
3. As artists, for they are said to have invented 



Telamon (Telajiuv), son of iEacus and En- ! useful arts and institutions, and to have made 
de'is, and brother of Peleus. Having assisted j images of the gods. They worked in brass and 
Peleus in slaying their half-brother Phocus (vid. \ iron, made the sickle of Saturn (Cronos) and 
Peleus), Telamon was expelled from iEgina, j the trident of Neptune (Poseidon). This last 
and came to Salamis. Here he was first mar- 
ried to Glauce, daughter of Cvchreus, king of 



feature in the character of the Telchines seems 
to have been the reason of their being classed 
the island, on whose death Telamon became j with the Idaean Dactyls ; and Strabo even states 
king of Salamis. He afterward married Peri- : that those of the nine Rhodian Telchines who ac- 
bcea or Eribcea, daughter of Alcathous, by whom companied Rhea to Crete, and there brought up 



he became the father of Ajax, who is hence fre- 
quently called Telamoniades and Tclamoyiius he- 
ros. Telamon himself was one of the Calydo- 
nian hunters and one of the Argonauts. He 
was also a great friend of Hercules, whom he 
joined in his expedition against Laomedon of 
Troy, which city he was the first to enter. He 
there erected an altar to Hercules Callinicus or 
Alexicacus. Hercules, in return, gave to him 
Theanira or Hesione, a daughter of Laomedon, 
by whom he became the father of Teucer and 
Trambelus. On this expedition Telamon and 
860 



the infant Jupiter (Zeus), were called Curetes. 
Telebo^e. Vid. Taphi^e. 
Teleboas (Tr)7,e66ac), a river of Armenia Ma- 
jor, falling into the Euphrates ; probably iden- 
tical with the Arsanias. 

[Teleboas, a centaur, son of Ixion and Ne- 
phele.] 

Teleclides (Tij?>en/.eld7]c), a distinguished 
Athenian comic poet of the Old Comedy, flour- 
ished about the same time as Crates and Crati- 
nus, and a little earlier than Aristophanes. He 
was an earnest advocate of peace, and a great 



TELECLUS. 



TELLEN^E. 



admirer of the ancient manners of the age of 
Themistocles. [The few fragments remaining 
of his comedies are contained in Meineke's 
Comic. Grac Fragm., vol. i., p. 130-138, edit, 
minor ] 

Teleclus (T^kAoc), king of Sparta, eighth 
of the Agids, and son of Archelaus. He was 
slain by the Messenians, in a temple of Diana 
(Artemis) Limnatis, on the borders. His death 
was the immediate occasion of the first Messe- 
nian war, B.C. 743. 

Telegonus (TT/Aeyovof), son of Ulysses and 
Circe. After Ulysses had returned to Ithaca, 
Circe sent out Telegonus in search of his fa- 
ther. A storm cast his ship on the coast of 
Ithaca, and, being pressed by hunger, he began 
to plunder the fields. Ulysses and Telemachus, 
being informed of the ravages caused by the 
stranger, went out to fight against him ; but 
Telegonus ran Ulysses through with a spear 
which he had received from his mother. At 
the command of Minerva (Athena), Telegonus, 
accompanied by Telemachus and Penelope, 
went to Circe in J2a?a, there buried the body 
of Ulysses, and married Penelope, by whom he 
became the father of Italus. In Italy Telego- 
nus was believed to have been the founder of 
the towns of Tusculum and Praeneste. He left 
a daughter Mamilia, from whom the family of 
the Mamilii traced their descent. 

Telemachus (Ti/Ze/uaxoc), son of Ulysses and 
Penelope. He was still an infant when his fa- 
ther went to Troy ; and when the latter had 
been absent from home nearly twenty years, 
Telemachus went to Pylos and Sparta to gather 
information concerning him. He was hospita- 
bly received by Nestor, who sent his owft son 
to conduct Telemachus to Sparta. Menelaus 
also received him kindly, and communicated to 
him the prophecy of Proteus concerning Ulys- 
ses. From Sparta Telemachus returned home ; 
and on his arrival there he found his father, 
whom he assisted in slaying the suitors. Ac- 
cording to some accounts, Telemachus became 
the father of Perseptolis either by Polycaste, 
the daughter of Nestor, or by Nausicaa, the 
daughter of Alcinous. Others relate that he 
was induced by Minerva (Athena) to marry 
Circe, and became by her the father of Latinus; 
or that he. married Cassiphone, a daughter of 
Circe, but in a quarrel with his mother-in-law 
slew her, for which he was in his turn killed by 
Cassiphone. One account makes Telemachus 
the founder of Clusium in Etruria. 

Telemus (Tri'Aepoc), son of Eurymus, and a 
celebrated soothsayer. 

[Teleon (TeXeuv), an Athenian, a son of 
Ion, husband of Zeuxippe, and father of the Ar- 
gonaut Butes. From him the Teleontes (TeAe- 
ovrec) derived their name.] 

Telephassa (T7)?L£<pa<7cra), wife of Agenor, and 
mother of Europa, Cadmus, Phoenix, and Cilix. 
She, with her sons, went out in search of Euro- 
pa, who had been carried off by Jupiter (Zeus) ; 
but she died on the expedition, and was buried 
by Cadmus. 

Telephus (Tr)Xe<j)oc), son of Hercules and 
Auge, the daughter of King Aleus of Tegea. 
As soon as he was born he was exposed by his 
grandfather, but was reared by a hind (tXa(j>oc), 
and educated by King Corythus in Arcadia. 



On reaching manhood, he consulted the Delphic 
oracle to learn his parentage, and was ordered 
to go to King Teuthras in Mysia. He there 
found his mother, and succeeded Teuthras on 
the throne of Mysia. He married Laodice or 
Astyoche, a daughter of Priam; and he attempt- 
ed to prevent the Greeks from landing on the 
coast of Mysia. Bacchus (Dionysus), however, 
caused him to stumble over a vine, whereupon 
he was wounded by Achilles. Being informed 
by an oracle that the wound could only be cured 
by him who had inflicted it, Telephus repaired 
to the Grecian camp ; and as the Greeks had 
likewise learned from an oracle that without 
the aid of Telephus they could not reach Troy, 
Achilles cured Telephus by means of the rust 
of the spear by which he had been wounded. 
Telephus, in return, pointed out to the Greeks 
the road which they had to take. 

Telepte. Vid. Thala. 

TelesIa (Telesinus : now Telcse), a town ia 
Samnium, on the road from Allifa3 to Beneven- 
turn, taken by Hannibal in the second Punss 
war, and afterward retaken by the Romans. L: 
was colonized by Augustus with a body of vet- 
erans. It was the birth-place of Pontius, who 
fought against Sulla, and who was hence sur- 
named Telesinus. 

Telesilla (TeliaiXka), of Argos, a celebra^ 
ted lyric poetess and heroine, flourished about 
B.C. 510. In the war of Argos against Sparta 
she not only encouraged her countrymen by he » 
lyre and song, but she took up arms at the heai 
of a band of her countrywomen, and greatly 
contributed to the victory which they gained 
over the Spartans. In memory of this exploit, 
her statue was erected in the temple of Venus 
(Aphrodite) at Argos, with the emblems of a 
poetess and a heroine ; Mars (Ares) was wor- 
shipped in that city as a patron deity of wom- 
en ; and the prowess of her female associates 
was commemorated by the annual festival call- 
ed Hybristica. Only two complete verses of 
her poetry are extant, [edited by Bergk, in his 
Poeta Lyrici Grceci, p. 742-3.] 

Telesinus, Pontius. Fid. Pontius. 

[Telesinus, C. Lucius, consul A.D. 66 with 
Suetonius Paulinus. He was banished by Do- 
mitian for his love of philosophy.] 

Telestas or Telestes {Te^iarac, TcAearjyf), 
of Selinus, a distinguished poet of the later 
Athenian dithyramb, flourished B.C. 398. A 
few lines of his poetry are preserved by Athe- 
naeus, [edited by Bergk in his Poetce Lyrici Gra- 
ci, p. 864-6.] 

Telethrius (TeXedpioc), a mountain in the 
north of Eubcea, near Histiaea. 

[Telethusa, wife of Ligdus and mother of 
Iphis. Vid. Iphis, No. 4.] 

[Teleutias (TeXevTtac), a Spartan, was broth- 
er on the mother's side to Agesilaus II., by 
whose influence he was appointed to the com- 
mand of the fleet, in B.C. 393, in the war of the 
Lacedaemonians against Corinth and the other 
states of the hostile league. After various 
successful enterprises in different quarters, he 
was sent as general against the Olynthians 
in B.C. 382; but, while making an assault on 
this city, he was slain in a sally of the inhabit- 
ants.] 

Tellen^:, a town in Latium, between the 

861 



TELLIAS. 



TEXEDOS. 



later Via Ostiensis and the Via Appia, destroyed 
by Ancus Marcius. 

[Tellias (TcAAi'af). 1. Of Elis, a distinguish- 
ed seer, was one of the commanders of the Pho- 
cians in a war against the Thessalians a few 
years before the invasion of Greece by Xerxes. 
After the defeat of the Thessalians, his statue 
was erected by the Phocians in the temple at 
Delphi. — 2. One of the generals of the Syracu- 
sans when their city was besieged by the Athe- 
nians during the Peloponnesian war.] 

Tellus. Vid. Gjea. 

Telmessus or Telmissus (Te?>.(itioo6c, Telfita- 
jo'f : TehprjaGevq, TeZuiocevc.). 1. (Ruins at Mei, 
the port of Macri), a city of Lycia, near the bor- 
ders of Caria, on a gulf called Telmissicus Si- 
nus, and close to the promontory Telmissis. — 
2. A town of Caria, sixty stadia (six geograph- 
ical miles) from Halicarnassus, celebrated for 
the skill of its inhabitants in divination. It is 
often identified with the former place. 

Telo Martius (now Toulon), a port- town of 
Gallia Xarbonensis, on the Mediterranean, is 
rarely mentioned by the ancient writers, and 
did not become a place of importance till the 
downfall of the Roman empire. 

Telos (TjjZor- T^fttof : now Telos or Pisko- 
pi), a small island of the Carpathian Sea, one 
of the Sporades, lay off the coast of Caria, 
southwest of the mouth of the Sinus Doridis, 
between Rhodes and Nisyrus. It was also 
called Agathussa. 

Telphussa. Vid. Thelpusa. 

Temenidae. Vid. Temenus. 

Temenites (TefievLTTjs), a surname of Apollo, 
derived from his sacred temenus in the neigh- 
borhood of Syracuse. 

Temenus (Tri/xevoc), son of Aristomachus, was 
one of the Heraclidae who invaded Peloponne- 
sus. After the conquest of the peninsula, he 
received Argos as his share. His descendants, 
the Temenidae, being expelled from Argos, are 
said to have founded the kingdom of Macedonia, 
whence the kings of Macedonia called them- 
selves Temenidae. 

Temesa or Tempsa (Temesaeus or Tempsa- 
nus : now Torre del Lupi), a town in Bruttium, 
on the Sinus Terinaeus, was one of the most 
ancient Ausonian towns in the south of Italy, 
and is said to have been afterward colonized 
by a body of ^Etolians under Thoas. At a still 
later time it was successively in the possession 
of the Locrians, of the Bruttians, and finally 
of the Romans, who colonized it in B.C. 196. 
Some of the ancients identified this town with 
Temese, mentioned by Homer as celebrated for 
its copper mines ; but the Homeric town was 
probably in Cyprus. 

Temxcs. 1. {rbTrjjivov opoc : now Morad or 
Ak Dagh), a mountain of Mysia, extending 
eastward from Ida to the borders of Phrygia, 
and dividing Mysia into two parts. It contains 
the sources of the Macestus, Mysius, Caicus, 
and Evenus. — 2. (Now Menimen ? or Guzal-Hi- 
sar?), a city of ^Eolis, in the northwest of Lyd- 
ia (some say in Mysia), on the western bank of 
the Hermus, thirty miles south of Cyme. It 
was nearly destroyed by an earthquake in the 
reign of Tiberius, and in that of Titus (Pliny's 
time) it no longer existed. 

Tempe (TeuTTn, contraction of Teurea). abeau- 
862 



tiful and romantic valley in the north of Thes- 
saly, between Mounts Olympus and Ossa, 
through which the Peneus escapes into the 
sea. The lovely scenery of this glen is fre- 
quently described by the ancient poets and de- 
claimers ; and it was also celebrated as one of 
the favorite haunts of Apollo, who had trans- 
planted his laurel from this spot to Delphi. The 
whole valley is rather less than five miles in 
length, and opens gradually to the east into a 
spacious plain. Tempe is also of great import 
ance in history, as it is the only pass through 
which an army can invade Thessaly from the 
north. In some parts the rocks on each side 
of the Peneus approach so close to each other 
as only to leave room between them for the 
stream ; and the road is obliged to be cut out 
of the rock in the narrowest point. Tempe is 
the only channel through which the waters of 
the Thessalian plain descend into the sea; and 
it was the common opinion in antiquity that 
these waters had once covered the country with 
a vast lake, till an outlet was formed for them 
by some great convulsion in nature, which rent 
the rocks of Tempe asunder. So celebrated 
was the scenery of Tempe that its name was 
given to any beautiful valley. Thus we find a 
Tempe in the land of the Sabines near Reate, 
through which the River Velinus flowed ; and 
also a Tempe in Sicily, through which the River 
Helorus flowed, hence called by Ovid Tempe 
Heloria. 

[Tempsa. Vid. Temesa.] 

Tempyra, a town in Thrace, at the foot of a 
narrow mountain pass, between Mount Rhodope 
and the coast. 

Texcteri or Tenchteri, a people of Ger- 
many, dwelling on the Rhine, between the Ruhr 
and the Sieg, south of the Usipetes, in conjunc- 
tion with whom their name usually occurs. 
They crossed the Rhine together with the Usip- 
etes, with the intention of settling in Gaul ; but 
they were defeated by Caesar with great slaugh- 
ter, and those who escaped took refuge in the 
territories of their southern neighbors the Sy- 
gambri. The Tencteri afterward belonged to 
the league of the Cherusci, and at a still later 
period they are mentioned as a portion of the 
confederacy of the Franks. 

[Tenea (Tevta : TeveaTr/g : now Qhiliomodi), 
a small town in the interior of Corinthia, said to 
have been colonized by some Trojan captives 
brought from Tenedos by the Greeks. It was 
celebrated as the place where CEdipus was 
brought up by his supposed father Polybus. Its 
inhabitants could likewise boast that the great- 
er part of the colonists who followed Archias 
to Syracuse were their fellow-citizens. Hav- 
ing submitted to the Roman power without re- 
sistance, it escaped the destruction that over- 
whelmed Corinth.] 

Texedos orTENEDUs (TeveSoc : Tevediog : now 
Tenedos), a small island of the JEgean Sea, oft" 
the coast of Troas, of an importance very dis- 
proportionate to its size, on account of its posi- 
tion near the mouth of the Hellespont, from 
which it is about twelve miles distant. Its dis- 
tance from the coast of the Troad was forty 
stadia (four geographical miles), and from Les- 
bos fifty-six stadia : its circuit was eighty stadia. 
It was called, in early times, by the names ot 



TENES. 



TERENTIUS AFER, P. 



'Jalydna, Leucophrys, Phcenice, and Lyrnessus. 
The mythical derivation of its usual name is 
rom Tenes, son of Cycnus. It had an ^Eolian 
city of the same name, with two harbors. Its 
name appears in several proverbs, suchasTev- 
idiog irtACKVc, T. uvdpunoc, T. avA^r/tf, T. kokov. 
It appears in tbe legend of the Trojan war as 
the station to which the Greeks withdrew their 
fleet, in order to induce the Trojans to think 
that they had departed, and to receive the wood- 
en horse. In the Persian war it was used by 
Xerxes as a naval station. It afterward be- 
came a tributary ally of Athens, and adhered to 
her during the whole of the Peloponnesian war, 
and down to the peace of Antalcidas, by which 
it was surrendered to the Persians. At the 
Macedonian conquest the Tenedians regained 
their liberty. In the war against Philip III., 
Attalus and the Romans used Tenedos as a naval 
station, and in the Mithradatic war Lucullus 
gained a naval victory over Mithradates off the 
island. About this time the Tenedians placed 
themselves under the protection of Alexandrea 
Troas. The island was celebrated for the beau- 
ty of its women. 

Tenes or Tennes (Tevvns), son of Cycnus 
and Proclea, and brother of Hemithea. Cycnus 
was King of Colonae in Troas. His second wife 
was Philonome, who fell in love with her step- 
son ; but as he repulsed her advances, she ac- 
cused him to his father, who threw both his son 
and daughter in a chest into the sea. But the 
chest was driven on the coast of the island of 
Leucophrys, of which the inhabitants elected 
him king, and which he called Tenedos, after 
his own name. Cycnus at length heard of the 
innocence of his son, killed Philonome, and 
went to his children in Tenedos. Here both 
Cycnus and Tenes were slain by Achilles. Te- 
nes was afterward worshipped as a hero in Ten- 
edos. 

Tenos (T^voc : Ttjvtoc : now Tino), a small 
island in the ^Egean Sea, southeast of Andros 
and north of Delos. It is about fifteen miles 
in length. It was originally called Hydrussa 
{'Ydpoiaaa) because it was well watered, and 
Ophiussa COfyioiooa) because it abounded in 
snakes. It possessed a town of the same name 
on the site of the modern S. Nicolo. It had also 
a celebrated temple of Neptune (Poseidon), 
which is mentioned in the time of the Emperor 
Tiberius. The wine of Tenos was celebrated in 
antiquity, and is still valued at the present day. 

Tentyra (ra Tevrvpa : TevTvptrjjc, Tentyrl- 
tes : ruins at Dcaderah), a city of Upper Egypt, 
on the western bank of the Nile, between Aby- 
dos and Coptos, with celebrated temples of 
Athor (the Egyptian Venus), Isis, and Typhon. 
Its people were distinguished for their hatred 
of the crocodile ; and upon this and the con- 
trary propensities of the people of Ombi, Juve- 
nal founds his fifteenth satire. Vid. Ombi. 
There are still magnificent remains of the tem- 
ples of Athor and of Isis : in the latter was 
found the celebrated Zodiac, which is now pre- 
served at Paris. 

Teos (7) Tiug : Trjioc, Telus : now Sighajik), 
one of the Ionian cities on the coast of Asia 
Minor, renowned as the birth-place of Anacreon 
and Hecataeus. It stood on the southern side 
of the isthmus which connects the peninsula of 



Mount Mimas with the main land of Lydia, at 
the bottom of the bay between the promontories 
of Coryceum and Myonnesus. It was a flour- 
ishing sea-port, until, to free themselves from 
the Persian yoke, most of its inhabitants retired 
to Abdera. It was still, however, a place of 
importance in the time of the Roman emperors. 
It had two harbors, and a celebrated temple of 
Bacchus (Dionysus). 

Teredon (TepTjduv : now probably Dorah), a 
city of Babylonia, on the western side of the 
Tigris, below its junction with the Euphrates, 
and not far from its mouth. It was a great em- 
porium for the traffic with Arabia. It is no 
doubt the Diridotis (Aipidurig) of Arrian. 

Terentia. 1. Wife of M. Cicero, the orator, 
to whom she bore two children, a son and 
daughter. She was a woman of. sound sense 
and great resolution ; and her firmness of char- 
acter was of no small service to her weak and 
vacillating husband in some important periods 
of his life. On his banishment in B.C. 58, Te- 
rentia by her letters endeavored to keep up Ci- 
cero's fainting spirits, and she vigorously exert- 
ed herself on his behalf among his friends in 
Italy. During the civil war, however, Cicero 
was offended with her conduct, and divorced 
her in 46. Shortly afterward he married Pub- 
lilia, a young girl of whose property he had the 
management. Terentia could not have been 
less than fifty at the time of her divorce, and 
therefore it is not probable that she married 
again. It is related, indeed, by Jerome, that 
she married Sallust the historian, and subse- 
quently Messala Corvinus 5 but these marriages 
are not mentioned by any other writer, and may 
therefore be rejected. Terentia is said to have 
attained the age of one hundred and three. — 2. 
Also called Terentilla, the wife of Maecenas, 
and also one of the favorite mistresses of Au- 
gustus. The intrigue between Augustus and 
Terentia is said to have disturbed the good un- 
derstanding which subsisted between the em- 
peror and his minister, and finally to have oc- 
casioned the retirement of the latter. 

Terentianus Maurus, a Roman poet, proba- 
bly lived at the end of the first or the beginning 
of the second century, under Nerva and Trajan, 
and was a native of Africa, as his surname, 
Maurus, indicates. There is still extant a poem 
of Terentianus, entitled De Litcris, Syllabis, Pe- 
dibus, Metris, which treats of prosody and the 
different kinds of metre with much elegance and 
skill. The work is printed by Santen and Van 
Lennep, Traj. ad Rhen., 1825, and by Lach- 
mann, Berol., 1836. 

Terentius Afer, P., usually called Terence, 
the celebrated comic poet, was born at Carthage 
B.C. 195. By birth or purchase he became the 
slave of P. Terentius Lucanus, a Roman sena- 
tor. A handsome person and promising talents 
recommended Terence to his master, who af- 
forded him the best education of the age, and 
finally manumitted him. On his manumission, 
according to the usual practice, Terence as- 
sumed his patron's nomen, Terentius, having 
been previously called Publius or Publipor. The 
Andria was the first play offered by Terence for 
representation. The curule aediles referred the 
piece to Caecilius, then one of the most popular 
play-writers at Rome. Unknown and meanly 

863 



TERENTIUS AFER, P. 



TERIAS. 



clad, Terence began to read from a low stool 
his opening scene. A few verses showed the 
elder poet that no ordinary writer was before 
him, and the young aspirant, then in his twenty- 
seventh year, was invited to share the couch 
and supper of his judge. This reading of the 
Andria, however, must have preceded its per- 
formance nearly two years, for Caecilius died in 
168, and it was not acted till 166. Meanwhile, 
eopies were in circulation, envy was awakened, 
and Luscius Lavinius, a veteran, and not very 
successful play- writer, began his unwearied at- 
tacks on the dramatic and personal character 
of the author. The Andria was successful, and, 
aided by the accomplishments and good address 
of Terence himself, was the means of introduc- 
ing him to the most refined and intellectual cir- 
cles of Rome: His chief patrons were Laelius 
and the younger Scipio, both of whom treated 
him as an equal, and are said even to have as- 
sisted him in the composition of his plays. 
After residing some years at Rome, Terence 
went to Greece, and while there he translated 
one hundred and eight of Menander's comedies. 
He never returned to Italy, and we have vari- 
ous accounts of his death. According to one 
story, after embarking at Brundisiurh, he was 
never heard of more ; according to others, he 
died at Stymphalus in Arcadia, in Leucadia, or 
at Patras in Achaia. One of his biographers said 
he was drowned, with all the fruits of his so- 
journ in Greece, on his home-passage. But 
the prevailing report was, that his translations 
of Menander were lost at sea, and that grief for 
their loss caused his death. He died in the 
thirty-sixth year of his age, in 159, or in the 
year following. He left a daughter, but noth- 
ing is known of his family. Six comedies are 
all that remain to us ; and they are probably all 
that Terence produced. His later versions of 
Menander were, in all likelihood, from their 
number and the short time in which they were 
made, merely studies for future dramas of his 
own. His plays were brought forward at the 
following seasons. 1. Andria, "the Woman of 
Andros," so called from the birth-place of Gly- 
cerium, its heroine, was first represented at the 
Megalesian Games, on the fourth of April, 166. 
2. Hecyra, "the Step-Mother," produced at the 
Megalesian Games in 165. 3. Heauton-timorou- 
menos, "the Self- Tormentor," performed at the 
Megalesian Games, 163. 4. Eunuchus, "the 
Eunuch," played at the Megalesian Games, 162. 
It was at the time the most popular of Terence's 
comedies. 5. Phormio, was performed in the 
same year with the preceding, at the Roman 
Games on the first of October. 6. Adelphi, " the 
Brothers," was acted for the first time at the 
funeral games of L. ^Emilius Paullus, 160. The 
comedies of Terence have been translated into 
most of the languages of modern Europe, and, 
in conjunction with Plautus, were, on the re- 
vival of the drama, the models of the most re- 
fined play-writers. The ancient critics are 
unanimous in ascribing to Terence immaculate 
purity and elegance of language, and nearly so 
in denying him vis comica. But it should be 
recollected that four of.Terence's six plays are 
more or less sentimental comedies, in which 
vis comica is not a primary element. Moreover, 
Terence is generally contrasted with Plautus, 
864 



with whom he had very little in common 
Granting to the elder poet the highest genius 
for exciting laughter, and a natural force which 
his rival wanted, there will remain to Terence 
greater consistency of plot and character, closer 
observation of generic and individual distinc- 
tions, deeper pathos, subtler wit, more skill and 
variety in metre and in rhythm, and a wider 
command of the middle region between sport 
and earnest. It may be objected that Terence's 
superiority in these points arises from his copy- 
ing his Greek originals more servilely. But no 
servile copy is an animated copy, and we have 
corresponding fragments enough of Menander 
to prove that Terence retouched and sometimes 
improved his model. In summing up his merits 
we ought not to omit the praise which has been 
universally accorded him — that, although a for- 
eigner and a freedman, he divides with Cicero 
and Cassar the palm of pure Latinity. The best 
editions of Terence are by Bentley, Cantab., 
1726, 4to, Amstel., 1727, 4to, Lips., 1791, 8vo ; 
by Westerhovius, Hagag Com., 1727, 2 vols. 
4to ; and by Stallbaum, Lips., 1830, 8vo. 

TERENTIUS CtTLLEO. Vid. CULLEO. 

Terentics Varro. Vid. Varro. 

Teres (T^prjc). 1. King of the Odrysae and 
father of Sitalces, was the founder of the great 
Odrysian monarchy.— 2. King of a portion of 
Thrace in the time of Philip of Macedon. 

Tereus (Tr/pEvc;), son of Mars (Ares), king of 
the Thracians in Daulis, afterward Phocis. 
Pandion, king of Attica, who had two daughters, 
Philomela and Procne, called in the assistance 
of Tereus against some enemy, and gave him 
I his daughter Procne in marriage. Tereus be- 
j came by her the father of Itys, and then con- 
cealed her in the country, that he might thus 
marry her sister Philomela, whom he deceived 
by saying that Procne was dead. At the same 
time he deprived Philomela of her tongue. Ovid 
(Met., vi., 565) reverses the story by stating that 
Tereus told Procne that her sister Philomela 
was dead. Philomela, however, soon learned 
the truth, and made it known to her sister by a 
few words which she wove into a peplus. Proc- 
ne thereupon killed her own son Itys, and served 
up the flesh of the child in a dish before Tereus. 
She then fled with her sister. Tereus pursued 
them with an axe, and when the sisters were 
overtaken, they prayed to the gods to change 
them into birds. Procne accordingly became 
a nightingale, Philomela a swallow, and Te- 
reus a hoopoo. According to some, Procne be- 
came a swallow, Philomela a nightingale, and 
Tereus a hawk. 

Tergeste (Tergestinus : now Trieste), a town 
of Istria, on a bay in the northeast of the Adri- 
atic Gulf, called after it Tergestinus Sinus. It 
was at first an insignificant place, with which 
the Romans became acquainted in their wars 
with the Iapydes ; but under the Roman domin- 
ion it became a town of considerable commer- 
cial importance. It was made a Roman colony 
by Vespasian. 

Teria (VripeLvc opog alnv, Horn.), a mountain 
of Mysia, probably in the neighborhood of Cyz- 
icus. Some identified it with a hill near Lamp- 
sacus, on which was a temple of Cybele. 

Terias (now Guaralunga), a river in Sicily, 
near Leontini. 



TERIBAZUS. 



TERTULLIANUS. 



[Teribazus or Tikibazus (Yj]pi6a^oQ, Tif.i6a- 
£of), a Persian, high in the favor of Artaxerxes 
II., and when he was present, as Xenophon 
says, no one else had the honor of helping the 
monarch mount his horse. At the time of the 
retreat of the Ten Thousand in B.C. 401, Te- 
ribazus was satrap of Western Armenia, and, 
when the Greeks had reached the River Tele- 
boas on the frontier of his territory, he himself 
rode up to their camp and proposed a truce, on 
condition that both parties should abstain from 
molesting each other, the Greeks taking only 
what they needed while in his country. Teri- 
bazus, however, did not intend to keep his word, 
but waited to assail the Greeks in a mountain 
pass, which the latter, on learning his design, 
secured, and having, besides, attacked the camp 
of the satrap, put the barbarians to flight. Sub- 
sequently he aided the Lacedaemonians until 
superseded in B.C. 392, and again after his res- 
toration in B.C. 388. Various charges having 
been brought against him, he was put on his trial 
and triumphantly acquitted. After this Arta- 
xerxes promised him Amastris, and afterward 
Atossa, in marriage, and having each time 
broken his word, Teribazus excited an insurrec- 
tion, but was betrayed, and slain by the king's 
guards.] 

Teridates. Vid. Tiridates. 

Terina (Terinaeus : now St. Eufemia), a town 
on the western coast of Bruttium, from which 
the Sinus Terinaeus derived its name. It was 
a Greek city founded by Croton, and was origi- 
nally a place of some importance ; but it was 
destroyed by Hannibal in the second Punic war. 

[Terinaeus Sinus (now Gulf of St. Eufemia). 
Vid. Terina.] 

Teriolis or Teriola Castra, a fortress in 
Raetia, which has given its name to the coun- 
try of the Tyrol. Its site is still occupied by 
the Castle of Tyrol, lying above Mera?i, to the 
north of the road. 

Termantia, Termes, or Termesus (Termes- 
tinus or Termesius : now Ermita de nuestra Se- 
hora de Tiermes), a town of the Arevaci in His- 
pania Tarraconensis, originally situated on a 
steep hill, the inhabitants of which frequently 
resisted the Romans, who compelled them, in 
consequence, to abandon the town, and build a 
new one on the plain, B.C. 98. 

Termera (tu Tepfiepa), a Dorian city in Caria, 
on the Promontory Termerium (Tep/iepiov), the 
northwestern headland of the Sinus Ceramicus. 
Under the Romans it was a free city. 

Termessus (TepfiTjaooc, and other forms: 
ruins probably at Shcnet), a city of Pisidia, high 
up on the Taurus, in the pass through which 
the River Catarrhactes flowed. It was almost 
impregnable by nature and art, so that even 
Alexander did not attempt to take it. 

Terminus, a Roman divinity presiding over 
boundaries and frontiers. His worship is said 
to have been instituted by Numa, who ordered 
that every one should mark the boundaries of 
his landed property by stones consecrated to 
Jupiter, and at these boundary-stones every 
year sacrifices should be offered at the festival 
of the Terminalia. The Terminus of the Ro- 
man state originally stood between the fifth and 
sixth mile-stone on the road toward Laurentum, 
near a place called Festi. Another public Ter- 
55 



minus stood in the temple of Jupiter in the Cap- 
itol. It is said that when this temple was to be 
founded, all the gods gave way to Jupiter and 
Juno, with the exception of Terminus and Ju- 
ventas, whose sanctuaries the auguries would 
not allow to be removed. This was taken as 
an omen that the Roman state would remain 
ever undiminished and young, and the chapels 
of the two divinities were inclosed within the 
walls of the new temple. It is, however, proba- 
ble that the god Terminus is no other than Ju- 
piter himself, in the capacity of protector of 
boundaries. 

[Termus, a small river of Sardinia, flowing 
into the sea on the western or northern coast.] 

Terpander (Tepvavdpog), the father of Greek 
music, and through it of lyric poetry. He was 
a native of Antissa in Lesbos, and flourished be- 
tween B.C. 700 and 650. He removed from 
Lesbos to Sparta, and there introduced his new- 
system of music, and established the first mu- 
sical school or system that existed in Greece. 
He added three strings to the lyre, which before 
his time had only four strings, thus making it 
seven-stringed. His music produced a power- 
ful effect upon the Spartans, and he was held in 
high honor by them during his life and after his 
death. He was the first who obtained a victory 
in the musical contests at the festival of the 
Carnea (676). We have only three or four frag- 
ments of the remains of his poetry. 

[Terpius, father of the celebrated minstrel 
Phemiue, who is hence called by Homer Ter- 
piades (TepKiddTjc)'] 

TerpsichSre (Teptytxopa), one of the nine 
Muses, presided over the choral song and dan- 
cing. Vid. Musje. 

Terra. Vid. G^a. 

TerracIna, more usually written Tarracina. 
Vid. Tarracina. 

[Terrasidius, T., one of Caesar's officers in 
Gaul, was sent to the Unelli to obtain corn in 
B.C. 57, but detained a prisoner by them.] 

[Tertia, a female actress, and one of the fa- 
vorite mistresses of Verres in Sicily.] 

[Tertia or Tertulla. Vid. Junia, No. 2.] 

Tertullianus, Q. Septimius Florens, usu- 
ally called Tertullian, the most ancient of the 
Latin fathers now eyvant. Notwithstanding the 
celebrity which he has always enjoyed, our 
knowledge of his personal history is extremely 
limited, and is derived almost exclusively from 
a succinct notice by St. Jerome. From this we 
learn that Tertullian was a native of Carthage, 
the son of a proconsular centurion (an officer 
who appears to have acted as a sort of aid-de- 
camp to provincial governors) : that he flourish- 
ed chiefly during the reigns of Septimius Seve- 
rus and of Caracalla ; that he became a presby- 
ter, and remained orthodox until he had reached 
the term of middle life, when, in consequence of 
the envy and ill-treatment which he experienced 
on the part of the Roman clergy, he went over 
to the Montanists, and wrote several books in 
defence of those heretics ; that he lived to a 
great age, and was the author of many works. 
His birth may be placed about A.D. 160, and his 
death about 240. The most interesting of his 
numerous works is his Apologia, or defence of 
Christianity. It was written at Carthage, prob- 
ably during the reign of Severus. The writings 



TESTA. 



TEUTONES. 



of Tertullian show that he was a man of varied 
learning ; but his style is rough, abrupt, and ob- 
scure, abounding in far-fetched metaphors and 
extravagant hyperboles. The best editions of 
the complete works of Tertullian are the edit, 
of Venice, 1744, fol., and that by Semler and 
Schutz, 6 vols. 8vo, Hal., 1770. There is a good 
edition of the Apologeticus by Havercamp, 8vo, 
Lugd. Bat., 1710, [and of the Apolog. and Ad 
Nahones by Oehler, Halle, 1849.] 

Testa, C. Trebatius, a Roman jurist, and a 
contemporary and friend of Cicero. He was 
recommended by Cicero to Julius Caesar during 
his proconsulship of Gaul, and he followed 
Caesar's party after the civil war broke out. 
Cicero dedicated to Trebatius his book of Top- 
%ca, which he wrote to explain to him this book 
of Aristotle. Trebatius enjoyed considerable 
reputation under Augustus as a lawyer. Hor- 
ace addressed to him the first satire of the sec- 
ond book. Trebatius was a pupil of Q. Corne- 
lius Maximus, and master of Labeo. He wrote 
some books De Jure Civili and De Religionibus. 
He is often cited in the Digest, but there is no 
direct excerpt from his writings. 

Tethys (Trjdvc), daughter of Ccelus (Uranus) 
and Terra (Gaea), and wife of Oceanus, by whom 
she became the mother of the Oceanides and 
of the numerous river-gods. She also educated 
Juno (Hera), who was brought to her by Rhea. 

[Tetrapolis, a union of four cities or states ; 
of these the most important were, 1. The Attic 
Tetrapolis {TeTpanohic rye 'Am/c^f), a district 
of Attica lying northward from Athens, com- 
posed of CEnoe, Marathon, Probalinthus, and 
Tricorythus, founded by Xuthus. 2. The Dori- 
an. Vid. Doris. 3. The Syrian (rfjc Svpta?, or 
Seaeu/af), composed of Antiochia, Apamea, La- 
odicea, and Seleucia.] 

Tetrica, a mountain on the frontiers of Pi- 
cenum and the land of the Sabines, belonging 
to the great chain of the Apennines. 

Tetricus, C. Pesuvius, one of the Thirty Ty- 
rants, and the last of the pretenders who ruled 
Gaul during its separation from the empire un- 
der Gallienus and his successor. He reigned 
in Gaul from A.D. 267 to 274, and was defeat- 
ed by Aurelian in 274 at the battle of Chalons, 
on which occasion he was believed to have be- 
trayed his army to the emperor. It is certain j 
that although Tetricus, along with his son, grac- 
ed the triumph of the conqueror, he was imme- 
diately afterward treated with the greatest dis- 
tinction by Aurelian. 

Teucer (TevKpoc). I. Son of the river-god 
Scamander by the nymph Idaea, was the first 
king of Troy, whence the Trojans are some- 
times called Teucri. Dardanus of Samothrace 
came to Teucer, received his daughter Batea 
or Arisbe in marriage, and became his success- 
or in the kingdom. According to others, Dar- 
danus was a native prince of Troy, and Scaman- 
der and Teucer immigrated into Troas from 
Crete, bringing with them the worship of Apollo 
Smintheus. — 2. Son of Telamon and Hesione, I 
was a step-brother of Ajax, and the best archer i 
among the Greeks at Troy. On his return from 
the Trojan war, Telamon refused to receive 
him in Salamis, because he had not avenged the 
death of his brother Ajax. Teucer thereupon 
sailed away in search of a new home, which he 



j found in the island of Cyprus, which was given 
I to him by Belus, king of Sidon. He there found- 
j ed the town of Salamis, and married Eune, the 
I daughter of Cyprus, by whom he became the 
j father of Asteria. 
j Teucri. Vid. Mysia, Troas. 
i Teumessus (Tevutjcgoc), a mountain in Bceo- 
tia, near Hypatus, and close to Thebes, on the 
road from the latter place to Chalcis. It was 
i from this mountain that Bacchus (Dionysus), 
! enraged with the Thebans, sent the fox which 
! committed such devastations in their territory. 

Tecta (Tevra), wife of Agron, king of the 
Illyrians, assumed the sovereign power on the 
| death of her husband, B.C. 231. In conse- 
! quence of the injuries inflicted by the piratical 
| expeditions of her subjects upon the Italian 
j merchants, the Romans sent two ambassadors 
i to demand satisfaction, but she not only refus- 
j ed to comply with their demands, but caused 
I the younger of the two brothers to be assassin- 
ated on his way home. War was now declared 
against her by the Romans. The greater part 
j of her territory was soon conquered, and she 
was obliged to sue for peace, which was grant- 
ed to her (B.C. 228) on condition of her giving 
up the greater part of her dominions. 

[Teutamias (Tevra/Liiag), a king of Larissa in 
Thessaly, and father of the Pelasgian Lethus. ] 
Teuthraxia. Vid. Mysia. 
Teuthras (Tevdpac). 1. An ancient king ot 
Mysia, who married, or, according to other ac- 
counts, adopted as his daughter Auge, the daugh- 
ter of Aleus. He also received with hospitality 
her son Telephus, when the latter came to Asia 
in search of his mother. He was succeeded in 
the kingdom of Mysia by Telephus. Vid. Tel- 
ephus. The fifty daughters of Teuthras, given 
as a reward to Hercules, are called by Ovid 
Teuthrantia turba.—[2. A Greek warrior of Mag- 
nesia, slain by Hector before Troy. — 3. A com- 
panion of JSneas, slain in battle against the 
Rutuli in Italy.] 

Teuthras (Tevdpac : now probably Demirji- 
Dagh), a mountain in the Mysian district of 
Teuthrania, a southwestern branch of Temnus. 
It contains a celebrated pass, called the Iron 
Gates (Demir Kapa), through which all caravans 
between Smyrna and Brusa (the ancient Pru- 
sias) must needs pass. 

Teutoburgiensis Saltus, a range of hills in 
Germany, covered with wood, extending north 
of the Lippe, from Osnabriick to Paderborn, and 
known in the present day by the name of the 
Teutoburger Wald or Lippische Wald. It is cel- 
ebrated on account of the defeat and destruc- 
tion of Varus and three Roman legions by the 
Germans under Arminius, A.D. 9. 

[Teutomatus, son of Ollovicon, king of the 
Nitiobriges, joined Vercingetorix with a body 
of cavalry : being suddenly attacked by Cae- 
sar's soldiers while reposing in his tent, he with 
difficulty escaped half naked from the camp.] 

Teutoxes or Teutoni, a powerful people in 
Germany, who invaded Gaul and the Roman 
dominions along with the Cimbri at the latter 
end of the second century B.C. The historv 
of their invasion is given under Cimbri. The 
name Teutones is not a collective name of 
the whole people of Germany, as some writ- 
ers have supposed, but only of one particular 



THABOR. 



THAPSACUS. 



tribe, who probably dwelt on the coast of the 
Baltic, near the Cimbri. 

Thabor, Tabor, or Atabyrium ('Aradvpiov, 
LXX. : 'IraSvpiov, Joseph. : now Jebcl Tur), an 
isolated mountain at the eastern end of the plain 
of Esdraelon in Galilee, between seventeen 
hundred and eighteen hundred feet high. Its 
summit was occupied by a fortified town under 
the Maccabees and the Romans. This is quite 
enough to prove that it can not be, as a local 
tradition asserts, the lonely mountain on which 
our Saviour was transfigured, although the tra- 
dition has been bolstered up by a variation of the 
modern name of the mountain, which makes it 
Jebel Nur,\. e., the Mountain of Light. 

Thabraca or Tabraca (Qa6pa,Ka, TdBadpa : 
now Tabarca), a city of Numidia, at the mouth 
of the River Tusca, and on the frontier toward 
Zeugitana. 

Thais (Qaig), a celebrated Athenian courte- 
san, who accompanied Alexander the Great on 
his expedition into Asia. Her name is best 
known from the story of her having stimulated 
the conqueror, during a great festival at Per- 
sepolis, to set fire to the palace of the Persian 
kings ; but this anecdote, immortalized as it 
has been by Dryden's famous ode, is in all prob- 
ability a mere fable. After the death of Alex- 
ander, Thais attached herself to Ptolemy Lagi, 
by whom she became the mother of two sons, 
Leontiscus and Lagus, and of a daughter, Irene. 

Thala (Qa1a), a great city of Numidia, men- 
tioned by Sallust and other writers, and prob- 
ably identical with Telepte (TeIetttt]) or The- 
lepte, a city in the south of Numidia, seventy- 
one Roman miles northwest of Capsa. It was 
the southwestern frontier town toward the 
desert, and was connected by a road with Ta- 
cape on the Syrtis Minor. It is probably to be 
identified with Fcrianah, or with the large ruins 
near it called Medinah el Kadima. 

Thalamus {QaMfiai). 1. A fortified town in 
Elis, situated in the mountains above Pylos. — 
2. A town in Messenia, probably a little to the 
east of the River Pamisus. j. 

Thalassius, Talassius, or Talassio, a Ro- 
man senator of the time of Romulus. At the 
time of the rape of the Sabine women, when a 
maiden of surpassing beauty was carried off for 
Thalassius, the persons conducting her, in order 
to protect her against any assaults from others, 
exclaimed " for Thalassius." Hence, it is said, 
arose the wedding shout with which a bride at 
Rome was conducted to the house of her bride- 
groom. 

Thales (0aA?}r), the Ionic philosopher, and 
one of the Seven Sages, was born at Miletus 
about B.C. 636, and died about 546, at the age 
of ninety, though the exact date neither of his 
birth nor of his death is known. He is said to 
have predicted the eclipse of the sun, which 
happened in the reign of the Lydian king Alyat- 
tes ; to have diverted the course of the Halys 
in the time of Croesus; and later, in order to 
unite the Ionians when threatened by the Per- 
sians, to have instituted a federal council in 
Teos. In the lists of the Seven Sages his name 
seems to have stood at the head ; and he dis- 
played his wisdom both by political sagacity 
and by prudence in acquiring wealth. He was 
also one of the founders in Greece of the study 



of philosophy and mathematics. In the lattei 
science, however, we find attributed to him only 
proofs of propositions which belong to the first 
j elements of geometry, and which could not pos- 
| sibly have enabled him to calculate the eclipses 
j of the sun and the course of the heavenly 
I bodies. He may, however, have obtained his 
| knowledge of the higher branches of mathemat- 
I ics from Egypt, which country he is said to have 
I visited. Thales maintained that water is the 
j origin of things, meaning thereby that it is 
! water out of which every thing arises and into 
I which every thing resolves itself. Thales left 
j no works behind him. 

: Thales or Thaletas {Qa/J/c, Qalrirag), the 
celebrated musician and lyric poet, was a na- 
tive of Gortyna in Crete. On the invitation of 
the Spartans he removed to Sparta, where, by 
the influence of his music, he appeased the 
wrath of Apollo, who had visited the city with 
a plague, and composed the factions of the cit- 
izens, who were at enmity with each other. He 
founded the second of the musical schools which 
flourished at Sparta, the first having been es- 
tablished by Terpander. The date of Thaletas 
is uncertain, but he may probably be placed, 
shortly after Terpander. Vid. Terpander. 

Thalia (Qd?,eia, QaMa). 1. One of the nine 
Muses, and, at least in later times, the Muse of 
Comedy. Vid. Mus^e. — 2. One of the Nereides. 
— 3. One of the Charites or Graces. 

Thallo. Vid. HoRiE. 

Thalxa or Talna, M\ Juventius, was trib- 
une of the plebs B.C. 170, praetor 167, and con- 
sul 163, when he subdued the Corsicans. The 
senate voted him a thanksgiving, and he was 
so overcome with joy at the intelligence, which 
he received as he was offering a sacrifice, that 
he dropped down dead on the spot. 

[Thalpius (Gd/lTuof ), son of Eurytus, one of 
the suitors of Helen, and therefore compelled to 
take part in the expedition against Troy ; he led 
the Epei in ten vessels.] 

Thambes (QdfxGng, Qdfifivg, Qdpns), a mount- 
ain in the east of Numidia, containing the source 
of the River Rubricatus. 

Thamydeni or Thamydit^: (Qafivdnvoi, Qafiv- 
dZrai), a people of Arabia Felix, on the coast of 
the Sinus Arabicus, in the neighborhood of The- 
mond. 

Thamyris oi'Thamyras (Qd/ivpic). 1. An an- 
cient Thracian bard, was a son of Philammon 
and the nymph Argiope. In his presumption he 
challenged the Muses to a trial of skill, and, being 
overcome in the contest, was deprived by them 
of his sight and of the power of singing. He 
was represented with a broken lyre in his hand. 
— [2. A Trojan w r arrior, companion of iEneas 
after the fall of Troy ; slain by Turnus in Italy.] 

Thanatos. Vid. Mors. 

Thapsa, a city of Northern Africa, probably 
identical with Rusicada. 

Thapsacus (QdipanoQ : in the Old Testament, 
Thiphsach : an Aramean word signifying a ford: 
QaipaKvvoc : ruins at the ford of El-Hamman, 
near Rakhah), a city of Syria, in the province 
of Chalybonitis, on the left bank of the Euphra- 
tes, two thousand stadia south of Zeugma, and 
fifteen parasangs from the mouth of the River 
Chaboras (the Araxes of Xenophon). At this 
place was the usual and, for a long time, the only 

867 



THAPSUS. 



THEBiE. 



ford of the Euphrates, by which a passage was 
made between Upper and Lower Asia. 

Thapsus (Qdipoc : QdipLog). 1. A city on the 
eastern coast of Sicily, on a peninsula of the 
same name (now Isola degli Magnisi), founded 
by Dorian colonists from Megara, who soon 
abandoned it in order to found Megara Hybla. 
— 2. (Ruins at Demas), a city on the eastern 
coast of Byzacena, in Africa Propria, where 
Caesar finally defeated the Pompeian army, and 
finished the civil war, B.C. 46. 

Thasos or Thasus (Qdcoc; : Quolos : now Tha- 
so or Tasso), an island in the north of the .-Egean 
Sea, off the coast of Thrace, and opposite the 
mouth of the River Nestus. It was at a very 
early period taken possession of by the Phoeni- 
cians on account of its valuable gold mines. 
According to tradition, the Phoenicians were 
led by Thasus, son of Poseidon or Agenor, who 
came from the East in search of Europa, and 
from whom the island derived its name. Tha- 
sos was afterward colonized by the Parians, B.C. 
708, and among the colonists was the poet Ar- 
chilochus. Besides the gold mines in Thasos 
itself, the Thasians possessed still more valua- 
ble gold mines at Scapte Hyle, on the opposite 
coast of Thrace. The mines in the island had 
been most extensively worked by the Phoeni- 
cians, but even in the time of Herodotus they 
were still productive. The clear surplus rev- 
enue of the Thasians before the Persian con- 
quest amounted to two hundred, and some- 
times even to three hundred talents (£46,000, 
£66,000), of which sum the mines in Scapte 
Hyle produced eighty talents, and those in the 
island somewhat less. They possessed at this 
time a considerable territory on the coast of 
Thrace, and were one of the richest and most 
powerful tribes in the north of the J^gean. They 
were subdued by the Persians under Mardonius, 
and subsequently became part of the Athenian 
maritime empire. They revolted, however, 
from Athens in B.C. 465, and after sustaining a 
siege of three years, were subdued by Cimon in 
463. They were obliged to surrender to the 
Athenians all their possessions in Thrace, to 
destroy their fortifications, to give up their ships, 
and to pay a large tribute for the future. They 
again revolted from Athens in 411, and called 
in the Spartans, but the island was again re- 
stored to the Athenians by Thrasybulus in 407. 
In addition to its gold mines, Thasos was cel- 
ebrated for its marble and its wine. The soil, 
however, is otherwise barren, and merits, even 
at the present day, the description applied to it 
by the poet Archilochus, " an ass's back-bone, 
overspread with wild wood." The principal 
town in the island, also called Thasos, was sit- 
uated on the northern coast upon three emi- 
nences. There are still a few remains of the 
ancient town. 

[Thaumaci (now DhomoJco), a city of Phthio- 
tis, in Thessaly, situated on a lofty and perpen- 
dicular rock, which rendered it a place of great 
strength. The ancients derived its name from 
the singularity of its position, and the astonish- 
ment it caused when first reached (QavfiaKoC, 
from d-avfia, " wonder").] 

Thaumas (Qavfias), son of Pontus and Terra 
(Ge), and by the Oceanid Electra, the father 
of Iris and the Harpies. Hence Iris is call- 
868 



ed Thaurnantias, Thaumantis, and Thaumantcn 

virgo. 

The^etetus (Qea'tTTiTor), an Athenian, the son 
of Euphronius of Sunium, is introduced as one 
of the speakers in Plato's Theatetus and Sophis- 
tes, in which dialogues he is spoken of as a no- 
ble and well-disposed youth, and ardent in the 
pursuit of knowledge, especially in the study of 
geometry. 

Theagenes (Qeayevvc). 1. Tyrant of Mega- 
ra, obtained his power about B.C. 630, having 
espoused the part of the commonalty against 
the nobles. He was driven out before his death. 
He gave his daughter in marriage to Cylon. 
Vid. Cylon. — 2. A Thasian, the son ofTimos- 
thenes, renowned for his extraordinary strength 
and swiftness. He gained numerous victories 
at the Olympian, Pythian, Nemean, and Isth- 
mian games, and is said to have won thirteen 
hundred crowns. He flourished B.C. 480. 
Theano (Qeavo), daughter of Cisseus, wife 

i of Antenor, and priestess of Minerva (Athena) 

! at Ilion. 

Theano (Qeavu), the most celebrated of the 
I female philosophers of the Pythagorean school, 
| appears to have been the wife of Pythagoras, 
i and the mother by him of Telauges, Mnesarchus, 
| Myia, and Arignote ; but the accounts respect- 
I ing her were various. Several letters are ex- 
\ tant under her name ; and, though they are not 
I genuine, they are valuable remains of a period 
! of considerable antiquity. 

Theb^e (0?)6oi), in the poets sometimes Thebe 
I (07?6?7, Dor. Qf/6a), afterward Diospolis Magna 
(Alocttomc fj,eyd?ir], i. e., Great City of Jove), in 
j Scripture, No or No Ammon, was the capital of 
1 Thebais or Upper Egypt, and, for a long time, 
i of the whole country. It was reputed the old- 
i est city of the world. It stood in about the 
| centre of the Thebaid, on both banks of the 
J Nile, above Coptos, and in the Nomos Coptites. 
It is said to have been founded by ^Ethiopians ; 
| but this is, of course, only a form of the tradi- 
tion which represents the civilization of Upper 
| Egypt as having come down the Nile. Others 
; ascribed its foundation to Osiris, who named it 
after his mother, and others to Busiris. It ap- 
pears to have been at the height of its splen- 
dor, as the capital of Egypt, and as a chief seat 
of the worship of Ammon, about B.C. 1600. The 
fame of its grandeur had reached the Greeks as 
early as the time of Homer, who describes it, 
with poetical exaggeration, as having a hund- 
red gates, from each of which it could send out 
two hundred war-chariots fully armed. Homer's 
epithet of" Hundred-Gated" (etcaTOfiirvXoi) is re- 
peatedly applied to the city by later writers. Its 
real extent was calculated by the Greek writers 
at one hundred and forty stadia (fourteen geo- 
graphical miles) in circuit ; and in Strabo's time, 
when the long transference of the seat of pow- 
er to Lower Egypt had caused it to decline 
j greatly, it still had a circuit of eighty stadia. 
, That these computations are not exaggerated, 
is proved by the existing ruins, which extend 
from side to side of the valley of the Nile, here 
about six miles wide ; while the rocks which 
bound the valley are perforated with tombs. 
These ruins, which are, perhaps, the most mag- 
nificent in the world, inclose within their site 
the four modern villages of Carnac, Luxor, Me- 



THEB^E. 



THEB.E. 



dinet Abou, and Gournou ; the two former on the 
eastern, and the two latter on the western side 
of the river. They consist of temples, colossi, 
sphinxes, and obelisks, and, on the western 
side, of tombs, many of which are cut in the 
rock and adorned with paintings, which are still 
as fresh as if just finished. These ruins are re- 
markable alike for their great antiquity and for 
the pnrity of their style. It is most probable 
that the great buildings were all erected before 
the Persian invasion, when Thebes was taken 
by Cambyses, and the wooden habitations burn- 
ed ; after which time it never regained the rank 
of a capital city ; and thus its architectural mon- 
uments escaped that Greek influence which is 
so marked in the edifices of Lower Egypt. 
Among its chief buildings, the ancient writers 
mention the Mkmnonium, with the two colossi 
in front of it, the temple of Ammon, in which 
one of the three chief colleges of priests was 
established, and the tombs of the kings. To 
describe the ruins and discuss their identifica- 
tion would far exceed the limits of this article. 

Theb^e, in Europe. 1. {Qfj6ai, in poetry 9^677, 
Doric Qi)6a : O^aloc, fern. Qr]6atc, Thebanus, 
fem. Thebais : now Theba, Turkish Stiva), the 
chief city in Bceotia, was situated in a plain 
southeast of the Lake Helice and northeast of 
Plataeae. Its acropolis, which was an oval em- 
inence of no great height, was called Cadmea 
(Kad/ieia), because it was said to have been 
founded by Cadmus, the leader of a Phoenician 
colony. On each side of this acropolis is a 
small valley, running up from the Theban plain 
into the low ridge of hills by which it is sepa- 
rated from that of Plataeae. Of these valleys, 
the one to the welt is watered by the Dirce, 
and the one to the east by the Ismenus ; both 
of which, however, are insignificant streamlets, 
though so celebrated in ancient story. The 
greater part of the city stood in these valleys, 
and was built some time after the acropolis. 
It is said that the fortifications of the city were 
constructed by Amphion and his brother Zethus ; 
and that, when Amphion played his lyre, the 
stones moved of their own accord and formed 
the wall. The territory of Thebes was called 
Thebais (QrjBaic), and extended eastward as far 
as the Eubcean Sea. No city is more celebrated 
in the mythical ages of Greece than Thebes. 
It was here that the use of letters was first in- 
troduced from Phoenicia into Western Europe. 
It was the reputed birth-place of the two great 
divinities, Dionysus and Hercules. It was also 
the native city of the great seer Tiresias, as 
well as of the great musician Amphion. It was 
the scene of the tragic fate of CEdipus, and of 
one of the most celebrated wars in the myth- 
ical annals of Greece. Polynices, who had 
been expelled from Thebes by his brother Eteo- 
cles, induced six other heroes to espouse his 
cause, and marched against the city ; but they 
were all defeated and slain by the Thebans, 
with the exception of Adrastus, Polynices and 
Eteocles falling by each other's hands. This 
is usually called the war of the "Seven against 
Thebes." A few years afterward, " the Epigo- 
ni," or descendants of the seven heroes, march- 
ed against Thebes to revenge their fathers' 
death ; they took the city and razed it to the 
ground. Thebes is not mentioned by Homer 



in the catalogue of the Greek cities which 
fought against Troy, as it was probably sup- 
posed not yet to have recovered from its dev- 
astation by the Epigoni. It appears, however, 
at the earliest historical period as a large and 
flourishing city ; and it is represented as pos- 
sessing seven gates, the number assigned to it 
in the ancient legends. Its government, after 
the abolition of monarchy, was an aristocracy, 
or, rather, an oligarchy, which continued to be 
the prevailing form of government for a long 
time, although occasionally exchanged for that 
of a democracy. Toward the end of the Pelo- 
ponnesian war, however, the oligarchy finally 
disappears, and Thebes appears under a derno- 
cratical form of government from this time till 
it became with the rest of Greece subject to the 
Romans. The Thebans were from an early pe- 
riod inveterate enemies of their neighbors, the 
Athenians. Their hatred of the latter people 
was probably one of the reasons which induced 
them to desert the cause of Grecian liberty in 
the great struggle against the Persian power. 
In the Peloponnesian war the Thebans naturally 
espoused the Spartan side, and contributed not 
a little to the downfall of Athens. But, in com- 
mon with the other Greek states, they soon 
became disgusted with the Spartan supremacy, 
and joined the confederacy formed against Spar- 
ta in B.C. 394. The peace of Antalcidas in 387 
put an end to hostilities in Greece ; but the 
treacherous seizure of the Cadmea by the La- 
cedaemonian general Phcebidas in 382, and its 
recovery by the Theban exiles in 379, led to a 
war between Thebes and Sparta, in which the 
former not only recovered its independence, but 
forever destroyed the Lacedaemonian suprem- 
acy. This was the most glorious period in the 
Theban annals ; and the decisive defeat of the 
Spartans at the battle of Leuctra in 371 made 
Thebes the first power in Greece. Her great- 
ness, however, was mainly due to the pre-emi- 
nent abilities of her citizens, Epaminondas and 
Pelopidas ; and with the death of the former at 
the battle of Mantinea in 362, she lost the su- 
premacy which she had so recently gained. 
Soon afterward Philip of Macedon began to ex- 
ercise a paramount influence over the greater 
part of Greece. The Thebans were induced, by 
the eloquence of Demosthenes, to forget their 
old animosities against the Athenians, and to 
join the latter in protecting the liberties of 
Greece ; but their united forces were defeated 
by Philip, at the battle of Chaeronea, in 338. 
Soon after the death of Philip and the accession 
of Alexander, the Thebans made a last attempt 
to recover their liberty, but were cruelly pun- 
ished by the young king. The city was taken 
by Alexander in 336, and was entirely destroy- 
ed, with the exception of the temples, and the 
house of the poet Pindar ; six thousand inhab- 
itants were slain, and thirty thousand sold as 
slaves. In 316 the city was rebuilt by Cassan- 
der, with the assistance of the Athenians. In 
290 it was taken by Demetrius Poliorcetes, and 
again suffered greatly. Dicaearchus, who flour- 
ished about this time, has left us an interesting 
account of the city. He describes it as about 
seventy stadia (nearly nine miles) in circumfer- 
ence, in form nearly circular, and in appearance 
somewhat gloomy. He says that it is plenti- 

869 



THEBAIS. 



THEMISTOCLES. 



fully provided with water, and contains better 
gardens than any other city in Greece ; that it 
is most agreeable in summer, on account of its 
plentiful supply of cool and fresh water, and its 
large gardens ; but that in winter it is very 
unpleasant, being destitute of fuel, exposed to 
floods and cold winds, and frequently visited by 
heavy falls of snow. He further represents the 
people as proud and insolent, and always ready 
to settle disputes by fighting rather than by the 
ordinary course of justice. It is supposed that 
the population of the city at this time may have 
been between fifty thousand and sixty thousand 
souls. After the Macedonian period Thebes 
rapidly declined in importance ; and it received 
its last blow from Sulla, who gave half of its 
territory to the Delphians. Strabo describes it 
as only a village in his time ; and Pausanias, 
who visited it in the second century of the 
Christian era, says that the Cadmea alone was 
then inhabited. The modern town is also con- 
fined to this spot, and the surrounding country 
is covered with a confused heap of ruins. — 2. 
Surnamed Phthiotic^e (Qf}6aL ai QdioTLdeg), an 
important city of Thessaly in the district Phthi- 
otis, at a short distance from the coast, and 
with a good harbor. — 3. A town in Lucania, 
rarely mentioned. 

Theb.us. Vid. JSgyptus. 

Thebe (03767 "Tttott^okIti), a city of Mysia, on 
the wooded slope of Mount Placus, destroyed 
by Achilles. It was said to have been the birth- 
place of Andromache and Chryseis. It existed 
in the historical period, but by the time of Stra- 
bo it had fallen into ruin, and by that of Pliny it 
had vanished. Its site was near the head of 
the Gulf of Adramyttium, where a beautiful 
tract of country was named, after it, Thebanus 
campus (to Qrjlrjg nediov). 

[Theches Mons (QrixVSi a summit of the range 
called Paryadres : now Kop Tagh), a mount- 
ain on the borders of Pontus and Colchis, from 
which the Greek troops of Cyrus under Xeno- 
phon first got a view of the sea (Euxine).] 

Thecoa or Tekoa (QeKoa, Joseph. : Qekue, 
LXX. : ruins at Tekua), a city of Judaea, on the 
edge of the desert, six miles south of Bethlehem, 
and twelve miles south of Jerusalem, was the 
birth-place of the prophet Amos. ( Vid. also 2 
Chron., xi.) In the time of Jerome it was a 
mere village. 

Thelpusa or Telphussa (QDiirovaa, Telyova- 
aa : Telfyovoiog : ruins near Vancna), a town in 
Arcadia, on the River Ladon. 

[Thelxiepeia, one of the Sirens. Vid. Sire- 

NBS.] 

[Thelxinoe, one of the earlier Muses. Vid. 
Mus^e.] 

Theman, a city of the Edomites, in Arabia 
Petraea, whose people were celebrated for their 
wisdom. 

Themis (Qepig), daughter of Ccelus (Uranus) 
and Terra (Ge). was married to Jupiter (Zeus), 
by whom she became the mother of the Horae, 
Eunomia, Dice (Astreea), Irene, and of the Mce- 
rae. In the Homeric poems. Themis is the per- 
sonification of the order of things established 
by law, custom, and equity, whence she is de- 
scribed as reigning in the assemblies of men, 
aud as convening, by the command of Jupiter 
(Zeus), the assembly of the gods. She dwells 
870 



in Olympus, and is on friendly terms with Juno 
(Hera). She is also described as a prophetic 
divinity, and is said to have been in possession 
of the Delphic oracle as the successor of Terra 
(Ge), and previous to Apollo. Nymphs believed 
to be daughters of Jupiter (Zeus) and Themis 
lived in a cave on the River Eridanus, and the 
Hesperides also are called daughters of Jupiter 
(Zeus) and Themis. She is often represented 
on coins resembling the figure of Minerva 
(Athena) with a cornucopia and a pair of scales. 

Themiscyra (QefiLGKvpa), a plain on the coast 
of Pontus, extending east of the River Iris, be- 
yond the Thermodon, celebrated from very an- 
cient times as the country of the Amazons. It 
was well watered, and rich in pasture. At the 
mouth of the Thermodon was a city of the same 
name, which had been destroyed by the time of 
Augustus. It is doubtful whether the present 
Thermeh occupies its site. Vid. Thermodon. 

Themison (Qe/LCL<7uv), a celebrated Greek phy- 
sician, and the founder of the medical sect of 
the Methodici, was a native of Laodicea in 
Syria, and lived in the first century B.C. He 
wrote several medical works, but of these only 
the titles and a few fragments remain. The 
physician mentioned by Juvenal was probably a 
contemporary of the poet, and consequently a 
different person from the founder of the Metho- 
dici. 

Themistius (QeuiGTiog), a distinguished phi- 
losopher and rhetorician, was a Paphlagonian, 
and flourished, first at Constantinople and after- 
ward at Rome, in the reigns of Constantius, 
Julian, Jovian, Valens, Gratian, and Theodosius. 
He enjoyed the favor of all ^pse emperors, and 
was promoted by them to the highest honors of 
the state. After holding various public offices, 
and being employed on many important em- 
bassies, he was made prefect of Constantinople 
by Theodosius, A.D. 384. So great was the 
confidence reposed in him by Theodosius, that, 
though Themistius was a heathen, the emperor 
intrusted his son Arcadius to the tutorship of 
the philosopher, 3S7. The life of Themistius 
probably did not extend beyond 390. Besides 
the emperors, he numbered among his friends 
the chief orators and philosophers of the age, 
Christian as well as heathen. Not only Liba- 
nius, but Gregory of Nazianzus also was his 
friend and correspondent, and the latter, in an 
epistle still extant, calls him the " king of argu- 
ments." The orations (koIltlkoI ?i6yoi) of The- 
mistius, extant in the time of Photius, were 
thirty-six in number, of which thirty-three have 
come down to us in the original Greek, and one 
in a Latin version. The other two were sup- 
posed to be lost, until one of them was discov- 
ered by Cardinal Maio, in the Ambrosian Libra- 
ry at Milan, in 1816. The best edition of the 
Orations is by Dindorf, Lips., 1832, 8vo. 

[Themisto (QeftLOTC)), of Cyprus, mother of 
Homer, according to one tradition.] 

Themistocles (Qe/LLioToic2,7j(;), the celebrated 
Athenian, was the son of Neocles and Abroto- 
non, a Thracian woman, and was born about 
B.C. 514. In his youth he had an impetuous 
character ; he displayed great intellectual pow- 
er combined with a lofty ambition and desire 
of political distinction. He began his career 
by setting himself in opposition to those who 



THEMISTOCLES. 



THEMISTOCLES. 



had most power, among whom Aristides was 
the chief. The fame which Miltiades acquired 
by his generalship at Marathon made a deep 
impression on Themistocles ; and he said that 
the trophy of Miltiades would not let him sleep. 
His rival Aristides was ostracized in 483, to 
which event Themistocles contributed ; and 
from this time he was the political leader in 
Athens. In 481 he was archon eponymus. It 
was about this time that he persuaded the Athe- 
nians to employ the produce of the silver mines 
of Laurium in building ships, instead of dis- 
tributing it among the Athenian citizens. His 
great object was to draw the Athenians to the 
sea, as he was convinced that it was only by 
their fleet that Athens could repel the Persians 
and obtain the supremacy in Greece. Upon 
the invasion of Greece by Xerxes, Themisto- 
cles was appointed to the eommand of the Athe- 
nian fleet ; and to his energy, prudence, fore- 
sight, and courage the Greeks mainly owed 
their salvation from the Persian dominion. Upon 
the approach of Xerxes, the Athenians, on 
the advice of Themistocles, deserted their city, 
and removed their women, children, and infirm 
persons to Salamis, ^Egina, and Troezen ; but, 
as soon as the Persians took possession of 
Athens, the Peloponnesians were anxious to re- 
tire to the Corinthian isthmus. Themistocles 
used all his influence in inducing the Greeks to 
remain and fight with the Persians at Salamis, 
and with the greatest difficulty persuaded the 
Spartan commander Eurybiades to stay at Sal- 
amis. But as soon as the fleet of Xerxes made 
its appearance, the Peloponnesians were again j 
anxious to sail away ; and when Themistocles j 
saw that he should be unable to persuade them j 
to remain, he sent a faithful slave to the Persian j 
commanders, informing them that the Greeks j 
intended to make their escape, and that the | 
Persians had nowthe opportunity of accomplish- j 
ing a noble enterprise, if they would only cut | 
off the retreat of the Greeks. The Persians 
believed what they were told, and in the night 
their fleet occupied the whole of the channel j 
between Salamis and the main land. The 
Greeks were thus compelled to fight ; and the ; 
result was the great and glorious victory, in 
which the greater part of the fleet of Xerxes 
was destroyed. This victory, which was due 
to Themistocles, established his reputation 
among the Greeks. On his visiting Sparta, he 
was received with extraordinary honors by the 
Spartans, who gave Eurybiades the palm of 
bravery, and to Themistocles the palm of wis- 
dom and skill, with a crown of olive, and the 
best chariot that Sparta possessed. The Athe- 
nians began to restore their ruined city after 
the barbarians had left the country, and The- \ 
mistocles advised them to rebuild the walls, and 
to make them stronger than before. The Spar- 
tans sent an embassy to Athens to dissuade 
them from fortifying their city, for which we 
can assign no motive except a miserable jeal- 
ousy. Themistocles, however, went on an em- 
bassy to Sparta, w T here he amused the Spartans 
with lies till the walls were far enough ad- 
vanced to be in a state of defence. It was 
upon his advice, also, that the Athenians forti- 
fied the port of Piraeus. The influence of The- 1 
mistocles does not appear to have survived the 



expulsion of the Persians from Greece and the 
fortification of the ports. He was probably just- 
ly accused of enriching himself by unfair means, 
for he had no scruples about the way of accom- 
plishing an end. A story is told that after the 
retreat of the fleet of Xerxes, when the Greek 
fleet was wintering at Pagasae, Themistocles 
told the Athenians in the public assembly that 
he had a scheme to propose which was benefi- 
cial to the state, but could not be expounded to 
the many. Aristides was named to receive 
the secret, and to report upon it. His report 
was that nothing could be more profitable than 
the scheme of Themistocles, but nothing more 
unjust ; and the Athenians abided by the report 
of Aristides. In 471 Themistocles was ostra- 
cized from Athens, and retired to Argos. After 
the discovery of the treasonable correspondence 
of Pausanias with the Persian king, the Lace- 
daemonians sent to Athens to accuse Themisto- 
cles of being privy to the design of Pausanias. 
Thereupon the Athenians sent off persons with 
the Lacedaemonians with instructions to arrest 
Themistocles (466). Themistocles, hearing of 
what was designed against him, first fled from 
Argos to Corcyra, and then to Epirus, where 
he took refuge in the house of Admetus, king 
of the Molossi, who happened to be from home. 
Admetus was no friend to Themistocles, but 
his wife told the fugitive that he would be pro- 
tected if he would take their child in his arms 
and sit on the hearth. The king soon came in, 
and, respecting his suppliant attitude, raised him 
up, and refused to surrender him to the Lace- 
daemonian and Athenian agents. Themistocles 
finally reached the coast of Asia in safety. 
Xerxes was now dead (465), and Artaxerxes 
was on the throne. Themistocles went up to 
visit the king at his royal residence ; and on 
his arrival he sent the king a letter, in which he 
promised to do the king a good service, and 
prayed that he might be allowed to wait a year, 
and then to explain personally what brought 
him there. In a year he made himself master 
of the Persian language and the Persian usages, 
and, being presented to the king, he obtained 
the greatest influence over him, and such as no 
Greek ever before enjoyed ; partly owing to his 
high reputation and the hopes that he gave to 
the king of subjecting the Greeks to the Per- 
sians. The king gave him a handsome allow- 
ance, after the Persian fashion ; Magnesia sup- 
plied him with bread nominally, but paid him an- 
nually fifty talents. Lampsacus supplied wine, 
and Myus the other provisions. Before he could 
accomplish any thing he died ; some say that 
he could not perform his promise to the king. 
A monument was erected to his memory in the 
Agora of Magnesia, which place was within his 
government. It is said that his bones were 
secretly taken to Attica by his relations, and 
privately interred there. Themistocles died in 
449, at the age of sixty-five. Themistocles un- 
doubtedly possessed great talents as a states- 
man, great political sagacity, a ready wit, and 
excellent judgment : but he was not an honest 
man ; and, like many other clever men with 
little morality, he ended his career unhappily 
and ingloriously, an exile and a traitor too. 
Twenty-one letters attributed to Themistocles 
are spurious. 

871 



THEMISTOGENES. 



THEODORETUS. 



Themistogenes (Qe/LtioroyevTis), of Syracuse, l 
is said by Xenophon (Hell., iii., 1, $ 2), to have ! 
written a work on the Anabasis of Cyrus ; but 
most modern writers, following the statement ' 
of Plutarch, suppose that Xenophon really re- 
fers to his own work, to which he prefixed the I 
name of Themistogenes. 

Theocles (QeoKAijg), son of Hegylus, was a 
Lacedaemonian statuary, and one of the dis- 
ciples of Dipoenus and Scyllis. He therefore 
flourished about B.C. 550. 

Theoclymenus (Geo/cAv/zevof), son of Poly- ! 
phides of Hyperasia, and a descendant of Me- 
lampus, was a soothsayer, and, in consequence j 
of a murder, was obliged to take to flight, and j 
came to Telemachus when the latter quitted j 
Sparta to return to Ithaca. 

Theocosmos (Qeonoofzog), of Megara, a statu- j 
ary, flourished about B.C. 435-430. 

Theocritus (QeonpiTog). 1. Of Chios, an or- 
ator, sophist, and perhaps an historian, in the I 
time of Alexander the Great. He was contem- j 
porary with Ephorus and Theopompus ; and the j 
latter was his fellow-citizen and political oppo- 
neat, Theopompus belonging to the aristocratic 
and Macedonian, and Theocritus to the demo- j 
cratic and patriotic party. Theocritus is said j 
to have also given deep offence to Alexander by 
the sarcastic wit, which appears to have been 
the chief cause of his celebrity, and which at ! 
last cost him his life. He was put to death by | 
Antigonus, in revenge for a jest upon the king's 
single eye. None of his works are extant with 
the exception of two or three epigrams, among 
which is a very bitter one upon Aristotle. — ! 
2. The celebrated bucolic poet, was a native of 
Syracuse, and the son of Praxagoras and Phi- 
linna. He visited Alexandrea during the latter 
end of the reign of Ptolemy Soter, where he re- 
ceived the instruction of Philetas and Asclepi- 
ades, and began to distinguish himself as a poet. 
His first efforts obtained for him the patronage 
of Ptolemy Philadelphus, who was associated 
in the kingdom with his father, Ptolemy Soter, 
in B.C. 285, and in whose praise, therefore, the 
poet wrote the fourteenth, fifteenth, and seven- 
teenth Idyls. At Alexandrea he became ac- 
quainted with the poet Aratus, to whom he ad- 
dressed his sixth Idyl. Theocritus afterward 
returned to Syracuse, and lived there under 
Hiero II. It appears from the sixteenth Idyl 
that Theocritus was dissatisfied, both with the 
want of liberality on the part of Hiero in reward- 
ing him for his poems, and with the political state 
of his native country. It may therefore be sup- 
posed that he devoted the latter part of his life 
almost entirely to the contemplation of those 
scenes of nature and of country life, on his rep- 
resentations of which his fame chiefly rests. 
Theocritus was the creator of bucolic poetry as 
a branch of Greek, and, through imitators, such 
as Virgil, of Roman literature. The bucolic 
idyls of Theocritus are of a dramatic and mi- 
metic character. They are pictures of the or- 
dinary life of the common people of Sicily ; 
whence their name, eldr], tld&Kkiit. The pasto- 
ral poems and romances of later times are a 
totally different sort of composition from the 
bucolics of Theocritus, who knows nothing of 
the affected sentiment, the pure innocence, and 
the primeval simplicity, which have been as- 
872 



cribed to the imaginary shepherds of a fictitious 
Arcadia. He merely exhibits simple and faith- 
ful pictures of the common life of the Sicilian 
people, in a thoroughly objective, although truly 
poetical spirit. Dramatic simplicity and truth 
are impressed upon the pictures exhibited in his 
poems, into the coloring of which he has thrown 
much of the natural comedy which is always 
seen in the common life of a free people. The 
collection, which has come down to us under the 
name of Theocritus, consists of thirty poems, 
called by the general title of Idyls, a fragment 
of a few lines from a poem entitled Berenice, and 
twenty-two epigrams in the Greek Anthology. 
But these Idyls are not all bucolic, and were 
not all written by Theocritus. Those idyls, 
of which the genuineness is the most doubtful, 
are the twelfth, seventeenth, eighteenth, nine- 
teenth, twentieth, twenty-sixth, twenty-sev- 
enth, twenty-ninth, and thirtieth. The dialect 
of Theocritus is a mixed or eclectic dialect, in 
which the new or softened Doric predominates. 
The best editions of Theocritus are by Kiess- 
ling, Lips., 1819, by Wiistemann, Gothas, 1830, 
[by Wordsworth, Camb., 1844, and by Ameis 
in the Poeta, Bucolici et Didactici, Paris, 1846.] 

Theodectes (QeodenTTjc), of Phaselis, in Pam- 
phylia, was a highly distinguished rhetorician 
and tragic poet in the time of Philip of Mace- 
don. He was the son of Aristander, and a pu- 
pil of Isocrates and Aristotle. The greater part 
of his life was spent at Athens, where he died 
at the age of forty-one. The people of his na- 
tive city honored the memory of Theodectes 
with a statue in their agora, which Alexander, 
when he stopped at Phaselis on his march to- 
ward Persia, crowned with garlands, to show 
his respect for the memory of a man who had 
been associated with himself by means of Aris- 
totle and philosophy. The passages of Aris- 
totle, in which Theodectes is mentioned, show 
the strong regard and high esteem in which he 
was held by the philosopher. Theodectes de- 
voted himself, during the first part of his life, 
entirely to rhetoric, and afterward he turned his 
attention to tragic poetry. He was a profes- 
sional teacher of rhetoric and composer of ora- 
tions for others, and was in part dependent on 
this profession for his subsistence. None of 
the works of Theodectes have come down to 
us. He wrote fifty tragedies, which were very 
popular among his contemporaries. His treatise 
on rhetoric is repeatedly referred to by the an- 
cient writers. 

Theodoretus (Qeo66p7]Toc), an eminent ec- 
clesiastic of the fifth century, was born at An- 
tioch about A.D. 393, and was made bishop of 
Cyrus, or Cyrrhus, a small city near the Eu- 
phrates, in 420 or 423. He was accused of be- 
ing a Nestorian, and was in consequence de- 
posed at the second council of Ephesus in 449 
but he was restored to his diocese at the coun- 
cil of Chalcedon, in 451, upon his anathemati- 
zing Nestorius and his doctrines. He appears 
to have died in 457 or 458. Theodoret was a 
man of learning and of sound judgment. The 
most important of his works are, 1. Commen- 
taries on various books of the Old and New 
Testaments, in which he adopts the method, 
not of a continuous commentary, but of propo- 
sing and solving those difficulties which h* 



THEODORIAS. 



THEODORUS. 



thinks likely to occur to a thoughtful reader. 

2. An Ecclesiastical History, in five books, in- 
tended as a continuation of the History of Eu- 
sebius. It begins with the history of Arianism, 
under Constantine the Great, and ends in 429. 

3. An apologetic treatise, intended to exhibit 
the confirmations of the truth of Christianity 
contained in the Gentile philosophy. 4. Ten 
Orations on Providence. The complete edi- 
tions of Theodoret are by Sirmond and Gamier, 
5 vols, fol., Paris, 1642-1684, and by Schulze 
and Noesselt, Halae Sax., 1769-1774, 5 vols, in 
ten parts, 8vo. 

Theodorias. Vid. Vacca. 

Theodoricus or Theodericus. 1. I. Kingof 
the Visigoths from A.D. 418 to 451, was the suc- 
cessor of Wallia, but appears to have been the 
son of the great Alaric. He fell fighting on the 
side of Aetius and the Romans at the great 
battle of Chalons, in which Attila was defeated, 
451.— 2. II. King of the Visigoths A.D. 452- 
466, second son of Theodoric I. He succeeded 
to the throne by the murder of his brother Tho- 
rismond. He ruled over the greater part of 
Gaul and Spain. He was assassinated in 466 
by his brother Euric, who succeeded him on the 
throne. Theodoric II. was a patron of letters 
and learned men. The poet Sidonius Apollina- 
ris resided for some time at his court. — 3. Sur- 
named the Great, king of the Ostrogoths, suc- 
ceeded his father Theodemir in 475. He was 
at first an ally of Zeno, the emperor of Constan- 
tinople, but was afterward involved in hostili- 
ties with the emperor. In order to get rid of 
Theodoric, Zeno gave him permission to invade 
Italy, and expel the usurper Odoacer from the 
country. Theodoric entered Italy in 489, and 
after defeating Odoacer in three great battles, 
laid siege to Ravenna, in which Odoacer took 
refuge. After a siege of three years, Odoacer 
capitulated, on condition that he and Theodoric 
should rule jointly over Italy ; but Odoacer was 
soon afterward murdered by his more fortunate 
rival (493). Theodoric thus became master of 
Italy, which he ruled for thirty-three years, till 
his death in 526. His long reign was prosper- 
ous and beneficent, and under his sway Italy 
recovered from the ravages to which it had been 
exposed for so many years. Theodoric was 
also a patron of literature ; and among his min- 
isters were Cassiodorus and Boethius, the two 
last writers who can claim a place in the litera- 
ture of ancient Rome. But prosperous as had 
been the reign of Theodoric, his last days were 
darkened by disputes with the Catholics, and 
by the condemnation and execution of Boethius 
and Symmachus, whom he accused of a con- 
spiracy to overthrow the Gothic dominion in 
Italy. His death is said to have been hastened 
by remorse. It is related that one evening, 
when a large fish was served on the table, he 
fancied that he beheld the head of Symmachus, 
and was so terrified that he took to his bed, and 
died three days afterward. Theodoric was 
buried at Ravenna, and a monument was erect- 
ed to his memory by his daughter Amalasun- 
tha. His ashes were deposited in a porphyry 
•vase, which is still to be seen at Ravenna. 

Theodobidas (Qeodwpidac), of Syracuse, a 
lyric and epigrammatic poet, who lived about 
B.C. 235. He had a place in the Garland of 



Meleager. There are eighteen of his epigrams 
in the Greek Anthology. 

Theodorus (Qeodupoc). 1. Of Byzantium, a 
rhetorician, and a contemporary of Plato, who 
speaks of him somewhat contemptuously. Ci- 
cero describes him as excelling rather in the 
theory than the practice of his art.— 2. A philos- 
opher of the Cyrenaic school, to one branch of 
which he gave the name of " Theodorians," 
Qeodupeloi. He is usually designated by ancient 
writers the Atheist. He was a disciple of the 
younger Aristippus, and was banished from Cy- 
rene, but on what occasion is not stated. He 
then went to Athens, and only escaped being 
cited before the Areopagus by the influence of 
Demetrius Phalereus. He was afterward ban- 
ished from Athens, probably with Demetrius 
(307), and went to Alexandrea, where he was 
employed in the service of Ptolemy, son of La- 
gus, king of the Macedonian dynasty in Egypt ; 
it is not unlikely that he shared the overthrow 
and exile of Demetrius. While in the service 
of Ptolemy, Theodorus was sent on an embassy 
to Lysimachus, whom he offended by the free- 
dom of his remarks. One answer which he 
made to a threat of crucifixion which Lysima- 
chus had used, has been celebrated by many 
ancient writers : " Employ such threats to those 
courtiers of yours ; for it matters not to Theo- 
dorus whether he rots on the ground or in the 
air." He returned at length to Gyrene, where 
he appears to have ended his days. — 3. An 
eminent rhetorician of the age of Augustus, was 
a native of Gadara, in the country east of the 
Jordan. He settled at Rhodes, where Tiberius, 
afterward emperor, during his retirement (B.C. 
6-A.D. 2) to that island, was one of his hearers. 
He also taught at Rome ; but whether his set- 
tlement at Rome preceded that at Rhodes is 
uncertain. Theodorus was the founder of a 
school of rhetoricians, called " Theodorei," as 
distinguished from « Apollodorei," or followers 
of Aptllodorus of Pergamus, who had been the 
tutor of Augustus Caesar at Apollonia. Theo- 
dorus wrote many works, all of which are lost. 
— 4. A Greek rrfbnk, surnamed Prodromus, who 
lived in the first half of the twelfth century. 
He was held in great repute by his contempo- 
raries as a scholar and philosopher, and wrote 
upon a great variety of subjects. Several of 
his works have come down to us, of which the 
following may be mentioned : 1. A metrical ro- 
mance, in nine books, on the loves of Rhodanthe 
and Dosicles, written in iambic metre, and ex- 
hibiting very little ability. 2. A poem entitled 
Galeomyomachia, in iambic verse, on " the battle 
of the mice and cat," in imitation of the Homeric 
Batrachomyomachia. This piece is often ap- 
pended to the editions of JEsop and Babrius. — 
5. The name of two ancient Samian artists. 
(1.) The son of Rhcecus, and brother of Tele- 
cles, flourished about B.C. 600, and was an ar- 
chitect, a statuary in bronze, and a sculptor in 
wood. He wrote a work on the Herseum at 
Samos, in the erection of which it may there- 
fore be supposed that he was engaged as well 
as his father. Or, considering the time which 
such a building would occupy, the treatise may 
perhaps be ascribed to the younger Theodorus, 
He was also engaged with his father in the 
I erection of the labyrinth of Lemnos ; and he 

873 



THEODOSIOPOLIS. 



THEODOSIUS. 



prepared the foundation of the temple of Diana Rome in triumph, accompanied by Valentiman 
(Artemis), at Ephesus. In conjunction with his and his own son Honorius. Two events in the 
brother Telecles, he made the wooden statue of life of Theodosius, about this time, may be men- 
Apollo Pythius for the Samians, according to ; tioned as evidence of his uncertain character 
the fixed rules of the hieratic style. — (2.) The and his savage temper. In 387, a riot took place 
son of Telecles, nephew of the elder Theodorus, i at Antioch, in which the statues of the emper- 
and grandson of Rhcecus, flourished about 560, j or, of his father, and of his wife were thrown 
:n the times of Crcesus and Polycrates, and ob- down; but these idle demonstrations were quick- 
tained such renown as a statuary in bronze, that ' ly suppressed by an armed force. When Theo- 
the invention of that art was ascribed to him, dosius heard of these riots, he degraded Antioch 
in conjunction with his grandfather. He also 1 from the rank of a city, stripped it of its pos- 
practicedtheartsofengravingmetals(ropet»T£K77, j sessions and privileges, and reduced it to the 
ctxlatura), and of gem-engraving ; his works in ' condition of a village dependent on Laodicea. 
those departments being celebrated gold and But, in consequence of the intercession of Anti- 
silver craters, and the ring of Polycrates. och and the senate of Constantinople, he par- 

Theodosiopolis (QeoAoglov-o/ac : probably doned the city, and all who had taken part in 
Erzcroum), a city of Armenia Major, south of \ the riot. The other event is an eternal brand 
the Araxes, and forty-two stadia south of the ■ of infamy on the name of Theodosius. In 390, 
mountain which contains the sources of the Eu- ■ while the emperor was at Milan, a serious riot 
phrates : built by Theodosius II. as a mountain broke out at Thessalonica, in which the impe- 
fortress : enlarged and strengthened by Anas- rial officer and several of his troops were mur- 
tasius and Justinian. Its position made it a dered. Theodosius resolved to take the most 
place of commercial importance. There were signal vengeance upon the whole city. An army 
other cities of the name, but none of any great of barbarians was sent to Thessalonica ; the 
consequence. people were invited to the games of the Circus : 

Theodosius. L Surnamed the Great, Ro- and as soon as the place was full, the soldiers 
man emperor of the East A.D. 378-395, was received the signal for a massacre. For three 
the son of the general Theodosius who re- hours the spectators were indiscriminately ex- 
stored Britain to the empire, and was beheaded posed to the fury of the soldiers, and seven thou- 
at Carthage in the reign of Valens, 376. The sand of them, or, as some accounts say, more 
future emperor was born in Spain about 346. than twice that number, paid the penalty of the 
He received a good education ; and he learned insurrection. St. Ambrose, the archbishop of 
the art of war under his own father, whom he Milan, represented to Theodosius his crime in a 
accompanied in his British campaigns. During letter, and told him that penitence alone could 
his father's lifetime he was raised to the rank efface his guilt. Accordingly, when the emper- 
ofDuke (dux) of Mossia, where he defeated the or proceeded to perform his devotions in the 
Sarmatians (374), and saved the province. On usual manner in the great church of Milan, the 
the death of his father, he retired, before court archbishop stopped him at the door, and demand- 
intrigues, to his native country. He acquired a ed an acknowledgment of his guilt. The con- 
considerable military reputation in the lifetime science-struck Theodosius humbled himself be- 
of his father; and after the death of Valens, fore the Church, which has recorded his penance 
who fell in battle against the Goths, he was pro- as one of its greatest victories. He laid aside 
claimed Emperor of the East by Gratian^ who the insignia of imperial power, and in the pos- 
felt himself unable to sustain the burden of the ture of a suppliant, in the church of Milan, en- 
empire. The Roman empire in the East was treated pardon for his great sin before all the 
then in a critical position ; for t!fe Romans were congregation. After eight months, the emperor 
disheartened by the bloody defeat which they \ was restored to communion with the church, 
had sustained, and the Goths were insolent in Theodosius spent three years in Italy, during 
their victory. Theodosius, however, showed which he established Yalentinian II. on the 
himself equal to the difficult position in which ( throne of the West. He returned to Constan- 
he was placed ; he gained two signal victories tinople toward the latter end of 391. Valentin- 
over the Goths, and concluded a peace with the ian was slain in 392 by Arbogastes, who raised 
barbarians in 382. In the following year (3S3) Eugenius to the empire of the West. This in- 
Maximus assumed the imperial purple in Brit- volved Theodosius in a new war ; but it ended 
ain, and invaded Gaul with a powerful army, in the defeat and death both of Eugenius and 
In the war which followed Gratian was slain ; Arbogastes in 394. Theodosius died at Milan, 
and Theodosius, who did not consider it prudent four months after the defeat of Eugenius, on the 
to enter into a contest with Maximus, acknowl- 17th of January, 395. His two sons, Arcadius 
edged the latter emperor of the countries of and Honorius. had already been elevated to the 
Spain, Gaul, and Britain, but he secured to Va- rank of Augusti, and it was arranged that the 
lentinian, the brother of Gratian, Italy, Africa, empire should be divided betweenlhem, Arca- 
and Western Ulyricum. But when Maximus dius having the East, and Honorius the West, 
expelled Yalentinian from Italy in 387, Theo- Theodosius was a firm Catholic, and a fierce 
dosius espoused the cause of the latter, and opponent and persecutor of the Arians and all 
marched into the West at the head of a pow- heretics. It was in his reign, also, that the 
erful army. After defeating Maximus in Pan- formal destruction of paganism took place ; and 
nonia, Theodosius pursued him across the Alps we still possess a large number of the laws of 
to Aquileia. Here Maximus was surrendered Theodosius, prohibiting the exercise of the pa- 
by his own soldiers to Theodosius, and was put gan religion, and forbidding the heathen worship 
to death. Theodosius spent the winter at Mi- under severe penalties, in some cases extending 
lan. and in the following year (389) he entered to death. — II. Roman emperor of the East, A.D 



THEODOTA. 



THEOPHANES. 



408-450, was born in 401, and was only seven 
years of age at the death of his father Arcadius, 
whom he succeeded. Theodosius was a weak 
prince ; and his sister Pulcheria, who became 
his guardian in 417, possessed the virtual gov- 
ernment of the empire during the remainder of 
his long reign. The principal external events 
in the reign of Theodosius were the war with 
the Persians, which only lasted a short time 
(421-422), and was terminated by a peace for 
one hundred years, and the war with the Huns, 
who repeatedly defeated the armies of the em- 
peror, and compelled him, at length, to conclude 
a disgraceful peace with them in 447 or 448. 
Theodosius died in 450, and was succeeded by 
his sister Pulcheria, who prudently took for her 
colleague in the empire the senator Marcian, 
and made him her husband. Theodosius had 
been married, in 421, to the accomplished Athe- 
nais, the daughter of the sophist Leontius, who 
received at her baptism the name of Eudocia. 
Their daughter Eudoxia was married to Valen- 
tinian III., the emperor of the West. In the 
reign of Theodosius and that of Valentinian III. 
was made the compilation called the Codex Theo- 
dosianus. It was published in 438. It consists 
of sixteen books, which are divided into titles, 
with appropriate rubricas or headings ; and the 
constitutions belonging to each title are ar- 
ranged under it in chronological order. The 
first five books comprise the greater part of the 
constitution which relates to Jus Privatum ; the 
sixth, seventh, and eighth books contain the law 
that relates to the constitution and administra- i 
tion ; the ninth book treats of criminal law ; the ; 
tenth and eleventh treat of the public revenue i 
and some matters relating to procedure ; the ! 
twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth, and fifteenth ! 
Dooks treat of the constitution, and the admin- ' 
istration of towns and other corporations ; and 
the sixteenth contains the law relating to ec- j 
clesiastical matters. The best edition of this 
Code, with a commentary, is that of J. Gotho- 
fredus, which was edited after his death by A. 
Marville, Lyon, 1665, six vols. fol. ; and after- ! 
ward by Ritter, Leipzig, 1736-1745, fol. The 
best edition of the text alone is that by Hanel, | 
in the Corpus Juris A?itejustintancum, Bonn, 
1837.— III. Literary. 1. Of Bithynia, a mathe- 
matician, mentioned by Strabo and by Vitruvi- 
-us, the latter of whom speaks of him as the in- 
ventor of a universal sun-dial. — 2. Of Tripolis, 
a mathematician and astronomer of some dis- 
tinction, who appears to have flourished later 
than the reign of Trajan. He wrote several 
works, of which the three following are extant, 
and have been published. 1. Zyaipind, a treat- 
ise on the properties of the sphere, and of the 
circles described on its surface. 2. Uepl f/fiepuv 
not vvktuv. 3. ITepi o'm^aeuv. 

Theodqsta (Qeodon]), an Athenian courtesan, 
and one of the most celebrated persons of that 
class in Greece, is introduced as a speaker in 
Xenophon's Memorabilia (iii., 11). She at last 
attached herself to Alcibiades, and, after his 
murder, she performed his funeral rites. 

Theognis (Geoywf). 1. Of Megara,an ancient 
elegiac and gnomic poet, is said to have flour- 
ished B C. 548 or 544. He may have been born 
about 570, and would therefore have been eighty 
at the commencement of the Persian wars, 490, ! 



at which time we know, from his own writings, 
that he was alive. Theognis belonged to the 
oligarchical party in his native city, and in its 
fates he shared. He was a noble by birth, and 
all his sympathies were with the nobles. They 
are, in his poems, the dyadoi and kcdloi, and the 
commons the Hanoi and deiloi, terms which, in 
fact, at that period, were regularly used in this 
political signification, and not in their later eth- 
ical meaning. He was banished with the lead- 
ers of the oligarchical party, having previously 
been deprived of all his property ; and most of 
his poems were composed while he was an ex- 
ile. Most of his political verses are addressed 
to a certain Cyrnus, the son of Polypas. The 
other fragments of his poetry are of a social, 
most of them of a festive character. They place 
us in the midst of a circle of friends, who formed 
a kind of convivial society : all the members of 
this society belonged to the class whom the poet 
calls " the good." The collection of gnomic 
poetry, which has come down to us under the 
name of Theognis, contains, however, many 
additions from later poets. The genuine frag- 
ments of Theognis contain much that is highly 
poetical in thought, and elegant as well as for- 
cible in expression. The best editions are by 
Bekker, Lips., 1815, and second ed., 1827, 8vo .; 
by Welcker, Francof, 1826, 8vo ; and by Orel- 
lius, Turic., 1840, 4to. — 2. A tragic poet, con- 
temporary with Aristophanes, by whom he is 
satirized. 

Theon (Qiov). 1. The name of two mathe- 
maticians who are often confounded together. 
The first is Theon the elder, of Smyrna, best 
known as an arithmetician, who lived in the 
time of Hadrian. The second is Theon the 
younger, of Alexandrea, the father of Hypatia. 
best known as an astronomer and geometer, 
who lived in the time of Theodosius the elder. 
Both were heathens, a fact which the date of 
the second makes it desirable to state ; and 
each held the Platonism of his period. Of The- 
on of Smyrna, all that we have left is a portion 
of a work entitled Tuv Kara padrjuaTLK^v XPV 01 -' 
puv etc T V V tov fll-drovog dvdyvuaiv. The por- 
tion which now exists is in two books, one on 
arithmetic and one on music : there was a third 
on astronomy, and a fourth, TLepl rfjc Kocpu dp- 
fioviaq. The best edition is by Gelder, Leyden, 
1827. Of Theon of Alexandrea the following 
works have come down to us : 1. Scholia on 
Aratus. 2. Edition of Euclid. 3. Commentary 
on the Almagest of Ptolemy, addressed to his 
son Epiphanius. 4. Commentary on the Tables 
of Ptolemy.— 2. ^Elius Theon, of Alexandrea, a 
sophist and rhetorician of uncertain date, wrote 
several works, of which one, entitled Progym- 
nasmata (Ilpoyvp.vdap.ara), is still extant. It is 
a useful treatise on the proper system of prep- 
aration for the profession of an orator, accord- 
ing to the rules laid down by Hermogenes and 
Aphthonius. One of the best editions is by 
Finckh, Stuttgard, 1834.— 3. Of Samos, a paint- 
er, who flourished from the time of Philip on- 
ward to that of the successors of Alexander. 
The peculiar merit of Theon was his prolific 
fancy. 

Theonoe (Qeovotj), daughter of Proteus and 
Psammathe, also called Idothea. Vid. Idothea. 
Theophanes (9eo<pdvT}£). 1. Cn. Pompeius 

875 



THEOPHILUS. 



THEOPHRASTUS. 



Theophanes, of Mytilene, in Lesbos, a learned 
Greek, and one of the most intimate friends of 
Pompey. Pompey appears to have made his ac- 
quaintance during the Mithradatic war, and soon 
became so much attached to him that he pre- 
sented to him the Roman franchise in the pres- 
ence of his army, after a speech in which he 
eulogized his merits. This occurred about B.C. 
62 ; and in the course of the same year The- 
ophanes obtained from Pompey the privileges 
of a free state for his native city, although it 
had espoused the cause of Mithradates. The- 
ophanes came to Rome with Pompey ; and on 
the breaking out of the civil war, he accompa- 
nied his patron to Greece. Pompey appointed 
him commander of the Fabri, and chiefly con- 
sulted him and Lucceius on all important mat- 
ters in the war, much to the indignation of the 
Roman nobles. After the battle of Pharsalia, 
Theophanes fled with Pompey from Greece, and 
it was owing to his advice that Pompey went 
to Egypt. After the death of his patron, The- 
ophanes took refuge in Italy, and was pardoned 
by Caesar. After his death, the Lesbians paid 
divine honors to his memory. Theophanes 
wrote the history of Pompey's campaigns, in 
which he represented the exploits of his patron 
in the most favorable light. — 2. M. Pompeius 
Theophanes, son of the preceding, was sent to 
Asia by Augustus, in the capacity of procurator, 
and was, at the time that Strabo wrote, one of 
the friends of Tiberius. The latter emperor, 
however, put his descendants to death toward 
the end of his reign, A.D. 33, because their an- 
cestor had been one of Pompey's friends, and 
had received after his death divine honors from 
the Lesbians. — 3. A Byzantine historian, flour- 
ished most probably in the latter part of the 
sixth century of our era. He wrote, in ten 
books, the history of the Eastern empire dur- 
ing the Persian war under Justin II., from A.D. 
567 to 581. The work itself is lost, but some 
extracts from it are preserved by Photius. — 4. 
Also a Byzantine historian, lived during the 
second half of the eighth century and the early 
part of the ninth. In consequence of his sup- 
porting the cause of image worship, he was 
banished by Leo the Armenian to the island of 
Samothrace, where he died in 818. Theopha- 
nes wrote a Chronicon, which is still extant, 
beginning at the accession of Diocletian in 277, 
and coming down to 811. It consists, like the 
Chronica of Eusebius and of Syncellus, of two 
parts, a history arranged according to years, 
and a chronological table, of which the former 
is very superior to the latter. It is published 
in the Collections of the Byzantine writers, Par- 
is, 1655, fol., Venet., 1729, fol. 

Theophilus (Qeoyiloc). 1. An Athenian com- 
ic poet, most probably of the Middle Comedy. — 
2. An historian and geographer, quoted by Jo- 
sephus, Plutarch, and Ptolemy.— 3. Bishop of 
Antioch in the latter part of the second century 
of our era, and the author of one of the early 
apologies for Christianity which have come 
down to us. This work is in the form of a let- 
ter to a friend, named Autolycus, who was still 
a heathen, but a man of extensive reading and 
great learning. It was composed A.D. 180, a 
year or two before the death of Theophilus. 
The best edition is that by Wolf, Hamb., 1724, 
876 



| 8vo. — 4. Bishop of Alexandrea in the latter part 
of the fourth and the beginning of the fifth cen- 
turies of our era, and distinguished for his per- 
secutions of the Origenists and for his hostility 
to Chrysostom. He died A.D. 412. A few re- 
mains of his works have come down to us. — 5. 
One of the lawyers of Constantinople who were 
employed by Justinian on his first Code, on the 
Digest, and on the composition of the Insti- 
tutes. Vid. Justinianus. Theophilus is the au- 
thor of the Greek translation or paraphrase of 
the Institutes of Justinian which has come 
down to us. It is entitled 'Ivorirovra Qsotyilov 
'A.VTiKevcupoc, Instituta Theophili Antecensoris. 
It became the text for the Institutes in the 
East, where the Latin language was little 
known, and entirely displaced the Latin text. 
The best edition is by Reitz, Haag., 1751, 2 vols. 
4to. — 6. Theophilus Protospatharius, the au- 
thor of several Greek medical works, which are 
still extant. Protospatharius was originally a 
military title given to the colonel of the body- 
guards of the Emperor of Constantinople (Spath- 
arii), but afterward became also a high civil dig- 
nity. Theophilus probably lived in the seventh 
century after Christ. Of his works the two 
most important are, 1. Uepl rfjs rov 'AvdpoTrov 
KaTaonEvrje, De Corporis Humani Fabrica, an an- 
atomical and physiological treatise in five books. 
The best edition is by Greenhill, Oxon., 1842, 
8vo. 2. Uspl Ovpuv, De Urinis, of which the 
best edition is by Guidot, Lugd. Bat., 1703 (and 
1731), 8 vo. 

Theophrastus (QeoQpaaroc), the Greek phi- 
losopher, was a native of Eresus in Lesbos, and 
studied philosophy at Athens, first under Plato, 
and afterward under Aristotle. He became the 
favorite pupil of Aristotle, who is said to have 
changed his original name of Tyrtamus to Theo- 
phrastus (or the Divine Speaker), to indicate the 
fluent and graceful address of his pupil ; but 
this tale is scarcely credible. Aristotle named 
Theophrastus his successor in the presidency 
of the Lyceum, and in his will bequeathed to 
him his library and the originals of his own 
writings. Theophrastus was a worthy success- 
or of his great master, and nobly sustained the 
character of the school. He is said to have had 
two thousand disciples, and among them such 
men as the comic poet Menander. He was 
highly esteemed by the kings Philippus, Cas- 
sander, and Ptolemy, and was not the less the 
object of the regard of the Athenian people, a« 
was decisively shown when he was impeached 
of impiety ; for he was not only acquitted, but 
his accuser would have fallen a victim to his 
calumny, had not Theophrastus generously in- 
terfered to save him. Nevertheless, when the 
philosophers were banished from Athens in 
B.C. 305, according to the law of Sophocles, 
Theophrastus also left the city, until Philo, a 
disciple of Aristotle, in the very next year 
brought Sophocles to punishment, and procured 
| the repeal of the law. From this time Theo- 
I phrastus continued to teach at Athens with- 
! out any further molestation till his death. He 
I died in 287, having presided over the Lyceum 
| about thirty-five years. His age is differently 
stated. According to some accounts, he lived 
eighty-five years ; according to others, one 
hundred and seven years. He is said to have 



THEOPHYLACTUS. 



THEOPOMPUS. 



closed his life with the complaint respecting 
the short duration of human existence, that it 
ended just when the insight into its problems 
was beginning. The whole population of Ath- 
ens took part in his funeral obsequies. He be- 
queathed his library to Neleus of Scepsis. Theo- 
phrastus exerted himself to carry out the philo- 
sophical system of Aristotle, to throw light upon 
the difficulties contained in his books, and to 
fill up the gaps in them. With this view he 
wrote a great number of works, the great ob- 
ject of which was the development of the Aris- 
totelian philosophy. Unfortunately, most of 
these works have perished. The following are 
alone extant: 1. Characteres (r/dtKoi xapaiaijpec), 
in thirty chapters, containing descriptions of vi- 
cious characters. 2. A treatise on sensuous 
perception and its objects (ire pi alodrjceuc [nal 
aiadnruv']). 3. A fragment of a work on meta- 
physics (tuv fisra ~a dvaiKo.). 4. On the History 
of Plants (Trepl fvruv iaroplag), in ten books, 
one of the earliest works on botany which have 
come down to us. 5. On the Causes of Plants 
(ncpl (pvruv ainuv), originally in eight books, of 
which six are still extant. 6. Of Stones (-n-epl 
?u6uv). The best editions of the complete works 
of Theophrastus are by Schneider, Lips., 1818- 
21, 5 vols., and by Wimmer, Vratislavise, 1842, 
of which, however, the first volume has only 
yet appeared. The best separate edition of the 
Characteres is by Ast, Lips., 1816. 

Theophylactus (QeofvlanToc). 1. Surnamed 
Simocatta, a Byzantine historian, lived at Con- 
stantinople, where he held some public offices 
under Heraclius, about A.D. 610-629. His chief 
work is a history of the reign of the Emperor 
Maurice, in eight books, from the death of Ti- 
berius n. and the accession of Maurice in 582, 
down to the murder of Maurice and his chil- 
dren by Phocas in 602 The best edition of 
this work is by Bekker, Bonn, 1834, 8vo. There 
is also extant another work of Theophylactus, 
entitled Quastiones Physicce, of which the best 
edition is by Boissonade, Paris, 1835, 8vo — 2. 
Archbishop of Bulgaria, flourished about A.D. 
1070 and onward, is celebrated for his com- 
mentaries on the Scriptures, which are founded 
on the commentaries of Chrysostom, and are of 
considerable value. 

Theopompus (9f onoinroc). 1 . King of Sparta, 
reigned about B.C. 770-720. He is said to have 
established the ephoralty, and to have been 
mainly instrumental in bringing the first Mes- 
senian war to a successful issue. — 2. Of Chios, 
a celebrated Greek historian, was the son of 
Damasistratus and the brother of Caucalus, the 
rhetorician. He was born about B.C. 378. He 
accompanied his father into banishment, when 
the latter was exiled on account of his espous- 
ing the interests of the Lacedaemonians, but he 
was restored to his native country in the forty- 
fifth year of his age (333), in consequence of 
the letters of Alexander the Great, in which he 
exhorted the Chians to recall their exiles. In 
what year Theopompus quitted Chios with his 
father is uncertain ; but we know that before he 
left his native country, he attended the school i 
of rhetoric which Isocrates opened at Chios, ! 
and that he profited so much by the lessons of j 
his great master as to be regarded by the an- 
cients as the most distinguished of all his schol- 1 



i ars. Ephorus the historian was a fellow-si u- 
; dent with him, but was of a very different char- 
\ acter ; and Isocrates used to say of them, that 
, Theopompus needed the bit and Ephorus the 
j spur. In consequence of the advice of Isocra- 
j tes, Theopompts did not devote his oratorical 
j powers to the pleading of causes, but gave his 
| chief attention to the study and composition of 
| history. Like his master Isocrates, however, 
he composed many orations of the kind called 
Epideictic by the Greeks, that is, speeches on 
set subjects delivered for display, such as eu- 
logiums upon states and individuals. Thus in 
352 he contended at Halicarnassus with Nau- 
crates and his master Isocrates for the prize 
of oratory, given by Artemisia in honor of her 
husband, and gained the victory. On his re- 
turn to Chios in 333, Theopompus, who was a 
j man of great wealth as well as learning, nat- 
I urally took an important position in the state ; 
j but his vehement temper, and his support of 
the aristocratical party, soon raised against 
him a host of enemies. Of these, one of the 
most formidable was the sophist Theocritus 
As long as Alexander lived, his enemies dared 
not take any open proceedings against Theo- 
pompus ; and even after the death of the Mace- 
j donian monarch he appears to have enjoyed for 
some years the protection of the royal house. 
Theopompus was supported by Alexander, and 
after his death by the royal house ; but he 
was eventually expelled from Chios as a dis 
turber of the public peace, and fled to Egypt 
to Ptolemy about 305, being at the time sev- 
enty-five years of age. We are informed that 
Ptolemy not only refused to receive Theo- 
pompus, but would even have put him to death 
as a dangerous busy-body, had not some of his 
friends interceded for his life. Of his further 
fate we have no particulars. None of the 
works of Theopompus have come down to us, 
but the following were his chief works : 1. 'EA- 
InviKal ioropiai or livvrat-ic 'EA&ywiodw, A His- 
tory of Greece, in twelve books, which was a 
continuation of the history of Thucydides. It 
commenced in B.C. 411, at the point where the 
history of Thucydides breaks off, and embraced 
a period of seventeen years, down to the battle 
of Cnidus in 394. 2. ^iTiiirmiid, also called 
'ItTToplai (/car' efo^jyv), The History of Philip, 
father of Alexander the Great, in fifty-eight 
books, from the commencement of his reign, 360, 
to his death, 336. This work contained numer- 
ous digressions, which in fact formed the great- 
er part of the whole work; so that Philip V., 
king of Macedonia, was able, by omitting them 
and retaining only what belonged to the proper 
subject, to reduce the work from fifty-eight 
books to sixteen. Fifty-three of the fifty-eight 
books of the original work were extant in the 
ninth century of the Christian era, and were 
read by Photius, who has preserved an abstract 
of the twelfth book. 3. Orationes, which were 
chiefly Panegyrics, and what the Greeks called 
LvfiCov^evTiKol Xoyoi. Of the latter kind, one of 
the most celebrated was addressed to Alexan- 
der on the state of Chios. Theopompus is 
praised by ancient writers for his diligence and 
accuracy, but is at the same time said to have 
taken more pleasure in blaming than in com- 
mending ; and many of his judgments respect- 

877 



THEOXENIUS. 



THERICLES. 



ing events and characters were expressed with 
such acrimony and severity that several of the 
ancient writers speak of his malignity, and call 
him a reviler. The style of Theopompus was 
formed on the model of Isocrates, and possess- 
ed the characteristic merits arM defects of his 
master. It was pure, clear, and elegant, but 
deficient in vigor, loaded with ornament, and in 
general too artificial. The best collections of 
the fragments of Theopompus are by Wichers, 
Lugd. Bat., 1829, and by C. and Theod. Muller, 
in the Fragmenta Historicorum Grcecoi-um, Paris, 
1841. — 3. An Athenian comic poet, of the Old 
and also of the Middle Comedy, was the son of 
Theodectes or Theodoras, or Tisamenus. He 
wrote as late as B.C 380. His extant frag- 
ments contain examples of the declining purity 
of the Attic dialect. 

Theoxenius (Qeotjivioc), a surname of Apollo 
and Mercury (Hermes). Respecting the festi- 
val of the Theoxenia, vid. Diet, of Antiq., s. v. 

Theka (Qijpa : Qrjpalog : now Santorin), an isl- 
and in the JEgean Sea, and the chief of the Spo- 
rades, distant from Crete seven hundred stadia, 
and twenty-five Roman miles south of the island 
of Ios. It is described by Strabo as two hund- 
red stadia in circumference, but by modern 
travellers as thirty-six miles, and in figure ex- 
actly like a horse-shoe. Thera is clearly of 
volcanic origin. It is covered at the present 
day with pumice-stone ; and the rocks are burn- 
ed and scorched. It is said to have been form- 
ed by a clod of earth thrown from the ship Argo, 
and to have received the name of Calliste when 
it first emerged from the sea. Therasia, a 
small island to the west, and called at the pres- 
ent day by the same name, was torn away from 
Thera by some volcanic convulsion. Thera is 
said to have been originally inhabited by Phoe- 
nicians, but was afterward colonized by Lace- 
daemonians and Minyans of Lemnos, under the 
guidance of the Spartan Theras, who gave his 
name to the island. In B.C. 631 Battus con- 
ducted a colony from Thera to Africa, where he 
founded the celebrated city of Cyrene. Thera 
remained faithful to the Spartans, and was one 
of the few islands which espoused the Spartan 
cause at the commencement of the Peloponne- 
sian war. 

Therambo (QepdfiSu, also Qpd/iBoc), a town of 
Macedonia on the peninsula Pallene. 

Theramenes {QripaixevTjc), an Athenian, son 
of Hagnon, was a leading member of the oli- 
garchical government of the Four Hundred at 
Athens in B.C. 411. In this, however, he does 
not appear to have occupied as eminent a sta- 
tion as he had hoped to fill, while, at the same 
time, the declaration of Alcibiades and of the 
army at Samos against the oligarchy made it 
evident to him that its days were numbered. 
Accordingly he withdrew from the more violent 
aristocrats, and began to cabal against them ; 
and he subsequently took not only a prominent 
part in the deposition of the Four Hundred, but 
came forward as the accuser of Antiphon and 
Archeptolemus, who had been his intimate 
friends, but whose death he was now the mean 
and cowardly instrument in procuring. At the 
battle of Arginusse in 406, Theramenes held a 
subordinate command in the Athenian fleet, and 
he was one of those who, after the victory, were 



commissioned by the generals to repair to the 
scene of action and save as many as possible 
of the disabled galleys and their crews. A 
storm, it is said, rendered the execution of the 
order impracticable ; yet, instead of trusting to 
this as his ground of defence, Theramenes 
thought it safer to divert the popular anger from 
himself to others ; and it appears to have been 
chiefly through his machinations that the six 
generals who had returned to Athens were con- 
demned to death. After the capture of Athens 
by Lysander, Theramenes was chosen one of 
the Thirty Tyrants (404). He endeavored to 
check the tyrannical proceedings of his col- 
leagues, foreseeing that their violence would be 
fatal to the permanence of their power. His 
opposition, however, had no effect in restrain- 
ing them, but only induced the desire to rid 
themselves of so troublesome an associate, 
whose former conduct, moreover, had shown that 
no political party could depend on him, and who 
had earned, by his trimming, the nickname of 
Kodopvoc — a boot which might be worn on either 
foot. He was therefore accused by Critias be- 
fore the council as a traitor, and when his nom- 
inal judges, favorably impressed by his able de- 
fence, exhibited an evident disposition to acquit 
him, Critias introduced into the chamber a num- 
ber of men armed with daggers, and declared 
that, as all who were not included in the priv- 
ileged Three Thousand might be put to death 
by the sole authority of the Thirty, he struck 
j the name of Theramenes out of that list, and 
condemned him with the consent of all his col- 
leagues. Theramenes then rushed to the altar, 
I which stood in the council-chamber, but was 
| dragged from it and carried off to execution. 
When he had drunk the hemlock, he dashed 
out the last drops from the cup, exclaiming, 
"This to the health of the lovely Critias!" 
Both Xenophon and Cicero express their ad- 
miration of the equanimity which he displayed 
in his last hour ; but surely such a feeling is 
sadly out of place when directed to such a man. 

Therapnje (Qepa7rvai, also Oepdirv7j, Dor. 0e- 
pdirva : Qepairvaloc). 1. A town in Laconia, on 
j the left bank of the Eurotas, and a little above 
J Sparta. It received its name from Therapne. 
| daughter of Lelex, and is celebrated in mythol- 
[ ogy as the birth-place of Castor and Pollux, and 
j contained temples of these divinities as well as 
j temples of Menelaus and Helen, both of whom 
j were said to be buried here. — 2. A town in Bce- 
otia, on the road from Thebes to the Asopus. 

[Therapne (QepdTzvri). Vid. Therapne, No. 
1-] 

Theras. Vid. Thera. 
Therasia. Vid. Thera. 
Thericles (Q7jpLKl?jc), a Corinthian potter, 
whose works obtained such celebrity that they 
became known throughout Greece by the name 
of Qr]piK?,Eia (sc. TcoTr/pia) or KvAinec Qrjpin/.eLa: 
(or -ai), and these names were applied not only 
to cups of earthen-ware, but also to those of 
: wood, glass, gold, and silver. Some scholars 
| make Thericles a contemporary of Aristopha- 
nes ; but others deny the existence of Thericles 
altogether, and contend that the name of these 
vases is a descriptive one, derived from the 
figures of animals (tif/pia) with which they were 
; adorned. 



THERM A. 



THESEUS. 



Therma (Otp/it} : Qepnaloc), a town in Mace- 
donia, afterward called Thessalonica {vid. Thes- 
salonica), situated at the northeastern extrem- 
ity of a great gulf of the ^Egean Sea, lying be- 
tween Thessaly and the peninsula Chalcidice, 
and called ThermaIcus or Therm^eus Sinus 
(Qepfialoc noXnog), from the town at its head. 
This gulf was also called Macedonicus Sinus : 
its modern name is Gulf of Saloniki. 

Thermae (Qepfiat), a town in Sicily, built by 
the inhabitants of Himera after the destruction 
of the latter city by pie Carthaginians. For 
details, vid. Himera. 

Thermaicus Sinus. Vid. Therma. 

THERM0D0N(6ep/i£j(5cj»; : now Thermeh), a river 
of Pontus, in the district of Themiscyra, the 
reputed country of the Amazons, rises in a 
mountain called Amazonius Mons (and still 
called Mason Dagh), near Phanaroea, and falls 
into the sea aboutthirty miles east of the mouth 
of the Iris, after a short course, but with so 
large a body of water, that its breadth, accord- 
ing to Xenophon, was three plethra (above three 
hundred feet), and it was navigable. At its 
mouth was the city of Themiscyra ; and there 
is still, on the western side of the mouth of the 
Thermeh, a place of the same name, Thermeh. 

Thermopylae, often called simply Pyl^: (9ep- 
uonvlai, Ylvlai), that is, the Hot Gates, or the 
Gates, a celebrated pass leading from Thessaly 
into Locris. It lay between Mount (Eta and 
an inaccessible morass, forming the edge of the 
Maliac Gulf. At one end of the pass, close to 
Anthela, the mountain approached so close to 
the morass as to leave room for only a single 
carriage between ; this narrow entrance formed 
the western gate of Thermopylae. About a 
mile to the east the mountain again approached 
close to the sea, near the Locrian town of Al- i 
peni, thus forming the eastern gate of Ther- 
mopylae. The space between these two gates 
was wider and more open, and was distinguish- 
ed by its abundant flow of hot springs, which 
were sacred to Hercules : hence the name of 
the place. Thermopylae was the only pass by 
which an enemy could penetrate from northern 
into Southern Greece, whence its great import- 
ance in Grecian history. It is especially cele- 
brated on account of the heroic defence of Le- 
onidas and the three hundred Spartans against 
the mighty host of Xerxes ; and they only fell 
through the Persians having discovered a path j 
over the mountains, and thus being enabled to j 
attack the Greeks in the rear. This mountain 
path commenced from the neighborhood of 
Trachis, ascended the gorge of the River Aso- 
pus and the hill called Anopaea, then crossed 
the crest of CEta, and descended in the rear of 
Thermopylae, near the town of Alpeni. 

Thermum or Therma (Qf.pu.ov or ra Qtpfia), 
a town of the ^Etolians, near Stratus, with warm 
mineral springs, was regarded for some time as 
the capital of the country, since it was the place 
of meeting of the ^Etolian confederacy. 

Thermus, Minucius. 1. Q., served under 
Scipio as tribunus militum in the war against 
Hannibal in Africa in B.C. 202 ; was tribune 
of the plebs 201 ; curule aedile 197 ; and praetor 
196, when he carried on war with great success 
in Nearer Spain. He was consul in 193, and 
carried on war against the Ligurians in this and 



the two following years. On his return to Rome 
in 190, a triumph was refused him, through the 
influence of M. Cato, who delivered on the oc 
casion his two orations entitled Dc decern Homin 
ibus and De falsis Pugnis. Thermus was killed 
in 188, while fighting under Cn. Manlius Vulso 
against the Thracians. — 2. M., propraetor in 81, 
accompanied L. Murena, Sulla's legate, into 
Asia. Thermus was engaged in the siege of 
Mytilene, and it was under him that Julius Cae- 
sar served his first campaign and gained his 
first laurels. — 3. Q., propraetor 51 and 50 in Asia, 
where he received many letters from Cicero, 
who praises his administration of the province. 
On the breaking out of the civil war he espous- 
ed the side of Pompey. 

Theron (Qr/puv), tyrant of Agrigentum in 
Sicily, was the son of ^Enesidemus, and de- 
scended from one of the most illustrious fam- 
ilies in his native city. He obtained the su- 
preme power about B.C. 488, and retained it 
till his death in 472. He conquered Himera in 
482, and united this powerful city to his own 
dominions. He was in close alliance with Gc- 
lon, ruler of Syracuse and Gela, to whom he 
had given his daughter Demarete in marriage ; 
and he shared with Gelon in the great victor/ 
gained over the Carthaginians in 480. On the 
death of Gelon in 478, Theron espoused the 
cause of Polyzelus, who had been driven into 
exile by his brother Hieron. Theron raised an 
army for the purpose of reinstating him, but 
hostilities were prevented, and a peace con- 
cluded between the two sovereigns. 

Thersander (Qepoavdpoc), son of Polynices 
and Argia, and one of the Epigoni, was married 
to Demonassa, by whom he became the father 
of Tisamenus. He went with Agamemnon to 
Troy, and was slain in that expedition by Tele- 
phus. His tomb was shown at Elaea in Mysia, 
where sacrifices were offered to him. Virgil 
(Mn., ii., 261) enumerates Thersander among 
the Greeks concealed in the wooden horse. 
Homer does not mention him. 

[Thersilochus (Qepail.oxoc ), a Paeonian chief- 
tain, an ally of the Trojans, killed by Achilles.] 

ThersItes (QepoiTTjc), son of Agrius, the most 
deformed [and ugliest of the Greeks that came 
beneath the walls of Troy, and, at the same 
time, the most loquacious busy-body and fault- 
finder in the Greek army. He was especially 
fond of abusing Achilles and Ulysses ; and, on 
one occasion, having assailed Agamemnon him- 
self with his revilings, Ulysses inflicted sum- 
mary punishment upon him with his sceptre in 
the assembly of the Greeks, and caused him to 
sit down quietly.] According to the later poets, 
he was killed by Achilles because he had ridi- 
culed him for lamenting the death of Penthe- 
silea, queen of the Amazons. 

Theseus (Orjoevg), the great legendary hero 
of Attica, was the son of vEgeus, king of Athens, 
and of JSthra, the daughter of Pittheus, king 
of Trcezen. He was brought up at Trcezen ; 
and when he reached maturity, he took, by his 
mother's directions, the sword and sandals, the 
tokens which had been left by iEgeus, and pro- 
ceeded to iUhens. Eager to emulate Hercules, 
he went by land, displaying his prowess by de- 
stroying the robbers and monsters that infested 
the country. Periphetes, Sinis, Phaea the Crom 

879 



THESEUS. 



THESPLE. 



myonian sow, Sciron, Cercyon, and Procrustes 
fell before him. At Athens he was immediately 
recognized by Medea, who laid a plot for poison- 
ing him at a banquet to which he was invited. 
By means of the sword which he carried, The- 
seus was recognized by JEgeus, acknowledged 
as his son, and declared his successor. The 
sons of Pallas, thus disappointed in their hopes 
of succeeding to the throne, attempted to se- 
cure the succession by violence, and declared 
war ; but, being betrayed by the herald Leos, 
were destroyed. The capture of the Maratho- 
nian bull, which had long laid waste the sur- 
rounding country, was the next exploit of The- 
seus. After this Theseus went of his own ac- 
cord as one of the seven youths, whom the 
Athenians were obliged to send every year, 
with seven maidens, to Crete, in order to be 
devoured by the Minotaur. When they arrived 
at Crete, Ariadne, the daughter of Minos, be- 
came enamored of Theseus, and provided him 
with a sword with which he slew the Minotaur, 
and a clew of thread by which he found his way 
out of the labyrinth. Having effected his ob- 
ject, Theseus sailed away, carrying off Ariadne. 
There were various accounts about Ariadne ; 
but, according to the general account, Theseus 
abandoned her in the island of Naxos on his 
way home. Vid. Ariadne. He was generally 
believed to have had by her two sons, CEnopion 
and Staph) 7 lus. As the vessel in which The- 
seus sailed approached Attica, he neglected to 
hoist the white sail, which was to have been 
the signal of the success of the expedition ; 
whereupon JEgeus, thinking that his son had 
perished, threw himself into the sea. Vid. 
^Egeus. Theseus thus became King of Athens. 
One of the most celebrated of the adventures 
of Theseus was his expedition against the Ama- 
zons. He is said to have assailed them before 
they had recovered from the attack of Hercules, 
and to have carried off their queen Antiope. 
The Amazons, in their turn, invaded Attica, 
and penetrated into Athens itself; and the final 
battle in which Theseus overcame them was 
fought in the very midst of the city. By An- 
tiope Theseus was said to have had a son named 
Hippolytus orDemophoon, and after her death to 
have married Phaedra. ( Vid. Hippolytus, Phae- 
dra.) Theseus figures in almost all the great 
heroic expeditions. He was one of the Argo- 
nauts (the anachronism of the attempt of Me- 
dea to poison him does not seem to have been 
noticed) ; he joined in the Calydonian hunt, 
and aided Adrastus in recovering the bodies 
of those slain before Thebes. He contracted 
a close friendship with Pirithous, and aided 
him and the Lapithae against the Centaurs. 
With the assistance of Pirithous he carried 
off Helen from Sparta while she was quite a 
girl, and placed her at Aphidnae, under the 
care of iEthra. In return, he assisted Pirith- 
ous in his attempt to carry off Proserpina (Per- 
sephone) from the lower world. Pirithous per- 
ished in the enterprise, and Theseus was kept 
in hard durance until he was delivered by Her- 
cules. Meantime Castor and Pollux invaded 
Attica, and carried off Helen and JEthra, Aca- 
demus having informed the brothers where 
they were to be found. ( Vid. Academus.) Me- 
nestheus also endeavored to incite the peo- 
880 



pie against Theseus, who, on his return, found 
himself unable to re-establish his authority, 
and retired to Scyros, where he met with a 
treacherous death at the hands of Lycomedes 
The departed hero was believed to have ap- 
peared to aid the Athenians at the battle of 
Marathon. In 469 the bones of Theseus were 
discovered by Cimon in Scyros, and brought to 
Athens, where they were deposited in a temple 
(the Theseum) erected in honor of the hero. A 
considerable part of this temple still remains, 
forming one of the most interesting monuments 
of Athens. A festival in honor of Theseus was 
celebrated on the eighth day of each month, es- 
pecially on the eighth of Pyanepsion. There can. 
be no doubt that Theseus is a purely legendary 
personage. Nevertheless, in later times the 
Athenians came to regard him as the author of 
a very important political revolution in Attica. 
Before his time Attica had been broken up into 
twelve petty independent states or townships, 
acknowledging no head, and connected only by 
i a federal union. Theseus abolished the sep- 
arate governments, and erected Athens into the 
; capital of a single commonwealth. The festival 
of the Panathenaea was instituted to commem- 
orate this important revolution. Theseus is 
said to have established a constitutional govern- 
ment, retaining in his own hands only certain, 
definite powers and functions. He is further 
I said to have distributed the Athenian citizens 
| into the three classes of Eupatridae, Geomori. 
and Demiurgi. It would be a vain task to at- 
tempt to decide whether there is any historical 
basis for the legends about Theseus, and still 
; more so to endeavor to separate the historical 
from the legendary in what has been preserved. 
The Theseus of the Athenians was a hero who 
; fought the Amazons, and slew the Minotaur, 
and carried off Helen. A personage who should 
j be nothing more than a wise king, consolidating 
! the Athenian commonwealth, however possible 
\ his existence might be, would have no historical 
j reality. The connection of Theseus with Po- 
seidon (Neptune), the national deity of the Ionic 
tribes, his coming from the Ionic town Troezen. 
forcing his way through the Isthmus into Atti- 
| ca, and establishing the Isthmia as an Ionic 
Panegyris, rather suggest that Theseus is, at 
; least in part, the mythological representative of 
! an Ionian immigration into Attica, which, add- 
■ ing, perhaps, to the strength and importance of 
Ionian settlers already in the country, might 
! easily have led to that political aggregation of 
\ the disjointed elements of the state which is 
; assigned to Theseus. 

Thesmia or Thesmophoros (Qeaula, Qeajuotj>6- 
poc), that is, "the law-giver," a surname of De- 
| meter (Ceres) and Persephone (Proserpina), in 
honor of whom the Thesmophoria were cele- 
| brated at Athens in the month of Pyanepsion. 

Thespi^3 or Thespia (QearreLai, Qeamal, Qsa- 
j iTEia, QicTua : Qectttievc, Qeo-Kiadrjc, Thespiensis : 
now Eremo or Rimokastro), an ancient town in 
Bceotia, on the southeastern slope of Mount Hel- 
icon, at no great distance from the Crissaean 
Gulf. Its inhabitants did not follow the exam- 
ple of the other Boeotian towns in submitting 
to Xerxes, and a number of them bravely fought 
under Leonidas at Thermopylae, and perished 
with the Spartans. Their city was burned to 



THESPIS. 



THESSALIA. 



the ground by the Persians, but was subse- 
quent rebuilt. In the Peloponnesian war the 
Thebans made themselves masters of the town. 
At Thespiae was preserved the celebrated mar- 
ble statue of Eros by Praxiteles, who had given 
it to Phryne, by whom it was presented to her 
native town. Vid. Praxiteles. From the vi- 
cinity of the town to Mount Helicon the Muses 
are called Thespiades, and Helicon itself is 
named the Thcspia rapes. 

Thespis (Qeo-ruc), the celebrated father of 
Greek tragedy, was a contemporary of Pisistra- 
tus, and a native of Icarus, one of the demi in 
Attica, where the worship of Bacchus (Diony- 
sus) had long prevailed. The alteration made 
by Thespis, and which gave to the old tragedy 
a new and dramatic character, was very simple 
but very important. He introduced an actor, 
for the sake of giving rest to the chorus, and 
independent of it, in which capacity he proba- 
bly appeared himself, taking various parts in 
the same piece, under various disguises, which 
he was enabled to assume by means of the linen 
masks, the invention of which is ascribed to 
him. The first representation of Thespis was 
in B.C. 535. For further details, vid. Diet, of 
Antiq., art. Tragcedia. 

Thespius (QeoiTioe), son of Erechtheus, who, 
according to some, founded the town of Thes- 
pise in Bceotia. His descendants are called 
Thespiada. 

Thesproti (Qec-puroi), a people of Epirus, 
inhabiting the district called after them Thes- 
protia (QeairpuTla) or Thesprotis (QeairpuTic), 
which extended along the coast from the Am- 
bracian Gulf northward as far as the River Thy- 
amis, and inland as far as the territory of the 
Molossi. The southeastern part of the country 
on the coast, from the River Acheron to the 
Ambracian Gulf, was called Cassopaea, from the 
town Cassope, and is sometimes reckoned a 
distinct district. The Thesproti were the most 
ancient inhabitants of Epirus, and are said to 
have derived their name from Thesprotus, the 
son of Lycaon. They were Pelasgians, and 
their country was one of the chief seats of the 
Pelasgic nation. Here was the oracle of Dodo- 
na, the great centre of the Pelasgic worship. 
From Thesprotia issued the Thessalians, who 
took possession of the country afterward called 
Thessaly. In the historical period the Thes- 
protians were a people of small importance, 
having become subject to the kings of the Mo- 
lossians. 

Thessalia (QeaaaAia or QerraXia : Qecaa/Mc 
or GfrraAdf), the largest division of Greece, was 
bounded on the north by the Cambunian Mount- 
ains, which separated it from Macedonia ; on 
the west by Mount Pindus, which separated it 
from Epirus ; on the east by the ^Egean Sea ; 
and on the south by the Maliac Gulf and Mount 
GEta, which separated it from Locris, Phocis, 
and ^Etolia. Thessaly Proper is a vast plain, 
lying between the Cambunian Mountains on 
the north and Mount Othrys on the south, 
Mount Pindus on the west, and Mounts Ossa and 
Pelion on the east. It is thus shut in on every 
side by mountain barriers, broken only at the 
northeastern corner by the valley and defile 
of Tempe, which separates Ossa from Olym- 
pus, and is the only road through which an in- 
56 



vader can enter Thessaly from the west. This 
plain is drained by the River Pcnous and its 
affluents, and is said to have been originally a 
vast lake, the waters of which were afterward 
carried off through the Vale of Tempe by some 
sudden convulsion, which rent the rocks of 
this valley asunder. The Lake of Ncssonis, at 
the foot of Mount Ossa, and that of Bxbcis, at 
the foot of Mount Pelion, are supposed to have- 
been remains of this vast lake. In addition to 
the plain already described, there were two 
other districts included under the general name 
of Thessaly : one called Magnesia, being a long, 
narrow strip of country, extending along the 
coast of the JEgean Sea from Tempe to the 
Pagasacan Gulf, and bounded on the west by 
Mounts Ossa and Olympus ; and the other be- 
ing a long narrow vale at the extreme south 
of the country, lying between Mounts Othrys 
and CEta, and drained by the River Sperche- 
us. Thessaly is said to have been originally 
known by the names of Pyrrha, JEmonw, and 
JEolis. The two former appellations belong 
to mythology ; the latter refers to the period 
when the country was inhabited by .Eolians, 
who were afterward expelled from the coun- 
try by the Thessalians about sixty years after 
the Trojan war. The Thessalians are said to 
have come from Thesprotia ; but at what pe- 
riod their name became the name of the coun- 
try can not be determined. It does not occur 
in Homer, who only mentions the several prin- 
cipalities of which it was composed, and does 
not give any general appellation to the country. 
Thessaly was divided in very early times into 
four districts or tetrarchies, a division which 
we still find subsisting in the Peloponnesian 
war. These districts were Hcsticr.otis, Pelasgio- 
tis, Thessaliotis, and Phthiotis. They comprised, 
however, only the great Thessalian plain ; and 
besides them, we find mention of four other dis- 
tricts, viz., Magnesia, Dolopia, (Etcea, and Malis. 
Thus there were eight districts altogether. 
Perrhazbia was, properly speaking, not a district, 
since Perrhaebi was the name of a Pelasgic 
people settled in Hestiaeotis and Pelasgiotis. 
Vid. Perrhaebi. 1. Hestiaeotis ('Eariaiunc or 
'Ectiutic), inhabited by the Hcsticedtaz ('EcTtai- 
urai or 'Eotlutcii), the northwestern part of 
Thessaly, bounded on the north by Macedonia, 
on the west by Epirus, on the east by Pelasgi- 
otis, and on the south by Thessaliotis : the Pe- 
neus may be said in general to have formed its 
southern limit— 2. Pelasgiotis {UelaoyL&TiQ), 
inhabited by the Pdasgidtaz (Yle?MayiuTai), the 
eastern part of the Thessalian plain, was bound- 
ed on the north by Macedonia, on the west by 
Hestiaeotis, on the east by Magnesia, and on the 
south by the Sinus Pagasseus and Phthiotis. 
The name shows that it was originally inhabited 
by Pelasgians ; and one of the chief towns in 
the district was Larissa, which was of Pelas- 
gic origin. — 3. Thessaliotis (QeacaliCjTLc), the 
southwestern part of the Thessalian plain, so 
called because it was first occupied by the Thes- 
salians who came from Thesprotia. It was 
bounded on the north by Hestiaeotis, on the 
west by Epirus, on the east by Pelasgiotis, and 
on the south by Dolopia and Phthiotis. — 4. 
Phthiotis {QdiuTie), inhabited by the Phthibta. 
(QOiutcll), the southeast of Thessaly, bounded 

881 



THESSALIA. 



THESSALONICA. 



on the north by Thessaliotis, on the west by 
Dolopia, on the south by the Sinus Maliacus, 
and on the east by the Pagasoean Gulf. Its in- 
habitants were Achaeans, and are frequently 
called the Achaean Phthiotae. It is in this dis- 
trict that Homer places Phthia and Hellas 
Proper, and the dominions of Achilles. — 5. Mag- 
nesia. Vid. Magnesia. — 6. Dolopia (AoAoTrm), 
inhabited by the Dolopes (A6Ao7ref), a small dis- 
trict bounded on the east by Phthiotis, on the 
north by Thessaliotis, on the west by Athama- 
nia, and on the south by CEtaea. They were 
an ancient people, for they are not only men- 
tioned by Homer as fighting before Troy, but 
they also sent deputies to the Amphictyonic as- 
sembly. — 7. (Et\ea (Ohala), inhabited by the 
(Etcei (Ohatoi) and Mnianes (kivLuveg), a dis- 
trict in the upper valley of the Spercheus, lying 
between Mounts Othrys and (Eta, and bounded 
on the north by Dolopia, on the south by Phocis, 
and on the east by Malis. — 8. Malis. Vid. Ma- 
lis.— History of Thessaly. The Thessalians, as 
we have already seen, were a Thesprotian tribe. 
Under the guidance of leaders, who are said to 
have been descendants of Hercules, they in- 
vaded the western part of the country, afterward 
called Thessaliotis, and drove out or reduced to 
the condition of Penestae or bondsmen the an- 
cient ^Eolian inhabitants. The Thessalians 
afterward spread over the other parts of the 
country, compelling the Perrhaebi, Magnetes, 
Achaean Phthiotae, etc., to submit to their au- 
thority and pay them tribute. The population 
of Thessaly, therefore, consisted, like that of 
Laconia, of three distinct classes: 1. The Pe- 
nestae, whose condition was nearly the same as 
that of the Helots. 2. The subject people, cor- 
responding to the Periceci of Laconia. 3. The 
Thessalian conquerors, who alone had any share 
in the public administration, and whose lands 
were cultivated by the Penestae. For some 
time after the conquest, Thessaly was governed 
by kings of the race of Hercules ; but the kingly 
power seems to have been abolished in early 
times, and the government in the separate cities 
became oligarchical, the power being chiefly in 
the hands of a few great families "descended 
from the ancient kings. Of these, two of the 
most powerful were the Aleuada? and the Sco- 
padae, the former of whom ruled at Larissa, and 
the latter at Cranon or Crannon. These nobles 
had vast estates cultivated by the Penestae ; 
they were celebrated for their hospitality and 
princely mode of life ; and they attracted to 
their courts many of the poets and artists of 
Southern Greece. At an early period the Thes- 
salians were united into a confederate body. 
Each of the four districts into which the coun- 
try was divided probably regulated its affairs 
by some kind of provincial council; and, when 
occasion required, a chief magistrate was elect- 
ed under the name of Tagus (Tayog), whose 1 
commands were obeyed by all the four districts. 
His command was of a military rather than of 
a civil nature, and he seems to have been ap- { 
pointed only in case of war. We do not know 
the extent of his constitutional power, nor the | 
time for which he held his office ; probably j 
neither was precisely fixed, and depended on j 
the circumstances of the time and character of I 
the individual. This confederacv, however. 
882 



was not of much practical benefit to the Thes- 
salian people, and appears to have been onlv 
used by the Thessalian nobles as a means of 
cementing and maintaining their power. The 
Thessalians never became of much importance 
in Grecian history. They submitted to the Per- 
sians on their invasion of Greece, and they ex- 
ercised no important influence on Grecian af- 
fairs till after the end of the Peloponnesian war. 
About this time the power of the aristocratical 
families began to decline, and Lycophron, who 
had established himself as a tyrant at Pherae, 
offered a formidable opposition to the great aris- 
tocratical families, and endeavored to extend 
his power over all Thessaly. His ambitious 
schemes were realized by Jason, the successor, 
and probably the son of Lycophron, who caused 
himself to be elected Tagus about B.C. 374. 
While he lived the whole of Thessaly was 
united as one political power, and he began to 
aim at making himself master of all Greece, 
when he was assassinated in 370. The office 
of Tagus became a tyranny under his success- 
ors, Polydorus, Polyphron, Alexander, Tisiphon, 
and Lycophron ; but at length the old aristo- 
cratical families called in the assistance of 
Philip of Macedonia, who deprived Lycophron 
of his power in 353, and restored the ancient 
government in the different towns. The coun- 
try, however, only changed masters ; for a few 
years later (344) Philip made it completely sub- 
ject to Macedonia, by placing at the head of the 
four divisions of the country governors devoted 
to his interests, and probably members of the 
ancient noble families, who had now become 
little better than his vassals. From this time 
Thessaly remained in a state of dependence 
upon the Macedonian kings, till the victory of 
T. Flamininus at Cynoscephalae in 197 again 
gave them a semblance of independence under 
the protection of the Romans. 

Thessalonica (QecaaXovtKi)), daughter of 
Philip, the father of Alexander the Great, by his 
wife or concubine Nicesipolis of Pherae. She 
was taken prisoner by Cassander along with 
Olympias on the capture of Pydna in B.C. 317 ; 
and Cassander embraced the opportunity to 
connect himself with the ancient royal house 
of Macedonia by marrying her. By Cassander 
she became the mother of three sons, Philip, 
Antipater, and Alexander ; and her husband 
paid her the honor of conferring her name upon 
the city of Thessalonica, which he founded on 
the site of the ancient Therma. (Vid. below.) 
After the death of Cassander, Thessalonica was 
put to death by her son Antipater, 295. 

Thessalonica (Qeaaa^ovLKT], also QeocaJ.ovi- 
neia : QeaaaXovucEvg : now Saloniki), more an- 
ciently Therma {Qepfi7] : Qepfialog), an ancient 
city in Macedonia, situated at the northeastern 
extremity of the Sinus Thermaicus. Under 
the name of Therma it was not a place of much 
importance. It was taken and occupied by the 
Athenians a short time before the commence- 
ment of the Peloponnesian war (B.C. 432), but 
was soon afterward restored by them to Per- 
diccas. It was made an important city by Cas- 
sander, who collected in this place the inhabit- 
ants of several adjacent towns (about B.C. 
315), and who gave it the name of Thessalo- 
nica, in honor of his wife, the daughter of Philip 



THESSALUS. 



THILSAPHATA. 



and sister of Alexander the Great. From this 
time it became a large and flourishing city. Its 
harbor was well situated for commercial inter- 
course with the Hellespont and the JEgean ; 
and under the Romans it had the additional ad- 
vantage of lying on the Via Egnatia, which led 
from the western shores of Greece to Byzant ium 
and the East. It was visited by the Apostle 
Paul about A.D. 53 ; and about two years after- 
ward he addressed from Corinth two epistles 
to his converts in the city. Thessalonica con- 
tinued to be, under the empire, one of the most 
important cities of Macedonia; and at a later 
time it became the residence of the prefect, and 
the capital of the Illyrian provinces. It is cele- 
brated at this period on account of the fearful 
massacre of its inhabitants by order of Theodo- 
sius, in consequence of a riot in which some of 
the Roman officers had been assassinated by 
the populace. Vid. Theodosius. 

[Thessalus (Qeaaa?.6g). 1. Son of Hercu- 
les and Chalciope (the daughter of Eurypylus, 
king of Cos), and father of Phidippus and Anti- 
phus. — 2. An eminent tragic actor in the time 
of Alexander the Great, whose special favor he 
enjoyed, and whom he served before his acces- 
sion to the throne, and afterward accompanied 
on his expedition into Asia.] 

Thessalus (Qeaaaloc.) 1. A Greek physi- 
cian, son of Hippocrates, passed some of his 
time at the court of Archelaus, king of Mace- 
donia, who reigned B.C. 413-399. He was one 
of the founders of the sect of the Dogmatici, 
and is several times highly praised by Galen, 
who calls him the most eminent of the sons 
of Hippocrates. He was supposed by some of 
the ancient writers to be the author of several 
of the works that form part of the Hippocratic 
Collection, which he might have compiled from 
notes left by his father. — 2. Also a Greek phy- 
sician, was a native of Tralles in Lydia, and 
one of the founders of the medical sect of the 
Methodici. He lived at Rome in the reign of 
the Emperor Nero, A.D. 54-68, to whom he 
addressed one of his works ; and here he died 
and was buried, and his tomb was to be seen 
in Pliny's time on the Via Appia. He consid- 
ered himself superior to all his predecessors ; 
he asserted that none of them had contributed 
anything to the advance of medical science, and 
boasted that he could himself teach the art of 
healing in six months. He is frequently men- 
tioned by Galen, but always in terms of contempt 
and ridicule. None of his works are extant. 

Thestius (Qegtloc), son of Mars (Ares) and 
Demonice or Androdice, and, according to oth- J 
ers, son of Agenor, and grandson of Pleuron, the j 
king of iEtolia. He was the father of Iphiclus, j 
Euippus, Plexippus, Eurypylus, Leda, Althaea, 
and Hypermnestra. His wife is not the same | 
in all traditions, some calling her Leucippe or 
Laophonte, a daughter of Pleuron, and others 
Deidamla. The patronymic Thestiades is 
given to his grandson Meleager, as well as to 
his sons, and the female patronymic Thestias 
to his daughter Althaea, the mother of Melea- 
ger. 

Thestor (QecTup). 1. Son of Idmon and 
Laothoe, and father of Calchas, Theoclyme- j 
nus, Leucippe, and Theonoe. The patronymic , 
Thestorides is frequently given to his son I 



Calchas. — [2. A Trojan warrior, son of Enops 

slain by Patroclus.] 

Thetis (Qtric), one of the daughters of Ne- 
reus and Doris, was the wife of Peleus, by 
whom she became the mother of Achilles. As 
a marine divinity, she dwelt like her sisters, 
the Nereids, in the depth of the sea, with her 
father Nereus. She there received Bacchus 
(Dionysus) on his flight from Lycurgus, and 
the god, in his gratitude, presented her with a 
golden urn. When Hephaestus (Vulcan) was 
thrown down from heaven, he was likewise re- 
ceived by Thetis. She had been brought up by 
Hera (Juno), and when she reached the age of 
maturity, Zeus (Jupiter) and Hera (Juno)°gave 
her, against her will, in marriage to Peleus 
Poseidon (Neptune) and Zeus (Jupiter) himself 
are said by some to have sued for her hand ; but 
when Themis declared that the son of Thetis 
would be more illustrious than his father, both 
gods desisted from their suit. Others state 
that Thetis rejected the offers of Zeus (Jupiter), 
because she had been brought up by Hera 
(Juno) ; and the god, to revenge himself, de- 
creed that she should marry a mortal. Chiron 
then informed Peleus how he might gain pos- 
session of her, even if she should metamorphose 
herself; for Thetis, like Proteus, had the power 
of assuming any form she pleased ; and she had 
recourse to this means of escaping from Peleus, 
but the latter, instructed by Chiron, held the 
goddess fast till she again assumed her proper 
form, and promised to marry him. The wed- 
ding of Peleus was honored with the presence 
of all the gods, with the exception of Eris or 
Discord, who was not invited, and who avenged 
herself by throwing among the assembled gods 
the apple, which was the source of so much 
misery. Vid. Paris. After Thetis had become 
the mother of Achilles, she bestowed upon him 
the tenderest care and love. Vid. Achilles. 

Theupolis (Q£ovtto?us), a later name given to 
the city of Antioch in Syria, on account of its 
eminence in the early history of Christianity. 

Theuprosopon (Qsov rcpocunov, i. e., the face 
of a god: now Ras-esh-Shukch ; Arab. Wejeh- 
el-Khiar, i. e., a face of stone), a lofty rugged 
promontory on the coast of Phcenice, between 
Tripolis and Byblus, formed by a spur of Leb- 
anon, and running far out to sea. Some travel- 
lers have fancied that they can trace in its side 
view that resemblance to a human profile Avhich 
its name implies. 

Theveste {QeoveaTTj: ruins at Tebcssa), a con- 
siderable city of Northern Africa, on the frontier 
of Numidia and Byzacena, at the centre of sev- 
eral roads. It was of comparatively late ori- 
gin, and a Roman colony. Among its recently 
discovered ruins are a fine triumphal arch and 
the old walls of the city, the circuit of which 
was large enough to have contained forty thou- 
sand inhabitants. 

Thia (Qeia), daughter of Ccelus (Uranus) and 
Terra (Ge), one of the female Titans, became by 
Hyperion the mother of Helios, Eos (Aurora), 
and Selene, that is, she was regarded as the 
deity from whom all light proceeded. 

[Thibron. Vid. Thimbron ] 

Thilsaphata (now probably Tell Afad, be- 
tween Mosul and Sinjar), a town of Mesopota- 
mia near the Tigris. 



THILUTHA. 



THOON. 



Thilutha, a fort in the south of Mesopotamia, 
on an island in the Euphrates. Some identify 
it with Olabus, and that with the fort now called 
Zobia or Juba in about 34° north latitude. 

[Thimbkox (Ocfi6p(ov) or TuiBHoy (Qidpuv). 1. 
A Lacedaemonian, was sent as harmost in B.C. 
400, with an army of five thousand men, to aid 
the Ionians against Tissaphernes. He arrived 
in Asia about the time of the return of the Greek 
mercenaries of Cyrus from Upper Asia, and at 
once engaged them to serve with him against 
Tissaphernes and Pharnabazus. With their 
aid he captured several cities. — 2. A Lacedae- 
monian, an officer under Harpalus, Macedonian 
satrap of Babylon. After his death he got pos- 
session of his treasures, fleet, and army, and 
laid siege to Cyrene in Africa. He took their 
port Apollonia, and would have succeeded but 
for the desertion of his officer Mnasicles, under 
whose direction the Cyreneans recovered most 
of what they had previously lost. A force having 
been sent against him from Egypt under Ophel- 
ias, he was defeated, and soon after fell into the 
hands of some Libyans, by whom he was deliv- 
ered up, taken to Apollonia, and crucified.] 

ThinuE or Thina (Qivac, Qlva), a chief city of 
the Sin^e, and a great emporium for the silk and 
wool trade of the extreme East. Some seek it 
on the eastern coast of China, others on the 
southeastern coast of Cochin- China. 

ThiodImas {Qeto6d t uac), father of Hylas, and 
King of the Dryopes. 

This (Qle : Qiv'iTng), a great city of Upper 
Egypt, capital of the Thinites Nomos, and the 
seat of some of the ancient dynasties. It was 
either the same place as Abydcs (No. 2), or 
was so near it as to be entirely supplanted by 
Abydus. 

Thisbe (QiaSn), a beautiful Babylonian maid- 
en, beloved by Pyramus. The lovers, living in 
adjoining houses, often secretly conversed with 
each other through a hole in the wall, as their 
parents would not sanction their marriage. 
Once they agreed upon a rendezvous at the 
tomb of Ninus. Thisbe arrived first, and, while 
she was waiting for Pyramus, she perceived a 
lioness which had just torn to pieces an ox, and 
took to flight. While running she lost her gar- 
ment, which the lioness soiled with blood. In 
the mean time Pyramus arrived, and, finding her 
garment covered with blood, he imagined that 
she had been murdered, and made away with 
himself under a mulberry-tree, the fruit of which 
henceforth was as red as blood. Thisbe, who 
afterward found the body of her lover, likewise 
killed herself. 

Thisbe, afterward Thisbe (Qia6n, QioSai : 
BioBatog, Qiofievc : now Kakosia), a town of 
Bceotia, on the borders of Phocis, and between 
Mount Helicon and the Corinthian Gulf. It was 
famed for its number of wild pigeons, which 
are still found in abundance in the neighbor- 
hood of Kakosia. 

ThIsoa {QiLaba : Oeioodrvg), a town in Ar- 
cadia, on Mount Lycaeus, called after a nymph 
of the same name. 

[Thius (Qeiovc, now Kutufarina), a river in 
Northern Laconia, which joins the Alpheus on 
the borders of Arcadia.] 

Thmuis {QpLovic : ruins at Tmaie, near Man- 
sourah), a city of Lower Egypt, on a canal on 
884 



i the eastern side of the Mendesian mouth of the 

! Nile. It was a chief seat of the worship of the 
god Mendes (the Egyptian Pan), under the sym- 

\ bol of a goat ; and, according to Jerome, the 
word Thmuis signifies goat. It was the chief 

| city of the Nomos Thmuites, which was after- 
ward united with the Mendesian Nomos. 

Thoaxtea, a surname of the Taurian Artemis, 
derived from Thoas, king of Tauris. 

Thoas (Qoac.) 1. Son of Andraemon and 
Gorge, was king of Calydon and Pleuron, in 
-Etolia, and sailed with forty ships against Troy. 
— 2. Son of Bacchus (Dionysus) and Ariadne, 
was king of Lemnos, and married to Myrina, by 
whom he became the father of Hypsipyle and 
Sicinus. When the Lemnian women killed all 
the men in the island, Hypsipyle saved her 
father Thoas, and concealed him. Afterward, 
however, he was discovered by the other wom- 
en and killed ; or, according to other accounts, 
he escaped to Taurus, or to'the island of CEnoe 
near Eubcea, which was henceforth called Si- 
cinus. The patronymic Thoantias is given to 
Hypsipyle, as the daughter of Thoas.— 3. Son 
of Borysthenes, and king of Tauris, into whose 
dominions Iphigenia was carried by Diana (Ar- 
temis) when she was to >iave been sacrificed. 
— [4. Son of Jason and Hypsipyle, grandson of 
No. 2, according to Homer, while others called 
him Deiphilus or Nebrophonus. — 5. Son of 
Icarius and Periboea, brother of Penelope. — 
6. A Trojan warrior, slain by Menelaus at the 
siege of Troy. — 7. A Trojan warrior, accom- 
panied JCneas to Italy, where he was slain by 
Halesus.] 

Thomas Magister, a rhetorician and gram- 
marian, who flourished about A.D. 1310. He 
was a native of Thessalonica, and lived at the 
court of the Emperor Andronicus Palaeologus I., 
where he held the offices of marshal (Magister 
Ojjiciorum) and keeper of the archives (Charto- 
phylax) ; but he afterward retired to a monas- 
tery, where he assumed the name of Theodulus. 
and devoted himself to the study of the ancient 
Greek authors. His chief work, which has 
come down to us, is a Lexicon of Attic Word* 
(Kara ' A/.odBrjrov bvofiuruv 'Attikuv , EK?toyat), 
compiled from the works of the elder gramma 
rians, such as Phrynichus, Ammonius, Herodian 
and Mceris. The work has some value on ac- 
count of its containing much from the elder 
grammarians, which wpuld otherwise have been 
lost ; but, when Thomas deserts his guides, he 
often falls into the most serious errors. The 
best edition is by Ritschl, Halis Sax., 1831, 
1832, 8vo. 

[Thon (Q£)v), husband of Polydamna, re- 
I nowned for his wealth, a king in Egypt, receiv- 
; ed Menelaus hospitably when he came thither 
I with Helen after the Trojan war, and bestowed 
I rich presents upon him, while Polydamna was 
equally liberal to Helen. Herodotus makes 
Paris and Helen to have arrived there from 
Sparta, and to have been detained by Thonis 
(Quvtg), the guard of the Canobic mouth of the 
I Nile, until delivered to Proteus, who kept Helen 
I until the visit of Menelaus in search of her after 
j the fall of Troy.] 

[Thoosa (Qouaa), daughter of Phorcys, moth- 
J er of Polyphemus by Neptune (Poseidon).] 
| [Thoon (Qouv). 1. One of the giants, slain by 



THORICUS. 



TIIRACIA. 



the Mceraj.— 2. Son of Phaenops, a Trojan war- 
rior, slain along with his brother Xanthus by 
Diomedes.— 3. A Trojan warrior, slain by Ulys- 
ses. — 4. A Phseacian, who distinguished him- 
self in the games celebrated by Alcinous in 
honor of Ulysses.] 

Thoricus (QopiKoc or GoptKoc : QopcKio^, Qopt- 
*evc : now Thenko), one of the twelve ancient 
towns in Attica, and subsequently a demus be- 
longing to the tribe Aeamantis, was situated on 
the southeastern coast, a little above Sunium, 
and was fortified by the Athenians toward the 
close of the Peloponnesian war. There are 
still extensive remains of the ancient town. 

Thornax (Q6pva!j : now Pavlalka), a mount- 
ain in Laconia, northeast of Sparta, on which 
stood a celebrated temple of Apollo. 

Thospxtes L.vcus (Ouamnc ?u/j.v?j : now Gol- 
jik ?), a lake in Armenia Major, through which 
the Tigris flows. The lake, and the surround- 
ing district, also called Thospitis, were both 
named from a city Thospia (Gwarrm) at the 
northern end of the lake. 

Thracia (QpaKrj, Ion. Opy/i?},, Qprjiicr}, Qprjiau) : 
Opdi, pi. QpdKEc, Ion. 9pyf and Qprjii;, pi. Qpr,- 
kec, QpffiKeg: Thrax, pl.Thraces), was in earlier 
times the name of the vast space of country 
bounded on the north by the Danube, on the 
south by the Propontis and the JEgean, on the 
east by the Pontus Euxinus, and on the west 
by the River Strymon and the easternmost of 
the Illyrian tribes. It was divided into two 
parts by Mount Haemus (now the Balkan), run- 
ning from west to east, and separating the plain 
of the Lower Danube from the rivers which 
fall into the iEgean. Two extensive mountain 
ranges branch off from the southern side of 
Mount Haemus, one running southeast toward 
Constantinople, and the other, called Rhodope, 
east of the preceding one, and also running in 
a southeasterly direction near the River Nes- 
lus. Between these two ranges there are many 
plains, which are drained by the Hebrus, the 
largest river in Thrace. At a later time the 
name Thrace was applied to a more limited ex- 
tent of country. The district between the Stry- 
mon and the Nestus was added to Macedonia 
by Philip, and was usually called Macedonia 
Adjecta. Vid. Macedonia. Under Augustus the 
part of the country north of the Haemus was 
made a separate Roman province under the 
name of Mcesia (vid. Mcesia) ; but the district 
between the Strymon and the Nestus had been 
previously restored to Thrace by the Romans. 
The Roman province of Thrace was according- 
ly bounded on the west by the River Nestus, 
which separated it from Macedonia, on the north 
by Mount Haemus, which divided it from Mcesia, 
on the east by the Euxine, and on the south by 
the Propontis and ^Egean. Thrace, in its wid- 
est extent, was peopled in the times of Herod- 
otus and Thucydides by a vast number of dif- 
ferent tribes ; but their customs and character 
were marked by great uniformity. Herodotus 
says that, next to the Indians, the Thracians 
were the most numerous of all races, and if 
united under one head would have been irre- 
sistible. He describes them as a savage, cruel, 
and rapacious people, delighting in blood, but 
brave and warlike. According to his account, 
which is confirmed by other writers, the Thra- 



cian chiefs sold their children for exportation 
to the foreign merchant ; they purchased their 
wives from their parents ; they punctured or 
tattooed their bodies, and those of the women 
belonging to them, as a sign of noble birth ; they 
despised agriculture, and considered it most 
honorable to live by war and robbery. Deep 
drinking prevailed among them extensively, 
and their quarrels over their wine-cups were 
notorious even in the time of Augustus. (Hor.. 
Carm., i., 27.) They worshipped deities, whom 
the Greeks assimilated to Ares, Dionysus, and 
Artemis : the great sanctuary and oracle of 
their god Bacchus (Dionysus) was in one of the 
loftiest summits of Mount Rhodope. The tribes 
on the southern coast attained to some degree of 
civilization, owing to the numerous Greek col- 
onies which were founded in their vicinity ; but 
the tribes in the interior seem to have retained 
their savage habits, with little mitigation, down 
j to the time of the Roman empire. In earlier 
times, however, some of the Thracian tribes 
• must have been distinguished by a higher de- 
gree of civilization than prevailed among them 
j at a later period. The earliest Greek poets, 
, Orpheus, Linus, Musaeus, and others, are all 
; represented as coming from Thrace. Eumol- 
J pus, likewise, who founded the Eleusinian mys- 
j teries at Attica, is said to have been a Thra- 
j cian, and to have fought against Erechtheus, 
! king of Athens. We also find mention of the 
! Thracians in other parts of Southern Greece : 
I thus they are said to have once dwelt both in 
Phocis and Bceotia. They were also spread 
over a part of Asia : the Thynians and Bithyn- 
i ians, and perhaps also the Mysians, were mem- 
bers of the great Thracian race. Even Xen- 
, ophoD speaks of Thrace in Asia, which extend- 
ed along the Asiatic side of the Bosporus as far 
asHeraclea. The principal Greek colonies along 
j the coast, beginning at the Strymon and going 
eastward, were Amphipolis, at the mouth of the 
! Strymon ; Abdera, a little to the west of the 
j Nestus ; Bicjex or Dicaepolis, a settlement of 
{ Maronea ; Maronea itself, colonized by the 
; Chians ; Stryme, a colony of the Thasians ; 

Mesembria, founded by the Samothracians ; 
, and^EN-os, a Lesbian colony at the mouth of 
the Hebrus. The Thracian Chersonesus was 
' probably colonized by the Greeks at an early 
period, but it did not contain any important 
Greek settlement till the migration of the first 
: Miltiades to the country, during the reign of 
Pisistratus at Athens. Vid. Chersonesus. On 
the Propontis the two chief Greek settlements 
; were those of Perinthus and Selymbria ; and 
, on the Thracian Bosporus was the important 
town of Byzantium. There were only a few 
j Greek settlements on the southwest coast of 
; the Euxine ; the most important were those of 
' Apollonia, Odessus, Caleatis,Tomi, renowned 
as the place of Ovid's banishment, and Istria, 
| near the southern mouth of the Danube. The 
Thracians are said to have been conquered by 
Sesostris, king of Egypt, and subsequently to 
have been subdued by the Teucrians and Mys- 
ians ; but the first really historical fact respect- 
ing them is their subjugation by Megabazus, the 
general of Darius. After the Persians had been 
driven out of Europe by the Greeks, the Thra- 
cians recovered their independence ; and at the 

885 



THRASEA. 



THRAUSTUS. 



beginning of the Peloponnesian war, almost all j 
the Thracian tribes were united under the do- 
minion of Sitalces, king of the Odrysae, whose ! 
kingdom extended from Abdera to the Euxine i 
and the mouth of the Danube. In the third \ 
year of the Peloponnesian war (B.C. 429), Sital- I 
ees, who had entered into an alliance with the I 
Athenians, invaded Macedonia with a vast army ; 
of one hundred and fifty thousand men, but was I 
compelled, by the failure of provisions, to return j 
home after remaining in Macedonia thirty days. 
Sitalces fell in battle against the Triballi in 424, j 
and was succeeded by his nephew Seuthes, who, J 
during a long reign, raised his kingdom to a j 
height of power and prosperity which it had 
never previously attained, so that his regular 
revenues amounted to the annual sum of four 
hundred talents, in addition to contributions of j 
gold and silver in the form of presents to a near- 
ly equal amount. After the death of Seuthes, 
which appears to have happened a little before ' 
the close of the Peloponnesian war, we find his j 
powerful kingdom split up into different parts ; j 
and when Xenophon, with the remains of the 
ten thousand Greeks, arrived on the opposite j 
coast of Asia, another Seuthes applied to him j 
for assistance to reinstate, him in his dominions, j 
Philip, the father of Alexander the Great, re- ; 
duced the greater part of Thrace; and after the | 
death of Alexander, the country fell to the share I 
of Lysimachus. It subsequently formed a part 
of the Macedonian dominions, but it continued 
to be governed by its native princes, and was 
only nominally subject to the Macedonian mon- , 
archs. Even under the Romans Thrace was 
for a long time governed by its own chiefs, and 
we do not know at what period it was made 
into a Roman province. 

Thrasea P^tus, P., a distinguished Roman 
senator and Stoic philosopher in the reign of 
Nero, was a native of Patavium. and was prob- 
ably born soon after the death of Augustus. He 
appears at an early period of his life to have 
made the younger Cato his model, of whose life 
he wrote an account. He married Arria, the 
daughter of the heroic Arria, who showed her j 
husband Caecina how to die ; and his wife was 
worthy of her mother and her husband. At a 1 
later period he gave his own daughter in mar- J 
riage to Helvidius Priscus, who trod closely in j 
the footsteps of his father-in-law. After in- j 
curring the hatred of Nero by the independence j 
of his character and the freedom with which i 
he expressed his opinions, he was condemned ! 
to death by the senate by command of the em- j 
peror, A.D. 66. By his execution and that of j 
his friend Barea Soranus, Nero, says Tacitus, ! 
resolved to murder Virtue herself. The pane- j 
gyric of Thrasea was written by Arulenus Rus- 
ticus, who was, in consequence, put to death by 
Domitian. 

[Thrasius (Qpuatog). 1. A Trojan warrior, 
slain by Achilles. — 2. A soothsayer of Cyprus, 
who told Busiris that by sacrificing a stranger 
to the gods, he would cause a drought which then 
prevailed to cease ; Busiris tried the experi- 
ment with the seer himself] 

Thrasybulus {QpaavSovAoq). 1. Tyrant of 
Miletus, was a contemporary of Periander and 
Alyattes, the king of Lydia. " He was intimate- 
ly connected with Thrasybulus. The story of 
886 



the mode in which Thrasybulus gave his advice 
to Periander as to the best means of securing 
his power, is given under Periander. — 2. A cel- 
ebrated Athenian, son of Lycus. He was zeal- 
ously attached to the Athenian democracy, and 
took an active part in overthrowing the oli- 
garchical government of the Four Hundred in 
B.C. 411. This is the first occasion on which 
he is mentioned ; but from this time he took a 
prominent part in the conduct of the war. On 
the establishment of the Thirty Tyrants at Ath- 
ens he was banished, and was living in exile at 
Thebes when the rulers of Athens were perpe- 
trating their excesses of tyranny. Being aided 
by the Thebans with arms and money, he col- 
lected a small band, and seized the fortress of 
Phyle. He next marched upon the Piraeus, 
which fell into his hands ; and from this place 
he carried on war for several months against 
the Ten, who had succeeded to the govern- 
ment, and eventually he obtained possession of 
Athens, and restored the democracy, 403. In 
390 he commanded the Athenian fleet in the 
JEgean, and was slain by the inhabitants of As- 
pendus. — 3. Brother of Gelon and Hieron, ty- 
rants of Syracuse. He succeeded Hieron in 
the government B.C. 467, and was soon after- 
ward expelled by the Syracusans, whom he 
had provoked by his rapacity and cruelty. He 
withdrew to Locri, in Italy, and there ended 
his days. 

Thras YDiEus (Qpacvdaloc), tyrant of Agrigen- 
tum, was the son and successor of Theron, B.C. 
472. Shortly after his accession he was defeat- 
ed by Hieron of Syracuse, and the Agrigentines 
immediately took advantage of this disaster to 
expel him from their city. He made his escape 
to Greece, but was arrested at Megara, and pub- 
licly executed. 

Thrasvllus or Thrasylus (Qpdcv2.?iog, Qpa- 
cv'Aoc). 1. An Athenian, who actively assisted 
Thrasybulus in opposing the oligarchical revo- 
lution in B.C. 411. He was one of the com- 
manders at the battle of Arginusae, and was 
among the six generals who returned to Athens 
and were put to death, 406. — 2. A celebrated 
astrologer at Rhodes, with whom Tiberius be- 
came acquainted during his residence in that 
island, and whom he ever after held in the high- 
est Honor. He died in A.D. 36, the year before 
Tiberius, and is said to have saved the lives of 
many persons whom Tiberius would otherwis" 
have put to death, by falsely predicting for thi 
very purpose that the emperor would live te 
years longer. The son of this Thrasyllus su~ 
ceeded to his father's skill, and he is said 
have predicted the empire to Nero. 

Thrasymachus (Qpacvfiaxoc), a native of Chal- 
cedon, was a sophist, and one of the earliest cul- 
tivators of the art of rhetoric. He was a con- 
temporary of Gorgias. He is introduced by 
Plato as one of the interlocutors in the Politia, 
and is referred to several times in the Phaedrus. 

Thrasymedes (QpaovfirjdTis), son of the Pylian 
Nestor and Anaxibia, accompanied his father on 
the expedition against Troy, and returned with 
him to Pylos. 

[Thrasymelus (QpaGVfiij?.og), in the Iliad, 
charioteer of Sarpedon, slain by Patroclus.] 

Thrasymekus. Vid. Trasimexus. 

[Thraustcs (epavaroc, Xen , or Gpaiorog, 



THRIA. 



THUCYDIDES. 



Diod.), a city of the Acrorei in Elis, not far from 
the horders of Arcadia ] 

[Thria (6pm), a village of Attica, from which 
the surrounding district was called Thriasius 
Campus (to Qpidaov -etiLov), a part of theEleu- 
sinian plain extending between the range of 
JEgaleus and Eleusis, along the borders of the 
bay, and to the north of it, and famed for its 
fertility.] 

Thronium (Qpoviov : Qpovioc, Qpovievg : now 
Roniani), the chief town of the Locri Epicne- 
midii, on the River Boagrius, at a short distance 
from the sea, with a harbor upon the coast. 

[Thrinakia (Qpivania). Vid. Sicilia.] 

[Thryum (Qpvov, near the modern Agulinitza), 
a city in Triphylia in Elis, on the Alpheus, near 
the borders of the Pylians, corresponding to the 
later Epitalium.] 

Thucydides ( Qovtivdidrjc ). 1. An Athenian 
statesman, of the demus Alopece, son of Mele- 
sias. After the death of Cimon in B.C. 449, 
Thucydides became the leader of the aristocrat- 
ic party, which he concentrated and more thor- 
oughly organized in opposition to Pericles. He 
was ostracized in 444, thus leaving the undis- 
puted political ascendency to Pericles. He left 
two sons, Melesias and Stephanus ; and a son 
of the former of these, named Thucydides after 
his grandfather, was a pupil of Socrates. — 2. 
The great Athenian historian, of the demus Hali- 
mus, was the son of Olorus or Orolus and Heg- 
esipyle. He is said to have been connected 
with the family of Cimon ; and we know that 
Miltiades, the conqueror of Marathon, married 
Hegesipyle, the daughter of a T hracian king 
called Olorus, by whom she became the mother 
of Cimon ; and it has been conjectured with 
much probability that the mother of Thucydides 
was a grand-daughter of Miltiades and Hegesip- 
yle. According to a statement of Pamphila 
(vid. Pamphila), Thucydides was forty years of 
age at the commencement of the Peloponnesian 
war or B.C. 431, and accordingly he was born 
in 471. There is a story in Lucian of Herodo- 
tus having read his History at the Olympic 
games to the assembled Greeks ; and Suidas 
adds that Thucydides, then a boy, was present, 
and shed tears of emulation ; a presage of his 
own future historical distinction. But this cel- 
ebrated story ought probably to be rejected as 
a fable. Thucydides is said to have been in- 
structed in oratory by Antiphon, and in philoso- 
phy by Anaxagoras ; but whether these state- 
ments are to be received can not be determin- 
ed. It is certain, however, that, being an Athe- 
nian of a good family, and living in a city which 
was the centre of Greek civilization, he must 
have had the best possible education : that he 
was a man of great ability and cultivated un- 
derstanding his work clearly shows. He in- 
forms us that he possessed gold mines in that 
part of Thrace which is opposite to the island 
of Thasos, and that he was a person of the 
greatest influence among those in that part of 
Thrace. This property, according to some ac- 
counts, he had from his ancestors : according 
to other accounts, he married a rich woman of 
Seaptesyle, and received them as a portion with 
her. Thucydides left a son called Timotheus ; 
and a daughter also is mentioned, who is said 
to have written the eighth book of the History 



of Thucydides. Thucydides (ii., 48) was one 
of those who suffered from the great plague 
of Athens, and one of the few who recovered. 
We have no trustworthy evidence of Thucyd- 
ides having distinguished himself as an ora- 
tor, though it is not unlikely tbat he did, for 
his oratorical talent is shown by the speeches 
that he has inserted in his history. He was, 
however, employed in a military capacity, and 
he was in command of an Athenian squadron 
of seven ships at Thasus, B.C. 424, when Eu- 
cles, who commanded in Amphipolis, sent for 
his assistance against Brasidas, who was before 
that town with an army. Brasidas, fearing 
the arrival of a superior force, offered favor° 
able terms to Amphipolis, which were readily 
accepted, for there were few Athenians in the 
place, and the rest did not wish to make re- 
sistance. Thucydides arrived at Eion, at the 
mouth of the Strymon, on the evening of the 
same day on which Amphipolis surrendered ; 
and though he was too late to save Amphipolis, 
he prevented Eion from falling into the hand 
of the enemy. In consequence of this failure, 
Thucydides became an exile, probably to avoid 
a severer punishment ; for Cleon, who was at 
this time in great favor with the Athenians, ap- 
pears to have excited popular suspicion against 
him. There are various untrustworthy ac- 
counts as to his place of residence during his 
exile ; but we may conclude that he could not 
safely reside in any place which was under 
Athenian dominion, and as he kept his eye on 
the events of the war, he must have lived in 
those parts which belonged to the Spartan al- 
liance. His own words certainly imply that, 
during his exile, he spent much of his time 
either in the Peloponnesus or in places which 
were under Peloponnesian influence (v., 26) ; 
and his work was the result of his own experi- 
ence and observations. His minute description 
of Syracuse and the neighborhood leads to the 
probable conclusion that he was personally ac- 
quainted with the localities ; and if he visited 
Sicily, it is probable that he also saw some parts 
of Southern Italy. Thucydides says that he 
lived twenty years in exile (v., 26) ; and as his 
exile commenced in the beginning of 423, he 
may have returned to Athens in the beginning 
of 403, about the time when Thrasybulus liber- 
ated Athens. Thucydides is said to have been 
assassinated at Athens soon after his return ; 
but other accounts place his death in Thrace. 
There is a general agreement, however, among 
the ancient authorities that he came to a violent 
end. His death can not be placed later than 401. 
The time when he composed his work has been 
j a matter of dispute. He informs us himself that 
he was busy in collecting materials all through 
the war from the beginning to the end (i., 22), 
and, of course, he would register them as he got 
them. Plutarch says that he wrote the work in 
Thrace ; but the work, in the shape in which we 
have it, was certainly not finished until after the 
close of the war, and he was probably engaged 
upon it at the time of his death. A question has 
been raised as to the authorship of the eighth 
and last book of Thucydides, which breaks off in 
the twenty-first year of the war (411). It dif- 
fers from all the other books in containing no 
speeches, and it has also been supposed to bs 

887 



THUCYDIDES. 



THUCYDIDES. 



inferior to the rest as a pieee of composition. 
Accordingly, several ancient critics supposed 
that the eighth book was not by Thucydides : 
some attributed it to his daughter, and some to 
Xenophon or Theopompus, because both of them 
continued the history. The words with which 
Xenophon's Hellcnica commence (//era 6e ravra) 
may chiefly have led to the supposition that he 
was the author, for his work is made to appear 
as a continuation of that of Thucydides ; but 
this argument is in itself of little weight ; and 
besides, both the style of the eighth book is dif- 
ferent from that of Xenophon, and the manner 
of treating the subject, for the division of the 
year into summers and winters, which Thucyd- j 
ides has observed in his first seven books, 
js continued in the eighth, but is not observed j 
by Xenophon. The rhetorical style of The- 
opompus, which was the characteristic of his j 
writing, renders it also improbable that he was 
the author of the eighth book. It seems the | 
simplest supposition to consider Thucydides 
himself as the author of this book, since he { 
names himself as the author twice (viii., 6, 60) ; J 
but it is probable that he had not the opportuni- j 
ty of revising it with the same care as the first \ 
seven books. It is stated by an ancient writer j 
that Xenophon made the work of Thucydides 
known, which may be true, as he wrote the first 
two books of his Hellcnica, or the part which j 
now ends with the second book, for the purpose j 
of completing the history. The work of Thucyd- I 
ides, from the commencement of the second i 
book, is chronologically divided into winters and 
summers, and each summer and winter make a 1 
year (ii., 1). His summer comprises the time ] 
irom the vernal to the autumnal equinox, and j 
the winter comprises the period from the au- 
tumnal to the vernal equinox. The division ! 
into books and chapters was probably made by 
the Alexandrine critics. The history of the | 
Peloponnesian war opens the second book of 
Thucydides, and the first is introductory to the 
history. He begins his first book by observ- 
ing that the Peloponnesian war was the most 
important event in Grecian history, which he j 
shows by a rapid review of the history of the j 
Greeks from the earliest periods to the com- 
mencement of the war (i., 1-21). After his 
introductory chapters he proceeds to explain 
the alleged grounds and causes of the war : the 
real cause was, he says, the Spartan jealousy j 
of the Athenian power. His narrative is inter- ! 
Tupted (c. 89-118), after he has come to the j 
time when the Lacedaemonians resolved on war, j 
by a digression on the rise and progress of the j 
power of Athens ; a period which had been | 
either omitted by other writers, or treated im- I 
perfectly, and with little regard to chronology, I 
as by Hellanicus in his Attic history (c. 97). He 
resumes his narrative (c. 119) with the negoti- ' 
ations that preceded the war ; but this leads to i 
another digression of some length on the trea- ! 
son of Pausanias (c. 128-134), and the exile of ; 
Themistocles (c. 135-138). He concludes the i 
book with the speech of Pericles, who advised 
the Athenians to refuse the demands of the Pel- j 
oponnesians ; and his subject, as already ob- I 
served, begins with the second book. A history j 
which treats of so many events, which took \ 
place at remote spots, could only be written, in \ 
888 



the time of Thucydides, by a man who took great 
pains to ascertain facts by personal inquiry. In 
modern times facts are made known by printing 
as soon as they occur ; and the printed records 
of the time, newspapers and the like, are often 
the only evidence of many facts which become 
history. When we know the careless way in 
which facts are now reported and recorded by 
very incompetent persons, often upon very indif- 
ferent and hearsay testimony, and compare with 
such records the pains that Thucydides took to 
ascertain the chief events of a war, with which he 
was contemporary, in which he took a share as 
a commander, the opportunities which his means 
allowed, his great abilities, and serious, earnest 
character, it is a fair conclusion that we have a 
more exact history of a long eventful period by 
Thucydides than we have of any period in mod- 
ern history equally long and equally eventful 
His whole work shows the most scrupulous care 
and diligence in ascertaining facts ; his strict 
attention to chronology, and the importance that 
he attaches to it, are additional proof of his his- 
torical accuracy. His narrative is brief and 
concise : it generally contains bare facts ex- 
pressed in the fewest possible words ; and when 
we consider what pains it must have cost him 
to ascertain these facts, we admire the self- 
denial of a writer who is satisfied with giving 
facts in their naked brevity, without ornament, 
without any parade of his personal importance, 
and of the trouble that bis matter cost him. A 
single chapter must sometimes have represent- 
ed the labor of many days and weeks. Such a 
principle of historical composition is the evi- 
dence of a great and elevated mind. The his- 
tory of Thucydides only makes an octavo vol- 
ume of moderate size ; many a modern writer 
would have spun it out to a dozen volumes, and 
so have spoiled it. A work that is for all ages 
must contain much in little compass. He sel- 
dom makes reflections in the course of his nar- 
rative : occasionally he has a chapter of politi- 
cal and moral observations, animated by the 
keenest perception of the motives of action 
and the moral character of man. Many of his 
speeches are political essays, or materials for 
them ; they are not mere imaginations of his 
own for rhetorical effect ; they contain the gen- 
eral sense of what was actually delivered as 
nearly as he could ascertain, and in many in- 
stances he had good opportunities of knowing 
what was said, for he heard some speeches de- 
livered (i., 22). His opportunities, his talents, 
his character, and his subject, all combined to 
produce a work that stands alone, and in its 
kind has neither equal nor rival. His pictures 
are sometimes striking and tragic, an effect pro- 
duced by severe simplicity and minute particu- 
larity. Such is the description of the plague 
of Athens. Such, also, is the incomparable his- 
tory of the Athenian expedition to Sicily, and 
its melancholy termination. A man who thinks- 
profoundly will have a form of expression which 
is stamped with the character of his mind ; and 
the style of Thucydides is accordingly conck$e r 
vigorous, and energetic. We feel that all the 
words were intended to have a meaning, and 
have a meaning : none of them are idle. Yet 
he is sometimes harsh and obscure ; and prob- 
ably he was so, even to his own countrymen 



THULE. 



THYME LE. 



Some of his sentences are very involved, and 
the connection and dependence of the parts are 
; often difficult to seize. The best editions of 
Thucydides are by Bekker, Berlin, 1821, 3 vols. 
8vo; by Poppo, Leipzig, 10 vols. 8vo, 1821— 
1838, of which two volumes are filled with pro- 
legomena ; by Haack, with selections from the 
Greek Scholia and short notes, Leipz., 1820, 2 
vols. 8vo; by Goller, 2 vols. 8vo, Leipz., 1826, 
[2d edit., 1836, 2 vols. 8vo] ; by Arnold, 3 vols. 
8vo, Oxford, 1830-1835. [2d edit., Oxford, 1840- 
1842 ; 3d edit., with copious indexes, still unfin- 
ished ; by Kruger, with grammatical and brief 
explanatory notes, Berlin, 1846, 2 vols. 8vo ; 
and by Poppo (school edit.), with brief notes, 
Erfurt and Gotha, 1843-1848, still incomplete.] 
Thule (QovIt}), an island in the northern 
part of the German Ocean, regarded by the an- 
cients as the most northerly point on the whole 
earth. It is first mentioned by Pytheas, the 
celebrated Greek navigator of Massilia, who 
undertook a voyage to Britain and Thule, of 
which he gave a description in his work on the 
Ocean. All subsequent writers who speak of 
Thule appear to have taken their accounts from 
that of Pytheas. According to Pytheas, Thule 
was six days' sail from Britain ; and the day 
and night there were each six months long. 
He further stated that in Thule and those dis- 
tant parts there was neither earth, sea, nor air, 
but a sort of mixture of all these, like to the 
mollusca, in which the earth, and the sea, and 
every thing else were suspended, and which 
could not be penetrated either by land or by sea. 
Many modern writers suppose the Thule of 
Pytheas to be the same as Iceland, while oth- 
ers regard it as a part of Norway. The Thule 
of Ptolemy, however, lay much farther to the 
south, and should probablv be identified with 
the largest of the Shetland Islands. 

Thurii, more rarely ThurIum (Qovpioi, Qov- 
piov t Qovpioc, Qoviurvr, Thurius, Thurinus : 
now Terra nuova), a Greek city in Lucania, 
founded B.C. 443, near the site of the ancient 
Sybaris, which had been destroyed more than 
sixty years before. Vid. Sybaris. It was built 
by the remains of the population of Sybaris, as- 
sisted by colonists from all parts of Greece, but 
especially from Athens. Among these colonists 
were the historian Herodotus and the orator 
Lysias, the latter of whom, however, was only 
a youth at the time, and subsequently returned 
to Athens. The new city, from which the re- 
mains of the Sybarites were soon expelled, 
rapidly attained great power and prosperity, and 
became one of the most important Greek towns 
in the south of Italy. Thus we are told that 
the Thurians were able to bring fourteen thou- 
sand foot soldiers and one thousand horse into 
the field against the Lucanians. In the Sam- 
nite wars Thurii received a Roman garrison ; 
but it revolted to Hannibal in the second Punic 
war. The Carthaginian general, however, at a 
later time, not trusting the Thurians, plundered 
the town, and removed three thousand five 
hundred of its inhabitants to Croton. The Ro- 
mans subsequently sent a Latin colony to Thu- 
rii, and changed its name into Copiee ; but it 
continued to retain its original name, under 
"which it is mentioned by Caesar in the civil war 
as a municipium. 



[Thurius Mons (to Oovpiov opoc, according 
to Plutarch, also called to 'Opdonayov opoc), a 
mountain of Boeotia, south of Chaeronea, on the 
right bank of the Cephisus, containing the sour- 
( ces of the River Morius.] 
I [Thvamia (Ova/jiia), a strong place in the south 
I of Sicyonia, on the borders of Phliasia, and an 
| object of contention between the two states.] 
I Thyamis (Qvafiic: now Kalama), a river in 
| Epirus, forming the boundary between Thes- 
! protia and the district of Cestryna, and flowing 
I into the sea opposite Corcyra and near a prom° 
: ontory of the same name. 
Thvades. Vid. Thyia. 
Thyamus (Gua/iof), a mountain in Acarnania, 
i south of Argos Amphilochicum. 

[ThyatIra (Qvureipa ra : now Akhissar, with 
| important ruins), a considerable city in the 
' northern part ofLydia, near Mysia, on the River 
j Lycus, a branch of the Hyllus ; according to 
j Strabo, a Macedonian colony ; said to have been 
> built by Seleucus Nicator, or, at least, greatly 
i enlarged, as others mention an earlier place on 
the site called Pclopia and Euhippc. It was 
celebrated for its purple dye, but still more as 
I an early seat of Christianity and one of the sev- 
; en churches of the Apocalypse.] 

Thyestes (Qvia-rjg), son of Pelops and Hip- 
j podamia, was the brother of Atreus and the 
j father of iEgisthus. His story is given under 
j Atreus and jEgisthus. 

[Thyestiades (QvEariddijc), son or grandson 
j of Thyestes, as JGgisthus is called in the Odys- 
I sey, &c.] 

Thyia (9iw), a daughter of Castalius or Ce- 
: phisseus, became by Apollo the mother of Del- 
| phus. She is said to have been the first to sac- 
j rifice to Bacchus (Dionysus), and to celebrate or- 
! gies in his honor. From her the Attic women, 
I who went yearly to Mount Parnassus to cele- 
| brate the Dionysiac orgies with the Delphian 
j Thyiades, received themselves the name of 
j Thyiades or Thyades. This word, however, 
comes from -&vo), and properly signifies the 
j raging or frantic women. 

Thymbra (QvfiBprj). I. A city of the Troad, 
north of Ilium Vetus, on a hill by the side of 
the River Thymbrius, with a celebrated temple 
' of Apollo, who derived from this place the epi- 
thet Thymbraeus. The surrounding plain still 
bears the same name. — 2. A wooded district in 
Phrygia, no doubt connected with Thymbrium. 
[Thymbrjeus (Qv/iSpaloe). 1. Vid. Thymbra. 
1 No. 1. — 2. A Trojan warrior, slain by Diomedes.] 
ThymbrTa (Ovfi6pia), a place in Caria, on the 
Maeander, four stadia east of Myus, with a Cha- 
j ronium, that is, a cave containing mephitic va- 
j P or - 

Thymbrium {Qvfi&ptov : Thymbriani), a small 
j town of Phrygia, ten parasangs west of Tyria 1 - 
! urn, with the so-called fountain of Midas (Xen., 
| Anab., i., 2). 

Thymbrius (QvfiCpioc : now Thimbrek), a river 
! of the Troad, falling into the Scamander. At 
j the present day it flows direct into the Helles- 
j pont j and, on this and other grounds, some 
! doubt whether the Thimbrek is the ancient river 
! Thymele, a celebrated mima or actress in 
! the reign of Domitian, with whom she was a 
great favorite. She frequently acted along with 
Latinus. 

889 



THYMGETES. 



TIBERIUS. 



Thymcetes {Qvholtt]^). 1. One of the elders of 
Troy. A soothsayer had predicted that on a 
certain day a boy should be born by whom Troy 
should be destroyed. On that day Paris was 
born to Priam, and Munippus to Thymcetes. 
Priam ordered Munippus and his mother Cylla 
to be killed. Hence Virgil (Mn., ii., 31) repre- 
sents iEneas saying that it was doubtful wheth- 
er Thymcetes advised the Trojans to draw the 
wooden horse into the city, in order to revenge 
himself. — [2. A Trojan warrior, accompanied 
JEneas to Italy, and was there slain in the war 
with Turn us.] 

Thyni (Qwol), a Thracian people, whose orig- 
inal abodes were near Salmydessus, but who 
afterward passed over into Bithynia. 

Thynia (0roi'a). 1. The land of the Thyni 
in Thrace. — 2. Another name for Bithynia. — 3. 
Vid. Thynias. 

Thynias or Thynia (Qvvtac, Qvvla). 1. (Now 
Inada), a promontory on the coast of Thrace, 
northwest of Salmydessus, with a town of the 
same name. — 2. (Now Kirpc), a small island of 
the Euxine, on the coast of Bithynia, near the 
Promontorium Calpe, also called Apollonia and 
Daphnusa. 

Thyone (Qvgjvt)), the name of Semele, under 
which Bacchus (Dionysus) fetched her from 
Hades, and introduced her among the immor- 
tals. Hence Bacchus (Dionysus) is also called 
Thyoneus. Both names are formed from dveiv, 
" to be inspired." 

Thyrea (Gypsa, Ion. Qvperj : Ovpedrrjg), the 
chief town in Cynuria, the district on the bor- 
ders of Laconia and Argolis, was situated upon 
a height on the bay of the sea called after it 
Sinus Thyreates (Qvpedrvc Ko?.7rog). It was 
for the possession of Thyrea that the celebra- 
ted battle was fought between the three hund- 
red Spartans and three hundred Argives. The 
territory of Thyrea was called ThyreItis (Qv- 
pednc). 

Thysdrus, Tisdrus, or Tusdrus (Qvodpog : 
ruins at El-Jemm), a large fortified city of By- 
zacena, northwest of the promontory Brachodes 
(now Ras Kapoudiak). Under the Romans it 
was a free city. It was here that the Emperor 
Gordian assumed the purple. 

Thyssaget^e (Qvacayercu), a people of Sar- 
matia Asiatica, on the eastern shores of the Pa- 
lus Maeotis. 

Thyssus (Qvccoc or Qvccog), a town of Mace- 
donia, on the peninsula of Acte. 

Tiarantus, a river of Scythia and a tributary 
of the Danube. 

[Tiasa (Tlaaa : now Magula), a small river 
of Laconia, flowing by Sparta into the Eurotas. 
Vid. Sparta, p. 829, a.] 

Tibareni or Tibari (Ti6ap?]vol, TiBapoi, a 
quiet agricultural people on the northern coast 
of Pontus, east of the River Iris. 

Tiberias. 1. (Tifiepidc : Ti6epievc), a city of 
Galilee, on the southwestern shore of the Lake 
of Tiberias, built by Herod Antipas in honor of 
the Emperor Tiberius. After the destruction 
of Jerusalem it became the seat of the Jewish 
sanhedrim. Near it were the warm baths of 
Emmaus.— 2. (TiBepidr, ?A/xvti V TiSepiuv), or 
Gennesaret (Vevvrjcaper, vdop Tevvrjcdp, rj Tev- 
vr}oapiTis), also the Sea of Galilee (ij ddiacaa 
rife TaW.aiar), in the Old Testament, Chinne- 
890 



reth (now Bahr Tubariych), the second of the 
three lakes in Palestine formed by the course 
of the Jordan. Vid. Jordanes. Its length is 
eleven or twelve geographical miles, and its 
breadth from five to six. It lies deep among 
fertile hills, has very clear and sweet water, 
and is full of excellent fish. Its surface is sev- 
en hundred and fifty feet below the level of the 
Mediterranean. In the time of our Saviour its 
shores were covered with populous villages, 
but they are now almost entirely deserted. Its 
eastern coast belonged to the districts of De- 
capolis and Gaulonitis. 

TiberInus, one of the mythical kings of Alba, 
son of Capetus, and father of Agrippa, is said to 
have been drowned in crossing the River Alba, 
which was hence called Tiberis after him, and 
of which he became the guardian god. 

Tiberiopolis (Ti6r]piov7To?.ir), a city of Great 
Phrygia, near Eumenia. 

Tiberis, also Tibris, Tybris, Thybris, Am- 
nis Tiberinus, or simply Tiberinus (now Ti- 
ber or Tevere), the chief river in Central Italy, 
on which stood the city of Rome. It is said to 
have been orginally called Albula, and to have 
received the name of Tiberis in consequence of 
Tiberinus, king of Alba, having been drowned 
in it. It has been supposed that Albula was the 
Latin and Tiberis the Etruscan name of the riv- 
er. The Tiber rises from two springs of limpid 
water in the Apennines, near Tifernum, and 
flows in a southwesterly direction, separating 
Etruria from Umbria, the land of the Sabines, 
and Latium. After flowing about one hundred 
and ten miles it receives the Nar (now Nera), 
and from its confluence with this river its reg- 
ular navigation begins. Three miles above 
Rome, at the distance of nearly seventy miles 
from the Nar, it receives the Anio (now Teve- 
rone), and from this point becomes a river of 
considerable importance. Within the walls of 
Rome, the Tiber is about three hundred feet 
wide and from twelve to eighteen feet deep. 
After heavy rains, the river in ancient times, as 
at the present day, frequently overflowed its 
banks, and did considerable mischief to the low- 
er parts of the city. (Hor., Carm., i., 2.) At 
Rome the maritime navigation of the river be- 
gins ; and at eighteen miles from the city, and 
about four miles from the coast, it divides into 
two arms, forming an island, which was sacred 
to Venus, and called Insula Sacra (now Isola 
Sagra). The left-branch of the river runs into 
the sea by Ostia, which was the ancient harbor 
of Rome ; but in consequence of the accumula- 
tion of sand at the mouth of the left branch, the 
right branch was widened by Trajan, and was 
made the regular harbor of the city, under the 
name of Portvs Romanus, Tortus Augusti, or 
simply Tortus. The whole length of the Tiber, 
with its windings, is about two hundred miles. 
The waters of the river are muddy and yellow- 
ish, whence it is frequently called by the Roman 
poets flavus Tiberis. The poets also give it 
the epithets of Tyrrheiius because it flowed past 
Etruria during the whole of its course, and of 
Lydius because the Etruscans are said to have 
been of Lydian origin. 

Tiberius. 1. Emperor of Rome A.D. 14-37. 
His full name was Tiberius Claudius Nero 
Caesar. He was the son of T. Claudius Nero 



TIBERIUS. 



TIBERIUS. 



and of Livia, and was born on the 16th of No- 
vember, B.C. 42, before his mother married Au- 
gustus. Tiberius was tall and strongly made, 
and his health was very good. His face was 
handsome, and his eyes were large. He was 
carefully educated, and he became well acquaint- 
ed with Greek and Latin literature. His master 
in rhetoric was Theodoras of Gadara. Though 
not without military courage, as his life shows, 
he had a great timidity of character, and was 
of a jealous and suspicious temper ; and these 
qualities rendered him cruel after he had ac- 
quired power. In the latter years of his life, 
particularly, he indulged his lustful propensities 
in every way that a depraved imagination could 
suggest : lust and cruelty are not strangers. 
He affected a regard to decency and to exter- 
nals. He was the prince of hypocrites ; and 
the events of his reign are little more than the 
exhibition of his detestable character. In B.C. 
11, Augustus compelled Tiberius, much against 
his will, to divorce his wife Vipsania Agrip- 
pina, and to marry Julia, the widow of Agrippa 
and the emperor's daughter, with whom Tibe- 
rius, however, did not long live in harmony. 
Tiberius was thus brought into still closer con- 
tact with the imperial family ; but, as Caesar 
and L. Caesar, the grandsons of Augustus, were 
still living, the prospect of Tiberius succeeding 
to the imperial power seemed very remote. He 
was employed by Augustus on various military 
services. In 20 he was sent by Augustus to 
restore Tigranes to the throne of Armenia. It 
was during this campaign that Horace address- 
ed one of his epistles to Julius Florus (i., 12), 
who was serving under Tiberius. In 15, Dru- 
sus and his brother Tiberius were engaged in 
warfare with the Raeti, and the exploits of the 
two brothers were sung by Horace (Carm., iv., 
4, 14). In 13 Tiberius was consul with P. 
Quintilius Varus. In 11, while his brother Dru- 
sus was fighting against the Germans, Tiberius 
conducted the war against the Dalmatians and 
against the Pannonians. Drusus died in 9, 
owing to a fall from his horse. On the news 
of the accident, Tiberius was sent by Augustus 
to Drusus, whom he found just alive. Tiberius 
returned to the war in (Jermany, and crossed 
the Rhine. In 7 he was consul a second time. 
In 6 he obtained the tribunitia potestas for five 
years, but during this year he retired, with the 
emperor's permission, to Rhodes, where he spent 
the next seven years. Tacitus says that his 
chief reason for leaving Rome was to get away 
from his wife, who treated him with contempt, 
and whose licentious life was no secret to her 
husband ; probably, too, he was unwilling to 
stay at Rome' when the grandsons of Augustus 
were attaining years of maturity, for there was 
mutual jealousy between them and Tiberius. 
He returned to Rome A.D. 2. He was relieved 
from one trouble during his absence, for his 
wife Julia was banished to the island of Panda- 
taria (B.C. 2), and he never saw her again. 
After the deaths of L. Caesar (A.D. 2) and C. 
Caesar (A.D. 4), Augustus adopted Tiberius, 
with the view of leaving to him the imperial 
power ; and, at the same time, he required Ti- 
berius to adopt Germanicus, the son of his 
brother Drusus, though Tiberius had a son Dru- 
sus by his wife Vipsania. From the year of 



i his adoption to the death of Augustus, Tiberius 
j was in command of the Roman armies, though 
I he visited Rome several times. He was sent 
into Germany A.D. 4. He reduced all Ulyricum 
i to subjection A.D. 9 j and in A.D. 12 he had the 
! honor of a triumph at Rome for his German and 
I Dalmatian victories. On the death of Augus- 
| tus at Nola, on the 19th of August, A.D. 14, 
I Tiberius, who was on his way to Ulyricum, was 
! immediately summoned home by his mother 
| Livia. He took the imperial power without any 
1 opposition, affecting all the while a great reluct- 
| ance. He began his reign by putting to death 
| Postumus Agrippa, the surviving grandson of 
! Augustus, and he alleged that it was done pur- 
I suant to the command of the late emperor. 
[ When he felt himself sure in his place, he be- 
! gan to exercise his craft. He took from the 
| popular assembly the election of the magistrates, 
j and transferred it to the senate. The news of 
the death of Augustus roused a mutiny among 
} the : legions in Pannonia, which was quelled by 
j Drusus, the son of Tiberius. The armies on 
I the Rhine under Germanicus showed a disposi- 
j tion to reject Tiberius, and, if Germanicus had 
I been inclined to try the fortune of a campaign, 
he might have had the assistance of the Ger- 
I man armies against his uncle. But Germani- 
I cus restored discipline to the army by his firm- 
| ness, and maintained his fidelity to the new em- 
| peror. The first year of his reign was marked 
by the death of Julia, whom Augustus had re- 
! moved from Pandataria to Rhegium. The death 
! of Germanicus in the East, in A.D. 19, relieved 
! Tiberius from all fear of a rival claimant to the 
i throne ; and it was believed by many that Ger- 
manicus had been poisoned by order of Tibe- 
rius. From this time Tiberius began to indulge 
with less restraint in his love of tyranny, and 
many distinguished senators were soon put to 
1 death on the charge of treason against the em- 
peror (Icesa majestas). Notwithstanding his sus- 
picious nature, Tiberius gave his complete con- 
! fidence to Sejanus, who for many years pos- 
: sessed the real government of the state. This 
i ambitious man aimed at the imperial power. 

In 23, Drusus, the son of Tiberius, was poisoned 
| by the contrivance of Sejanus. Three years 
I afterward (26) Tiberius left Rome and with- 
| drew into Campania. He never returned to the 
I city. He left on the pretext of dedicating tem- 
ples in Campania, but his real motives were his 
I dislike to Rome, where he heard a great deal 
; that was disagreeable to him, and his wish to 
| indulge his sensual propensities in private. In 
i order to secure still greater retirement, he took 
I up his residence (27) in the island of Capreae, 
! at a short distance from the Campanian coast. 
The death of Livia (29), the emperor's mother, 
released Tiberius from one cause of anxiety. 
He had long been tired of her because she wish- 
ed to exercise authority, and one object in leav- 
ing Rome was to be out of her way. Livia's 
death gave Sejanus and Tiberius free scope, for 
Tiberius never entirely released himself from a 
kind of subjection to his mother, and Sejanus 
did not venture to attempt the overthrow of 
Livia's influence. The destruction of Agrip- 
pina and her children was now the chief pur- 
pose of Sejanus : he finally got from the tyrant 
(31) the reward that w r as his just desert, an ig- 

891 



TIBILIS. 



TIBULLUS. 



nominious death. Vid. Sejanus. The death of 
Sejanus was followed by the execution of his 
friends ; and for the remainder of the reign of 
Tiberius, Rome continued to be the scene of 
tragic occurrences. Tiberius died on the 16th 
of March, 37, at the villa of Lucullus, in Mise- 
num. He was seventy-eight years of age, and 
had reigned twenty-two years. He was suc- 
ceeded by Caius (Caligula), the son of German- 
Icus, but he had himself appointed no successor. 
Tiberius did not die a natural death. It was 
known that his end was rapidly approaching, 
and having had a fainting fit, he was supposed I 
to be dead. Thereupon Caius came forth and 
was saluted as emperor; but he was alarmed j 
by the intelligence that Tiberius had recovered 
and called for something to eat. Caius was so 
frightened that he did not know what to do ; \ 
but Macro, the praefect of the praetorians, with j 
more presence of mind, gave orders that a quan- 
tity of clothes should be thrown on Tiberius, I 
and that he should be left alone. In the time j 
of Tiberius lived Valerius Maximus, Velleius j 
Paterculus, Phaedrus, Fenestella, and Strabo ; i 
also the jurists Massurius Sabinus, M. Cocceius j 
Nerva, and others. Tiberius wrote a brief com- I 
mentary of his own life, the only book that the j 
Emperor Domitian studied : Suetonius made j 
use of it for his life of Tiberius. Tiberius also j 
wrote Greek poems, and a lyric poem on the j 
death of L. Caesar.— 2. A philosopher and soph- ' 
ist, of unknown time, the author of numerous 
works on grammar and rhetoric. One of his 
works, on the figures in the orations of Demos- j 
thenes {nepl ruv napa krifiocdivei o^udrcjy), is j 
still extant, and has been published. 

Tibilis (now Hammam Miskoutcn ?), a town 
of Numidia, in Northern Africa, on the road from j 
Cirta to Carthage, with warm springs, called 
Aquae Tibilitanae. 

Tibiscdm, a town of Dacia and a Roman mu- 
nicipium on the River Tibiscus. 

Tibiscus or Tibissus, probably the same as 
the Parthiscus or Parthissus (now Theiss), a 
river of Dacia, forming the western boundary 
of that country, rising in the Montes Carpates, 
and falling into the Danube. 

Tibullus, Albius, the Roman poet, was of 
equestrian family. The date of his birth is un- 
certain ; but he died young, soon after Virgil. 
His birth is therefore placed by conjecture B.C. 
54, and his death B.C. 18. Of his youth and 
education, absolutely nothing is known. The 
estate belonging to the equestrian ancestors of 
Tibullus was at Pedum, between Tibur and 
Praeneste. This property, like that of the other 
great poets of the day, Virgil and Horace, had 
been either entirely or partially confiscated dur- 
ing the civil wars ; yet Tibullus retained or re- 
covered part of it, and spent there the better 
portion of his short, but peaceful and happy life. 
His great patron was Messala, whom he accom- 
panied in 31 into Aquitania, whither Messala 
had been sent by Augustus to suppress a formi- 
dable insurrection which had broken out in this 
province. Part of the glory of the Aquitanian 
Campaign, which Tibullus celebrates in language 
of unwonted loftiness, redounds, according to 
the poet, to his own fame. He was present at 
the battle of Atax (Aude in Languedoc), which 
broke the Aquitanian rebellion. In the follow- 
892 



ing year (30), Messala, having pacified Gaul, 
was sent into the East. Tibullus set out in his 
company, but was taken ill, and obliged to re- 
main in Corcyra, from whence he returned to 
Rome. So ceased the active life of Tibullus ; 
his life is now the chronicle of his poetry and: 
of those tender passions which were the in- 
spiration of his poetry. The first object of his 
attachment is celebrated under the poetic name 
of Delia. To Delia are addressed the first six 
elegies of the first book. The poet's attach- 
ment to Delia had begun before he left Rome 
for Aquitania. But Delia seems to have been 
faithless during his absence from Rome. On 
his return from Corcyra he found her ill, and 
attended her with affectionate solicitude (Elcg., 
i., 5), and hoped to induce her to retire with him 
into the country. But first a richer lover ap- 
pears to have supplanted him with the incon- 
stant Delia ; and afterward there appears a 
husband in his way. The second book of Ele- 
gies is chiefly devoted to a new mistress named 
Nemesis. Besides these two mistresses Tibul- 
lus was enamored of a certain Glycera. He 
wrote elegies to soften that cruel beauty, whom 
there seems no reason to confound either with 
Delia, the object of his youthful attachment, or 
with Nemesis. Glycera, however, is not known 
to us from the poetry of Tibullus, but from the 
ode of Horace, which gently reproves him for 
dwelling so long in his plaintive elegies on the 
pitiless Glycera. The poetry of his contempo- 
raries shows Tibullus as a gentle and singularly 
amiable man. To Horace especially he was an 
object of warm attachment. Besides the ode 
which alludes to his passion for Glycera (Hor., 
Carm., i., 33), the epistle of Horace to Tibullus 
gives the most full and pleasing view of his 
poetical retreat, and of his character : it is 
written by a kindred spirit. Horace does hom- 
age to that perfect purity of taste which distin- 
guishes the poetry of Tibullus ; he takes pride 
in the candid but favorable judgment of his own 
satires. The time of Tibullus he supposes to 
be shared between the finishing his exquisite 
small poems, which were to surpass even those 
of Cassius of Parma, up to that time the models 
of that kind of composition, and the enjoyment 
of the country. Tibullus possessed, according 
to his friend's notions, all the blessings of life — 
a competent fortune, favor with the great, fame, 
health ; and he seemed to know how to enjoy 
all those blessings. The first two books alone 
of the Elegies, under the name of Tibullus, are 
of undoubted authenticity. The third isr the 
work of another, a very inferior poet, ^tiether 
Lygdamus be a real or fictitious name or not. 
This poet was much younger than Tibullus, for 
he was born in the year of the battle of Mutina, 
43. The hexameter poem on Messala, which 
opens the fourth book, is so bad that, although 
a successful elegiac poet may have failed when 
he attempted epic verse, it can not well be as- 
cribed to a writer of the exquisite taste of Ti- 
bullus. The smaller elegies of the fourth* book 
have all the inimitable grace and simplicity of 
Tibullus. With the exception of the thirteenth 
(of which some lines are hardly surpassed by 
Tibullus himself), these poems relate to the love 
of a certain Sulpicia, a woman of noble birth, 
for Cerinthus, the real or fictitious name of a 



TIBUR. 



TIGRANES. 



beautiful youth. Nor is there any improbability 
in supposing that Tibullus may have written 
elegies in the name or by the desire of Sulpicia. 
If Sulpicia was herself the poetess, she ap- 
proached nearer to Tibullus than any other 
writer of elegies. The first book of Elegies 
alone seems to have been published during the 
author's life, probably soon after the triumph of 
Messala (27) The second book no doubt did 
not appear till after the death of Tibullus. With 
it, according to our conjecture, may have been 
published the elegies of his imitator, perhaps his 
friend and associate in the society of Messala, 
Lygdamus (if that be a real name), i. c, the 
third book ; and likewise the fourth, made up 
of poems belonging, as it were, to this intimate 
society of Messala, the Panegyric by somfc name- 
less author, which, feeble as it is, seems to be 
of that age ; the poems in the name of Sulpicia, 
with the concluding one, the thirteenth, a frag- 
ment of Tibullus himself The best editions of 
Tibullus are by Lachmann, Berol., 1829, and by 
Dissen, Gottingen, 1835. 

Tibur (Tiburs, pi Tiburtes, Tiburtinus : now 
Tivoli), one of the most ancient towns of La- 
tium, sixteen miles northeast of Rome, situated 
on the slope of a hill (hence called by Horace 
supinum Tibur), on the left bank of the Anio, 
which here forms a magnificent water-fall. It 
is said to have been originally built by the Sic- 
uli, and to have afterward passed into the pos- 
session of the Aborigines and Pelasgi. Accord- 
ing to tradition, it derived its name from Tibur- 
tus, son of Catillus, who emigrated from Greece 
with Evander. It was afterward one of the 
chief towns of the Latin league, and became 
subject to Rome with the other Latin cities on 
the final subjugation of Latium in B.C. 338. Un- 
der the Romans Tibur continued to be a large 
and flourishing town, since the salubrity and 
beautiful scenery of the place led many of the 
most distinguished Roman nobles to build here 
magnificent villas. Of these the most splendid 
was the villa of the Emperor Hadrian, in the 
extensive remains of which many valuable spec- 
imens of ancient art have been discovered. 
Here also the celebrated Zenobia lived after 
adorning the triumph of her conqueror Aure- 
lian. Horace likewise had a country house 
in the neighborhood of Tibur which he prefer- 
red to all his other residences. The deity chief- 
ly worshipped at Tibur was Hercules ; and in 
the neighborhood was the grove and temple of 
the Sibyl Albunea, whose oracles were consult- 
ed from the most ancient times. Vid. Albu- 
nea. The surrounding country produced ex- 
cellent olives, and also contained some celebra- 
ted stone quarries There was a road from 
Rome leading to Tibur, called Via Tiburtina, 
which was continued from the town under the 
name of the Via Valeria, past Corfinium to Adria. 

TicHia or Tecum. Vid. Tecum. 

Tichiussa (Teixiovaaa), a fortress in the ter- 
ritory of Miletus. 

Ticinum (Ticinensis : now Pavia), a town of 
the Laevi, or, according to others, of the Insu- 
bres, in Gallia Cisalpina, on the left bank of the 
Ticinus. It was subsequently a Roman muni- 
cipium ; but it owed its greatness to the Lom- 
bard kings, who made it the capital of their do- 
minions. The Lombards gave it the name of 



Papia, which it still retains under the slightly 
changed form of Pavia. 

Ticinus (now Tessino), an important river in 
Gallia Cisalpina, rises in Mons Adula, and aflei 
flowing through Lacus Verbanus (now Lagc 
Maggiore), falls into the Po near Ticinum. It 
was upon the bank of this river that Hannibal 
gained his first victory over the Romans by the 
defeat of P. Scipio, B.C. 218. 

Tifata, a mountain in Campania, east of Ca- 
pua, near which the Samnites defeated the Carn- 
panians, and where at a later time Sulla gained 
a victory over the proconsul Norbanus On this 
mountain there was a temple of Diana, and also 
one of Jupiter of some celebrity. 

Tifernum. 1. Tiberinum (Tifernates Tiben- 
ni, pi. : now Citta di Castcllo), a town of Um- 
bria, near the sources of the River Tiber, 
whence its surname, and upon the confines of 
Etruria. Near this town the younger Pliny had 
a villa. — 2. Metaurense (Tifernates Metauren- 
ses : now S. Angelo in Vado), a town in Um- 
bria, east of the preceding, on the River Metau- 
rus, whence its surname. — 3. A town in Sam- 
nium, on the River Tifernus. 

Tifernus (now Bi/cmo), a river of Samnium. 
rising in the Apennines, and flowing through 
the country of the Frentani into the Adriatic. 

Tigellinus Sophonius, the son of a native 
of Agrigentum, owed his rise from poverty and 
obscurity to his handsome person and his un- 
scrupulous character. He was banished to Scyl- 
laceum in Bruttii (A. D. 39-40) for an intrigue 
with Agrippina and Julia Li villa, sisters of Ca- 
ligula. He was probably among the exiles re- 
stored by Agrippina, after she became empress, 
since early in Nero's reign he was again in fa- 
vor at court, and on the death of Burrus (63) 
was appointed praetorian prefect jointly with 
Fenius Rufus. Tigellinus ministered to Nero's 
worst passions, and of all his favorites was the 
most obnoxious to the Roman people. He in- 
flamed his jealousy or his avarice against the 
noblest members of the senate and the most 
pliant dependants of the court. In 65, Tigelli- 
nus entertained Nero in his JEmilian gardens 
with a sumptuous profligacy unsurpassed even 
in that age, and in the same year shared with 
him the odium of burning Rome, since the con- 
flagration had broken out on the scene of the 
| banquet. On Nero's fall he joined with Nym- 
phidius Sabinus, who had succeeded Fenius 
I Rufus as praetorian prefect, in transferring the 
, allegiance of the soldiers to Galba. The people 
clamorously demanded his death. During the 
brief reign of Galba his life was spared, but on 
the accession of Otho he was compelled to put 
an end to his own life. 

TigellTus Hermogenes. Vid. Hermogenes. 

Tigranes (Tr/pavvc), kings of Armenia. 1. 
Reigned B.C. 96-56 or 55. He united under 
his sway not only all Armenia, but several of 
the neighboring provinces, such as Atropatene 
and Gordyene, and thus raised himself to a de- 
gree of power far superior to that enjoyed by 
j any of his predecessors. He assumed the pomp- 
ous title of king of kings, and always appeared 
in public accompanied by some of his tributary 
I princes as attendants. His power was also 
I greatly strengthened by his alliance with Mith- 
i radates the Great, king of Pontus, whose daugh- 



TIGRANES. 



TIMJ3US. 



ter Cleopatra he had married at an early period 
of his reign. In consequence of the dissensions ! 
in the royal family of Syria, Tigranes was en- ; 
abled in 83 to make himself master of the whole ' 
Syrian monarchy from the Euphrates to the \ 
sea. He was now at the summit of his power, 
and continued in the undisputed possession of 
these extensive dominions for nearly fourteen 
years. At the instigation of his son-in-law | 
Mithradates, he invaded Cappadocia in 74, and | 
is said to have carried off into captivity no less j 
than three hundred thousand of the inhabit- 
ants, a large portion of whom he settled in his 
newly-founded capital of Tigranocerta. Vid. 
Tigranocerta. In other respects he appears 
to have furnished little support to Mithradates 
in his war against the Romans ; but when the j 
Romans haughtily demanded from him the j 
surrender of Mithradates, who had taken ref- j 
uge in his dominions, he returned a peremp- j 
tory refusal, accompanied with an express dec- j 
laration of war. Lucullus invaded Armenia J 
in 69, defeated the mighty host which Tigranes J 
led against him, and followed up his victory j 
by the capture of Tigranocerta. In the fol- 
lowing year (68) the united forces of Tigranes j 
and Mithradates were again defeated by Lu- j 
cullus ; but the mutinous disposition of the 
Roman troops prevented Lucullus from gain- 
ing any further advantages over the Armenian 
king, and enabled the latter not only to regain 
his dominions, but also to invade Cappadocia. i 
The arrival of Pompey (66) soon changed the j 
face of events. Mithradates, after his final de- j 
feat by Pompey, once more threw himself upon 
the support of his son-in-law ; but Tigranes, 
who suspected him of abetting the designs of 
his son Tigranes, who' had rebelled against his 
father, refused to receive him, w T hile he himself 
hastened to make overtures of submission to 
Pompey. That general had already advanced 
into the heart of Armenia under the guidance 
of the young Tigranes, when the old king re- 
paired in person to the Roman camp, and, pre- 
senting himself as a suppliant before Pompey, 
laid his tiara at his feet. By this act of humili- 
ation he at once conciliated the favor of the con- 
queror, who treated him in a friendly manner, 
and left him in possession of Armenia Proper 
with the title of king, depriving him only of the 
provinces of Sophene and Gordyene, which he 
erected into a separate kingdom for his son Ti- 
granes. The elder monarch was so overjoyed at 
obtaining these unexpectedly favorable terms, 
that he not only paid the sum of six thousand 
talents demanded by Pompey, but added a large 
sum as a donation to his army, and continued 
ever after the steadfast friend of the Roman gen- 
eral. He died in 56 or 55, and was succeeded 
by his son Artavasdes. — 2. Son of Artavasdes, 
and grandson of the preceding. He was living 
an exile at Rome, when a party of his country- 
men, discontented with the rule of his elder 
brother, Artaxias, sent to request that he should 
be placed on the throne. To this Augustus as- 
sented, and Tiberius was charged with the duty 
of accomplishing it, a task which he effected 
apparently without opposition (B.C. 20). 

Tigranocerta (tu TLypavonepra and ?; Tcyp., 
i. e. t in Armenian, the City of Tigranes : ruins 
at Sert), the later capital of Armenia, built by 
894 



Tigranes on a height by the River Nicephorius, 
in the valley between Mounts Masius and Ni- 
phates. It was strongly fortified, and peopled 
chiefly with Macedonians and Greeks, forcibly 
removed from Cappadocia and Cilicia ; but, after 
the defeat of Tigranes by Lucullus under its 
walls, these people were permitted to return to 
their homes. The city was, at the same time, 
partially destroyed ; but it still remained a con- 
siderable place. 

Tigris, generally -ioos and -is (6 Ttyptg, gen- 
erally Tiypidor and Tiypior, also Ttyprjg, gener- 
ally Tiyp7]Tor : now Tigris), a great river of 
Western Asia, rises from several sources on the 
southern side of that part of the Taurus chain 
called Niphates, in Armenia, and flows south- 
east, fc-st through the narrow valley between 
Mount Masius and the prolongation of Mount 
Niphates, and then through the great plain which 
is bounded on the east by the last-named chain, 
till it falls into the head of the Persian Gulf, 
after receiving the Euphrates from the west. 
(Compare Euphrates.) Its other chief tribu- 
taries, all falling into its eastern side, were the 
Nicephorius or Cextrites, the Lvcus, the Ca- 
prus, the Physcus, the Gorgus, Sillas, or De- 
las, the Gyndes, and the Choaspes. It divided 
Assyria and Susiana on the east, from Mesopo- 
tamia and Babylonia, and (at its mouth) Arabia, 
on the west. The name is sometimes applied 
to the Pasitigris. 

Tigurini, a tribe of the Helvetii, who joined 
the Cimbri in invading the country of the Allo- 
broges in Gaul, where they defeated the consul 
L. Cassius Longinus, B.C. 107. They formed 
in the time of Caesar the most important of the 
four cantons (jpagi) into which the Helvetii were 
divided. It was perhaps from this people that 
the town of Tigurum (now Zurich) derived its 
name, though this name does not occur in any 
ancient writer. 

Tilphusium (T 'i?,<j>ova iov, Ti2,<povaaiov, Dor. 
j Ti?,<p6caiov : TiXfovaioc, Dor. Ti2,<pcjcuos), a town 
j in Boeotia, situated upon a mountain of the 
same name, south of Lake Copais, and between 
Coronea and Haliartus. It derived its name 
from the fountain Tilphusa, which was sacred 
to Apollo, and where Tiresias is said to have 
been buried. 

Tim^sus (Tlfiatoc). 1. The historian, was the 
son of Andromachus, tyrant of Tauromenjum, 
in Sicily. Timseus attained the age of ninety- 
six"; and though we do not know the exact date 
either of his birth or death, we can not be far 
wrong in placing his birth in B.C. 352, and his 
death in 256. Timasus received instruction 
from Philiscus, the Milesian, a disciple of Isoc- 
rates ; but we have no further particulars of 
his life, except that he was banished from Sicily 
by Agathocles, and passed his exile at Athens, 
where he had lived fifty years when he wrote 
the thirty-fourth book of his history. The great 
work of Timaeus was a history of Sicily from 
the earliest times to 264, in which year Polybius 
commences the introduction to his work. This 
history was one of great extent. We have a 
quotation from the thirty-eighth book, and there 
were probably many books after this. The value 
and authority of Timasus as an historian have 
been most vehemently attacked by Polybius in 
many» parts of his work. Most of the charges 



TIMAGENES. 



TIMESITHEUS. 



of Polybius appear to have been well founded ; 
but he has not only omitted to mention some 
of the peculiar excellences of Timaeus, but has 
even regarded these excellences as deserving 
the severest censure. Thus it was one of the , 
great merits of Timaeus, lor which he is loudly ! 
denounced by Polybius, that he attempted to 
give the myths in their simplest and most gen- 
uine form, as related by the most ancient writ- 
ers. Timaeus, also, collected the materials of 
his history with the greatest diligence and care, 
a fact which even Polybius is obliged to admit. 
He likewise paid very great attention to chro- 
nology, and was the first writer who introduced 
the practice of recording events by Olympiads, 
which was adopted by almost all subsequent 
writers of Greek history. The fragments of 
Timaeus have been collected by Goller, in his 
Dc Situ ct Origine Syracusarum, Lips., 1818, and 
by Car. and Theod. Miiller, in the Fragmenta 
Historic. Grac, Paris, 1841. — 2. Of Locri, in 
Italy, a Pythagorean philosopher, is said to have 
been a teacher of Plato. There is an extant 
work, bearing his name, written in the Doric 
dialect, and entitled Tzepi ipvx"C noofiov /cat fyvoioc : 
but its genuineness is very doubtful, and it is 
in all probability nothing more than an abridg- 
ment of Plato's dialogue of Timczus. The best 
edition is by Gelder, Leyden, 1836. — 3. The 
Sophist, wrote a Lexicon to Plato, addressed to 
a certain Gentianus, which is still extant. The 
time at which he lived is quite uncertain. He 
is usually placed in the third century of the 
Christian era, which produced so many ardent 
admirers of the Platonic philosophy, such as 
Porphyry, Longinus, Plotinus, &c. The Lexi- 
con is very brief, and bears the title Tifiaiov 
GofyiaToti kit tuv rov U^utuvoc ?Ji;euv. It is evi- 
dent that the work has received several inter- 
polations, especially in explanations of words 
occurring in Herodotus. But it is one of great 
value, and the explanations of words are some 
of the very best which have come down to us 
from the ancient grammarians. It has been ed- 
ited by Paihnken, Leyden, 1754, and again, Ley- 
den, 1789 ; and by Koch, Leipzig, 1828 and 1833. 

Timagenes (Ti(iayev)js), a rhetorician and a 
historian, was a native of Alexandrea, from 
which place he was carried as a prisoner to 
Rome, where he was first employed as a slave 
in menial offices, but being liberated by Faustus 
Sulla, the son of the dictator, he opened a school 
of rhetoric, in which he taught with great suc- 
cess. (Comp. Hor., Ep. y i , 19, 15.) The Em- 
peror Augustus induced him to write a history 
of his exploits ; but having offended Augustus 
by sarcastic remarks upon his family, he was 
forbidden the palace ; whereupon he burned his 
historical works, gave up his rhetorical school, 
and retired from Rome to the house of his 
friend Asinius Pollio at Tusculum. He after- 
ward went to the East, and died at Dabanum in 
Mesopotamia. 

[Timagenidas (Tifiayevidac or -wfyc), aTheban, 
son of Herpys, advised Mardonius in his inva- 
sion of Greece to occupy the passes of Mount 
Cithaeron, so as to cut off the re-enforcements 
and supplies that were coming through them to 
the Greeks. After the battle of Plataeae, his sur- 
lender (with that of the other Theban traitors 
to the national cause) was demanded, and he 



was finally given up at his own instigation 
But instead of a trial, which he had expected, 
he was sent with the other culprits to Corinth 
by Pausanias, and there put to death.] 

Timanthes (TL/xuvOric), a celebrated Greek 
painter at Sicyon, contemporary with Zeuxis 
and Parrhasius, about B.C. 400. The master- 
piece of Timanthes was his celebrated picture 
of the sacrifice of Iphigenia, in which Agamem- 
non was painted with his face hidden in his 
mantle. The ancient critics tell us that the 
picture showed Iphigenia standing by the altar, 
surrounded, among the assistants, by Calchas, 
whose prophetic voice had demanded her sacri- 
fice, and whose hand was about to complete it ; 
Ulysses, who had brought her from her home, 
and Menelaus, her father's brother, all manifest- 
ing different degrees of grief, so that, when the 
artist had painted the sorrow of Calchas, and 
the deeper sorrow of Ulysses, and had added all 
his powers to express the woe of Menelaus, his 
resources were exhausted, and, unable to give 
a powerful expression to the agony of the father, 
he covered his head with a veil. But this is 
clearly not the reason why Timanthes hid the 
face of Agamemnon. The critics ascribe to 
impotence what was the forbearance of judg- 
ment. Timanthes felt like a father : he did not 
hide the face of Agamemnon because it was 
beyond the possibility, but because it was be- 
yond the dignity of expression. If he made 
Agamemnon bear his calamity as a man, he 
made him also feel it as a man. It became the 
leader of Greece to sanction the ceremony with 
his presence, but it did not become the father to 
see his daughter beneath the dagger's point. 

[Timasion (Ti/iaaiuv), a Dardanian, served un- 
der Clearchus in Asia, and afterward joined the 
expedition of the younger Cyrus against Arta- 
xerxes. After the arrest and murder of the 
generals by Tissaphernes, Timasion was chosen 
in the place of Clearchus, and he and Xenophon, 
as the youngest, had command of the rear. 
When the army had reached Cotyora, he en- 
deavored to extort money as well as the means 
of conveyance from some of the neighboring 
cities by the report of Xenophon's intention to 
found a city in Pontus, but was foiled by Xen- 
ophon's refusing to lend himself to his designs. 
Timasion, in the subsequent movements, contin- 
ued with Xenophon until they crossed over into 
Europe, and also entered with him into the serv- 
ice of Seuthes. After this he probably return- 
ed to Asia with the army, when it entered the 
Spartan service under Thimbron.] 

Timavus (now Timavo), a small river in the 
north of Italy, forming the boundary between 
Istria and Venetia, and falling into the Sinus 
Tergestinus in the Adriatic, between Tergeste 
and Aquileia. This river is frequently cele- 
brated by the poets and other ancient writers, 
who speak of its numerous sources, its lake, 
and its subterraneous passage ; but these ac- 
counts seem, to a great extent, fabulous. 

[Timesias (Tiuijc'iac), or Timesius (Tipr/aioe), 
of Clazomenae, was the first founder of the col- 
ony of Abdera in Thrace. He was expelled by 
the Thracians, but was afterward worshipped 
as a hero at Abdera by the Teians, who found- 
ed a second colony at that place.] 

[Timesitheus (Tiurjaideoc), a Trapezuntian, 

895 



TIMOCLES. 



TIMOLEOX. 



proxenus of the Mossynoeci, sent by the Greeks 
under Xenophon to treat with the Mossynoeci 
about a passage through their territory : in an 
interview between the magistrates of the Mos- 
synoeci and the Greek generals, Timesitheus act- 
ed as interpreter.] 

Timocles (T£ucA/.?}f), a distinguished Athe- 
nian comic poet of the Middle Comedy, who 
lived at a period when the revival of political 
energy, in consequence of the encroachments 
of Philip, restored to the Middle Comedy much 
of the vigor and real aim of the Old. He is con- 
spicuous for the freedom with which he dis- 
cussed public men and measures, as well as for 
the number of his dramas and the purity of his 
style. He flourished from about the middle of 
the fourth century B.C. till after 324, so that at 
the beginning of his career he was in part con- 
temporary with Antiphanes. and at the end of 
it with Menander. [The fragments of his Com- 
edies are edited by Meineke in the Comic. Grac. 
Fragm., vol. ii., 793-S11, edit, minor.] 

[TimocrItes (TinoKpdr:;c). 1. A Lacedaemo- 
nian, one of the three counsellors sent to assist 
Cnemus after his first defeat by Phormion in 
the Corinthian Gulf in B.C. 429. In the second 
battle there, shortly after, Timocrates having 
had the vessel, on board which he himself was, 
sunk by an Athenian galley, slew himself, and 
his body was washed into the harbor of Xaupac- 
tus. — 2. An Athenian, was one of the commis- 
sioners for concluding the fifty years' truce be- 
tween Athens and Sparta in B.C. 421, and also 
the separate treaty between these states in the 
same year. — 3. An Athenian, in B.C. 406, was 
a member of the Council of Five Hundred, be- 
fore which the generals who had conquered at 
Arginusae gave in their account. (Perhaps the 
same as No. 2 ) — 4. A Rhodian, who was sent 
into Greece by the satrap Tithraustes in B.C. 
395, taking with him fifty talents wherewith to 
bribe the leading men in the several states to 
excite a war against Sparta at home, and so to 
compel the return of Agesilaus from his vic- 
torious career in Asia. Plutarch calls him Her- 
mocrates. — 5. A Lacedaemonian, was one of the 
ambassadors who were sent to Athens in B.C. 
369 to settle the terms of alliance between the 
Athenians and the Spartans. — 6. A Syracusan, 
who commanded a squadron of twelve galleys 
sent by Dionysius the younger to the aid of 
Sparta in B.C. 366. The arrival of this force 
enabled the Spartans to reduce Sellasia, which 
had revolted from them.] 

Timocreon {Tiuonpiuv), of Rhodes, a lyric 
poet, celebrated for the bitter and pugnacious 
spirit of his works, and especially for his attacks 
on Themistocles and Simonides. He was a na- 
tive of Ialysus in Rhodes, whence he was ban- 
ished on the then common charge of an inclina- 
tion toward Persia {u.ij6lgu6c) ; and in this ban- 
ishment he was left neglected by Themistocles, 
who had formerly been his friend, and his con- 
nection by the ties of hospitality. Timocreon 
was still flourishing after B.C. 471, since one 
of his poems, of which we have a fragment, 
was an attack upon Themistocles after the exile 
of the latter. It appears that Timocreon was 
a man of prodigious strength, which he sustain- 
ed by great voracity. 

Timoleon- (Tiuo/.ewv), son of Timodemus or 
896 ' 



Timaenetus and Demariste, belonged to one of 
the noblest families at Corinth. Wis early life 
was stained by a dreadful deed of blood. We 
are told that so ardent was his love of liberty, 
that when his brother Timophanes endeavored 
to make himself tyrant of their native city, Ti- 
moleon murdered him rather than allow him to 
destroy the liberty of the state. The murder 
was perpetrated just before an embassy arrived 
from several of the Greek cities of Sicily, beg- 
ging the Corinthians to send assistance to the 
island, which was distracted by internal dissen- 
sions, and was expecting an invasion of the 
Carthaginians. It is said that the Corinthians 
were at the very moment of the arrival of the 
Sicilians deliberating respecting Timoleon's act, 
and had not come to any decision respecting it ; 
and that they avoided the difficulty of a decision 
by appointing him to the command of the Sicil- 
ian expedition, with the singular provision, that 
if he conducted himself justly in the command, 
they would regard him as a tyrannicide, and 
honor him accordingly ; but if otherwise, they 
would punish him as a fratricide. To whatever 
causes Timoleon owed his appointment, his ex- 
traordinary success more than justified the con- 
fidence which had been reposed in him. His. 
history reads almost like a romance ; and yet 
of the main facts of the narrative we can not 
entertain any reasonable doubt. Although the 
Corinthians had readily assented to the requests 
of the Sicilians in the appointment of a com- 
mander, they were not prepared to make many 
sacrifices in their favor, and accordingly it was 
only with ten triremes and seven hundred mer- 
cenaries that Timoleon sailed from Corinth to 
repel the Carthaginians, and restore order to the 
Sicilian cities. He reached Sicily in B.C. 344, 
and straightway marched against Syracuse, of 
two quarters of which he obtained possession. 
In the following spring(343), Dionysius, despair- 
ing of success, surrendered the citadel to Ti- 
moleon, on condition of his being allowed to de- 
part in safety to Corinth. Vid. Dionysius. 
Timoleon sonn afterward obtained possession of 
the whole of Syracuse. He destroyed the cita- 
del, which had been for so many years the seat 
and bulwark of the power of the tyrants, and 
restored the democratical form of government. 
He then proceeded to expel the tyrants from the 
other Greek cities of Sicily, but was interrupt- 
ed in this undertaking by a formidable invasion 
of the Carthaginians, who landed at Lilybaeum 
in 339, with an immense army, under the com- 
mand of Hasdrubal and Hamilcar, consisting of 
seventy thousand foot and ten thousand horse. 
Such an overwhelming force struck the Greeks 
with consternation and dismay. So great was 
their alarm, that Timoleon could only induce 
twelve thousand men to march with him against 
the Carthaginians. But with this small force 
he gained a brilliant victory over the Carthagin- 
ians on the river Crimissus (339.) This vic- 
tory justly ranks as one of the greatest gained 
by Greeks over barbarians. The booty which 
Timoleon acquired was prodigious ; and some 
of the richest of the spoils he sent to Corinth 
and other cities in Greece, thus diffusing the 
glory of his victory throughout the mother coun- 
try. Timoleon now resolved to carry into exe- 
cution his project of expelling all the tyrants 



TIMOMACHUS. 



TIMOTHEUS. 



Irom Sicily. Of these, two of the most power- 
ful, Hicetas of Leontini, and Mamercus of Ca- 
tana, had recourse to the Carthaginians for as- 
sistance, who sent Gisco to Sicily with a fleet 
of seventy ships and a body of Greek mercena- 
ries. Although (iiseo gained a few successes 
at first, the war was, upon the whole, favorable 
to Timoleon, and the Carthaginians were there- 
fore glad to conclude a treaty with the latter in 
338, by which the River Halycus was fixed as 
the boundary of the Carthaginian and Greek 
dominions in Sicily. It was during the war 
with Gisco that Hicetas fell into the hands of 
Timoleon, and was massacred by his order. His 
wife and daughters were carried to Syracuse, 
where they were executed by the people, as a 
satisfaction to the manes of Dion, whose wife 
Arete and sister Aristoiuachc had both been put 
to death by Hicetas. This is one of the greatest 
stains upon Timoleon's character, as he might 
easily have saved these unfortunate women if 
he had chosen. After the treaty between the 
Carthaginians and Timoleon, Mamercus, being 
unable to maintain himself in Catana, fled to 

I Messana, where he took refuge with Hippon, 
tyrant of that city. Timoleon quickly followed, 

t • and besieged Messana so vigorously by sea and 
land, that Hippon, despairing of holding out, 
attempted to escape by sea, but was taken and 
put to death in the public theatre. Mamercus 
now surrendered, stipulating only for a public 
trial before the Syracusans, with the condition 
that Timoleon should not appear as his accuser. 
But as soon as he was brought into the assem- 
oly at Syracuse, the people refused to hear kim, 
and unanimously condemned him to death. Thus 
almost all the tyrants were expelled from the 
Greek cities in Sicily, and a democratical form 
of government established in their place. Ti- 
moleon, however, was m reality the ruler of Si- 

! cily, for all the states consulted him on every 
matter of importance; and the wisdom of his 

| rule is attested by the flourishing condition of 

1 the island for several years even after his death. 

| He did not, however, assume any title or office, 
but resided as a private citizen among the Syr- 
acusans. Timoleon died in 337, having become 
blind a short time before his death. He was 
buried at the public expense in the market-place 
at Syracuse, where his monument was after- 
ward surrounded with porticoes and a gymna- 
sium, which was called after him the Timoleon- 
teum. Annual games were also instituted in 
his honor. 

Timomachus (Tiuopaxog), a distinguished 
painter of Byzantium, lived in the time of Ju- 

i lius Caesar (according to Pliny), who purchased 
two of his pictures, the Ajax and Medea, for the 
immense sum of eighty Attic talents, and ded- 

1 icated them in the temple of Venus Genitrix. 

I It has been supposed, however, by some mod- 

! ern writers, that Timomachus lived at an ear- 
lier period. 

I Timon {Tifiuv). 1. The son of Timarchus of 
Phlius, a philosopher of the sect of the Skeptics, 
flourished in the reign of Ptolemy Philadelphus, 
about B.C. 279, and onward. He first studied 
philosophy at Megara, under Stilpon, and then 
returned home and married. He next went to 
Elis with his wife, and heard Pyrrhon, whose 
tenets he adopted. Driven from Elis by strait- 
57 



ened circumstances, he spent some time on the 
Hellespont and the Propontis, and taught at 
Chalcedon as a sophist with such success that 
he realized a fortune. He then removed to 
Athens, where he passed the remainder of his 
life, with the exception of a short residence at 
Thebes. He died at the age of almost ninety. 
Timon appears to have been endowed by nature 
with a powerful and active mind, and with that 
quick perception of the follies of men which be- 
trays its possessor into a spirit of universal dis- 
trust both of men and truths, so as to make him 
a skeptic in philosophy and a satirist in every 
thing. He wrote numerous works both in prose 
and poetry. The most celebrated of his poems 
were the satiric compositions called Silli (o~iA- 
Xoi), a word of somewhat doubtful etymology, 
but which undoubtedly describes metrical com- 
positions of a character at once ludicrous and 
sarcastic. The invention of this species of 
poetry is ascribed to Xenophanes of Colophon. 
Vid. Xenophanes. The Sdli of Timon were in 
three books, in the first of which he spoke in his 
own person, and the other two are in the form 
of a dialogue between the author and Xenopha- 
nes of Colophon, in which Timon proposed ques- 
tions, to which Xenophanes replied at length. 
The subject was a sarcastic account of the ten- 
ets of all philosophers, living and dead ; an un- 
bounded field for skepticism and satire. They 
were in hexameter verse, and, from the way in 
which they are mentioned by the ancient writ- 
ers, as well as from the few fragments of them 
which have come down to us, it is evident that 
they were very admirable productions of their 
kind. The fragments of his poems are collected 
by Wolke, Dc Grcecorum Stl/is, Varsav., 1820; 
and by Paul, Dissertated de Sillis, Berol , 1821. — 
2. The Misanthrope (6 fiiauidpunuc), lived in the 
time of the Peloponnesian war. He was an 
Athenian, of the demos of Colyttus, and his 
father's name was Echecratides. In conse- 
quence of the ingratitude he experienced, and 
the disappointments he suffered from his early 
friends and companions, he secluded himself en- 
tirely from the world, admitting no one to his 
society except Alcibiades, in whose reckless and 
variable disposition he probably found pleasure 
in tracing and studying an image of the world 
he had abandoned ; and at last he is said to have 
died in consequence of refusing to suffer a sur- 
geon to come to him to set a broken liinb. One 
of Lucian's pieces bears his name. 

[TimophInes (Ti/Hxbuvw), the brother of Ti- 
moleon. Vid. Timoleon.] 

Timotheus (Tifiddeug). 1. So* of Conon, the 
famous general, was himself a distinguished 
Athenian general. He was first appointed to 
a public command in B.C. 378, and from this 
time his name frequency occurs as one of the 
Athenian generals liown to 356. In this year 
he was associate^ with Iphicrates, Menestheus, 
and Chares \n the command of the Athenian 
fleet. In consequence of his conduct in this 
war, he was arraigned in 354, and condemned 
to the crushing fine of one hundred talents 
(more than £24,000). Being unable to pay the 
fine, he withdrew to Chalcis in Euboea, where 
he died shortly after. The Athenians sub- 
sequently remitted nine tenths of the penalty, 
and allowed his son Conon to expend the re- 

897 



TINA. 



TIRESIAS. 



mainder on the repair of the walls, which the 
famous Conon had restored. — 2. Son of Clear- 
chus, the tyrant of Heraclea on the Euxine, 
whom he succeeded in the sovereignty B.C. 
353. There is extant a letter addressed to him 
by Isocrates. — 3. A celebrated musician and 
poet of the later Athenian dithyramb, was a 
native of Miletus, and the son of Thersander. 
He was horn B.C. 446, and died in 357, in the 
ninetieth year of his age. Of the details of his 
life we have very little information. He was 
at first unfortunate in his professional efforts. 
Even the Athenians, fond as they were of nov- 
elty, were offended at the bold innovations of 
Timotheus, and hissed off his performance. On 
this occasion it is said that Euripides encour- 
aged Timotheus by the prediction that he would 
soon have the theatres at his feet. This predic- 
tion appears to have been accomplished in the 
vast popularity which Timotheus afterward en- 
joyed. The Ephesians rewarded him, for his 
dedicatory hymn to Diana (Artemis), with the 
sum of one thousand pieces of gold ; and the last 
accomplishment by which the education of the 
Arcadian youth was finished, was learning the 
nomes of Timotheus and Philoxenus. Timo- 
theus is said to have died in Macedonia. He 
delighted in the most artificial and intricate 
forms of musical expression, and he used in- 
strumental music, without a vocal accompani- 
ment, to a greater extent than any previous 
composer. Perhaps the most important of his 
innovations, as the means of introducing all 
the others, was his addition to the number of 
the strings of the cithara. Respecting the pre- 
cise nature of that addition the ancient writers 
are not agreed ; but it is most improbable, from 
the whole evidence, that the lyre of Timotheus 
had eleven strings. It is said that, when Timo- 
theus visited Sparta, and entered the musical 
contest at Carnea, one of the ephors snatched 
away his lyre, and cut from it the strings, four 
in number, by which it exceeded the seven- 
stringed lyre of Terpander, and, as a memorial 
of this public vindication of the ancient simplic- 
ity of music, and for a warning to future inno- 
vators, the Lacedaemonians hung up the muti- 
lated lyre of Timotheus in their Scias. With 
regard to the subjects of his compositions, and 
the manner in which he treated them, we have 
abundant evidence that he even went beyond 
the other musicians of the period in the liber- 
ties which he took with the ancient myths, in 
the attempt to make his music imitative as well 
as expressive, and in the confusion of the dif- 
ferent departments of lyric poetry ; in one word, 
in the application of that false principle, which 
also misled his frhnd Euripides, that pleasure 
is the end of poetry.-- 4. A distinguished flute- 
player of Thebes, flourished under Alexander 
the Great, on whom his nvusic made so power- 
ful an impression, that once, in the midst of a 
performance by Timotheus of at. Orthian Nome 
to Atheua, Alexander started from his seat and 
seized his arms. — 5. A statuary and sculptor, 
whose country is not mentioned, but who be- 
longed to the later Attic school of the time of 
Scopas and Praxiteles. He was one of the art- 
ists who executed the bas-reliefs which adorned 
the frieze of the Mausoleum, about B.C. 352. 
[Tina (now Tyne), a river of Britannia, north 
898 



| of the Vedra, marking the eastern termination 

i of the wall of Hadrian.] 

; Tixgis (?) Tiyyiz '■ now Tangier), a city of 
j Mauretania, on the southern coast of the Fre- 
I turn Gaditanum (now Slraits of Gibraltar), was 
■ a place of very great antiquity. It was made 
j by Augustus a free city, and by Claudius a col- 
I ony, and the capital of Mauretania Tingitana. 
Tin i a (now Timia), a small river in Umbria, 
rising near Spoletium, and falling into the Ti- 
ber after receiving the Clitumnus. 
[Tiph^:. Vid. Siph^:.] 
[Tiphys (Tipi'f), son of Hagnius, or, according 
to others, of Phorbas, born at Tiphee or Siphse 
in Bceotia, or at Aphormium, in the territory of 
the Thespians, was the pilot of the Argo, but 
died before the Argonauts reached Colchis.] 

Tiresias (Tetpvciac), a Theban, son of Eu- 
eres and Chariclo, was one of the most renown- 
ed soothsayers in all antiquity. He was blind 
from his seventh year, but lived to a very old 
age. It was believed that his blindness was 
, occasioned by his having revealed to men things 
j which they ought not to have known, or by his 
! having seen Athena while she was bathing, on 
| which occasion the goddess deprived him of 
! sight by sprinkling water upon his face. Chan- • 
' clo prayed to Minerva (Athena) to restore his 
sight, but as the goddess was unable to do this, 
she conferred upon him the power of under- 
standing the voices of birds, and gave him a 
staff, with the help of which he could walk as 
safely as if he had his eyesight. Another tra- 
dition accounts for his blindness in the follow- 
ing manner. Once, when on Mount Cithseron 
(others say Cyllene), he saw a male and a fe- 
male serpent together ; he struck at them with 
his staff, and as he happened to kill the female, 
he himself was metamorphosed into a woman. 
Seven years later he again saw two serpents, 
and now killing the male, he again became a 
man. It was for this reason that Jupiter (Zeus), 
and Juno (Hera), when disputing whether a man 
or a woman had more enjoyments, referred the 
matter to Tiresias, who declared that women 
enjoyed more pleasure than men. Juno (Hera), 
indignant at the answer, deprived him of sight, 
but Jupiter (Zeus) gave him the power of proph- 
ecy, and granted him a life which was to last 
for seven or nine generations. In the war of 
the Seven against Thebes, he declared that 
Thebes should be victorious if Menceceus would 
sacrifice himself ; and during the war of the 
Epigoni, when the Thebans had been defeated,, 
he advised them to commence negotiations of 
peace, and to avail themselves of the opportu- 
nity that would thus be afforded them to take 
to flight. He himself fled with them (or, ac- 
cording to others, he was carried to Delphi as 
a captive), but on his way he drank from the 
well of Tilphossa and died. His daughter Man- 
to (or Daphne) was sent by the victorious Ar- 
gives to Delphi as a present to Apollo. Even 
in the lower world Tiresias was believed to re- 
tain the powers of perception, while the souls 
of other mortals were mere shades, and there 
also he continued to use his golden staff. His 
tomb was shown in the neighborhood of the 
Tilphusian well near Thebes, and in Macedonia 
likewise The place near Thebes where he had 
observed the birds was pointed out as a remark- 



TIRIBAZUS. 



TISSAPHERNES. 



able spot even in later times. The blind seer 
Tiresias acts so prominent a part in the myth- 
ical history of Greece that there is scarcely any 
event with which he is not connected in some 
way or other ; and this introduction of the seer 
in so many occurrences separated by lon^ in- 
tervals of time, was facilitated by the belief in 
his long life. 

[Tiribazus (TipiCa^or). Vid. Terih azus.] 
Tiridates or TsRiDATKa (Yrjpi66.T7j^). l. The 
second king of Parthia. Vid. Arsaces II. — 2. 
King of Armenia, and brother of Vologeses I. 
(Arsaces, No. 23), king of Parthia. He was 
made King of Armenia by his brother, but was 
driven out of the kingdom by Corbulo, the Ro- 
man general, and finally received the Arme- 
nian crown from Nero at Rome in A.D. 63. 

Tiro, M. Tullu s, the freedman of Cicero, to 
whom he was an object of tender affection. He 
appears to have been a man of very amiable dis- 
position and highly-cultivated intellect. He was 
not only the amanuensis of the orator, and his 
assistant in literary labor, but was himself an 
author of no mean reputation, and notices of 
several works from his pen have been preserved 
by ancient writers. It is supposed by many 
that Tiro was the chief agent in bringing to- 
gether and arranging the works of his illustri- 
ous patron, and in preserving his correspond- 
ence from being dispersed and lost. After the 
death of Cicero, Tiro purchased a farm in the 
neighborhood of Puteoli, where he lived until 
he reached his hundredth year. It is usually 
believed that Tiro was the inventor of the art 
of short-hand writing among the Romans ; and 
hence abbreviations of tins description, which 
are common in MSS. from the sixth century- 
downward, have very generally been designa- 
ted by the learned as Afaftfl Tironiana. 

Tiryns (T/pw/f, -vvdog : Tipvudtog), an ancient 
town in Argolis, southeast of Argos, and one of 
the most ancient in all Greece, is said to have 
been founded by Prcetus, the brother of Acris- 
ius, who built the massive walls of the city with 
the help of the Cyclopes. Prcetus was succeed- 
ed by Perseus ; and it was here that Hercules 
was brought up. Hence we find his mother Alc- 
mena called Tirynihia, and the hero himself Ti- 
rynthius. Homer represents Tiryns as subject 
to Argos ; the town was at a later time destroyed 
by the Argives, and most of the inhabitants 
were removed to Argos. Tiryns was built upon 
a hill of small extent, rising abruptly from the 
dead level of the surrounding country. The re- 
mains of the city are some of the most interest- 
ing in all Greece, and are, with those of Myce- 
nae, the most ancient specimens of what is called 
Cyclopian architecture. They consist of masses 
of enormous stones, rudely piled in tiers above 
one another. 

Tisamenus (YLcauevoc.) 1. Son of Orestes 
and Hermione, was king of Argos, but was de- 
prived of his kingdom when the Heraclida; in- 
vaded Peloponnesus. He was slain in a battle 
against the Heraclida?, and his tomb was after- 
ward shown at Helice, from which place his re- 
mains were subsequently removed to Sparta by 
command of an oracle. — 2. Son of Thersander 
and Demonassa, was king of Thebes, and the j 
father of Autesion. — 3. An Elean soothsayer, 
of the family of the Clytiadae. He was assured ! 



by the Delphic oracle that he should be success- 
ful in five great conflicts. Supposing this to be 
: a promise of distinction as an athlete, he de- 
! voted himself to gymnastic exercises ; but the 
; Spartans, understanding the oracle to refer, not 
: to gymnastic, but to military victories, made 
1 great offers to Tisamenus to induce him to take 
j with their kings the joint command of their ar- 
mies. This he refused to do on any terms short 
of receiving the full franchise of their city, which 
the Spartans eventually granted. He was pres- 
ent with the Spartans at the battle of Plataeae, 
B.C. 379, which was the first of the five con- 
flicts referred to by the oracle. The second 
was with the Argives and Tegeans at Tegea ; 
the third, with the Arcadians at Dipaea;°the 
fourth was the third Messenian War (465-455) j 
and the last was the battle of Tanagra, with the 
Athenians and their allies, in 457. 

Tisia (Tisiates, pi.), a town in Bruttium, in 
the Sila Silva, of uncertain site. 

[Tisias, of Syracuse, one of the earliest writ- 
ers on rhetoric, a pupil of Corax, who was said to 
have invented the rhetorical art. Vid. Corax.] 

TisicrItes, an eminent Greek statuary of the 
school of Lysippus, to whose works those of 
Tisicrates so nearly approached that many of 
them were scarcely to be distinguished from the 
works of the master. 

TlSIPHONE. Vid. EUMENIDES. 

Tissa (Tissiensis, Tissinensis), a town in Si- 
cily north of Mount iEtna. 

Tissapherxes (T ' icoa<t>£pv?]s), a famous Per- 
sian, who was appointed satrap of Lower Asia 
in B.C. 414. He espoused the cause of the 
Spartans in the Peloponnesian war, but he did 
not give them any effectual assistance, since his 
policy was not to allow either Spartans or Athe- 
nians to gain the supremacy, but to exhaust 
the strength of both parties by the continuance 
of the war. His plans, however, were thwarted 
by the arrival of Cyrus in Asia Minor in 407. 
This prince supplied the Lacedaemonians with 
cordial and effectual assistance. Tissaphernes 
and Cyrus were not on good terms ; and after 
the death of Darius, they were engaged in con- 
tinual disputes about the cities in the satrapy 
of the former, over which Cyrus claimed domin- 
ion. The ambitious views of Cyrus toward the 
throne at length became manifest to Tissapher- 
nes, who lost no time in repairing to the king 
with information of the danger. At the battle 
of Cunaxa in 401, he was one of the four gen- 
erals who commanded the army of Artaxerxes, 
and his troops were the only portion of the left 
wing that was not put to flight by the Greeks. 
When the ten thousand had begun their retreat, 
Tissaphernes professed his great anxiety to 
serve them, and promised to conduct them 
home in safety. In the course of the march 
he treacherously arrested Clearchus and four 
of the other generals, who were put to death- 
After this, Tissaphernes annoyed and harassed 
the Greeks in their march, without, however, 
seriously impeding it, till they reached the Car- 
duchian Mountains, at which point he gave up 
the pursuit. Not long after, Tissaphernes, as a 
reward for his great services, was invested by 
the king, in addition to his own satrapy, with 
all the authority which Cyrus had enjoyed in 
Western Asia. On his arrival he claimed do- 

899 



TITANES. 



TITUS FLAVIUS. 



minion over the Ionian cities, which applied to 
Sparta for aid. Their request was granted, and 
the Spartans carried on war against Tissapher- 
nes with success for some years under the com- 
mand successively of Thimbron, Dercyllidas, 
and Agesilaus (400-395). The continued want 
of success on the part of Tissaphernes led to 
grievous complaints against him ; and the 
charges were transmitted to court, where they 
were backed by all the influence of Parysatis, 
eager for revenge on the enemy of Cyrus, her 
favorite son. The result was, that Tithraustes 
was commissioned by the king to put Tissapher- 
nes to death and to succeed him in his govern- 
ment, which was accordingly done (395). 

Titanes (Tirdvec, sing. Tlt&v, Ion. TiTfjvec : 
fern. TiTavidec, sing. Ttravcg). 1 . The sons and 
daughters of Ccelus (Uranus) and Terra (Ge), 
originally dwelt in heaven, whence they are 
called Ovpaviuveg or Ovpavidat. They were 
twelve in number, six sons and six daughters, 
namely, Oceanus, Cceus, Crius, Hyperion, Iap- 
etus, Cronus, Thia, Rhea, Themis, Mnemosyne, 
Phoebe, and Tethys ; but their names are dif- 
ferent in other accounts. It is said that Uranus 
(Coelus), the first ruler of the world, threw his 
sons, the Hecatoncheires (hundred-handed) — 
Briareus, Cottys, Gyes, and the Cyclopes Ar- 
ges, Steropes, and Brontes — into Tartarus. 
Gaea (Terra), indignant at this, persuaded the 
Titans to rise against their father, and gave to 
Cronus (Saturn) an adamantine sickle. They 
did as their mother bade them, with the excep- 
tion of Oceanus. Cronus (Saturn), with his 
sickle, unmanned his father, and threw the part 
into the sea : from the drops of his blood there 
arose the Erinyes Alecto, Tisiphone, and Me- 
gaera. The Titans then deposed Uranus (Cce- 
lus), liberated their brothers who had been 
cast into Tartarus, and raised Cronus (Saturn) 
to the throne. But Cronus (Saturn) hurled the 
Cyclopes back into Tartarus, and married his 
sister Rhea. Having been foretold by Gaea 
(Terra) and Uranus (Ccelus) that he should be 
dethroned by one of his own children, he swal- 
lowed successively his children Hestia (Vesta), 
Demeter (Ceres), Hera (Juno), Hades (Pluto), 
and Poseidon (Neptune). Rhea, therefore, when 
she was pregnant with Zeus (Jupiter), went to 
Crete, and gave birth to the child in the Dictaean 
Cave, where he was brought up by the Curetes. 
When Zeus (Jupiter) had grown up, he availed 
Himself of the assistance of Thetis, the daugh- 
ter of Oceanus, who gave to Cronus (Saturn) 
a potion which caused him to bring up the stone 
and the children he had swallowed. United 
with his brothers and sisters, Zeus (Jupiter) 
-now began the contest against Cronus (Saturn) 
and the ruling Titans. This contest (usually 
called the Titanomachia) was carried on in 
Thessaly, Cronus (Saturn) and the Titans oc- 
cupying Mount Othrys, and the sons of Cronus 
(Saturn) Mount Olympus. It lasted ten years, 
till at length Gaea (Terra) promised victory to 
Zeus (Jupiter) if he would deliver the Cyclopes 
and Hecatoncheires from Tartarus. Zeus (Ju- 
piter) accordingly slew Campe, who guarded the 
Cyclopes, and the latter furnished him with 
thunder and lightning. The Titans then were 
•overcome, and hurled down into a cavity below 
Tartarus, and the Hecatoncheires were set to 
900 



guard them. It must be observed that the fight 
of the Titans is sometimes confounded by an- 
cient writers with the fight of the Gigantes 

2. The name Titans is also given to those di- 
vine or semi-divine beings who were descended 
from the Titans, such as Prometheus, Hecate, 
Latona, Pyrrha, and especially Helios (the Sun) 
and Selene (the Moon) as the children of Hype- 
rion and Thia, and even the descendants of 
Helios, such as Circe. 

TitaresIus (TiTapricuoi; : now Elassonitiko or 
Xeraghi), a river of Thessaly, also called Euro- 
pus, rising in Mount Titarus, flowing through 
the country of the Perrhaebi, and falling into the 
Peneus southeast of Pbalanna. Its waters were 
impregnated with an oily substance, whence it 
was said to be a branch of the infernal Styx. 

Tithonus (T UdGwos), son of Laomedon and 
Strymo, and brother of Priam. By the prayers 
of Eos (Aurora), who loved him, he obtained 
from the gods immortality, but not eternal youth, 
in consequence of which he completely shrunk 
together in his old age, whence an old decrepit 
man was proverbially called Tithonus. As he 
could not die, Eos (Aurora) changed him into a 
cicada. 

Tithorea. Vid. Neon. 

Tithraustes (TtOpavarr/c;), a Persian, wno 
succeeded Tissaphernes in his satrapy, and put 
him to death by order of Artaxerxes Mnemon, 
B.C. 395. Being unable to make peace with 
Agesilaus, he sent Timocrates, the Rhodian, 
into Greece with fifty talents, to distribute 
among the leading men in the several states, in 
order to induce them to excite a war against 
Sparta at home. 

Titianus, Julius, a Roman writer, was the 
father of the rhetorician Titianus, who taught 
the younger Maximinus. The elder Titianus 
may therefore be placed in the reigns of Com- 
modus, Pertinax, and Severus. He was called 
the ape of his age, because he had imitated 
every thing. All his works are lost. 

Titinius, a Roman dramatist, whose produc- 
tions belonged to the department of the Comct- 
dia Togata, is commended by Varro on account 
of the skill with which he developed the char- 
acters of the personages whom he brought upon 
the stage. It appears that he was younger than 
Caecilius, but older than Terence, and flourished 
about B.C. 170. The names of upward of 
fourteen plays, together with a considerable 
number of short fragments, have been preserv- 
ed by the grammarians. 

Titius Septimius. Vid. Septimius. 

[Titormus (TtToppioc), a herdsman of iEtolia, 
renowned for his great strength, which so far 
surpassed that of the celebrated Milo of Cro- 
tona, that the latter is said to have exclaimed, 
on witnessing a display of his physical powers, 
"Oh, Jupiter! hast thou begotten in this man 
another Hercules for us !"] 

Titus Flavius Sabinus Vespasianus, Roman 
emperor A.D. 79-81, commonly called by his 
pramomen Titus, was the son of the Emperor 
Vespasianus and his wife Flavia Domitilla. He 
was born on the 30th of December, A.D. 40. 
When a young man he served as tribunus mil- 
itum in Britain and in Germany with great 
credit. After having been quaestor, he had the 
command of a legion, and served under his 



TITUS FLAVIUS. 



TMOLUS. 



father in the Jewish wars. Vespasian returned 
to Italy after he had heen proclaimed emperor 
on the first of July, A.D. 69 ; but Titus remain- 
ed in Palestine to prosecute the siege of Jeru- 
salem, during which he showed the talents of 
a general with the daring of a soldier. The 
siege of Jerusalem was concluded hy the cap- 
ture of the place on the 8th of September, 70. 
Titus returned to Italy in the following year 
(71), and triumphed at Rome with his father. 
He also received the title of Caesar, and became 
the associate of Vespasian in the government. 
His conduct at this time gave no good promise, 
and the people looked upon him as likely to be 
another Nero. He was accused of being ex- 
cessively addicted to the pleasures of the table, 
of indulging lustful passions in a scandalous 
way, and of putting suspected persons to death 
with very little ceremony. His attachment to 
Berenice, the sister of Agrippa II., also made I 
him unpopular. Titus became acquainted with | 
her when he was in Judaea, and after the cap- 
ture of Jerusalem she followed him to Rome I 
with her brother Agrippa. and both of them 
lodged in the emperor's residence. It was said 
that Titus had promised to marry Berenice, 
but as this intended union gave the Romans 
great dissatisfaction, he sent her away from 
Rome after he became emperor. Titus suc- 
ceeded his father in 79, and his government 
proved an agreeable surprise to those who had 
anticipated a return of the times of Nero. His 
brother Domitian was accused of having enter- 
tained designs against Titus ; but, instead of 
punishing him, Titus endeavored to win his 
affection, and urged him not to attempt to gain 
by criminal means that power which he would 
one day have in a legitimate way. During his 
whole reign Titus displayed a sincere desire for 
the happiness of the people, and he did all that I 
he could to relieve them in times of distress. | 
He assumed the office of pontifex maximus aft- j 
er the death of his father, and with the purpose, 
as he declared, of keeping his hands free from 
blood ; a resolution which he kept. Two patri- 
cians, who were convicted by the senate of a 
conspiracy against him, were pardoned, and 
treated with kindness and confidence. He 
checked all prosecutions for the crime of Icesa 
majestas, and he severely punished all informers. 
The first year of his reign is memorable for the 
great eruption of Vesuvius, which desolated a 
large part of the adjacent country, and buried 
with lava and ashes the towns of Herculaneum 
and Pompeii. Titus endeavored to repair the 
ravages of this great eruption : he sent two con- i 
sulars with money to restore the ruined towns, 
and he applied to this purpose the property of i 
those who had been destroyed, and had left no 
next of kin. At the beginning of the following 
year (80) there was a great fire at Rome, which 
lasted three days and three nights, and destroy- I 
ed the Capitol, the library of Augustus, the the- 
atre of Pompeius, and other public buildings, 
besides many houses. The emperor declared 
that he should consider all the loss as his own, 
and he set about repairing it with great activity ; 
he took even the decorations of the imperial i 
residences, and sold them to raise money. The ! 
eruption of Vesuvius was followed by a dread- ! 
ful pestilence, which called for fresh exertions | 



on the part of the benevolent emperor. In this 
year he completed the great amphitheatre called 
the Colosseum, which had been commenced by 
his father; and also the baths called the baths 
of Titus. The dedication of these two edifices 
was celebrated by spectacles which lasted one 
hundred days; by a naval battle in the old 
naumachia, and fights of gladiators : on one day 
alone five thousand wild animals are said to 
have been exhihited, a number which we may 
reasonably suspect to be exaggerated. He died 
on the thirteenth of September, 81. after a reign 
of two years, two months, and twentv days. 
He was in the forty-first year of his age. There 
were suspicions that he was poisoned hy Domi- 
tian. There is a story that Domitian came be- 
fore Titus was dead, and ordered him to be de- 
serted by those about him : according to an- 
other story, he ordered him to be thrown into a 
vessel full of snow, under the pretext of cooling 
his fever. Titus was succeeded by his brother 
Domitian. His daughter Julia Sabina was mar- 
ried to Flavius Sabinus, his cousin, the son of 
Flavins Sabinus, the brother of Vespasian. 
Titus is said to have written Greek poems and 
tragedies ; he was very familiar with Greek- 
He also wrote many letters in his father's name 
during Vespasian"s life, and drew up edicta. 

Tityts (Tf-t'rif), son of Terra (Ga?a), or of 
Jupiter (Zeus) and Elara, the daughter of Or- 
chomenus, was a giant in Eubcea. Instigated 
by Juno (Hera), he attempted to ofTer violence 
to Latona (Leto) or Diana (Artemis), when she 
passed through Panopaeus to Pytho, but he was 
killed by the arrows of Diana (Artemis) or Apol- 
lo ; according to others, Jupiter (Zeus) destroy- 
ed him with a flash of lightning. He was then 
cast into Tartarus, and there he lay outstretch- 
ed on the ground, covering nine acres, with two 
vultures or snakes devouring his liver. His de- 
struction by the arrows of Diana (Artemis) and 
Apollo was represented on t he throne of Apollo 
at Amyclae. 

Tius or Tium (Tioc, Tcov, also Ti'/iov : now 
Tios or Tilios), a sea-port town of Bithynia, on 
the River Billaeus ; a colony from Miletus, and 
the native place of Philetaerus, the founder of 
the Pergamene kingdom. 

Ti.epolemus (T?>7)TTo?.euor), son of Hercules by 
Astyoche, daughter of Phylas, or by Astydamia, 
daughter of Amyntor. He was King of Argos. 
but after slaying his uncle Licymnius he was 
obliged to take to flight ; and, in conformity with 
the command of an oracle, he settled in Rhodes, 
where he built the towns of Lindos, Ialysus, and 
Camirus. He joined the Greeks in the Trojan 
war with nine ships, but was slain by Sarpedon. 

Tlos [Tlur, gen. Tlu : TP.ufvc, TZUttjs : ru- 
ins near Doovcr), a considerable city in the inte- 
rior of Lycia, about two and a half miles east 
of the River Xanthus, on the road leading over 
Mount Massicytus to Cibyra. 

T si akus. Vid. Tomarus. 

Tmolus (Tud^.of), god of Mount Tmolus 10 
Lydia, is described as the husband of Pluto (or 
Omphale) and father of Tantalus, and is said to 
have decided the musical contest between Apol- 
lo and Pan. 

Tmolus or Timolus (T/uwAoc : now Kisilja 
Musa Dagh), a celebrated mountain of Asia 
Minor, running east and west through the cen- 

901 



TOGATA, GALLIA. 



TORQUATUS. 



tre of Lydia, and dividing the plain of the Her- 
raus, on the north, from that of the Cayster, on 
the south. At its eastern end it joins Mount 
Messogis, thus entirely inclosing the valley of 
the Cayster. On the west, after throwing out 
the northwestern branch called Sipylus, it runs 
far out into the JSgean, forming, under the name 
of Mimas, the great Ionian peninsula, beyond 
which it is still further prolonged in the island 
of Chios. On its northern side are the sources 
of the Pactolus and the Cogamus ; on its south- 
ern side those of the Cayster. It produced 
wine, saffron, zinc, and gold. 

TogIta, Gallia. Vid. Gallia. 

TolbiIcum (now Zulpich), a town of Gallia 
Belgica, on the road from Colonia Agrippina to 
Treviri. 

Tolentinum (Tolinas, -atis : now Tolcntino), 
a town of Picenum, on a height on the River 
Flusor (now Chiente). 

Tolenus or Telonius (now Turano), a river 
in the land of the Sabines, rising in the country 
of the Marsi and iEqui, and falling into the 
Velinus. 

Toletum (now Toledo), the capital of the Car- 
petani in Hispania Tarraconensis, situated on 
the River Tagus, which nearly encompasses the 
town, and upon seven hills. According to tra- 
dition, it was founded by Jews, who fled thither 
when Jerusalem was taken by Nebuchadnezzar, 
and who called it Toledoth, or the " city of gen- 
erations." It was taken by the Romans under 
the proconsul M. Fulvius, B.C. 192, when it is 
described as a small but fortified town. It was 
celebrated in ancient, as well as in modern 
times, for the manufactory of swords ; but it 
owed its greatness to the Gothic kings, who 
made it the capital of their dominions. It still 
contains many Roman remains. 

TOLISTOBOGI, TOLISTOBOJI (To/UGTOboyiOl, To- 

/uGTodoioi, To?uGTo6o>yLoi). Vid. Galatia. 

[Tolmides (To/ifxidijc). h An Athenian gen- 
eral, who ravaged the coast of the Peloponne- 
sus in B.C. 455, burned the Spartan arsenal at 
Gythium, took Naupactus, and settled there the 
Messenians who left their country on its con- 
quest by the Spartans. He afterward under- 
took an expedition to quell a disturbance in 
Chaeronea and Orchomenus, but was defeated 
and slain. — 2. An Elean, a herald in the Greek 
army of Cyrus, considered the best herald of 
his day.] 

Tolophon (To?.o<puv : ToIloouvioq), also called 
Colophon (Koloyuv), a town of Locris, on the 
Corinthian Gulf. 

Tolosa (now Tolouse), a town of Gallia Nar- 
bonensis, and the capital of the Tectosages, was 
situated on the Garumna, near the frontiers of 
Aquitania. It was subsequently made a Roman 
colony, and was surnamed Palladia. It was a 
large and wealthy town, and contained a cele- 
brated temple, in which great riches were de- 
posited. In this temple there is said to have 
been preserved a great part of the booty taken 
by Brennus from the temple at Delphi. The 
town and temple were plundered by the consul 
Q. Servilius Caepio in B.C. 106 ; but the sub- 
sequent destruction of his army and his own 
unhappy fate were regarded as a divine punish- 
ment for his sacrilegious act. Hence arose the 
proverb Aurum Tolosanum habet. There are ! 
902 



the ruins of a small amphitheatre and some 
other Roman remains at the modern town. 

[Tolumnius, an augur among the Rutulians, 
who distinguished himself by his bravery, was 
the means of preventing the completion of a 
J friendly compact between Turnus and .'Eneas, 
j and was slain in the subsequent conflict.] 
i Tolumnius, Lar, king of the Veientes, to 
whom Fidenee revolted in B.C. 438, and at 
whose instigation the inhabitants of FidensB 
slew the four Roman ambassadors who had 
been sent to Fidenae to inquire into the reasons 
of their recent conduct. Statues of these am- 
bassadors were placed on the Rostra at Rome, 
where they continued till a late time. In the 
war which followed, Tolumnius was slain in 
single combat by Cornelius Cossus, who dedi- 
cated his spoils in the temple of Jupiter Fere- 
trius, the second of the three instances in which 
the spolia opima were won. 

Tomarus or Tmarus (Topapoc, T/xupoc ■ now 
Tomaro), a mountain in Epirus, in the district 
Molossia, between the Lake Pambotis and the 
River Arachthus, near Dodona. 

Tomeus (Tojxtvc : now Kondozoni), a mount- 
ain in Messenia, east of the promontory Cory- 
phasium. 

Tomi or Tomis (Topoi, Topic : Tofievc, Tomi- 
ta : now Tomiswar or Jcgni Pangola), a town 
of Thrace (subsequently Mcesia), situated on the 
western shore of the Euxine, and at a later 
time the capital of Scythia Minor. According 
to tradition, it was called Tomi (from rifivu, 
"cut") because Medea here cut to pieces the 
body of her brother Absyrtus. It is said to have 
been a colony of the Milesians. It is renowned 
as the place of Ovid ? s banishment. 

Tomyris (Touvptc), a queen of the Massageta.-. 
who dwelt south of the Araxes (Jaxartes), by 
whom Cyrus was slain in battle B.C. 529. 

[Tonoilius. 1. A dissolute young Roman, 
mentioned contemptuously by Cicero among 
the favorites of Catiline. — 2. A lawyer undei 
Adrian, noted for his avarice, ridiculed by Juve 
nal.] 

[Topazos, an island on the western side of 
the Sinus Arabicus. Vid. Ophiodes.] 

Tornadotus. Vid. Physcus, No. 3. 

[ToRONiEus or Toronicus Sinus (Topovaloc, 
TopuvucbgyTopcovLaKog «o?i > 7to$ , ),Toronaicus (Liv., 
now Gulf of Cassandhra or Hagios-Mamos). 
Vid. Tor one, No. 1.] 

Tor one (Topuvr) : Topuvaloc). 1. A town of 
Macedonia, in the district Chalcidice, and on 
the southwestern side of the peninsula Sitho- 
nia, from which the gulf between the peninsu- 
las Sithonia and Pallene was called Sinus Toro- 
naicus. — [2. Vid. Toryne.] 

Torquatus, the name of a patrician family oi 
the Manlia gens. 1. T. Manlius Imperiosus 
Torquatus, the son of L. Manlius Capitolinus 
Imperiosus, dictator B.C. 363, was a favorite 
hero of Roman story. Manlius is said to have 
been dull of mind in his youth, and was brought 
up by his father in the closest retirement in the 
country. When the tribune M. Pomponius ac- 
cused the elder Manlius in B.C. 362, on ac- 
count of the cruelties he had practiced in his 
dictatorship, he endeavored to excite an odium 
against him by representing him at the same 
time as a cruel and tyrannical father. As soon 



TORQUATUS. 



TRACHONITIS. 



as the younger Manlius heard of this, he hur- 
ried to Rome, obtained admission to Pomponius 
early in the morning, and compelled the trib- 
une, by threatening him with instant death if 
he did not take the oath, to swear that he would 
drop the accusation against his father. In 361 
Manlius served under the dictator T. Quintius 
Pennus in the war against the Gauls, and in 
this campaign earned immortal glory by slaying 
in single combat a gigantic Gaul. From the 
dead body of the barbarian he took the chain 
(torques) which had adorned him, and placed it 
around his own nock ; and from this circum- 
stance he obtained tbe surname of Torquatus. 
He was dictator in 358, and again in 349. He 
was also three tunes consul, namely, in 347, 
344, and in 340. In the last of these years 
Torquatus and his colleague P. Decius Mus 
gained the great victory over the Latins at the 
foot of Vesuvius, which established forever the 
supremacy of Rome over Latium. Vid. Decius. 
Shortly before the battle, when the two armies 
were encamped opposite to one another, the 
consuls published a proclamation that no Ro- 
man should engage in single combat with a 
Latin on pain of death. Notwithstanding this 
proclamation, the young Manlius, the son of the 
consul, provoked by the insults of a Tusculan 
noble of the name of Mettius Geminus, accept- 
ed his challenge, slew his adversary, and bore 
the bloody spoils in triumph to his father. Death 
was his reward. The consul would not over- 
look this breach of discipline, and the unhappy 
youth was executed by the lictor in presence of 
the assembled army. This severe sentence 
rendered Torquatus an object of detestation 
among the Roman youths as long as he lived ; 
and the recollection of his severity was pre- 
served in after ages by the expression Manliana 
■imperia. — 2. T. Ma n li b s To rqi; atu s, consul B. 0. 
235, when he conquered the Sardinians ; cen- 
sor 231, and consul a second time in 224. He 
possessed the hereditary sternness and severity 
of his family; and we find him opposing in the 
senate the ransom of those Romans who had 
been taken prisoners at the fatal battle of Can- 
nae. In 217 he was sent into Sardinia, where 
he carried on the war with success against the 
Carthaginians and the Sardinians. He was dic- 
tator in 210. — 3. T. Manlius Torquatus, con- 
sul 165 with Cn Octavius. He inherited the 
severity of his ancestors, of which an instance 
is related in the condemnation of his son, who 
had been adopted by D. Junius Silanus. Vid. 
Silanus, No. 1. — 4. L. Manlius Torquatus, con- 
sul B C. 65 with L Aurelius Cotta. Torquatus 
and Cotta obtained the consulship in conse- 
quence of the condemnation, on account of brib- 
ery, of P. Cornelius Sulla and P. Autronius Pa3- 
tus, who had been already elected consuls. Aft- 
er his consulship Torquatus obtained the prov- 
ince of Macedonia. He took an active part in 
suppressing the Catilinarian conspiracy in 63; 
and he also supported Cicero when he was ban- j 
ished in 58. — 5. L Manlius Torquatus, son of 
No. 4, accused of bribery, in 66, the consuls 
elect, P. Cornelius Sulla and P. Autronius Par- 
tus, and thus secured the consulship for his fa- 
ther. He was closely connected with Cicero 
during the praetorship (65) and consulship (63) 
of the latter. In 62 he brought a second aecu- 



; sation against P. Sulla, whom he now charged 
| with having been a party to both of Catiline's 
j conspiracies. Sulla was defended by Horten- 
I sius and by Cicero in a speech which is still 
extant. Torquatus, like his father, belonged to 
the aristocratical party, and accordingly opposed 
Caesar on the breaking out of the civil war in 
49. He was praetor in that year, and was sta- 
tioned at Alba with six cohorts. He subse- 
quently joined Pompey in Greece, and in the 
following year (48) he had the command of Ori- 
cum intrusted to him, but was obliged to sur- 
render both himself and the town to Caesar, 
who, however, dismissed Torquatus uninjured. 
After the battle of Pharsalia Torquatus went to 
Africa, and upon the defeat of his party in that 
country in 46 he attempted to escape to Spain 
along with Scipio and others, but was taken, 
prisoner by P. Sittius at Hippo Regius, and 
slain together with his companions. Torquatus 
was well acquainted with Greek literature, and 
is praised by Cicero as a man well trained in 
every kind of learning. He belonged to the 
Epicurean school of philosophy, and is intro- 
duced by Cicero as the advocate of that school 
in his dialogue De Finibus, the first book of 
which is called Torquatus in Cicero's letters to 
Atticus. — G. A. Manlius Torquatus, praetor in 
52, when he presided at the trial of Milo for 
bribery. On the breaking out of the civil war 
he espoused the side of Pompey, and after the 
defeat of the latter retired to Athens, where he 
was living in exile in 45. He was an intimate 
friend of Cicero, who addressed four letters to 
him while he was in exile. 

Torquatus Silanus. Vid. Silanus. 
[Toryne (TopvvTi) or Torone (Topuvi], near 
Pcrga), a haven in Thesprotia, where the fleet 
of Augustus was moored for a short time pre- 
vious to the battle of Actium.] 

Toxandri, a people in Gallia Belgica, between 
the Menapii and Morini, on the right bank of 
the Scaldis. 

Trabea, Q., a Roman comic dramatist, who 
occupies the eighth place in the canon of Vol- 
catius Sedigitus. Vid. Sedigitus. The peri- 
od when he flourished is uncertain, but he has 
been placed about B.C. 130. No portion of his 
works has been preserved with the exception of 
half a dozen lines quoted by Cicero, [edited in. 
Bothe's Poctcr, Scenici Latin., vol. vi., p. 29-30.] 
Trachalus, Galerius, consul A.D. 68 with 
Silius Italicus, is frequently mentioned by his 
contemporary Quintilian as one of the most 
distinguished orators of his age. 

Trachis or Trachin (Tpaxk, Ion. Tpggfjf, 
Tpax'i-v '■ Tpaxhioc). 1. Also called Heraclea. 
Trachinije, or Heraclea Phthiotidis, or sim- 
ply Heraclea ('HpuK?,ua ij ev Tpaxtvatr, or 'H. 
7} kv Tpaxivt), a town of Thessaly, in the dis- 
trict Malis, celebrated as the residence of Her- 
cules for a time. — 2. A town of Phocis, on the 
frontiers of Bceotia, and on the slope of Mount 
Helicon, in the neighborhood of Lebadea. 

Trachonitis or Trachon (TpaxuvtTic, Tpd- 
xuv), the northern district of Palestine beyond 
the Jordan, lay between Antilibanus and the 
mountains of Arabia, and was bounded on the 
north by the territory of Damascus, on the east 
by Auranitis, on the south by Ituraea, and on 
the west by Gaulanitis. It was for the most 

903 



TRADUCTA, JULIA. 



TRAJECTUM. 



part a sandy desert, intersected by two ranges 
of rocky mountains, called Trachones (Tpa^w- 
vec), the caves in which gave refuge to numer- 
ous bands of robbers. For its political rela- 
tions under the Asmonaean and Idumeean prin- 
ces, vid. Pal^estina. Under the Romans it 
belonged sometimes to the province of Judaea 
and sometimes to that of Arabia. It forms part 
of the Hauran. 

[Teaducta, Julia (now Tarifa), a town in 
Hispania Baetica, owed its origin to the Ro- 
mans, who transported (whence the name Tra- 
ducta) hither the inhabitants of Zelas, a town in 
Africa, near Tingis, adding some colonists of 
their own to the number ] 

Tragia, Tragic, or Tragias (Tpayia, Tpa- 
ytat, Tpayiac), a small island (or more than 
one) in the JSgean Sea, near Samos, probably 
between it and Pharmacussa, where Pericles 
gained a naval victorv over the Samians, B.C. 
439. 

Tragurium (now Trait, or Troghie), a town 
of Dalmatia, in Illyricum, celebrated for its mar- 
ble, and situated on an island connected with 
the main land by means of a mole. 

Trajanopolis. 1. (Now Orickovo), a town in 
the interior of Thrace, on the Hebrus, founded 
by Trajan. — 2. A town of Cilicia. Vid. Seli- 
xus. — 3. A town in Mysia, on the borders of 
Phrygia. 

Trajanus, M. Ulpius, Roman emperor A.D. 
98-117, was born at Italica, near Seville, the 
18th of September, 52. He was trained to 
arms, and served with distinction in the East 
and in Germany. He was consul in 91, and at 
the close of 97 he was adopted by the Emperor 
Nerva, who gave him the rank of Cassar and 
the names of Nerva and Germanicus, and, 
shortly after, the title of imperator and the trib- 
unitia potestas. His style and title after his 
elevation to the imperial dignity were Imperator 
Cazsar Nerva Trajanus Augustus. He was the 
first emperor who was born out of Italy. Nerva 
died in January, 98, and was succeeded by Tra- 
jan, who was then at Cologne. His accession 
was hailed with joy, and he did not disappoint 
the expectations of the people. He was a man 
adapted to command He was strong and heal- 
thy, of a majestic appearance, laborious, and 
inured to fatigue. Though not a man of letters, 
he had good sense, a knowledge of the world, 
and a sound judgment. His mode of living was 
very simple, and in his campaigns he shared 
all the sufferings and privations of the soldiers, 
by whom he was both loved and feared. He 
was a friend to justice, and he had a sincere de- 
sire for the happiness of the people. Trajan 
did not return to Rome for some months, being 
employed in settling the frontiers on the Rhine 
and the Danube. He entered Rome on foot, ac- 
companied by his wife Pompeia Plotina. This 
lady is highly commended by Pliny the younger 
for her modest virtues, and her affection to Mar- 
ciana, the sister of Trajan. In A.D. 101 Trajan 
left Rome for his campaign against the Daci. 
Decebalus, king of the Daci, had compelled Do- 
mitian to purchase peace by an annual payment 
of money ; and Trajan determined on hostili- 
ties. This war employed Trajan between two 
and three years ; but it ended with the defeat 
of Decebalus, who sued for peace at the feet 
904 



of the Roman emperor. Trajan assumed the 
name of Dacicus, and entered Rome in triumph 
(103). In the following year (104) Trajan com- 
menced his second Dacian war against Dece- 
balus, who, it is said, had broken the treaty. 
Decebalus was completely defeated, and put an 
end to his life (106). In the course of this war 
Trajan built (105) a permanent bridge across the 
Danube at a place now called Szernecz. The 
piers were of stone and of an enormous size, 
but the arches were of wood. After the death 
of Decebalus Dacia was reduced to the form 
of a Roman province ; strong forts were built 
in various places, and Roman colonies were 
planted. It is generally supposed that the col- 
umn at Rome, called the Column of Trajan, was 
erected to commemorate his Dacian victories. 
On his return Trajan had a triumph, and he ex- 
hibited games to the people for one hundred and 
twenty-three days. Eleven thousand animals 
were slaughtered during these amusements ; 
and an army of gladiators, ten thousand men, 
gratified the Romans by killing one another. 
About this time Arabia Petraea was subjected 
to the empire by A. Cornelius Palma, the gov- 
ernor of Syria ; and an Indian embassy came 
to Rome. Trajan constructed a road across the 
Pomptine marshes, and built magnificent bridges 
across the streams. Buildings, probably man- 
siones, were constructed by the side of this 
road. In 114 Trajan left Rome to make war 
on the Armenians and the Parthians. He spent 
the winter of 114 at Antioch, and in the follow- 
ing year he invaded the Parthian dominions 
The most striking and brilliant success attend 
ed his arms. In the course of two campaigns 
(115-116) he conquered the greater part of the 
Parthian empire, and took the Parthian capital, 
Ctesiphon. In 116 he descended the Tigris 
and entered the Erythraean Sea (the Persian 
Gulf). While he was thus engaged the Par- 
thians rose against the Romans, but were again 
subdued by the generals of Trajan. On his re- 
turn to Ctesiphon, Trajan determined to give 
the Parthians a king, and placed the diadem on 
the head of Parthamaspates. In 117 Trajan 
fell ill, and, as his complaint grew worse, he set 
out for Italy. He lived to reach Selinus in Ci- 
licia, afterward called Trajanopolis, where he 
died in August, 117, after a reign of nineteen 
years, six months, and fifteen days. His ashes 
were taken to Rome in a golden urn, carried in 
triumphal procession, and deposited under the 
column which bears his name. He left no chil- 
dren, and he was succeeded by Hadrian. Tra- 
jan constructed several great roads in the em- 
pire ; he built libraries at Rome, one of which, 
called the Ulpia Bibliotheca, is often mentioned ; 
and a theatre in the Campus Martius. His 
great work was the Forum Trajanum, in the 
centre of which was placed the column of Tra- 
jan. Under the reign of Trajan lived Sextus 
Julius Frontinus, C. Cornelius Tacitus, the 
younger Pliny, and various others of less note. 
Plutarch, Suetonius, and Epictetus survived 
Trajan. The jurists Juventius Celsus and Ne- 
i ratius Priscus were living under Trajan. 

Trajanus Portus. Vid. Centum Cell^e. 
! Trajectum (now Utrecht), a town of the Ba- 
I tavi, on the Rhine, called at a later time Trajec- 
I tus Rkeni, or Ad Rhenum. 



TRALLES. 



TREBULA. 



Tralles or Trallis (at Tpa/Aaf, fj TpuAAif : I 
TpaXXiavoc, Trallianus : ruins at Ghiuzel Hisar, 
near Aidin), a flourishing commercial city of 
Asia Minor, -reckoned sometimes to Ionia and 
sometimes to Cana. It stood on a quadrangular 
height at the southern foot of Mount Messogis 
(with a citadel on a higher point), on the banks 
of the little river Eudon, a northern tributary of 
the Maeander, from which the city was distant 
eighty stadia (eight geographical miles). The 
surrounding country was extremely fertile and 
beautiful, and hence the city was at first called 
Anthea ('Avdeta). Under the Seleucidae it bore 
the names of Seleucia and Antiochia. It was 
inhabited by a mixed population of Greeks and 
Carians. There was a less important city of 
the same name in Phrygia, if, indeed, it be not 
the same. 

[Tranips^e (T pavifai), a people of Thrace, 
mentioned along with the Melanditae (vid. Me- 
landeptve) and Thyni, by Seuthes, in the Anab- 
asis of Xenophon, as forming part of the gov- 
ernment of his father Maesades.] 

Tranquillus, Suetonius. Vid. Suetonius. 

Transcellensis Mons, a mountain of Maure- j 
tania Csesariensis, between Caesarea and the j 
River Chinalaph. 

[Trans Tiberim or Transtiberina, a region 
of Rome. Vid. Roma, p. 746, a, No. 14.] 

Trapezopolis (TpaTTfCovTroAif) a town of Asia 
Minor, on the southern slope of Mount Cadmus, 
on the confines of Caria and Phrygia. Its site 
is uncertain. 

Trapezus (Tpane&vc: : TpanefyvvTioc and 
-ovoiog). 1. (Near Mama), a city of Arcadia, 
on the Alpheus, the name of which was myth- 
ically derived from the -pd-efc, or altar, on 
which Lycaon was said to have offered human 
sacrifices to Jove. At the time of the building 
of Megalopolis, the inhabitants of Trapezus, 
rather than be transferred to the new city, mi- 
grated to the sbores of the Euxine, and their 
city fell to ruin. — 2. (Now Tarabosan, Trabezun, 
or Trebizond), a colony of Sinope, at almost the 
extreme east of the northern shore of Asia 
Minor. After Sinope lost her independence, 
Trapezus belonged first to Armenia Minor, and 
afterward to the kingdom of Pontus. Under 
the Romans it was made a free city, probably 
by Pompey, and, by Trajan, the capital of Pon- 
tus Cappadocius. Hadrian constructed a new 
harbor ; and the city became a place of first-rate 
commercial importance. It was also strongly 
fortified. It was taken by the Goths in the 
reign of Valerian ; but it had recovered, and 
was in a flourishing state at the time of Justin- 
ian, who repaired its fortifications. In the Mid- 
dle Ages it was for some time the seat of a frag- 
ment of the Greek empire, called the empire of 
Trebizond. It is now the second commercial 
port of the Black Sea, ranking next after 
Odessa. 

Trasimknus Eacus (now Lago di Perugia), 
sometimes, but not correctly, written Thrasy- 
jiBNus, a lake in Etruria, between Clusium and 
Perusia, memorable for the victory gained by 
Hannibal over the Romans under Flaminius, 
B.C. 217. 

Treba (Trebanus : now Trevi), a town in 
Latium, near the sources of the Anio, north- 
east of Anagnia. 



Trebatius Testa. Vid. Testa. 

[Trebellianus, C. Annius, a Cilician pirate, 
proclaimed himself Roman emperor (one of the 
so-called thirty tyrants) A.D. 264, but was de- 
feated and slain in Isauria by one of the gen- 
erals of Gallienus.] 

Trebellius Pollio, one of the six Scnptores 
Histories Augusta, flourished under Constantine, 
and was anterior to Vopiscus. His name is 
prefixed to the biographies of, 1. The two Va- 
leriani, father and son; 2. TheGallieni; 3. The 
Thirty Tyrants ; 4. Claudius, the last-named 
piece being addressed to Constantine. We learn 
from Vopiscus that the lives written by Trebel- 
lius Pollio commenced with Philippus and ex- 
tended down to Claudius. Of these, all as far 
as the Valeriani, regarding whom but a short 
fragment remains, have been lost. [For edi- 
tions, vid. Capitolinus, Julius.] 

Trebia (now Trcbbia), a small river in Gallia 
Cisalpina, falling into the Po near Placentia. 
It is memorable for the victory which Hannibal 
gained over the Romans, B.C. 218. This river 
is generally dry in summer, but is filled with a 
rapid stream in winter, which was the season 
when Hannibal defeated the Romans. 

Trebonius, C, played rather a prominent 
part in the last days of the republic. He com- 
menced public life as a supporter of the aristo- 
cratical party, and in his quaestorship (B.C. 60) 
he attempted to prevent the adoption of P. Clo- 
dius into a plebeian family. He changed sides 
soon afterw ard, and in his tribunate of the plebs 
(55) he was the instrument of the triumvirs in 
proposing that Pompey should have the two 
Spains, Crassus Syria, and Caesar the Gauls and 
Illyricum for another period of five years. This 
proposal received the approbation of the comi- 
tia, and is known by the name of Lei Treboma. 
For this service he was rewarded by being ap- 
pointed one of Caesar's legates in Gaul, w here 
he remained till the breaking out of the civil 
war in 49. In the course of the same year he 
was intrusted by Caesar with the command of 
the land forces engaged in the siege of Massdia. 
In 48 Trebonius was city-praetor, and in the dis- 
charge of his duties resisted the seditious at- 
tempts of his colleague M. Caelius Rufus to ob- 
tain by force the repeal of Caesar's law respect- 
ing the payment of debts. Toward the end of 
47, Trebonius, as pro praetor, succeeded Q. Cas- 
sius Longinus in the government of Further 
Spain, but was expelled from the province by a 
mutiny of the soldiers who espoused the Pom 
peian party. Caesar raised him to the consul 
ship in October, 45, and promised him the prov- 
ince of Asia. In return for all these honors and 
favors, Trebonius was one of the prime movers 
in the conspiracy to assassinate Caesar, and 
after the murder of his patron (44) he went as 
proconsul to the province of Asia. In the fol- 
lowing year (43), Dolabella, who had received 
from Antonius the province of Syria, surprised 
the town of Smyrna, where Trebonius was then 
residing, and slew him in his bed. 

Trebula (Trebulanus). 1. (Now Tregghia), 
a tow T n in Samnium, situated in the southeastern 
part of the mountains of Cajazzo. — 2. Mutusca, 
a town of the Sabines of uncertain site.— 3 Sup- 
fena, also a town of the Sabines, and of uncer- 
tain site. 

905 



TRERUS. 



TRIDENTUM. 



Trerus (now Sacco), a river in Latium, and 
a tributary of the Liris. 

Tres Tabeex^e. 1; A station on the Via Ap- 
pia in Latium. between Aricia and Forum Appii. 
It is mentioned in the account of St. Paul's jour- 
ney to Rome. — 2. (Now Borghetto), a station in 
Gallia Cisalpina, on the road from Placentia to 
Mediolanum. 

Tretcm (Tpr,r6v : now Cape Bugiaroni, or Ras 
Seba Rous, i. e. Seven Capes), a great promon- 
tory on the coast of Numidia, forming the west- 
ern headland of the Sinus Olcachites (now Bay 
of Storah). 

Teeviri or Treveri, a powerful people in 
Gallia Belgica, who were faithful allies of the 
Romans, and whose cavalry was the best in all 
Gaul. The River Mosella flowed through their 
territory, which extended westward from the 
Rhine as far as the Remi. Their chief town 
was made a Roman colony by Augustus, and 
was called Augusta Trevirorum (now Trier or 
Treves). It stood on the right bank of the Mo- | 
sella, and became under the later empire one of | 
the most flourishing Roman cities north of the 
Alps. It was the capital of Belgica Prima ; and 
after the division of the Roman world by Diocle- i 
tian (A.D. 292) into four districts, it became the { 
residence of the Caesar who had the govern- 
ment of Britain, Gaul, and Spain. Here dwelt j 
Constantius Chlorus and his son Constantine 
the Great, as well as several of the subsequent j 
emperors. The modern city still contains many j 
nteresting Roman remains. They belong, how- 
ever, to the latter period of the empire, and are j 
consequently not in the best style of art. The j 
most important of these remains is the Porta j 
Nigra or Black Gate, a large and massive build- ' 
ing in an excellent state of preservation. In 
addition to this, we have extensive remains of ' 
the Roman baths, of the amphitheatre, and of 
the palace of Constantine. The piers of the 
bridge over the Moselle are likewise Roman. 
At the village of Igel, about six miles from ' 
Treves, is a beautiful Roman structure, being a | 
four-sided obelisk, more than seventy feet high, | 
covered with carvings, inscriptions", and bas- J 
reliefs. There has been much dispute respect- j 
ing the object for which this building was erect- ! 
ed ; but it appears to have been set up by two j 
brothers, named Secundini. partly as a funeral i 
monument to their deceased relatives, partly to i 
celebrate their sister's marriage, which is rep- I 
resented on one of the bas-reliefs by the figures 
of a man and woman joining hands. 

Triarius, Valerius. 1. L.. quaestor urbanus 
B.C. 81, and propraetor in Sardinia 77, when he 
repulsed Lepidus, who had fled into that island 
after his unsuccessful attempt to repeal the laws 
of Sulla. Triarius served under Lucullus as 
one of his legates in the war against Mithrada- 
tes, and at first gained considerable distinction 
by his zeal and activity. In 68 Triarius was 
dispatched to the assistance of Fabius, who had 
been intrusted with the defence of Pontus, while ! 
Lucullus invaded Armenia, and who was now 
attacked by Mithradates with overwhelming i 
cumbers. Triarius compelled Mithradates to ; 
assume the defensive, and early in the follow- ; 
ing year he commenced active operations against [ 
the Pontic king. Anxious to gain the victory ! 
OTer Mithradates before the arrival of Lucullus, 1 
906 



Triarius allowed himself to be attacked at a dis 
advantage, and was defeated with great slaugh- 
; ter near Zela. — 2. P., son of the preceding, ac- 
; cused M. .Emilius Scaurus, in 54, first of repe- 
tundae and next of ambitus. Scaurus was de- 
I fended on both occasions by Cicero. — 3. C, a 
: friend of Cicero, who introduces him as one of 
j the speakers in his dialogue De Finibus, and 
praises his oratory in his Brutus. He fought on 
| Pompey's side at the battle of Pharsalia. Tri- 
l arius perished in the civil wars, probably in Af- 
I rica, for Cicero speaks in 45 of his death, and 
| adds, that Triarius had left him the guardian of 
| his children. 

Triballi, a powerful people in Thrace, a 
: branch of the Getai dwelling along the Danube, 
1 who were defeated by Alexander the Great, 
I B.C. 335, and obliged to sue for peace. 

Tribocci, a German people, settled in Gallia 
Belgica, between Mount Vogesus and the Rhine, 
in the neighborhood of Strasburg. 

TribomIxus, a jurist, commissioned by Jus- 
tinianus, with sixteen others, to compile the Di- 
gest or Pandect. For details, vid. Justinianus. 
Tricala. Vid. Triocala. 
Tricaraxox ( Tpinapavov : Tpiaapavevg ), a 
fortress in Phliasia, southeast of Phlius, on a 
mountain of the same name. 

Tricasses, Tricasii, or Tricassixi, a people 
in Gallia Lugdunensis, east of the Senones, 
whose chief town was Augustobona, afterward 
Tricassae (now Troyes). 

Tricastixi, a people in Gallia Narbonensis, 
between the Cavares and Voconlii, inhabiting a 
narrow slip of country between the Drome and 
the Isere. Their chief town was Augusta Tri- 
castinorum, or simply Augusta (now Aouste). 

Tricca, subsequently Tricala (TpiKKij, Tpiita- 
/.a : now Trikhala), an ancient town of Thes- 
saly. in the district Hestiaeotis, situated on the 
Letbaeus, north of the Peneus. Homer repre- 
sents it as governed by the sons of ^Esculapius ; 
and it contained in later times a celebrated tem- 
ple of this god. 

Trichoxis (Tpix^vig : now Zygos or Vrakho- 
ri), a large lake in iEtolia, east of Stratos and 
north of Mount Aracynthus. 

Trichoxium (Tptxuviov : Tpi^uvievc), a town 
in ^Etolia, east of Lake Trichonis. 

Tricipitixus. Lucretius. Vid. Lucretia 
Gexs. 

Tricoloxi {TpLK.67.uvoi : TptKo/.uvevc), a town 
of Arcadia, a little north of Megalopolis, of 
which a temple of Neptune (Poseidon) alone 
remained in the time of Pausanias. 

Tricorii, a Ligurian people in Gallia Narbo- 
nensis, a branch of the Sallyi, in the neighbor- 
hood of Massilia and Aquae Sextiae. 

Tricorythus (Tpinopvdoc. : Tpixopvatoc), a de- 
rmis in Attica, belonging to the tribe Aiantis, 
between Marathon and Rhamnus. 

Tricraxa (TpiKpava : now Trikhiri), an island 
off the coast of Argolis, near Hermione. 

Tridextum (now Trent, in Italian Trento), the 
capital of the Tridextixi, and the chief town of 
Raetia, situated on the River Athesis (now 
Adige), and on the pass of the Alps leading to 
Verona. Its greatness dates from the Middle 
Ages, and it is chiefly celebrated on account 
of the ecclesiastical council which assembled 
within its walls A.D. 1545. 



TRIERES. 



T1UPT0LEMUS. 



Trieres or Trieris {Tpu'jprj^: now En/eh?), Tripoli* (Tpt7roAtf : TpnroTitTT/c), is properly 
a small fortress on the coast of Phoenicia, be- , the name of a confederacy composed of three 
tween Tripolis and the Promontorium Theu- cities, or a district containing three cities, but 
prosopon. j it is also applied to single cities which had some 

Trifanum, a town in Latium of uncertain site, 1 such relation to others as to make the name ap- 
between Minturnee and Sinuessa. ' propriate. 1. In Arcadia, comprising the three 

[Trimerus (now Tremiti), an island on the j cities of Callia, Dipcena, and Nonacris : its name 
coast of Apulia, one of the Diomede^: Insula. I is preserved in the modern town of Tnpolitza. 



v.), where Julia, the grand-daughter of Au- 
rstus, died in exile ] 
[Trimoxtium. Via. Phlippopolis.] 



T. Pelagonia, in Thessaly, comprising the 
three towns of Azorus, Doliche, and Pythium. 
■3. In Rhodes, comprising the three Dorian 



Trixacria. Ft'rf. Sicilia. ! cities Lindus, Ialysus, and Camirus. Vid. Rho- 

Trixemes or Trixemia (Tpiveuelc, Tpive/ieia: dus. — 4. (Now Kash Yeniji), a city on the Mae- 
Tpivefievs), a demus in Attica, belonging to the j ander, twelve miles west of Hierapolis, on the 
tribe Cecropis, on Mount Parnes. : borders of Phrygia, Caria, and Lydia, to each 

[Trixium {jlumcn, now Trigno), a small river ' of w ? hich it is assigned by different authorities, 
in the country of the Frentani, afforded a good ' — 5. (Now Tircboli), a fortress on the coast of 
harbor for ships (flumen portuosum, Plin.).] \ Pontus, on a river of the same name (now Ti- 
Trixobaxtes, one of the most powerful peo- ; rcboli Su), ninety stadia east of the Promonto- 
ple of Britain, inhabiting the modern Essex. ! rium Zephyrium (now Cape Zefreh). — 6. (Now 
They are mentioned in Caesars invasion of j Tripoli, Tarahulus), on the coast of Phoenicia, 
Britain, and they offered a formidable resist- j consisted of three distinct cities, one stadium 
ance to the invading force sent into the island i (six hundred feet) apart, each having its own 
by the Emperor Claudius. ! walls, but all united in a common constitution, 

[Trio, L. Fulcixius, a notorious informer un- i having one place of assembly, and forming in 
der Tiberius, and one of the friends and favor- ; reality one city. They were colonies of Tyre, 
ites of that emperor : in A D. 20 he accused Pi- i Sidon, and Aradus respectively. Tripolis stood 
so before the consuls, and for that service was j about thirty miles south of Aradus, and about 
still further honored by Tiberius. In A.D. 35 j the same distance north of Byblus, on a bold 
he was thrown into prison on suspicion, and i headland formed by a spur of Mount Lebanon, 
there put an end to his own life ] j It had a fine harbor and a flourishing com- 

Triocala or Tricala (Tpiona/.a, TpiKa/.a : \ merce. It is now a city of about fifteen thou- 
TpiticO.Zvoc, Tricallnus : near Calata Bellota), a j sand inhabitants, and the capital of one of tho 
mountain fortress in the interior of Sicily, near i pachalics of Syria, that of Tripoli. — 7. The dis- 
the Crimisus. was in the Servile war the head- ' trict on the northern coast of Africa, between 
quarters of the slaves, and the residence of their j the two Syrtes, comprising the three cities of 
leader Tryphon. Sabrata (or Abrotonum), CEa, and Leptis Mag- 

Triopas (TpcoTrar or Tpio\j<), son of Neptune > na, and also called Tripolitana Regio. Vid. Syr- 
( Poseidon) and Ganaee, a daughter of .Eolus, or ' tica. Its name is preserved in that of the re- 
of Helios and Rhodes, and the father of Iphi- gency of Tripoli, the western part of which an- 
media and Erysichthon. Hence his son Ery- ! swers to it, and in that of the city of Tripoli. 
sichthon is called Triopetns, and his grand- ! probably the ancient CEa. 
daughter Mestra or Metra, the daughter of Ery- 1 Tripolitaxa Regio. VuL Svrtica, Tripolis, 
sichthon, Triopcis. Triopas expelled the Pelas- ! No. 7. 

gians from the Dotian plain, but was himself j Triptolemus (Tpi-roAe/zoc), son of Celeus, 
obliged to emigrate, and went to Caria, where I king of Eleusis, and Metanira or Polymnia. 
he founded Cnidus on the Triopian promontory. j Others describe him as son of King Eleusis by 
His son Erysichthon was punished by Ceres \ Cothonea, or of Oceanus and Ga?a, or of Trochi- 
(Demeter) with insatiable hunger because he j lus by an Eleusinian woman. Triptolemus was 
had violated her sacred grove ; but others re- j the favorite of Demeter (Ceres), and the invent- 
late the same of Triopas himself. j or of the plough and agriculture, and of civiliza- 
Triopia orTRioPio\, an early name of Cnidus. tion, which is the result of it. He was the great 
Triopium (Vptomvv : now Cape Krio), the i hero in the Eleusinian mysteries. According 
promontory which terminates the peninsula of j to the common legend, he hospitably received 
Cnidus, forming the southwestern headland of j Demeter at Eleusis when she was wandering 



Caria and of Asia Minor. Upon it was a temple 
of Apollo, surnamed Triopius, which was the 
centre of union for the states of Doris. Hence 
it was also called the Sacred Promontory (u«pw- 
rfipiov iepov). 

Triphylia (Tpioi'/.ia : TptfvKtof), the south- 
ern portion of Elis, lying between the Alpheus 
and the Neda, is said to have derived its name 
from the three different tribes by which it was 
peopled. Its chief town was Pylos. 

[Triphylus (Tpi<j>v?.oc), son of Areas and Lao- 



in search of her daughter. The goddess, in 
return, wished to make his son Demophon im- 
mortal, and placed him in the fire in order to 
destroy his mortal parts ; but Metanira scream- 
ed out at the sight, and the child was consumed 
by the flames. As a compensation for this be- 
reavement, the goddess gave to Triptolemus a 
chariot with winged dragons and seeds of wheat. 
In this chariot Triptolemus rode over the earth, 
making man acquainted with the blessings of 
agriculture. On his return to Attica, Celeus 



damia, the legendary hero eponymus of Tri- i endeavored to kill him, but by the command of 
phylia ] ! Demeter he was obliged to give up his country 

Tripodisccs (TptTod'iGKos : TpazodlcrKioc- : ru- | to Triptolemus, who now established the wor- 
ins near Dcriccni), a town in the interior of Me- ship of Demeter, and institued the Thesmopho- 
garis. northwest of Megara. ria. Triptolemus is represented in works of 

907 



TRITiEA. 



TROAS. 



art as a youthful hero, sometimes with the peta- 
sus, on a chariot drawn by dragons, and holding 
in his hand a sceptre and corn ears. 

Trit^ea (Tpcraia: Tpiraievg). I. A town of 
Phocis, northwest of Cleonae, on the left bank 
of the Cephisus, and on the frontiers of Locris. 
— 2. One of the twelve cities of Achaia, one 
hundred and twenty stadia east of Pharee, and 
near the frontiers of Arcadia. Augustus made 
:t dependent upon Patras. 

[Tritaxt^echmes (TpiTavraLXfirjc). i. A Per- 



sian satrap of Babylon, son of Artabazus. — 2. A Samnium from Apulia. 



coast is much altered by the inroads of the 
sands of the Sahara, it seems impossible to 
identify the river : some suppose that it is rep- 
resented by the Wady-el-Khabs. Some of the 
ancient writers gave altogether a different lo- 
cality to the legend, and identify the Triton with 
the river usually called Lathon in Cyrenaica • 
and Apollonius Rhodius even transfers the name 
to the Nile. 

TrivJcum (now Trivico), a small town in Sam- 
nium, situated among the mountains separating 



son of Artabanus, and cousin of Xerxes, was 
one of the commanders of the Persian infantry 
when the barbarians invaded Greece in B.C. 
480.] 

Trito or Tritogenia (Tpiru or Tpiroyiveia, 
and TpL-oyevrjg), a surname of Minerva (Athe- 
na), which is explained in different ways. Some 
derive it from Lake Tritonis in Libya, near which 
she is said to have been born ; others from the 
stream Triton, near Alalcomenae in Boeotia, 
where she was worshipped, and where, accord- 
ing to some statements, she was also born ; 
the grammarians, lastly, derive the name from 
rpiru, which, in the dialect of the Athamani- 
ans, is said to signify "head," so that it would be 
the goddess born out of the head of her father. 

Triton (Tpiruv), son of Neptune (Poseidon) 
and Amphitrite (or Cela;no), who dwelt with his 
father and mother in a golden palace in the bot- 
tom of the sea, or, according to Homer, at J^gaj. 
Later writers describe him as riding over the 
sea on horses or other sea-monsters. Some- 
times we rind mention of Tritons in the plu- 
ral. Their appearance is differently described ; 



though they are always conceived as having 

the human figure in the upper part of their bod- j Mount Ida and its branches 
ies, and that of a fish in the lower part. The 
chief characteristic of Tritons in poetry as well 



Troas (r/ Tpudc, sc. #<3pa, the feminine of the 
adjective Tpuc : Tpuadevc : now Chan), the ter- 
ritory of Ilium or Troy, formed the northwest- 
ern part of Mysia. It was bounded on the west 
by the iEgean Sea. from Promontorium Lectum 
to Promontorium Sigeum, at the entrance of 
the Hellespont ; on the northwest by the Hel- 
lespont, as far as the River Rhodius, below 
Abydus ; on the northeast and east by the 
mountains which border the valley of the Rho- 
dius, and extend from its sources southward to 
the main ridge of Mount Ida, and on the south 
by the northern coast of the Gulf of Adramyt- 
tium along the southern foot of Ida ; but on the 
northeast and east the boundary is sometimes 
extended so far as to include the whole coast 
of the Hellespont, and part of the Propontis, and 
the country as far as the Paver Granicus, thus 
embracing the district of Dardania, and some- 
what more. Strabo extends the boundary still 
further east, to the River iEsepus, and also 
south to the Caicus ; but this clearly results 
from his including in the territory of Troy that 
of her neighboring allies. The Troad is for the 
most part mountainous, being intersected by 
the largest plain 
is that in which Troy stood. The chief rivers 
were the Satnois on the south, the Rhodius on 



as in works of art is a trumpet made out of a I the north, and the Scamander and Simoi's in the 
shell (concha), which the Tritons blow at the | centre. These two rivers, so renowned in the 



command of Neptune (Poseidon) to soothe the 
restless waves of the sea. 

Triton Fl., Tritonis, or Tritonitis Palus 
[Tplrcov, Tpirtjvlc, Tpi-uvtTic), a river and lake 
on the Mediterranean coast of Libya, which are 
mentioned in several old Greek legends, espe- 
cially in the mythology of Minerva (Athena), 
whom one account represented as born on the 
Lake Tritonis, and as the daughter of the nymph 
of the same name, and of Neptune (Poseidon) : 
hence her surname of Tpiroysveia. When the 
Greeks first became acquainted geographically 
with the northern coast of Africa, they identified 
the gulf afterward called the Lesser Syrtis 
with the Lake Tritonis. This seems to be the 
notion of Herodotus, in the story he relates of 
Jason (iv., 178, 179). A more exact knowledge 
of the coast showed them a great lake be- 
yond the inmost recess of the Lesser Syrtis, 
to which the name Tritonis was then applied. 
This lake had an opening to the sea, as well as 
a river flowing into it, and accordingly the ge- 
ographers represented the River Triton as ris- 
ing in a mountain called Zuchabari, and form- 
ing the Lake Tritonis on its course to the Less- 
er Syrtis, into which it fell. The lake is un- 
doubtedly the great salt lake, in the south of 
Tunis, called El Sibkah ; but as this lake has 
no longer an opening to the sea, and the whole 
908 



legends of the Trojan war, flow from two dif- 
ferent points in the chain of Mount Ida, and 
unite in the plain of Troy, through which the 
united stream flows northwest, and falls into 
the Hellespont east of the promontory of Sige- 
um. The Scamander, also called Xanthus, is 
usually identified with the Mendcreh-Chai, and 
the Simols with the Gumbrek ; but this subject 
presents difficulties which can not be discussed 
within the limits of the present article. The 
precise locality of the city of Troy, or, accord- 
ing to its genuine Greek name, Ilium, is also 
the subject still of much dispute. First, there 
is the question whether the Ilium of Homer 
had any real existence ; next, whether the Ili- 
um Vetus of the historical period, which was 
visited by Xerxes and by Alexander the Great, 
was on the same site as the city of Priam. The 
most probable opinion seems to be that which 
places the original city in the upper part of the 
plain, on a moderate elevation at the foot of 
Mount Ida, and its citadel (called Pergama. 
Hepyafxa) on a loftier height, almost separated 
from the city by a ravine, and nearly surround- 
ed by the Scamander. This city seems never 
to have been restored after its destruction by 
the Greeks. TheiEolian colonists subsequent- 
ly built a new city, on the site, as they doubtless 
believed, of the old one, but really much lowei 



TROCMI. 



TKOTILUM. 



down the plain ; and this city is the Troja or 
Ilium Vetus of most of the ancient writers. 
After the time of Alexander, this city declined, 
and a new one was built still further down the 
plain, below the confluence of the Simois and 
Scamander, and near the Hellespont, and this 
was called Ilium Novum. Under the Romans, 
this city was honored with various immunities, 
as the only existing representative of the an- 
cient Ilium. Its substantial importance, how- 
ever, was entirely eclipsed by that of Alexan- 
dra Troas. — For the general political history 
of the Troad, see Mtsia. The Teucrians, by 
whom it was peopled at a period of unknown 
antiquity, were a Thracian people. Settling in 
the plain of the Scamander, they fou nded the city 
of Ilium, which became the head of an extens- 
ive confederacy, embracing not only the north- 
west of Asia Minor, but much of the opposite 
t shores of Thrace, and with allies in Asia Minor 
oven as far as Lycia, and evidently much in ad- 
vance of the Greeks in civilization. The myth- 
H ical account of the origin of the kingdom is 
b briefly as follows. Teucer, the first king in the 
Troad, had a daughter, who married Dardanus, 
the chieftain of the country northeast of the 
Troad. Vid. Dardania. Dardanus had two 
sons, Ilus and Erichthonius ; and the latter was 
the father of Tros, from whom the country and 
people derived the names of Troas and Troes. 
Tros was the father of Ilus, who founded the 
city, which was called after him Ilium, and also, 
after his father, Troja. The next king was 
Laomedon, and after him Priam. Vid. Priamus. 
In his reign the city was taken and destroyed 
by the confederated Greek** after a ten years' 
siege. Vid. Helena, Alex ander, Agamemnon, 
Achilles, Hector, Ajax, Ulysses, JNeoptole- 
i mus, ^Eneas, &c, and Homerus. To discuss 
the historical value of this legend is not the 
| province of this work . it is enough to say that 
we have in it evidence of a great conflict, at a 
very early period, between the great Thracian 
empire in the northwest of Asia Minor, and the 
rising power of the Achasans in Greece, in 
which the latter were victorious ; but their vic- 
tory was fruitless, in consequence of their com- 
paratively low civilization, and especially of 
their want of maritime power. The chronolo- 
gers assigned different dates for the capture of 
Troy : the calculation most generally accepted 
placed it in B.C. 1184. This date should be 
carefully remembered, as it forms the starting 
point of various computations ; but it should also 
be borne in mind that the date is of no historical 
authority. (There is not space to explain this 
matter here.) The subsequent history of the 
Troad presents an entire blank till we come to 
the period of the great .Eolic migration, when it 
merges in that of Mows and Mysia. In writers 
of the Roman period, the name Troas is often 
used by itself for the city of Alexandre.*. Troas. 
Trocmi or -ii. Vid. Galatia. 
Troes. Vid. Troas. 

Trcezen (Tpotftv, more rarely Tpoi&vi] : Tpoi- 
&viog : now Dhamala), the capital of Trcezenia 
CTpoi&via), a district in the southeast of Argo- 
lis, on the Saronic Gulf, and opposite the island 
of iEgina. The town was situated at some 
little distance from the coast, on which it pos- 
sessed a harbor called Pogon (Huyuv), opposite 



the island of Calauria. Trcezen was a very an- 
cient city, and is said to have been originally 
called Poseidonia, on account of its worship of 
Poseidon (Neptune). It received the name of 
Trcezen from Trcezen, one of the sons of Pelops ; 
and it is celebrated in mythology as tbe place 
where Pittheus, the maternal grandfather of 
Theseus, lived, and where Theseus himself was 
born. Trcezen was for a long time dependent 
upon the kings of Argos; but in the historical 
period it appears as an independent state. It 
was a city of some importance, for we read that 
the Troezenians sent five ships of war to Sala- 
mis and one thousand heavy armed men to Pla- 
taeae. When the Persians entered Attica, the 
Trcezenians distinguished themselves by the 
kindness with which they received the Atheni- 
ans, who were obliged to abandon their city. 

TrogTlLe, three small islands, named Psilon, 
Argennon. and Sandalion, lying off the promon- 
tory of Trogilium. Vid. Mycale. 

[Trogilium Promontorium {TpuryiJUov uKpu- 
Ti'jpinv). Vid. Mycale.] 

Trogitis Lacus. Vid. Pisidia. 

Troglodyte (TpuyXofivrai, i. e., dwellers in 
caves), the name applied by the Greek geogra- 
phers to various uncivilized people, who had no 
abodes but caves, especially to the inhabitants 
of the western coast of the Red Sea, along the 
shores of Upper Egypt and .-Ethiopia. The 
whole of this coast was called Troglodyticc 
(Tpuy?.odvTiK7}). There were also Troglodytae 
in Mcesia, on the banks of the Danube. 

Trogus, Pompeius. Vid. Justinus. 

Troilium. Vid. Trossulum. 

Troilus (Yputt.oc), son of Priam and Hecuba, 
or, according to others, son of Apollo. He fell 
by the hands of Achilles. 

Troja (Tp<Ua, Ion. Tpmrj, Ep. Tpota : Tpuc, 
Tpcpoc, Ep. and Ion Tpuioc, fern. Tpudc, &c. : 
Tros, TroTus, Trojanus, fern. Troas, pi Troades 
and Trolades), the name of the city of Troy or 
Ilium, also applied to the country. Vid Tkoas. 

Trophonius (Tpr)0(jvtr>c), son of Erginns. king 
of Orchomenus, and brother of Agamedes. He 
and his brother built the temple at Delphi and 
the treasury of King Hyrieus in Bceoiia. For 
details, vid. Agamedes. Trophonius, after his 
death, was worshipped as a hero, and had a cel- 
ebrated oracle in a cave near Lebadea in Bceo- 
tia. (Vid. Diet, of Antiq , art. 3a a solum ) 

Tros (Tpwc), son of Erichthonius and Asty- 
oche, and grandson of Dardanus. He was mar- 
ried to Callirrhoe, by whom he became the 
father of Ilus, Assaracus, and Ganymedes, and 
was King of Phrygia. The country and people 
of Troy derived their name from him. He [re- 
ceived from Jupiter (Zeus) as a compensation 
for his son Ganymedes a pair of divine horses.] 
Vid. Ganymedes. 

Trossulum (Trossulanus : now Trosso), a 
town in Etruria, nine miles from Volsinii, winch 
is said to have been taken by some Roman 
equites without the aid of foot soldiers ; whence 
the Roman equites obtained the name of Tros- 
suli. Some writers identify this town with 
Troilium, which was taken by the Romans B.C. 
293 ; but they appear to have been different 
places. 

Trotilum (TpunXov : now Trontello), a town 
of Sicily, on the road from Syracuse to Leontini. 

909 



TRUENTUM. 



TUDITANUS. 



Tbcextum, a town of Picenura, on the River 
Truentus or Truentinus (now Tronto). 

Trutclen'sis Portcs, a harbor on the north- 
eastern coast of Britain, near the estuary Taus 
(now Tay), but of which the exact site is un- 
known. 

Tryphiodorus (Tpvmodopos), a Greek gram- 
marian and poet, was a native of Egypt ; but 
nothing is known of his personal history. He 
is supposed to have lived in the fifth century of 
the Christian era. Of his grammatical labors 
we have no record ; but one of his poems has 
come down to us, entitled 'Vuov a/.ucig, the Cap- 
ture of Ilium, consisting of six hundred and 
ninety-one lines. From the small dimensions 
of it, it is necessarily little but a sketch. The 
best editions are by Northmore, Cambridge, 
1791, London, 1804 ;'by Schafer, Leipzig, 1808 ; 
and by Wernicke, Leipzig-. 1819. 

Teyphox (Tpvtiuv). I. Diodotus, a usurper 
of the throne of Syria during the reign of De- 
metrius II. Nicator. After the death of Alex- 
ander Balas in B.C. 146, Tryphon first set up 
Antiochus, the infant son of Balas, as a pretend- 
er against Demetrius ; but in 142 he murdered 
Antiochus and reigned as king himself. Try- 
phon was defeated" and put to death by Antio- 
chus Sidetes, the brother of Demetrius, in 139. 
after a reign of three years. — 2. Salvius, one 
of the leaders of the revolted slaves in Sicily, 
was supposed to have a knowledge of divina- 
tion, for which reason he was elected king by 
the slaves in 103. He displayed considerable 
abilities, and in a short time collected an army 
of twenty thousand foot and two thousand horse, 
with which he defeated the propraetor P. Licin- 
ius Nerva. After this victory Salvius assumed 
all the pomp of royalty, and took the surname 
of Tryphon, probably because it had been borne 
by Diodotus, the usurper of the Syrian throne. 
He chose the strong fortress of Triocala as the 
seat of his new kingdom. Tryphon was defeat- 
ed by L. Lucullus in 102, and was obliged to 
take refuge in Triocala. But Lucullus failed in 
taking the place, and returned to Rome without 
effecting any thing more. Lucullus was suc- 
ceeded by C. Servilius ; and on the death of 
Tryphon, about the same time, the kingdom de- 
volved upon Athenion, who was not subdued 
till 101. 

Tryphonints, Claudius, a Roman jurist, 
wrote under the reigns of Septimius Severus 
and Caracalla. 

Tub antes, a people of Germany, allies of the 
Cherusci, originally dwelt between the Rhine 
and the Yssel : in the time of Germanicus, on 
the southern bank of the Lippe, between Pader- 
born, Hamm, and the Armsberger Wald ; and 
at a still later time in the neighborhood of the 
Thuringer "Wald, between the Fulda and the 
Werra. Subsequently they are mentioned as a 
part of the great league of the Franci. 

Tubero, ^Elics. 1. Q., son-in-law of L. 
.iEmilius Paulus, served under the latter in his 
war against Perseus, king of Macedonia. This 
Tubero, like the rest of his family, was so poor 
that he had not an ounce of silver plate till 
his father-in-law gave him five pounds of plate 
from the spoils of the Macedonian monarch. — 
2. Q., son of the preceding, was a pupil of Panse- 
tius, and is called the Stoic. He had a reputa- 
910 



; tion for talent and legal knowledge. He was 
• praetor in 123, and consul suffectus in 118. He 
I was an opponent of Tib. Gracchus, as well as 
of C. Gracchus, and delivered some speeches 
against the latter, 123. Tubero is one of the 
speakers in Cicero's dialogue dc Republica. The 
passages in the Digest in which Tubero is cited 
do not refer to this Tubero, but to No. 4. — 3. 
L., an intimate friend of Cicero. He was a re- 
lation and a school-fellow of the orator, had 
served with him in the Marsic war, and had aft- 
erward served under his brother Quintus as 
legate in Asia. On the breaking out of the 
I civil war, Tubero, who had espoused the Pom- 
I peian party, received from the senate the prov- 
! ince of Africa ; but as Atius Varus and Q. Liga- 
i rius, who likewise belonged to the aristocratica! 
! party, would not surrender it to him, he passed 
i over to Pompey in Greece. He was afterward 
| pardoned by Caesar, and returned with his son 
I Quintus to Rome. Tubero cultivated literature 
I and philosophy. He wrote a history, and the 
j philosopher -Enesidemus dedicated to him his 
| work on the skeptical philosophy of Pyrrhon. — 
| 4. Q., son of the preceding. In 46 he made a 
| speech before C. Julius Caesar against Q. Liga- 
j rius, who was defended by Cicero in a speech 
j which is extant (Pro Q. Ligario). Tubero ob- 
; tained considerable reputation as a jurist. He 
j had a great knowledge both of Jus Publicum 
j and Privatum, and he wrote several works on 
j both these divisions of law. He married a 
| daughter of Servius Sulpicius, and the daugh- 
ter of Tubero was the mother of the jurist C. 
Cassius Longinus. Like his father, Q. Tubero 
wrote a history. Tubero the jurist, who is often 
cited in the Digest, is this Tubero ; but there 
is no excerpt from his writings. 

Tucca, Plotius, a friend of Horace and Vir- 
gil. The latter poet left Tucca one of his heirs, 
and bequeathed his unfinished writings to him 
and Varius, who afterward published the JEneid 
by order of Augustus. 

Tcder (Tuders, -tis : now Todi), an ancient 
town of Umbria, situated on a hill near the 
Tiber, and on the road from Mevania to Rome. 
It was subsequently made a Roman colony. 
There are still remains of the polygonal walls 
of the ancient town. 

Tuditaxus, Semproxius. 1. M., consul B.C. 
240, and censor 230.— 2. P., tribune of the sol- 
diers at the battle of Cannae in 216, and one of 
the few Roman officers who survived that fatal 
day. In 214 he was curule aedile ; in 213 prae- 
tor, with Ariminum as his province, and was 
continued in the command for the two follow- 
ing years (212, 211). He was censor in 209 
with M. Cornelius Cethegus, although neither 
he nor his colleague had yet held the consul- 
ship. In 205 he was sent into Greece with the 
title of proconsul, for the purpose of opposing 
Philip, with whom, however, he concluded a 
treaty, which was ratified by the Romans. Tu 
ditanus was consul in 204, and received Bruttii 
I as his province. He was at first defeated by 
i Hannibal, but shortly afterward he gained a de- 
cisive victory over the Carthaginian general — 
j 3. C, plebeian aedile 198, and praetor 197, when 
; he obtained Nearer Spain as his province. He 
i was defeated by the Spaniards with great loss, 
; and died shortly afterward of a wound which 



TULCIS. 



TULLIUS, SERVIUS 



he had received in the battle. — 4. M., tribune 
of the plebs 193; praetor 189, when he obtain- 
ed Sicily as his province ; and consul 185. In 
his consulship he carried on war in Liguria, and 
defeated the Apuani, while his colleague was 
equally successful against the Ingauni. He 
was carried off by the great pestilence which 
devastated Rome in 174 —5. C, praetor 132. and 
consul 129. In his consulship he carried on 
war against the Iapydes in Illyricum, over whom 
he gained a victory chiefly through the military 
skill of his legate, D. Junius Brutus. Tudita- 
nus was an orator and a historian, and in both 
obtained considerable distinction. 

Tulcis, a river on the eastern coast of Spain, 
near Tarraco. 

Tulingi, a people of Gaul of no great import- 
ance, who dwelt on the Rhine, between the 
Rauraci and the Helvetii. 

Tullia, the name of the two daughters of 
Servius Tullius, the sixth king of Rome. Vid. 
Tullius. 

Tullia, frequently called by the diminutive 
Tulliola, was the daughter of M. Cicero and 
Terentia, and was probably born B C. 79 or 78. 
She was betrothed in 67 to C. Calpurnius Piso 
Frugi, whom she married in 63 during the con- 
sulship of her father. During Cicero's banish- 
ment Tullia lost her first husband. She was 
married again in 56 to Furius Crassipes, a 
young man of rank and large property ; but she 
did not live with him long, though the time and 
the reason of her divorce are alike unknown. 
In 50 she was married to her third husband, P. 
Cornelius Dolabella, who was a thorough profli- 
gate. The marriage took place during Cicero's 
absence in Cilicia, and, as might have been an- 
ticipated, was not a happy one. On the break- 
ing out of the civil war in 49, the husband and 
the father of Tullia espoused opposite sides. 
While Dolabella fought for Caesar, and Cicero 
took refuge in the camp of Pompey, Tullia re- 
mained in Italy. On the 19th of May, 49, she 
was delivered of a seven months' child, which 
died soon afterward. After the battle of Phar- 
salia, Dolabella returned to Rome ; but he con- 
tinued to lead a dissolute and profligate life, and 
at length (46) a divorce took place by mutual 
consent. At the beginning of 45 Tullia was 
delivered of a son. As soon as she was suffi- 
ciently recovered to bear the fatigues of a jour- 
ney, she accompanied her father to Tusculum, 
but she died there in February. Her loss was 
a severe blow to Cicero. Among the many 
consolatory letters which he received on the 
occasion is the well-known one from the cele- 
brated jurist Serv. Sulpicius (ad Fam., iv., 5). 
To dissipate his grief, Cicero drew up a treatise 
on Consolation. 

Tullia Gens, patrician and plebeian. The 
patrician Tullii were one of the Alban houses, 
which were transplanted to Rome in the reign 
of Tullus Hostilius. The patrician branch of 
the gens appears to have become extinct at an 
early period ; for, after the early times of the 
republic, no one of the name occurs for some 
centuries, and the Tullii of a later age are not 
only plebeians, but, with the exception of their 
bearing the same name, can not be regarded as 
having any connection with the ancient gens. 
The first plebeian Tullius who rose to the hon- 



ors of the state was M. Tullius Decula, con. 
sul B.C. 81, and the next was the celebrated 
orator M. Tullius Cicero. Vid. Cicero. 

Tullianum. Vid. Roma, p. 753, a. 

Tullius, Servius, the sixth king of Rome. 
The account of the early life and death of Ser- 
vius Tullius is full of strange marvels, and tan 
not be regarded as possessing any title to a real 
historical narrative. His mother, Ocrisia, was 
one of the captives taken at Corniculum, and 
became a female slave of Tanaquil, the wife of 
Tarquinius Priscus. He was born in the king's 
palace, and, notwithstanding his servile origin, 
was brought up as the king's son, since Tana- 
quil, by her powers of divination, had foreseen 
the greatness ofthe child ; and Tarquinius placed 
such confidence in him, that he gave him his 
daughter in marriage, and intrusted him with 
the exercise ofthe government. His rule was 
mild and beneficent ; and so popular did he be- 
come, that the sons of Ancus Marcius, fearing 
lest they should be deprived of the throne which 
they claimed as their inheritance, procured the 
assassination of Tarquinius. Vid. Tarquinius. 
They did not, however, reap the fruit of their 
crime, for Tanaquil, pretending that the king's 
wound was not mortal, told the people that Tar- 
quinius would recover in a few days, and that 
he had commanded Servius, meantime, to dis- 
charge the duties of the kingly office. Servius 
forthwith began to act as king, greatly to the 
satisfaction of the people ; and when the death 
of Tarquinius could no longer be concealed, he 
was already in firm possession of the royal pow- 
er. The reign of Servius is almost as barren 
of military exploits as that of Numa. The only 
war which Livy mentions is one against Veii, 
which was brought to a speedy conclusion. The 
great deeds of Servius were deeds of peace ; 
and he was regarded by posterity as the author 
of all their civil rights and institutions, just as 
Numa was of their religious rites and ordinan- 
ces. Three important events are assigned to 
Servius by universal tradition. First, he gave 
a new constitution to the Roman state. The 
two main objects of this constitution were to 
give the plebs political independence, and to 
assign to property that influence in the state 
which had previously belonged to birth exclu- 
sively. In order to carry his purpose into ef- 
fect, Servius made a two-fold division of the 
Roman people, one territorial, and the other ac- 
cording to property. For details, vid. Diet, of 
Antiq , art. Comitia. Secondly, he extended 
the pomoerium, or hallowed boundary of the 
city, and completed the city by incorporating 
with it the Quirinal, Viminal, and Esquiline 
hills. Vid. Roma. Thirdly, he established an 
important alliance with the Latins, by which 
Rome and the cities of Latium became the 
members of one great league. By his new con- 
stitution Servius incurred the hostility of the 
patricians, who conspired with L. Tarquinius 
to deprive him of his life and of his throne. 
His death was the subject of a legend, which 
ran as follows. Servius, soon after his suc- 
cession, gave his two daughters in marriage to 
the two sons of Tarquinius Priscus. L. Tar- 
on inius, the elder, was married to a quiet and 
gentle wife ; Aruns, the younger, to an aspiring 
and ambitious woman. The character of the 

911 



TULLIUS TIRO. 



TURIASSO. 



two brothers was the very opposite of the wives 
who had fallen to their lot ; for Lucius was 
proud and haughty, but Aruns unambitious and 
quiet. The wife of Aruns, fearing that her hus- 
band would tamely resign the sovereignty to his 
elder brother, resolved to destroy both her fa- 
ther and her husband. She persuaded Lucius 
to murder his wife, and she murdered her own 
husband, and the survivors straightway married. 
Tullia now urged her husband to murder her fa- 
ther ; and it was said that their design was hast- 
ened by the belief that Servius entertained the 
thought of laying down his kingly power and 
establishing the consular form of government. 
The patricians were equally alarmed at this 
scheme. Their mutual hatred and fears united 
them closely together ; and when the conspir- 
acy was ripe, Tarquinius entered the Forum ar- 
rayed in the kingly robes, seated himself in the 
royal chair in the senate-house, and ordered the 
senators to be summoned to him as their king. 
At the first news of the commotion, Servius 
hastened to the senate-house, and, standing at 
the door-way, ordered Tarquinius to come down 
from the throne. Tarquinius sprang forward, 
seized the old man, and flung him down the 
stone steps. Covered with blood, the king was 
hastening home, but, before he reached it, he 
was overtaken by the servants of Tarquinius 
and murdered. Tullia drove to the senate- 
house, and greeted her husband as king; but 
her transports of joy struck even him with hor- 
ror. He bade her go home ; and as she was 
returning, her charioteer pulled up and pointed 
out the corpse of her father lying in his blood 
across the road. She commanded him to drive 
on ; the blood of her father spirted over the 
carriage and on her dress; and from that day 
forward the street bore the name of the Vicus 
Sceleratus, or Wicked Street. The body lay 
unburied, for Tarquinius said scoffingly, "Rom- 
ulus too went without burial ;" and this impi- 
ous mockery is said to have given rise to his 
surname of Superbus. Servius had reigned for- 
ty-four years. His memory was long cherished 
by the plebeians. 

Tullius Tiro. Vid. Tiro. 

Tullum (now Toul), the capital of the Leuci, 
a people in the southeast of Gallia Belgica, be- 
tween the Matrona and Mosella. 

Tullus Hostilius, third king of Rome, is 
said to have been the grandson of Hostus Hos- 
tilius, who fell in battle against the Sabines in 
the reign of Romulus. His legend ran as fol- 
lows : Tullus Hostilius departed from the peace- 
ful ways of Numa, and aspired to the martial 
renown of Romulus. He made Alba acknowl- 
edge Rome's supremacy in the war wherein 
the three Roman brothers, the Horatii, fought 
with the three Alban brothers, the Curiatii, at 
the Fossa Cluilia. Next he warred with Fide- 
nae and with Veii, and being straitly pressed by 
their joint hosts, he vowed temples to Pallor 
and Pavor — Paleness and Panic. And after the 
fight was won, he tore asunder with chariots 
Mettius Fufetius, the king or dictator of Alba, 
because he had desired to betray Rome ; and 
he utterly destroyed Alba, sparing only the tem- 
ples of the gods, and bringing the Alban people 
to Rome, where he gave them the Caelian Hill 
to dwell on. Then he turned himself to war 
912 



with the Sabines ; and being again straitened 
in fight in a wood called the Wicked Wood, he 
vowed a yearly festival to Saturn and Ops, and 
to double the number of the Salii, or priests of 
Mamers. And when, by their help, he had van- 
quished the Sabines, he performed his vow, and 
its records were the feasts Saturnalia and Opa- 
lia. In his old age, Tullus grew weary of war- 
ring ; and when a pestilence struck him and 
his people, and a shower of burning stones fell 
from heaven on Mount Alba, and a voice as of 
the Alban gods came forth from the solitary 
temple of Jupiter on its summit, he remembered 
the peaceful and happy days of Numa, and sought 
to win the favor of the gods, as Numa had done, 
by prayer and divination. But the gods heeded 
neither his prayers nor his charms, and when 
he would inquire of Jupiter Elicius, Jupiter was 
wroth, and smote Tullus and his whole house 
with fire. Perhaps the only historical fact em- 
bodied in the legend of Tullus is the ruin of 
Alba. 

[Tullus, Volcatius. I. L., consul B.C. 6G 
with M'. iEmilius Lepidus. After his consul- 
ship he lived in retirement, and during the civil 
wars took no part in public affairs. He had 
approved of Cicero's measures against the ac- 
complices of Catiline, and spoke on the subject 
in the senate. — 2. C, probably son of No. 1, 
fought under Caesar in the Gallic war, and also 
distinguished himself at the siege of Dyrrachi- 
um in B.C. 48. — 3. L., son of No. 1, was praetor 
urbanus in B.C. 46, and consul with Octavianus 
in B.C. 33.] 

Tunes or Tunis (Tvvrjc, Tovvlc : Twrjoaloc . 
now Tunis), a strongly-fortified city of North- 
ern Africa, stood at the bottom of the Cartha- 
ginian Gulf, ten miles southwest of Carthage, at 
the mouth of the little river Catada. At the 
time of Augustus it had greatly declined, but it 
afterward recovered, and is now the capital of 
the regency of Tunis. 

Tungri, a German people who crossed the 
Rhine, and settled in Gaul in the country for- 
merly occupied by the Aduatici and the Ebu- 
rones. Their chief town was called Tunsri or 
Aduaca Tongrorum (now Tongern), on the road 
from Castellum Morinorum to Colonia Agrip- 
pina. 

[Turbo. 1. A gladiator of small stature, but 
great courage, mentioned by Horace (" et idem 
Corpore majorem rides Turbonis in armis Spir- 
itum et incessum," Sat., ii., 3, 310-11).— 2. A 
distinguished commander, and governor for 
some time of Pannonia under Hadrian.] 

Turdetani, the most numerous people in 
Hispania Baetica, dwelt in the south of the prov- 
ince, on both banks of the Baetis, as far as Lusi- 
tania. They were regarded as the most civil- 
ized people in all Spain. Their country was 
called Turdetani a. 

Turduli, a people in Hispania Baetica, situa- 
ted to the east and south of the Turdetani, with 
whom they were closely connected. The names, 
in fact, appear identical. 

Turia or Turium (now Guadalaviar), a river 
on the eastern coast of Spain, flowing into the 
sea at Valentia, memorable for the battle fought 
on its banks between Pompey and Sertorius. 

Turiasso (Turiassonensis : now Tarrazona), 
a town of the Celtiberi in Hispania Tarraconen* 



Tl'RlGUM. 



TYDEUS. 



sis, on the road from Caesaraugusta to Numan- 
iia. It possessed a fountain, the water of which 
was said to be very excellent for hardening 
jron. 

[Tukicum (Turicensis, now Zurich), a town 
in the territory of the Helvetii, on the Limagus 
(now Limmat).] 

Turnus (Twpwc). 1. Son of Daunus and 
Venilia, and king of the Rutuli at the time of 
the arrival of JEneas in Italy. He was a broth- 
er of Juturna, and related to Amata, the wife 
of King Latinus ; and he fought against yEneas 
because Latinus had given to the Trojan hero 
his daughter Lavinia, who had been previously 
promised to Turniia He appears in the JEnad 
as a brave warrior , but in the end he fell by 
the hand of yEnea* — 2. A Roman satiric poet, 
was a native of Aurunca, and lived under Ves- 
pasian and Domitiau. We possess thirty hex- 
ameters, forming a portion of, apparently, a long 
satiric poem, the subject being an enumeration 
of the crimes and abominations which charac- 
terized the reign of Nero. These lines are as- 
cribed by some modern scholars to Turnus. 

Turnus HerdonIus. Vid. Herdonius. 

Turones, TCroni or Turonii, a people in the 
interior of Gallia Lugdunensis, between the Au- 
lerci, Andes, and Pictones. Their chief town 
was C^sarodunum, subsequently Turoni (now 
Tours), on the Liger (now Loire). 

Turpilius, Sextus, a Roman dramatist, 
whose productions belonged to the department 
of Com(cdia Palliata. The titles of thirteen or 
fourteen of his plays have been preserved, to- 
gether with a few fragments. He died, when 
very old, at Sinnessa in B C. 101. He stands 
seventh in the scale of Volcatius Sedigitus. 
Vid. Sedigitus. [His fragments are collected 
in Bothe's Pocla. Seen i Lahnorum, vol. vi., p. 
77-94.] 

Turpio, L. Ambivio*, a very celebrated actor 
in the time of Terence, in most of whose plays 
he acted. 

Turris Hannibalis (ruins at Bourj Salcktah), 
a castle on the coast of Byzacena, between 
Thapsus and Acholla, belonging to Hannibal, 
who embarked here when he fled to Antiochus 
the Great. 

Turris Stratonis. Vid. CLus area, No. 3. 

Tuscania (Tuscaniensis : now Toscanella), a 
town of Etruria, on the River Marta, rarely men- 
tioned by ancient writers, but celebrated in mod- 
ern times on account of the great number of 
Etruscan antiquities which have been discov- 
ered in its ancient tombs. 

Tusci, Tuscia. Vid. Etruria. 

Tusculum (Tusculanus: ruins near Frascati), 
an ancient town of Latium, situated about 
ten miles southeast of Rome, on a lofty sum- 
mit of the mountains, which are called after the 
town Tusci/lani Montes, and which are a con- 
tinuation of Mons Albanus. Tusculum was 
one of the most strongly fortified places in all 
Italy, both by nature and by art. It is said to 
have been founded by Telegonus, the son of 
Ulysses ; and it was always one of the most 
important of the Latin towns. Its importance 
in the time of the Roman kings is shown by 
Tarquinius Superbus giving his daughter in 
marriage to Octavius Mamilius, the chief of Tus- 
culum. At a late r time it became a Roman 
58 



rnunicipium, and was the birth-place of several 
distinguished Roman families. Cato the cen- 
sor was a native of Tusculum. Its proximity 
to Home, its salubrity, and the beauty of its 
situation made it a favorite residence of the 
Roman nobles during the summer. Cicero, 
among others, had a favorite villa at this place, 
which he frequently mentions under the name 
of Tusculanum. The site of this villa is not 
exactly known ; some placing it near Grotta 
Ferrata, on the road from Frascati to the Alban 
Lake, and others near La Rufinella. The ruins 
of ancient Tusculum are situated on the sum- 
mit of the mountain, about two miles above 
Frascati. 

Tuticanus, a Roman poet and a friend of 
Ovid, who had translated into Latin verse a 
portion of the Odyssey. 

Tutzis (ruins at Garshce or Gucrfcy Hassan), 
a city in the Dodecaschcenus, that is, the part 
of ^Ethiopia immediately above Egypt, on the 
western bank of the Nile, north of Pselcis, and 
south of Talmis. 

Tvana (Tvava : Tvavzvg : ruins at Kiz Hisar), 
a city of Asia Minor, stood in the south of Cap- 
padocia, at the northern foot of Mount Taurus, 
on the high road to the Cilician Gates, three 
hundred stadia from Cybistra, and four hundred 
from Mazaca, in a position of great natural 
strength, which was improved by fortifications. 
Under Caracalla it was made a Roman colony. 
In B.C. 272 it was taken by Aurelian, in the 
war with Zenobia, to whose territory it then 
belonged. Valens made it the chief city of 
Cappadocia Secunda. In its neighborhood was 
a great temple of Jupiter, by the side of a lake 
in a swampy plain ; and near the temple was a 
remarkable effervescing spring called Asmabae- 
on. Tyana was the native place of Apollonius, 
the supposed worker of miracles. The south- 
ern district of Cappadocia, in which the city 
stood, was called Tyanitis 

Tyche. Vid. Fortuna. 

Tyche. Vid. Svracus/e. 

[Tychius (Tv X ioO> °f Hvle > a mythical artifi- 
cer, mentioned by Homer as the maker of 
Ajax's shield of seven ox-hides, covered with a 
plate of brass ] 

Tydeus (Tvdev<;), son of CEneus, king of Caly- 
don, and Peribcea. He was obliged to leave 
Calydon in consequence of some murder which 
he had committed, but which is differently de- 
scribed by the different authors, some saying 
that he killed his father's brother, Melas, Lyco- 
peus, or Alcathous ; others, that he slew Thoas 
or Aphareus, his mother's brother ; others, that 
he slew his brother Olenias ; and others, again, 
that he killed the sons of Melas. who had revolt- 
ed against CEneus. He fled to Adrastus at Ar- 
gos, who purified him from the murder, and 
gave him his daughter Deipyle in marriage, by 
whom he became the father of Diomedes. who 
is hence frequently called Tydides. He ac- 
companied Adrastus in the expedition against 
Thebes, where he was wounded by Melanippus, 
who, however, was slain by him. When Tyd- 
eus lay on the ground wounded, Minerva (Athe- 
na) appeared to him with a remedy which she 
had received from Jupiter (Zeus), and which 
was to make him immortal. This, however, 
was prevented by a stratagem of Amphiaraus, 

913 



TYLOS. 



TYRAS. 



who hated Tydeus, for he cut off the head of 
Melanippus and brought it to Tydeus, who di- 
vided it and ate the brain, or devoured some of 
the flesh. Minerva (Athena), seeing this, shud- 
dered, and left Tydeus to his fate, who conse- 
quently died, and was buried by Macon. 

Tylos or Tyros {Tv'ao^, Tvpoc; : now Bah- 
rein), an island in the Persian Gulf, off the coast 
of Arabia, celebrated for its pearl fisheries. 

Tymbres or Tembrogius (now Pursek), a river 
of Phrygia, rising in Mount Dindymene, and 
flowing past Cotyaeum and Dorylaeum into the 
Sangarius. It was the boundary between Phry- 
gia Epictetus and Phrygia Salutaris. 

Tymnes (Tw/ivjyc), an epigrammatic poet, 
whose epigrams were included in the Garland 
of Meleager, but respecting whose exact date 
wc have no further evidence. There are seven 
of his epigrams in the Greek Anthology. 

Tymph^ei (Tvfitpalot), a people of Epirus, on I 
the borders of Thessaly, so called from Mount j 
Tymphe (Tvp<pn), sometimes, but less correctly, j 
written Stymphe (SrtJ/t^jy). Their country was J 
called Tymph^ea {Tvtxfaia). 

Tvmphrestus (Tvpippnaroc : row Elladka), a 
mountain in Thessaly, in the country of the 
Dryopes, in which the River Spercheus rises. 

Tyndareus (Tvvddpeoc), not Tyndarcs, which 
is not found in classical writers, was son of Pe- 
rieres and Gorgophone, or, according to others, 
son of CEbalus, by the nymph Batla or by Gor- 
gophone. Tyndareus and his brother Icarius 
were expelled by their step-brother Hippocoon 
and his sons ; whereupon Tyndareus fled to 
Thestius in iEtolia, and assisted him in his wars 
against his neighbors. In ^Etolia Tyndareus 
married Leda, the daughter of Thestius, and 
was afterward restored to Sparta by Hercules. 
By Leda, Tyndareus became the father of 
Timandra, Clytaemnestra, and Philonoe. One 
night Leda was embraced both by Jupiter (Zeus) 
and Tyndareus, and the result was the birth of 
Pollux and Helena, the children of Jupiter 
(Zeus), and of Castor and Clytaemnestra, the 
children of Tyndareus. The patronymic Tyn- 
darid^e is frequently given to Castor and Pol- 
lux, and the female patronymic Tyndaris to 
Helen and Clytaemnestra. When Castor and 
Pollux had been received among the immortals, 
Tyndareus invited Menelaus to come to Spar- 
ta, and surrendered his kingdom to him. 

Tynparis orTYNDARiUM (Tvvdap'ig, Tvvddpiov. 
Tyndaritanus : now Tindare), a town on the 
northern coast of Sicily, with a good harbor, a 
little w r est of Messana, near the promontory of 
the same name founded by the elder Dionysius, 
B.C. 396, which became an important place. It 
was the head-quarters of Agrippa, the general 
of Octavianus, in the war against Sextus Pom- 
pey. The greater part of the town was subse- 
quently destroyed by an inundation of the sea. 

[Typ^tjs (TvTtaLov opoc), a craggy elevation 
in Elis, between Scillus and the Alpheus, in the 
direction of Olympia, from which the law de- 
creed that women should be hurled, who had 
infringed the regulations excluding them from 
appearing at the Olympic games ] 

Typhon or Typhoeus (Tv$duv, Tv$ueve, con- 
tracted into TvQuc), a monster of the primitive 
world, is described sometimes as a destructive 
hurricane, and sometimes as a fire-breathing 
914 5 



giant. According to Homer, he was concealed 
in the earth in the country of the Arimi (Elv 
'Apifioig, of which the Latin poets have made 
Inarime), which was lashed by Jupiter (Zeus) 
with flashes of lightning. In Hesiod, Typhaon 
and Typhoeus are two distinct beings. Typha- 
on is represented as a son of Typhoeus, and a 
fearful hurricane, who by Echidna became the 
father of the dog Orthus, Cerberus, the Lernaean 
hydra, Chimaera, and the Sphinx. Typhoeus, on 
the other hand, is called the youngest son of 
Tartarus and Terra (Gaea), or of Juno (Hera) 
alone, because she was indignant at Jupiter 
(Zeus) having given birth to Minerva (Athena). 
He is described as a monster with one hundred 
heads, fearful eyes, and terrible voices ; he 
wanted to acquire the sovereignty of gods and 
men, but was subdued, after a fearful struggle, 
by Jupiter (Zeus), with a thunderbolt. He be- 
got the winds, whence he is also called the 
father of the Harpies ; but the beneficent winds 
Notus, Boreas, Argestes, and Zephyrus, were 
not his sons. ./Eschylus and Pindar describe 
him as living in a Cilician cave. He is further 
said to have at one time been engaged in a 
struggle with all the immortals, and to have 
been killed by Jupiter (Zeus) with a flash of 
lightning ; he was buried in Tartarus under 
Mount iEtna, the work-shop of Hephaestus, 
which is hence called by the poets Typhois JEt- 
na. The later poets frequently connect Ty- 
phoeus with Egypt. The gods, it is said, unable 
to hold out against him. fled to Egypt, where, 
from fear, they metamorphosed themselves into 
animals, with the exception of Jupiter (Zeus) 
and Minerva (Athena). 

Tyraget.<e,Tyriget.s, or Tyranget^e, a peo- 
ple in European Sarmatia, probably a branch of 
the Getae, dwelling east of the River Tyras. 

Tyrannion (Tvpavviuv). 1. A Greek gram- 
marian, a native of Amisus in Pontus, was orig- 
inally called Theophrastus, but received from 
his instructor the name of Tyrannion on account 
of his domineering behavior to his fellow-disci- 
ples. In B.C. 72 he was taken captive by Lu- 
cullus, who carried him to Rome. He was 
given by Lucullus to Murena, who manumitted 
him. At Rome Tyrannion occupied himself in 
teaching. He was also employed in arranging 
the library of Apellicon, which Sulla brought to 
Rome This library contained the writings of 
Aristotle, upon which Tyrannion bestowed con- 
siderable care and attention. Cicero speaks in 
the highest terms of the learning and ability of 
Tyrannion. Tyrannion amassed considerable 
wealth, and died at a very advanced age of a 
paralytic stroke. — 2. A native of Phoenicia, tho 
son of Artemidorus, and a disciple of the pre- 
ceding. His original name was Diocles. He 
was taken captive in the war between Antony 
and Octavianus, and was purchased by Dymas, a 
freedman of the latter. By him he was pre- 
sented to Terentia. the wife of Cicero, who man- 
umitted him. He taught at Rome, and wrote 
I a great number of works, which are all lost. 
Tyras {Tvpac, Tvpnc : now Dniester), subse- 
quently called Danastris, a river in European 
Sarmatia, forming, in the lower part of its 
course, the boundary between Dacia and Sar- 
matia, and falling into the Pontus Euxinus 
north of the Danube. At its mouth there was 



TYRES. 



TZETZES. 



a town of the same name, probably on the site 
of the modern Ackjermann. 

[Tv res, brother of Tenthras, one of the com- 
panions of /Eneas, fought in Italy against Tur- 
nus.] 

Tyrueum (YvpialoD : now llghun), a city of 
Lycaonia, (lescril)ed by Xenophon (in iha Aria b~ 
asis) as twenty parasangs west of Iconium. 
It lay due west of Laodicea. 

Tyro (Tvpw), daughter of Salmoneus and Al- 
ddice. She wus wife of Cretheus, and beloved 
by the river-god Enipeus in Thessaly, in whose 
form Neptune (Poseidon) appeared to her, and 
became by her the father of Pelias and Neleus. 
By Cretheus she was the mother of /Eson, 
Pheres, and Amylhaon 

Tyrrheni, T v k ■ h i Nl a . Vid. Etruria. 

Tyrrhenum Mark. Vid. Etruria. 

Tyrrhenes (TvppTjvoe or Tvparjvog), son of 
the Lydian king Atys and Callithea, and brother 
of Lydus, is said to have led a Pelasgian colony 
from Lydia into Italy, into the country of the 
Urnbrians, and to have given to the colonists 
his name, Tyrrhenians. Others call Tyrrhenus 
a son of Hercules by Omphale, or of Telephus 
and Hiera, and a brother of Tarchon. The 
name Tarchon seems to be only another form 
of Tyrrhenus. 

Tyrrheus, a shepherd of King Latin ua. As 
Ascanius was hunting, he killed a tame stag be- 
longing to Tyrrheus, whereupon the country 
people took up arm?, which was the first con- 
flict in Italy between the natives and the Tro- 
jan settlers. 

Tyrtaeus (Tvpraioc or Tuprcuoc), son of Ar- 
chembrotus, of Aphidnae in Attica. According 
to the older tradition, the Spartans, during the 
second Messenian war, were commanded by an 
oracle to take a leader from among the Athe- 
nians, and thus to conquer their enemies, where- 
upon they chose Tyrtaeus as their leader. Later 
writers embellish the story, and represent Tyr- 
taeus as a lame schoolmaster, of low family and 
reputation, whom the Athenians, when applied 
to by the Lacedaemonians in accordance with j 
the oracle, purposely sent as the most inefficient 
leader they could select, being unwilling to as- 
sist the Lacedaemonians in extending their do- 
minion in the Peloponnesus, but little thinking 
that the poetry of Tyrtaeus would achieve that 
victory which his physical constitution seemed 
to forbid his aspiring to. Many modern critics 
reject altogether the account of the Attic origin 
of Tyrtaeus, and maintain that the extant frag- 
ments of his poetry actually furnish evidence 
of his being a Lacedaemonian. But it is impos- 
sible to arrive at any positive decision upon the 
subject. It is certain, however, that the poems 
of Tyrtaeus exercised an important influence 
upon the Spartans, composing their dissensions 
at home, and animating their courage in the 
field. In order to appease their civil discords, 
he composed his celebrated elegy entitled " Le- 
gal Order" (Evvoftta), which appears to have 
had a wondrous effect in stilling the excited 
passions of the Spartans. But still more cele- 
brated were the poems by which he animated 
the courage of the Spartans in their conflict 
with the Messenians. These poems were of 
two kinds ; namely, elegies, containing exhorta- 
tions to constancy and courage, and descriptions 



of the glory of lighting bravely for one's native 
land ; and more spirited compositions, in the 
anapaest'c measure, which were intended as 
marching songs, to be performed with the music 
of the flute. He lived to see the success of his 
efforts in the entire conquest of the Messenians, 
and their reduction to the condition of Helots, 
lie therefore flourished down to B.C. 6G8, which 
was the last year of the second Messenian war. 
The best separate edition of the fragments of 
his poems is by Bach, with the remains of the 
elegiac poets Callinus and Asius, Lips., 1831. 

Tyrus (Tvpog : Aram. Tura : in the Old Test- 
ament, Tsor : Tipiof, Tyrius : ruins at Sur). one 
of the greatest and most famous cities of the 
ancient world, stood on the coast of Phcenice, 
about twenty miles south of Sidon. It was a 
colony of the Sidonians, and is therefore called 
in Scripture M the daughter of Sidon." It grad- 
ually eclipsed the mother city, and came to be 
the chief place of all Phcenice for wealth, com- 
merce, and colonizing activity. In the time of 
Solomon, we find its king, Hiram, who was also 
King of Sidon, in close alliance with the Hebrew 
monarch, whom he assisted in building the tem- 
ple and his palace, and in commercial enter- 
prises. Respecting its colonies and maritime 
enterprise, vid. Phcenice and Carthago. The 
Assyrian king Shalmaneser laid siege to Tyre 
for five years, but without success. It was 
again besieged for thirteen years by Nebuchad- 
nezzar, and there is a tradition that he took it, 
but the matter is not quite certain. At tbe pe- 
riod when the Greeks began to be well acquaint- 
ed with the city, its old site had been abandon- 
ed, and a new city erected on a small island 
about half a mile from the shore, and a mile in 
length, and a little north of the remains of the 
former city, which was now called Old Tyre 
(Ua'kairvpoq). With the additional advantage 
of its insular position, this new city soon rose 
to a prosperity scarcely less than tbat of its 
predecessor 5 though, under the Persian kings, 
it seems to have ranked again below Sidon. 
Vid. Siuon. In B.C. 322 the Tyrians refused 
to open their gates to Alexander, who laid siege 
to the city for seven months, and united the 
island on which it stood to tbe main land by a 
mole constructed chiefly of the ruins of Old 
Tyre. This mole has ever since formed a per- 
manent connection between the island and the 
main land. After its capture and sack by Alex- 
ander, Tyre never regained its former conse- 
quence, and its commerce was for the most 
part transferred to Alexandrea. It recovered, 
however, sufficiently to be mentioned as a strong 
fortress and flourishing port under the early Ro- 
man emperors. Septimius Severus made it a 
Roman colony. It was the see of a bishop, 
and Jerome calls it the most beautiful city of 
Phoenicia. It was a place of considerable im- 
portance in medieval history, especially as one 
of the last points held by the Christians on the 
coast of Syria. The wars of the Crusades com- 
pleted its ruin, and its site is now occupied hy 
a poor village ; and even its ruins are for the 
most part covered by the sea. Even the site 
of Babylon does not present a more striking ful- 
filment of prophecy. 

TzKTZEs(TCert"?7( ). 1. Joannes, a Greek gram- 
marian of Constantinople, flourished about A.D. 

915 



TZITZIS 



ULYSSES. 



1150. His writings bear evident traces of the 
extent of his learning, and not less of the inor- 
dinate self-conceit with which they had filled 
him. He wrote a vast number of works, of 
which several are still extant. Of these the 
two following are the most important : 1. Hiaca, 
which consists properly of three poems, collect- 
ed into one under the titles Td r:pb 'Ofiypov, ra 
'Ournov, kg.1 ra ue6"OfiTipov. The whole amounts 

10 one thousand six hundred and seventy-six 
lines, and is written in hexameter metre. It is 
a very dull composition. Edited by Bekker, 
Berlin, 1816. 2. Ckiliades, consisting in its pres- 
ent form of twelve thousand six hundred and 
sixty-one lines. This name was given to it by 
the first editor, who divided it, without refer- 
ence to the contents, into thirteen divisions of 
one thousand lines, the last being incomplete. 
Its subject-matter is of the most miscellaneous 
kind, but embraces chiefly mythological and his- 
torical narratives, arranged under separate ti- 
tles, and without any further connection. The 
following are a few of them, as they occur : 
Croesus, Midas, Gyges. Codrus, Alcmaeon, &c. 

11 is written in bad Greek, in that abominable 
make-believe of a metre called political terse. 
Edited by Kiessling, Lips., 1826. — 2. Isaac, 
brother of the preceding, the author of a val- 
uable commentary on the Cassandra of Lyco- 
phron. printed in most of the editions of Lyco- 
phron ; [best edit, by Miiller, Lips. 181 1. 3 vols ] 

Tzitzis or Tzutzis (ruins south of Debout), a 
city in the north of the Dodecaschcenus. that is, 
the part of ^Ethiopia immediately above Egypt, 
a little south of Parembole, and considerably 
north of Taphis. 

Ubii, a Gerna^n people, who originally dwelt 
on the right bank of the Rhine, buf were trans- 
ported across the river by Agrippa in B C. 37. 
at their own request, because they wished to es- 
cape the hostilities of the Suevi. They took 
the name of Agrippenses, from their town Co- 

LOXIA AGRIPPINA. 

LcIlegox [OvKukiyav\ one of the elders at 
Troy, whose bouse was burned at the destruc- 
tion of the city. 

Uccbis. a town inHispania Baetica, near Cor- 
doba. 

Ufens (now Ujfente), a river in Latium, flow- 
ing from Setia, and falling into the Amasenus. 

Uffcgcm, a town in Bruttium, between Scyl- 
lacium and Rhegium. 

Ugerncm (now Bea.uca.ire)> a town in Gallia 
Narbonensis, on the road from Nemausus to 
Aquae Sextiae, where Avitus was proclaimed 
emperor. 

Ulia (now Monlemayor), a Roman municip- 
ium in Hispania Baetica, situated upon a hill, 
and upon the road from Gades to Corduba. 

Uliaecs or Olarionexsis Ixscla (now Oh- 
ron), an island off the western coast of Gaul, in 
the Aquitanian Gulf. 

UlpiIxus. 1. Domitics Ulpiaxtts, a celebra- 
ted jurist, derived his origin from Tyre in Phoe- 
nicia, but was probably not a native of Tyre 
himself. The time of his birth is unknown. 
The greater part of his juristical works were 
written during the sole reign of Caracalla, es- 



pecially the two great works Ad Edictum and 
the Lihri ad Sabinum. He was banished or de- 
prived of his functions under Elagabalus, who 
| became emperor 217 ; but on the accession of 
Alexander Severus, 222, he became the emper- 
I or's chief adviser. The emperor conferred on 
| Ulpian the office of Scriniorum magister, and 
j made him a consiliarius. He also held the of- 
! fice of Praefectus Annona?, and he was likewise 
made Praefectus Praetorio. Ulpian perished in 
' the reign of Alexander by the hands of the sol- 
diers, who forced their way into the palace at 
night, and killed him in the presence of the em- 
peror and his mother, 228. His promotion to 
the office of praefectus praetorio was probably 
an unpopular measure. A great part of the nu- 
merous writings of Ulpian were still extant in 
the time of Justinian, and a much greater quan- 
tity is excerpted from him by the compilers of 
the Digest than from any other jurist. The 
number of excerpts from Ulpian is said to be 
two thousand four hundred and sixty-two ; and 
many of the excerpts are of great length, and 
altogether they form about one third of the 
whole body of the Digest. The excerpts from 
Paulus and Ulpian together make about one 
half of the Digest. Ulpian's style is perspicu- 
; ons, and presents fewer difficulties than that of 
many of the Roman jurists who are excerpted 
in the Digest. The great legal knowledge, the 
good sense, and the industry of Ulpian place 
him among the first of the Roman jurists ; and 
he has exercised a great influence on the juris- 
prudence of modern Europe through the copi- 
ous extracts from his writings which have been 
preserved by the compilers of Justinian's Di- 
gest. We possess a fragment of a work under 
the title of Domitii Ulpiani Fragmenta. ; it con- 
sists of twenty- nine titles, and is a valuable 
source for the history of the Roman law. The 
best editions are by Hugo. Berlin, 1834, and by 
Booking. Bonn, 1836. — 2. Of Antioch, a soph- 
ist, lived in the time of Constantine the Great, 
and wrote several rhetorical works. The name 
of Ulpianus is prefixed to extant Commentaries 
in Greek on eighteen of the orations of Demos- 
thenes, and it is usually stated that they were 
written by Ulpianus of Antioch. But the Com- 
mentaries have evidently received numerous 
additions and interpolations from some gram- 
marian of a very late period. They are printed 
in several editions of the Attic orators. 
Ulpits Trajaxcs. Vid. Trajancs. 
Ultor, " the avenger,*' a surname of Mars, 
to whom Augustus built a temple at Rome in 
{ the Forum, after taking vengeance upon the 
murderers of his great-unrle, Julius Caesar. 

Ulcsr.32 (Ulubranus. Ulubrensis), a small 
town in Latium, of uncertain site, but in the 
neighborhood of the Pontine Marshes. 

Ulysses, LTlyies, or Ulixes, called Odys- 
seus ('Odvarrevc) by the Greeks, one of the prin- 
cipal Greek heroes in the Trojan war. Ac- 
cording to the Homeric account, he was a son 
of Laertes and Anticlea, the daughter of Au- 
tolvcus, and was married to Penelope, the 
daughter of Icarius, by whom he became the 
father of Telemachus. But. according to a lat- 
er tradition, he was a son of Sisyphus and Aa- 
ticlea, who, being with child by Sisyphus, was 
. married to Laertes, and thus gave birth to him 



ULYSSES. 



ULYSSES. 



either after her arrival in Ithaca or on her way gained the prize. He is said hy some to have 
thither. Later traditions further state that, he- I devised the stratagem of the wooden horse, and 
sides Telemachus, Ulysses became hy Penelope ! he was one of the heroes concealed within it. 
the father of Arcesilaus or Ptoliporthus ; and, I He is also said to have taken part in carrying 
by Circe, the father of Agrins, Latin us, Telego- : offihe palladium. But the most celebrated part 
iius, and Cassiphone ; by Calypso, of Nausith- j of his story consists of his adventures after the 
ous and Nausinous or Auson, Telegonus, and [ destruction of Troy, which form the subject ol 
Teledamus ; and, lastly, by Evippe, of Leonto- j the Homeric poem called after him, the Odyssey. 
phron, Doryclus or Euryalus. The name Odys- After the capture of Troy he set out on his voy- 
seus is said to signify the angry. The story of age home, but was overtaken by a storm and 
Ulysses ran as follows : When a young man, j thrown upon the coast of Isrnarus, a town of 
Ulysses went to see his grandfather Autolycus | the Cicones, in Thrace, north of the island of 
near Mount Parnassus. There, while engaged Lemnos. He plundered the town, but several 
in the chase, he was wounded by a boar in his ' of his men were cut off by the Cicones. From 
knee, by the scar of which he was subsequently thence he was driven by a north wind toward 
recognized by Euryclea. Even at that age he ! Malea and to the Lotophagi on the coast of 
was distinguished for courage, for knowledge of Libya. Some of his companions were so much 
navigation, for eloquence, and for skill as a nego- ( delighted with the taste of the lotus that they 
tiator; and on one occasion, when the Messeni- wanted to remain in the country, but Ulysses 
ans had carried off some sheep from Ithaca, La- ' compelled them to embark again, and continued 
ertes sent him to Messene to demand reparation. ; his voyage. In one day he reached the goat- 
He there met with Iphitus, who was seeking the : island, situated north of the country of the Lo- 
horses stolen from him, and who gave him the j tophagi. He there left behind eleven ships, and 
famous bow of Eurytus. This bow Ulysses with one he sailed to the neighboring island of 
used only in Ithaca, regarding it as too great a the Cyclopes (the western coast of Sicily), 
treasure to be employed in the field, and it was j where, with twelve companions, he entered the 
so strong that none of the suitors was able to j cave of the Cyclops Polyphemus, a son of Nep- 
handle it. According to some accounts, he went tune (Poseidon) and Thoosa. This giant de- 
to Sparta as one of the suitors of Helen ; and ! voured, one after another, six of the compan- 
he is said to have advised Tyndareus to make i ions of Ulysses, and kept the unfortunate Ulys- 
the suitors swear that they would defend the i ses and the six others as prisoners in. his cave, 
chosen bridegroom against any one who should In order to save himself, Ulysses contrived to 
insult him on Helen's account. Tyndareus, to 
show him his gratitude, persuaded his brother 
to give Penelope in marriage to Ulysses ; or, 
according to others, Ulysses gained her by con- 
quering his competitors in the foot-race. Homer, 
however, mentions nothing of all this, and states 
that Agamemnon, who visited Ulysses in Ithaca, 
prevailed upon him only with great difficulty to 
join the Greeks in their expedition against Troy. 
Other traditions relate that he was visited by 
Menelaus and Agamemnon, and that Paiamedes 
more especially induced him to join the Greeks. 
When Paiamedes came to Ithaca, Ulysses pre- 
tended to be mad . he yoked an ass and ox to 
a plough, and began to sow salt. Paiamedes, 
to try him, placed the infant Telemachus before 
the plough, whereupon the father could not con- 
tinue to play his part. He stopped the plough, 
and was obliged to undertake the fulfillment of 
the promise he had made when he was one of 
the suitors of Helen. This occurrence is said 
to have been the cause of his hatred of Paiame- 
des. Being now himself gained for the under- 
taking, he contrived to discover Achilles, who 
was concealed among the daughters of King 
Lycomedes. Vii. Achilles. Before, however, 
the Greeks sailed from home, Ulysses, in con- 
junction with Menelaus, went to Troy for the 
purpose of inducing the Trojans to restore Helen 
and her treasures. When the Greeks were as- 
sembled at Aulis, Ulysses joined them with 
twelve ships and men from Cephallenia, Ithaca, 
Neritus, Crocylia, Zacynthus, Samos, and the 
coast of Epirus. During the siege of Troy he 
distinguished himself as a valiant and undaunt- 
ed warrior, but more particularly as a cunning 
spy, and a prudent and eloquent negotiator. 
After the death of Achilles, Ulysses contended 
for his armor with the Telamonian Ajax, and 



make the monster drunk with wine, and then, 
with a burning pole, deprived him of his one 
eye. He now succeeded in making his escape 
with his friends, by concealing himself and them 
under the bodies of the sheep which the Cyclops 
let out of his cave. In this way Ulysses reached 
' his ship. The Cyclops implored his father Nep- 
; tune (Poseidon) to take vengeance upon Ulys- 
I ses, and henceforth the god of the sea pursued 
the wandering king with implacable enmity. 
Ulysses next arrived at the island of /Eolus ; 
! and the god gave him, on his departure, a bag 
! of winds, which were to carry him home ; but 
I the companions of Ulysses opened the bag, and 
! the winds escaped, whereupon the ships were 
j driven back to the island of /Eolus, who indig- 
! nantly refused all further assistance. After a 
; voyage of six days, Ulysses arrived atTelepylos, 
j the city of Lamus, in which Antiphates ruled 
| over the Laestrygones, a sort of cannibals.- This 
j place must probably be sought somewhere in 
I the north of Sicily. Ulysses escaped from them 
j with only one ship ; and his fate now carried 
j him to a western island, JEaja, inhabited by 
| the sorceress Circe. Part of his people were 
| sent to explore the island, but they were 
changed by Circe into swine. Eurylochus alone 
I escaped, and brought the sad news to Ulysses, 
1 who, when he was hastening to the assistance 
of his friends, was instructed by Mercury (Her- 
1 mes) by what means he could resist the magic 
| powers of Circe. He succeeded in liberating 
his companions, who were again changed into 
men, and were most hospitably treated by the 
i sorceress. When at length Ulysses begged for 
leave to depart, Circe desired him to descend 
j into Hades and to consult the seer Tiresias. 
• He now sailed west, right across the river Oce- 
! anus, and having landed on the other side, in 



ULVSSES. 



ULYSSES. 



the country of the Cimmerians, where Helios 
does not shine, he entered Hades, and consult- 
ed Tiresias about the manner in which he might 
reach his native land. Tiresias informed him 
of the danger and difficulties arising from the 
anger of Neptune (Poseidon), but gave him hope 
that all would yet turn out well, if Ulysses and 
his companions would leave the herds of Helios 
in Thrinacia uninjured. Ulysses now returned 
to JEaea, where Circe again treated the stran- 
gers kindly, told them of the dangers that yet 
awaited them, and of the means of escaping. 
The wind which she sent with them carried 
them to the island of the Sirens, somewhere 
near the western coast of Italy. The Sirens 
sat on the shore, and with their sweet voices 
attracted all that passed by, and then destroyed 
them. Ulysses, in order to escape the danger, 
filled the ears of his companions with wax, and 
fastened himself to the mast of his ship, until he 
was out of the reach of the Sirens' song. His 
ship next sailed between Scylla and Charyb- 
dis, two rocks between Thrinacia and Italy. As 
the ship passed between them, Scylla, the mon- 
ster inhabiting the rock of the same name, car- 
ried off and devoured six of the companions of 
Ulysses. From thence he came to Thrinacia, 
the island of Helios, who there kept his sacred 
herds of oxen. Mindful of the advice of Tire- 
sias and Circe, Ulysses wanted to sail past, but 
his companions compelled him to land. He 
made them swear not to touch any of the cat- 
tle ; but as they were detained in the island by 
storms, and were hungry, they killed the finest 
of the oxen while Ulysses was asleep. After 
some days the storm abated, and they sailed 
away, but soon another storm came on, and 
their ship was destroyed by Jupiter (Zeus) with 
a flash of lightning. All were drowned with 
the exception of Ulysses, who saved himself by 
means of the mast and planks, and after ten 
days reached the island of Ogygia, inhabited by 
the nymph Calypso. She received him with 
kindness, and desired him to marry her, prom- 
ising immortality and eternal youth if he would 
consent, and forget Ithaca. But he could not 
overcome his longing after his own home. Mi- 
nerva (Athena), who had always protected Ulys- 
ses, induced Jupiter (Zeus) to promise that her 
favorite hero, notwithstanding the anger of Nep- 
tune (Poseidon), should one day return to his 
native island, and take vengeance on the suitors 
of Penelope. Mercury (Hermes) carried to Ca- 
lypso the command of Jupiter (Zeus) to dismiss 
Ulysses. The nymph obeyed, and taught him 
how to build a raft, on which, after remaining 
eight years with her, he left the island. In 
eighteen days he came in sight of Scheria, the 
island of the Phasacians, when Neptune (Posei- 
don) sent a storm, which cast him off the raft. 
By the assistance of Leucothea and Minerva 
(Athena), he reached Scheria by dint of swim- 
ming. The exhausted hero slept on the shore 
until he was awoke by the voices of maidens. 
He found Nausicaa,the daughter of King Alci- 
nous and Arete, who conducted the hero to her 
father's court. He was there honored with 
feasts and contests, and the minstrel Demodo- 
cus sang of the fall of Troy, which moved Ulys- 
ses to tears ; and, being questioned about the 
cause of his emotion, he related his whole his- 
918 



tory. At length he was sent home in a ship- 
One night, as he had fallen asleep in his ship, 
it reached the coast of Ithaca ; the Phaeacians 
who had accompanied him carried him on shore, 
and left hirn. He had now been away from 
Ithaca for twenty years, and when he awoke he 
did not recognize his native land, for Athena, 
that he might not be recognized, had enveloped 
him in a cloud. As he w ? as lamenting his fate, 
the goddess informed him where he was, and 
advised him how to take vengeance upon the 
enemies of his house. During his absence, his 
father Laertes, bowed down by grief and old 
age, had withdrawn into the country, his mother 
Anticlea had died of sorrow, his son Telemachus 
had grown up to manhood, and his wife Penel- 
ope had rejected all the offers that had been 
made to her by the importunate suitors from 
the neighboring islands. During the last few 
years more than a hundred nobles of Ithaca, 
Same, Dulichium, and Zacynthus had been suing 
for the hand of Penelope, and in their visits to 
her house had treated all that it contained as 
if it had been their own. That he might be able 
to take vengeance upon them, it was necessary 
that he should not be recognized. Minerva 
(Athena) accordingly metamorphosed him into 
an unsightly beggar, and he was kindly received 
by Eumasus, the swine-herd, a faithful servant 
of his house. While staying with Eumaeus, his 
son Telemachus returned from Sparta and Py- 
los, whither he had gone to obtain information 
concerning his father. Ulysses made himself 
known to him, and with him deliberated upon 
the plan of revenge. In the disguise of a beg- 
gar he accompanied Telemachus and Eumaeus 
to the town. The plan of revenge was now 
carried into effect. Penelope, with great diffi- 
culty, was made to promise her hand to him 
who should conquer the others in shooting with 
the bow of Ulysses. As none of the suitors 
was able to draw this bow, Ulysses himself took 
it up and then began to attack the suitors. He 
was supported by Athena and his son, and all 
fell by his hands. Ulysses now made himself 
known to Penelope, and went to see his aged 
father. In the mean time the report of the death 
of the suitors was spread abroad, and their rel- 
atives rose in arms against Ulysses ; but Athe- 
na, who assumed the appearance of Mentor, 
brought about a reconciliation between the peo- 
ple and the king. It has already been remark- 
ed that in the Homeric poems Ulysses is rep- 
resented as a prudent, cunning, inventive, and 
eloquent man, but, at the same time, as a brave, 
bold, and persevering warrior, whose courage 
no misfortune or calamity could subdue, but 
later poets describe him as a cowardly, deceit- 
ful, and intriguing personage. Respecting the 
last period of his life the Homeric poems give 
us no information, except the prophecy of Tire- 
sias, who promised him a painless death in a 
happy old age ; but later writers give us differ- 
ent accounts. According to one, Telegonus, 
the son of Ulysses by Circe, was sent out by 
his mother to seek his father. A storm cast 
him upon Ithaca, which he began to plunder in 
order to obtain provisions. Ulysses and Telem- 
achus attacked him, but he slew Ulysses, and 
his body was afterward carried to JEaea. Ac- 
cording to some, Circe recalled Ulysses to life 



UMBRENUS. 

ajrain, m, on his arrival in Tyrrhenia, he was 
burned on Mount Perge. In works of art Ulys- 
ses is commonly represented as a sailor, wear- 
ing a semi-oval cap. 

[Umbrenus, P., one of the accomplices of Cat- 
iline ; he was a frccdman, and had followed the 
business of a negotiator in Gaul, and was for 
that reason employed to gain over the ambas- 
sadors of the Allobroges to favor the designs of 
the conspirators ] 

Umbria, called by the Greeks Ombrica (7 
'O/zfyufoy), a district of Italy, bounded on the 
north by Gallia Cisalpina, from which it was 
separated by the River Rubicon ; on the east 
by the Adriatic Sea : on the south by Picenum, 
from which it was separated by the River AZsis, 
and by the land of the Sabines, from which it 
was separated by the River Nar ; and on the 
west by Etruria, from which it was separated 
by the Tiber. Under Augustus it formed the 
sixth Regio of Italy. The Apennines ran 
through the western part of the country, but it 
contained many fertile plains on the coast. Its 
inhabitants, the Umbri (sing. Umber), called by 
the Greeks Umbrici COfxSotKoi), were one of the 
most ancient races of Italy, and were connect- 
ed with the Opicans, Sabines, and those other 
tribes whose languages were akin to the Greek. 
The Umbri were at a very early period the 
most powerful people in Central Italy, and ex- 
tended across the peninsula from the Adriatic 
to the Tyrrhene seas. Thus they inhabited the 
country afterward called Etruria ; and we are 
expressly told that Crotona, Perusia, Clusium, 
and other Etruscan cities were built by the 
Umbrians. They were afterward deprived of 
their possessions west of the Tiber by the Etrus- 
cans, and confined to the country between this 
river and the Adriatic. Their territories were 
still further diminished by the Senones, a Gallic 
people, who took possession of the whole coun- 
try on the coast, from Ariminum to the jfesis. 
The Umbri were subdued by the Romans B.C. 
307 ; and after the conquest of the Senones by 
the Romans in 283, they again obtained posses- 
sion of the country on the coast of the Adriatic. 
This district, however, continued to be called 
Ager Gallicus down to a late period. The chief 
towns of Umbria were Ariminum, Fanum For- 
tune, Mevania, Tuder, Narnia, and Spole- 

TIUM. 

[Umbricius, a diviner, who predicted to Galba, 
shortly before his death, that a plot threatened 
him] 

[Umbro, a famous magician, from the coun- 
try of the Marsi, aided Turnus against the Tro- 
jans, but was slain in battle : he was brother 
of the nymph Angitia] 

Umbro (now Ombrune), one of the largest riv- 
ers in Etruria, falling into the Tyrrhene Sea, 
near a town of the same name. 

Ummidius Quadratus. Vid. Quadratus. 

Unelli, a people on the northern coast of 
Gaul, on a promontory opposite Britain (the 
modern Cotantin), belonging to the Armorici. 

[Unsingis (now the Hunze, flowing by Grunin- 
gen), a conjectural emendation in Tacitus (Ann., 
i., 70) for the Vtsurgis, a river of Germania, 
flowing into the Oceanus Germanicus.] 

Upis (Qvtcic). 1. A surname of Artemis (Di- 
ana), as the goddess assisting women in child- 



URSUS. 

j birth — 2. The name of a mythical being, who 
is said to have reared Artemis (Diana), and who 
is mentioned by Virgil as one of the nymphs in 
her train. The masculine Upis is mentioned 
by Cicero as the father of Artemis (Diana). 
Ur. Vid. Edessa. 

Urania (Qvpavia). 1. One of the Muses, a 
daughter of Zeus (Jupiter) by Mnemosyne. The 
ancient bard Linus is called her son by Apollo, 
and Hymenals also is said to have been a son 
of Urania. She was regarded, as her name in- 
dicates, as the Muse of Astronomy, and was 
represented with a celestial globe, to which she 
points with a small stall*— 2. Daughter of Oce- 
anus and Tethys, who also occurs as a nymph 
in the train of Persephone (Proserpina). — 3. A 
surname of Aphrodite (Venus), describing her 
as "the heavenly," or spiritual, to distinguish 
her from Aphrodite Pandemos. Plato repre- 
sents her as a daughter of Uranus (Ccelus), be- 
gotten without a mother. Wine was not used 
in the libations offered to her. 

Uranus (Ovpavoc), Co^lus, or Heaven, some- 
times called a son, and sometimes the husband 
of Gaea (Earth). By Gaea Uranus became the 
father of Oceanus, Cceus, Crius, Hyperion, lape- 
tus, Thia, Rhia, Themis, Mnemosyne, Phcebe, 
Tethys, Cronos (Saturn); of the Cyclopes 
Brontes, Steropes, Arges ; and of the Hecalon- 
cheires Cottus, Briareus, and Gyes. Accord- 
ing to Cicero, Uranus also was the father of 
Mercury by Dia, and of Venus by Hemera. Ura- 
nus hated his children, and immediately after 
their birth he confined thern in Tartarus, in con- 
sequence of which he was unmanned and de- 
throned by Cronos (Saturn) at the instigation 
of Gaea (Terra). Out of the drops of his blood 
sprang the Gigantes, the Mclian nymphs, and, 
according to some, Silenus, and from the foam 
gathering around his limbs in the sea sprang 
Aphrodite (Venus). 

Urbigenus Pagus. Vid. Helvetii. 
Urbinum (Urbinas, -atis). 1. Hortense (now 
Urbeno), a town in Umbria and a municipium, 
situated on a steep round rock.— 2. Metaurensb 
(now Urbama), a town in Umbria, on the River 
Metaurus, and not far from its source. 
Urbs Salvia. Vid. Poi.lentia, No. 2. 
Urci, a town of the Bastetani in Hispania 
Tarraconensis, on the coast, and on the road 
from Castulo to Malaca. 

Urcinium (now Orcine), a town on the west- 
ern coast of Corsica. 

Urgo or Gorgon (now Gorgona), an island 
off the coast of Etruria, north of Ilva. 

Uria (Urias : now Oria), called Hyria ('Ypf'77) 
by Herodotus, a town in Calabria, on the road 
from Brundisium to Tarentum, was the ancient 
capital of Iapygia, and is said to have been 
founded by the Cretans under Minos. 

Urium, a small town in Apulia, from which 
the Sinus Urias took its name, being the bay 
on the northern side of Mount Garganus, oppo- 
site the Diomedean islands. 
I Urseius Ferox. Vid. Ferox. 
j [Urso (Ovpauv : now Osuna, with ruins and 
i inscriptions), a city of Hispania Baetica, also 
j called Genua Urbanorum; this was the last hold 
! of the partisans of Pompey in Spain.] 

Ursus, a contemporary of Domitian, whom 
1 dissuaded from killing his wife Domitia. 

919 



USCANA. 



VALENS. 



Statius addressed to him a poem of consolation 
on the death of a favorite slave (Silv., ii., 6), 
and he also mentions him in the Preface to the 
second book of his Silva. 

UscIna, a large town in Illyria, on a tributary 
of the Aous, and in the district Penestiana. 

Usipetes or Usipii, a German people, who, 
being driven out of their abodes by the Suevi, 
crossed the Rhine and penetrated into Gaul ; 
but they were defeated by Caesar, and compelled 
to recross the river. They were now received 
by the Sigambri, and allowed to dwell on the 
northern bank of the Lippe ; but we afterward 
find them south of the Lippe ; and at a still 
later time they become lost under the general 
name of Alemanni. 

[Uspe, the capital of the Siraceni or Siraci, 
a people of Sarmatia Asiatica.] 

Ustica, a valley near the Sabine villa of Hor- 
ace. 

Utica (?) 'Itvkji or Ovtlkt} : 'Inmate?, Uticen- 
sis: ruins at Bou-Shater), the greatest city of 
ancient Africa, after Carthage, was a Phoeni- 
cian colony, older (and, if the chronologers are 
to be trusted, much older) than Carthage. Like 
others of the very ancient Phoenician colonies 
in the territory of Carthage, Utica maintained 
a comparative independence, even during the 
height of the Punic power, and was rather the 
ally of Carthage than her subject. It stood on 
the shore of the northern part of the Cartha- 
ginian Gulf, a little west of the mouth of the 
Bagradas, and twenty-seven Roman miles north- 
west of Carthage; but its site is now inland, 
in consequence of the changes effected by the 
Bagradas in the coast-line. Vid. Bagradas. In 
the third Punic war, Utica took part with the 
Romans against Carthage, and was rewarded 
with the greatest part of the Carthaginian ter- 
ritory. It afterward became renowned to all 
future time as the scene of the last stand made 
by the Pompeian party against Caesar, and of 
the glorious, though mistaken, self-sacrifice of 
the younger Cato. Vid. Cato. 

Utus (now Vid), a river in Mcesia and a trib- 
utary of the Danube, falling into the latter riv- 
er at the town Utus. It is perhaps the same 
river as the Artanes of Herodotus. 

Uxama. (now Osma), a town of the Arevaci 
in Hispania Tarraconensis, on the road from 
Asturica to Ceesaraugusta, fifty miles west of 
Numantia. 

Uxantis (now Ushant), an island off" the north- 
western coast of Gaul. 

Uxellodunum, a town of the Cadurci in Gal- 
lia Aquitanica, situated on a steep hill, rising 
out of the plain, at the foot of which a river 
flowed. It is probably the same as the modern 
Capedenac, on the Lot. 

Uxentum (Uxentinus : now Ugento), a town 
in Calabria, northwest of the Iapygian promon- 
tory. 

Uxli (Oiftot), a warlike people, of predatory 
habits, who had their strongholds in Mount 
Parachoathras, on the northern border of Per- 
sis, in the district called Uxia (Ovtjia), but who 
also extended over a considerable tract of coun- 
try in Media. 



920 



V. 

Vacca, Vaga, or Vaba (Ovaya, Bdya : now 
Beja), a city of Zeugitana in Northern Africa, 
on the borders of Numidia, on an eastern trib- 
utary of the River Tusca, a good day's journey 
south of Utica. It was a great emporium for 
the trade between Hippo, Utica, and Carthage, 
and the interior. It was destroyed by Metellus 
in the Jugurthine war, but was restored and col- 
onized by the Romans. Its fortifications were 
renewed by Justinian, who named it Theodo- 
rias in honor of his wife. 

Vacc&i, a people in the interior of Hispania 
Tarraconensis, occupying the modern Toro, Pa- 
Icnr.ia, Burgos, and Valladolid, east of the As- 
tures, south of the Cantabri, west of the Cel- 
tiberi, and north of the Vettones. Their chief 
towns were Pallantia and Intercatia. 

[Vacccjs, M. Vitruvius, general of the Fun- 
dani and Privernates in their revolt against the 
Romans in B C. 330 : he had a house at Rome 
on the Palatine, which was destroyed (after the 
suppression of the revolt and the death of Vac- 
cus), and its site made public under the name 
of Vacci prafa.] 

[Vacuna, a Sabine divinity, identical with Vic- 
toria. She had an ancient sanctuary near Hor- 
ace's villa at Tibur, and another at Rome. The 
Romans, however, derived the name from va- 
cuus, and said that she was a divinity to whom 
the country people offered sacrifices when the 
labors of the field were over, that is, when they 
were at leisure, vacui ] 

Vada. I. A fortress of the Batavi in Gallia 
Belgica, east of Batavodurum. — 2. Vada Sab- 
batia (now Vado), a town of Liguria, on the 
coast, which was the harbor of Sabbata or Savo. 
— 3. Vada Volaterrana (now Torre di Vado), 
a small town on the coast of Etruna, in the ter- 
ritory of Volaterrae. 

Vadicassii, a people in Gallia Belgica, near 
the sources of the Sequana. 

Vadimonis Lacus (now Lago di Bassano), a 
small lake of Etruria of a circular form, with 
sulphureous waters, and renowned for its float- 
ing islands, a minute description of which is 
given by the younger Pliny. It is celebrated in. 
history for the defeat of the Etruscans in two 
great battles, first by the dictator Papirius Cur- 
sor in B.C. 309, from the effects of which the 
Etruscans never recovered ; and again in 283, 
when the allied forces of the Etruscans and 
Gauls were routed by the consul Cornelius Do- 
labella. The lake has so shrunk in dimensions 
in modern times as to be only a small stagnant 
pond, almost lost in the tall reeds and bulrush- 
es which grow in it. 

Vagedrusa, a small river in Sicily, between 
Camarina and Gela. 
; Vagienni, a small people in Liguria, whose 
! chief town was Augusta Vagiennorum. Their 
! site is uncertain, but they perhaps dwelt near 
! Saluzzo. 

i Vahalis. Vid. Rhexus. 
i [Vala, C. Numonius, a friend of Horace, who 
j addressed to him the fifteenth of the first book 
! of Epistles.] 

| Valens, emperor of the East A.D. 364-378, 
! was born about A.D. 328. and was made em- 



VALENS, ABURNUS. 



VALENTINIANUS. 



peror by his brother Valentinian. Vid. Valen- 
tinianus. The greater part of Valens's reign is 
occupied by his wars with the Goths. At first 
he gained great advantages over the barba- 
rians, and concluded a peace with them in 370, 
on the condition that they should not cross the 
Danube. In 376 the Goths were driven out of 
their country by the Huns, and were allowed 
by Valens to cross the Danube, and settle in 
Thrace and the country on the borders of the 
Danube. Dissensions soon arose between the 
Romans and these dangerous neighbors, and in 
377 the Goths took up arms. Valens collect- 
ed a powerful army, and marched against the 
Goths ; but he was defeated by them with im- 
mense slaughter, near Hadnanople, on the 9th 
of August, 378. Valens was never seen after 
the battle ; some say he died on the field, and 
others relate that he was burned to death in a 
peasant's house, to which he was carried, and 
"which the barbarians set fire to without know- 
ing who was in it. The reign of Valens is im- 
portant in the history of the empire on account 
of the admission of the Goths into the coun- 
tries south of the Danube, the commencement 
of the decline of the Roman power. The fu- 
rious contests between the rival creeds of the 
Catholics and the Arians also characterize this 
reign. 

Valens, Aburnus, also called Aburnius, one 
of the jurists who are excerpted in the Digest, 
belonged to the school of the Sabinians. He 
flourished under Antoninus Pius. 

Valens, FabIus, one of the principal generals 
of the Emperor Vitellius in A D 69, marched 
into Italy through Gaul, and, after forming a 
junction with the forces of Caecina, defeated 
Otho in the decisive hattleof Bedriacum, which 
secured for Vitellius the sovereignty of Italy. 
Vitellius raised Valens and Caecina to the con- 
sulship, and he left the whole government in 
their hands. Valens remained faithful to Vi- 
tellius, when Antonius Primus, the general of 
Vespasian, marched into Italy j but as he had 
not sufficient forces to oppose Antonius after 
the capture of Cremona, he resolved to sail to 
Gaul and rouse the Gallic provinces to espouse 
the cause of Vitellius; but he was taken pris- 
oner at the islands called Stcechades (now Hi- 
eres), off Massilia, and was shortly afterward 
put to death at Urbinum (now Urbino). 

Valentia. 1. (Now Valencia), the chief town 
of the Edetani, on the River Turia, three miles 
from the coast, and on the road from Carthago 
Nova to Castulo. It was founded by Junius 
Brutus, who settled here the soldiers of Viria- 
thus ; it was destroyed by Pompey, but it was 
soon afterward rebuilt and made a Roman col- 
ony. It continued to be an important place 
down to the latest times. — 2. (Now Valence), a 
town in Gallia Narbonensis, on the Rhone, and 
a Roman colony. Some writers call it a town 
of the Cavares, and others a town of the Segel- 
launi.— 3. A town of Sardinia, of uncertain site, 
but which some writers place on the eastern 
coast, between Portus Sulpicii and Sorabile. — 
4. Or Valentium. a town in Apulia, ten miles 
from Brundisium. — 5. A province in the north 
of Britain, beyond the Roman* wall, which ex- 
isted only for a short time. Vid. Britannia. 
Vj,,,entinianus. I., Roman emperor A.D. 



I 364-375, was the son of Gratianus, and was born 
A.D. 321, at Cihalis in Pannonia. His first wife 
! was Valeria Severa, by whom he became the 
father of the Emperor Giatianus. He held im- 
portant military commands under Julian and 
| Jovian ; and on the death of the latter in Feb- 
ruary, 364, Valentinian was elected emperor by 
the troops at Nicaea. A few weeks after his 
, elevation Valentinian elected his brother Va- 
lens emperor, and assigned to him the East, 
while he himself undertook the government of 
i the West. Valentinian was a Catholic, though 
his brother Valens was an Arian ; but he did 
not persecute either Arians or heathens. He 
j possessed good abilities, prudence, and vigor of 
I character. He had a capacity for military mat- 
j ters, and was a vigilant, impartial, and labori- 
I ous administrator; but he sometimes punished 
with excessive severity. The greater part of 
Valentinian's reign was occupied by the wars 
against the Alemanni, and the other barbarians 
I on the Roman frontiers. His operations were 
J attended with success. He not only drove the 
j Alemanni out of Gaul, but on more than one 
i occasion crossed the Rhine and carried the war 
j into the enemy's country. His usual residenco 
\ was Treviri (Treves). In 375 he went to Car- 
nuntum, on the Danube, in order to repel the 
Quadi and Sarmatians, who had invaded Pan- 
nonia. After an indecisive campaign, he took 
up his wintdr quarters at Bregetio. In this 
place, while giving an audience to the deputies 
of the Quadi, and speaking with great heat, he 
fell down in a fit, and expired suddenly on the 
17th of November. — II., Roman emperor A.D. 
375-392, younger son of the preceding, was 
j proclaimed Augustus by the army after his fa- 
ther's death, though he was then only three or 
j four years of age. His elder brother Gratia- 
i nus, who had been proclaimed Augustus during 
I the lifetime of their father, assented to the 
choice of the army, and a division of the West 
was made between the two brothers. Valen- 
tinian had Italy, Illyricum, and Africa. Gratian 
had the Gauls, Spain, and Britain. In 383 Gra- 
tian was defeated and slain by Maximus, who 
left Valentinian a precarious authority out of 
fear of Theodosius, the emperor of the East ; 
but in 387 Valentinian was expelled from Italy 
by Maximus, and fled for refuge to Theodosius 
In 388 Theodosius defeated Maximus, and re- 
stored Valentinian to his authority as emperor 
of the West. Theodosius returned to Constan- 
tinople in 391, and in the following year (392) 
Valentinian was murdered by the general Ar- 
gobastes, who raised Eugenius to the throne 
Valentinian perished on the 15th of May, being 
only a few months above twenty years of age 
His funeral oration was pronounced by St. Am- 
brose. — III., Roman emperor A.D. 425-455, was 
born 419, and was the son of Constantius III. 
by Placidia, the sister of Honorius, and the 
daughter of Theodosius I. He was declared 
Augustus in 425 by Theodosius II., and was 
placed over the West ; but as he was only six 
years of age, the government was intrusted to 
his mother Placidia. During his long reign the 
empire was repeatedly exposed to the invasions 
of the barbarians ; and it was only the military 
abilities of Aetius which saved the empire from 
j ruin. In 429. the Vandals, under Genseric. 

921 



VALERIA. 



VALERIUS MAXIMUS. 



crossed over into Africa, which they conquered, 
and of which they continued in possession till 
the reign of Justinian. The Goths likewise es- 
tablished themselves in Gaul ; but Aetius final- 
ly made peace with them (439), and with their 
assistance gained a great victory over Attila 
and the vast army of the Huns at Chalons in 
451. The power and influence of Aetius ex- 
cited the jealousy and fears of Valentinian, 
who murdered his brave and faithful general in 
454. In the following year the emperor him- 
self was slain by Petronius Maximus, whose 
wife he had violated. He was a feeble and con- 
temptible prince, and had all the vices that in 
a princely station disgrace a man's character. 

Valeria. 1. Sister of P. Valerius Publicola, 
advised the Roman matrons to ask Veturia, the 
mother of Coriolanus, to go to the camp of Cor- 
iolanus in order to deprecate his resentment. — 
"2. The last wife of Sulla, was the daughter of 
M. Valerius Messala, and bore a daughter soon 
after Sulla's death. — 3. Galeria Valeria, daugh- 
ter of Diocletian and Prisca, was, upon the re- 
construction of the empire in A.D. 292, united 
10 Galerius, one of the new Caesars. After the 
death of her husband in 311, Valeria rejected 
the proposals of his successor Maximinus, who, 
in consequence, stripped her of her possessions, 
and banished her along with her mother. After 
the death of Maximinus, Valeria and her moth- 
er were executed by order of Licinius, 315. — 4. 
Messalina. Vid. Messalina. 

Valeria Gens, one of the most ancient pa- 
trician houses at Rome. The Valerii were of 
Sabine origin, and their ancestor Volesus or Vo- 
lusus is said to have settled at Rome with Ti- 
tus Tatius. One of the descendants of this 
Volesus, P. Valerius, afterward surnamed Pub- 
licola, plays a distinguished part in the story of 
the expulsion of the kings, and was elected con- 
sul in the first year of the republic, B.C. 509. 
From this time forward down to the latest pe- 
riod of the empire, for nearly one thousand 
years, the name occurs more or less frequently 
in the Fasti, and it was borne by the emperors 
Maximinus, Maximianus, Maxentius, Diocle- 
tian, Constantius, Constantine the Great, and 
others. The Valeria gens enjoyed extraordi- 
nary honors and privileges at Rome. Their 
house at the bottom of the Velia was the only 
one in Rome of which the doors were allowed 
to open back into the street. In the Circus a 
conspicuous place was set apart for them, where 
a small throne was erected, an honor of which 
there was no other example among the Ro- 
mans. They were also allowed to bury their 
dead within the walls. The Valerii in early 
times were always foremost in advocating the 
rights of the plebeians, and the laws which they 
proposed at various times were the great char- 
ters of the liberties of the second order. Vid. 
Diet, of Anliq., s. v. Leges Valeria. The Va- 
leria gens was divided into various families un- 
der the republic, the most important of which 
bore the names of Corvus, Flaccus, L.evinus, 
Messala, Publicola, and Triarius. 

Valeria, a province in Pannonia formed by 
Galerius, and named in honor of his wife. Vid. 
Pannonia. 

Valerianus. 1. Roman emperor A.D. 253- 
260, whose full name was P. Licinius Vale- 
922 



rianus. Valerian was proclaimed emperor by 
the troops whom he was leading against the 
usurper iEmilianus. Valerian proclaimed his 
son Gallienus Augustus, and first carried on 
war against the Goths, whom he defeated '257). 
But though the barbarians still threatened the 
Roman frontiers on the Danube and the Rhine, 
the conquests of the Persians, who had crossed 
the Euphrates and stormed Antioch, compelled 
him to hasten to the East. For a time his 
measures were both vigorous and successful. 
Antioch was recovered, and the Persian king 
Sapor was compelled to fall back behind the 
Euphrates ; but the emperor, flushed by his 
good fortune, followed too rashly. He was sur- 
rounded, in the vicinity of Edessa, by the count- 
less horsemen of his active foe ; he was en- 
trapped into a conference, taken prisoner (260), 
and passed the remainder of his life in captiv- 
ity, subjected to every insult which Oriental 
cruelty could devise. After death his skin was 
stuffed and long preserved as a trophy in the 
chief temple of the nation. — 2. Son of the pre- 
ceding, but not by the same mother as Gallie- 
nus. He perished along with Gallienus at Mi- 
Ian in 268. Vid. Gallienus. 

Valerius. Vid. Valeria Gens. 

Valerius Volusus Maximus, M'., was a 
brother of P. Valerius Publicola, and was dic- 
tator in B.C. 494, when the dissensions be- 
tween the burghers and commonalty of Rome 
de Nexis were at the highest. Valerius was 
popular with the plebs, and induced them to en- 
list for the Sabine and iEquian wars, by prom- 
ising that when the enemy was repulsed, the 
condition of the debtors {next) should be alle- 
viated. He defeated and triumphed over the 
Sabines ; but, unable to fulfill his promise to 
the commons, resigned his dictatorship. The 
plebs, seeing that Valerius at least had kept 
faith with them, escorted him honorably home. 
As he was advanced in life at the time of his 
dictatorship, he probably died soon after. There 
were several descendants of this Valerius Max- 
imus, but none of them are of sufficient im- 
portance to require special mention. 

Valerius Maximus, is known to us as the 
compiler of a large collection of historical anec- 
dotes, entitled De Factis Diclisque Memorabilibus 
Libri IX., arranged under different heads, the 
sayings and doings of Roman worthies being, 
moreover, kept distinct in each division from 
those of foreigners. He lived in the reign of 
the Emperor Tiberius, to whom he dedicated 
his work. Of his personal history we know 
nothing, except the solitary circumstance, re- 
corded by himself, that he accompanied Sextus 
Pompeius into Asia (ii., 6, 9 8), the Sextus 
Pompeius, apparently, who was consul A.D. 14, 
at the time when Augustus died. The subjects 
treated of in the work are of a character so 
miscellaneous, that it would be impossible, 
without transcribing the short notices placed at 
the head of each chapter, to eonvey a clear idea 
of the contents. In some books the topics se- 
lected for illustration are closely allied to each 
other, in others no bond of union can be traced. 
Thus the first book is entirely devoted to mat- 
ters connected with sacred rites ; the second 
book relates chiefly to certain remarkable civil 
institutions ; the third, fourth, fifth, and sixth, 



VALERIUS FLACCUS. 



VARRO, TERENTIUS. 



to the more prominent social virtues ; but in 
the seventh the chapters De Strategematis, De 
Repulsis, are abruptly followed by those Dc 
Necessitate, Dc Tcstamentis Kcscissis, De Katis 
Teslamentis et Insperahs. In an historical point 
of view, the work is by no means without value, 
since it preserves a record of many curious 
events not to be found elsewhere; but from 
the errors actually detected upon points where 
we possess more precise information, it is mani- 
fest that we must not repose implicit confidence 
in the statements, unless where they are cor- 
roborated by collateral testimony. The work 
of Valerius Maximus became very popular in 
the later times of the empire and in the Middle 
Ages. It was frequently abridged, and we still 
possess an abridgment of it made by Julius 
Paris. The best editions of the original work 
are by Torrenius, Leid., 1726, and by Kappius, 
Lips., 1782. 

Valerius Flaccus. Vid. Flaccbs. 

[Valgius. 1. The father-in-law of Ilullus. 
who proposed the agrarian law in the consul- 
ship of Cicero, which was opposed by the latter. 
It appears from Cicero that Valgius had ob- 
tained much confiscated property in the time of 
Sulla. — 2. A., the son of a senator, deserted the 
Pompeian party in the Spanish war, B C. 45, 
and went over to Caesar. — 3. C. Valgius Hippi- 
ancs, the son of Q. Hippius, was adopted by 
a certain C. Valgius ] 

Valgius Rufus, C, a Roman poet, and a con- 
temporary of Virgil anil Horace, the latter of 
whom ranks him along with Varius, Maecenas, 
and Virgil, among those friends of genius whose 
approbation far more than compensated for the 
annoyance caused by the attacks of his detract- 
ors. 

Vandali, Vandalu, or Vindalh, a confeder- 
acy of German nations, probably of the great 
Suevic race, to which the Burgundiones, Goth- 
ones, Gepidce, and Rugii belonged. They dwelt 
originally on the northern coast of Germany, 
but were afterward settled north of the Mar- 
comanni, in the Riesengcbirge, which are hence 
called Vandalici Montes. They subsequently 
appear for a short time in Dacia and Pannonia ; 
but at the beginning of the fifth century (A.D. 
409) they traversed~Gcrmany and Gaul, and in- 
vaded Spain. In this country they subjugated 
the Alani, and founded a powerful kingdom, the 
name of which is still preserved in Andalusia 
(Vandalusia). In A.D. 429 they crossed over 
into Africa, under their king Genseric, and con- 
quered all the Roman dominions in that coun- 
try. Genseric subsequently invaded Italy, and 
took and plundered Rome in 455. The Vandals 
continued masters of Africa till 535, when their 
kingdom was destroyed by Belisarius, and an- 
nexed to the Byzantine empire. 

Vangiones, a German people, dwelling along 
the Rhine, in the neighborhood of the modern 
Worms. 

Varagbi. Vid. Veragri. 

[Vard.*i, an Illyrico-Dalmatian nation, whom 
Pliny styles 4 - populatores quondam Italiae. ?: ] 

Varduli, a people in Hispania Tarraconen- 
sis, west of the Vascones, in the modern Gui- 
puzcoa and Alar a. 

[Varencs, L., a centurion in Caesar's army, 
distinguished himself, along with T. Pulfio, by 



a daring act of bravery, when the camp of Q. 
Cicero was besieged by the Nervii in B.C 54.] 

[ Vargula, a friend of C. Julius Caesar Strabo, 
was noted as a wit.] 

Vargunteics, a senator, and one of Catiline's 
conspirators, undertook, in conjunction with C. 
Cornelius, to murder Cicero in B.C. 63, but 
their plan was frustrated by information con- 
veyed to Cicero through Fulvia. He was after- 
ward brought to trial, but could find no one to 
defend him. 

I Varia (now Varea), a town of the Berones in 
j Hispania Tarraconensis, on the Ibcrus, which 
j was navigable from this town. 

Varini, a people of Germany, on the right 
j bank of the Albis, north of the Langobardi. 

Varius. 1. Q. Varius Hybrida, tribune of 
J the plebs B.C. 90, was a native of Sucro in 
I Spain, and received the surname of Hybrids 
because his mother was a Spanish woman. In 
his tribuneship he carried a lex de majestate, in 
order to punish all those who had assisted or 
advised the Socii to take up arms against the 
Roman people. Under this law many distin- 
guished senators were condemned ; but in the 
following year Varius himself was condemned 
under his own law, and was put to death.— 2. 
L. Varius Rufus, one of the most distinguished 
poets of the Augustan age, the companion and 
friend of Virgil and Horace. By the latter he 
is placed in the foremost rank among the epic 
bards, and Quintilian has pronounced that his 
tragedy of Thyestes might stand a comparison 
with any production of the Grecian stage. He 
enjoyed the friendship of Maecenas, and it was 
to the recommendation of Varius, in conjunc- 
tion with that of Virgil, that Horace was in- 
debted for an introduction to the minister, about 
B.C. 39. Virgil appointed Plotius Tucca and 
Varius his literary executors, and they revised 
the JEneid. Hence Varius was alive subse- 
quent to B.C. 19, in which year Virgil died. 
Only the titles of three works of Varius have 
been preserved : 1. De Morte. 2. Panegyricu$ in 
Casarem Octaviaiuim. 3. The tragedy Thyestes. 
Only a very few fragments of these poems are 
extant. 

Varro, Atacinus. ( Vid. below, Varro, No. 3.) 

Varro, CingonIus, a Roman senator under 
Nero, supported the claims of Nymphidius to 
the throne on the death of Nero, and was put 
to death in consequence by Galba, being at the 
time consul designatus. 

Varro, Tkrkntius. 1. C, consul B C. 216 
with L. JEmilius Paulus. Varro is said to have 
been the son of a butcher, to have carried on 
business himself as a factor in his early years, 
and to have risen to eminence by pleading the 
causes of the lower classes in opposition to the 
opinion of all good men. Notwithstanding the 
strong opposition of the aristocracy, he was 
raised to the consulship by the people, who 
thought that it only needed a man of energy at 
the head of an overwhelming force to bring the 
war against Hannibal to a close. His colleague 
was L. ^Emilius Paulus, one of the leaders of the 
aristocratical party. The two consuls w ere de- 
feated by Hannibal at the memorable battle of 
Cannae. Vid. Hannibal. The battle was fought 
by Varro against the advice of Paulus. The Ro- 
man army was all but annihilated. Paulus and 

923 



VARRO, TERENTIUS. 



VARUS, ALFENUS. 



almost all the officers perished. Varro was one 
of the few who escaped and reached Venusia in 
safety, with about seventy horsemen. His con- 
duct after the battle seems to have been deserv- 
ing of high praise. He proceeded to Canusium, 
where the remnant of the Roman army had taken 
refuge, and there adopted every precaution 
which the exigencies of the case required. His 
conduct was appreciated by the senate and the 
people, and his defeat was forgotten in the serv- 
ices he had lately rendered. On his return to 
the city all classes went out to meet him, and 
the senate returned him thanks because he had 
not despaired of the commonwealth. He con- 
tinued to be employed in Italy for several suc- 
cessive years in important military commands 
till nearly the close of the Punic war. — 2. The 
celebrated wnter, whose vast and varied erudi- 
tion in almost every department of literature 
earned for him the title of the " most learned 
of the Romans." He was born B.C. 116, and 
was trained under the superintendence of L. 
Julius Stilo Prasconinus, and he afterward re- 
ceived instruction from Antiochus, a philoso- 
pher of the Academy. Varro held a high naval 
command in the wars against the pirates and 
Mithradates, and afterward served as the lega- 
tus of Pompeius in Spain in the civil war, but 
was compelled to surrender his forces to Caesar. 
He then passed over into Greece, and shared 
the fortunes of the Pompeian party till after the 
battle of Pharsalia, when he sued for and ob- 
tained the forgiveness of Caasar, who employ- 
ed him in superintending the collection and ar- 
rangement of the great library designed for pub- 
lic use. For some years after this period Varro 
remained in literary seclusion, passing his time 
chiefly at his country seats near Cumae and Tus- 
culum, occupied with study and composition. 
Upon the formation of the second triumvirate, ' 
his name appeared upon the list of the pro- 
scribed ; but he succeeded in making his escape, 
and, after having remained for some time con- 
cealed, he obtained the protection of Octavianus. 
The remainder of his career was passed in tran- 
quillity, and he continued to labor in his favor- 
ite studies, although his magnificent library had 
been destroyed, a loss to him irreparable. His 
death took place B.C. 28, when he was in his 
eighty-ninth year. Not only was Varro the most 
learned of Roman scholars, but he was likewise 
the most voluminous of Roman authors. We 
have his own authority for the assertion that he 
had composed no less than four hundred and 
ninety books ; but of these only two works have 
come down to us, and one of them in a mutila- 
ted form. The following is a list of the princi- 
pal works, both extant and lost : l.DeRe Rustica 
Libri III., still extant, was written when the au- 
thor was eighty years old, and is the most import- 
ant of all the treatises upon ancient agriculture 
now extant, being far superior to the more vo- 
luminous production of Columella, with which 
alone it can be compared. The best editions 
are in the Scriptores Rei Rustica veteres Latini 
by Gesner, 4to, 2 vols., Lips., 1735, and by 
Schneider, 8vo, 4 vols., Lips., 1794-1797. 2. 
De Lingua Latina, a grammatical treatise which 
extended to twenty-four books; but six only 
(v.-x.) have been preserved, and these are in a 
mutilated condition. The remains of this treat- 
924 



ise are particularly valuable, in so far as they 
have been the means of preserving many terms 
and forms which would otherwise have been 
altogether lost, and much curious information 
is here treasured up connected with the ancient 
usages, both civil and religious, of the Romans. 
The best editions are by Spengel, 8vo, Berol, 
1826, and by Muller, 8vo, Lips., 1833. 3. Sen- 
tenticc. One hundred and sixty-five Sentential, 
or pithy sayings, have been published by Devit 
under the name of Varro, Patav., 1843. It is 
manifest that these sayings were not strung to- 
gether by Varro himself, but are scraps gleaned 
out of various works, probably at different times 
and by different hands. 4. Antiquitatura Libri, 
divided into two sections. Antiquitates Rerum 
humanarum, in twenty-five books, and Antiqui- 
tates Rerum divinarum, in sixteen books. This 
was Varro's great work ; and upon this chiefly 
his reputation for profound learning was based ; 
but, unfortunately, only a few fragments of it 
have come down to us. With the second sec- 
tion of the work we are, comparatively speak- 
ing, familiar, since Augustine drew very largely 
from this source in his " City of God." 5. Sat- 
urce, which were composed, not only in a variety 
of metres, but contained an admixture of prose 
also. Varro, in these pieces, copied to a certain 
extent the productions of Menippus the Gada- 
rene (vid. Menippus), and hence designated them 
as Saturcz Menippca s. Cynica. They appear 
to have been a series of disquisitions on a vast 
variety of subjects, frequently, if not uniformly, 
couched in the shape of dialogue, the object 
proposed being the inculcation of moral lessons 
and serious truths in a familiar, playful, and 
even jocular style. The best edition of the 
fragments of these Saturce is by CEhler, M. Tc- 
rentii Varronis Saturarum Menippearum Rcliquia, 
Quedlingb., 1844. Of the remaining works of 
Varro we possess little except a mere catalogue 
of titles. — 3. P., a Latin poet of considerable 
celebrity, surnamed Atacinus, from the Alax, 
a river of Gallia Narbonensis, his native prov- 
ince, was born B.C. 82. Of his personal history 
nothing further is known. He is believed to 
have been the composer of the following works, 
of which a few inconsiderable fragments only 
have come down to us ; but some of them ought 
perhaps to be ascribed to his illustrious con- 
temporary M. Terentius Varro : 1. Argonautica, 
probably a free translation of the well-known 
poem by Apollonius Rhodius. Upon this piece 
the fame of Varro chiefly rested. It is referred 
to by Propertius, by Ovid, and by Statius. 2 
Chorographia s. Cosmographia, appears to have 
been a metrical system of astronomy and geog- 
raphy. 3. Libri Navales, appears to have been 
a poem upon navigation. 

Varus, a cognomen in many Roman gentes, 
signified a person who had his legs bent in- 
ward, and was opposed to Valgus, which signi- 
fied a person having his legs turned outward. 

Varus, Alfenus. 1. A Roman jurist, was a 
pupil of Servius Sulpicius, and the only pupil 
of Servius from whom there are any excerpts 
in the Digest. The scholiast on Horace (Sat., 
i., 3, 130) tells us that the " Alfenus vafer" of 
Horace was the lawyer, and that he was a na- 
tive of Cremona, where he carried on the trade 
of a barber or a botcher of shoes (for there are 



VARUS, AT1US. 



\ ATI A ISAURICaS. 



both readings, sutor and tonsor) ; that he came 
to Rome, where lie became a pupil of Servius 
Sulpicius, attained the dignity of the consulship, 
and was honored with a public funeral. — 2. A 
general of Vitellius, in the civil war in A.D. 
69, and perhaps a descendant of the jurist. 

Varus, Atius. 1. P., a zealous partisan of 
Pompey in the civil war, was stationed in Pice- 
num on the breaking out of the civil war in B.C. 
49. He subsequently crossed over into Africa, 
and took possession of the province, which was 
then governed by Q. Ligarius. Vid. Ligakius. 
In consequence of his having been propraetor of 
Africa a few years previously, Varus was well 
acquainted with the country and the people, and 
was thus able to raise two legions without much 
difficulty. Meantime, L. iElius Tubero, who 
had received from the senate the province of 
Africa, arrived to take the command ; but Va- 
rus would not even allow him to land, and com- 
pelled him to sail away. In the course of the 
same year, Varus, assisted by King Juba, defeat- | 
ed Curio, Caesar's legate, who had crossed over 
from Sicily to Africa. Vid. Curio. Varus J 
fought with the other Pompeians in Africa \ 
against Caesar in 46 ; but after the battle of 
Thapsus he sailed away to Cn. Pompey in Spain. 
He fell at the battle of Morula, and his head was 
carried to Caesar. — 2. Q. Atius Varus, com- 
mander of the cavalry under C Fabius, one of 
Caesar's legates in Gaul, and probably the same 
as the Q. Varus who commanded the cavalry 
under Domitius, one of Caesar's generals in 
Greece in the war with Pompey. It is sup- 
posed by many modern writers that he is the 
same person as the Varus to whom Virgil dedi- 
cated his sixth eclogue, and whose praises the 
poet also celebrates in the ninth (ix., 27), from 
which poems we learn that Varus had obtained 
renown in war. 

Varus, Quintilius. 1. Sex., quaestor B.C. 
49, belonged to the Pompeian party. He fell 
into Caesar's hands at the capture of Corfinium, 
but was dismissed by Cajsar. He afterward 
fought under Brutus and Cassius against the 
triumvirs ; and after the loss of the battle of 
Philippi, he fell by the hands of his freedmen, 
who slew him at his own request.— 2. P., son 
of the preceding, was consul B.C. 13, and was 
subsequently appointed to the government of 
Syria, where he acquired enormous wealth. 
Shortly after his return from Syria he was made 
governor of Germany (probably about A.D. 7). 
Drusus had conquered a great part of Central 
Germany as* far as the Visurgis (now Weser) ; 
and Varus received orders from Augustus to in- 
troduce the Roman jurisdiction into the newly- 
conquered country. The Germans, however, 
were not prepared to submit thus tamely to the 
Roman yoke, and found a leader in Arminius, a 
noble chief of the Cherusci, who had previously 
served in the Roman army. Arminius organ- 
ized a general revolt of all the German tribes 
between the Visurgis and the Weser, but kept 
his design a profound secret from Varus, with 
whom he continued to live on the most friendly 
terms. When he had fully matured his plans, 
he suddenly attacked Varus, at the head of a 
countless host of barbarians, as the Roman gen- 
eral was marching with his three legions through 
a pass of the Saltus Teutoburgiensis, a range of 



hills covered with wood, which extends north 
of the I,ippc from Osnabriick to Paderhorn. and 
is known in the present day by the name of ihe 
Teutoburgerwald or Lippische Wald. The bat- 
tle lasted three days, and ended with tho en- 
tire destruction of the Roman army Varus put 
an end to his own life. His defeat w is follow- 
ed by the loss of all the Roman possessions be- 
tween the Weser and the Rhine, and the latter 
river again became the boundary of the Roman 
dominions. When the news" of this defeat 
reached Rome, the whole city was thrown into 
consternation ; and Augustus, who was l>oth 
weak and aged, gave way lo the most violent 
grief, tearing his garments, and calling Dpon Va- 
rus to give him back his legions <) r <!< rs wen- 
issued, as if the very empire was in danger; 
and Tiberius was dispatched with a veteran 
army to the Rhine. 

Varus (now Var or Vara), a river in Callia 
Narbonensis, forming the boundary betw e e n 
this province and Italy, rises in Mount f'ema in 
the Alps, and falls into the Mediterranean Sea 
between Antipolis and Nieaea. 

Vasates, a people in Gallia Aquitaniea, on the 
Garuinna, whose chief town was Cossitim (now 
Bazas), on the road from Burdigala to Elusa. 

Vascones, a powerful people on the northern 
coast of Hispania Tarraeonensis, between the 
Iberus and the Pyrenees, in the modern Na- 
varre and Ginpuzco. Their chief towns were 
Pompelon and Calagurris. They were a brave- 
people, and fought in battle bare-headed. Un- 
der the empire they were regarded as skillful 
diviners and prophets. Their name is still re- 
tained in that of the modern Basques. 

Vasconum Saltus. Vid. Pvrene. 

Vasio (now Vaison), a considerable town of 
the Vocontii in Gallia Narbonensis. 

[Vasius, T., one of the conspirators a^ninst 
Q. Cassius Longinus, propraetor of Further 
Spain in B.C. 48.] 

Vatia Isauricus, P. Serviuus. 1. Consul in 
B.C. 79, was sent in the following year as pro- 
consul to Cilicia, in order to clear the seas of 
the pirates, whose ravages now spread far and 
wide. He carried on the war with great ability 
and success, and from his conquest of the Isauri 
he obtained the surname of Isauricus. After 
giving Cilicia the organization of a Roman prov- 
ince, he entered Rome in triumph in 74. After 
his return Servilius took a leading part in pub- 
lic affairs. In 70 he was one of the judices at 
the trial of Verres ; in 66 he supported the roga- 
tion of Manilius for conferring upon Pompey the 
command of the war against the pirates; in 63 
he was a candidate for the dignity of pontifex 
maximus, but was defeated by Julius Caesar ; in 
the same year he spoke in the senate in favor 
of inflicting the last penalty of the law upon the 
Catilinarian conspirators ; in 57 he joined the 
other nobles in procuring Cicero's recall from 
banishment ; in 56 he opposed the restoration 
of Ptolemy to his kingdom ; and in 55 he was 
censor with M. Valerius Messala Niger. He 
took no part in the civil wars, probably on ac- 
count of his advanced age, and died in 44 — 2. 
j Praetor 54, belonged originally to the aristocrat- 
j ical party, but espoused Caesar's side on the 
i breaking out of the civil war, and was consul 
! with Caesar in 48. In 46 he governed the prov- 

925 



VATICANUS MONS. 



VEIL 



ince of Asia as proconsul, during which time 
Cicero wrote to him several letters. After the 
death of Caesar in 44, he supported Cicero and 
the rest of the aristocratical party, in opposition 
to Antony. But he soon changed sides again, 
became reconciled to Antony, and was made 
consul a second time in 41. 

[Vaticanus Moots. Vid. Roma, p. 747, b, 
748, a.] 

Vatinius. 1. P., a political adventurer in the 
last days of the republic, who is described by 
Cicero as one of the greatest scamps and vil- I 
lains that ever lived. His personal appearance 
was unprepossessing ; his face and neck were 
covered with swellings, to which Cicero alludes, 
calling him the struma civitatis. Vatinius was 
quaestor B.C. 63, and tribune of the plebs 59, 
when he sold his services to Caesar, who was j 
then consul along with Bibulus. It was Vatin- j 
ius who proposed the bill to the people by j 
which Caesar received the provinces of Cisal- j 
pine Gaul and Illyricurn for five years. Yatini- 
us continued to take an active part in political 
affairs. In 56 he appeared as a witness against : 
Milo and Sestius, two of Cicero's friends, in con- j 
sequence of which the orator made a vehement 
attack upon the character of Vatinius, in the 
speech which has come down to us. Vatinius j 
was praetor in 55, and in the following year (54) j 
he was accused by C. Licinius Calvus of having j 
gained the praetorship by bribery. He was de- j 
fended on this occasion by Cicero, in order to 
please Caesar, whom Cicero had offended by his ; 
former attack upon Vatinius. Soon afterward 
Vatinius went to Gaul, where we find him serv- j 
ing in 51. He accompanied Caesar in the civil 
war, and was made consul suffectus for a few j 
days, at the end of December, 47. At the be- 
ginning of the following year he was sent into 
Illyricurn, where he carried on the war with 
success. After Caesar's death he was compell- 
ed to surrender Dyrrhachium and his army to 
Brutus, who had obtained possession of Mace- 
donia, because his troops declared in favor of 
Brutus. — 2. Of Benventum, one of the vilest 
and most hateful creatures of Nero's court, 
equally deformed in body and in mind. He was 
originally a shoemaker's apprentice, next earned 
his living as one of the lowest kinds of scurrce 
or buffoons, and finally obtained great power 
and wealth by accusing the most distinguished 
men in the state. A certain kind of drinking- 
cups, having nasi or nozzles, bore the name of 
Vatinius, probably because he brought them into 
fashion. Juvenal alludes (v., 46) to a cup of 
this kind. 

Vatrenus. Vid. Padus. 

Vectis or Vecta (now Isle of Wight), an isl- 
and off the southern coast of Britain, with which 
the Romans became acquainted before their j 
conquest of Britain, by means of the inhabit- j 
ants of Massilia, who were accustomed to visit j 
this island for the purpose of obtaining tin. It is 
related by Diodorus that at low water the space 
between Vectis and the coast of Britain was al- j 
most entirely dry, so that the Britons used to i 
bring tin to the island in wagons. It was con- j 
quered by Vespasian in the reign of Claudius. 

Vedius Pollio. Vid. Pollio. 

Vegetios, FlavIos Renatus, the author of a 
treatise Rei Militants Instituta, or Epitome Rei 
926 



j Militaris, dedicated to the Emperor Valentinian 
| II. The materials were derived, according to 
i the declaration of the writer himself, from Cato 
the Censor, De Disciplina Militari, from Cor- 
nelius Celsus, from Frontinus, from Paternus, 
and from the imperial constitutions of Augustus, 
Trajan, and Hadrian. The work is divided into 
five books. The first treats of the levying and 
training of recruits, including instructions for 
the fortification of a camp ; the second, of the 
different classes into which soldiers are divided, 
and especially of the organization of the legion ; 
the third, of the operations of an army in the 
field ; the fourth, of the attack and defence of 
fortresses ; the fifth, of marine warfare. The 
value of this work is much diminished by the 
fact that the usages of periods the most remote 
from each other are mixed together into one 
confused mass, and not unfrequently, we have 
reason to suspect, are blended with arrange- 
ments which never existed, except in the fancy 
of the author. The best edition is by Sehwe- 
belius, Norimberg, 1767, and by Oudendorp and 
Bessel, Argent., 1806. 

[Vehilius, praetor B.C. 44, refused to Teceive 
a province from Antony, and said that he would 
obey the senate alone.] 

[Veianius, a celebrated gladiator in the time 
of Horace, who had retired to a small estate in 
the country, after dedicating his arms in the 
temple of Hercules at Fundi in Latium.] 

Veiexto, Fabricius, was banished in the reign 
of Nero, A.D. 62, in consequence of his having 
published several libels. He afterward return- 
ed to Rome, and became in the reign of Domi- 
tian one of the most infamous informers and 
flatterers of that tyrant. He also enjoyed the 
friendship of Nerva. 

Veii (Veiens, -entis, Veientanus : now Isola 
Farnese), one of the most ancient and powerful 
cities of Etruria, situated on the River Cremera, 
about twelve miles from Rome. It possessed 
a strongly-fortified citadel, built on a hill rising 
precipitously from the deep glens which bound 
it, save at the single point where a narrow ridge 
unites it to the city. It was one of the twelve 
cities of the Etruscan Confederation, and appa- 
rently the largest of all. As far as we can judge 
from its present remains, it was about seven 
miles in circumference, which agrees with the 
statement of Dionysius, that it was equal in 
size to Athens. Its territory (Ager Veiens) was 
extensive, and appears originally to have ex- 
tended on the south and east to the Tiber; on 
the southwest to the sea, embracing the salinse 
or salt-works at the mouth of the river ; and 
on the west to the territory of Caere. The Ci- 
minian forest appears to have been its north- 
western boundary; on the east it must have 
embraced all the district south of Soraote and 
eastward to the Tiber. The cities of Capena 
and Fidenae were colonies of Veii. Veii was a 
powerful city at the time of the foundation of 
R.ome, and the most formidable and dangerous 
of her neighbors. The Veientes were engaged 
in almost unceasing hostilities with Rome for 
more than three centuries and a half, and we 
have records of fourteen distinct wars between 
the two nations. Veii was at length taken by 
the dictator Camillus, after a siege which is said 
to have lasted ten years. The city fell into his 



VEIOVIS. 

hands, according to the common story, by means 
of a cuniculus or mine, which was carried by 
Camillus from the Roman camp under the city 
into the citadel of Veii. So well built and spa- 
cious was Veii, that the Romans were anxious, 
after the destruction of their own city by the 
Gauls in 390. to remove to Veii, and are said to 
have been only prevented from carrying their 
purpose into effect by the eloquence of Camillus. 
From this time Veii was abandoned ; but after 
the lapse of ages it was colonized afresh by 
Augustus, and made a Roman municipium. 
The new colony, however, occupied scarcely a 
third of the ancient city, and had again sunk 
into decay in the reign of Hadrian. From this 
time Veil disappears entirely from historv, and, 
on the revival of letters, even its site was long 
an object of dispute. It is now settled, how- 
ever, beyond a doubt, that it stood in the neigh- 
borhood of the hamlet of Isola Farncsc, where 
several remains of the ancient city have been 
discovered. Of these the most interesting is 
its cemetery ; but there is now only one tomb 
remaining open, which was discovered in the 
winter of 1842-3, and contains many interesting 
remains of Etruscan art. 

Veiovis, a Roman deity, whose name is ex- 
plained by some to mean " little Jupiter,'" while 
others interpret it "the destructive Jupiter," 
and identify him with Pluto Veiovis was prob- 
ably an Etruscan divinity of a destructive na- 
ture, whose fearful lightnings produced deaf- 
ness in those who were to be struck by them, 
even before they were actually hurled. His 
temple at Rome stood between the Capitol and 
the Tarpeian Rock j he was represented as a 
youthful god armed with arrows. 

Velabrcjm. Vid. Roma, p 749, a. 

Velauni or Veli.aw, a people in Gallia Aqui- 
tanica, in the modern Yelay, who were origin- 
ally subject to the Arverni, but subsequently 
appear as an independent people. 

Veleda, a prophetic virgin, by birth belonged 
to the Bructeri, and was regarded as a divine 
being by most of the nations in Central Ger- 
many in the reign of Vespasian. She inhabited 
a lofty tower in the neighborhood of the River 
Luppia (now Lippe). She encouraged Civilis 
in his revolt against the Romans, but she was 
afterward taken prisoner and carried to Rome, j 

Velia or Elea, also called Hvslb ('EAea, 
T&tj, the different forms are owing to the word 
having originally the yEolic digamma, which the 
Romans changed into V; Velienses or Eleates, 
pi. : now Casicli a Marc dc/la Brucca), a Greek 
town of Lucania, on the western coast, between 
Paestum and Buxentum, was founded by the 
Phocaeans, who had abandoned their native city 
to escape from the Persian sovereignty, about 
B.C. 543. It was situated about three miles 
east of the River Hales, and possessed a good i 
harbor. It is celebrated as the birth-place of 
the philosophers Parmenides and Zeno, who 1 
founded a school of philosophy usually known 
Wider the name of the Eleatic. It possessed a 
celebrated temple of Demeter (Ceres). Cicero, j 
who resided at Velia at one time, frequently j 
mentions it in his correspondence ; and it ap- j 
pears to have been reckoned a hpalthy place. 
(Hor., Ep., i., 15.) In the time of Strabo it had 
ceased to be a town of importance. 



VENETIA. 

Velinus (now Fdmo), a river in the territory 
of the Sabines, rising m the central Apennines 
and falling into the NaT. This river in the 
neighborhood of Reate overflowed its banks 
and formed several small lakes, the largest of 
which was called Laci/s Velinui (now l',e dt 
Lugo, also La go ddU Marmore). In order to car- 
ry off these waters, a channel was cut through 
the rocks by Curius Dentatus, the conqueror 
of the Sabines, by means of which the waters 
of the Vehnus were carried through a narrow 
gorge to a spot where they fall from a height of 
several hundred feet into the Rivt r Nar This 
fall, which is one of the most celebrated in Eu- 
rope, is known at the present day by the name 
of the Fall of Term, or the ('aduta delle Mar- 
more. 

Veutr;e (Veliternus: now Velletn), an an- 
cient town of the Volscians in Latium, but sub- 
sequently belonging to the Latin league. It 
was conquered by the Romans, and colonized 
at an early period, but it frequently revolted 
from Rome. It is chiefly celebrated as the 
birth-place of the Emperor Augustus. 

Veuus Longus, a Latin grammarian, known 
to us from a treatise De Orthographm, still ex- 
tant, printed in the " Grammatics Latina? Auc- 
tores Antiqui" of Putschius, 4to, Hanov , 1G05 
Velius also wrote a commentary on Virgil, which 
is mentioned by Macrobius. 

VellaunooOnum (now Bcaumc), a town of tho 
Scnones in Gallia Lugdunensis. 

V e l l a v i . Vid. Veladni. 

f Vei.lkics C, a Roman senator, introduced 
by Cicero as one of the supporters of the Epi- 
curean philosophy in his « De Natura Dcorum:" 
he was a friend of the orator L. Crassus.J 

Velleius PatlrcCmxs. Vid. Paterculus. 

Vellocasses, a people in Gallia Lugdunen- 
sis, northwest of the Parisii, extending along 
the Sequana as far as the ocean : their chief 
town was Ratomagcs. 

Venafrum (Venafranus : now Venafn),d town 
in the north of Samniurn, near the River Vul- 
turnus, and on the confines of Latium, celebra- 
ted for the excellence of its olives. 

Venedi or Veneu.*:, a people in European 
Sarmatia, dwelling on the Baltic east of the 
Vistula. The Sinus Vctfiofcofl (now Gulf of 
Rija), and the Venedici Moxtes, a range of 
mountains between Poland and East Prussia, 
were called after this people. 

Veneris Peomontoriim. Vid. Pykenks Pro- 

MONTORIUM. 

Veneris Portls or Pyrlnvei Portis, a sea- 
port town of the Indigetes in Hispania Tarra- 
conensis, near the Promontorium Veaefiej and 
on the frontiers of Gaul. 

Venktia. 1. A district in the north of Italy, 
was originally included under the general name 
of Gallia Cisalpina, but was made by Augustus 
the tenth Regio of Italy. It was bounded on 
the west by the River Athcsis, which separated 
it from Gallia Cisalpina ; on the north by the 
Carnic Alps; on the east by the River Tima- 
vus, which separated it from Istria ; and on the 
south by the Adriatic Gulf. This country was, 
and is, very fertile, and its inhabitants enjoyed 
great prosperity. The chief productions of the 
country were excellent wool, a sweet hut much 
prized wine, and race-horses. Dionysius, the 

927 



VEXETUS LACUS. 



VEXTIDIUS BASSUS. 



tyrant of Syracuse, is said to have kept a stud 
of race-horses in this country. Its inhabitants, 
the Vexeti, frequently called Hexeti {'Everoi) 
by the Greeks, were commonly said to be de- 
scendants of the Paphlagonian Heneti, whom 
Awtenor led into the country after the Trojan 
war ; but this tale, like so many others, has 
evidently arisen from the mere similarity of the 
name. Others supposed the Veneti to be a 
branch of the Celtic Veneti in Gaul ; but this 
supposition is disproved by the express testi- 
mony of Polybius, that they spoke a language 
entirely different from the Celtic ; and that they 
had no connection with the Celts, may be in- 
ferred from the fact that they were always on 
hostile terms with the Celtic tribes settled in 
Italy. Herodotus regards them as an Illyrian 
race ; and all writers are agreed that they did 
not belong to the original population of Italy. 
In consequence of their hostility to the Celtic 
tribes in their neighborhood, they formed at an 
early period an alliance with Rome ; and their 
country was defended by the Romans against 
their dangerous enemies. On the conquest of 
the Cisalpine Gauls, the Veneti likewise be- 
came included under the Roman dominions ; 
and they were almost the only people in Italy 
who became the subjects of Rome without of- 
fering any resistance. The Veneti continued 
to enjoy great prosperity down to the time of 
the Marcomannie wars, in the reign of the Em- 
peror Aurelius ; but from this time their coun- 
try was frequently devastated by the barba- 
rians who invaded Italy; and at length, in the 
fifth century, many of its inh itants, to escape 
the ravages of the Huns under Attila, took ref- 
uge in the islands off their coast, on which now 
stands the city of Venice. The chief towns of 
Venetia in ancient times were Patavium, Al- 
tinum, and Aqcileia. The two latter carried on 
an extensive commerce, and exported, among 
other things, large quantities of amber, which 
was brought from the Baltic through the inte- 
rior of Europe to these cities. — 2. A district in 
the northwest of Gallia Lugdunensis, inhabited 
by the Veneti, who were a brave people, and 
the best sailors in all Gaul. Off their coast 
was a group of islands called Insula Vexe- 

Vexetcs Laccs. Vid. Brigaxtixcs Laccs. 

Vexilia, a nymph, daughter of Pilumnus, 
sister of Amata (the wife of King Latinus), and 
mother of Turnus and Juturna by Daunus. 

Vennoxes, a people of Reetia, and, according 
to Strabo, the most savage of theRaetian tribes, 
inhabiting the Alps near the sources of the 
Athesis {now Adige). 

[Vexxoxius. 1. An early Roman annalist, 
placed by Cicero immediately after Fannius in 
his enumeration of Roman historians. Xo frag- 
ments of his works remain ; a few references 
are collected by Krause, Histor. Rom. Fragm., 
p. 175-6. — 2. Sextus, one of the instruments 
of Verres in oppressing the Sicilians.— 3. C, a 
money-lender {negotiator) in Cilicia, a friend of 
Cicero, solicited, but unsuccessfully, a prafec- 
tura from the latter.] 

Vexta. 1. Belgabum (now Winchester), the 
chief town of the Belgae in Britain. The mod- 
ern city still contains several Roman remains. 

—2. ICENORUM. Vid. ICENI. 3. SlLURUM (HOW 1 

928 



Carwcnt), a town of the Silures in Britain, in 

Monmouthshire. 

Vexti {uvefioi), the winds. They appear per- 
sonified, even in the Homeric poems, but, at 
the same time, they are conceived as ordinary 
phenomena of nature. The master and ruler 
of all the winds is .tEolus, who resides in the 
island ^Eolia {vid. ^Eolcs) ; but the other gods 
also exercise a power over them. Homer men- 
tions by name Boreas (north wind), Eurus (east 
wind), Xotus (south wind), and Zephyrus (west 
wind). When the funeral pile of Patroclus 
could not be made to burn, Achilles promised 
to offer sacrifices to the winds ; and Iris accord- 
ingly hastened to them, and found them feast- 
ing in the palace of Zephyrus in Thrace. Bo- 
reas and Zephyrus thereupon straightway cross- 
ed the Thracian Sea into Asia, to cause the fire 
to blaze. According to Hesiod, the beneficial 
winds, Xotus, Boreas, Argestes, and Zephyrus, 
were the sons of Astraeus and Eos ; and the de- 
structive ones, such as Typhon, are said to be 
the sons of Typhoeus. Later, especially philo- 
sophical, writers endeavored to define the winds 
more accurately, according to their places in the 
compass. Thus Aristotle, besides the four prin- 
cipal winds (Boreas or Aparciias, Eurus, Xotus, 
and Zephyrus), mentions three, the Meses, Cai- 
cias, and Apeliotes, between Boreas and Eurus; 
between Eurus and Xotus he places the Phce- 
nicias ; between Xotus and Zephyrus he has 
only the Lips ; and between Zephyrus and Bo 
reas he places the Argestes (Olympias or Sci- 
ron) and tb.3 Thrascias. It must further be ob- 
served that, according to Aristotle, the Eurus 
is not due east, but southeast. In the Museum 
Pio-Clementinum there exists a marble monu- 
ment upon which the winds are described with 
their Greek and Latin names, viz., Septentric 
(Aparctias), Eurus (Euros or southeast), and 
between these two Aquilo (Boreas), Vulturnus 
(Caicias), and Solanus (Apheliotes). Between 
Eurus and Xotus (Xotos) there is only one, the 
Euroauster (Euronotus) ; between Xotus and 
Favonius (Zephyrus) are marked Austro-Africus 
(Libonotus) and Africus (Lips) ; and between 
Favonius and Septentrio we find Chorus (Iapyx) 
and Circius (Thracius). The winds were rep- 
resented by poets and artists in different ways ; 
. the latter usually represented them as beings 
i with wings at their heads and shoulders. The 
most remarkable monument representing the 
winds is the octagonal tower of Andronicus 
Cyrrhestes at Athens. Each of the eight sides 
: of the monument represents one of the eight 
t principal winds in a flying attitude. A mov- 
• able Triton in the centre of the cupola pointed 
t with his staff to the wind blowing at the time. 
All these eight figures have wings at their 
shoulders, all are clothed, and the peculiarities 
of the winds are indicated by their bodies and 
various attributes. Black lambs were offered 
as sacrifices to the destructive winds, and white 
ones to favorable or good winds. Boreas had a 
temple on the River Ilissus in Attica ; and 
Zephyrus had an altar on the sacred road to 
Eleusis. 

VextidIxs Bassus, P., a celebrated Roman 
general, was a native of Picenum, and was 
taken prisoner by Pompeius Strabo in the So- 
cial war (B.C. 89), and carried to Rome. When 



VENULUS. 

he grew up to man's estate, he got a poor living 
by undertaking to furnish mules and vehicles 
for those magistrates who went from Rome to 
administer a province. In this humble employ- 
ment he became known to C. Julius Ca?sar, 
whom he accompanied into Gaul. In the Civil 
war he executed Caesar's orders with ability, 
and became a favorite of his great commander. 
He obtained the rank of tribune of the plebs, 
and was made a praetor for B.C. 43. After Cae- 
sar's death Ventidius sided with M. Antony in 
the war of Mutina (43), and in the same year 
was made consul suffectus. In 39 Antony sent 
Ventidius into Asia to oppose Labienus and the 
Parthians. He conducted this war with distin- 
guished ability and success. In the first cam- 
paign (39) he defeated the Parthians and Labi- 
enus, the latter of whom was slain in his flight 
after the battle ; and in the second campaign 
(38) Ventidius gained a still more brilliant vic- 
tory over the Parthians, who had again invaded 
Syria. Pacorus, the king's son, fell in this bat- 
tle. Antony, however, far from being pleased 
with the success of Ventidius, showed great 
jealousy of him, and dismissed him from his 
employment. Yet his services were too great 
to be overlooked, and he had a triumph in No- 
vember. 38. Nothing more is known of him. 
Ventidius was often cited as an instance of a 
man who rose from the lowest condition to the 
highest honors ; a captive became a Roman 
consul and enjoyed a triumph ; but this was in 
a period of revolution. 

[Venulus, a Latin chieftain (according to 
Servius, originally from Argos), sent by Turnus 
to Diomedes to persuade bin to lend aid against 
./Eneas and the Trojans : he was subsequently 
captured by Tarchon, and carried off the field 
after a fierce struggle.] 

Venus, the goddess of love among the Ro- 
mans. Before she was identified with the Greek 
Aphrodite, she was one of the least important 
divinities in the religion of the Romans ; but 
still her worship seems to liave been establish- 
ed at Rome at an early time. There was a 
stone chapel with an imago of Venus Murtca or 
Murcia in the Circus, near the spot where the 
altar of Consus was concealed. This surname 
was said to be the same as Myrtea (from myr- 
tus, a myrtle), and to indicate the fondness of 
the goddess for the myrtle-tree. In ancient 
times there is said to have been a myrtle grove 
in front of her sanctuary below the Aventine. 
Another ancient surname of Venus was Cloa- 
cina, which is said to have been derived from 
her image having been found in the great sew- 
er {cloaca) ; but this tale is nothing but an ety- 
mological inference from the name. It is sup- 
posed by modern writers that this surname sig- 
nifies the 44 Purifier," from cloare or cluerc, 44 to 
wash" or "purify." The statue of Venus un- 
der this surname was set up by T. Tatius in a 
temple near the forum. A third ancient sur- 
name of Venus is Calva, under which she had 
two temples in the neighborhood of the Capitol. 
Some believed that one of them had been built 
by Ancus Marcius, because his wife was in 
danger of losing her hair ; others thought that 
it was a monument of a patriotic act of the 
Roman women, who, during the siege of the 
Gauls, cut off their hair and gave it to the men 
59 



VERCELLJ5. 

to make strings for their bows ; and others, 
again, supposed it to refer to the fancies and 
caprices of lovers, calvcre signifying to tease." 
But it probably refers to the fact that on her 
wedding-day the bride, either actually or sym- 
bolically, cut off a lock of hair to sacrifice it to 
Venus. In these, the most ancient surnames 
of Venus, we must recognize her primitive char- 
acter and attributes. In later times her wor- 
ship became much more extended, and her iden- 
tification with the Greek Aphrodite introduced 
various new attributes. At the beginning of 
the second Punic war, the worship of Venus 
Erycina was introduced from Sicily, and a tem- 
ple was dedicated to her on the Capitol, to 
which subsequently another was added outside 
the Collinc gate. In the year B.C. 114, a Ves- 
tal virgin was killed by lightning; and as the 
general moral corruption, especially among the 
Vestals, was believed to be the cause of this 
disaster, the Sibylline books, upon being con- 
sulted, commanded that a temple should be built 
to Venus Verticordia (the goddess who turns 
the hearts of men) on the Via Salaria. After 
the close of the Samnitc war, Fabius Gurges 
founded the worship of Venus Obsequens and 
Postvorta ; Scipio Africanus the younger, that 
of Venus Genitrix, in which he was afterward 
followed by Caesar, who added that of Venus 
Victrix. The worship of Venus was promoted 
by Caesar, who traced his descent from ^Eneas, 
who was supposed to be the son of Mars and 
Venus. The month of April, as the beginning 
of spring, was thought to be peculiarly sacred 
to the goddess of love. Respecting the Greek 
goddess, vid. Aphroditi:. 

Venusia (Venusinus : now Vcnosa), an an- 
cient town of Apulia, south of the River Aufi- 
dus, and near Mount Yultur, situated in a ro- 
mantic country, and memorable as the birth- 
place of the poet Horace. It was originally a 
town of the Hirpini in Sainnium ; and after its 
original Sabellian inhabitants had been driven 
out by the Romans, it was colonized by the 
latter, B.C. 291, and formed an important mili- 
tary station. Here the remnants of the Roman 
army took refuge al ter the fatal battle of Cannae, 
216. 

Veraori or Vakagri, a people in Gallia Bel- 
gica, on the Pennine Alps, near the confluence 
of the Dranse and the Rhone. 

[Veranils, Q., appointed by Tiberius Caesar 
legatus or governor of Cappadocia, when that 
country was reduced to the form of a Roman, 
province, A.D. 18. Veranius was one of the 
friends of Germanicus, and took an active part 
in the prosecution of Cn. Piso. He was consul 
in A.D. 49, and in A.D. 58, under Nero, he suc- 
ceeded Didius Gallus as governor of Britain, 
but died there within a year.] 

Verbanus Lacus (now Lago Maggiore), a lake 
in Gallia Cisalpina, and the largest lake in all 
Italy, being about forty miles in length from 
north to south : its greatest breadth is eight 
miles. It is formed by the River Ticinus and 
other streams descending from the Alps; and 
the River Ticinus issues from its southern ex- 
tremity. [In it are the Borromcan islands, the 
admiration of travellers.] 

Vercell.*: (Vercellensis : now Vercelli), the 
chief town of the Libici in Gallia Cisalpina, and 

929 



VERCINGETORIX. 



VERRES. 



eubsequently a Roman municipium, and a place 
of considerable importance. 

Vercingetorix, the celebrated chieftain of 
the Arverni, who carried on war with great 
ability against Caesar in B.C. 52. The history of 
this war occupies the seventh book of Caesar's 
Commentaries on the Gallic war. Vercingeto- 
rix fell into Caesar's hands on the capture of 
Alesia, was subsequently taken to Rome, where 
he adorned the triumph of his conqueror in 45, 
and was afterward put to death. 

Veretom (Veretinus : now Alessano), more 
anciently called Baris, a town in Calabria, on 
the road from Leuca to Tarentum, and six 
hundred stadia southeast of the latter city. 

Verg^, a town in the interior of Bruttium, 
of uncertain site. 

Vergellus, a rivulet in Apulia crossing the 
plain of Cannae, which is said to have been 
choked by the dead bodies of the Romans slain 
in the memorable battle against Hannibal. 

Vergilics. Vid. Viegilius. 

Verginics. Vid. Virginics. 

Verolamicm or VerulamIcm (now Old Veru- 
lam, near St. Alban's), the chief town of the 
Catuellani in Britain, probably the residence of 
the King Cassivellaunus, which was conquered 
by Caesar. It was subsequently made a Roman 
municipium. It was destroyed by the Britons 
under Boadicea, in their insurrection against 
the Romans, but was rebuilt, and continued to 
be an important place. 

Veromandui, a people in Gallia Belgica, be- 
tween the Nervii and Suessiones, in the mod- 
ern Vcrmandois. Their chief town was Acgusta 
Veromanduorcm (now St. Qucntin). 

Verona (Veronensis : now Verona), an im- 
portant town in Gallia Cisalpina, on the River 
Athesis, was originally the capital of the Euga- 
nei, but subsequently belonged to the Cenomani. 
At a still later time it was made a Roman col- 
ony, with the surname Augusta ; and under the 
empire it was one of the largest and most flour- 
ishing towns in the north of Italy. It was the 
birthplace of Catullus, and, according to some 
accounts, of the elder Pliny, though others make 
him a native of Comum. It is celebrated on 
account of the battle fought in its neighborhood 
in the Campi Raudii, by Marius against the 
Cimbri, and also by the victory of Theodoric 
the Great over Odoacer. Theodoric took up 
his residence in this town, whence it is called 
by the German writers of the Middle Ages 
Dietrichs Bern, to distinguish it from Bern in 
Switzerland. There are still many Roman re- 
mains at Verona, and, among others, an amphi- 
theatre in a good state of preservation. 

Verres, C, was quaestor B.C. 82, to Cn. Pa- 
pirius Carbo, and therefore, at that period, be- 
longed to the Marian party. He, however, de- 
serted Carbo and went over to Sulla, who sent 
him to Beneventum, where he was allowed a 
share of the confiscated estates. Verres next 
appears as the legate of Cn. Cornelius Dolabella, 
praetor of Cilicia in 80-79, and one of the most 
rapacious of the provincial governors. On the 
death of the regular quaestor C. Malleolus, Ver- 
res became the pro quaestor of Dolabella. In 
Verres I> 'jbella found an active and unscru- 
pulous agent, and, in return, connived at his 
excesses. But the pro-quaestor proved as faith- 
930 



less to Dolabella as he had been to Carbo, and 
turned evidence against him on his prosecution 
by M. Scaurus in 78. Verres was praetor ur- 
banus in 74, and afterward pro-praetor in Sicily, 
where he remained nearly three years (73-71)! 
The extortions and exactions of Verres in the 
island have become notorious through the cele- 
brated orations of Cicero. No class of the in- 
habitants of Sicily was exempted from his ava- 
rice, his cruelty, or his insults. The wealthy 
had money or works of art to yield up ; the 
middle classes might be made to pay heavier 
imposts ; and the exports of the vineyards, the 
arable land, and the loom, he saddled with 
heavier burdens. By capricious changes or 
violent abrogation of their compacts, Verres 
reduced to beggary both the producers and the 
farmers of the revenue. His three years' rule 
desolated the island more effectually than the 
two recent Servile wars, and than the old strug- 
gle between Carthage and Rome for the pos- 
session of the island. So diligently did he era- 
ploy his opportunities, that he boasted of having 
amassed enough for a life of opulence, even if 
he were compelled to disgorge two thirds of his 
plunder in stifling inquiry or purchasing an ac- 
quittal. As soon as he left Sicily, the inhabit- 
ants resolved to bring him to trial. They com- 
mitted the prosecution to Cicero, who had been 
Lilybaean quaestor in Sicily in 75, and had prom- 
ised his good offices to the Sicilians whenever 
they might demand them. Cicero heartily en- 
tered into the cause of the Sicilians, and spared 
no pains to secure a conviction of the great 
criminal. Verres was defended by Hortensius, 
and was supported by the whole power of the 
aristocracy. At first his partisans attempted to 
stop the prosecution by bribes, flatteries, and 
menaces ; but, finding this to be impossible, 
they endeavoured to substitute a sham prose- 
cutor in the place of Cicero. Hortensius there- 
fore offered as prosecutor Q. Caecilius Niger, 
who had been quaestor to the defendant, had 
quarrelled with him, and had consequently, it 
was alleged, the means of exposing officially his 
abuse of the public money. But the Sicilians 
rejected Caecilius altogether, not merely as no 
match for Hortensius, but as foisted into the 
cause by the defendant or his advocate. By a 
technical process of the Roman law, called Dro- 
inatio, the judices, without hearing evidence, de- 
termined from the arguments of counsel alone 
who should be appointed prosecutor. They de- 
cided in Cicero's favor. The oration which 
Cicero delivered on this occasion was the Drt>- 
inalio in Q. Cacilium. The pretensions of Cae- 
cilius were thus set aside. Yet hope did not 
forsake Verres and his friends. Evidence foi 
the prosecution was to be collected in Sicily it- 
self. Cicero was allowed one hundred and ten 
days for the purpose. Verres once again at- 
tempted to set up a sham prosecutor, who un- 
dertook to impeach him for his former extor- 
tions in Achaia, and to gather the evidence in 
one hundred and eight days. But the new prose- 
cutor never went even so far as Brundisium in 
quest of evidence, and the design was aban- 
doned. Instead of the one hundred and ten 
days allowed, Cicero, assisted by his cousin 
Lucius, completed his researches in fifty, and 
returned with a mass of evidence and a crowd 



VERRUGO. 

of witnesses gathered from all parts of the isl- 
and. Hortensius now grasped at his last chance 
of an acquittal, and it was not an unlikely one 
Could the impeachment be put off to the next 
year, Verres was safe. Hortensius himself 
would then be consul, with Q. Mete] J us for his 
colleague, and M. Metellus would be praetor ur- 
banus. For every firm and honest judex whom 
the upright M. Acilius Glabrio, then preetor ur- 
banus, had named, a partial or venal substitute 
would be found. Glabrio himself would (rive 
place as quaesitor or president of the court to M 
Metellus, a partisan, if not a kinsman, of the 
defendant. It was already the month of Julv. 
The games to be exhibited by Cn. Pompey were 
fixed for the middle of August, and would oc- 
cupy a fortnight ; the Roman games would im- 
mediately succeed them, and thus forty days in- 
tervene between Cicero's charge and the reply 
of Hortensius, who again, by dexterous adjourn- 
ments, would delay the proceedings until the 
games of Victory, and the commencement of 
the new year. Cicero therefore abandoned all 
thought of eloquence or display, and merely in- 
troducing his case in the first of the Verrine 
orations, rested all his hopes of success on the 
weight of testimony alone. Hortensius was 
quite unprepared with counter-evidence, and 
after the first day he abandoned the cause of 
Verres. Before the nine days occupied in hear- 
ing evidence were over, Verres quitted the city 
in despair, and was condemned in his absence. 
He retiredV) Marseilles, retaining so many of 
his treasures of art as to cause eventually his 
proscription by M. Antony in 43. Of the seven 
Verrine orations of Cicero, two only, the Div- 
inatio and the Actio Prima, were spoken, while 
the remaining five were eompiled from the de- 
positions after the verdict. Cicero's own divi- 
sion of the impeachment is the following : 



VESPASIAM7S,T. FLAVirs SABINUa 

not was in love with Pomona, he assumed all 
possible forms, until at last he L M,ned hi 9 end 
by metamorphosing himself into a blooming 
youth. Gardeners accordingly oflWcd t<, h.m 
the first produce of the.r gardens and garlands 
of budding flowers. The whole people celebra- 
ted a festival to Vertumnus on the S3d of \ u . 
gust under the name of the Vortumnalia, denot- 
ing the transition from the beautiful season of 
autumn to the less agree able one. He had a 
temple in the vicus Tuscus, and a statue of him 
stood in the vicus Junius, near the altar of 
Ops. The story of the Etruscan origin seeim 
to be sufficiently refuted by his genuine Roman 
name, and it is much more probable thai the 
worship of Vertumnus was of Sabine orwin 
The importance of the worship of Vertumnus 
at Rome is evident from the fart that it was 
attended to by a special flamen ( (lamcn Vortum- 
nalis). 

Verul/e (Verulanus : now Veroli), a town of 
the Hcrnici in Latium, southeast of Aletrium, 
and north of Frusino, subsequently a llomaii 
colony. 

Verulamium 



(1. In ( 

1 2. Pro 

c a 



Preliminary 
These alone were spoken 



Q,. Cuecilium or Divinatio. 
Procmiutn — Actio Prima — 
Statement of the Case. 



Orations 
founded on 
the Depo- 
sitions. 



f3. Verros's official life to B.C. 73. 

4. Jurisdictio Siciliensis. 

5. Oratio Frumentaria. 
8. De Sie-nis. 

7. De Suppliciis. 



These were circulated as documents or mani- 
festoes of the cause after the flight of Verres. 

Verrugo, a town of the Volsci in Latium, of 
uncertain site. 

Verticordia. Vid. Venus. 

Vertumnus or Vortcmvus, is said to have 
been an Etruscan divinity, whose worship was 
introduced at Rome by an ancient Vulsinian 
colony occupying at first the Caelian Hill, and 
afterward the vicus Tuscus. The name is evi- 
dently connected with vcrto, and formed on the 
analogy of alumnus from alo, whence it must 
signify "the god who changes or metamorpho- 
ses himself." For this reason the Romans con- 
nected Vertumnus with all occurrences to which 
the verb vcrto applies, such as the change of 
seasons, purchase and sale, the return of rivers 
to their proper beds. &c. But, in reality, the 
god was connected only with the transforma- 
tion of plants and their progress from blossom 
to fruit. Hence the story, that when Vertum- 



Yid. Veroi.amicm. 
Verus, L. AurklIus, the colleague of M. Au- 
relius in the empire, AD. 1GI-169. He was 
born in 130, and his original name was L Ceion- 
ius Commodus. His father, L. Ccionius Corn- 
modus, was adopted by Hadrian in 136 ; and on 
the death of his father in 138. he was, in pur- 
suance of the command of Hadrian, adopted, 
along with M. Aurelius, by M. Antoninus. On 
the death of Antoninus in 161, he succeeded to 
the empire along with M. Aurelius. The histo- 
ry of his reign is given under Ac-relics. Verus 
died suddenly at Altinum, in the country of the 
Veneti, toward the close of 169. He bad been 
married to Lucilla. the daughter of his colleague 
Vescinus Acer. Vid. Suessa Aurunca. 
Vesevus. Vid. Vesuvius. 
Vesontio (now Bcsanron), the chief town of 
the Sequani in Gallia Belgica, situated on the 
River Dubis (now Doubs), which flowed around 
the town, with the exception of a space of six 
hundred feet, on which stood a mountain, form- 
ing the citadel of the town, and connected with 
the latter by means of walls. Vesontio was an 
important place under the Romans, and still 
contains ruins of an aqueduct, a triumphal arch, 
and other Roman remains. 

Vespasianus, T. Flavics SabInus, Roman 
emperor A D 70-79, was born in the Sabine 
country on the seventeenth of November, A D. 
9. His father was a man of mean condition, of 
Reate, in the country of the Sabini. His moth- 
er, Vespasia Polla. was the daughter of a prae- 
fectus castrorum, and the sister of a Roman 
senator. She was left a widow with two sons, 
Flavins Sabinus and Vespasian. Vespasian 
served as trihunus militant in Thrace, and was 
quaestor in Crete and Cyrene. He was after- 
ward ajdile and praetor. About this time he 
took to wife Flavia Domitilla, the daughter of a 
Roman equcs, by whom he had two sons, both 
of whom .succeeded him. In the reign of Clau- 
dius he was sent into Germany as legatus le- 
gionis; and in 43 he held the samp command 
in Britain, and reduced the Isle of Wight. He 
was consul in 51. and proconsul of Africa tin- 
der Nero He was at this time very poor, and 

931 



VESTA. 



VE STINT. 



was accused of getting money by dishonorable 
means. But he had a great military reputation, 
and he was liked by the soldiers. Nero after- 
ward sent him to the East (66). to conduct the 
war against the Jews. His conduct of the Jew- 
ish war had raised his reputation, when the war 
broke out between Otho and Vitellius after the 
death of Galba. He was proclaimed emperor 
at Alexandrea on the first of July, 69, and soon 
after all through the East. Vespasian came to 
Rome in the following year (70), leaving his son 
Titus to continue the war against the Jews. 
Titus took Jerusalem after a siege of five 
months ; and a formidable insurrection of the 
Batavi, headed by Civilis, was put down about 
the same period. Vespasian, on his arrival at 
Rome, worked with great industry to restore 
order in the city and in the empire. He dis- 
banded some of the mutinous soldiers of Vitel- 
lius, and maintained discipline among his own. 
He co-operated in a friendly manner with the 
senate in the public administration. The sim- 
plicity and frugality of his mode of life formed 
a striking contrast with the profusion and lux- 
ury of some of his predecessors, and his exam- 
ple is said to have done more to reform the 
morals of Rome than all the laws which had 
ever been enacted. He lived more like a pri- 
vate person than a man who possessed supreme 
power : he was affable and easy of access to all 
persons. The personal anecdotes of such a 
man are some of the most instructive records 
of his reign. He was never ashamed of the 
meanness of his origin, and ridiculed all attempts 
to make out for him a distinguished genealogy. 
When Volocreses, the Parthian king, addressed 
to him a letter commencing in these terms, 
"Arsaces, king of kings, to Flavius Vespasia- 
nus,'' the answer began, " Flavius Vespasianus 
to Arsaces, king of kings/' If it be true, as it 
is recorded, that he was not annoyed at satire 
or ridicule, he exhibited an elevation of charac- 
ter almost unparalleled in one who filled so ex- 
alted a station. He knew the bad character of 
his son Domitian, and as long as he lived he 
kept him under proper restraint. The stories 
that are told of his avarice and of his modes of 
raising money, if true, detract from the dignity 
of his character; and it seems that he had a 
taste for little savings, and for coarse humor. 
Yet it is admitted that he was liberal in all his 
expenditure for purposes of public utility. In 
71 Titus returned to Rome, and both father and 
son triumphed together on account of the con- 
quest of the Jews. The reign of Vespasian was 
marked by few striking events. The most im- 
portant was the conquest of North "Wales and 
the island of Anglesey by Agricola, who was 
sent into Britain in 78. In the summer of 79, 
Vespasian, whose health was failing, went to 
spend some time at his paternal house in the 
mountains of the Sabini. By drinking to excess 
of cold water, he damaged his stomach, which 
was already disordered. But he still attended 
to business, just as if he had been in perfect 
health ; and on feeling the approach of death, 
he said that an emperor should die standing ; 
and. in fact, he did actually die in this posture, 
on the twenty-fourth of June, 79, being sixty- 
nine years of age. 

Vesta, one of the great Roman divinities, 
932 



I identical with the Greek Hestia both in name 
and import. She was the goddess of the hearth, 
I and therefore inseparably connected with the 
j Penates ; for iEneas was believed to have 
j brought the eternal fire of Vesta from Troy 
■ along with the images of the Penates ; and the 
i praetors, consuls, and dictators, before entering 
i upon their official functions, sacrificed, not only 
; to the Penates, but also to Vesta at Lavinium. 
' In the ancient Roman house, the hearth was the 
j central part, and around it ail the inmates daily 
! assembled for their common meal {cana) ; every 
; meal thus taken was a fresh bond of union and 
| affection among the members of a family, and 
at the same time an act of worship of Vesta, 
combined with a sacrifice to her and the Pe- 
nates. Every dwelling-house therefore was, in 
some sense, a temple of Vesta; but a public 
sanctuary united all the citizens of the state 
into one large family. This sanctuary stood in 
j the Forum, between the Capitoline and Pala- 
j tine hills, and not far from the temple of the 
i Penates. The temple was round, with a vault- 
j ed roof, like the impluvium of private houses, so 
; that there is no reason to regard that form as 
] an imitation of the vault of heaven. The god- 
| dess was not represented in her temple by a 
. statue, but the eternal fire burning on her hearth 
or altar was her living symbol, and was kept 
! up and attended to by the Vestals, her virgin 
| priestesses. As each house, and the city itself, 
so also the country had its own Vesta, and the 
: latter was worshipped at Laviniumfthe metrop- 
olis of the Latins, where she was worshipped 
I and received the regular sacrifices at the hands 
i of the highest magistrates. The goddess her- 
I self was regarded as chaste and pure, like her 
; symbol, the fire ; and the Vestals who kept up 
' the sacred fire were likewise pure maidens. 
Respecting their duties and obligations, vid. 
j Diet, of Antiq. t art. Vestales. On the first of 
! March in every year, her sacred fire, and the 
I laurel-tree which shaded her hearth, were re- 
; newed, and on the fifteenth of June her temple 
was cleaned and purified. The dirt was carried 
, into an angiportus behind the temple, which 
was locked by a gate that no one might enter 
j it. The day on which this took place was a 
| dies nefastus, the first half of which was thought 
j to be so inauspicious, that the priestess of Juno 
was not allowed to comb her hair or to cut her 
nails, while the second half was very favorable 
! to contracting a marriage or entering upon other 
. important undertakings. A few days before 
I that solemnity, on the ninth of June, the Vesta- 
lia was celebrated in honor of the goddess, on 
which occasion none but women walked to the 
! temple, and that with bare feet. On one of 
these occasions an altar had been dedicated to 
Jupiter Pistor. Respecting the Greek goddess, 
j vid. Hestia. 

VestLvi, a Sabellian people in Central Italy, 
lying between the Apennines and the Adriatic 
( Sea, and separated from Picenum by the River 
Matrinus, and from the Marrucini by the River 
I Aternus. They are mentioned in connection 
with the Marsi, Marrucini, and Peligni ; but 
they subsequently separated from these tribes, 
\ and joined the Samnites in their war against 
j Rome. They were conquered by the Romans 
B.C. 328, and from this time appear as the al- 



VESULUS. 

lies of Rome. They joined the other allies in 
the Marsic war, and were conquered by Pom- 
peius Strabo in 89. They made a particular 
kind of cheese, which was a great favorite with 
the Romans. 

Vesulus. Vid. Alpes. 

Vesuvius, also called Vesevus, Vesbius, or 
Vesvius, the celebrated volcanic mountain in 
Campania, rising out of the plain southeast of 
Neapolis. There are no records of any erup- 
tion of Vesuvius before the Christian era, but 
the ancient writers were aware Of its volcanic 
nature from the igneous appearance of its rocks. 
The slopes of the mountain were extremely fer- 



veti:s, Aicnsnus. 

VktixGnia, VrrcLdwfuii, or Vktulonii, an 
ancient city of Etruria, and one of the* twelve 
cities of the Etruscan confederation. From this 
city the Romans are said to have borrowed the 
insignia of their magistrates— the fasces, sella 
CO rails, and toga pnrtcxta— as well as the use of 
the brazen trumpet in war After the time of ihc 
Koman kings we find no further mention of Vc- 
tuloma, except in the catalogues of 1'lmv and 
Ptolemy, both of whom place it among the in- 
land colonics of Etruria. Plmv also stairs that 
there were hot springs in its neighborhood not 
far from the sea, in wind, fish were found, not- 

rj , , -- I withstanding the warmth of the water The 

tile, but the top was a rough and sterile plain, j very site of the ancient city was su noosed to 
on which Spartacus and his gladiators were be- have been entirely lost ; but ?b£ K 
sieged by a Roman army. In A D. 63 the vol- covered within the last few years Tear a mall 
cano gave the first symptoms of agitation in | village called Magliana, between the miSSm 

and the Albegna, and about eight miles inland 
It appears to have had a circan of at least four 
and a half miles. 



an earthquake, which occasioned considerable 
damage to several towns in its vicinity ; and 
on the 24th of August, A D. 79, occurred the 
first great eruption of Vesuvius, which over- 
whelmed the cities of Stabiae, Herculaneum, 
and Pompeii. It was in this eruption that the 
elder Pliny lost his life. Vid. Fumes. There 
have been numerous eruptions since that time, 
which have greatly altered the shape of the 
mountain. Its present height is three thousand 
two hundred feet. 

Vetera or Castra Vetera. Vid. Castro 
No. 5. 

Vetranio, commanded the legions in Illvria 
and Pannonia at the period (A D. 350) when 



Veturia Gens, anciently called Vktusia, pa- 
trician and plebeian. The Veturii rarely occur 
in the later times of the republic, and after B C. 
206, when L. Veturius Philo was consul, their 
name disappears from the Fasti. The most dis- 
tinguished families in the gens bore the names 
Calvinus, Cicurinus, and Philo. 

Vetcrius Mamurics is said to have been the 
armorer who made the eleven ancilia exactly 
like the one that was sent from heaven in the 
reign of Numa His praises formed one of the 
chief subjects of the songs of the Salii. Even 



Constans was treacherously destroyed and his j the ancients themselves doubted in the re 
throne seized by Magnentius Vetranio was 
proclaimed emperor by his troops ; but at the 
end often months he resigned his pretensions 
in favor of Constantius, by whom he was treat- 
ed with great kindness, and permitted to retire 
to Prusa, in Bithynia, where he passed the re- 
maining six years of his life. 

Vettius, L., a Roman eques, in the pay of 
Cicero in B.C. 63. to whom he gave some val- 
uable information respecting the Catilinarian 
conspiracy. He again appears in 59 as an in- 
former. In that year he accused Curio, Cicero, 
L. Lucullus, and many other distinguished men, 
of having formed a conspiracy to assassinate 
Pompey. This conspiracy was a sheer inven- 
tion for the purpose of injuring Cicero, Curio, 
and others ; but there is difficulty in determin- 
ing who were the inventors of it. Cicero re- 
garded it as the work of Caesar, who used the 
tribune Vatinius as his instrument. At a later 
period, when Cicero had returned from exile, j 
and feared to provoke the triumvir, he threw 
the whole blame upon Vatinius. Vettius gave 
evidence first before the senate, and on the 



Bitty of his existence : Varro interpreted his 
name as equivalent to rctus memona. Some 
modern writers regard Mamurius Veturius as 
an Etruscan artist, because he is said to have 
made a brazen image of the god Vertum- 
nus. 

Vetus, Antisthjs. 1. Propr.-etor in Further 
Spam about B.C. 68, under whom Cavsar served 
as quaestor. — 2. C, son of the preceding, quars- 
tor in 61, and tribune of the plebs in 57, when 
he supported Cicero in opposition to Clodius. 
In the Civil war he espoused Caesar's party, 
and we find him in Syria in 45 fighting against 
Q. Caecilius Bassus. In 34 Vetus carried on 
war against the Salassi, and in 30 was consul 
suffectus. He accompanied Augustus to Spain 
in 25, and on the illness of the emperor contin- 
ued the war against the Cantabri and Astures. 
whom he reduced to submission. — 3. C , son of 
No. 2, consul B.C. 6 ; and as he lived to see 
both his sons consuls, he must have been alive 
at least as late as A 1). 88. He was a friend of 
Velleius Paterculus. — 4. L., grandson of No 
and consul with the Emperor Nero, A D. 55 



next day before the assembly of the people; I In 58 he commanded a Koman army in (Jcr- 
but his statements were regarded with great j many, and formed the project of connecting the 
suspicion, and on the following morning he was j Mosella (now Moselle) and the Arar (now Sa 
found strangled in prison, to which the senate one) by a canal, and thus forming a communi 



had sent him. It was given out that he had 
committed suicide ; but the marks of violence 
were visible on his body, and Cicero at a later 
time charged Vatinius with the murder. 

Vettius Scato. Vid. Scato. 

Vettones or Vectones, a people in the inte- 
rior of Lusitania, east of the Lusitani and west 
of the Carpetani, extending from the Durius to 
the Tagus. 



cation between the Mediterranean and the 
Northern Ocean, as troops could be conveyed 
down the Rhone and the Saone into the Mo- 
selle through the canal, and down the Moselle 
into the Rhine, and so into the ocean. Vetus 
put an end to his life in 65, in order to antici- 
pate his sentence of death, which Nero had re- 
solved upon. Vetus was the father-in-law of 
Rubellius Plautus. 



VIADUS. 



VICTOR, SEX. AURELIUS. 



Viadus (now Oder), a river of Germany, fall- 
ing into the Baltic. 

Vibius Pansa. Vid. Pansa. 

VibIus Sequester. Vid. Sequester. 

Vibo (Vibonensis : now Bivona), the Roman 
form of the Greek town Hipponium ('Imruviov : 
'l7r7T(jvi&7?]£ ), situated on the southwestern coast 
of Bruttium, and on a gulf called after it Sinus 
Vibonensis or Hipponiates. It is said to have 
been founded by the Locri Epizephyrii ; but it 
was destroyed by the elder Dionysius, who trans- 
planted its inhabitants to Syracuse. It was aft- 
erward restored ; and at a later time it fell into 
the hands of the Bruttii, together with the other 
Greek cities on this coast. It was taken from 
the Bruttii by the Romans, who colonized it 
B.C. 194, and called it Vibo Valentia. Cicero 
speaks of it as a municipium ; and in the time 
of Augustus it was one of the most flourishing 
cities in the south of Italy. 

Vibulanus, the name of the most ancient 
family of the Fabia Gens. It was so powerful 
in the early times of the republic that three 
brothers of the family held the consulship for 
seven years in succession, B.C. 485-479. The 
last person of the gens who bore this surname 
was Q. Fabius Vibulanus, consul 412. This 
Vibulanus assumed the agnomen of Ambustus; 
and his descendants dropped the name of Vibu- 
lanus and took that of Ambustus in its place. 
In the same way Ambustus was after a time 
supplanted by that of Maximus. — 1. Q. Fabius 
Vibulanus, consul 485, when he carried on war 
with success against the Volsci and ^Equi, and 
consul a second time in 482. In 480 he fought 
under his brother Marcus (No. 3) against the 
Etruscans, and was killed in battle. — 2. K., 
brother of the preceding, was quaestor parricidii 
in 485, and along with his colleague L. Valerius 
accused Sp. Cassius Viscellinus, who was, in 
consequence, condemned by the votes of the 
populus. He was consul in 484, when he took 
an active part in opposing the agrarian law, 
which the tribunes of the people attempted to 
bring forward. In 481 he was consul a second 
time, and in 479 a third time, when he espoused 
the cause of the plebeians, to whom he had be- 
come reconciled. As his propositions were re- 
jected with scorn by the patricians, he and his 
house resolved to quit Rome altogether, where 
they were regarded as apostates by their own 
order. They determined to found a settlement 
on the banks of the Cremera, a small stream 
that falls into the Tiber a few miles above Rome. 
According to the legend, the consul Ka;so went 
before the senate, and said that the Fabii were 
willing to carry on the war against the Veientes 
alone and at their own cost. Their offer was 
joyfully accepted, for the patricians were glad 
to see them expose themselves voluntarily to 
such dangers. On the day after Kseso had 
made the proposal to the senate, three hundred 
and six Fabii, all patricians of one gens, assem- 
bled on the Quirinal at the house of Kasso, and 
from thence marched with the consul at their 
head through the Carmental gate. They pro- 
ceeded straight to the banks of the Cremera, 
where they erected a fortress. Here they took 
up their abode along with their families and 
clients, and for two years continued to devas- 
tate the territory of Veii. They were at length 



destroyed by the Veientes in 477. Ovid says 
that the Fabii perished on the Ides of February ; 
but all other authorities state that they were 
destroyed on the day on which the Romans 
were subsequently conquered by the Gauls at 
the Allia, that is, on the 15th before the Kal- 
ends of Sextilis, June the 17th. The whole 
Fabia gens perished at the Cremera with the 
exception of one individual, the son of Marcus, 
from whom all the later Fabii were descended. 
— 3. M., brother of the two preceding, was con- 
sul 483, and a second time 480. In the latter 
year he gained a great victory over the Etrus- 
cans, in which, however, his colleague the con- 
sul Cincinnatus and his brother Q. Fabius were 
killed. — 4. Q., son of No. 3, is said to have been 
the only one of the Fabii who survived the de- 
struction of his gens at the Cremera, but he 
could not have been left behind at Rome on ac- 
count of his youth, as the legend relates, since 
he was consul ten years afterward. He was 
consul 467, a second time in 465, and a third 
time in 459. Fabius was a member of the sec- 
ond decemvirate (450), and went into exile on 
the deposition of the decemvirs. 

Vibullius Rufus, L., a senator and a friend 
of Pompey, who made him prcefectus fabrum 
in the Civil war. He was taken prisoner by Ca- 
sar at Corfinium (49), and a second time in 
Spain later in the year. When Cassar landed 
in Greece in 48. he dispatched Vibullius to Pom- 
pey with offers of peace. Vibullius made the 
greatest haste to reach Pompey, in order to give 
him the earliest intelligence of the arrival of 
his enemy in Greece. 

Vicentia or Vicetia, less correctly Vincen- 
tia (Vicentinus : now Vicenza), a town in Vene- 
tia, in the north of Italy, and a Roman muni- 
cipium on the River Togisonus. 

Victor, Sex. Aurelius, a Latin writer, flour- 
ished in the middle of the fourth century under 
the Emperor Constantius and his successors. 
He was born of humble parents, but rose to dis- 
tinction by his zeal in the cultivation of litera- 
ture. Having attracted the attention of Julian 
when at Sirmium, he was appointed by that 
prince governor of one division of Pannonia. 
At a subsequent period, he was elevated by 
Theodosius to the high office of city prsefect, 
and he is perhaps the same as the Sex. Aure- 
lius Victor who was consul along with Valen- 
tinian in A.D. 373. The following works, which 
present in a very compressed form a continu- 
ous record of Roman affairs, from the fabulous 
ages down to the death of the Emperor Theo- 
dosius, have all been ascribed to this writer; 
but the evidence upon which the determination, 
of authorship depends is very slender, and in 
all probability the third alone belongs to the 
Sex. Aurelius Victor whom we have noticed 
above: 1. Origo Gentis Romanes, in twenty- 
three chapters, containing the annals of the Ro- 
man race, from Janus and Saturnus down to 
the era of Romulus. It is probably a produc- 
tion of some of the later grammarians, who 
were desirous of prefixing a suitable introduc- 
tion to the series. 2. De Viris illustrious Urbis 
Roma, in eighty-six chapters, commencing with 
the birth of Romulus and Remus, and conclud- 
ing with the death of Cleopatra. 3. De C<£sari- 
bits, in forty-two chapters, exhibiting short biog- 



VICTOR, PUBLIUS. 

rapines of the emperors from Augustus to Con- 
stantius. 4. Epitome de Casanbus, in forty- 
eight chapters, commencing with Augustus and 
concluding with Theodosius. These lives agree 
tor the most part almost word for word with the 
preceding, hut variations may here and there 
be detected. Moreover, the first series term- 
inates with Constantius, but the second comes 
down as low as Arcadius and Honorius. The 
best edition of these four pieces is by Arntze- 
nius, Amst. et Traj. Bat , 1733, 4to. 

Victor, Publius, the name prefixed to an enu- 
meration of the principal buildings and monu- 
ments of ancient Rome, distributed according 
to the regions of Augustus, which has generally 
been respected as a work of great authority by 
Italian antiquaries The best modern scholars, 
however, are agreed that this work, and a sim- 
ilar production ascribed to Sextos Rufus, can 
not be received in their present state as an- 
cient at all, but must be regarded as mere pieces 
of patch-work, fabricated not earlier than the 
fifteenth century. 

Victoria, the personification of victory among 
the R,omans. It is said that Evander, by the 
command of Minerva, dedicated on Mount Pal- 
atine a temple of Victoria, the daughter of Pal- 
las. On the site of this ancient temple a new 
one was built by L. Postumius during the war 
with the Samniies, and M Porcius Cato added 
to it a chapel of Victoria Virgo. In later times 
there existed three or four sanctuaries of Vic- 
tory at Rome. Respecting the Greek goddess 
of Victory, vid. Nice. 

Victoria or Victorina, the mother of Victo- 
rious, after whose death she was hailed as the 
mother of camps (Mater Castrorum) ; and coins 
were struck bearing her effigy. Feeling une- 
qual to the weight of empire, she transferred 
her power first to Marius, and then toTetricus, 
by whom some say that she was slain, while 
others affirm that she died a natural death. 

Victorinus. 1. One of the Thirty Tyrants, 
was the third of the usurpers who in succession 
ruled Gaul during the reign of Gallienus. He 
was assassinated at Colonia Agrippina by one of 
his own officers in A.D 268, after reigning some- 
what more than a year. — 2. Bishop of Pcttaw, on 
the Drave, in Styria, hence distinguished by the 
epithet Petavioncnsis or Pictavicnsis, flourished 
A.D. 270-290, and suffered martyrdom during 
the persecution of Diocletian, probably in 303. 
He wrote commentaries on the Scriptures, but 
all his works are lost — 3. C. Marius Victori- 
nus, surnamed Afer from the country of his 
birth, taught rhetoric at Rome in the middle of 
the fourth century w ith so much reputation that 
his statue was erected in the Forum of Trajan 
In his old age he professed Christianity ; and 
when the edict of Julian, prohibiting Christians 
from giving instruction in polite literature, was 
promulgated, Victorious chose to shut up his 
school rather than deny his religion. Besides 
his commentaries on the Scriptures, and other 
theological works, many of which are extant, 
Victorinus wrote, 1. Comrncntarius s. Expositio 
in Ciceronis libros de Inrentione, the best edition 
of which is in the fifth volume of Orelli's edi- I 
tion of Cicero. 2. Ars Grammatica de Ortko- \ 
graphia et Ratione Metrorum, a complete and vo- j 
Uiminous treatise upon metres, in four books, | 



VINDELICIA. 

printed in the Grammatics. Latma Auctores A*, 
uqui of Putschius, Hannov , 1606. [and in the 

t£T? r %i U/ r Rrl Mar - h y G«W«nl. Oxford, 
1837.] I he fame enjoyed bv Victorinus as a 
public instructor docs not fja.n any accession 
lrom his works. The exposition of I be De In- 
ventione is more difficult to comprehend than 
the text which it professes to explain —4 
M.aximcs Victorinus. We possess three short 
tracts: 1. De Re Grammalica; 2. De Carmine 
Hcroico; 3. De Ralwnr Metrorum; all apparent- 
ly the work of the same author, and usually as- 
cribed in MSS. to a Maximum Victorinus ; but 
whether we ought to consider him the same 
with the rhetorician who flourished under Con- 
stantius. or as an independent personage, it is 
impossible to decide. They were printed m the 
collection of Putschius, Hannov., 1605, and in 
that of Lindemann. Lips., 1831. 

Victrix. Vid. Venus. 

[Vidrus (now Vechtl), a small stream of Ger- 
mania, between the Rhenus and the Amisia ] 

Viducasses, a tribe of the Armorici in Gallia 
Lugdunensis, south of the modern Caen. 

Vienna ( Viennensis : now Viennc), the chief 
town of the Allohroges in Gallia Lugdunensis, 
situated on the Rhone, south of Lugdunum. It 
w^as subsequently a Roman colony, and a wealthy 
and flourishing town Under the later emper- 
ors it was the capital of the province, called aft- 
er it Gallia Viennensis. The modern town con- 
tains several Roman remains, of which tlic most 
important is a temple, supposed to have been 
dedicated to Augustus, and now converted into 
a museum. 

[ Vigelmus, M., a Stoic philosopher, who lived 
with Panaetius ] 

[Vigenna (now Vienne), a river of Gallia, 
rising in the country of the Lemovices, and 
falling into the Liger (now Loire).] 

Villius Annai.is. Vid. Annaus 

Viminalis. Vid, Roma. 

Vincentil'8, surnamed Lirinensis. from the 
monastery in the island of Lerins, where he of- 
ficiated as a presbyter. He was by birth a na- 
tive of Gaul, and died in the reign of Theodo- 
sius and Valentinian, about A.D. 450. His 
fame rests upon a treatise against heretics, 
composed in 431. It commonly bears the title 
Cummonitorium pro Catholiccc fidet antiquitate et 
universitatc adversus pro/anas omnium Hirreheo- 
rum noritutcs. The standard edition is that of 
Baluzius, 8vo, Paris, 1663, 1G69, 1684. 

Vindall'm, a town of the Cavares in Gallia 
Narbonensis, situated at the confluence of the 
Sulgas and the Khonc. 

Vindelicia, a Roman province south of the 
Danube, bounded on the north by the Danube, 
which separated it from Germany, on the west 
by the territory of the Helvetii in Gaul, on the 
south by Ra3tia, and on the east by the River 
CEnus (now Inn), which separated it from Nor- 
icum, thus corresponding to the northeastern 
part of Switzerland, the southeast of Baden, 
the south of Wurtemberg and Bavaria, and the 
northern part of the Tyrol. It was originally 
part of the province of Ra»tia, and was con- 
quered by Tiberius in the reign of Augustus. 
At a later time Raetia was divided into two 
provinces, Raztia Prima and Rcetia Sccunda, 
the latter of which names was gradually sup- 



VINDEX, C. JULIUS. 



VIRBIUS. 



planted by that of Vindelicia. It was drained 
by the tributaries of the Danube, of which the 
most important were the Licias or Licus (now 
Lech), with its tributary the Vindo, Vinda, or 
Virdo (now Wertach), the Isarus (now Isar), and 
CEnus (now Inn). The eastern part of the La- 
cus Brigantinus (now Lake of Constance) also 
belonged to Vindelicia. The greater part of 
Vindelicia was a plain, but the southern portion 
was occupied by the northern slopes of the Alpes 
Raeticae. It derived its name from its chief in- 
habitants, the Vindelici, a warlike people dwell- 
ing in the south of the country. Their name is 
said to have been formed from the two rivers 
Vindo and Licus ; but it is more likely connect- 
ed with the Celtic word Vind, which is found in 
the names Vindobona, Fmdomagus, Vindonis- 
sa, &c. The Vindelici were a Celtic people, 
and were closely connected with the Raeti, with 
whom they are frequently spoken of by the an- 
cient writers, and along with whom they were 
subdued by Tiberius, as is mentioned above. 
The other tribes in Vindelicia were the Brigan- 
tii on the Lake of Constance, the Licatii or Li- 
cates on the Lech, and the Breuni in the north 
of Tyrol, on the Brenner. The chief town in 
the province was Augusta Vindelicorum (now 
Augsburg), at the confluence of Vindo and the 
Licus, which was made a Roman colony A.D. 
14, and was the residence of the governor of 
the province. This town, together with the 
other towns of Vindelicia, fell into the hands of 
the Alemanni in the fourth century, and from 
this time the population of the country appears 
to have been entirely Germanized. 

Vindex, C. Julius, propraetor of Gallia Cel- 
tica in the reign of Nero, was the first of the 
Roman governors who disowned the authority 
of Nero (A.D. 68). He did not, however, as- 
pire to the empire himself, but offered it to Gal- 
Da. Virginius Rufus, the governor of Upper 
Germany, marched with h*5 army against Vin- 
dex. The two generals had a conference be- 
fore Vesontio (now Besangon), in which they 
appear to have come to some agreement ; but 
as Vindex was going to enter the town, he was 
attacked by the soldiers of Virginius, and put 
an end to his own life. 

[Vindicianus, an eminent physician in the 
time of Valentinian, A.D. 364-375 : there are 
extant a letter addressed by him to the em- 
peror, and a poem on the medical art usually 
ascribed to him, though others assign it to Mar- 
cellus Empiricus. The poem is appended to 
several editions of Celsus, and is contained also 
In Burmann's Poeta Latini Minores.] 

Vindicius, a slave, who is said to have given 
information to the consuls of the conspiracy 
which was formed for the restoration of the 
Tarquins, and who was rewarded in conse- 
quence with liberty and the Roman franchise. 
He is said to have been the first slave manu- 
mitted by the Vindicta, the name of which was 
derived by some persons from that of the slave ; 
but it is unnecessary to point out the absurdity 
of this etymology. 

Vindili. Vid. Vandili. 

Vindilis (now Belle Isle), one of the isl- 
ands of the Veneti, off the northwestern coast 
of Gaul. 

Vindius or Vinnius, a mountain in the north- 
936 



west of Hispania Tarraconensis, forming the 
boundary between the Cantabri and Astures. 

Vindobona (now Vienna, English ; Wien, Ger- 
man), a town in Pannonia, on the Danube, was 
originally a Celtic place, and subsequently a 
Roman municipium. Under the Romans it be- 
came a town of importance ; it was the chief 
station of the Roman fleet on the Danube, and 
the head quarters of a Roman legion. It was 
taken and plundered by Attila, but continued to 
be a flourishing town under the Lombards. It 
was here that the Emperor M. Aurelius died, 

A. D. 180. 

Vindonissa (now Windisch), a town in Gallia 
Belgica, on the triangular tongue of land be- 
tween the Aar and Reuss, was an important 
Roman fortress in the country of the Helvetii. 
Several Roman remains have been discovered 
on the site of the ancient town ; and the foun- 
dations of walls, the traces of an amphitheatre, 
and a subterranean aqueduct are still to be 
seen. 

[Vinicianus, M. C^elius, tribune of the plebs 

B. C. 53, exerted himself to raise Pompey to 
the dictatorship, and was, in consequence, de- 
feated when he became a candidate for the cu- 
rule aedileship in B.C. 51. In the Civil war he 
espoused the cause of Caesar, who left him in 
Pontus with two legions after the conquest of 
Pharnaces in B.C. 48.] 

[Vinicius or Vinucius. 1. L., tribune of the 
plebs B.C. 51, put his veto on a senatuscon- 
sultum, directed against Caesar : perhaps the 
same Vinicius as the one who was consul suf- 
fectus in B.C. 33. — 2. M., born at Cales, in Cam- 
pania, was consul with C. Cassius Longinus in 
A.D. 30, in which year Paterculus dedicated his 
work to him. Vid. Paterculus. In A.D. 33 
Tiberius gave Julia Livilla, daughter of Ger- 
manicus, in marriage to Vinicius ; he was con- 
sul a second time in the reign of Claudius, A.D. 
45 ; though in the following year he was put to 
death by Messalina, to whom he had become 
an object of suspicion, and whose advances he 
had repulsed.] 

Vinius, T., consul in A.D. 69 with the Em- 
peror Galba, and one of the chief advisers of 
the latter during his brief reign. He recom- 
mended Galba to choose Otho as his successor^ 
but he was, notwithstanding, killed by Otho's 
soldiers after the death of Galba. 

Vipsania Agrippina. 1. Daughter of M. Vip- 
sanius Agrippa by his first wife Pomponia, the 
daughter of T. Pomponius Atticus, the friend of 
Cicero. Augustus gave her in marriage to his 
step-son Tiberius, by whom she was much be- 
loved ; but after she had borne him a son, Dru- 
sus, Tiberius was compelled to divorce her by 
the command of the emperor, in order to marry 
Julia, the daughter of the latter. Vipsania aft- 
erward married Asinius Gallus. She died ia 
A.D. 20. — 2. Daughter of M. Vipsanius Agrippa 
by his second wife Julia, better known by the 
name of Agrippina. Vid. Agrippina. 

VipsanIus Agrippa, M. Vid. Agrippa. 

Virbius, a Latin divinity worshipped along 
with Diana in the grove at Aricia, at the foot 
of the Alban Mount. He is said to have been 
the same as Hippolytus, who was restored to 
life by ^Esculapius at the request of Diana. He- 
was placed by this goddess under the care of the 



VIRDO. 

nymph Aricia.and received the name ofVirbius 
By this nymph he became the father of a son 
who was also called Virbius, and whom his 
mother sent to the assistance of Turnus against 
,/Eneas. 

VlRDO. Vid. VlNDELIClA. 

[Virgilianus, Q Fabii s, the legatus of Ap- 
pius Claudius Pulcher in Cilicia in B.C 51. He 
espoused the cause of Pompey on the breaking 
out of the Civil war in B.C. 49.] 

Virgilius or VhrgIlTcb Maro, P., the Roman 
poet, was born on the 15th of October, B.C. 70, 
at Andes (now Putola), a small village near 
Mantua, in Cisalpine Gaul. Virgil's father prob- 
ably had a small estate which he cultivated : 
his mother's name was Maia. He was educa- 
ted at Cremona and Mediolanum (now Milan), 
and he took the toga vinlis at Cremona on the 
day on which he commenced Ins sixteenth year, 
in 55. It is said that he subsequently studied 
at Neapolis (now Naples), under Partlienius, a 
native of Bithynia, from whom he learned 
Greek. He was also instructed by Syron, an 
Epicurean, and probably at Rome. Virgil's 
writings prove that he received a learned edu- 
cation, and traces of Epicurean opinions are 
apparent in them. The health of Virgil was 
always feeble, and there is no evidence of his 
attempting to rise by those means by which a 
Roman gained distinction, oratory and the prac- 
tice of arms. After completing his education, 
Virgil appears to have retired to his paternal 
farm, and here he may have written some of 
the small pieces which are attributed to him, the 
Culex, Ciris, Moretum, and others. After the 
battle of Philippi (42) Octavianus assigned to 
his soldiers lands in various parts of Italy ; and 
the neighborhood of Cremona and Mantua was 
one of the districts in which the soldiers were 
planted, and from which the former possessors 
were dislodged Virgil was thus deprived of 
his property. It is said that it was seized by a 
veteran named Claudius or Clodius, and that 
Asinius Pollio, who was then governor of Gallia 
Transpadana, advised Virgil to apply to Octa- 
vianus at Rome for the restitution of his land, 
and Octavianus granted his request. It is sup- 
posed that Virgil wrote the Eclogue which stands 
first in our editions to commemorate his grati- I 
tude to Octavianus. Virgil became acquainted J 
with Maecenas before Horace was, and Horace | 
(Sat., i., 5, and 0, 55, &c.) was introduced to Mae- 
cenas by Virgil Whether this introduction was 
in 41 or a little later, is uncertain ; but we may 
perhaps conclude, from the name of Maecenas not 
being mentioned in the Eclogues of Virgil, that 
he himself was not on those intimate terms with 
Maecenas which ripened into friendship until 
after 'they were written. Horace, in one of his 
Satires (Sat., i , 5), in which he describes the 
journey from Rome to Brundisium, mentions 
Virgil as one of the party, and in language 
which shows that they were then in the closest 
intimacy. The most finished work of Virgil, 
his Georgica, an agricultural poem, was under- 
taken at the suggestion of Maecenas (Georg., 
iii., 41). The concluding lines of the Georgica 
were written at Naples (Georg., iv., 559), and 
the poem was completed after the battle of Ac- 
tium, B.C. 31, while Octavianus was in the East. 
(Compare Georg., \y., 560, and ii., 171.) His 



VIRGILIUS. 

Eclogues had all been completed, and probably 

before the Georgica were begun (Georg, j v 

T uJ ^ Cp '° pocm of Vir W thr ^netd, was 
probably long contemplated bv the poet While 
Augustus was in Spam (27), he wrote to Vinril 
to express his wish to have some monument of 
his poetical talent Virgil appears to have com- 
menced the .Eneid about this time. In 23 died 
Marcellus, the son of Octavia, Ca-sar's sister by 
her first husband ; and as Virgil lost no oppor- 
tunity of gratifying his patron, he introduced 
into his sixth book of thc.Eneid(^.n the well- 
known allusion to the virtues of tins youth who 
was cut off by a premature death. Octavia is 
said to have been present when the port was 
reciting this allusion to her son, ami to have 
fainted from her emotions. She rewarded the 
poet munificently for Ins excusable flatterv \s 
Marcellus did not die till 23. these lines were 
of course written after his death, but that does 
not prove that the whole of the sixth book was 
written so late. A passage in the seventh book 
(606) appears to allude to Augustus receiving 
back the Parthian standards, which event be- 
longs to 20. When Augustus was returning 
from Samos, where he had spent the winter of 
20, he met Virgil at Athens. The poet, it is 
said, had intended to make a tour of Greece, 
but he accompanied the emperor to Megara and 
thence to Italy. His health, which had been 
long declining, was now completely broken, and 
he died soon after his arrival at Brundisium on 
the twenty-second of September, 19, not having 
quite completed his fifty-first year. His re- 
mains were transferred to Nap'les, which had 
been his favorite residence, and placed on the 
road from Naples to Puteoli (now Pozzuoli), 
where a monument is still shown, supposed to 
be the tornb of the poet. The inscription said 
to have been placed on the tomb, 

" Mantua DM genuit, Cnlabri rnpuero, trnrt nunc 
Partnenope. Cocini pascua. rura, ducr*," 

we can not suppose to have been written by the 
poet. Virgil named, as heredes in his testa- 
ment, his half-brother Valerius Proculus, to 
whom he left one half of his property, and also 
Augustus, Maecenas, L. Varius, and PlotiusTuc- 
ca. It is said that in his last illness he wished 
to burn the ^Eneid, to which he had not given 
the finishing touches, but his friends Would not 
allow him. Whatever he may have wished to 
be done with the yEneid. it was preserved and 
published by his friends Varius and Tucca. The 
poet had been enriched by the liberality of his 
patrons, atid he left behind him a considerable 
property, and a house on the Esquiline Hill, near 
the gardens of Maecenas. He used his wealth 
liberally, and his library, which was doubtless a 
good one, was easy of access. He used to send 
his parents money every year. His father, who 
became blind, did not die before his son had at- 
tained a mature age. Two brothers of Virgil 
also died before him. In his fortunes and his 
friends Virgil was a happy man. Munificent 
patronage gave him ample means of enjoyment 
and of leisure, and he had the friendship of all 
the most accomplished men of the day, among 
whom Horace entertained a strong affection for 
him. He was an amiable, good-tempered man r 
free from the mean passions of envy and jeal- 

937 



VIRGILIUS. 



VIRGILIUS. 



ousy ; and in all but health he was prosperous. 
His fame, which was established in his life-time, 
was cherished after his death, as an inheritance 
in which every Roman had a share ; and his 
works became school-books even before the 
death of Augustus, and continued such for cen- 
turies after. The learned poems of Virgil soon 
gave employment to commentators and critics. 
Aulus Gellius has numerous remarks on Virgil, 
and Macrobius, in his Saturnalia, has filled four 
books (iii.-vi.) with his critical remarks on Vir- 
gil's poems. One of the most valuable com- 
mentaries on Virgil, in which a great amount of 
curious and instructive matter has been pre- 
served, is that of Servius. Vid. Servius. Vir- 
gil is one of the most difiicuit of the Latin 
authors, not so much for the form of the ex- 
pression, though that is sometimes ambiguous 
enough, but from the great variety of knowledge 
that is required to attain his meaning in all its 
fullness. Virgil was the great poet of the Mid- 
dle Ages too. To him Dante paid the homage 
of his superior genius, and owned him for his 
master and his model. Among the vulgar he 
had the reputation of a conjurer, a necromancer, 
a worker of miracles ; it is the fate of a great 
name to be embalmed in fable. The ten short 
poems called Bucolica were the earliest works 
of Virgil, and probably all written between 41 
and 37. These Bucolica are not Bucolica in 
the same sense as the poems of Theocritus, 
■which have the same title. They have all a 
Bucolic form and coloring, but some of them 
have nothing more. They are also called Eclo- 
gas or Selections, but this name may not have 
originated with the poet. Their merit consists 
in their versification, which was smoother and 
more polished than the hexameters which the 
Romans had yet seen, and in many natural and 
simple touches. But as an attempt to transfer 
the Syracusan muse into Italy, they are certainly 
a failure, and we read the pastorals of Theo- 
critus and of Virgil with a very different degree 
of pleasure. The fourth Eclogue, entitled Pol- 
lio, which may have been written in 40, after 
the peace of Brundisium, has nothing of the 
pastoral character about it. It is allegorical, 
mystical, half historical and prophetical, enig- 
matical — any thing, in fact, but Bucolic. The 
first Eclogue is Bucolic in form and in treatment, 
with an historical basis. The second Eclogue, 
the Alexis, is an amatory poem, with a Bucolic 
coloring, which, indeed, is the characteristic of 
all Virgil's Eclogues, whatever they may be in 
substance. The third, the fifth, the seventh, 
and the ninth are more clearly modelled on the 
form of the poems of his Sicilian prototype ; and 
the eighth, the Pharmaceutria, is a direct imita- 
tion of the original Greek. The tenth, entitled 
Gallus, perhaps written the last of all, is a love 
poem, which, if written in elegiac verse, would 
be more appropriately called an elegy than a Bu- 
colic. The Georgica, or " Agricultural Poem,'" 
in four books, is a didactic poem, which Virgil j 
dedicated to his patron Maecenas. He treats of 
the cultivation of the soil in the first book, of 
fruit-trees in the second, of horses and other 
cattle in the third, and of bees in the fourth. 
In this poem Virgil shows a great improve- 
ment both in his taste and in his versification. 
Neither in the Georgics nor elsewhere has Vir- 
938 



gil the merit of striking originality ; his chief 
merit consists in the skillful handling of borrow- 
ed materials. His subject, which was by no 
means promising, he treated in a manner both 
instructive and pleasing ; for he has given 
many useful remarks on agriculture, and diver- 
sified the dryness of didactic poetry by numer- 
ous allusions and apt embellishments, and some 
occasional digressions without wandering too 
far from his main matter. In the first book he 
enumerates the subjects of his poem, among 
which is the treatment of bees ; yet the man- 
agement of bees seems but meagre material for 
one fourth of the whole poem, and the author 
accordingly had to complete the fourth book 
with matter somewhat extraneous — the long 
story of Aristaeus. The Georgica is the most 
finished specimen of the Latin hexameter which 
we have: and the rude vigor of Lucretius and 
the antiquated rudeness of Ennius are here re- 
placed by a versification which in its kind can 
not be surpassed. The Georgica are also the 
most original poem of Virgil, for he found little 
in the Works and Days of Hesiod that could 
furnish him with hints for the treatment of his 
subject, and we are not aware that there was 
any work which he could exactly follow as a 
whole. For numerous single lines he was in- 
debted to his extensive reading of the Greek 
poets. The Mneid, or adventures of ..Eneas 
after the fall of Troy, is an epic poem on the 
model of the Homeric poems. It was founded 
upon an old Roman tradition that JEneas and 
his Trojans settled in Italy, and were the found- 
ers of the Roman name. In the first book we 
have the story of iEneas being driven by a 
storm on the coast of Africa, and being hospi- 
tably received by Dido, queen of Carthage, to 
whom he relates in the episode of the second 
and third books the fall of Troy and his wander- 
ings. In the fourth book the poet has elabo- 
rated the story of the attachment of Dido and 
yEneas, the departure of /Eneas in obedience 
to the will of the gods, and the suicide of the 
Carthaginian queen. The fifth book contains 
the visit to Sicily, and the sixth the landing of 
/Eneas at Cumas in Italy, and his descent to the 
infernal regions, where he sees his father An- 
chises, and has a prophetic vision of the glorious 
destinies of his race and of the future heroes of 
Rome. In the first six books the adventures of 
Ulysses in the Odyssey are the model, and these 
books contain more variety of incident and sit- 
uation than those which follow. The critics 
have discovered an anachronism in the visit of 
/Eneas to Carthage, which is supposed not to 
have been founded until two centuries after the 
fall of Troy, but this is a matter which we may 
leave without discussion, or admit without al- 
lowing it to be a poetical defect. The last six 
booksTthe history of the struggles of -Eneas in. 
Italy, are founded on the model of the battles 
of the Iliad. Latinus, the king of the Latini, 
| offers the Trojan hero his daughter Lavinia in 
marriage, who had been betrothed to Turnus, 
the warlike king of the Rutuli. The contest ia 
ended by the death of Turnus, who falls by the 
hand of ^Eneas. The fortunes of /Eneas and 
his final settlement in Italy are the subject of 
the /Eneid, but the glories of Rome and of the 
Julian house, to which Augustus belonged, are 



VIRGIUl/S. 

indirectly the poet's theme. In the lirst book 
the foundation of Alba Longa is promised by 
Jupiter to Venus (JEneid, L, 254), and tbe trans- 
fer of empire from Alba to Rome ; from the 
line of^Eneas will descend tbe "Trojan Cae- 
sar," whose empire will only be limited by tbe 
ocean, and whose glory by the heavens. The 
future rivalry between Rome and Carthage, and 
the ultimate triumphs of Rome are predicted. 
The poems abound in allusions to the history of 
Rome ; and the aim of the poet to confirm and 
embellish the popular tradition of the Trojan 
origin of the Roman state, and the descent of 
the Julii from Venus, is apparent all through the 
poem. It is objected to the ^Eneid that it has 
not the unity of construction either of the Iliad 
or of the Odyssey, and that it is deficient in that 
antique simplicity which characterizes these 
two poems. JEncas, the hero, is an insipid 
kind of personage, and a much superior interest 
is excited by the savage Mezentius, and also by 
Turnus, the unfortunate rival of ^Eneas. Virgil 
imitated other poets besides Homer, and he has 
occasionally borrowed from them, especially 
from Apollonius of Rhodes. If Virgil's subject 
was difficult to invest with interest, that is his 
apology ; but it can not be denied that many 
parts of his poem are successfully elaborated, 
and that particular scenes and incidents are 
treated with true poetic spirit. The historical 
coloring which pervades it, and the great amount 
of antiquarian learning which he has scattered 
through it, make the .Eneid a study for tbe his- 
torian of Rome. Virgil's good sense and taste 
are always conspicuous, and make up for the 
defect of originality. As a whole, the ^Eneid 
leaves no strong impression, which arises from 
the fact that it is not really a national poem, 
like the Iliad or the Odyssey, the monument of 
an age of which we have no other literary mon- 
ument ; it is a learned poem, the production of 
an age in which it does not appear as an em- 
bodiment of the national feeling, but as a mon- 
ument of the talent and industry of an individ- 
ual. Virgil has the merit of being the best of 
the Roman epic poets, superior both to Ennius 
who preceded him, and on whom he levied con- 
tributions, and to Lucan, Silius Italicus, and Va- 
lerius Flaccus, who belong to a later age. The 
passion for rhetorical display, which character- 
izes all the literature of Rome, is much less 
offensive in Virgil than in those who followed 
him in the line of epic poetry. The larger edi- 
tions of Virgil contain some short poems, which 
are attributed to him, and may have been among 
his earlier works. The Culcx, or Gnat, is a kind 
of Bucolic poem, in four hundred and thirteen 
hexameters, often very obscure ; the Ciris, or 
the mythus of Scylla, the daughter of Nisus, 
Xing of Megara, in five hundred and forty-one 
hexameters, has been attributed to Cornelius 
Gallus and others ; the Morctum, in one hundred 
and twenty-three verses, the name of a com- 
pound mess, is a poem in hexameters, on the 
daily labor of a cultivator, but it contains only 
the description of the labors of the first part of 
the day, w hich consist in preparing the More- 
turn ; the Copa, in elegiac verse, is an invita- 
tion by a female tavern-keeper or servant at- 
tached to a Caupona, to passengers to come in 
and enjoy themselves. There are also fourteen 



ViRGINIUS UUFCS. 

short pieces in various metres, classed under 
'■ tbe general name of CaUUctm. Thai addressed 
< 'Ad Venerea" ■bows that the writer, whoever 
I be was, bad a talent for elegiac poetry. Of the 
I ^mcrous editions of Virgil, the best are by 
liurmann, Amsterdam, 1746, 4 vols. 4to • br 
Heyne, 1767-1775, laps., 4 vols 8vo, of which 
tbe fourth edition contains important improve- 
ments by Wagner, laps., 1830, 5 vote. 8vo • 
and by rorbiger, laps., 1S15-IH40, 3 vols 8vo 
(second edition). 

[Virgilius, C, praetor B.C. 62, had Q. Cicero 
as one of his colleagues. Next year, B C. 61, 
he governed Sicily as proprajtor, where IV Clo- 
dius served under him as quaestor. He was 
still in Sicily in B.C. 58, when Cicero was ban- 
ished, and refused to allow the latter refuge in 
his province. In the Civil war Virgilius es- 
poused the cause of Pompey. and bad tbe com- 
mand of Thapsus, together with a tied, m B.C. 
46. After the battle of Tbapsus, Virgilius at 
first refused to surrender tbe town, but subse- 
quently, seeing resistance hopeless, he surren- 
dered tbe place to Caninius Rebilus.] 

Virginia, daughter of L. Virginius, a brave 
centurion, was a beautiful and innocent girl, 
betrothed to L. Icilius. Her beauty i ceiled the 
lust of the decemvir Appius Claudius, who got 
one of his clients to seize the damsel and claim 
her as his slave. The case was brought before 
the decemvir for decision ; her friends begged 
him to postpone his judgment till her father 
could be fetched from the camp, and offered to 
give security for the appearance of the maiden. 
Appius, fearing a riot, agreed to let the cause 
stand over till the next day ; but on the follow- 
ing morning he pronounced sentence, assigning 
Virginia to his freedman. Her father, who had 
come from the camp, seeing that all hope was 
gone, prayed the decemvir to be allowed to 
speak one word to the nurse in bis daughter's 
hearing, in order to ascertain whether she was 
really his daughter. The request was granted ; 
Virginius drew them both aside, and snatching 
up a butcher's knife from one of the stalls, 
plunged it in his daughter's breast, exclaiming, 
"There is no way but this to keep thee free." 
In vain did Appius call out to slop him. The 
crowd made way for him ; and, bidding his 
bloody knife on high, he rushed to tbe gate of 
the city, and hastened to the Roman camp 
The result is known. Both camp and city rose 
against the decemvirs, who were deprived of 
their power, and the old form of government 
was restored. L. Virginius was the first who 
was elected tribune, and he hastened to take 
revenge upon his cruel enemy. By his orders 
Appius was dragged to prison to await his trial, 
and he there put an end to his own life in order 
to avoid a more ignominious death. 

Virginia or Vekgi'nia Gkns. patrician and 
plebeian. The patrician Virgimi frequently filled 
the highest honors of the state during the earlj 
years of the republic. They all bore the cog- 
nomen of Tricoslus, but none of them are of 
sufficient importance to require a separate no- 
tice. 

Virginius, L., father of Virginia, whose tragic 
fate occasioned the downfall of tbe decemvirs, 
B.C. 449. Fid. Virginia. 

Virginius Rukus, consul A.D. 63. and gor- 

939 



VIRIATHUS. 



VITELLIUS. 



ernor of Upper Germany at the time of the re- 
volt of Julius Vindex in Gaul (68). The sol- 
diers of Virginius wished to raise him to the 
empire ; but he refused the honor, and marched 
against Vindex, who perished before Vesontio. 
Vid. Vindex. After the death of Nero, Vir- 
ginius supported the claims of Galba, and ac- 
companied him to Rome. After Otho's death, 
the soldiers again attempted to proclaim Virgin- 
jus emperor, and, in consequence of his refusal 
of the honor, he narrowly escaped with his life. 
Virginius died in the reign of Nerva, in his third 
consulship, AD. 97, at eighty-three years of age. 
He was honored with a public funeral, and his 
panegyric was pronounced by the historian Tac- 
itus, who was then consul. The younger Pliny, 
of whom Virginius had been the tutor or guard- 
ian, also mentions him with praise. 

Viriathus, a celebrated Lusitanian, is de- 
scribed by the Romans as originally a shepherd 
or huntsman, and afterward a robber, or, as he 
would be called in Spain at the present day, a 
guerilla chief. His character is drawn very 
favorably by many of the ancient writers, who 
celebrate his justice and equity, which was 
particularly shown in the fair division of the 
spoils he obtained from the enemy. Viriathus 
was one of the Lusitanians who escaped the 
treacherous and savage massacre of the people 
by the proconsul Galba in B.C. 150. Vid. Galba, 
No. 2. He was destined to be the avenger of 
his country's wrongs. He collected a formida- 
ble force, and for several successive years he 
defeated one Roman army after another. At 
length, in 140, the proconsul Fabius Servilianus 
concluded a peace with Viriathus in order to 
save his army, which had been inclosed by the 
Lusitanians in a mountain pass, much in the 
same way as their ancestors had been by the 
Samnites at the Caudine Forks. The treaty 
was ratified by the senate ; but Servilius Ca?pio, 
who had succeeded to the command of Further 
Spain in 140, renewed the war, and shortly aft- 
erward procured the assassination of Viriathus 
by bribing three of his friends. 

Viridomarus. 1. Or Britomartus, the lead- 
er of the Gauls, slain by Marcellus. Vid. Mar- 
cellos, No. 1. — 2. Or Virdumarus, a chieftain 
of the ^Edui, whom Caesar had raised from a 
low rank to the highest honor, but who after- 
ward joined the Gauls in their great revolt in 
B.C. 52. 

[Viridovix, the chieftain of the Unelli, was 
conquered by Q. Titurius Sabinus, Caesar's le- 
gatus in B.C. 56 ] 

Virtus, the Roman personification of manly 
valor. She was represented with a short tunic, 
her right breast uncovered, a helmet on her 
head, a spear in her left hand, a sword in the 
right, and standing with her right foot on a hel- 
met. A temple of Virtus was built by Marcel- 
lus close to one of Honor. Vid. Honor. 

Viscellinus, Sp. Cassius. Vid. Cassius, 
No. I. 

[Viscus. 1. Surnamed Thurinus, probably 
from his native place Thurii in Calabria, a poet 
and friend of Horace and Maecenas, one of the 
guests at the supper of Nasidienus described by 
Horace (Sat., ii., 8, 20).— 2. Vibius Viscus, a 
Roman knight, who, though possessed of great 
wealth and enjoying the favor of Augustus, pre- ! 



ferred remaining in the equestrian order: he 
was the father oV the two Visci, who are praised 
as poets, and were on intimate terms with Hor- 
ace.] 

Vistula (now Vistula, English; Weichsd. 
German), an important river of Germany, form- 
ing the boundary between Germany and Sarma- 
tia, rising in the Hercynia Silva, and falling into 
the Mare Suevicum or the Baltic. 

Visurgis (now Weser), an important river of 
Germany, falling into the German Ocean. Ptol- 
emy makes it rise in Mount Meliboeus, because 
the Romans were not acquainted with the south- 
ern course of the Weser below Minden. 

Vitellius. 1. L., father of the emperor, 
was a consummate flatterer, and by his arts 
gained promotion. After being consul in A.D. 
34, he had been appointed governor of Syria, 
and had made favorable terms of peace with Ar- 
tabanus. But all this only excited Caligula's 
jealousy, and he sent for Vitellius to put him to 
death. The governor saved himself by his ab- 
ject humiliation and the gross flattery which 
pleased and softened the savage tyrant. He 
paid the like attention to Claudius and Messa- 
lina, and was rewarded by being twice consul 
with Claudius, and censor. — 2. L., son of the 
preceding, and brother of the emperor, was con- 
sul in 48. He was put to death by the party of 
Vespasian on his brother's fail. — 3 A.. Roman 
emperor from January 2d to December 22d„ 
A.D. 69, was the son of No. 1. He was consul 
during the first six months of 48, and his broth- 
er Lucius during the six following months. He 
had some knowledge of letters and some elo- 
quence. His vices made him a favorite of Ti- 
berius, Caius Caligula, Claudius, and Nero, who 
loaded him with favors. People were much sur- 
prised when Galba chose such a man to com- 
mand the legions in Lower Germany, for he had 
no military talent. His great talent was eat- 
ing and drinking. The soldiers of Vitellius pro- 
claimed him emperor at Colonia Agrippinensis 
(now Cologne) on the 2d of January, 69. His 
generals Fabius Valens and Caecina marched 
into Italy, defeated Otho's troops at the decisive 
battle of Bedriacum, and thus secured for Vi- 
tellius the undisputed command of Italy. The 
soldiers of Otho, after the death of the latter, 
took the oath of fidelity to Vitellius. Vitellius 
reached Rome in July. He did not disturb any 
person in the enjoyment of what had been given 
by Nero, Galba, and Otho, nor did he confis- 
cate any man's property. Though some of 
Otho's adherents were put to death, he let the 
next of kin take their property. But, though he 
showed moderation in this part of his conduct, 
he showed none in his expenses. He was a 
glutton and an epicure, and his chief amuse- 
ment was the table, on which he spent enor- 
mous sums of money. Meantime Vespasian, 
who had at first taken the oath of allegiance to 
Vitellius, was proclaimed emperor at Alexan 
drea on the 1st of July. Vespasian was speed- 
ily recognized by all the East ; and the legions 
of Illyricum, under Antonius Primus, entered 
the north of Italy and declared for Vespasian. 
Vitellius dispatched Caecina with a powerful 
force to oppose Primus ; but Caecina was not 
faithful to the emperor. Primus defeated the 
Vitellians in two battles, and afterward took 



VITIA. 

and pillaged the city of Cremona. Primus then 
marched upon Rome, and forced his way into 
the city, after much fighting. Vitellius was 
seized in the palace, led through the streets 
with every circumstance of ignominy, and drag- 
ged to the Gemonic Scale, where he was killed 
with repeated blows. His head was carried 
about Rome, and his body was dragged into the 
Tiber; but it wars afterward interred by his 
wife Galeria Fundana. A few days before the 
death of Vitellius, the Capitol had been burned 
in the assault made by his soldiers upon this 
building, where Flavius Sabinus, the brother of 
the Emperor Vespasian, had taken refuge. 

[Vitia, the mother of Fufius Geminus, was 
put to death by Tiberius in A.D. 32 because she 
had lamented tin; execution of her son, who 
had been consul in A.D. 29 ] 

VitruvIus Poluo, M., the author of the cel- 
ebrated treatise on Architecture, of whom we 
know nothing except a few facts contained in 
scattered passages of his own work. He ap- 
pears to have served as a military engineer un- 
der Julius Caesar, in the African war, B.C. 46, 
and he was broken down with age when he 
composed his work, whieh is dedicated to the 
Emperor Augustus. (The name of the emper- 
or is not mentioned in the dedication, but there 
can be no doubt tliatjt was Augustus.) The 
object of his work ap'pears to have had refer- 
ence to himself a* well as to his subject. He 
professes his intention to furnish the emperor 
with a standard by which to judge of the build- 
ings he had already erected, as well as of those 
which he might afterward erect; which can 
have no meaning, unless he wished to protest 
against the style of architecture which prevail- 
ed in the buildings already erected. That this 
was really bis intention appears from several 
other arguments, and especially from his fre- 
quent references to the unworthy means by 
which architects obtained wealth and favor, 
with which he contrasts his own moderation 
and contentment in bis more obscure position. 
In a word, comparatively unsuccessful as an 
architect, for we have no building of his men- 
tioned except the basilica at Fanum, he attempt- 
ed to establish his reputation as a writer upon 
the theory of his art j and in this he has been 
tolerably successful. His work is a valuable 
compendium of those written by numerous 
Greek architects, whom he mentions chiefly in 
the preface to his seventh book, and by some 
Roman writers on architecture. Its chief de- 
fects are its brevity, of which Vitruvius him- 
self boasts, and which he often carries so far as 
to be unintelligible, and the obscurity of the 
style, arising in part from the natural difficulty 
of technical language, but in part also from the 
author's want of skill in writing, and sometimes 
from his imperfect comprehension of his Greek 
authorities His work is entitled De Architec- 
ture. Libri X. In the First Book, after the ded- 
ication to the emperor, and a general descrip- 
tion of the science of architecture, and an ac- 
count of the proper education of an architect, 
he treats of the choice of a proper site for a 
city, the disposition of its plan, its fortifications, 
and the several buildings within it. The Sec- 
ond Book is on the materials used in building. 
The Third and Fourth Books are devoted to 



VOLATERRvE. 

temples and the four orders of architecture ero- 
P oyed in them, namely, the Ionic, Corinthian 
j Done, and luscan. The Fifth Bool; relate* t, 
| public buildings, the Sixth to private houses 
i and the Seventh to interior decorations. Tin' 
l highth is on the subject of water ; the mode of 
finding it ; its different kinds ; and the various 
modes oi conveying ,t for the suppl) of cities 
I he NtrUh Book treats of vario,,.. kinds of sun- 
dials and other instruments fur measurinc time 
and the lenth of the machines us .1 in budd- 
ing and of military engines Bscs boss] has a 
preface, upon some matter more or l, >s con- 
nected with the subject; and these prefaces 
are the source of most of our information about 
the author. The best edition.- of Vnruvius are 
those of Schneider, 3 vols , , isu;, lsOS, 
8vo; ofStratico. 4 vols, l.dino. Lsj.-,-:!0. with 
plates and a Lexicon Vttrumanum ; and of Mar: 
ni, 4 vols., Rom., 18:JG, (si 

[Vivisci. Vid Bituriues, No 2 ] 
Vocates, a people in Gallia Aiju;tamca, dwell- 
ing in the neighborhood of the Tarusaies, Sos- 
siates, and Elusates, probably in the modern 
Tursan or Tcursan. 

VocetIus (now Bozhcrp), a mountain in Gal- 
lia Belgica, an eastern branch of the Jura. 
Voconius Saxa. Vid. Saxa. 
Vocontii, a powerful and important people in 
Gallia Narbonensis, inhabiting the southeastern 
part of Dauphme, and a part of i'rov. nr. . be- 
tween the Drac and the Durance, bounded on 
the north by the Allobroges, and on the south 
; by the Salyes and Albiceei. Their country con- 
! tained large and beautiful valleys between the 
! mountains, in which good wine was grown. 
| They were allowed by the Romans to live un- 
der their own laws, and, though in a Roman 
province, they were the allies and not the sub 
jects of Rome. 

Vogesus or Vosgesus (now Yospes), a range 
of mountains in Gaul, in the territory of the 
Lingones, running parallel to the Rhine, and 
separating its basin from that of the Mosella. 
The rivers Sequana (now Seme), Arar(now Sa- 
dne), and the Mosella (now Moselle), rise in 
these mountains. 

Volandum, a strong fortress in Armenia Ma- 
jor, some days' journey west of Artaxata, men- 
tioned by Tacitus (Ann., xni , 39). 

Volatebr/e ( Volaterra I us ; now Volaterra), 
called by the Etruscans Velathri, one of the 
twelve cities of the Etruscan Confederation, 
was built on a lofty hill, about eighteen thou- 
sand English feet above the level of the sea, 
rising from a deep valley, and precipitous on 
every side. The city was about four or five 
miles in circuit. It was the most northerly city 
of the Confederation, and possessed an extens- 
ive territory. Its dominions extended eastward 
as far as the territory of Arretium. which was 
fifty miles distant ; westward as far as the Med- 
iterranean, which was more than twenty miles 
off ; and southward at least as far as Populonia, 
which was either a colony or an acquisition of 
Volaterra*. In consequence of possessing the 
two great ports of Luna and Populonia, Vola- 
terra?, though so far inland, was reckoned as one 
of the powerful maritime cities of Etruria. Vol- 
aterrae is mentioned as one of the five cities 
which, acting independently of the rest of Etru- 

941 



YOLATERRANA VADA. 



Y0LUSIAX7S 



ria, determined to aid the Latins against Tar- 
quinius Prisons ; but its name is rarely men- 
t»oned in connection with the Romans, and we 
have no record of its conquest by the latter. 
Yolaterrae. like most of the Etruscan cities, 
espoused the Marian party against Sulla ; and 
such was the strength of its fortifications, that 
it was not till afier a siege of two years that 
the city fell into Sulla's hands. Cicero speaks 
of Yolaterrae as a municipium. and a military 
colony was founded in it under the triumvirate 
It continued to be a place of importance even 
after the fall of the Western Empire ; and it 
was for a time the residence of the Lombard 
kings, who fixed their court here on account of 
the natural strength of the site. The modern 
town covers but a small portion of the area oc- 
cupied by the ancient city. It contains, how- 
ever, several interesting Etruscan remains. 
Of these the most important, in addition to the 
ancient wails, are the family tomb of the Ca- 
rina?, and a double gateway, nearly thirty feet 
deep, united by parallel wails of very massive 
character 

YolatesrIxa Yai>a Yii. Yada, No. 3. 

Yolcs:. a powerful Celtic people in Gall a 
Narbonensis. divided into the two tribes of the 
Yolcae Tectosages and the Yolcae Arecomici, 
extending from the Pyrenees and the frontiers 
of Aqaiiania along the coast as far as the 
Rhone. They lived under their own laws, 
without being subject to the Roman governor 
of the province, and they also possessed the 
Jus Latii. The Tectosages inhabited the west- 
ern part of the country from the Pyrenees as 
far as Narbo, and the Arecomici the eastern 
part from Narbo to the Rhone. The chief town 
of the Tectosages was Tolosa A portion of 
the Tectosages left their native country under 
Brennus. and were one of the three great tribes 
into which the Galatians in Asia Minor were 
divided. Vid. Galatia. 

Yolcatit? Ssm&rrcs. Wl. Sedigitcs 

[Yolcatius Tcllus. C, a Roman officer, who 
was left by Csesar in charge of the bridge over 
the Rhine when he was setting out on the ex- 
pedition against Ambiorix] 

Yolci or Yclci. 1. (Yolcientes, pi. : now 
Vulciy. an inland city of Etruria, about eighteen 
miles northwest of Tarquinii. was about two 
miles in circuit, and was situated upon a hill 
of no great elevation. Of the history of this 
city we know nothing. It is only mentioned in 
the catalogues of the geographers and in the 
Fasti Capitolini, from which we learn that its 
citizens, in conjunction with the Yolsinienses, 
were defeated by the consul Tib. Coruncanius. 
B.C. 2S0. But its extensive sepulchres, and 
the vast treasures of ancient art which they 
contain, prove that Yulci must at one time have 
been a powerful and flourishing city. These 
tombs were only discovered in 1828, and have 
yielded a greater number of works of art than 
have been discovered in any other parts of 
Etruria. — 2. (Yoleentes, Yolcentani, pi. : now 
F«B»), a town in Lncania, thirty-six miles 
southeast of Paestum, on the road to Buxentum. 

VoLtEO PcBULICS. Vid. PcBLILICS. 

[Volets. Vid. Yoluscs.] 
Volossses. the name of five kines of Parthia. 
VuL Aesaces, Nos. 23, 27, 23, 29, 30 
942 



[Volscexs. a Rutulian warrior in the army 
of Turncs : he encountered Nisus and Euryahxa 
as they were returning from their expedition to 
the Rutulian camp, loaded with booty, slew En- 
ryalus, and was himself slain by Nisus ] 

Yolsci, an ancient people in Latium, but 
originally distinct from the Latins, dwelt on 
both sides of the River Liris. and extended 
down to the Tyrrhene Sea. Their language 
was nearly allied to the Umbrian. They were 
from an early period engaged in almost unceas- 
ing hostilities with the Romans, and were not 
completely subdued by the latter till B.C. 33S, 
from which time they disappear from history. 

Volsixh or Vrxsixu (Yolsiniensis : now Bci- 
sena), called Yelsixa or Yelscxa by the Etrus- 
cans, one of the most ancient and most power- 
ful of the twelve cities of the Etruscan Confed- 
eration, was situated on a lofty hill on the north- 
eastern extremity of the lake called after it 
Laccs Yolsixiexsis and Yclsixiexsis (now 
Lajzo di Bolsma). Yolsinii is first mentioned 
in B.C. 392. when its inhabitants invaded the 
Roman territory, but were easily defeated by 
the Romans, and were glad to purchase a twen- 
ty years' truce on humiliating terms. The Vol- 
sinienses also carried on war with the Romans 
in 311. 294. and 280, but were on each occasion 
defeated, and in the last of these years appear 
to have been finally subdued. On their final 
subjugation their city was razed to the ground 
by the Romans, and its inhabitants were com- 
pelled to settle on a less defensible site in the 
plain. The new city, on which stands the mod- 
ern B:xscKa. also became a place of importance. 
It was the birth-place of Sejanus, the favorite of 
Tiberius. Of the ancient city there are scarcely 
any remains. It occupied the summit of the 
highest hill, northeast of Bolsena, above the re- 
mains of a Roman amphitheatre. From the 
Lacus Yolsiniensis the River Marta issues ; and 
the lake contains two beautiful islands. 

[ Ycltcmx a. an Etrurian goddess, at whose 
temple on Mons Ciminius (q. v.) the Etrurian 
Confederation used to hold their general as- 
semblies] 

YoltcbcIcs or Yclturcics, T., of Crotona, 
one of Catiline's conspirators, was sent by Len- 
tulus to accompany the ambassadors of the AI- 
lobroges to Catiline. Arrested along with the 
ambassadors on the Mulvian bridge, and brought 
before the senate by Cicero, Yolturcius turned 
informer upon obtaining the promise of pardon. 

[YoLTCExrs. Vid. Ycltcbxcs ] 

YoLotxiA. wife of Coriolanus. Vid. Cono- 

LaXTS. 

YolcpIa or Yolcptas, the personification of 
sensual pleasure among the Romans, was hon- 
ored with a temple near the porta Romanula. 

[Yolcssxcs Qcadeatcs, C, a tribune of 
soldiers under Caesar in his Gallic wars, is 
spoken of by the latter as a brave and prudent 
officer, and was therefore employed on several 
difficult and dangerous enterprises. At a later 
period in the war he was prsefectus equitum in 
the contest with Commius, king of the Atreba- 
tes, under Antony, and afterward, as tribune of 
the plebs in B.C." 43, was one of the supporters 
of Antony ] 

Yolcsiaxcs, son of the Emperor Trehooianos 
Gallus, upon whom his father conferred the 



VOLUSIUS M^ECIANUS. 

title of Caesar in A D. 251, and of Augustus in 
252. He was slain along with his father in 
254. Vid. Callus. 

Volusius M.tci.lxi's, L. f a jurist, was in the 
consilium of Antoninus Pius, and was one of the 
teachers of M. Aurelius. Maccianus wrote sev- 
eral works ; and there are forty-four excerpts 
from his writings in the Digest. A treatise, 
De Assc et Pondenbus, is attributed to him, but 
there is some doubt about the authorship. It 
is edited by Booking, Bonn, 1831. 

Volusus or Volksus. [!. One of the most 
distinguished chiefs in the army of Turnus ; 
had command of the infantry of the Volsci and 
the Rutuli.]— 2. The reputed ancestor of the 
Valeria gens, who is said to have settled at 
Rome with Titus Tatius. Vid. Valeria Gens. 

[Volux, the son of Bocchus, king of Maure- 
tania, sent by his father, at the head of a large 
body of cavalry, to meet Sulla, and escort him 
to the royal presence ] 

Vomanus, (now Vomano), a small river in 
Picenum. 

Vonones, the name of two kings of Parthia. 
Vid. Arsaces, Nos. 18, 22. 

Vopiscus, a Roman praenomen, signified a 
twin child who was born safe, while the other 
twin died before birth. Like many other an- 
cient Roman praenomens, it was afterward used 
as a cognomen. 

Vopiscus, Flayus, a native of Syracuse, and 
one of the six Scnptores Histories Augusts, flour- 
ished about A D. 300. His name is prefixed to 
the biographies of, 1 Aurelianus; 2. Tacitus; 
3. Florianus ; 4. Probus ; 5 The four tyrants, 
Firmus, Saturninus, Proculus, and Bonosus ; 
6. Carus; 7. Numerianus ; 8. Carinus ; at this 
point he stops, declaring that Diocletian, and 
those who follow, demand a more elevated style 
of composition. For editions, vid. Capitolinus. 

[Voranus, a person mentioned in the Satires 
of Horace as a notorious thief, said to have been 
a freedman of Q Lutatius Catulus.] 

VoSGESUS. V id. VOGESUS- 

VoTIENUS MoNTANUS. Vid. MoNTANUS. 

VulcanL'e Insul/e. Vid. ^oli/E Insula. 

Vulcanus, the Roman god of fire, whose 
name seems to be connected with f ulcere, Jul- 
gur, and fulmen. His worship was of consid- 
erable political importance at Rome, for a tem- 
ple is said to have been erected to him close by 
the comitium as early as the time of Romulus 
and Tatius, in which the two kings used to 
meet and settle the afTairs of the state, and 
near which the popular assembly was held. 
Tatius is reported to have established the wor- 
ship of Vulcan along with that of Vesta, and 
Romulus to have dedicated to him a quadriga 
after his victory over the Fidenates, and to 
have set up a statue of himself near the tem- 
ple. According to others, the temple was built 
by Romulus himself, who also planted near it 
the sacred lotus-tree which still existed in the 
days of Pliny. These circumstances, and what 
is related of the lotus-tree, show that the tem- 
ple of Vulcan, like that of Vesta, was regarded 
as a central point of the whole state, and hence 
it was perhaps not without a meaning that the 
temple of Concord was subsequently built with- 
in the same district. The most ancient festi- 
val in honor of Vulcan seems to have been the 



XAXTHICLES. 

Fornacalia or Furnalia, Vulcan bring the *od 
of furnaces ; but his great festival w ? as railed 
V ulcanaha, and was celebrated on the 23d of 
August. The Roman por ts transfer all the sto- 
nes which are related of the Creek HephsMM 
to their own Vulcan, the two divinities having 
in the course of time been completely identi- 
fied. Respecting the Creek divinity, rut Hit- 

Vulci. Vid. Volci. 

Vulgientes, an Alpine people in Gallia Nar- 
bonensis, whose chief town was Ipta lulu 
(now Apt). 

VULSINII. Vid. VoLSINII. 

Vulso, ManlIus. l. L., consul B I V IM with 
M. Alihus Regulus He invaded Afnea along 
with his colleague. For details, r ,d Kn;n.e*. 
l\o. 3. Vulso returned to Italy at the fall of 
the year with half of the army, and obtained the 
honor of a triumph. In 250 Vulso was consul a 
second time with T. Atilius Kegulus Serranus. 
and with his colleague commenced the siege of 
Lilyba^um— 2. Cn., curule aedile 197, praetor 
with Sicily as his province 195, and consul 189 
He was sent into Asia in order to conclude the 
peace which Scipio Asiaticus had made with 
Antiochus, and to arrange the affairs of Asia 
He attacked and conquered the Gallograeci or 
Galatians in Asia Minor without waiting for any 
formal instructions from the senate. He set 
out on his return to Italy in 188, but in his 
march through Thrace he suffered much from 
the attacks of the Thracians, and lost a con- 
siderable part of the booty he had obtained in 
Asia. He reached Rome in 187. His triumph 
was a brilliant one. but his campaign in Asia 
had a pernicious influence upon the morals of 
his countrymen. He had allowed his army ev- 
ery kind of license, and his soldiers introduced 
into the city the luxuries of the East. 

[Vulteius Mena, an auctioneer in Rome, a 
freedman of the family of the Vulteii or Vulteu, 
who was leading a happy life till Marcms Phi- 
lippus took him under his protection and at- 
tempted to better his condition ; from the ill ef- 
fects produced by this change or elevation, Hor- 
ace draws a lesson of instruction ] 

Vultur, a mountain dividing Apulia and Lu- 
cania near Venusia, is a branch of the Apen- 
nines. It is celebrated by Horace as one of 
the haunts of his youth. From it the southeast 
wind was called Vulturncs by the Romans. 

[Vulturcius, T. Vid. Volturcius ] 

Vu ltu rnl'h (now Castcl di Volturno), a town 
in Campania, at the mouth of the River Vultur- 
nus, was originally a fortress erected by the Ro- 
mans in the second Punic war. At a later tnno 
it was made a colony. 

Vulturnus (now Volturno), the chief river 
in Campania, rising in the Apennines in Sam- 
nium, and falling into the Tyrrhene Sea. Its 
principal affluents are the Calor (now Colore), 
Tamarus (now Tamaro), and Sabatus (now Sa- 
bato). 

X. 

[Xanthicles {z.avQiKA.f,r), an Achaean, chosen 
general by the Greek mercenaries of Cyrus in 
the place of his countryman Socrates, when tho 
latter had been treacherously seized by Tissa 

943 



XANTHIPPE. 



XENOCLES. 



phernes. B.C. 401, along with Clearchus. When 
the army reached Cotyora, Xanthicles was one 
of those fined for a deficiency in the cargoes of 
the ships which had brought the soldiers from 
Trapezus, and of which he was one of the com- 
missioners.] 

Xanthippe (MavOmnq), wife of Socrates, said 
to be a woman of a peevish and quarrelsome 
disposition. 

Xanthippus CZdvdtTTTTog). 1. Son of Ariphron 
and father of Pericles. In B.C. 490, he im- 
peached Miltiades on his return from his un- 
successful expedition against the island of Pa- 
ros. He succeeded Themistocles as command- 
er of the Athenian fleet in 479, and commanded 
the Athenians at the decisive battle of Mycale. 
— 2. The elder of the two legitimate sons of 
Pericles, Paralus being the younger. For de- 
tails, vid. Paralus. — 3. The Lacedaemonian, 
who commanded the Carthaginians against Reg- 
ulus. For details, vid. Regulus, No. 3. Xan- 
thippus appears to have left Carthage a short 
time after his victory over Regulus. 

[Xantho (Zavdu), a daughter of Oceanus and 
Tethys. one of the nymphs in the train of Cy- 
rene._ 

[Xavthcs (gdvdoc), a son of Phaenops, broth- 
er of Thoon, a warrior in the Trojan army, slain 
by Diomedes.] 

Xanthus (Savdoc). 1. A lyric poet, older 
than Stesichorus, who mentioned him in one at 
least of his poems, and who borrowed from him 
in some of them. Xanthus may be placed about 
B.C. 650. No fragments of his poetry survive. 
— 2. A celebrated Lydian historian, older than 
Herodotus, who flourished about B.C. 480. The 
genuineness of the Four Books of Lydian Histo- 
ry which the ancients possessed under the name 
of Xanthus, and of which some considerable 
fragments have come down to us, was question- 
ed by some of the ancient grammarians them- 
selves. There has been considerable contro- 
versy respecting the genuineness of this work 
among modern scholars. It is certain that 
much of the matter in the extant fragments is 
spurious ; and the probability appears to be that 
the work from which they are taken is the pro- 
duction of an Alexandrean grammarian, found- 
ed upon the genuine w r ork of Xanthus. [The 
fragments of Xanthus are collected in Creuzer's 
Historicorum Grac. Anliquiss. Fragmenta, Hei- 
delb., 1808 ; and in Muller's Hist. Grac. Fragm., 
vol. i., p. 36-44, Paris, 1841.] 

Xanthus (Zuvdoc), rivers. 1. Vid. Scaman- 
der. — 2. (Nov/ Echen Chai), the chief river of 
Lycia, rises in Mount Taurus, on the borders 
of Pisidia and Lycia, and flows south through 
Lycia, between Mount Cragus and Mount Mas- 
sicytus, in a large plain called the Plain of Xan- 
thus (to ZuvOiov tzeSlov), falling at last into the 
Mediterranean Sea a little west of Patara. 
Though not a large river, it is navigable for a 
considerable part of its course. 

Xanthus (Bdvdnc : Zdvdioc, Xanthius : ruins 
at Gunik), the most famous city of Lycia, stood 
on the western bank of the river of the same 
name, sixty stadia from its mouth. Twice in 
the course of its history it sustained sieges, 
which terminated in the self destruction of the 
inhabitants with their property, first against the 
Persians under Harpagus, and long afterward 
944 



against the Romans under Brutus. The city 
was never restored after its destruction on the 
latter occasion. Xanthus was rich in temples 
and tombs, and other monuments of a most in- 
teresting character of art. Among its temples 
the most celebrated were those of Sarpedon and 
of the Lycian Apollo ; besides which there was 
a renowned sanctuary of Latona (to Arj-dov), 
near the River Xanthus, ten stadia from its 
mouth, and sixty stadia from the city. The 
splendid ruins of Xanthus have recently been, 
thoroughly explored by Sir C. Fellowes and his 
coadjutors, and several important remains of its 
works of art are now exhibited in the British 
Museum under the name of the Xanthian Mar- 
bles. 

Xenarchcs CEivapxog). 1. Son of Sophron, 
and, like his father, a celebrated writer of mimes. 
He flourished during the Rhegian war (B.C. 
399-389), at the court of Dionysius. — 2. An 
Athenian comic poet of the Middle Comedy, 
who lived as late as the time of Alexander the 
Great. [The fragments of his comedies are 
given by Meineke, in his Comic. Grac Fragm., 
vol. ii., p. 811-15, edit, minor.]— 3. Of Seleucia 
in Cilicia, a Peripatetic philosopher and gram- 
marian in the time of Strabo, who heard him. 
He taught first at Alexandrea, afterward at Ath- 
ens, and last at Rome, where he enjoyed the 
friendship of Augustus. 

Xeniades (EeiLadTjg), a Corinthian, who be- 
came the purchaser of Diogenes the Cynic 
when he was taken by pirates and sold as a 
slave. 

[Xenias (Em'ac). 1. A Parrhasian, one of 
the commanders of mercenaries in the service 
of Cyrus the younger, whom he accompanied, 
with a body of three hundred men, to court, 
when he was summoned thither by his father 
Darius in B.C. 405. After the return of Cyrus 
to Western Asia, Xenias commanded for him 
the garrisons in the several Ionian states, and 
with the greater portion of these troops, viz., 
four thousand heavy armed men. he joined the 
prince in his expedition against Artaxerxes. 
At Tarsus a large body of his troops and of 
those of Pasion left their standards for that of 
Clearchus ; and Cyrus having allowed the latter 
to retain them, Xenias and Pasion abandoned the 
army at Myriandrus, and sailed away to Greece. 
— 2. An Elean of great wealth, was a proxenus 
of Sparta, and connected by private ties of hos- 
pitality with King Agis II. In B C. 400, during 
the war between Sparta and Elis, Xenias and 
his oligarchical partisans made an attempt to 
overpower their opponents and to subject their 
country to the Spartans, but they were defeated 
and driven into exile by Thrasidaeus, the leader 
of the democracy.] 

Xenippa (now probably Uratippa), a city of 
Sogdiana, mentioned by Curtius. 

Xenocles (ZevokItic). 1. An Athenian tragic 
poet, son of Carcinus, who was also a tragic 
poet, and a contemporary of Aristophanes, who 
attacks him on several occasions. His poetry 
seems to have been indifferent, and to have re- 
sembled the worse parts of Euripides ; but he 
obtained a victory over Euripides B.C. 415. 
There was another tragic poet of the name of 
Xenocles, a grandson of the preceding, of whom 
no particulars are recorded. — 2. An Athenian 



XENOCRATES. 

architect, of the demos of Cholargos, was one 
of the architects who superintended the erection 
of the temple of Ceres (Demeter) at Eleusis, in 
the time of Pericles. 

XenScrates (Sevotcpdrrif). 1. The philoso- 
pher, was a native of Chalcedon. He was born 
B.C. 396, and died 314. at the age of eighty-two. 
He attached himself first to ^Eschines the So- 
cratic, and afterward, while still a youth, to 
Plato, whom he accompanied to Syracuse. Aft- 
er the death of Plato ho betook himself, with 
Aristotle, to Hermias, tyrant of Atarneus ; and, 
after his return to Athens, he was repeatedly 
sent on embassies to Philip of Macedonia, and 
at a later time to Antipater during the Lamian 
war. He is said to have wanted quick appre- 
hension and natural grace; but these defects 
were more than compensated by persevering 
industry, pure benevolence, freedom from all 
selfishness, and a moral earnestness which ob- 
tained for him the esteem and confidence of the 
Athenians of his own age. Yet he is said to 
have experienced the fickleness of popular fa- 
vor, and, being too poor to pay the protection- 
money (fXEToiiciov), to have been saved only by 
the courage of the orator Lycurgus. He be- 
came president of the Academy even before the 
death of Speusippus, who was bowed down by 
sickness, and he occupied that post for twenty- 
five years. The importance of Xenocrates is 
shown by the fact that Aristotle and Theophras- 
tus wrote upon his doctrines, and that Panaetius 
and Cicero entertained a high regard for him. 
Of his numerous works only the titles have 
come down to us.— 2. A physician of Aphrodis- 
ias in Cilicia, lived about the middle of the first 
century after Christ. Besides some short frag- 
ments of his writings, there is extant a little 
essay by him, entitled Ihpi nfa uko tuv 'Evvdpwv 
Tpo<p7jg, " De Alimento ex \quatilibus," which 
is an interesting record of the si ate of Natural 
History at the time in which he lived. Edited 
by Franz, 1774, Lips., and byCoray, 1794, Neap., 
and 1814, Paris.— 3. A statuary of the school of 
Lysippus, was the pupil either of Tisicrates or 
of Euthycrates. He also wrote works upon the 
art. He flourished about B.C. 260. 

Xenocritus (Hev(kpiroc), of Locri Epizephy- 
rii, in Lower Italy, a musician and lyric poet, 
was one of the leaders of the second school of 
Dorian music, which was founded by Thaletas, 
and was a composer of Paeans. 

Xenophanes {Zevo<j>dv7)c), a celebrated philos- 
opher, was a native of Colophon, and flourished 
between B.C. 640 and 500. He was a poet as 
well as a philosopher, and considerable frag- 
ments have come down to us of his elegies, and 
of a didactic poem "On Nature." According 
to the fragments of one of his elegies, he had 
left his native land at the age of twenty-five, 
and had already lived sixty-seven years in Hel- 
las, when, at the age of ninety-two, he com- 
posed that elegy. He quitted Colophon as a 
fugitive or exile, and must have lived some time 
at Elea (Velia) in Italy, as he is mentioned as 
the founder of the Eleatic school of philosophy. 
He sung in one of his poems of the foundation 
of Velia. Xenophanes was usually regarded in 
antiquity as the originator of the Eleatic doc- 
trine of the oneness of the universe. The 
Deity was in his view the animating power of 
60 



XENOPHON 

the universe, which is expressed by Aristotle 
in the words, that, directing his glance on the 
whole universe, Xenophanes said, •• Cod is the 
One." [His fragments arc contained m Kar- 
sten's Xcnophams Col. ( 'armimtm Reiwunr, Brux- 
clhs, 1830 ] 

Xknoimion {Xevo+Qv), l. The Athenian, was 
the son of Gryllus, and a native of the drums 
Erchia. The time of his birth is not known, but 
it is approximated to by the fact that XYnoph.m 
fell from his horse in the flight after the battle 
of Dehum, and was taken up by Socrates, the 
philosopher, on his shoulders, and carried a dis- 
tance of several stadia. The battle of Dehum 
was fought B.C. 424 hitweui the Alhenians 
and Boeotians, and Xeuophun therefore could 
not well have been born after 444. The timo 
of his death, also, is not mentioned by any an- 
cient writer. Lucian says that he attained to 
above the age of ninety, and Xenophon himself 
mentions the assassination of Alexander of 
Pherae, which happened m 867. Between 424 
and 357 there is a period of sixty-seven years, 
and thus we have evidence of Xenophon' being 
alive nearly seventy years after Socrates saved 
his life at Delium. Xenophon is said to have 
been a pupil of Socrates at an early age, which is 
consistent with the intimacy which might have 
arisen from Socrates saving his life. The most 
memorable event in Xenophon's life is his con- 
nection with the Greek army, which marched 
under Cyrus against Artaxerxcs in 401. Xeno- 
phon himself mentions (Anab., iii , 1) the cir- 
cumstances under which he joined this army. 
Proxenus, a friend of Xenophon, was already 
with Cyrus, and he invited Xenophon to come 
to Sardis, and promised to introduce him to the 
Persian prince. Xenophon consulted his mas- 
ter Socrates, who advised him to consult tho 
oracle of Delphi, for it was rather a hazardous 
matter for him to enter the service of Cyrus, 
who was considered to be the friend of the Lac- 
edaemonians and the enemy of Athens. Xeno- 
phon went to Delphi, but he did not ask the yod 
whether he should go or not i he probably had 
made up his mind. He merely asked to what 
gods he should sacrifice in order that he might 
be successful in his intended enterprise. Soc- 
rates was not satisfied with his pupil's mode 
of consulting the oracle, but as he had got an 
answer he told him to go ; and Xenophon went 
to Sardis, which Cyrus was just about to leave. 
He accompanied Cyrus into Upper Asia. In 
the battle of Cunaxa, Cyrus lost his life, his 
barbarian troops were dispersed, and the Greeks 
were left alone on the wide plains between the 
Tigris and the Euphrates. It was after the 
treacherous massacre of Clearchus and other 
of the Greek commanders by the Persian sa- 
trap Tissaphernes that Xenophon came forward. 
He had held no command in the army of Cyrus, 
nor had he, in fact, served as a soldier. He was 
now elected one of the generals, and took the 
principal part in conducting the Greeks in their 
memorable retreat along the Tigris over the 
high table-lands of Armenia to Trapezus (Tre- 
bizond), on the Black Sea. From Trapezus the 
troops were conducted to Chrysopolis, which is 
opposite to Byzantium. The Greeks were in 
great distress, and some of them, under Xeno- 
phon, entered the service of Seuthes, kins of 

945 



XENOPHON. 



XENOPHON. 



Thrace. As the Lacedaemonians under Thim- 
bron were now at war with Tissaphernes and 
Pharnabazus, Xenophon and his troops were in- 
vited to join the army of Thimbron, and Xeno- 
phon led them to Pergamus to join Thimbron, 
399. Xenophon, who was very poor, had made 
an expedition into the plain of the Caicus with 
his troops before they joined Thimbron, to plun- 
der the house and property of a Persian named 
Asidates. The Persian, with his women, chil- 
dren, and all his movables, was seized ; and 
Xenophon, by this robbery, replenished his 
empty pockets (Anab., vii., 8, 23). He tells the 
story himself as if he were not ashamed of it. 
Socrates was put to death in 399, and it seems 
probable that Xenophon was banished either 
shortly before or shortly after that event. Xen- 
ophon was not banished at the time when he 
was leading the troops back to Thimbron {Anab., 
vii., 7, 57), but his expression rather seems to 
imply that his banishment must have followed 
soon after. It is not certain what he was do- 
ing after the troops joined Thimbron. As we 
know nothing of his movements, the conclusion 
ought to be that he stayed in Asia, and prob- 
ably with Thimbron and his successor Dercyl- 
lidas. Agesilaus, the Spartan king, was com- 
manding the Lacedaemonian forces in Asia 
against the Persians in 396, and Xenophon was 
with him at least during part of the campaign. 
When Agesilaus was recalled (394), Xenophon 
accompanied him ; and he was on the side of 
the Lacedaemonians in the battle which they 
fought at Coronea (394) against the Athenians. 
It seems that he went to Sparta with Agesilaus 
after the battle of Coronea, and soon after he 
settled at Scillus, in Elis, not far from Olympia, 
a spot of which he has given a description in 
the Anabasis (v., 3, 7, &c.). Here he was join- 
ed by his wife Philesia and his children. His 
children were educated in Sparta. Xenophon 
was now an exile, and a Lacedaemonian so far 
as he could become one. His time during his 
long residence at Scillus was employed in hunt- 
ing, writing, and entertaining his friends ; and 
perhaps the Anabasis and part of the Hellenica 
were composed here. The treatise on hunting 
and that on the horse were probably also writ- 
ten during this time, when amusement and ex- 
ercise of that kind formed part of his occupa- 
tion. Xenophon was at last expelled from his 
quiet retreat at Scillus by the Eleans after re- 
maining there about twenty years. The sen- 
tence of banishment from Athens was repealed 
on the motion of Eubulus, but it is uncertain in 
what year. In the battle of Mantinea, which 
was fought 362, the Spartans and the Athe- 
nians were opposed to the Thebans, and Xeno- 
phon's two sons, Gryllus and Diodorus, fought 
on the side of the allies. Gryllus fell in the 
same battle in which Epaminondas lost his life. 
There is no evidence that Xenophon ever re- 
turned to Athens. He is said to have retired 
to Corinth after his expulsion from Scillus, and 
as we know nothing more, we assume that he 
died there. The Hipparchicus and the treatise 
on the revenues of Athens were written after 
the repeal of the decree of banishment. The 
events alluded to in the Epilogus to the Cyropa- 
dia (viii., 8, 4) show that the Epilogus at least 
was written after 362. The time of his death 
946 



may have been a few years later. The follow- 
ing is a list of Xenophon's works : 1. The Anaba- 
sis ('Avddaaic), or the History of the Expedition 
of the Younger Cyrus, and of the retreat of the 
Greeks, who formed part of his army. It is di- 
vided into seven books. This work has immor- 
talized Xenophon's name. It is a clear and 
pleasing narrative, written in a simple style, 
free from affectation ; and it gives a great deal 
of curious information on the country which 
was traversed by the retreating Greeks, and on 
the manners of the people. It was the first 
work which made the Greeks acquainted with 
some portions of the Persian empire, and it 
showed the weakness of that extensive mon- 
archy. The skirmishes of the retreating Greeks 
with their enemies, and the battles with some 
of the barbarian tribes, are not such events 
as elevate the work to the character of a mili- 
tary history, nor can it, as such, be compared 
with Caesar's Commentaries. 2. The Hellenica. 
{'YiTCkvvLKo) of Xenophon are divided into seven 
books, and comprehend the space of forty-eight 
years, from the time when the history of Thu- 
cydides ends (vid. Thucydides) to the battle of 
Mantinea, 362. The Hellenica is generally a dry 
narrative of events, and there is nothing in the 
treatment of them which gives a special inter- 
est to the work. Some events of importance 
are briefly treated, but a few striking incidents 
are presented with some particularity. 3. The 
Cyropadia (Kvpoiraide'ta), in eight books, is a 
kind of political romance, the basis of which is 
the history of Cyrus, the founder of the Persian 
monarchy. It shows how citizens are to be 
made virtuous and brave ; and Cyrus is the 
model of a wise and good ruler. As a history it 
has no authority at all. Xenophon adopted the 
current stories as to Cyrus and the chief events 
of his reign, without any intention of subjecting 
them to a critical examination ; nor have we 
any reason to suppose that his picture of Per- 
sian morals and Persian discipline is anything 
more than a fiction. Xenophon's object was to 
represent what a state might be, and he placed 
the scene of his fiction far enough off to give it 
the color of possibility. His own philosophical 
notions and the usages of Sparta were the real 
materials out of which he constructed his polit- 
ical system. The Cyropcedia is evidence enough 
that Xenophon did not like the political consti- 
tution of his own country, and that a well-or- 
dered monarchy or kingdom appeared to him 
preferable to a democracy like Athens. 4. The 
Agesilaus (' ' hyrjcilaoc) is a panegyric on Agesi- 
laus II., king of Sparta, the friend of Xenophon. 
5. The Hipparchicus ('ImrapxiKoc) is a treatise 
on the duties of a commander of cavalry, and it 
contains many military precepts. 6. The De Re 
Equestri, a treatise on the Horse ('Ittttlkt)), was 
written after the Hipparchicus, to which treatise 
he refers at the end of the treatise on the Horse. 
The treatise is not limited to horsemanship, as 
regards the rider: it shows how a man is to 
avoid being cheated in buying a horse, how a 
horse is to be trained, and the like. 7. The 
Cynegeticus (KwriyeTinoc) is a treatise on hunt- 
ing; and on the dog, and the breeding and train- 
ing of dogs ; on the various kinds of game, and 
the mode of taking them. It is a treatise writ- 
ten by a genuine sportsman, who loved the e.r« 



XE NOP HON. 

ercise and the excitement of the chase ; and it 
may be read with delight by any sportsman who 
deserves the name. 8, 9. The Respublica Lace- 
damoniorum and Rcsjmhlica Athcnicnsium, the 
two treatises on the .Spartan and Athenian 
states (Aancdatpoviuv Uo?urna, and 'Advvaiav 
TIoltTeia), were not always recognized as gen- 
uine works of Xenophon, even by the ancients. 
They pass, however, under his name, and there 
is nothing in the internal evidence that appears 
to throw any doubt on the authorship. The 
writer clearly prefers Spartan to Athenian insti- 
tutions. 10. The Dc Vectigalibus, a treatise on 
the Revenues of Athens {Udpoi f) nepl Upocoduv) 
is designed to show how the public revenue of 
Athens may be improved. 11. The Memorabilia 
of Socrates, in four books {Wnouvnuovevpara 
ZoKpdTovc), was written by Xenophon to defend 
the memory of his master against the charge 
of irreligion and of corrupting the Athenian 
youth. Socrates is represented as holding a 
series of conversations, in which he develops 
and inculcates moral doctrines in his peculiar 
fashion. It is entirely a practical work, such 
as we might expect from the practical nature 
of Xenophon's mind, and it professes to exhibit 
Socrates as he taught. It is true that it may 
only exhibit one side of the Socratic argument- 
ation, and that it does not deal in those subtle- 
ties and verbal disputes which occupy so large 
a space in some of Plato's dialogues. Xeno- 
phon was a hearer of Socrates, an admirer of 
his master, and anxious to defend his memory. 
The charges against Socrates for which he suf- 
fered were, that " Socrates was guilty of not 
believing in the gods which the state believed 
in, and of introducing other new daemons (#ai- 
fiovta) : he was also guilty of corrupting the 
youth." Xenophon replies to these two charges 
specifically ; and he then goes on to show what 
Socrates's mode of life was. The whole treatise 
is intended to be an answer to the charge for 
which Socrates was executed, and it is, there- 
fore, in its nature, not intended to be a complete 
exhibition of Socrates That it is a genuine pic- 
ture of the man is ind isputable, and it is the most 
valuable memorial that we have of the practical 
philosophy of Socrates. 12. The Apology of Soc- 
rates CAiroXoyia 2,uKpaTovc irpbc robe diKaoruc) 
is a short speech, containing the reasons which 
induced Socrates to prefer death to life. It is 
not a first-rate performance, and is considered 
by some critics not to have been written by 
Xenophon. 13. The Symposium (Ivprroaiov), 
or Banquet of Philosophers, in which Xenophon 
delineates the character of Socrates. The 
speakers are supposed to meet at the house of 
Callias, a rich Athenian, at the celebration of 
the great Panathenaea. Socrates and others 
are the speakers. The piece is interesting as 
a picture of an Athenian drinking party, and of 
the amusement and conversation with which 
it was diversified. The nature of love and 
friendship is discussed. 14. The Hiero ('lepuv 
rj TvpawiKoc) is a dialogue between King Hiero 
and Simonides, in which the king speaks of the 
dangers and difficulties incident to an exalted 
station, and the superior happiness of a private 
man. The poet, on the other hand, enumerates 
the advantages which the possession of power 
gives, and the means which it offers of obliging j 



VEKXES. 



and do.ng services. 15 fg^^^ {0U 
iKoc) is a dialogue betwe«n Socrates and Crito- 
buius, in which Socrates gives instruction in 
the art called (Economic, which relates to the 
administration of a household and of a man's 
Property. This is one of the best treatises of 
Xenophon. All antiquity and all modern writ- 
ers agree in allowing Xenophon great merit 
as a writer of a plain, simple, persp.cuous, and 
unaffected style. Hia mind was not adapted 
for philosophical speculation : he looked to the 
practical in all things ; and the has., of his 
philosophy was a strong belief in a divine me- 
diation in the government of the world The 
best edition of Xenophon's complete works h 
by Schneider, Lips., 1815, 6 vols. 8vo. [of which 
the first, second, and fourth volumes hare been 
re-edited and much improved by Bornemann, 
containing, the first, Cyropa-dia, Leipzig. 1838 
the second, Anabasis, 1825 ; the fourth, Memora- 
bilia, 1829 ; and the sixth, containing the Opus- 
cula politica, cquestria, venatiea, by Sauppe, 1838 . 
the best separate editions of the more important 
works are, of the Cyropadia, by Poppo, Leip- 
zig, 1821, and by Jacobitz, Leipzig, 1843; of 
the Anabasis, by Poppo, Leipzig, 1827, and by 
Kruger, Halle, 1826; of the Memorabilm, by 
Kuhner, Gotha, 1841 ; of the Historia Craea, 
from the text of Dindorf, with selected notes, 
at the University Press, Oxford, 1831 : in addi- 
tion may be mentioned, as useful in the study of 
Xenophon, Sturz's Lexicon Xenophonteum 4 
vols. 8vo, 1801-1804. J— 2. The Ephesian. the 
author of a romance, still extant, entiled Evhe- 
siaca, or the Loves of Anthia and Abrocomas 
('EQemaicu, ru kotu 'Avtiiav Kai 'AtpoKopijv). The 
style of the work is simple, and the story is 
conducted without confusion, notwithstanding 
the number of personages introduced. The ad- 
ventures are of a very improbable kind. The 
age when Xenophon lived is uncertain. He is 
probably the oldest of the Greek romance writ- 
ers. The best editions of his work are by 
Peerlkamp, Harlem, 1818, and by Passow, Lips., 
1833. 

Xerxes (Klpjw)- King of Persia B.C 
485-465. The name is said by Herodotus (vi., 
98) to signify the warrior, but it is probably the 
same word as the Zend ksathra and the San- 
crit kshatra, " a king." Xerxes was the son of 
Darius and Atossa. Darius was married twice. 
By his first wife, the daughter of Gobryas, he 
had three children before he was raised to the 
throne ; and by his second wife, Atossa, the 
daughter of Cyrus, he had four children after 
he had become kin?. Artabazanes. the eldest 
son of the former marriage, and Xerxes, the 
eldest son of the latter, each laid claim to the 
succession ; but Darius decided in favor of 
Xerxes, no doubt through the influence of his 
mother Atossa, who completely ruled Darius. 
Xerxes succeeded his father at the beginning of 
485. Darius had died in the midst of his prep- 
arations against Greece, which had been inter- 
rupted by the revolt of the Egyptians. The 
first care of Xerxes was to reduce the latter 
people to subjection. He accordingly invaded 
Egypt at the beginning of the second year of 
his reign (B C. 484), compelled the people again 
to submit to the Persian yoke, and then re- 
turned to Persia, leaving his brother Acbee- 

947 



XERXES. 



XIPHILINUS. 



menes governor of Egypt. The next four years 
were devoted to preparations for the invasion 
of Greece. In the spring of 480 he set out from 
Sardis on his memorable expedition against 
Greece. He crossed the Hellespont by a bridge 
of boats, and continued his march through the 
Thracian Chersonese till he reached the plain 
of Doriscus, which is traversed by the River 
Hebrus. Here he resolved to number both his 
land and naval forces. Herodotus has left us a 
most minute and interesting catalogue of the 
nations comprising this mighty army, with their 
various military equipments and different modes 
of fighting. The land forces contained forty- 
six nations. (Herod., vii., 61, foil.) In his 
march through Thrace and Macedonia, Xerxes 
received a still further accession of strength ; 
and when he reached Thermopylae, the land and 
sea forces amounted to two million, six hundred 
and forty-one thousand, six hundred and ten 
fighting men. This does not include the at- 
tendants, the slaves, the crews of the provision- 
ships, &c., which, according to the supposition 
of Herodotus, were more in number than the 
fighting men ; but, supposing them to have been 
equal, the total number of male persons who 
accompanied Xerxes to Thermopylae reach the 
astounding sum of five million, two hundred 
and eighty-three thousand, two hundred and 
twenty ! Such a vast number must be dis- 
missed as incredible ; but, considering that this 
army was the result of a maximum of effort 
throughout the empire, and that provisions had 
been collected for three years before along the 
line of march, we may well believe that the 
numbers of Xerxes were greater than were ever 
assembled in ancient times, or perhaps at any 
known epoch of history. After the review of 
Doriscus, Xerxes continued his march through 
Thrace. On reaching Acanthus, near the isth- 
mus of Athos, Xerxes left his fleet, which re- 
ceived orders to sail through the canal that had 
been previously dug across the isthmus — and 
of which the remains are still visible (vid. 
Athos)— and await his arrival at Therme, aft- 
erward called Thessalonica. After joining his 
fleet at Therme, Xerxes marched through Mac- 
edonia and Thessaly without meeting with any 
opposition till he reached Thermopylae. Here 
the Greeks resolved to make a stand. Leoni- 
das, king of Sparta, conducted a land force to 
Thermopylae ; and his colleague Eurybiades 
sailed with the Greek fleet to the north of Eu- 
boea, and took up his position on the northern 
coast, which faced Magnesia, and was called 
Artemisium from the temple of Artemis be- 
longing to the town of Hestiaea. Xerxes ar- 
rived in safety with his land forces before Ther- 
mopylse, but his fleet was overtaken by a vio- 
lent storm and hurricane off the coast of Sepias 
in Magnesia, by which at least four hundred 
ships of war were destroyed, as well as an im- 
mense number of transports. Xerxes attempt- 
ed to force his way through the Pass of Ther- 
mopylae, but his troops were repulsed again and 
again by Leonidas ; till a Malian, of the name 
of Ephialtes, showed the Persians a pass over 
the mountains of CEta, and thus enabled them 
to fall on the rear of the Greeks. Leonidas and 
his Spartans disdained to fly, and were all slain. 
Vid. Leonidas. On the same days on which 
948 



Leonidas was fighting with the land forces ot 
Xerxes, the Greek ships at Artemisium attack- 
ed the Persian fleet. In the first battle the 
Greeks had the advantage, and in the following 
night the Persian ships suffered still more from 
a violent storm. Two days afterward the con- 
test was renewed, and both sides fought with 
the greatest courage. Although the Greeks at 
the close still maintained their position, and had 
destroyed a great number of the enemy's ships, 
I yet their own loss was considerable, and half 
j the Athenian ships were disabled. Under these 
! circumstances, the Greek commanders aban- 
i doned Artemisium and retired to Salamis, oppo- 
site the southwest coast of Attica. It was now 
! too late to send an army into Boeotia, and Attica 
| thus lay exposed to the full vengeance of the 
! invader. The Athenians removed their worn- 
j en, children, and infirm persons to Salamis, 
j vEgina, and Trcezen. Meantime Xerxes march- 
ed through Phocis and Bceotia, and at length 
i reached Athens. About the same time that 
i Xerxes entered Athens, his fleet arrived in the 
I bay of Phalerum. He now resolved upon an 
j engagement with the Greek fleet. The history 
[ of this memorable battle, of the previous dis- 
| sensions among the Greek commanders, and of 
j the glorious victory of the Greeks at the last, 
{ is related elsewhere. Vid Themistocles. Xerx- 
es witnessed the battle from a lofty seat, w hich 
] was erected for him on the shores of the main 
j land, on one of the declivities of Mount -•Ega- 
j leos, and thus beheld with his own eyes the de- 
j feat and dispersion of his mighty armament. 
Xerxes now became alarmed for his own safe- 
ty, and resolved to leave Greece immediately. 
He was confirmed in his resolution by Mardu- 
nius, who undertook to complete the conquest 
with three hundred thousand of his troops, 
j Xerxes left Mardonius the number of troops 
which he requested, and with the remainder 
: set out on his march homeward. He reached 
| the Hellespont in forty-five days from the time 
j of his departure from Attica. On arriving at 
the Hellespont, he found the bridge of boats de- 
I stroyed by a storm, and he crossed over to Asia 
j by ship. He entered Sardis toward the end of 
the year 480. In the following year, 479. the 
war was continued in Greece ; but Mardonius 
was defeated at Plataeae by the combined forces 
of the Greeks, and on the same day another 
victory was gained over the Persians at My- 
cale in Ionia. Next year, 478, the Persians lost 
their last possession in Europe by the capture 
of Sestos on the Hellespont. Thus the strug- 
gle was virtually brought to an end, though the 
war still continued for several years longer. 
We know little more of the personal history of 
Xerxes. He was murdered in 465, after a reign 
of twenty years, by Artabanus, who aspired to 
become king of Persia. Xerxes was succeed- 
ed by his son Artaxerxes I. — II. The only le- 
j gitimate son of Artaxerxes I., succeeded his 
j father as King of Persia in 425, but was mur- 
dered after a short reign of only two months by 
his half-brother Sogdianus, who thus became 
I king. 

Xiphilinus (H^iAivof), of Trapezus, was a 
monk at Constantinople, and made an abridg- 
ment of Dion Cassius from the thirty-sixth to 
the eightieth book, at the command of the Em- 



XIPHONIA. 

peror Michael VII Ducas, who reigned from 
A.D. 1071 to 1078. The work is executed with 
carelessness, and is only of value as preserving 
the main facts of the original, the greater part 
of which is lost. It is printed along with Dion 
Cassius. 

Xiphonia (Spuria : now Capo di S. Croce), a 
promontory on the eastern coast of Sicily, above 
Syracuse, with a harbor (Si^uveioc Itfir/v). 

Xois or Choi's (Molf, S%>, Xdifj, an ancient 
city of Lower Egypt, north of Leontopolis on 
an island of the Nile, in the Nomos Sebennyti- 
cus, the seat, at one time, of a dynasty of Egyp- 
tian kings. It appears to have entirely perished 
under the Roman empire, and its site is very 
doubtful. Some ulentifv it with the Papremfs 
of Herodotus. 

Xuthus (aovOoc), son of Hellen by the nymph 
Orseis, and a brother of Dorus and .^olus. He 
was king of Peloponnesus, and the husband of 
Creusa, the daughter of Erechtheus, by whom he 
became the father of Achaeus and Ion. Others 
state that after the death of his father Hellen, 
Xuthus was expelled from Thessaly by his 
brothers, and went to Athens, where he mar- 
Tied the daughter of Erechtheus. After the 
death of Erechtheus, Xuthus, being chosen ar- 
bitrator, adjudged the kingdom to his eldest 
brother-in-law Cecrops, in consequence of which 
he was expelled by the other sons of Erech- 
theus, and settled in .Egialus in Peloponnesus 
Xyline, a town of Pisidia, between Corbasa 
and Termessus, mentioned by Livy (xxxviii., 
15). 

Xynia or Xyni.t; (SvWi : Zvvievc : now Tan- 
kli), a town of Thessalv, in the district of Plithi- 
otis, east of the lake of the same name (r) "Ewiur 
Xifivri : now Nizero or Derelt). 

XYPETE (EvTTfT// : El'TfraiUV, HllTTf-CWV, El>~C- 

raiwvfwf, Bvnersvr, gsirtfrief), said to have been 
anciently called Troja, a demus of Attica be- 
longing to the tribe Cecropis, near Piraeus. 



Z. 

Zabatus (Zd6aror). Vid. Lycus, No. 5. 

[Zabdicene, a district in Mesopotamia, in 
which was a city named Zabda or Bezabda] 

Zabe (Zu6n), a name applied, under the later 
emperors, to the southern part of Numidia, as 
far as the border of the Great Desert. 

[Zabus, a river of Assyria, called by the Mac- 
edonians Caprus VH. Caprus.] 

Zacynthus {Zdnvvthc : Zaavvdiog, Zacynthi- 
us : now Zante), an island in the Ionian Sea, j 
off the coast of Elis, about forty miles in cir- 
cumference. It contained a large and flourish- I 
ing town of the same name upon the eastern 
coast, the citadel of which was called Psophis. ! 
There are two considerable chains of mount- 
ains in the island. The ancient writers men- 
tion Mount Elatus, which is probably the same 
as the modern Scopo in the southeast of the isl- | 
and, and which rises to the height of one thou- | 
sand five hundred and nine feet. Zacynthus 
was celebrated in antiquity for its pitch wells, 
which were visited by Herodotus, and which 
still supply a large quantity of bitumen. About 
one hundred tons of bitumen are at the present 
day annually extracted from these wells. Za- 
synthus was inhabited by a Greek population at 



ZALLTCUS. 

an early period. It is said to have derived its, 
name from Zacynthus, a son of Dardanus who 
colonized the island from Psophis in Arcadia 
and, according to an ancient tradition, the Za- 
cynthians founded the town of Saguntum in 
Spam. Vid. Saountim. The island is frequent- 
Jy mentioned by Homer, who speaks of it as the 
" woody Zacynthus." It was afterward colo- 
nized by Achajans from Peloponnesus It form- 
ed part of the maritime empire of Athens, and 
continued faithful to the Athenians during the 
Peloponnesian war. At a later time it was sub- 
ject to the Macedonian monarchs, and on the 
conquest of Macedonia by the Romans passed 
into the hands of the latter. It is now one of 
the Ionian islands under the protection of Great 
Britain. 

Zadracarta (ZnJp'iKapra), one of the capital 
cities and royal residences in Hyrcania, lay at 
the northern foot of the chief pass through 
Mount Coronus. (Compare Tuw.) 

Zagrecs (Zayprvr), a surname of the mystic 
Dionysus (Aiovvfror vftwof), whom Zeus (Ju- 
piter), in the form of a dragon, is said to have 
begotten by Persephone (Proserpina), before 
she was carried ofT by Pluto. He was torn to 
pieces by the Titans; and Athena (Minerva) 
carried his heart to Zeus (Jupiter). 

Zagros or -t s (') Zdypot and to Zuypiov opo<, 
now Mountains of Kurdistan and Lour'i.stan),\hc 
general name for the range of mountains form- 
ing the southeastern continuation of the Tau- 
rus, and the eastern margin of the Tigris and 
Euphrates valley, from the southwestern side 
of the Lake Arsissa (now Van) in Armenia, to 
the northeastern side of the head of the Per- 
sian Gulf, and dividing Media from Assyria and 
Susiana. More specifically, the name Zagros 
was applied to the central part of the rhain, the 
northern part being called the mountains of the 
Cordueni or Gordyaei, and the southern part 
Parachoathras. 

Zaitha or Zautiia (Zartf«), ■ town of Meso- 
potamia, on the eastern bank of the Euphrates, 
twenty Roman miles south of Circesium, re- 
markable as the place at which a monument 
was erected to the murdered Emperor Gordian 
by his soldiers. 

Zaleuccs (Zu?.cvko(;), the celebrated lawgiver 
of the Epizephyrian Eocrians, is said by some 
to have been originally a slave, hut is described 
by others as a man of good family. He could 
not, however, have been a disciple of Pythago- 
ras, as some writers state, since he lived up- 
ward of one hundred years before Pythagoras. 
The date of the legislation of Zaleucus is as- 
signed to B C. 660. His code is stated to have 
been the first collection of written laws that the 
Greeks possessed. The general character of 
his laws was severe ; but they were observed 
for a long period by the Locrians, who obtained, 
in consequence, a high reputation for legal or- 
der. Among other enactments, we are told that 
the penalty of adultery was the loss of the eyes. 
There is a celebrated story of the son of Zaleu- 
cus having become liable to this penalty, and 
the father himself suffering the loss of one eye 
that his son might not be utterly blinded. It is 
further related that among his laws was one 
forbidding any citizen, under penalty of death, to 
enter the senate house in arms. On one occa- 

949 



ZALMOXIS. 



ZENO. 



sion, however, on a sudden emergency in time 
of war, Zaleucus transgressed his own law, 
which was remarked to him by one present ; 
whereupon he fell upon his own sword, declar- 
ing that he wou d himself vindicate the law. 
Other authors tell the same story of Charon- 
das, or of Diocles. 

Zalmoxis or Zamolxis (Zd/^fio^ig, ZdfioA^t^), 
said to have been so called from the bear's skin 
(ZdX/zof) in which he was clothed as soon as he 
was born. He was, according to the story cur- 
rent among the Greeks on the Hellespont, a 
Getan, who had been a slave to Pythagoras in 
Samos, but was manumitted, and acquired not 
only great wealth, but large stores of knowledge 
from Pythagoras, and from the Egyptians, whom 
he visited in the course of his travels. He re- 
turned among the Getae, introducing the civili- 
zation and the religious ideas which he had 
gained, especially regarding the immortality of 
the soul. He was said to have lived in a sub- 
terraneous cave for three years, and after that 
to have again made his appearance among the 
Getae. Herodotus inclines to place the age of 
Zalmoxis a long time before Pythagoras, and 
expresses a doubt not only about the story it- 
self, but as to whether Zalmoxis were a man, 
or an indigenous Getan deity. The latter ap- 
pears to have been the real state of the case. 
The Getae believed that the departed went to 
him. 

Zama Regia (Zd/xa : Zamensis : now Zoica- 
reen, southeast of Kaff), a strongly-fortified city 
in the interior of Numidia, on the borders of the 
Carthaginian territory. It was the ordinary 
residence of King Juba, who had here his treas- 
ury and his harem. It was the scene of one of 
the most important battles in the history of the 
world, that in which Hannibal was defeated by 
Scipio, and the second Punic war was ended, 
B.C. 202. Strabo tells us that it was destroyed 
by the Romans ; but if so, it must have been 
restored, for we find it mentioned under the em- 
pire as a colony and a bishop's see. Pliny and 
Vitruvius speak of a fountain in its neighbor- 
hood. There were unimportant places of the 
same name in Cappadocia and Mesopotamia. 

Zancle. Vid. Messana. 

Zapaortene, a city in the southeast of Par- 
thia, in the mountains of the Zapaorteni. 

Zabadrus (now Sutlej), a river of Northern 
India, now the southern boundary of the Punjab. 
It rises from two principal sources beyond the 
Himalaya, and falls into the Hyphasis (now 
Gharra). 

Zarang^e or -i, or Saraxg.e (Zapdyyot, 2<z- 
pdyyai), a people in the north of Drangiana, on 
the confines of Aria. The close resemblance 
of their name to the generic name of all the 
people of Drangiana, that is, Drangas, suggests 
a doubt whether they ought to be specifleally 
distinguished from them. 

Zarax or Zarex (Zupa£, Zdp?]^). 1. The cen- 
tral part of the chain of mountains, extending 
along the eastern coast of Laconia from Mount 
Parnon, on the frontiers of Argolis, down to the 
promontory Malea. — 2. (Now Jcraka), a town on 
the eastern coast of Laconia, at the foot of the 
mountain of the same name. 

Zariaspe. Vid. Bactra. 

Zariaspis, an earlier, probablv the native 
950 



name for the river on which Bactra stood, and 
which is usually called Bactrus. Vid. Bactra. 
The people on its banks were called Zariaspae. 

Zela or Ziela (rd Zfjla : now Zilleh), a city 
in the south of Pontus, not far south of Amasia, 
and four days' journey east of Tavium. It 
stood on an artificial hill, and was strongly for- 
tified. Near it was an ancient and famous tem- 
ple of Anaiitis and other Persian deities, in which 
great religious festivals were held. The sur- 
rounding district was called Zeletis or Zelitis. 
At Zela the Roman general Valerius Triarius 
was defeated by Mithradates ; but the city is 
more celebrated for another great battle, that in 
which Julius Caesar defeated Pharnaces, and of 
which he wrote this dispatch to Rome : Veni : 
Vidi : Vici. 

[Zelarchus {ZftapxoQ), an inspector of the 
market (ayopavdfiog) among the Greek mercena- 
ries of Cyrus, attacked by the soldiers for some 
real or imaginary misconduct in his official duty 
while they were at Trapezus ; avoided the at- 
tack, and escaped from Trapezus by sea ] 

Zelasium, a Thessalian town in the district 
Phthiotis, of uncertain site. 

ZelIa (ZiXeLa), an ancient city of Mysia, at 
the foot of Mount Ida, and on the River iEse- 
pus, eighty stadia from its mouth, belonging to 
the territory of Cyzicus. At the time of Alex- 
ander's invasion the head-quarters of the Per- 
sian army were fixed here. 

Zelus (Z?)Aoc), the personification of zeal or 
strife, is described as a son of Pallas and Styx, 
and a brother of Nice. 

Zeno, Zenon (Zi)vuv). 1. The founder of the 
Stoic philosophy, was a native of Citium in Cy- 
prus, and the son of Mnaseas. He began at an 
early age to study philosophy through the writ- 
ings of~the Socratic philosophers, which his fa- 
ther was accustomed to bring back from Athens 
when he went thither on trading voyages. At 
the age of twenty-two, or, according to others, 
of thirty years, Zeno was shipwrecked in the 
neighborhood of Piraeus ; whereupon he was led 
to settle in Athens, and to devote himself en- 
tirely to the study of philosophy. According to 
some writers, he lost all his property in the ship- 
wreck ; according to others, he still retained a 
large fortune ; but, whichever of these accounts 
is correct, his moderation and contentment be 
came proverbial, and a recognition of his virtues 
shines through even the ridicule of the comic 
poets. The weakness of his health is said to 
have first determined him to live rigorously and 
simply ; but his desire to make himself inde- 
pendent of all external circumstances seems to 
have been an additional motive, and to have led 
him to attach himself to the cynic Crates. In 
opposition to the advice of Crates, he studied 
under Stilpo of the Megaric school ; and he sub- 
sequently received instruction from the two 
other contemporary Megarics, Diodorus Cronus 
and Philo, and from the Academics Xenocrates 
and Polemo. The period which Zeno thus de- 
voted to study is said to have extended to 
twenty years. At its close, and after he had 
developed his peculiar philosophical system, he 
opened his school in the porch adorned with the 
paintings of Polygnotus (Stoa Pccalc), which, at 
an earlier time, had been a place in which poets 
met. From this place his disciples were called 



ZENOBIA. 

Stoics. Among the warm admirers of Zeno was 
Antigonus Gonatas, king of Macedonia. The 
Athenians likewise placed the greatest confi- 
dence in him, and displayed the greatest esteem 
for him ; for, although the well-known story that 
they deposited the keys of the fortress with him 
as the most trustworthy man, may be a later 
invention, there seems no reason for doubling 
the authenticity of the decree of the people by 
which a golden crown and a public burial in the 
Ceramicus were awarded to him. The Athe- 
nian citizenship, however, he is said to have de- 
clined, that he might not become unfaithful to 
his native land, whore, in return, he was biehly 
esteemed. We do not know the year either" of 
Zeno's birth or death, He is said to have pre- 
sided over his school for fifty-eight years, and 
to have died at the age of ninety-eight. He is 
said to have been still alive in the one hundred 
and thirtieth Olympiad (B.C. 260). Zeno wrote 
numerous works; but the writings of Chrysip- 
pus and the later Stoics seem to have obscured 
those of Zeno, and even the warm adherents of 
the school seem seldom to have gone back to 
the books of its founder. Hence it is difficult 
to ascertain how much of the later Stoic philos- 
ophy really belongs to Zeno —2. The Eleatic 
philosopher, was a native of EJea (Velia) in 
Italy, son of Teleutagoras, and the favorite dis- 
ciple of Parmenides. He was born about B.C. 
488, and at the age of forty accompanied Par- 
menides to Athens. Vid. Pabkbxwb* Heap- 
pears to have resided some time at Athens, and 
is said to have unfolded his doctrines to men 
like Pericles and Callias for the price of one 
hundred minae. Zeno is said to have taken part 
in the legislation of Parmenides, to the mainte- 
nance of which the citicena of Elea had pledged 
themselves every year by an oath. His love 
of freedom is shown by the courage with which 
he exposed his life in order to deliver his native 
country from a tyrant. Whether he perished 
in the attempt, or survived the fall of the tyrant, 
is a point on which the authorities vary. They 
also state the name of the tyrant differently. 
Zeno devoted all his energies to explain and 
develop the philosophical system of Parmeni- 
des. Vid. Parmenides. — 3. An Epicurean phi- 
losopher, a native of Sidon, was a contemporary 
of Cicero, who heard him when at Athens. He 
was sometimes termed Coryphaus Epicurcorurn. 
He seems to have been noted for the disrespect- 
ful terms in whieh he spoke of other philoso- 
phers. For instance, he called Socrates the At- 
tic buffoon. He was a disciple of Apollodorus, 
and is described as a clear-headed thinker and 
perspicuous expounder of his views. 

Zenobia, queen of Palmyra. After the death 
of her husband Udenathus, whom, according to 
some accounts, she assassinated (A.D. 266),~shc 
assumed the imperial diadem as regent for her 
sons, and discharged all the active duties of a 
sovereign. But not content with enjoying the 
independence conceded by Gallienus and toler- 
ated by Claudius, she sought to include all Syr- 
ia, Asia, and Egypt within the limits of her 
sway, and to make good the title which she 
claimed of Queen of the East. By this rash 
ambition she lost both her kingdom and her lib- 
erty. She was defeated by Aurelian, taken pris- 
oner on the capture of Palmyra (273), and ear- 



ZEXODOTUS 

I ried to Rome, where she adorned the triumph 
; of her conqueror (274) Her life was spared by 
I Aurehan, and she passed the remainder of her 
'years with her sons in the vicinity of Tibur 
| < novv Tnoh). Eon^inus lived at her court, and 
was put to death on the capture of Palmyra. 
y id. Eonginus. 

Zenobia {Zrfvotoa : now CkcUbi or ZeUbi), a 
city ol Chalybonitis, in Syria, on the west bank 
of the Euphrates, three days' journey both from 
Sura and from Circesium. It was founded by 
Zenobia. 

Zenorils (Z/yi.o£to C ). lived- at Rome in the 
time of Hadrian, and was the BO too; -,f ■ col- 
lection of proverbs in Greek, which have come 
down to us. In this collection the pro verbs arc 
arranged alphabetically, and divided into hund- 
reds. The last division is incomplete, the to- 
tal number collected being five hundred and 
fifty-two. It is printed in the collection of 
Schottus (Unpntuini 'RlhfviMai, Antwerp. 1612), 
[in the Paraumupraplu Cncci of Gaisford, Ox- 
ford, 183G, and of Eeutsch and Schneidewin, 
Gotlingen, 1839.] 

Zenodorus, a Greek artist, who made for Ne- 
ro the colossal statue of that emperor, winch he 
set up in front of the Golden House, and wlneh 
was afterward dedicated afresh by Vespasian 
as a statue of the Sun. It was one hundred 
and ten feet in height. 

Zenodotium or -w {Zijvodortoit, Zr?i<otW<a), a 
fortress in the north of Mesopotamia, on the 
small tributary of the Euphrates called Hilecha. 
a little above Nicephonum, and below Ichna;. 
It was a Macedonian settlement, and the only 
one of the Greek cities of Mesopotamia which 
did not revolt from the Parthians at the ap- 
proach of Crassus. 

Zenodotus (7.f)v66aror). 1. Of Ephesus, a 
celebrated grammarian, was the first superin- 
tendent of the great library at A lexandrea, and 
flourished under Ptolemy Pluladelphus about 
B.C. 208. Zenodotus was employed by 1'hila- 
delphus, together with his two great contempo- 
raries, Alexander the yEtolian. and Lycophron 
the Chalcidian, to collect and revise all the 
Greek poets. Alexander, we are told, under- 
took the task of collecting the tragedies, Lyco- 
phron the comedies, and Zenodotus the poems 
of Homer and of the other illustrious poets. 
Zenodotus, however, devoted his chief atten- 
tion to the Iliad and Odyssey. Hence he is 
called the first Reviser (Aoptf/yr^c) of Homer, 
and his recension (Aioptiuci',) of the Iliad and 
Odyssey obtained the greatest celebrity. The 
corrections which Zenodotus applied to the 
text of Homer were of three kinds. 1. He ex- 
punged verses. 2. He marked them as spuri- 
ous, but left them in bis copy. 3. He intro- 
duced new readings, or transposed or altered 
verses. The great attention which Zenodotus 
paid to the language of Homer caused a new 
epoch in the grammatical study of the Greek 
language. The results of his investigations re- 
specting the meaning and the use of words 
were contained in two works which lie pub- 
lished under the title of a Glossary {Y/.tioaai), 
and a Dictionary of barbarous or foreign phra- 
ses. — 2. Of Alexandrea, a grammarian, lived 
after Aristarchus, whose recension of the Ho- 
meric poems he attacked. 

951 



ZEPHYRA. 



ZEUS. 



Zephyra. Vid. Halicarnassus. 

Zephyrium (Zeovpiov, sc. aKpcjTTjpiov, i.e., the 
western promontory), the name of several prom- 
ontories of the ancient world, not all of which, 
however, faced the west. The chief of them 
were the following : I. In Europe. 1. (Now 
Capo di Brussa.no), a promontory in Bruttium, 
forming the southeastern extremity of the coun- 
try, from which the Locri, who settled in the 
neighborhood, are said to have obtained the 
name of Epizephyrii. Vid. p. 445, b. — 2. A prom- 
ontory on the western coast of Cyprus. — II. In 
Asia. 1. In Pontus (now Cape Zefreh), a head- 
land west of Tripolis, with a fort and harbor 
of the same name. — 2. Vid. Caria. — 3. In Cili- 
cia (now probably Cape Cavaliere), a far-pro- 
jecting promontory, west of Promontorium 
Sarpedon. Some make it the headland east of 
Promontorium Sarpedon, and just south of the 
mouth of the Calycadnus, which Polybius, Ap- 
pian, and Livy call by the same name as the 
river, Calycadnus. — III. In Africa (now Kasser 
Maarah), a headland on the northeastern coast 
of Cyrena'ica, west of Darnis. 

Zephyrus (Zepvpoc), the personification of 
the west wind, is described by Hesiod as a son 
of Astraeus and Eos (Aurora). Zephyrus and 
Boreas are frequently mentioned together by 
Homer, and both dwelt together in a palace in 
Thrace. By the Harpy Podarge, Zephyrus be- 
came the father of the horses Xanthus and 
Balius, which belonged to Achilles ; but he 
was married to Chloris, whom he had carried 
off by force, and by whom he had a son Car- 
pus. 

[Zerna (Zernensis), a city of Dacia, a Ro- 
man colony, situated a short distance east of 
the Pons Trajani : it is sometimes called Colo- 
nia Zernensium.'] 

Zerynthus (Zrjpyvdog : Zrjpvvdtog), a town of 
Thrace, in the territory of JEnos, with a temple 
of Apollo and a cave of Hecate, who are hence 
called Zerynthius and Zerynthia respectively. 
Some writers, however, place the Zerynthian 
cave of Hecate in Samothrace. 

Zetes {Zt]Tvr) and Calais (Kula'ic), sons of 
Boreas and Orithyia, frequently called the Bo- 
keadje, are mentioned among the Argonauts, 
and are described as winged beings. Their sis- 
ter Cleopatra, who was married to Phineus, 
king of Salmydessus, had been thrown with her 
sons into prison by Phineus at the instigation 
of his second wife. Here she was found by 
Zetes and Calais, when they arrived at Salmy- 
dessus in the Argonautic expedition. They lib- 
erated their sister and his children, gave the 
kingdom to the latter, and sent the second wife 
of Phineus to her own country, Scythia. Oth- 
ers relate that the Boreadse delivered Phineus 
from the Harpies ; for it had been foretold that 
the Harpies might be killed by the sons of Bo- 
reas, but that the sons of Boreas must die if 
they should not be able to overtake the Har- 
pies. Others, again, state that the Boreadae per- 
ished in their pursuit of the Harpies, or that 
Hercules killed them with his arrows near the 
island of Tenos. Different stories were rela- 
ted to account for the anger of Hercules against 
the Boreadae. Their tombs were said to be in 
Tenos, adorned with sepulchral stelae, one of 
which moved whenever the wind blew from th'e 
952 



north. Calais is also mentioned as the founder 
of the Campanian town of Cales. 

Zethos {Zfjdog), son of Jupiter (Zeus) and 
Antiope, and brother of Amphion. For details, 
vid. Amphion. 

Zeugis, Zeugitana Regio (f/ Zevyiravn : 
northern part of Tunis), the northern district 
of Africa Propria. Vid. Africa. 

Zeugma (Zevyfia, i. e., Junction : now probably 
Rumkaleh), a city of Syria, on the borders of 
Commagene and Cyrrhestice, built by Seleucus 
Nicator, on the western bank of the Euphrates, 
at a point where the river was crossed by a 
bridge of boats, which had been constructed by 
Alexander the Great : hence the name. After- 
ward, when the ford of Thapsacus became im- 
passable for travellers, on account of the hordes 
of Arabs who infested the banks of the Lower 
Euphrates, the bridge at Zeugma gave the only 
passage over the river. 

Zeus (Zevc), called Jupiter by the Romans, 
the greatest of the Olympian gods, was a son 
of Cronos (Saturn) and Rhea, a brother of Po- 
seidon (Neptune), Hades (Pluto), Hestia (Ves- 
ta), Demeter (Ceres), Hera (Juno), and was also 
married to his sister Hera (Juno). When Zeus 
(Jupiter) and his brothers distributed among 
themselves the government of the world by lot, 
Poseidon (Neptune) obtained the sea, Hades 
(Pluto) the lower world, and Zeus (Jupiter) the 
heavens and the upper regions, but the earth 
became common to all. According to the Ho- 
meric account, Zeus (Jupiter) dwelt on Mount 
Olympus in Thessaly, which was believed to 
penetrate with its lofty summit into heaven it- 
self. He is called the father of gods and men, 
the most high and powerful among the immor- 
tals, whom all others obey. He is the supreme 
ruler, who, with his counsel, manages every 
thing; the founder of kingly power, and of law 
and of order, whence Dice, Themis, and Neme- 
sis are his assistants. For the same reason, he 
protects the assembly of the people (uyopalog), 
the meetings of the council (fiov?>aioe), and as 
he presides over the whole state, so also over 
every house and family (epsecog). He also 
watched over the sanctity of the oath (bptaoc)' 
and the laws of hospitality (gevtog), and pro- 
tected suppliants (Ueaiog). He avenged those 
who were wronged, and punished those who 
had committed a crime, for he watched the do- 
ings and sufferings of all men (eTroipioc). He 
was further the original source of all prophet- 
ic power, from whom all prophetic signs and 
sounds proceeded {navop^alog). Every thing 
good as well as bad comes from Zeus (Jupiter) ; 
according to his own choice, he assigns good or 
evil to mortals ; and fate itself was subordinate 
to him. He is armed with thunder and light- 
ning, and the shaking of his aegis produces storm 
and tempest : a number of epithets of Zeus 
(Jupiter) in the Homeric poems describe him 
as the thunderer, the gatherer of clouds, and 
the like. He was married to Hera (Juno), by 
whom he had two sons, Ares (Mars) and He- 
phaestus (Vulcan), and one daughter, Hebe. 
Hera (Juno) sometimes acts as an independent 
divinity ; she is ambitious, and rebels against 
her lord, but she is nevertheless inferior to him, 
and is punished for her opposition ; his amours, 
with other goddesses or mortal women are no 



ZEUS. 



concealed from her, though they generally rouse 
her jealousy and revenge. During the Trojan 
war, Zeus (Jupiter), at the request of Thetis 
favored the Trojans, until Agamemnon repaired 
the wrong he had done to Achilles. Zeus (Ju- 
piter), no doubt, was originally a god of a por- 
tion of nature. Hence the oak, with its eatable 
fruit, and the fertile doves, were sacred to him 
at Dodona and in Arcadia. Hence, also, rain 
storms, and the seasons were regarded as his 
work ; and hence, likewise, the Cretan stories 
of milk, honey, and the cornucopia. In the Ho- 
meric poems, however, this primitive character 
of a personification of certain powers of nature 
as already effaced to some extent, and the god 
appears as a political and national divinity, as 
the king and father of men, as the founder and 
protector of all institutions hallowed by law, 
custom, or religion. Hesiod also calls Zeus 
(Jupiter) the son of Cronos (Saturn) and Rhea, 
and the brother of Hestia (Vesta), Demeter 
(Ceres), Hera (Juno), Hades (Pluto), and Po- 
seidon (Neptune). Cronos (Saturn) swallowed 
his children immediately after their birth ; but 
when Rhea was pregnant with Zeus (Jupiter), 
she applied to Uranus (Cojlus) and Ge (Terra) 
to save the life of the child. Uranus (Ccelus) 
and Ge (Terra) therefore sent Rhea to Lyctos 
in Crete, requesting her to bring up her child 
there. Rhea accordingly concealed Zeus (Ju- 
piter) in a cave of Mount /Egeeon, and gave to 
Cronos (Saturn) a stone wrapped up in cloth, 
which he swallowed in the belief that it was 
his son. Other traditions slate that Zeus (Ju- 
piter) was born and brought up on Mount Dicte 
or Ida (also the Trojan Ida), lthome in Messc- 
nia, Thebes in Boeotia, .Ugion in Achaia, or 
Olenos in ^Etolia. According to the common 
account, however, Zeus (Jupiter) grew up in 
Crete. In the mean time, Cronos (Saturn), by 
a cunning device of Ge (Terra) or Metis, was 
made to bring up the children he had swal- 
lowed, and first of all the stone, which was 
afterward set up by Zeus (Jupiter) at Delphi. 
The young god now delivered the Cyclopes 
from the bonds with which they had been fet- 
tered by Cronos (Saturn), and they, in their 
gratitude, provided him with thunder and light- 
ning. On the advice of Ge (Terra), Zeus (Ju- 
piter) also liberated the hundred-armed Gigan- 
tes, Briareos, Cottus, and Gyes, that they might 
assist him in his fight against the Titans. The 
Titans were conquered and shut up in Tartarus, 
where they were henceforth guarded by the 
Hecatoncheires. Thereupon Tartarus and Ge 
(Terra) begot Typhocus, who began a fearful 
struggle with Zeus (Jupiter), but was con- 
quered. Zeus (Jupiter) now obtained the do- 
minion of the world, and chose Metis for his 
wife. When she was pregnant with Athena 
(Minerva), he took the child out of her body 
and concealed it in his head, on the advice of 
Uranus (Ccelus) and Ge (Terra), who told him 
that thereby he would retain the supremacy of 
the world ; for if Metis had given birth to a 
son, this son (so fate had ordained it) would 
have acquired the sovereignty. After this, Zeus 
(Jupiter) became the father of the Horae and 
Mcerai by his second wife Themis ; of the 
Chantes by Eurynome ; of Persephone (Proser- 
pina) by Demeter (Ceres) ; of the Muses by 



Mnemosyne ; of Apollo and Artemis (Diana) by 
Ueto (Latona) ; and of Hebe, Ares (Mars), anil 
Ilithyia by Hera (Juno) Athena was born out of 
the head of Zeus (Jupiter) ; while Hera (Juno) 
on the other hand, gave birth to Hepha-stus 
(Vulcan) without the co-operation of Z« us (Ju- 
piter) The family of the Cronida- accordingly 
embraces the twelve great c ods of Olympus 
Zeus (Jupiter, the head of them all). Poseidon 
(Neptirtie), Apollo, Ares (Mars), Hermes (Mer- 
cury), Hephaestus (Vulcan). Hestia (Vesta). De- 
meter (Ceres), Hera (Juno), Athena (Minerva), 
Aphrodite (Venus), and Artemis(Uiana). These 
twelve Olympian gods, who in some places 
were worshipped as a body, were recognized 
not only by the Greeks, but were adopted also 
by the Romans, who, in particular, identified 
their Jupiter with the Greek Zeus. In survey- 
ing the different local traditions about Zeus, it 
would seem that originally there were several, 
or at least three, divinities which in their re- 
spective countries were supreme, but which in 
the course of time became united in the minds 
of the people into one great national divinity. 
We may accordingly speak of an Arcadian, Do- 
donaean. Cretan, and a national Hellenic Zeus. 
1. '1 he Arcadian Zeus (Zci'f Avnaioc) was born, 
according to the legends of the country, in Ar- 
cadia, either on Mount Parrhasium or on Mount 
Uycaeus. He was brought up there by the nymphs 
Thisoa, Neda, and Hagno. Lycaon, a son of 
Pelasgus, erected a temple to Zeus I,yea-us on 
Mount Lycaeus, and instituted the festival of the 
Lycea in honor of him. Vtd. Lycxvs, Lycao.v 
No one was allowed to enter this sanctuary 
of Zeus Lycauis on Mount Lyca;us. 2. The 
Dodunaan Zeus ( Zf vc AuAuvaioc or llc/.aoytnor) 
possessed the most ancient oracle in Greece, at 
Dodona in Epirus, from which he derived his 
name. At Dodona Zeus was mainly a prophetic 
god, and the oak tree was sacred to him ; but 
there, too, he was said to have been reared 
by the Dodona;an nymphs (Hyades). Respect- 
ing the Dodonaean oracle of Zeus, nd. Diet, 
of Anliq., art. Oracci.cm. 3. The Cretan Zeus 
(Zeir AiKTaioc or KpjjTaycvqr). We have al- 
ready given Hesiod's account of this god. He 
was brought up in a cave of Mount Dictc by 
the Curetes and the nymphs Adrastia and Ida, 
the daughters of Melisseus. They fed him with 
the milk of the goat Amalthea, and the bees of 
the mountain provided him with honey. Crete 
is called the island or nurse of the great Zeus, 
and his worship there appears to have been very 
ancient. 4. The national Hellenic. Zeus, near 
whose temple at Olympia, in Elis, the great na- 
tional panegyris was celebrated once in four 
years. There, too, Zeus was regarded as the 
father and king of gods and men, and as the 
supreme god of the Hellenic nation. His statue 
there was executed by Phidias, a few years be- 
fore the outbreak of the Peloponnesian war, the 
majestic and sublime idea of this statue having 
been suggested to the artist by the words of 
Homer (7/., i , 527). Vii. Phidias. The Greek 
and* Latin poets give to Zeus or Jupiter an im- 
mense number of epithets and surnames, which 
are derived partly from the places where he was 
worshipped, and partly from his powers and 
functions. The eagle, the oak, and the sum- 
mits of mountains were sacred to him, and his 

953 



ZEUXIDAMUS. 



ZONARASi 



sacrifices generally consisted of goats, bulls, 
and cows. His usual attributes are the sceptre, 
eagle, thunderbolt, and a figure of Victory in 
his hand, and sometimes also a cornucopia. 
The Olympian Zeus sometimes wears a wreath 
of olive, and the Dodonaean Zeus a wreath of 
oak leaves. In works of art Zeus is generally 
represented as the omnipotent father and king 
of gods and men, according to the idea which 
had been embodied in the statue of thfe Olym- 
pian Zeus by Phidias. Respecting the Roman 
god, vid. Jupiter. 

Zeuxidamus {Zev^lda/j.og). I. King of Sparta, 
and tenth of the Eurypontidae. He was grand- 
son of Theopompus, and father of Anaxidamus, 
who succeeded him. — 2. Son of Leotychides, 
king of Sparta. He was also named Cyniscus. 
He died before his father, leaving a son, Archi- 
damus EL 

Zeuxis (Zevfa), the celebrated Greek painter, 
who excelled all his contemporaries except Par- 
rhasius, was a native of Heraclea (probably of 
the city of this name on the Euxine), and flour- 
ished B.C. 424-400. He came to Athens soon 
after the beginning of the Peloponnesian war, 
when he had already achieved a great reputa- 
tion, although a young man. He passed some 
time in Macedonia, at the court of Archelaiis, 
for whom he decorated the royal palace at Pella 
with paintings, probably soon after 413. He 
must have spent some time in Magna Graecia, 
as we learn from the story respecting the pic- 
ture of Helen, which he painted for the city of 
Croton ; and it is also probable that he visited 
Sicily, as we are told that he gave away one 
of his pictures to the Agrigentines. His travels 
through Greece itself were no doubt extensive 
We find him at Olympia, where he made an os- 
tentatious display, before the eyes of all Greece, 
of the wealth which his art had brought him, 
by appearing in a robe embroidered with his 
own name in letters of gold. After acquiring 
a great fortune by the exercise of his art, he 
adopted the custom of giving away his pictures, 
because no adequate price could be set upon 
them. The time of his death is unknown. The 
master-piece of Zeuxis was his picture of Helen, 
in painting which he had as his models the five 
most beautiful virgins of Croton, whom he was 
allowed to select for this purpose from among 
all the virgins of the city. It was painted for 
the temple of Juno at Croton. This picture 
and its history were celebrated by many poets, 
who preserved the names of the five virgins 
upon whom the choice of Zeuxis fell. The ac- 
curate imitation of inanimate objects was a de- 
partment of the art which Zeuxis and his young- 
er rival Parrhasius appear to have carried al- 
most to perfection. The well-known story of 
the trial of skill in that species of painting be- 
tween these two artists, if not literally true, in- 
dicates the opinion which was held in ancient 
times of their powers of imitation. In this con- 
test the picture of Zeuxis represented a bunch 
of grapes, so naturally painted that the birds 
flew at the picture to eat the fruit ; upon which 
the artist, confident in this proof of his success, 
called upon his rival no longer to delay to draw 
aside the curtain and show his picture ; but the 
picture oi Parrhasius was the curtain itself, i 
which Zeuxis had mistaken for real drapery. ! 



On discovering his error, Zeuxis honorably 
yielded the palm to Parrhasius, saying that he 
himself had deceived birds, but Parrhasius an 
artist. Besides this accuracy of imitation, many 
of the works of Zeuxis displayed great dramatic 
power. This appears to have been especially 
the case with his Infant Hercules strangling the 
Serpent, where the chief force of the composi- 
tion consisted in the terror of Alcmena and Am- 
phitryon as they witnessed the struggle. An- 
other picture, in which he showed the same 
dramatic power, applied to a very different sub- 
ject, was his Female Hippocentaur, and which 
was lost in a shipwreck off Cape Malea, on its 
way to Rome, whither it had been sent by Sulla. 

ZiKLAG(2e/c£/Ua, 2e/ceZa), a town in the south- 
west of Palestine, belonging to the Philistines 
of Gath, whose king Achish gave it to David 
for a residence during his exile from the court 
of Saul. On David's accession to the kingdom, 
it was united to Judah. 

[Zilia, Zelis (Zf/Xic), Zeles (Zelnc), Zelas 
or Zilis (now Ar-Zila), an ancient Punic city 
in Mauretania Tingitana, at the mouth of a river 
of the same name, south of Tingis ; after the 
time of Augustus, a Roman colony, with the ap- 
pellation Julia Constantia : according to Strabo, 
its inhabitants were transferred to a town in 
Spain. Vid. Traducta Julia.] 

Ziobetis ([not Zioberis as commonly written, 
vid. Zumpt ad Curt., vi., 10], now Jinjeran), a 
river of Parthia, [the same as the Stibcetes 
(Y,Tif>oL7nc) of Diodorus, flows a short distance, 
then disappears under ground ; after a subter- 
ranean course of three hundred stadia it re- 
appears, and flows on in a broader current until 
it unites with the Ridagnus. Forbiger, follow- 
ing Mannert, considers the united stream the 
Choatres of Ammianus (now Adscki-Su).'] 

Zion. Vid. Jerusalem. 

Zoar or Tsoar, Zoara or Zoaras (Zoap, Zd- 
apa : LXX., Z?/ywp and Zoyopa: now probably 
ruins in Ghor el Mezraa, on the Wady el Deraak), 
originally called Bela, a city on the southeast 
of the Dead Sea, belonging first to the Moabites, 
and afterward to the Arabs. In the time of 
Abraham it was the smallest of the " cities of 
the plain," and was saved, at the intercession 
of Lot, from the destruction which fell upon 
Sodom and Gomorrha. 

ZcETIUM Or Z03TEUM {ZOLTLOV, ZoiTELOV E Zot- 

Teievg), a town of Arcadia, in the district Eutre- 
sia, north of Megalopolis. 

Zoilus {ZutAoq), a grammarian, was a native 
of Amphipolis, and flourished in the time of 
Philip of Macedon. He was celebrated for the 
asperity with which he assailed Homer. He 
found fault with him principally for introducing 
fabulous and incredible stories in his poems. 
From the list that we have of his writings, it 
also appears that he attacked Plato and Isocra- 
tes. His name became proverbial for a captious 
and malignant critic. 

Zonaras, Joannes (ludwrjc 6 Zuvapa?), a 
celebrated Byzantine historian and theologian, 
lived in the twelfth century under the emperors 
Alexus I. Comnenus and Calo- Joannes. Be- 
sides his theological works, there are still ex- 
tant, 1. Annales (xpovinov), in eighteen books, 
from the creation of the world to the death of 
Alexis in 1118. It is compiled from various 



ZONE. 

Greek authors, whose very words Zonaras fre- 
quently retains. The earlier part is chiefly 
taken from Josephus ; and in the portion which 
relates to Roman history, he has, for the most 
part, followed Dion Cassius. In consequence 
of the latter circumstance, the Annals of Zona- 
ras are of great importance in studying the early 
history of Rome. Of the first twenty books of 
Dion Cassius we have nothing but the abstract 
of Zonaras ; and even of the later books, of 
which Xiphilinus has made a more full epitome, 
Zonaras has preserved many statements of 
Dion which are entirely omitted by Xiphilinus. 
The best editions are by Du Fresne du Cange, 
Paris, 1686, fol. ; and by Pinder, Bonn, 1841, 
8vo. 2. A Lexicon, edited by Tittmann, Lips., 
1808, 4to. 

Zone (Zuvn : Zuvaloc ), a town of Thrace, on 
a promontory of the .same name in the J2gean, 
where Orpheus is said to have sung. 

Zopyrus (ZwTTupof). 1. A distinguished Per- 
sian, son of Megabyzus. After Darius Hystas- 
pis had besieged Babylon for twenty months in 
rain, Zopyrus resolved to gain the place for his 
master by the most extraordinary self-sacrifice. 
Accordingly, one day he appeared before Darius 
with his body mutilated in the most horrible 
manner ; both his ears and nose were cut off, 
and his person otherwise disfigured. After ex- 
plaining to Darius his intentions, he fled to Bab- 
ylon as a victim of the cruelty of the Persian 
king. The Babylonians gave him their confi- 
dence, and placed him at the head of their troops. 
He soon found means to betray the city to Da- 
rius, who severely punished the inhabitants for 
their revolt. Darius appointed Zopyrus satrap 
of Babylon for life, with the enjoyment of its 
entire revenues. — [2. The son of Megabyzus, 
and grandson of the preceding, revolted from 
the Persians, and fled to Athens.]— 3. The Phys- 
iognomist, attributed many vices to Socrates in 
an assembly of his disciples, who laughed at 
him and at his art in consequence ; but Socrates 
admitted that such were his natural propensi- 
ties, but said that they had been overcome by 
philosophy.— [4. A Thracian, a slave of Pericles, 
assigned by him, as the least useful, from old 
age, of all his slaves, to Alcibiades as his paeda- 
gogus ] — 5. A surgeon at Alexandrea, the tutor 
of Apollonius Citiensis and Posidonius, about 
the beginning of the first century B.C. He in- 
vented an antidote, used by Mithradates, king 
ofPontus. 

Zoroaster or Zoroastres (Zupodarprjc), the 
Zarathustra of the Zendavesta, and the Zer- 
dusht of the Persians, was the founder of the 
Magian religion. The most opposite opinions 
have been held both by ancient and modern 
writers respecting the time in which he lived ; 
but it is quite impossible to come to any conclu- 
sion on the subject. As the founder of the Ma- 
gian religion, he must be placed in remote anti- 
quity, and it may even be questioned whether 
such a person ever existed. This religion was 



ZYG ANTES 

probably of Bactrian origin, and from thenc* 
spread eastward , and the tradition which rep- 
resents Zoroaster a Mcde sprang up at a later 
time, when the chief seat of his religion was in 
Media, and no longer in the further East. There 
were extant in the later Greek literature sev- 
eral works bearing the name of Zoroaster j but 
these writings were forgeries of a later age, and 
belong to the same class of writings as the 
works of Hermes Trismegistus, Orpheus, Ac. 
There is still extant a collection of oracles as- 
cribed to Zoroaster, which arc of course spuri- 
ous. They have been published by Morell, 
Paris, 1595; by Obsopacus, Paris, 1507, and by 
others. 

[Zorzines or Zorsines, king of the Siraci, a 
people of Sarmatia Asiatica, in whose territory 
was the city Uspe, taken by the Romans in the 
reign of Claudius.] 

[Zosimus, a learned frecdman of the younger 
Pliny, remarkable for his talents as a comedian 
and musician, as well as for his excellence as 
a reader.] 

Zosimus (Zuccfioc), a Greek historian, who 
lived in the time of the younger Thcodosius. 
He wrote a history of the Roman empire in six 
books, which is still extant. This work must 
have been written after A.D. 425, as an event 
is mentioned in it which took place in that year. 
The first book comprises a sketch of the history 
of the early emperors, down to the end of the 
reign of Diocletian (305). The second, third, 
and fourth books are devoted to the history of 
the fourth century, which is treated much less 
concisely. The fifth and sixth books embrace 
the period from 395 to 410, when Attalus was 
deposed. The work of Zosimus is mainly 
(though not altogether) an abridgment or com- 
pilation of the works of previous historians. His 
style is concise, clear, pure, and not unpleasing. 
His chief fault as an historical writer is his neg- 
lect of chronology. Zosimus was a pagan, and 
comments severely upon the faults and crimes 
of the Christian emperors. Hence his credibil- 
ity has been assailed by several Christian writ- 
ers. There are, no doubt, numerous errors of 
judgment to be found in the work, and some- 
times (especially in the case of Constantino) an 
intemperate expression of opinion, which some- 
what exaggerates, if it does not distort, the truth. 
But he does not seem fairly chargeable with de- 
liberate invention or willful misrepresentation. 
The best editions are by Reitemeier, Lips., 
1784, [and by Imm. Bekker, Bonn, 1837 ] 

Zoster (now Cape of Van), a promontory on 
the west of Attica, between Phalerum and Su- 
nium. It was a sacred spot, and contained al- 
tars of Lcto (Latona), Artemis (Diana), and 
Apollo. 

Zygantes or Gygantes (Zvynvrcr, Tv^avrec), 
a people of Libya, whom Herodotus places on 
the western side of the Lake Triton. Others 
mention a city Zygantis and a people Zyges on 
the coast of Marmarica 

955 



CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES 

OF 

GREEK AND ROMAN HISTORY, 

CIVIL AND LITERARY, 

FROM THE FIRST OLYMPIAD, B.C. 776, TO THE FALL OF 
THE WESTERN EMPIRE, A D. 476. 

WITH 

TABLES OF GREEK AND ROMAN MEASURES, 
WEIGHTS, AND MONEY. 

EDITED BY 

WILLIAM SMITH, LL.D., 

EDITOR OF THE DICTIONARIES OF CHEEK AND SOMAN ANTIQUITIES, AND 
BIOGRAPHY AND MYTHOLOGY. 



[From the Dictionaries of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, and Aniiquittit ] 



ADVERTISEMENT, 



t CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES. 

1. CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES OF GREEK HISTORY, 

FROM THE FIRST OLYMPIAD, B.C. 776, TO THE FALL OF CORINTH, B.C. 146. 

2. CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES OF ROMAN HISTORY, 

PROM THE FOUNDATION OF THE CITY, B.C. 753, TO THE FALL OF THE WESTERN EMPIRI, 

A.D. 476. 

3. PARALLEL YEARS, 

THAT IS, THE YEARS BEFORE THE CHRISTIAN ERA, THE YEARS FROM THE FOUNDATION OF 

ROME, AND THE OLYMPIADS. 

4. LISTS OF THE ATHENIAN ARCHONS EPONYMI, AND OF THE KINGS OF 
THE MOST IMPORTANT MONARCHIES : 

Kings of Egypt, Kings of Egypt (the Ptolemies), 

Kings of Media, Kings of Pergamus, 

Kings of Lydia, Kings of Bithynia, 

Kings of Persia, Kings of Pontus, 

Kings of Sparta, Kings of Cappadocia, 

Kings of Macedonia, Kings of Rome, 

Kings of Syria, Emperors of Rome, 
And Emperors of Constantinople. 



II. TABLES OF MEASURES, WEIGHTS, AND MONEY, 



FROM THE DICTIONARY OF GREEK AND ROMAN ANTIQUITIES. 

In the construction of these Tables, the same authorities have been used as those referred to in 
the articles in the body of the work. Particular acknowledgment is due of the assistance which 
has been derived from the Tables of Hussey and Wurm. The last two Tables (of Greek and Ro- 
man money) have been taken without alteration from Mr. Hussey's, because they were thought 
incapable of improvement, except one addition in the Table of Attic Money. All the calcula- 
tions, however, have been made de novo, even where the results are the same as in Mr. Hussey's 
Tables. 

The Tables are so arranged as to exhibit the corresponding Greek and Roman measures in 
direct comparison with each other. In some of the Tables the values are given, not only in our 
several measures, but also in decimals of a primary unit, for the purpose of facilitating calcula- 
tions. In others, approximate values are given, that is, values which differ from the true ones by 
some small fraction, and which, from their simplicity, will perhaps be found far more useful for 
ordinary purposes than the precise quantities, while the error, in each case, can easily be correct- 
ed. Fuller information will be found under Mensue.a, Nummus, Pondera, and the specific 
names, in the Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities. 



Table 




Table 




I. 


Greek Measures of Length. 


IX. 


Greek Measures of Capacity. 




(1.) Smaller Measures. 




(2.) Dry Measures. 


II. 


Roman Measures of Length. 


X. 


Roman Measures of Capacity. 




(1.) Smaller Measures. 




(2.) Dry Measures. 


III. 


Greek Measures of Length. 


XI. 


Greek Weights. 




(2.) Land and Itinerary. 


XII. 


Greek Money. 


IV. 


Roman Measures of Length. 


XIII. 


Roman Weights. 




(2.) Land and Itinerary. 




(1.) The As and its Divisions. 


V. 


Greek Measures of Surface. 


XIV. 


Roman Weights. 


VI. 


Roman Measures of Surface. 




(2.) Subdivisions of the Uncia. 


VII. 


Greek Measures of Capacity. 


XV. 


Roman Money. 




(1.) Liquid Measures. 




(1.) Before Augustus. 


VIII. 


Roman Measures of Capacity. 


XVI. 


Roman Money. 




(1.) Liquid Measures. 




(2.) After Augustus. 



w. s. 



RULES 



FOR THE 



CONVERSION OF THE OLYMPIADS AND THE YEARS OP ROME (A U C ) INTO YFARS 
BEFORE AND AFTER THE BIRTH OF CHRIST. ' 

The Olympiads commenced in the year 3938 of the Julian period, or B.C. 776. Each Olym- 
piad contains 4 years The year of Rome commenced B.C. 753. 

To ascertain the years before or after Christ of any Olympiad, take the number of Olympiad* 
actually completed, multiply that number by 4, and if the product be less than 776, subtract that 
product from 776 ; the remainder will be the years before Christ. If the product be more than 
776, subtract 776 from that product, and the remainder will be the years after Christ. 

We thus obtain the year before or after Christ of the last complete Olympiad : we must now 
include the single years of the current Olympiad. To put down these correctly— if before Christ, 
subtract the last completed year (viz., the number 1, 2, or 3 immediately preceding) • if after Christ, 
add the current year j the product will be the year before or after Christ, corresponding to the 
current year of the current Olympiad. 

For Example : Let the 3d year of the 87th Olympiad be the year to be converted. IV num- 
ber of Olympiads actually completed is 86 ; multiply that number by 4, and the total will be 344. 
Subtract this number (being kss than 776) from 776, and the remainder will be 432 ; subtract 
further the last completed year of the current Olympiad (viz., 2), and the year 430 before Christ 
will be the corresponding year. 

Suppose it were the 2d year of the 248th Olympiad. Multiply 247, the number of Olympiuda 
actually completed, by 4, and the total will be 988 ; as that number is larger than 776, deduct 776 
from 988, and the remainder, 212, will be the year of the last complete Olympiad : add 2 for the 
current year of the current Olympiad, and 214 after Christ (A.D. 214) will be the corresponding 
year. 

To find the year before or after Christ which corresponds to any given year of the Building of 
Rome, add 1 year (for the current year) to 753, and from the total, 754, subtract the given year 
of Rome ; the remainder will be the corresponding year before Christ. If the given year of Rome 
exceed 753, subtract 753 from the given number, and the remainder will be the corresponding 
year after Christ 

For Example : Caesar invaded Britain in the year of Rome 699. Deduct 699 from 754, and 
that event is seen to correspond with the year B.C. 55. The Romans finally left Britain in the 
year of Rome 1179. Subtract 753 from 1179, and the remainder, 426, will be the year of our 
Lord in which that event took place. 
61 



V 




CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES OF GREEK HISTORY, 

l-KOM X II F. FIRST OLYMPIAD, B.C. 776, TO THE FALL OF CORINTH. K.C. 146. 



776 Corcabus the Elean gains the victory in the foot-race 
at the Olympic games The Olympic games were 
instituted by Iphitus the Elean about B.C. 884, but 
the Olympiads wi re not employed as a chronolog- 
ical era till the victory of Corcebus. 

775 Arctinus of Miletus, the Cyclic poet, flourished. 

774 Pandosia and Mctapontum, in Italy, founded. 

765 Cintethon of Laccdwmon, the Cyclic poet, flourished. 

761 Eumelus flourished. 

753 Antimachus of Tcos flourished. 

750 Miletus at the height of its power. Many of its colo- 
nies founded about this time or a little later. 

748 Phidon, tyrant of Argos, celebrates the 8th Olympic 
games. He introduced copper and silver coinag 
and a new scale of weights and measures, through- 
out the Peloponnesus. 

745 The first annual Prytanis at Corinth, 90 years before 
the reign of Cypselus. 

744 Eumelus of Corinth, the Cyclic poet, flourished. 

743 The beginning of iiv rirst war between the Messeni- 
ans and the Lacedaemonians. 

736 Callinus of Ephesus, the earliest Greek elegiac poet, 
flourished. 

735 Naxos, in Sicily, founded by the Chalcidians of Eu- 
boea. 

734 Syracuse founded by Aichiai of Corinth. 
730 Leontium and Catana, in Sicily, founded. 
728 Megara Hybla^a, in Su.ily, founded. 

Philolaus of Corinth, the Theban lawgiver, flour- 
ished. 

723 End of the first Meeeenian war. The Messenians were 
obliged to submit after the capture of Ithome, and 
to pay a heavy tribute to the Lacedaemonians. 

721 Sybaris, in Italy, founded by the Achaeans. 

718 War between the Lacedaemonians and Argives. 

716 Gyges begins to reign in Lydia. This dynasty reigned, 
according to Herodotus, 160 years, and terminated 
B.C. 546 by the fall of Croesus. 

712 Astacus founded by the Megarians. 
Callmus of Ephesus flourished. 

710 Croton or Crotona, in Italy, founded by the Achas- 
ans. Soon after the foundation of Croton the Ozo- 
lian Locrians founded the Epizephyrian Locri in 
Italy. 

709 Deioces begins to reign in Media. The Medes revolt- 
ed from the Assyrians after the death of Sennache- 
rib in B.C. 71). The Assyrians, according to He- 
rodotus, hnj governed Upper Asia for 520 years. 
This account gives B.C. 710 + 520 = B.C. 1230 for 
the commencement of the Assyrian dominion. The 
Median kings reigned 150 years. See B.C. 667 and 
559. 

708 Tarentum founded by the Lacedaemonian Parthenia\ 
under Phalanthus. 
Tbasos and Parium, on the Propontis, founded by the 
Parians. 

Archilochus of Paros, the Iambic poet, accompanied 
the colony to Thasos, being then in the flower of 
hie age. 



. He 

if sol 



G93 Simonides of Amorgos, the lyric poet, fl< 
Glaucus of Chios, a statuary in metal, flot 
was distinguished as the inventor of tl 
dering metals. 

690 Foundation of Gela in Sicily, and of Phafebs in Panv 
phylia. 

687 The empire of the Medea is computed by Hcrodotua 
to commence from this date, the 23d year of tiuur 
independence. It lasted 128 years, and tcrrainaU-d 
in B.C. 559. 
Archilochus flourished. Sec B.C. 708. 
685 The beginning of the second Mrsseuian war. 
C63 First annual archon at Athens. 

Tyrtaius, the Athenian poet, came to Sparta alter tho 
first success of the Messenians, and by his martial 
songs roused the fainting courage of the Laced w- 
monians. 9 
678 Ardys, king of Lydia, succeeded Gygca. 
675 Foundation of Cyzicus by the Megarians. 
674 Foundation of Chalcedon by the Megarinns. 
672 The Pisatus, led by Pantalcon, revolt from the Kleans, 
and espouse the cause of the Messenians. 
Alcman, a native of Sardis in Lydia, and the chi<f iyr 
ic poet of Sparta, flourished. 
570 Psammctichus, king of Egypt, Iwgins to reign. 
669 The Argives defeat the Laced.emonians at Ilysij*. 
668 End of the second Messcni.in war, according to Pau- 
sanias. 

G6f) Thaletus of Crete, the lyric poet ami mu.-;cian, flour- 
ished. 

664 A sea-fight between the Corinthians and Corcyrieans. 

the most ancient sea fight recorded. 
662 Zalcucus, tho lawgiver in Locri Epizephyrii, flour 
ished. 

657 Byzantium founded by the Megarians. 

G3f> Phraortes, king of Media, succeeds Deioces. 

655 The Bacchiada) expelled from Corinth. Cyp*cluj 

begins to reign. He reigned 30 years. 
651 Foundation of Acanthus, Stagira, Abdera, and Lamp 
sacus. 

651 Birth of Pittacus, according to Stride*. 
618 Himera in Sicily founded. 

647 Pisander. the epic poet of Camirus, in JUiodcs, flour- 
ished. 

644 Pnntaicon, king of Pisa, celebrates the Olympic pBNlL 
Terpander flourished. 

635 Sardis taken by the Cimmerians in the reign of Ardya. 

634 Phraortes, king of Media, slain by the Assyrians, and 
succeeded by his son Cyaxarcs. Irruption of the 
Scythians into Asia* who interrupt Cyaxare- ;n the 
siege of Nineveh. 

631 Cyrene, in Libya, founded by Ilattus oPThera. 

630 Mimnermus nourished. 

629 Foundation of Sinope by the Milesians. Sadyattet, 

king of Lydia, euccecds Ardys. 
625 Periander succeeds Cypselus at Coriuth. He rcigaed 

40 years. 

Arion flourished in the reign of Periander. 
621 Legislation of Dracon at Athens. m 



964 



CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES OF 



isc. 

€30 Attempt of Cylon to make himself master of Athena. 
He had been victor in the Olympic games in B.C. 
640. Assisted by Theagenes, tyrant of Megara, 
whose daughter he had married, he seized the cit- 
adel, but was there besieged by the archon Mega- 
eles, the Alcmseonid. Cylon and his adherents sur- 
rendered on a promise that their lives should be 
spared, but they were put to death. 

817 Alyattes, king of Lydia, succeeds Sadyattes. 

616 Neco, king of Egypt, succeeds Psammetichus. 

612 Peace between Alyattes, king of Lydia, and Miletus, 
in the 12th year of the war. 

611 Pittacus overthrows the tyranny of Melanchrus at 
Mytilene. 

Sappho, Alcseus, and Stesichorus flourished. 
€10 Birth of Anaxiraander. 

<9S7 Scythians expelled from Asia by Cyaxares, king of 
Media, after holding the dominion of it for 28 years. 
606 Nineveh taken by Cyaxares. 

Combat between Pittacus and Phrynon, the com- 
mander of the Athenians. 
Alcseus fought in the wars between the Mytilenssans 
and Athenians, and incurred the disgrace of leav- 
ing his shield on the field. 
660 Psammis, king of Egypt, succeeds Neco. 

Massilia, in Saul, founded by the Phocseans. 
599 Camarina, in Sicily, founded 135 years after Syracuse. 
596 Epimenides, the Cretan, came to Athens. 
595 Apries, king of Egypt, succeeds Psammis. 
Birth of Croesus, king of Lydia. 

Commencement of the Cirrhaean or Sacred War, 
which lasted 10 years. 

594 Legislation of Solon, who was Athenian archon in 
this year. 

592 Anacharsis came to Athens. 

591 Cirrha taken by the Amphictyons. 

Arcesilaiis I., king of Cyrene, succeeds Battus I. 

589 Commencement of the government of Pittacus at 
Mytilene. He held the supreme power for 10 years 
under the title of iEsymnetes. 
Alcaeus the poet in exile, and opposed to the govern- 
ment of Pittacus. 

586 The conquest of the Cirrhaeans completed and the 
Pythian games celebrated. 
The seven wise men flourished. They were, accord- 
ing to Plato, Thales, Pittacus, Bias, Solon, Cleobu- 
lus, Myson, Chilon. The first four were universally 
acknowledged. Periander, whom Plato excluded, 
was admitted by some. 
Sacadas of Argos gained the prize in music in the 
first three Pythia, B.C. 586, 582, 578. 

585 Death of Periander. 

582 Clisthenes of Sicyon, victor in the second Pythia. 

Agrigentum founded. 
581 The dynasty of the Cypselidae ended. 
579 Pittacus resigns the government of Mytilene. 
575 Battus II., king of Cyrene, succeeds Arcesilatis I. Na- 
val empire of the Phocseans. 
572 The war between Pisa and Elis ended by the subjec- 
tion o^the Pisans. 
iEsopus flourished. 
570 Accession of Phalaris, tyrant of Agrigentum. He 

reigned 16 years. 
•569 Amasis, king of Egypt, succeeds Apries. 

Death of Pittacus, 10 years after his abdication. 
.566 The Panathenasa instituted at Athens. 

Eugamon flourished. 
^64 Alalia, in Corsica, founded by the Phocseans. 



B.C. 

560 Pisistratus usurps the government of Athens. 
Thales is nearly eighty years of age. 
Ibycus of Rhegium, the lyric poet, flourished. 
559 Cyrus begins to reign in Persia. The Median empire 
ended. See B.C. 687. 
Heraclea. on the Euxine, founded. 
Anacreon begins to be distinguished. 
556 Simonides of Ceos, the lyric poet, born. 
553 Stesichorus died. 
549 Death of Phalaris of Agrigentum. 
548 The temple at Delphi burned. 

Anaximenes flourished. 
546 Sardis taken by Cyrus, and the Lydian monarchy 
overthrown. 
Hipponax, the Iambic poet, flourished. 
544 Pherecydes of Syros, the philosopher, and Theognia 

of Megara, the poet, flourished. 
539 Ibycus of Rhegium, the lyric poet, flourished. 
538 Babylon taken by Cyrus. 

Xenophanes of Colophon, the philosopher, flourished 
535 Thespis, the Athenian, first exhibits tragedy. 
532 Polycrates becomes tyrant of Samos. 
531 The philosopher Pythagoras and the poet Anacreon 
flourished. All accounts make them contemporary 
with Polycrates. 
529 Death of Cyrus and accession of Cambyses as king 
of Persia. 

527 Death of Pisistratus, 33 years after his first usurpation. 
525 Cambyses conquers Egypt in the fifth year of his 
reign. 

War of the Lacedaemonians against Polycrates of Sa- 
mos. 

Birth of jEschylus. 

Anacreon and Simonides came to Athens in the reign 
of Hipparchus. 

523 Choerilus of Athens first exhibits tragedy. 

522 Polycrates of Samos put to death. 

521 Death of Cambyses, usurpation of the Magi, and ac- 
cession of Darius, son of Hystaspes, to the Persian 
throne. 

Hecataius and Dionysius of Miletus, the historians, 
flomished. 

520 Melanippides of Melos, the dithyrambic poet, flour- 
ished. 

519 Plataeae places itself under the protection of Athens. 

Birth of Cratinus, the comic poet. 
518 Birth of Pindar. 

514 Hipparchus, tyrant of Athens, slain by Harmodtas 

and Aristogiton. 
511 Phrynicus, the tragic poet, flourished. 
510 Expulsion of Hippias and his family from Athens. 
The ten tribes instituted at Athens by Clisthenes. 
Telesilla of Argos, the poetess, flourished. 
504 Charon of Lampsacus, the historian, flourished. 
503 Heraclitus of Ephesus, the philosopher, and Lasus 

of Hermione, the lyric poet, flourished. 
501 Naxos besieged by Aristagoras and the Persians. 
Upon the failure of this attempt, Aristagoras de- 
termines to revolt from the Persians. 
Hecataeus the historian took part in the deliberations 
of the Ionians respecting the revolt. 
500 Aristagoras solicits aid from Athens and Sparta. 

Birth of Anaxagoras the philosopher. 
499 First year of the Ionian revolt The Ionians, assisted 
by the Athenians, burn Sardis. 
jEschylus, aged 25, first exhibits tragedy. 
498 Second year of the Ionian revolt. Cyprus recovered 
by the Persians. 



GREEK HISTORY. 



497 Third year of the Ionian revolt. Aristagoras slain in 
Thrace. 

Death of Pythagoras, according to Euaebiug 
496 Fourth year of the Ionian revolt. Histiaeus comes 
down to the coast. 
Birth of Hellanicus of Mytilene, the historian. 
495 Fifth year of the Ionian revolt. 

Birth of Sophocles. 
494 Sixth and last year of the Ionian revolt. The Ioni- 
ans defeated in a naval battle near Miletus, and Mi- 
letus taken. 

493 The Persians take the islands of Chios, Lesbos, and 
Tenedos. Miltiades fled from the Chersonesus to 
Athens. He had been in the Chersonesus twenty- 
two years, having succeeded his brother Stceagoras 
in the government in B.C. 515. 

492 Mardonius, the Persian general, invades Europe, and 
unites Macedonia to the Persian empire. 

491 Darius sends heralds to Greece to demand earth and 
water. 

War betweeu Athens and jEgina. 

Demaratus, king of Sparta, deposed by the intrigues 
of his colleague Cleomenes. He flies to Darius. 
490 Datis and Artapherues, the Persian generals, invade 
Europe. They take F.retria in Euboea, and land in 
Attica under the guidance of Hippias. They are 
defeated at Marathon by the Athenians under the 
command of Miltiades. 

iEschylus fought at the battle of Marathon, sot. 35. 
489 Miltiades attempts to conquer Naxue, but is repulsed. 
He is accused, and, unable to pay the fine, in which 
he was condemned, is thrown into prison, where 
he died. 

Panyasis the poet, the uncle of Herodotus, flourished. 
487 Chionides, the Athenian comic poet, first exhibits. 
486 Revolt of Egypt from the Persians in the fourth year 

after the battle of Marathon. 
485 Xerxes, king of Persia, succeeds Darius. 

Gelon becomes master of Syracuse. 
484 Egypt reconquered by the Persians. 

Herodotus born. 

jEschylus gains the prize in tragedy. 
Acha3us, the tragic poet, born. 

483 Ostracism of Aristides. He was recalled from ban- 
ishment three years afterward. 

431 Themistocles the leading man at Athens. He per- 
suades his countrymen to build a fleet of 200 6hips, 
that they might be able to resist the Persians. 

480 Xerxes invades Greece. He set out from Sardis at 
the beginning of the spring. The battles of Ther- 
mopylae and Artemisium were fought at the time 
of the Olympic games. The Athenians deserted 
their city, which was taken by Xerxes. The battle 
of Salamis, in which the fleet of Xerxes was de- 
stroyed, was fought in the autumn. 
Birth of Euripides. 

Pherecydes of Athens, the historian, flourished. 
479 After the return of Xerxes to Asia, Mardonius, who 
was left in the command of the Persian army, 
passed the winter in Thessaly. In the spring 
he marches southward, and occupies Athens ten 
months after its occupation by Xerxes. At the 
battle of Plattese, fought in September, he is defeat- 
ed by the Greeks under the command of Pausanias. 
On the same day the Persian fleet is defeated off 
Mycale by the Greek fleet. Sestos besieged by the 
Greeks in the autumn, and surrendered in the fol- 
lowing spring. 



47:- 



477 



476 



467 



166 



465 



461 



Antiphon, the Athenian orator, born. 
Chcerilus of Samos, the epic poet, probably born. 
Sestos taken by the Greeks. Hicron succeed* Geloo 
The history of Herodotus terminates at the siege of 

Sestos. 

In consequence of the haughty conduct of Pautanhu, 
the maritime allies place themselves under the so 
prcmacy of Athens. Commencement of thr Ath* 
nian ascendency or empire, which lasted about sct- 
cnty years— sixty five before the ruin of the Athe- 
nian affairs in Sicily, seventy three before tho cap- 
ture of Athens by I.ynandi r. 

Epicharmus, the comic poet, flourished in the rei^a 
of Hieron. 

Cimon, commanding the forces of the Athenians and 
of the allies, expels the Persians from Kion, on tho 
Strymon, and then takes the island of Scyros. where 
the bones of Theseus are discovered. 

Phryniehus gains tho prize in tragedy. 

Simonides, n:t. 80, gains the prize in the di thy rain bi<s 
chorus. 

Naval victory of Hieron over the Tueran*. 

Death of Tberon of Agrigcntum. 

The Prr/a of Alschylus performed. 

Themistocles, banished by ostracism, goes to Argos. 

Pausanias convicted of treason and put to death 
Thucydides, the historian, born. 
Timocreon of Rhodes, the lyric poet, flourished in the 

time of Themistocles. 
Pericles begins to take part iu public affair*, forty 

years before hi9 death. 
Myccnse destroyed by the ArgivcJ. 
Death of Aristides. 
Socrates bom. 

Sophocles gained his lir-t !r«:.ic victory. 
Death of Hieron. 
Andocides, the orator, horn. 
Simonides, aet. 90, died. 
Naxos revolted and subdued. 

Great victory of Cimon over the Persians at the Riv- 
er Eurymedon, in Pamphylia. 
Themistocles flics to Persia. 

After the death of Hieron. Thrwybulus ruled Syra- 
cuse for a year, at the end of which time a demo- 
crotical form of government was cftablished. 

Diagoras of Melos flourished. 

Revolt of Thasos. 

Death of Xerxes, king of Persia, and accession of Ar 
taxcrxes I. 

Earthquake at Sparta, and revolt of the HcloU and 
Messenians. 

Cimon marches to tho assistance of the Laceda-mo- 
nians. 

Zeno of Elea flourished. 
Thasos subdued by Cimon. 

Xanthus of Lydia continued to write history in the 
reign of Artaxerxes. 

Cimon marches a second time to the assistance of the 
Lacedemonians, but his offers are declined by the 
latter, and the Athenian troops sent beck. Ostra- 
cism of Cimon. 

Pericle s at the head of public uffairs at Athens. 

Revolt of Inaros, and first year of the Egyptian war, 
which lasted six years. The Athenian* m 
ance to the Egyptians. 

Democritus and Hippocrates born 

Gorgias flourished. 

Lysias born. 



CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES OF 



B.C. 

458 The Orestcia of /Eschylus performed. 

457 Battles in the Megarid, between the Athenians and 
Corinthians. The Lacedaemonians march into Do- 
ris, to assist the Dorians against the Phocians. On 
their return, they are attacked by the Athenians at 
Tanagra, but the latter are defeated. The Atheni- 
ans commence building their long walls, which 
were completed in the following year. 
Panyasis, the uncle of Herodotus, put to death by 
Lygdamis. 

456 The Athenians, commanded by Myronides, defeat the 
Thebans at CEnophyta. 
Recall of Cimon from exile. 
Herodotus set. 25. Thucydides aet 15 
Herodotus is said to have recited his history at the 
Olympic games when Thucydides was a boy. The 
recitation may therefore be placed in this year, if 
the tale be true, which is very doubtfuL 
Death of iEschylus, aet. 69. 
455 The Messenians conquered by the Lacedsmonians in 
the tenth year of the war. Tolmides, the Athenian 
general, settles the expelled Messenians at Naupac- 
tus. See B.C. 464. Tolmides sails round Pelopon- 
nesus with an Athenian fleet, and does great injury 
to the Peloponnesians. 
End of the Egyptian war in the sixth year. See B.C. 
460. All Egypt conquered by the Persians, except 
the marshes, wbere Amyrtaeus continued to hold 
out for some years. See B.C. 449. 
Euripides, aet. 25, first gains the prize in tragedy. 
454 Campaign of Pericles at Sicyon and in Acarnania. 

Cratinus, the comic writer, flourished. 
451 Ion of Chios, the tragic writer, begins to exhibit 
450 Five years' truce between the Athenians and Pelopon- 
nesians, made through the intervention of Cimon. 
Anaxagoras, aet 50, withdraws from Athens, after re- 
siding there thirty years. 
Crates, the comic poet, and Bacchylides, flourished. 
449 Renewal of the war with Persia. Tne Athenians send 
assistance to Amyrtaeus. Death of Cimon, and vic- 
tory of the Athenians at S alar m s, in Cyprus. 
448 Sacred war between the Delphians and Phocians for 
the possession of the oracle and temple. The Lac- 
edaemonians assisted the Delphians. and the Athe- 
nians the Phocians. 
447 The Athenians defeated at Coronea by the Eoaotians. 
445 Revolt of Euboea and Megara from Athens. The five 
years' truce having expired (see B.C. 450;, the Lac- 
edaemonians, led by Plistoanax, invade Attica. Aft- 
er the Lacedaemonians had retired, Pericles recov- 
ers Euboea. The thirty years* truce between Athens 
and Sparta. 

444 Pericles begins to have the sole direction of public af- 
fairs at Athens. Tnucydides. the son of Milesias, 
the leader of the aristocratical party, ostracized. 
Melissus and Empedocles, the philosophers, flour- 
ished. 

443 The Athenians send a colony to Thurii. in Italy. 

Herodotus, aet. 41, and Lysias, aet L5. accompany this 
colony to Thurii. 
441 Euripides gains the first prize in tragedy. 
440 Samos revolts from Athens, but is subdued by Peri- 
cles in the ninth month. 
Sophocles, aet. 55, was one of the ten Athenian gener- 
als who fought against Samos. 
Melissus, the philosopher, defends Samoa against Per- 
icles. 

A decree to prohibit comedy at Athens. 



439 Athens at the height of its glory. 

437 Colony of Agnon to Amphipolis. 
The prohibition of comedy repealed. 

436 Isocrates born. 

Cratinus, the comic poet, gains the prize. 

435 War between the Corinthians and Corcyraeans on 
account of Epidamnus. The Corinthians defeated 
by the Ccrcyraeans in a sea-fight 

434 The Corinthians make great preparations to carry on 
the war with vigor. 
Lysippus, the comic poet gains the prize. 

433 The Corcyrseans and Corinthians send embassies t© 
Athens to solicit assistance. The Athenians form a 
defensive alliance with the Corcyraeans. 

432 The Corcyraeans, assisted by the Athenians, defeat the 
Corinthians in the spring. In the same year Poti- 
daea revolts from Athens. Congress of the Pelo- 
ponnesians in the autumn to decide upon war with 
Athens. 

Andocides the orator, one of the commanders of the 
Athenian fleet to protect the Corcyraeans against 
the Corinthians. 

Anaxagoras. prosecuted for impiety at Athens, with- 
draws to Lampsacus, where he died about four 
years afterward. 

Aspasia prosecuted by the comic poet Hermippus. 
but acquitted through the influence of Pericles. 

Prosecution and death of Phidias. - x 
431 First year of the Peloponnesian war. The Thebans 
make an attempt upon Plataeee two months before 
midsummer. Eighty days afterward, Attica is in- 
vaded by the Peloponnesians. Alliance between 
the Athenians and Sitalces, king of Thrace. 

Ilelianicus aet 65, Herodotus aet 53, Thucydides est 
40, at the commencement of the Peloponnesian war. 

The Medea of Euripides exhibited. 
430 Second year of the Peloponnesian war. Second in- 
vasion of Attica. 

The plague rages at Athens. 
429 Tnird year of the Peloponnesian war. Potidaea sur- 
renders to the Athenians after a siege of more than 
two years. Naval actions of Phormio in the Co- 
rinthian gulf. Commencement of the siege 6f Pl«- 
taeae. Death of Pericles in the autumn. 

Birth of Plato, the philosopher. 

Eupolis and Phrynichus, the comic poets, exhibit 
428 Fourth year of the Peloponnesian war. Third inva- 
sion of Attica. Revolt of all Lesbos except Me- 
thymna. Mytileae besieged toward the eutumn. 

Death of AnaxEgoras, aet 72. 

The Uippolytus of Euripides gains the first prize. 

Plato, the comic poet first exhibits. 
427 Fifth year of the Peloponnesian war. Fourth inva- 
sion of Attica. Mytilene taken by the Athenians 
and Lesbos recovered. The demagogue Cleon be- 
gins to have great influence in public affairs. Pla- 
taeae surrendered to the Peloponnesians. Sedition 
at Corcyra. The Athenians send assistance to the 
Leontimans in Sicily. 

Aristophanes, the comic poet first exhibits. He gains 
the prize with the play called Aa:ra>tli, which is 
lost 

Gorgias ambassador from Leontini to Athens. H« 
was probably now nearly sixty years of age. 
426 Sixth year of the Peloponnesian war. The Pelopon- 
nesians do not invade Attica in consequence of »a 
earthquake. 

Lustration of Delos. 



GREEK HISTORY. 



B.C. 



426 The Babylonians of Aristophanes. 
425 Seventh year of the Peloponnesian war. Fifth inva 
sion of Attica. Demosthenes takes possession of 
Pylos. The Spartans in the island of Sphacteria 
surrendered to Clcon seventy-two days afterward 
Eruption of Mount .Etna. 
Accession of Darius Nothus. 
The Acharnians of Aristophanes. 
424 Eighth year of the I'eloponnesian war. Nicias rava- 
ges the coast of Laconia and captures the island of 
Cythera. March of Brasidas into Thrace, who ob 
tains possession of Acanthus and Araphipolis. The 
Athenians defeated by the Thebans at Delium. 
Socrates and Xenophon fought at the battle of Delium. 
Thucydides, the historian, commanded at Amphipolis. 
The Knights of Aristophanes. 
423 Ninth year of the I'eloponnesian wnr. Truce for a 
year. 

Thucydides banished in consequence of the loss of 
Amphipolis. He was 20 years in exile. 

The Clouds of Aristophanes first exhibited. 

Anriochus of Syracuse brought down his history to 
this date. 

422 Tenth year of the I'eloponnesian war. Hostilities in 
Thrace between the Lacedaemonians and Atheni- 
ans. Both Brasidas and Cleon fail in battle. Athe- 
nian citizens at thi? time computed at 20,000. 
The Wasps of Aristophanes, and second exhibition 

of the Clouds. 
Death of Cratinu?. 

Protagoras, the sophist comes to Athens. 
421 Eleventh year of the Peloponnesian war. Truce for 
fifty years between the Athenians and Lacedaemo- 
nians. Though this truce- was not formally de- 
clared to be at an end till B.C. 414, there were, not- 
withstanding, frequent hostilities meantime. 

The Mapi/caS and K^aert of Eupolis. 
420 Twelfth year of the Peloponnesian war. Treaty be- 
tween the Athenians and Argives effected by means 
of Alcibiades. 

The "Aypiot of Pherecrates. The Avt6Xvkos of Eu- 
polis. 

419 Thirteenth year ot the I'eloponnesian war. Alcibia- 
des marches into Peloponnesus. 
The Peace of Aristophanes. 

418 Fourteenth year of the Peloponnesian war. The Athe- 
nians send a force into Peloponnesus to assist the 
Argives agaiust the Lacedaemonians, but are defeat- 
ed at the battle of Mantinea. Alliance between Spar- 
ta and Argo" 

417 Fifteenth year of the Peloponnesian war. 

416 Sixteenth year of the Peloponnesian war. The Athe- 
nians conquer Melos. 
Agathon, the tragic poet, gains the prize. 

415 Seventeenth year of the Peloponnesian war. The 
Athenian expedition against Sicily. It sailed after 
midsummer, commanded by Nicias, Alcibiades, and 
Lamachus. Mutilation of the Henna at Athens 
before the fleet sailed. The Athenians take Cate- 
na. Alcibiades is recalled home : he makes his es- 
cape, and takes refuge with the Lacedemonians. 
Andocides, the orator, imprisoned on the mutilation 
of the Hermee. He escapes by turning informer. 
He afterward went to Cyprus and other countries. 
Xenocles, the tragic poet, gains the first prize. 
Archippus, the comic poet, gains the prize. 

<14 Eighteenth year of the Peloponnesian war. Second 
campaign in Sicily. The Athenians invest Syra- 



cuse. Gylippue, the Lacedemonian, comes to the 

assistance of the Syracusans. 
The Birds and Amphiaraus (. let drain.) of Aria- 

tophanes. 

Amipsias, the comic poet, gain* the prue with hi. 

413 Nineteenth year of the I'eloponnesian war. Invasion 
of Attica and fortification of Dccelca, on the advice 

of Alcibiadee. 

Third campaign in Sicily. Demosthenes rent with a 
large force to the assistance of the Athenians. To- 
tal destruction of the Athenian army and fleet Ni- 
cias and Demosthenes surrender and are put to 
death on the 12th or 13th of September. 16 or 17 
days after the eclipse of the moon, which took place 
on the 27th of August 
Hegemon of Thasos, the comic pott was exhibiting 
his parody of the Gigantomadiia whin the news 
arrived at Athens of the defeat in Sicily. 
412 Twentieth year of the Peloponnesian war. The Les 
bians revolt from Athens. Alcibiades sent by tho 
Lacedemonians to Asia to form a treaty with the 
Persians. He succeeds in his mission, and forms a 
treaty with Tissaphernee, and urges the Athenian 
allies in Asia to revolt The Athenians make use 
of the 1000 talents deposited for extreme emerg- 
encies. 

The Andromeda of Euripides. 
411 Twenty -first year of the Peloponnesian war. Democ- 
racy abolished at Athens, and the goTernment in- 
trusted to a council of Four Hundred. This coun- 
cil holds the government four months. The Athe- 
nian army at Samos recalls Alcibiades from exile 
and appoints him one of their generals. He is aft- 
erward recalled by a vote of the people at Athen*. 
but he remained abroad for the next four years ut 
the head of the Athenian forces. Miudarus, the 
Laceda;monian admiral, defeated at ('ynosscma. 
Antiphon, the orator, had a great hhnrc iu the estab- 
lishment of the Pour Hundred. After their down* 
fall he is brought to trial and put to death. 
The history of Thucydides suddenly breaks off in the 

middle of this year. 
The Lysistrata and Tktstnophoriasusz ot Aristophanes 
Lysias returns from Thurii to Athens. 
410 Twenty-second year of the Peloponnesian war. Min 
darus defeated and slain by Alcibiades at Cyzicu*. 
400 Twenty -third year of the Peloponnesian war. 
The Philoeieies of Sophocles. 
Plato, a?t 20, begins to hear Socrates. 
403 Twenty-fourth year of the 1'cioponnrsian war. Al- 
cibiades recovers Byzantium. 
The Orestes of Euripides. 
The Plutus of Aristophanes. 
407 Twenty-fifth year of the PeioponneMan war. Alcibi- 
ades returns to Athens. Lysander appointed the 
Lacedaemonian admiral and supported by Cyrus, 
who this year received the government of the coun- 
tries on the Asiatic coast Antiochus, the lieutenant 
of Alcibiades, defeated by Lysander at Notium in 
the absence of Alcibiades. Alcibiades is in conse- 
quence banished, and ten new generals appointed. 
Antiphanes, the comic poet born. 
406 Twenty-sixth year of the Peloponnesian war. CaUi- 
cratidas, who succeeded Lysander aa Lacedaemo- 
nian admiral defeated by the Athenians in the sea- 
fight off the Arginusss islands. The Athenian pen 
eralf condemned to death, because they had not 



963 



CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES OF 



B.C. 

picked up the bodies of those who had fallen in the 
battle. 

406 Dionysius becomes master of Syracuse. 
Death of Euripides. 
Death of Sophocles. 

Philistus of Syracuse, the historian, espoused the 
cause of Dionysius. 
405 Twenty-seventh year of the Peloponnesian war. Ly- 
sander defeats the Athenians off JEgospotami, and 
takes or destroys all their fleet with the exception 
of eight ships, which fled with Conon to Cyprus. 

The Frogs of Aristophanes acted in February at the 
Lenaea. 

404 Twenty-eighth and last year of the Peloponnesian 
war. Athens taken by Lysander in the spring, on 
the 16th of the month Munychion. Democracy 
abolished, and the government intrusted to thirty 
men, usually called the Thirty Tyrants. 
The Thirty Tyrants held their power for eight months, 
till Thrasybulus occupied Phyle and advanced to 
the Piraeus. 

Death of Alcibiades during the tyranny of the Thirty. 

Lysias banished after the battle of iEgospotami. 
403 Thrasybulus and his party obtain possession of the 
Piraeus, from whence they carried on war for sev- 
eral months against the Ten, the successors of the 
Thirty. They obtain possession of Athens before 
Hecatombaeon (July) ; but the contest between the 
parties was not finally concluded till Boedromion 
(September). The date of the amnesty, by which 
the exiles were restored, was the 12th of Boedro- 
mion. Euclides was archon at the time. 

Thucydides, set. 68, Lysias, and Andocides return to 
Athens. 

401 Expedition of Cyrus against his brother Artaxerxes. 
He falls in the battle of Cunaxa, which was fought 
in the autumn. His Greek auxiliaries commence 
their return to Greece, usually called the retreat 
of the Ten Thousand. 

First year of the war of Lacedaemon and Elis. 

Xenophon accompanied Cyrus, and afterward was 
the principal general of the Greeks in their retreat. 

Ctesias, the historian, was physician at the court of 
Artaxerxes at this time. 

The (Edipus at Colonus of Sophocles exhibited, after 
his death, by his grandson Sophocles. See B.C. 406. 

Telestes gains a dithyrambic prize. 
400 Return of the Ten Thousand tq Greece. 

Second year of the war of Lacedaemon and Elis. 

The speech of Andocides on the Mysteries : he is now 
about 67 years of age. 
399 The Lacedaemonians send Thimbron with an army 
to assist the Greek cities in Asia against Tissapher- 
nes and Pharnabazus. The remainder of the Ten 
Thousand incorporated with the troops of Thim- 
bron. In the autumn Thimbron was superseded 
by Dercyllidas. 

Third and last year of the war of Lacedaemon and 
Elis. 

Death of Socrates, aet. 70. 

Plato withdraws to Megara. 
398 Dercyllidas continues the war in Asia with success. 

Ctesias brought his Persian History down to this year. 

Astydamas, the tragic poet, first exhibits. 

Philoxenus, Timotheus, and Telestes flourished. 
397 Dercyllidas still continues the war in Asia. 
396 Agesilaus supersedes Dercyllidas. First campaign 
of Agesilaus in Asia. He winters at Ephesus. 



B.C. 

396 Sophocles, the grandson of the great Sophocles, be- 
gins to exhibit this year in his own name. See B.C. 
401. 

Xenocrates, the philosopher, born. 
395 Second campaign of Agesilaus in Asia. He defeat* 
Tissaphernes, and becomes master of Western 
Asia. Tissaphernes superseded by Tithraustes, 
who sends envoys into Greece to induce the Greek 
states to declare war against Lacedaemon. Com- 
mencement of the war of the Greek states again3fe 
Lacedaemon. Lysander slain at Haliartus. 

Plato, aet 34, returns to Athens. 
394 Agesilaus recalled from Asia to fight against the Greek 
states, who had declared war against Lacedaemon. 
He passed the Hellespont about midsummer, and 
was at the entrance of Boeotia on the 14th of An- 
gust. He defeats the allied forces at Coronea. A 
little before the latter battle, the Lacedaemonians 
also gained a victory near Corinth ; but about the 
same time, Conon, the Athenian admiral, and Phar- 
nabazus, gained a decisive victory over Pisander, 
the Spartan admiral, off Cnidus. 

Xenophon accompanied Agesilaus from Asia, and 
fought against his country at Coronea. He was, in 
consequence, banished from Athens. He retired 
under Lacedaemonian protection to Scillus, where 
he composed his works. 

Theopompus brought his history down to this year . 
It embraced a period of 17 years, from the battle 
of Cynossema, B.C. 411, to the battle of Cnidos, 
B.C. 394. 

393 Sedition at Corinth and victory of the Lacedaemoni- 
ans at Lechceum. Pharnabazus and Conon ravage 
the coasts of Peloponnesus. Conon begins to re- 
store the long walls of Athens and the fortifications 
of the Piraeus. 

392 The Lacedaemonians under Agesilaus ravage the Co- 
rinthian territory, but a Spartan mora is cut to 
pieces by Iphicrates. 
The Ec-desiazusct of Aristophanes. 
391 Expedition of Agesilaus into Acarnania. 

Speech of Andocides " On the Peace." He is ban- 
ished. 

Plato, the comic poet, exhibits. 

390 Expedition of Agesipolis into Argolis. The Persians 
again espouse the cause of the Lacedaemonians, and 
Conon is thrown into prison. The Athenians assist 
Evagoras of Cyprus against the Persians. Thra- 
sybulus, the Athenian commander, is defeated and 
slain by the Lacedaemonian Teleutias at Aspendua. 

369 Agyrrhius sent, as the successor of Thrasybulus, to 
Aspendus, and Iphicrates to the Hellespont. 
Plato, aet. 40, goes to Sicily : the first of the three voy* 
ages. 

JEschines born about this time. 
388 Antalcidas, the Lacedaemonian commander on the 
Asiatic coast, opposed to Iphicrates and Chabriaa. 
The second edition of the Plutus of Aristophanes. 
387 The peace of Antalcidas. 

Antiphanes, the comic poet, begins to exhibit. 
386 Restoration of Plataese, and independence of thetowa* 
of Boeotia. 

385 Destruction of Man tinea by the Laecdeemonians un 
der Agesipolis. 
Great sea-fight between Evagoras and the Persians. 
384 Birth of Aristotle. 

382 First year of the Oiynthian war. The Laccdeemoni- 
ans commanded by Tdeutias. 



GREEK HISTORY. 



382 Phcebidas seizes the Cadmea, the citadel of Thebes. 
This was before Teleutias marched to Olynthus. 
Birth of Demosthenes. 
381 Second year of the Olynthian war. Teleutias slain, 

and the command taken by Agesipolis. 
380 Third year of th- ulynthian war. Death of Agesipo- 
lis, who is succeeded by Polybiadcs. 
The Pancgyricus of Isocrates. 
379 Fourth and last year of the Olynthian war. The 
Olynthians surrender to Polybiades. 
Surrender of Phlius. after a siege of 20 months, to 
Agesilaus. 

The Cadmea recovered by the Theban exiles in the 
winter. 

378 Cleombrotus sent into Bceotia in the middle of win- 
ter, but returned without effecting any thing. The 
Laced eemo n inn Sphodrias makes an attempt upon 
the Piraeus. The Athenians form an alliance with 
the Thebans against Sparta. First expedition of 
Agesilaus into Bceotia. 
Death of Lysias. 
877 Second expedition of Agesilaus into Bceotia 
374 Cleombrotus marches into Bceotia, and sustains a 
slight repulse at the passes of Citbreron. 
The Lacedaemonian fleet conquered by Chabrias oft' 
Naxos, and the Athenians recover the dominion of 
the sea. 

Tenth and last year of the war between Evagoras 
and the Persians. 

Demosthenes left an orphan in his seventh year. 

Anaxandrides, the comic poet, flourished. 
875 Cleombrotus sent into Phocis, which had been invaded 
by.the Thebans, who withdraw into their own coun- 
try on his arrival. 

Araros, the son of Aristophanes, first exhibits com- 
edy. 

Eubulus, the comic poet, flourished. 
374 The Athenians, jealous of the Thebans, conclude a 
peace with Laceda;mon. Timotheus, the Atheni- 
an commander, takes Corcyrn. and on his return 
to Athena restores the Zacynthian exiles to their 
country. This lends to a renewal of the war be- 
tween Athens and Lacedtemon. 

Second destruction of Plataire. 

Jason elected Tagus of Thessaly. 

Ieocrates advocated the cause of the Plataeans in his 
IlXaraiKos- 

373 The Lacedaemonians attempt to regain possession of 
Corcyra, and send Mnasippus with a force for the 
purpose, but he is defeated and slain by the Corcy- 
raeans. Iphicrates, with Callistratus and Chabrias 
as his colleagues, sent to Corcyra. 

Prosecution of Timotheus by Callistratus and Iphic- 
rates. Timotheus is acquitted. 
372 Timotheus goes to Asia. Iphicrates continued in the 
command of a fleet in the Ionian Sea. 

The most eminent orators of this period were Leoni- 
das, Callistratus, Ari6tophon the Azenian, Cepha- 
lus the Colyttian, Thrasybulus the Colyttian, and 
Diophantus. 

Astydamas gains the prize in tragedy. 
371 Congress at Sparta, and general peace, from which 
the Thebans were excluded, because they would 
not grant the independence of the BoBotian towns. 

The Lacedaemonians, commanded by Cleombrotus, 
invade Boeotia. but are defeated by the Thebans 
under Epaminondas at the battle of Leuctra. 

Foundation of Megalopolis. 



370 Expedition of Agesilaus into Arcadia. 

Jason of Phersa slain. After the interval of a year, 
Alexander of Pliers? succeeds to his power in 

Thessaly. 

369 First invasion of Peloponnesus by the Thebans. 
They remain in Peloponnesus four months, and 
found Mcsscne. 
368 Second invasion of Peloponnesus by the Thebans. 
Expedition of Pelopidaa to Thessaly. He is impris- 
oned by Alexander of Pherss. but Epaminondas 
obtains his release. 
Eudoxus flourished. 
Aphareus begins to exhibit tragedy. 
367 Archidamus gains a victory over the Arcadian*. 
Embassy of Pelopidas to Persia 
Death of the elder Dion ysius of Sy rscuse, after a r<-ign 

of 38 years. 
Aristotle, set 17, conies to Athens. 
366 Third invasion of Peloponnesus l»y the Thebans. 

The Archidamus of Isocrates. 
965 War between Arcadia and Elis. 

364 Second campaign of the war between Arcadia and 
Elis. Battle of Olympia at the time of the games. 
Demosthenes, a»t. 18, delivers his oration against 
Aphobus. 

362 Fourth invasion of Peloponnesus by the Thebans. 
Battle of Mantinca, in June, in which Epaminondas 
is killed. 

Xenophon brought down his Creek history to the 

battle of Mantinca. 
^schines, the orator, a;t. 27, is present at Mantinea. 
361 A general peace between all the belligerent*, with the 

exception of the Lacedemonians, bccau*c the latter 

would not acknowledge the independence of the 

Mcssenians. 

Agesilaus goes to Egypt to assist Tachos, and dies in 
the winter, when preparing to return home. 

Birth of Dinarchus, the orator. 
360 War between the Athenians and Olynthians for the 
possession of Amphipolis. Timotheus, the Atheni- 
an general, repulsed at Amphipolis. 

Theopompus commenced his history from this year. 
358 Accession of Philip, king of Macedonia, sst. 23. He 
defeats Arga-us, who luid claim to the throne, de- 
clares Amphipolis a free city, and makes peace with 
the Athenians. He then defeats the Pa-onians and 
Illyrians. 

Death of Alexander of Phcra\ who was succeeded 
by Tisipbonus. 
358 Amphipolis taken by Philip. Expedition of the Athe- 
nians into Euboea. 
357 Chios, Rhodes, and Byzantium revolt from Athens. 
First year of the Social War. Chares and Chabri- 
as Bent against Chios, but fail in their attempt upon 
the island. Chabrias killed. 
The Phocians seize Delphi. Commencement of the 
Sacred War. The Thebans and the Locrians arc 
the chief opponents of the Phocians. 
Dion sails from Zacynthus and lands in Sicily about 
September. 

Death of Democritus, a&t 104. of Hippocrates, set 104, 

and of the poet Timotheus. 
356 Second year of the Social war 

Birth of Alexander, the son of Philip and Olympiaa, 

at the time of the Olympic games. 
Potidaea taken by Philip, who gives it to Olynthus. 
Dionysius the younger expelled from Syracuse by 

Dion, after a reign of 12 years. 



CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES OF 



B.C. 

356 Philistus, the historian, espouses the side of Dionys- 
ius, but is defeated and slain. 
The speech of Isocrates De Pace. 
355 Third and last year of the Social War. Peace con- 
cluded between Athens and her former allies. 
354 Trial and condemnation of Timotheus. 

Demosthenes begins to speak in the assemblies of the 
people. 

353 Philip seizes upon Pagass?, and begins to besiege Me- 
thone. 
Death of Dion. 
352 Philip takes Methone and enters Thessaly. He de- 
feats and slays Onomarchus, the Phocian general, 
expels the tyrants from Pherse. and becomes mas- 
ter of Thessaly. Ke attempts to pass Thermopy- 
lae, but is prevented by the Athenians. 
War between Laceda;mon and Megalopolis. 
The first Philippic of Demosthenes. 
351 Speech of Demosthenes for the Rhodians. 
349 The Olynthians, attacked by Philip, ask succor from 
Athene. 

The Olynthiac orations of Demosthenes. 
348 Olynthian war continued. 

The speech of Demosthenes against Midias. 
347 Olynthus taken and destroyed by Philip. 

Death of Plato, fet. 82. Speusippus succeeds Plato. 

Aristotle, upon the death of Plato, went to Atarnge. 
Anaxandrides, the comic poet, exhibits. 
346 Peace between Philip and the Athenians. 

Philip overruns Phocis and brings the Sacred war to 
an end, after it had lasted ten years. All the Pho- 
cian cities, except Abas, were destroyed. 
Oration of Isocrates to Philip. 
Oration of Demosthenes on the Peace. 
345 Speech of ^schines against Timarchue. 
344 Timoleon sails from Corinth to Syracuse, to expel 
the tyrant Dionysius. 
Aristotle, after three years' stay at Atarnse, went to 
Mytilene. 

The second Philippic of Demosthenes. 
343 Timoleon completes the conquest of Syracuse. 

Dionysius was thus finally expelled. He had regained 
the sovereignty after his first expulsion by Dion. 

Disputes between Philip and the Athenians. An Athe- 
nian expedition is sent into Acarnania to counteract 
Philip, who was in that country. 

The speech of Demosthenes respecting Halonnesus. 

The speeches of Demosthenes and -Eschines, Ucpi 
IlapazpcsSdas. 
342 Philip's expedition to Thrace. He is opposed by Di- 
opithes, the Athenian general at the Chersonesus. 

Aristotle comes to the court of Philip. 

Death of Menander. 

Isocrates, aet. 94, began to compose the Panathenaic 
oration. 

341 Philip is still in Thrace, where he wintered. 

The oration of Demosthenes on the Chersonesus, in 
which he vindicates the conduct of Diopithes, and 
the third and fourth Philippics. 
Birth of Epicurus. 
340 Philip besieges Selymbria, Perinthus, and Byzantium. 
Isocrates completes the Panathenaic oration. See 
B.C. 342. 

Ephorus brought down hi* history to the siege of Pe- 
rinthus. 

339 Renewal of the war between Philip and the Atheni- 
ans. Phocion compels Philip to raise the siege 
both of Byzantium and Perinthu?. 



B.C. 

339 Xenocrates succeeds Speusippus at the Academy. 

338 Philip is chosen general of the Amphictyons, to carry 
on the war against Amphissa. He marches through 
Thermopylae, and seizes Elatea. The Athenian* 
form an alliance with the Thebans ; but their united 
forces are defeated by Philip at the battle of Chte- 
ronea, fought on the 7th of Metageitnion (August). 
Philip becomes master of Greece. Congress at 
Corinth, in which war is declared by Greece against 
Persia, and Philip appointed to conduct it. 
Death of Isocrates, act. 98. 

337 Death of Timoleon. 

336 Murder of Philip, and accession of his son Alexander, 
ast. 20. 

Dinarchus, set. 26, began to compose orations. 

335 Alexander marches against the Thracians, TribalH, 
and niyrians. While he is engaged in the war, 
Thebes revolts. He forthwith marches southward, 
and destroys Thebes. 
Philippides, the comic poet, flourished. 

334 Alexander commences the war against Persia. He 
crosses the Hellespont in the spring, defeats the 
Persian satraps at the Granicus in the month Thar- 
gelion (May), and conquers the western part of 
Asia Minor. 
Aristotle returns to Athens. 

333 Alexander subdues Lycia in the winter, collects hia 
forces at Gordium in the spring, and defeats Darius 
at Issus late in the autumn. 

332 Alexander takes Tyre, after a siege of seven months, 
in Hecatombason (July). He takes Gaza in Sep- 
tember, and then marches into Egypt, which sub- 
mits to him. In the winter he visits the oracle of 
Ammon, and gives orders for the foundation of Al- 
exandrea. 
Stephanus, the comic poet, flourished. 

331 Alexander sets out from Memphis in the spring; 
marches through Phoenicia and Syria, crosses the 
Euphrates at Thapsacus in the middle of the sum- 
mer, and defeats Darius again at Arbela or Gauga- 
mela on the 1st of October. He wintered at Per- 
sepolis. 

In Greece, Agis is defeated and slain by Antipater. 

330 Alexander marches into Media, and takes Ecbatana. 
From thence he sets out in pursuit of Darius, who 
is slain by Bessus. After the death of Darius, Al- 

© exander conquers Hyrcania, and marches in pur- 
suit of Bessus through Drangiana and Arachoaia, 
toward Bactria. 
The speech of iEschines against Ctesiphon, and the 
speech of Demosthenes on the Crown. iEschines, 
after his failure, withdrew to Asia. 
Speech of Lycurgus against Leocrates. 
Philemon began to exhibit comedy, during the reiga. 
of Alexander, a little earlier than Menander. 

329 Alexander marches across the Paropamisus in the 
winter, passes tbe Oxus, takes Bessus, and reaches 
the Jaxartes, where he founds a city Alexandrea. 
He subsequently crosses the Jaxartes, and defeats 
the Scythians. He winters at Bactra. 

328 Alexander is employed during the whole of this cam 
paign in the conquest of Sogdiana. 
Crates, the cynic, flourished. 

327 Alexander completes the conquest of Sogdiana early 
in the spring. He marries Roxana, the daughter 
of Oxyartes, a Bactrian prince. After the subjuga- 
tion of Sogdinna, Alexander returns to Bactra, from 
whence lie marches to invade India. He crosses 



GREEK HISTORY. 



071 



the Hydaspes, and defeats Torus. He continues 
his march a* far as the Hyphasis, hut is there com- 
pelled by his troops to return to the Hydaspes. In 
the autumn km begins to sail down the Hydaspes 
and the Indus to the ocean, which he reached in 
July in the following year. 
326 Alexander returns to Persia with part of his troops 
through Gedrosia. lit: se.nds Nearchus with the 
fleet to sail from the mouths of the Indus to the Per- 
sian Gulf. Nearchua accomplishes the voyage in 
129 days. 

325 Alexander reaches SlH I 'it tlio beginning of the year. 
Toward the close of it he visits Ecbatana, where 
Hephaestion die? Campaign against the Cossau 
in the winter. 
324 Alexander reaches Babylon in the spring. 

Harpalus comes to Athens and bribes many of the 
Greek orator - 

Demosthenes, accused of having received a bribe 
from Harpalus. is condemned to pay a fine of 50 
talents. He withdraw* to TrcBzen and .■Egina. 
323 Death of Alexander at Babylon in June, after a reign 
of twelve years and eight mouths. 

Division of the satrapies among Alexander's generals. 

The Greek states make war against Macedonia, usu- 
ally called the Lamian war. Leosthenes, the Athe- 
nian general, dsf« at I Afltfpater, and besieges Lamia, 
in which Antipater had t.»ken refuge. Death of Le- 
osthenes. 

Demosthenes n turm to Athens. 

Hyperides pronoune< m tiv inner al UMilltW over those 
who had fallen in the Lamian war. 

Epicurus, set. IS, com ." to Athene. 

Death of Diogenes, »!•• eynfe. 
322 Leonnatus comes to rhe assistance of Antipater, but 
is defeated and slain. Cruterus comes to the assist- 
ance of Antipater. Defeat of the confederates at 
the battle of Crannon on the ?th oi August. End 
of the Lamian war Munychia occupied by the 
Macedonians on the 19th of September. 

Death of Demosthenes on the 1-Jfh of October. 

Death of Aristotle, sjfc 63, at Chalcis, whither he had 
withdrawn from Athens I few months before. 
321 Antipater and Craterus cross over into Asia, to carry 
on war against Perdiccas. Craterus is defeated and 
elain by Eumenes, who had espoused the side of 
Perdiccas. Perdiccas invades Egypt, where he is 
slain by his own troops. Partition of the provinces 
at Triparadisus. 

Menander, a^t. M. exhibits his first comedy. 
320 Antigonus carries on war against Eumenes. 
319 Death of Antipater. after appointing Polysperchon re- 
gent, and his son Cassander chiliarch. 

Escape of Eumenes from Nora, where he had been 
long besieged by Antigonus. 

Demades put to death by Cassander. 
318 War between Cassander and Polysperchon in Greece. 
The Athenians put Phocion to death. Athens is 
conquered by Cassander, who places it under the 
government of Demetrius Phalereus. 
317 Eumenes is appointed by Polysperchon commander 
of the royal forces in the East, and is opposed by 
Antigonus. Battle of Gabiene, between Eumenes 
and Antigonus. 

Death of Arridaeus, Philip, and Eurydice. 

Olympias returns to Macedonia, and is besieged by 
Cassander at Pydna. 
S16 Last battle between Antigonus and Eumenes. Eu- 



menes surrendered by th* Ar 
death. Antigonus become ma«trr of Aria. Selcu 
cus flies from Babylon, and tnkr* rcf with Ptolc 

my in Egypt. 

Cassander takes Pydna, and puts Olympics to death 
He marries Thessalonice, the daughter of Philip, 
and keeps Koxana and her son Alexander IV la 
custody. Cassander rebuild* Thebes. 
315 Coalition of Seleucus, Ptolemy, Cassander. and Ly 
simachuB against Antigonus. First year of the wmr 
Polemon succeeds Xcnocratcs at the Academy. 
314 Second year of the war against Antigonus. Success- 
es of Cassander in Greece. Antigonus conoucra 
Tyre, and winters in Phrygia. 
Death of the orator -Eschincs, 1 1. 78 
(MS Third year of the war against Antigonus. 
312 Fourth year of the war against Anligonus. Ptolemy 
and Fcleucus defeat Demetrius, the son of Antigo- 
nus, at Gaza. Seleucus recovers Babylon on the 
1st of October, from which tie- era of the S. !. uc: 
dae commences. 
311 General peace. 

Murder of Roxana and Alexand- r IV. by Calender 
310 Hercules, the son of Alexander and Barsinr, a pre 
tender to the throne. 
Ptolemy appears as liberator of the Greeks. Renew 

al of hostilities between him and Antigonus. 
Agathocles lands in Africa. 

Epicurus, apt. 31, begins to (etch si IfytflflM and 
Lampsacus. 
309 Hercules murdered by Polysperchon. 
308 Ptolemy's expedition to Greece. 
307 Demetrius, the son of Antigonus, becomes master o! 
Athens. Demetrius Phalereus leaves the city. 
The orator Dinarchus goes into exile 
306 Demetrius recalled from Atheriv He .1- feats Ptolc 
my in a great sea fight offSalamis in Cyprus. Aft- 
er that battle Antigonus assumes the title of king, 
and his example is followed by Ptolemy, Scleucu* 
Lysimachus, and Cassundcr. 
Antigonus invades Egypt, but is compelled to retreat 
Epicurus settles at Athens, where he teaches about 
36 years, till his death, at the age of 72. 
305 Rhodes besieged by Demetrius. 
304 Demetrius makes peace with the Rhodiims, and r>> 

turns to Athens. 
1003 Demetrius carries on the war in Greece with MMM 

against Cassander. 
302 War continued in Greer* between I>em< trius and 
Cassander. 

Dcmochares, the nephew of Demosthenes, banished 
Archedicus, the comic poet, flourished. 
301 Demetrius crosses over to Asia. 

Battle of Ipsus, in Phrygia, about the month of Au 
gust, in which Lysimachus and Seleucus defeat An 
tigonus and Demetrius. Antiponu*. iPt PI, falls la 
the battle. 

Hieronymus of Cardia, the historian, flouri«hrd. 
300 Demetrius obtains possession of CUkfft, and marrirs 
his daughter Stratonice to Seleucus. 
Birth of Lycon, the Peripatetic. 
297 Demetrius returns to Greece, and makes an attempt 
upon Athens, but is repulsed. 
Death of Cassander, and accession of his son Philip. 
296 Death of Philip, and accession of his brother Antipater 
Demetrius takes Salamis and jEgina. and lays siey 

to Athens. 
Pyrrhus returns to Epirus. 



972 



CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES OF 



B.C. 

295 Demetrius takes Athens 

294 Demetrius makes an expedition into Peloponnesus. 
Civil war in Macedonia between the two brothers 

Antipater and Alexander. 
Demetrius becomes king of Macedonia. 
292 Demetrius conquers Thebes. 

Dinarchus returns from exile. 
291 Lysimachus defeated, and taken prisoner by the Getae. 
Second insurrection of Thebes against Demetrius. 
Pyrrhus invades Thessaly, but is obliged to retire be- 
fore Demetrius. 
Death of Menander, ait 52. 
290 Demetrius takes Thebes a second time. He cele- 
brates the Pythian games at Athens. 
289 Demetrius carries on war against Pyrrhus and the 
jEtolians. He marries Lanassa, one of the wives 
of Pyrrhus, and the daughter of Agathocles. 
Posidippus, the comic poet, begins to exhibit 
288 Death of Agathocles. 

287 Coalition against Demetrius. He is driven out of 
Macedonia, and his dominions divided between Ly- 
simachus and Pyrrhus. 
Demetrius sails to Asia. 

Pyrrhus driven out of Macedonia by Lysimachus, 

after seven months' possession. 
Strato succeeds Theophrastus. 
286 Demetrius surrenders himself to Seleucus, who keeps 

him in captivity. 
285 Ptolemy II. Philadelphus is associated in the kingdom 
by his father. 

284 Demetrius, set. 54, dies in captivity at Apamea, in Syria. 

283 Death of Ptolemy Soter, set. 84. 

281 Lysimachus is defeated and slain by Seleucus at the 
battle of Corupedion. 

260 Seleucus murdered by Ptolemy Ceraumis, seven 
months after the death of Lysimachus. 
Antiochus I., the son of Seleucus, becomes King of 
Asia, Ptolemy Ceraunus King of Thrace and Mace- 
donia. 

Pyrrhus crosses into Italy. 

Irruption of the Gauls and death of Ptolemy Cerau- 
nus. He is succeeded by his brother Meleager, who 
reigns only two months. 

Rise of the Achaean league. 

Demosthenes honored with a statue on the motion of 

his nephew Demochares. 
Birth of Chrysippus. < 
279 Antipater King of Macedonia for a short time. Sos- 
thenes, the Macedonian general, checks the Gauls. 
The Gauls, under Brennus, invade Greece, but Bren- 
nus and a great part of his army are destroyed at 
Delphi. Death of Sosthenes. 
278 Antigonus Gonatas becomes King of Macedonia. 

Zeno of Cittium flourished at Athens. 
275 Birth of Eratosthenes. 
274 Pyrrhus returns to Italy. 

Birth of EupUorion. 
273 Pyrrhus invade3 Macedonia, and expels Antigonus 
Gonatas. 

272 Pyrrhus invades Peloponnesus, and perishes in an 
attack on Argos. Antigonus regains Macedonia. 

270 Death of Epicurus, set. 72. 

262 Death of Philemon, the comic poet, set 97. 

251 Aratus delivers Sicyon. and unites it to the Achsean 
league. 

250 Arsaces founds the Parthian monarchy. 
243 Aratus, a second time general of the Achsean league, 
delivers Corinth from the Macedonians. 



241 Agis IV., king of Sparta, put to death in eonaequenee 
of his attempts to reform the state. 

239 Death of Antigonus, and accession of his son Deme- 
trius II. 

236 Cleomenes III. becomes King of Sparta. 
229 Death of Demetrius II., and accession of Antigonus 
Doson, who was left by Demetrius guardian of bis 

son Philip. 

227 Cleomenes commences war against the Achaean 
league. 

226 Cleomenes carries on the war with success against 
Aratus, who is again the general of the Achaean 
league. 

225 Reforms of Cleomenes at Sparta. 

224 The Achaeans call in the assistance of Antigonus Do- 
son against Cleomenes. 

222 Mantinea taken by Antigonus and Megalopolis by 
Cleomenes. 

221 Antigonus defeats Cleomenes at Sellasia, and obtains 
possession of Sparta. Cleomenes sails to Egypt 
where he dies. Extinction of the royal line of the 
Heraclidas at Sparta. 

220 Death of Antigonus Doson, and accession of Philip 
V., a*. 17. 

The Achaeans and Aratus are defeated by the JStoli- 
ans. The Achseans apply for assistance to Philip, 
who espouses their cause. Commencement of the 
Social war. 

The history of Aratus ended in this year, and that ot 
Polybius commences. 
219 Successes of Philip. He invades JEtolia and Elfe, 
and winters at Argos. 
Phylarchus, the historian, flourished. 
218 Continued successes of Philip. He again invades 

jEtolia, and afterward Laconia. 
217 Third and last year of the Social war. Peace con- 
cluded. 

215 Philip concludes a treaty with Hannibal. 

214 Eratosthenes flourished. 

213 Philip removes Aratus by poison. 

Birth of Carneades. 
212 Death of Archimedes at the capture of Syracuse by 
the Romans. 

211 Treaty between Rome and the uEtolians against Philip. 
210 The Romans take jEgina. 
209 Philip invades Elis. 

208 Philip marches into Peloponnesus to assist the Achae- 
ans. 

Philopcemen is elected general of the Achsean league, 
and effects important reforms in the army. 
207 Philopcemen defeats and slays Machanidas, tyrant of 
Lacedsemon, at the battle of Mantinea. 

Death of Chrysippus, who was succeeded by Zeno 
of Tarsus. 

205 The jEtolians make peace with Philip. 

Philip's treaty with Rome. 
202 Nabis, tyrant of Lacedaemon, takes Messene. 

Philip makes war upon the Rhodians and Attalus. 
201 Philopcemen, general of the Achaeans, defeats Nabis, 

Philip takes Chios, and winters in Caria. 
200 Philip returns to Macedonia. War between Philip 
and Rome, which continues till B.C. 197. See the 
Roman Tables. 
Aristophanes, the grammarian, flourished. 
197 Philip defeated at the battle of Cynoscephal®. 
196 Greece declared free by Flamininus at the Isthmian 
games. 

194 Death of Eratosthenes, ast. 80. 



GREEK HISTORY. 



9T3 



B.C. 

193 Philopoemen defeats Nabis, who is afterward slain by 

the .SStolians. Lacedaemon is added by Philopce- 

men to the Achaean league. 
Antiochus comes into Greece to assist the jEtolians 

against the Romano. He winters at Chalcis. 
191 Antiochu6 and the JCtolians defeated by the Romans 

at the battle of Thermopylae. 
190 The Romans besiege Amphissa, and grant a truce to 

the ..Etolians. 

189 The Romans besiege Ambracia, and grant peace to 
the jEtolians. 

188 Philopcemen again general of the Achaean league, sub- 
jugates Sparta, and abrogates the laws of Lycurgus. 

183 The Messenian6 revolt from the Achaean league. 
They capture and put to death Philopcemen, set 70. 

182 Polybius, the historian, carries the urn at the funeral 
of Philopcemen. 



B.C. 

179 Death of Philip and accession of Perseus. 

171 War between Perseus and Rome, which contains* 

till B.C. 168. Sec the Roman Table*. 
1C8 Defeat and capture of Perseus by ..Erailius Paulus. 

Division of Macedonia. 
167 One thousand of the principal Acha-sns arc sent im 

Rome. 

Polybius is among the Acba-nn exiles. 
151 Return of the Achaean exile*. 

149 Andriscus, pretending to be the son of Perseus, lay« 
claim to the Macedonian throne. 

143 Andriscus conquered by Metellus. 

147 Macedonia reduced to the form of a Roman province 
War between Rome and the Achseans. 

146 Destruction of Corinth by Mummius. Greece be- 
comes a Roman province. [Although this is denied 
In an able dissertation, by C. ¥. Hermann.) 



CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES OF ROMAN HISTORY, 

FROM THE FOUNDATION OF THE CITY, B.C. 753, TO THE FALL OF THE WESTERN EMPIRE, A.D. 476. 



B.C. 

753 Foundation of Rome on the Palatine Mount, on the 
Palilia, the 21st of April. This is the era of Varro. 
According to Cato, Rome was founded in B.C. 751 ; 
according to Polybius, in B.C. 750 ; according to 
Fabius Pictor, in 747. 
<53 Romulus, first Roman king, reigned thirty-seven 
to years. Rape of the Sabine women. Conquest 
716 of the Csninenses, Crustumini, and Antemnates. 
War and league with the Sabines, who settle on 
the Capitoline and Quirinal, under their king Ta- 
tius. Tatius slain at Laurentum, Wars with Fi- 
densa and Veii. 
716 Interregnum for a year. 

716 Numa Pompilius, second Roman king. The length 
to of Numa's reign is stated differently. Livy makes 
673 it 43 years ; Cicero, who follows Polybius, 39 years. 
Constant peace during Numa's reign. Institution 
of religious ceremonies and regulation of the year. 
673 Tullus Hostilius, third Roman king, reigned 32 years, 
to Destruction of Alba, and removal of its inhabitants 
641 to Rome. War with Veii and Fidcnfe. League 

with the Latins. 
640 Ancus Marcius, fourth Roman king, reigned 24 years, 
to Origin of the plebeians, consisting of conquered 
616 Latins settled on the Aventine. Extension of the 

city. Ostia founded. 
616 L. Tarquinius Priscus, fifth Roman king. Greatness 
to of the Roman monarchy. Great public works un- 
578 dertaken. Conquest of the Sabines and Latins. 
The senate increased to 300. The number of the 
equites doubled. Institution of the minores gentes. 
578 Servius Tullius, sixth Roman king, reigned 44 years, 
to He adds the Esquiiine and Viminalis to the city, 
534 and surrounds the city with a stone wall. Consti- 
tution of Servius Tullius. Institution of the 30 ple- 
beian tribes, and of the comitia centuriata. 
534 L. Tarquinius Superbus, last Roman king. The con- 
to stitution of Servius Tullius abrogated. Tarquin be- 
510 comes ruler of Latium. Makes war upon the Vol- 
scians, and conquers Suessa Poinetia. Sends colo- 
nies to Signia and Circeii. Expulsion of the Tar- 
quins and establishment of the republic. 
509 Coss. L. Junius Brutus. Slain in battle. 

L. Tarquinius Collatinus. Abdicated. 
Sp. Lucretius Tricipitinus. Died. 
M. Horatius Pulvillus. 
P. Valerius Poplicola. 
War with the Etruscans, and death of Brutus in bat- 
tle. First treaty with Carthage. 
?08 Coss. P. Valerius Poplicola II. 

T. Lucretius Tricipitinus. 
War with Porsena, king of Clvisium. 
507 Coss. P. Valerius Poplicola III. 

M. Horatius Pulvillus II. 
Dedication of the Capitoline temple by the consul 
Horatius. 

606 Coss. Sp. Lartius Flavus s. Rufus. 

T. Herminius Aquilinus. 
505 Coss. M. Valerius Volusus. 



B.C. 

P. Postumius Tubertus. 
504 Coss. P. Valerius Poplicola IV. 

T. Lucretius Tricipitinus H. 
Appius Claudius removes to Rome. 
503 Coss. P. Postumius Tubertus II. 

Agrippa Menenius Lanatus. 
Death of P. Valerius Poplicola. 
502 Coss. Opiter Virginius Tricostus. 

Sp. Caesius Viscellinus. 
501 Coss. Postumus Cominius Auruncus. 
T. Lartius Flavus s. Rufus. 
Institution of the dictatorship. T. Lartius Flavua & 
Rufus was the first dictator, and Sp. Cassius Vfe» 
cellinus the first magister equitum. 
500 Coss. Ser. Sulpicius Camerinus Cornutus. 

M. Tullius Longus. Died. 
499 Coss. T. .Ebutius Elva. 

P. Veturius Geminus Cicurinus. 
498 Coss. T. Lartius Flavus s. Rufus H. 

Q. Cloelius (Volcula) Siculus. 
Diet. A. Postumius Albus Regillensis. 
Mag. Eq. T. .Ebutius Elva. 

Battle of Lake Regillus, in which the Latins are de* 
feated by the Romans. Some writers place this 
battle in B.C. 496, in which year Postumius was 
consul. 

497 Coss. A. Sempronius Atratinus. 

M. Minucius Augurinus. 
496 Coss. A. Postumius Albus Regillensis. 

T. Virginius Tricostus Cseliomontanus. 
Tarquinius Superbus dies at Cumaa. 
495 Coss. Ap. Claudius Sabinus Regillensis. 
P. Servilius Priscus Structus. 
Oppression of the plebeians by the patricians. The 
tribes increased from 20 to 21 by the addition of the 
tribus Claudia. 
494 Coss. A. Virginius Tricostus Cjeliomontanu?. 
T. Veturius Geminus Cicurinus. 
Diet. M'. Valerius Volusus Maximus. 
Mag. Eq. Q. Servilius Priscus Structus. 
First secession of the plebs to the Sacred Mount. In- 
stitution of the Tribuni plebis and ./Ediles plebis. 
Colony sent to Velitrae. 
493 Coss. Sp. Cassius Visceliiuus II. 

Postumus Cominius Auruncus II. 
Treaty with the Latins concluded by Sp. Cassius, 
War with the Volscians, and capture of Corioli 
492 Coss. T. Geganius Macerinus. 

P. Minucius Augurinus. 
Lex Icilia. Famine at Rome. Colony sent to Norba, 
491 Coss. M. Minucius Augurinus II. 

A. Sempronius Atratinue II. 
M. Coriolanus goes into exile among the Volscians, 
490 Coss. Q, Sulpicius Camerinus Cornutus. 

Sp. Lartius Flavus s. Rufus II. 
489 Cost: C. Julius Jul us. 

P. Pinarius Marnercinus Rufus. 
The Volscians, commanded by Coriolanus, attack 
Rome. 



CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES, ETC 



B.C. 



97* 



488 Cots. Sp. Nautius Rutilus. 

Sex. Furius Medullinus Fusus. 
Successes of Volscians. Retreat of Coriolanu*. 
487 C08S. T. Sicinius Sabinus. 

C. Aquilius Tuscus. 
486 Cots. Proculus Hlghlim Tricostus Rutilus. 
Sp. Cassius Viscellinus III. 
League concluded by Sp. Cassius with the Hcrnici. 
First agrarian law proposed by Sp. Cassius. 
485 Coss. Ser. Cornelius Cossus Maluginrnsis. 
Q.. Fabius Vibulanus. 
Condemnation and death of Caserns. 
484 Coss. L. jEmilius Ksmeretk* 

K. Fabius Vibulanus. 
483 Coss. M. Fabius Vibulanus. 

L. Valerius Potitus. 
War with Veii, which lasts several years. Power of 
the Fabia gens. 
482 Coss. C. Julius Julus 

Q. Fabius Vibulanus II. 
481 Coss. K. Fabius Vibulanus II. 

Sp. Furius Medullinus Fusus. 
480 Coss. Cn. Manlius Cincinnati. 

M. Fabius Vibulanus II. 
Manlius falls in battle against the Etruscans. 
479 Coss. K. Fabius Vibulanus III. 

T. Virginias Trieoetus Rutilus. 
The Fabia gens undertakes the war with Veii, and 
stations itself on the Cremera. 
478 Coss. L. iEmilius Mamercus II. 

C. Servilius Structus Ahala. Died. 
Opiter Vilnius Tricostus Eequilinus. 
477 Cose. C. Horatius Pulvillus. 

T. Menenius Lanatus. 
Destruction of the Fabii at the Cremera. 
47G Coss. A. Virginius Tricostus Rutilus. 

Sp. Servilius Priscus Structus. 
The Veientes take the Janiculum. 
475 Coss. P. Valerius Poplicola. 
C. Nautius Rutilus. 
Impeachment of the ex consul Servilius by the trib- 
unes. 

474 Coss. A. Manlius Vulso. 

L. Furius Medullinus Fusus. 
The census taken. Lustrum VIII. Forty years' truce 
with Veii. 
473 Coss. L. ^EmiUus Mamercus III. 
Vopiscus Julius Julus. 
Murder of the tribuDe Genucius. 
472 Coss. L. Pinarius Mamercinus Rufua. 
P. Furius Medullinus Fusus. 
Publilius Volero, trib. pi., proposes the Pnblilia lex. 
'471 Coss. Ap. Claudius Sabinus Regillensis. 

T. Quinctius Capitolinus Barbatus. 
Publilius, again elected trib. pi., carries the Publilia 
lex, which enacted that the plebeian magistrates 
should be elected by the comitia tributa. Wars 
with the iEquians and Volscians. Ap. Claudius, 
the consul, deserted by his army. 
470 Coss. L. Valerius Pititus II. 

Ti. .Emilius Mamercus. 
Iiiil« :ichraent of the ex-consul Ap. Claudius, who 
dies before his trial. 
469 Coss. A. Virginius Tricostus Csliomontanus. 

T. Numicius Priscus. 
468 Coss. T. Quinctius Capitolinus Barbaras II. 
Q. Servilius Priscus Structus. 
Antium taken by the Romans. 



B.C. 

467 Cott. Ti. .Emilius Mamercus II. 

Q. Fabius Vibulanus. 
Colony sent to Antium. 
466 Cost. Sp. PosrumiuB Albua Regillenats. 

Q. Servilius Priscus Structu* II. 

465 Coes. Q. Fabius Vibulanus II. 

T. Quinctius Capitolinus Barbatua ILL 

War with the .Equians. 
464 Cost. A. PostumiuB Albu» Regillenaia. 
Sp. Furius Medulliiius Fubuj. 
War with the .Equians. 
40.1 Coss. P. Servilius Priscus Structus. 
L. iEbutius Elva. 
Festilcnce at Rome. 
462 Coss. L. Lucretius Tricipitinus. 

T. Veturius Geminus Cicurinus. 
C. Terentillus Arsa, trib. pi., propo»ca a revision of 
the laws. The consula triumph over the Volsciain» 
and iEquians. 
461 Cott. P. Volumnius Amintinus Callus. 

Ser. Sulpicius CamerLnus CornutUB. 
Struggles between the patricians and plebeians re- 
specting the law of Terentillus, which are contin- 
ued till B.C. 464. Accusation and condemnation 
of K. Quinctius, the son of Cincinnatus. 
460 Cost. C. Claudius Sabinus Regillenais. 

P. Valerius Poplicola II. Pied 
It. Quinctius Cincinnatus. 
During the contentions of the patricians and plebei- 
ans, the Capitol is seized by Herdonius. The con- 
sul Valerius is killed in recovering it 
459 Cott. Q. Fabius Vibulanus III. 

L. Cornelius Maluginensis. 
War with the Volscians and >Equians. Antium re- 
volts, and is conquered. Peace with the /Equiao*. 
458 Coss. L. Minucius Esquilinus Augurinus. 
C. Nautius Rutilus II. 
Diet. L. Quinctius Cincinnntus. 
Mag. Eq. L. Tarquitius Flaccus. 

War with the .Equians and Shbinca. The Roman 
army shut in by the enemy, but delivered by the 
dictator Cincinnatus. 
457 Coss. C. Horatius Pulvillus II. 

Q. Minucius F.squilinus Augurinus. 
Tribunes of the plebs increased from five to ten. 
456 Coss. M. Valerius (Lnctuca) Maximus. 

Sp. Virginius Tricostus Cwliomontanua. 
The Mons Aventinus is ussigucd to the plebeians by 
the law of the tribune Icilius. 
455 Coss. T. Romihus Hocus Vaticani*. 

C. Veturius Geminu* Cicurinus. 
Victory over the .Equians. 
454 Cots. Sp. Tarpeius Montnnus Capitolinus. 
A. Aternius Varus Fontinalis. 
The patricians yield. See B.C. 461. Three coromi*- 
sioners are sent into Greece to become acquainted 
with the Grecian laws. 
453 Coss. Sex. Quinctilius Varus. 

P. Curiatius Festus Trigeminus. 
A famine and pestilence. 
452 Coss. P. Sestius Capitolinus Vaticanus. 
T. Menenius Lanatus. 
The ambassadors return from Greece. It is resolved 
to appoint Decemviri, from whom there should be 
no appeal (provocatio). 
451 Coss. Ap. Claudius Crassinus Regillensis Sabinus IL 
Abdicated. 
T. Genucius Augurinus. Abdicated. 



CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES OF 

B.C. 



976 

B.C. 

451 Decemviri, Ap. Claudius Crassinus Regilleneis Sabi- 

DU8. 

T. Genucius Augurinus. 

Sp. Veturius Crassus Cicurinus.' 

C. Julius Julus. 

A. Manliua Vulso. 

Ser. Sulpicius Camerinus Cornutus. 
P. Sestius Capitolinus Vaticanus. 
P. Curiatius Festus Trigeminus. 
T. Romilius Rocus Vaticanus. 
Sp. Postumius Albus UegillensU. 
Laws of the Ten Tables promulgated. 
50 Decemviri. Ap. Claudius Crassinus Regillensia Sabi- 
nus II. 

M. Cornelius Maluginensis. 
L. Sergius Esquilinus. 
L. Minucius Esquilinus Augurinue. 
T. Antonius Merenda. 
Q. Fabius Vibulanu9. 
Q. Poetilius Libo Visoius. 
K. Duilius Longus. 
Sp. Oppius Cornicen. 
M'. Rabuleius. 
Two additional tables are added, thus making the 
laws of the Twelve Tables. 
449 Coss. L. Valerius Poplicola Potitus. 
M. Horatius Barbatus. 
The decemvirs continue illegally in the possession of 
power. In consequence of the death of Virginia, 
the plebeians secede to the Mons Sacer. The de- 
cemvirs deposed, and the old form of government 
restored. Valerius and Horatiu6 appointed consuls. 
The Leges Valerias HoratiaB increase the power 
of the plebeians. Successful war of the consuls 
against the JEquians and Sabines. 
448 Coss. Lar Herminius jEquilinus < Continisanus). 
T. Virginius Tricostus Cseliomontanus. 
Lex Trebonia. 
447 Coss. M. Geganius Macerinus. 
C. Julius Julus. 
The qutestors are for the first time elected by the 
people, having been previously appointed by the 
consuls. 

446 Coss. T. Quinctius Capitolinus Barbatus IV. 
Agrippa Furius Medullinus Fusus. 
War with the Vol6cians and jEquians. 
445 Coss. M. Genucius Augurinus. 
C Curtius Philo. 
Lex Canuleia establishes connubium between the pa- 
tricians and plebeians : it is proposed to elect the 
consuls from the patricians and plebeians, but it is 
enacted that Tribuni militum with consular power 
6hall be elected indifferently from the two orders. 
444 Coss. L. Papirius Mugillanus. 

L. Sempronius Atratinus. 
Three Tribuni militum with consular power appoint- 
ed, but they are compelled to abdicate from a defect 
in the auspices. Consuls appointed in their place. 
443 Coss. M. Geganius Macerinus II. 

T. Quinctius Capitolinus Barbatus V. 
Censores. L. Papirius Mugillanus. 

L. Sempronius Atratinus. 
Institution of the censorship. The history of Dionys- 
iuB breaks off in this year. Victory over the Vol- 
scians. 

442 Coss. If. Fabius Vibulanus. 

Postumus iEbutius Elva Cornicen. 
Colony founded at Ardea. 



441 Coss. C. Furius Pacilus Fusus. 

M'. Papirius Crassus. 
440 Coss. Proculus Geganius Macerinus. 
L. Menenius Lanatus. 
A famine at Rome. A Prafectus Annona appoint** 
for the first time. Sp. Maelius distributee corm t» 
the poor. 

439 Coss. T. Quinctius Capitolinus Barbatus VI. 
Agrippa Menenius Lanatus. 
Diet. L. Quinctius Cincinnatus II. 
Mag. Eq. C. Servilius Structus Ahala. 
Sp. Maelius summoned before the dictator, and kiBe4 
by the magister equitum when he refused to obej 
the eummons. 

438 III. Tribuni Militum consulari potestate (Lit., ir., Iff). 
The inhabitants of Fidensa revolt, and place them- 
selves under the protection of Veii. Murder of tb* 
Roman ambassadors. 
437 Coss. M. Geganius Macerinus IIL 
L. Sergius (Fidenas). 
Diet. Mam. ^milius Mamercinus. 
Mag. Eq. L. Quinctius Cincinnatus. 
Fidenaj reconquered. The Veientes defeated. 
436 Coss. M. Cornelius Maluginenais. 

L. Papirius Crassus. 
435 Coss. C. Julius Julus II. 

L. Virginius Tricostus. 
Diet. Q. Servilius Priscus Structus (Fidenas). 
Mag. Eq. Postvmus jEbutius Elva Cornicen. 
Censs. C. Furius Pacilus Fusus. 
M. Geganius Macerinus. 
434 III. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv., iv., 23.) 
433 III. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv., iv., 25.) 
Diet. Mam. ^Emiliu6 Mamercinus II. 
Mag. Eq. A. Postumius Tubertus. 
The Lex Emilia of the dictator limits the dar*tio» 
of the censorship to eighteen months. 
432 III. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv., ir., 25.) 
431 Coss. T. Quinctius Pennus Cincinnatus. 
C. Julius Mento. 
Diet. A. Postumius Tubertus. 
Mag. Eq. L. Julius Julus. 

Great victory over the jEquians and VolseiaM at 

Mount Algidus. 
430 Coss. C. Papirius Crassus. 

L. Julius Julus. 
429 Coss. L. Sergius Fidenas II. 

Hostus Lucretius Tricipitinus. 
428 Coss. A. Cornelius Co6BU8. 

T. Quinctius Pennus Cincinnatus IL 
427 Coss. C. Servilius Structus Ahala. 
L. Papirius Mugillanus II. 
War declared against Veii by the vote of the eonUa 
centuriata. 

426 IV. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv., iv., 31.) 
Diet. Mam. ^milius MamercinuB III. 
Mag. Eq. A. Cornelius Cos6us. 
War with Veii. Fidenae again revolts, is retaken ant 
destroyed. 

425 IV. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv., iv., 35.) 

Truce with Veii for twenty years. 
424 IV. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv., iv., 35.) 
Censs. L. Julius Julus. 

L. Papirius Crassus. 
423 Coss. C. Sempronius Atratinus. 
Q. Fabius Vibulanus. 
War with the Volscians. Vulturnum taken by &• 
Somnites. 



ROMAN HISTORY. 



'J-.7 



422 IV. Trib. Mil. cons, pot. (Lit., iv., 42.) 
421 Cosb. N. Fabius Vibulanus. 

T. Quinctius Capitolinus Barbatus. 
The number of tlie qua-stors increased from two to 
four. 

420 IV. Trib. Mil. conn. pot. (Liv., iv., 44.) 

Conquest of tin- Greek city of CumaB by the Campa- 
nians. 

419 IV. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv., iv., 44.) 
418 III. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv., iv., 45.) 
Diet. Q. Serviliua Priacus Fidenas II. 
Mag. Eq. C. Serviliua (Structus) Axilla. 
Cents. L. Papirius Mu^llanus. 

Mam. vEmilius Mamorcinus. 
Defeat of the iEquians, Lavici taken, and a colony 
sent thither. 
417 TV. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv.. iv., 47.) 
41C TV. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv., iv, 47.) 
415 IV. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv., iv., 49.) 
414 TV. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv., iv., 49.) 

War with the .f.quians. Bola conquered. Fostu- 
mius, the consular tribune, killed by the soldiers. 
From this rime the power of the jEquians and 
Volscians decline.*, chiefly through the increasing 
might of the Samnites. 
413 Coss. A. Cornelius Cossua. 

L. Furius Medullinus. 
412 Coss. Q. Fabius Vibulanua Ambustus. 

C. Furius Pacilus. 
411 Coss. M. Papirius Mugillanua. 

C. Nautius Rutilus. 
410 Cots. M*. iEmilius Maine™ inu3. 

C. Valerius l'otitus Vulusus. 
M. Maenius, tribune of the pMlfa, proposes an ngTariau 
law. 

409 Coss. Cn. Cornelius Cossus. 

L. Furius Medulkous IL 
Three of the four qutvstors are plebeians, being the 
first time that the plebeians had obtained this office. 
408 III. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv., iv., 56.) 
Diet. P. Cornelius Rutilua Cossus. 
Mag. Eq. C. Serviliua (Structus) Ahala. 
407 IV. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv., iv., 57.) 

Expiration of the truce with Veii. See B.C. 425. 
The truce was made for twenty years ; but the 
years were the old Roman years of ten months. 
The Romans defeated by the Volscians. 
406 IV. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv., iv., 58.) 

War with the Volscians. Anxur, afterward called 
Tarracina, taken. War declared against Veii. Pay 
decreed by the senate to the Roman soldiers for the 
first time. 

405 VI. Trib. Mil. cms. pot. (Liv., iv., 61.) 

Siege of Veii. which lasts ten years. See B.C. 396. 
404 VI. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv., iv., 61.) 

An eclipse of the suu recorded in the Annales Maxi- 
mi as occurring on the Nones of June. (Cic, de 
Rep., i., 16.) 
403 VI. Trib. Md. cons. pot. (Liv., v., 1.) 
Censs. ML Furius Carnillus. 

M. Postutnius Albinus Regillensis. 
Livy counts the censors among the consular tribunes, 
whom he accordingly makes eight in number. 
402 VI. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv., v., 8.) 

Defeat of the Romans before Veii. Anxur recovered 
by the Volscians. 
401 VI. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv., v., 10.) 
400 VI Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv., v., 12.) 
62 



B.C. 

400 Anxur recovered by tb« 

399 VI. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv, v., 13.) 
A pestilence at Rome. A Lectistcrnium 
for the first time. 
398 VI. Trib. Mil. com. pot. (Liv., v.. ML) 

An embassy sent to consult the oracle at Delphi. 
397 VI. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv., v., 16.) 
396 VI. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv., v., IP.) 
Diet. M. Furius Carnillus. 
Mag. Eq. P. Cornelius Malugincnais. 
Capture of Veii by th<: dictator Camillui. 
395 VI. Trib. Mil. cons. po>. M.iv . v .•_>!, 
394 VI. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv.. v.*;. 

Peace made with the Faliscl. 
393 Coss. L. Valerius Potitus. Abdicated. 

P. Cornelius Maluginensia Count. Abdicated. 
L. Lucretius Flavua (Tricipttinus). 
Ser. Sulpieius Cumirinus. 
Censs. L. Papirius Cursor. 

C. Julius Julua. Died. 
M. Corneliua Malugincnai*. 
Distribution of the Wirntine territory amoog lb" 
plebeians. 
392 Coss. L. Valerius Potitus. 

M. Manlius Capitolinus. 
391 VI. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv.. v., 32.) 

Carnillus banished. Wnr with Volrinii. Thf Cauls 
invade Ktruria nnd l:iy Bicge to Clusium. 
390 VI. Trib. Mil. cone. pot. (Liv.. v.. 36.) 
Diet. M. Furius Carnillus II. 
Mag. Eq. L. Valerius Potitus. 

Rome taken by the Gauls. The Romans are de- 
feated at the battle of the Allia on the 16th of July 
(Niebuhr, vol. ii., note llT'.t), and the Gauls entered 
Rome on the third day after the battlf. Carnillus 
recalled from exile and appointed dictator. The 
Gauls leave Rome after holding it «" . en months. 
38!» VI. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv.. vi. 1.) 

Diet. M. Furius Carnillus III. 

Mag. Eq. C. Servilius Ahala. 

Rome rebuilt. The Latins and Heruican* renounce 
their alliance with Rome. Rom<- attacked by the 
surrounding nations, but Camillua piuns victories 

over them. 
388 VI. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv., vi., 4.) 
387 VI. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv.. ft, ft) 

The number of the Roman tribes increased from ■ 
to 25, by the addition of four new tril»c8, the SttUo- 
tina, Tromentina, Salatina, and Arnitnsis. 
386 VI. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv., H, t) 
Defeat of the Antiates and Ktruscans. 
385 VI. Trib. Mil. con: pot. (Liv., vi.. 11.) 
Diet. A. Cornelius Cossus. 
Mag. Eq. T. Quinctius Cnpitolinu?. 
Defeat of the Volscians. A colony founded at Satri- 
cum. The patricians accuse M. Manlius Capitoli- 
nus of aspiring to royal power. 
384 VI. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv., vi.. 18.) 

Manlius is brought to trial, condemned, and put to 
death. 

383 VI. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv.. vi., 21.) 

The Ager Pomptinus assigned to the plebeians, k 
colony founded at Nepete. 
382 VI. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv., vi . 22.) 

War with Prieneste. 
381 VL Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv., vi., 22.) 

War with Pra?ne3te and the Volscians. 
380 VI. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv., vi.. 27.) 



978 



CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES OF 



380 Censs. C. 3alpicius Camerinus. Abdicated. 

Sp. Po3tumius Regillensis Albinus. Died. 
Diet. T. Quinctius Cincinnatus Capitolinus. 
Mag. Eq. A. Sempronius Atratinus. 
Preeneste taken by the dictator. 
379 VI. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv., vi., 30.) 
378 VI. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv., vi., 31.) 
Censs. Sp. Servilius Priscus. 
Q. Cloelius Siculus. 
377 VI. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv., vi., 32.) 
376 VI. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. Their names are not men- 
tioned by Livy, but Diodorus (xv., 71) has pre- 
served the name3 of four of tbem. 
The Rogationes Licinije proposed by C. Licinius 
and L. Sextius, the tribunes of the people, to im- 
prove the condition of the plebeians, and to in- 
crease their political power. 
375 C. Licinius and L. Sextius re-elected tribunes every 
to year; and as the patricians would not allow the 
371 Rogations to become laws, the tribunes prevented 
the election of all patrician magistrates during these 
years. 

370 VI. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv., vi., 36.) 

C. Licinius and L. Sextius, who are again elected 
tribunes, allow consular tribunes to be chosen this 
year, on account of the war with Velitraj. Licini- 
us and Sextius continue to be re-elected down to 
B.C. 367. 

369 VI. Trib. Mil. com. pot. (Liv., vi., 36.) 
368 VI. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv., vi., 38.) 
Diet. M. Furius Camillus IV. 
Mag. Eq. L. -,Emilius Mamercinus. 
Diet. P. Manlius Capitolinus. 
Mag. Eq. C. Licinius Calvus. 
067 VI. Trib. Mil. cons. pot. (Liv., vi., 42.) 
Diet. M. Furius Camillus V. 
Mag. Eq. T. Quinctius Cincinnatus Capitolinus. 
The Rogationes Licinle passed. One of the con- 
suls was to be chosen from the plebeians ; but a 
new magistracy was instituted, the prsetorship, 
which was to be confined to the patricians. Ca- 
millus, the dictator, conquers the Gauls, and dedi- 
cates a temple to Concordia to celebrate the recon- 
ciliation of the two orders. 
366 Coss. L. jEmilius Mamercinus. 

L. Sextius Sextinus Lateranus. 
Censs. A. Posturaius Regillensis Albinus. 

C. Sulpicius Petkus. 
First Plebeian Consul, L. Sextius. 
First Pr^tor, L. Furius Camillus. 
365 Coss. L. Genucius Aventinensis. 
Q, Servilius Ahala. 
Pestilence at Rome. Death of Camillus, 
364 Coss. C. Sulpicius Peticus. 

C. Licinius Calvus Stolo. 
The pestilence continues. Ludi scenici first insti- 
tuted. 

«J63 Coss. Cn. Genucius Aventinensis. 

L. iEmilius Mamercinus II. 
Diet. L. Manlius Capitolinus Imperiosus, 
Mag. Eq. L. Pinarius Natta. 
Censs. M. Fabius Ambustus. 
L. Furius Medullinus. 
362 Coss. Q. Servilius Ahala II. 

L. Genucius Aventinensis II. 
Diet. Ap. Claudius Crassinus Regillensis. 
Mag . Eq. P. Cornelius Scapula. 
Half of the Tribuni Militum for the first time elected 



B.C. 

by the people. Earthquake at Rome. Self-devo- 
tion of Curtius. 
361 Coss. C. Sulpicius Peticus II. 

C. Licinius Calvus Stolo II. 
Diet. T. Quinctius Pennus Capitolinus Criapinus. 
Mag. Eq. Ser. Cornelius Maluginensis. 
Invasion of the Gauls. T. Manlius kills a Gaul in sin* 
gle combat, and acquires the surname of Torquatus, 
360 Coss. C. Poetelius Libo Visolus. 
M. Fabius Ambustus. 
Diet. Q. Servilius Ahala. 

Mag. Eq. T. Quinctius Pennus Capitolinus Crispi- 
nus. 

War with the Gauls and Tiburtines, who are defeated 
by the dictator. 
359 Coss. M. Popilius Lsenas. 

Cn. Manlius Capitolinus Imperiosus. 
358 Coss. C. Fabius Ambustus. 

C. Plautius Proculus. 
Diet. C. Sulpicius Peticus. 
Mag. Eq. M. Valerius Poplicoia. 
Plautius defeats the Hernicans, and Sulpicius the 
Gauls. Fabius fights unsuccessfully against the 
Tarquinienses. Renewal of the alliance with La- 
tium. Lex Poetelia de ambilu, proposed by the trib- 
une Poeteiius. The number of tribes increased 
from 25 to 27 by the addition of the Pomptina and 
Publilia. 
357 Coss. C. Marcius Rutilus. 

Cn. Manlius Capitolinus Imperiosus IL 
Lex Duilia et Mienia de unciario fenore, restoring the 
rate of interest fixed by the Twelve Tables. Lex 
Manlia de vicesima manumissorum. 
Privernum taken. C. Licinius fined for an infraction 
of his own law. 
356 Coss. M. Fabius Ambustus II. 
M. Popilius Lsenas II. 
Diet. C. Martius Rutilus. 
Mag. Eq. C. Plautius Proculus. 
First Plebeian Dictator, C. Marcius Rutilus, con- 
quers the Etruscans. 
355 Coss. C. Sulpicius Peticus III. 
M. Valerius Poplicoia. 
Both consuls patricians, in violation of the Licinian 
law. 

354 Coss. M. Fabius Ambustus III. 

T. Quinctius Pennus Capitolinus Crispinus. 
Both consuls again patricians. League with the San> 
nites. 

353 Coss. C. Sulpicius Peticus IV. 

M. Valerius Poplicoia II. 
Diet. T. Manlius Imperiosus Torquatus. 
Mag. Eq. A. Cornelius Cossus Arvina. 
War with Caere and Tarquinii. Truce made with 
Caere for 100 years. 
352 Coss. P. Valerius Poplicoia. 

C. Marcius R.utilus II. 
Diet. C. Julius Julus. 
Mag. Eq. L. jEmilius Mamercinus. 
Quinqueviri Mensarii appointed for a general liquida- 
tion of debts. 
351 Coss. C. Sulpicius Peticus V. 

T. Quinctius Pennus Capitolinus Crispinus IL 
Diet. M. Fabius Ambustus. 
Mag. Eq. Q. Servilius Ahala. 
Censs. Cn. Manlius Capitolinus Imperiosus. 

C. Marcius Rutilus. 
First Plebeian Censor, C. Marcius Rutilus. War 



ROMAN HISTORY". 



979 



with the IteqaUWM) to whom a truce for 40 
years is granted. 
350 Coss. M. Popiliua Lamas III. 

L. Cornelius Scipio. 
Diet. L. Furius Cnmillus. 
Mag. Eq. P. Cornelius Scipio. 
The Gauls defeated by the consul Popilius. 
Hi Coss. L. Furius ( umillus. 

Ap. Claudius Crassinus Regillensis. Died. 
Diet. T. Manlius Imperiosus Torquatus II. 
Mag. Eq. A. Cornelius Cossus Arvina II. 
Both consuls patricians. The Gauls defeated by the 
consul CtaMfttlU. M. Valerius Corvus kills a Gaul 
iu single combat 
.348 Coss. M. Valerius Corvus. 

M. Popilius Lamas IV. 
Diet. C. Claudius Crassinus Regillensis. 
Mag. Eq. C Livius Denter. 
Renewal of the treaty with Carthage. 
347 Coss. T. Manlius Imperiosus Torquatus. 
C. Plautius Yenno Hypsseua. 
Reduction of the rate of interest. 
346 Coss. M. Valerius Corvus II. 

C. Poetelius I.ibo Visolus. 
Second celebration of the Ludi Sreculares. War 
with the Volscians. fstrtcnai taken. 
345 Coss. M. Fabius Dorso. 

Ser. Sulpiciua Camerinus Rufus. 
Diet. L. Furius Camillus II. 
Mag. Eq. Cn. Manlius Capitolinns Impcriosua. 
War with the Aururm 
344 Coss. C. Marcius Rutilus III. 

T. Manlius Imperiosus Torquatus II. 
Diet. P. Vulerius I'nplicola. 
Mag. Eq. Q. PMbilM \nibu«tus. 
JEdcB Monehe dedicated, 
343 Coss. M. Valerius Corvus III. 

A. Cornelius Cossus Arvina. 
First Samniti: Wah. The Campanians place them- 
selves under the protection of the Romans, who 
send the two consuls against the Samnitee. Vale- 
rius defeats tlx- Samnites at Mount Gaurus. 
J42 Coss. C. Marcius Rutilus IV. 
Q. Servilius Ahala. 
Diet. M. Valerius Corvus. 
Mag. Eq. L. .F.milius Mamercinus Privernas. 
Insurrection of the Roman army at Capua. Various 
concessions made to the plebeians : that no one 
should hold the same magistracy till after the ex- 
piration of ten years, that no one should hold two 
magistracie s In the same year, and that both con- 
suls might be plebeians. Lex Genucia forbade the 
taking of interest. 
341 Coss. C. Plautius Venno Hypsaeus II. 

L. /Emilius Mamercinus Privernas. 
Peace and alliance with the Samnites. 
340 Coss. T. Manlius Imperiosus Torquatus TIL 
P. Decius Mus. 
Diet. L. Papirius Crassus. 
Mag. Eq. L. Papirius Cursor. 

Latin War. Self-devotion of Decius and defeat of 
the Latins at Mount Vesuvius. The Latins become 
the subjects of Rome. 
339 Coss. Ti. .Emilius Mamercinus. 
Q. Publilius Philo. 
Di.t. Q. Publilius Philo. 
Mag. Eq. D. Junius Brutus Sceeva. 
The Latins renew the war and are defeated. The 



Leges l'ui.hli e. pro|K)w,l by the dictator, (1.) gi» e 
to the plebiscitn tho force „f j,.^., (ut pUbitcita cm- 
nes quiritet teutrtnt) ; (2.) .,l,oli»h the r.to of the 
curia- on the measures of the comiti* centoritta 
(3.) enart that one of the cenaor* mu«t be a pk> 
beinn. 

338 Cost. L Furius Cnmillui.. 
C. Mamius. 
Subjugation of Latium concluded. 
337 Coss. C. Sulpicius Longuo. 
P. JDM Ptetus. 
Diet. C. Claudius Craasimu Regillenahi. 
Mag. Eq. C. Claudius Hortator. 
First Plebeian Pr.ttor, (£ Publilius Philo. The 
pra;torehip was probably thrown o|>cn *.o the ple- 
beians by his laws. 
336 Coss. L. Papirius Crassus. 
K. Duilius. 
Peace with the Cauls. 
335 Coss. M. Valerius Corvus (Cahnus) IV. 
M. Atilius Regulus. 
Diet. L. .Emilius Mamercinus Privcrna*. 
Mag. Eq. Q. Publilius Philo. 
Calcs taken. 
334 Coss. T. Veturius Calvinus. 

Sp. Postumius Albinus (Caudiatu). 
Diet. P. Cornelius Rufinus. 
Mag. Eq. M. Ar.tonius. 
Colony sent to Cales. 
333 Coss. (L. Papirius Cursor. 

C. Poetelius Libo Visolus II.) 
The consuls of this year arc not mentioned by any 
ancient authority, and are inserted here on con- 
jecture. 

332 Coss. A. Cornelius Cossus Arvina II. 
Cn. Domitius Calvinus. 
Diet. M. Papirius Crassus. 
Mag. Eq. P. Valerius l'oplicola. 
Ceiiss. Q. Publilius Philo. 

Sp. Postumius Albinus. 
The civitas given to the Acerrani. Two new tribes 
added, M<eeia and Sraplia. The Samnites and Lu- 
canians tight with Alexander, king of Kpinn. who 
makes a treaty with the Roman-". 
331 Coss. M. Claudius Marcellue. 

C. Valerius Potitus Flaccus. 
Diet. Cn. Quintilius Varus. 
Mag. Eq. L. Valerius Potitus. 
330 Coss. L. Papirius Crassus II. 
L. Plautius Venno. 
Revolt of Fundi and Privermim. 
329 Coss. L. -Emilius Mamercinus Privernas II. 
C. Plautius Drrianus. 
Privernum taken. The civitas given to the Priver- 
natcs. A colony sent to Anxur (Tarrarina). 
328 Coss. C. Plautius Decinnus (Veno\) II. 
P. Cornelius Scipio Barbatus. 
A colony sent to Frr-ellte. 
327 Coss. Li Cornelius I.entulus. 

a Publilius Philo II. 
Diet. M. Claudius Marccllug. 
Mag. Eq. Sp. Postumius Albinus. 
War with Pala-polis. 
326 Coss. C. Poetelius Libo Visolu* BE 

L. Pftpirina Mugillanus (Cursor II.). 
Second Bamntte Was Pala-polis taken. LexPo 
tclia ct Papiria enacted that no plebeian »hou!d be- 
come a nexus. 



980 



CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES OF 



325 Coss. L. Furius Camillus II. 

D. Junius Brutus Scaeva. 
Diet. L. Papirius Cursor. 

Mag . Eq. Q. Fabius Maximus Rullianus. Abdicated. 
L. Papirius Crassus. 
324 The Dictator and Magister Equitum continued in of- 
fice this year by a decree of the senate, without any 
consuls. Defeat of the Samnites. 
323 Coss. C. Sulpicius Longus II. 

Q. Aulius Cerretanus. 
322 Coss. Q, Fabius Maximus Rullianua. 
L. Fulvius Curvus. 
Diet. A. Cornelius Cossus Arvina. 
Mag. Eq. M. Fabius Ambustus. 
The Samnites defeated. 
321 Coss. T. Veturius Calvinus II. 

Sp. Postumius Albinus II. 
Diet. Q. Fabius Ambustus. 
Mag. Eq. P. jElius Paetus. 
Diet. M. iEmihus Papus. 
Mag. Eq. L. Valerius Flaccus. 

Surrender of the Roman army to the Samnites at the 
Caudine Forks. The Romans refuse to ratify the 
peace with the Samnites made by the consul, and 
continue the war. 
320 Coss. Q. Publilius Philo III. 

L. Papirius Cursor II. (III.). 
Diet. C. Maenius. 
Mag. Eq. M. FosHus Flaccinator. 
Diet. L. Cornelius Lentulus. 
Mag. Eq. L. Papirius Cursor II. 
Diet. T. Manlius Imperiosus Torquatus. 
Mag. Eq. L. Papirius Crassus. 
319 Coss. L. Papirius Cursor III. (Mugillanus). 
Q. Aulius Cerretanus II. 
Defeat of the Samnites by Papirius. 
318 Coss. M. Foslius Flaccinator. 
L. Plautius Venno. 
Censs. L. Papirius Crassus. 
C. Maenius. 

Truce made with the Samnites for two years. Two 
new tribes added, Ufentina and Falerina. 
317 Coss. C. Junius Bubulcus Brutus. 

Q.. JEmilius Barbula. 
316 Coss. Sp. Nautius Rutilus. 

M. Popilius Laenas. 
Diet. L. aEmilius Mamercinus Priverna3 U. 
Mag. Eq. L. Fulvius Curvus. 
The Samnites renew the war. 
315 Coss. Q. Publilius Philo IV. 

L. Papirius Cursor IV. 
Diet. Q. Fabius Maximus Rullianus. 
Mag. Eq. Q.. Aulius Cerretanus. Slain in battle. 
C. Fabius Ambustus. 
-314 Coss. M. Poetelius Libo. 

C. Sulpicius Longus III. 
Diet. C Maenius II. 
Mag. Eq. M. Foslius Flaccinator JJ. 
Victory over the Samnites. Insurrection and subju- 
gation of the Campanians. 
313 Coss. L. Papirius Cursor V. 

C. Junius Bubulcus Brutus II. 
Colonies founded by the Romans at Saticula, Suessa, 
and the island Pontia. 
312 Coss. M. Valerius Maximus. 
P. Decius Mus. 
Diet. C. Sulpicius Longus. 
Jdag. Eq. C. Junius Bubulcus Brutus. 



312 Censs. Ap. Claudius Caecus. 

C. Plautius (Venox). 
The censor Claudius constructs the Via Appia and 
the Aqua Appia ; and, in order to gain popularity, 
distributes the libertini among all the tribes. 
311 Coss. C. Junius Bubulcus Brutus III. 
Q. iEmilius Barbula IL 
The Etruscans declare war against the Romans, but 
are defeated. Victory over the Samnites. 
310 Coss. Q. Fabius Maximus RuUianus II. 
C. Marcius Rutilus (Censorinus). 
The Etruscans again defeated. Ap. Claudius contin- 
ues censor after the abdication of his colleague, in 
defiance of the Lex JEmiiia. The Samnites and 
Etruscans defeated. 
309 Dick L. Papirius Cursor II. 

Mag. Eq. C. Junius Bubulcus Brutus II. 
No consuls this year. The Samnites and Etruscant 
again defeated. 

306 Coss. Q. Fabius Maximus Rullianua HI. 

P. Decius Mus II. 
The Samnites again defeated. War with the Marri 
and Peligni. 

307 Coss. Ap. Claudius Caecus. 

L. Volumnius Flamma Violens. 
Censs. M. Valerius Maximus. 

C. Junius Bubulcus Brutus. 
Fabius, proconsul, defeats the Samnites at Allifae. 
306 Coss. P. Cornelius Arvina. 

Q.. Marcius Tremulu?. 
Diet. P. Cornelius Scipio Barbatus. 
Mag. Eq. P. Decius Mus. 

Insurrection and subjugation of the Hernicans. 
305 Coss. L. Postumius Megellus. 

Ti. Minucius Augurinus. Slain in batiU. 
M. Fulvius Curvus Paetinus. 
Victorious campaign against the Samnites. Bovift- 
num taken. 
304 Coss. P. Sulpicius Saverrio. 

P. Sempronius Sophus. 
Censs. Q.. Fabius Maximus Rullianus. 

P. Decius Mus. 
Peace concluded with the Samnites. The jEquians 
defeated with great slaughter. Peace with the 
Marrucini, Marsi, Peligni. The censors place all 
the libertini in the four city tribes. 
Cn. Flavius makes known the civile jus. and publish- 
es a calendar of the dies fasti and nefasti. 
303 Coss. L. Genucius Aventinensis. 

Ser. Cornelius Lentulus (Rufinus). 
Colonies sent to Sora and Alba. 
302 Coss. M. Livius Denter. 

M. Jimilius P aulius. 
Diet. C. Junius Bubulcus Brutus. 
Mag. Eq. M. Titinius. 

The iEquians renew the war, but are easily defeated 
by the dictator. 
301 Diet. Ql. Fabius Maximus Rullianua II. 

Mag. Eq. M. JEniilius Paullus. 

Diet. M. Valerius Corvus II. 

Afa^. Eq. C. Sempronius Sophus. 

No consuls this year. War with the Marsi and Etrus- 
cans. 

300 Coss. Q. Appuleius Pansa. 

M. Valerius Corvus V. 
The Lex Ogulnia increases the number of the pon- 
tiffs and augurs, and enacts that four of the pontiffs 
and five of the augurs shall always be plebeians. 



ROMAN HISTORY. 



B.C. 
300 



297 



»5 



994 



m 



291 



m 



The Lex Valeria de provocatione re-enacted the former 
law, which had been twice before passed on the 
proposition of different members of the same gem. 
Coss. M. Fulvius Psetinus. 

T. Manlius Torquatus. Died. 
M. Valerius Corvus VI. 
Censs. P. Sempronius Sophus. 

P. Sulpieius Saverrio. 
Two new tribes formed, the Aniensis and Terentina. 

A colony sent to Narnia among the 1,'mbrians. 
Coss. L. Cornelius Scipio. 

Cn. Fulvius Maximus Centumalua. 
Third Samnite War. The Samnites invade the 
territory of the I ucanians, the allies of the Romans, 
which occasions a war. The Samnites defeated at 
Bovianum ; the F.truscans at Volaterra?. Colony 
founded at Carseoli. 
Coss. Q. Fabius Maximum Rullianus IV. 

P. Decius Mus III. 
The war continued in Samnium. The Etruscans re- 
main quiet this peat*. 
Coss. L. Volumnius Flamma Violens II. 

Ap. Claudius Caucus II. 
The war continued in Samnium, and also in Etruria. 
Coss. Q. Fabius Maximus Rullianus V. 

P. Decius Mus IV. 
Great defeat of the Samnites, Etruscans, Umbrinns, 

and Gauls at Sentinum. 
Coss. L. Postumius Megellus II. 

M. Atilius Regnlus, 
Censs. P. Cornelius Arvina. 

C. Marcius Rutilus (Censorinus). 
War continued in Samnium and Etruria. Three 
cities in Etruria, Volsinii, Perusia, and Arretium, 
sue for peace : a truce is made with them for 40 
years. 

Coss. L. Papirius Cursor. 

Sp. Carvilius Maximus. 
The Samnites nVf.-.ited with great loss. First sun- 
dial set up at Rome. 
Coss. Q. Fabius Maximus Gurges. 

D. Junius Brutus Scaeva. 
The consul Fabius defeated by the Samnites; but his 
father, Q. Fabius Maximus, gains a great victory 
over the Samnites, from which they never recover. 
Pontius, the Samnite general, taken prisoner. 
Coss. L. Postumius Megellus III. 

C. Junius Brutus Bubulcus. 
The Samnites hopelessly continue the struggle. Co- 
minium taken. A colony sent to Venusia. 
Coss. P. Cornelius Rufinus. 

M'. Curius Dentatus. 
Both consuls invade Samnium. The Samnites sub- 
mit, and sue for peace. Conclusion of the Samnite 
wars, which had lasted & years. See B.C. 343. 
Coss. M. Valerius Maximus Corvinus. 

Q. C'tedioius Noctua. 
Triumviri Capitate* instituted. Colonies sent to Cas- 

trum, Sena, and Hadria. 
Coss. Q. Marcius Tremulus II. 
P. Cornelius Arvina II. 
M. Claudius Marcellus. 
C. Nautius Rutilus. 
M. Valerius Maximus Potitus. 
C. jElius Psetus. 
Q. Hortensius. 
Last secession of the plebs. The Lex Hortensia of 
the dictator confirms more fully the privileges of 



Coss. 



Coss. 



Diet. 



the plebeians. The I.ex Marnia was very probablj 
passed in this year. 
285 Coss. C. Claudius Cnnina. 

M. JSmjlhU I.epidua 
284 Coss. C. Servilius Tucca. 

L. Cu-cilius Metellus D.nt.r. 
283 Coss. P. Cornelius Do!aMla Maximus. 

Cn. Domitius Calvimn Maximus. 

Censs 

Q. Ca-dicius Noctun. Abdicaltd. 
The Gauls besiege Arretium. and daft* the Roman*. 
In the course of the same pear the flaul* and Etrus- 
cans are defeated by the Romans. 
282 Coss. C. Fabricius I.uscinus. 
Q. .f.milius Papus. 
The Boii defeated : peace made with them. The 
Samnites revolt, but are d. f. sted tOfB&ef with the 
Lucanians and Bruttinns. The Romans relieve 
Tliurii. Hie Tarentines attack a Roman fleet 
281 Coss. L. .Emilius Barbula. 

Q. Marcius Philippus. 
Pyrrhus arrives in Italy. He came upon the in- 
vitation of the Tarentines, to ansi.n them in their 
war against the Romans. 
280 Coss. P. Valerius La-vinus. 
Ti. Coruncanius. 
Diet. Cn. Domitius Calvinus Maximus. 

Mag . E(] 

Censs 

Cn. Domitius Calvinus Maximus. 
The Romans defeated by Pyrrhus near Hcraclea 
279 Coss. P. Sulpieius Saverrio. 
P, Decius Mus. 
The Romans again defeat! .1 by Pyrrhu* nrnr Ascu 
lum. 

278 Coss. C. Fabricius I.uscinus II. 
Q. JSmfliu* Papa* II. 
Tyrrhus pawei over into Sicily. The Romans carry 
on the war with success against the nations of 
Southern Italy, who had sided with Pyrrhu*. 
277 Coss. P. Cornelius Rufinus II. 

C. Junius Brutus Bubulcus II. 
276 Coss. Q. Fabius Maximus Curves II. 
C. Genucius Clcpsina. 
Diet. P. Cornelius Rufinus. 

Mag. Eq 

Pyrrhus returns to Italy. 
275 Coss. M'. Curius Dentatus PL 
L. Cornelius Lentulus. 
Censs. C. Fabricius Lusciuus. 

Q. .Emilius Papus. 
Total defeat of Pyrrhus near Beneventum. He leave* 
Italy. 

274 Coss. M'. Curius Dentatus III. 

Ser. Cornelius Merenda. 
273 Coss. C. Claudius Canina II. 

C. Fabius Dorso Licinu*. Died. 
C. Fabririns I.uscinus QL 
Embassy from Ptolemreus Philadelphus to Rome 
Colonies sent to Posidonia and Cosa. 
272 Coss. L. Papirius Cursor DL 

Sp. Carvilius Maximus DL 
Censs. M'. Curius Dentatus. 

L. Papirius Cursor. 
Conclusion of the war in Southern Italy. Tarentwtn 
submits. 
271 Coss. C. Quinctius Claudu*. 

L. Genucius Clepsina 



982 



CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES OF 



271 Rbegium is taken, and the soldiers of the Campanian 
legion, who had seized the city, are taken to Rome 
and put to death. 

270 Coss. C. Genucius Clepsina II. 
Cn. Cornelius Blasio. 

269 Coss. Q. Ogulnius Gallus. . 

C. Fabius Pictor. 

Silver money first coined at Rome. 
268 Coss. Ap. Claudius Crassus Rufus. 
P. Sempronius Sophus. 
The Picentines defeated and submit to the Romans. 
Colonies founded at Ariminum and Beneventum. 
267 Cosa. M. Atilius Regulus. 
L. Julius Libo. 
The Sallentines defeated and Brundisium taken. 
266 Coss. N. Fabius Pictor. 

D. Junius Pera. 

The Sallentines submit. Subjugation of Italy com- 
pleted. 

265 Coss. Q, Fabius Maximus Gurges III. 
L. Mamilius Vitulus. 
Censs. Cn. Cornelius Blasio. 

C. Marcius Rutilus II. (Censorinus). 
264 Coss. Ap. Claudius Caudex. 
M. Fulvius Flaccus. 
First Punic War. First year. The consul Claudi- 
us crosses over into Sicily, and defeats the Cartha- 
ginians and Syracusans. Gladiators exhibited for 
the first time at Rome. 
263 Coss. M'. Valerius Maximus (Messala). 
M l : Otaciliu8 Crassus. 
Diet. Cn. Fulvius Maximus Centumalus. 
Mag. Eq. Q. Marcius Philippus. 
Second year of the first Punic war. The two consuls 
cross over into Sicily, and raise the siege of Meesa- 
na. Hiero makes peace with the Romans. 
262 Coss. L. Postumius (Megellus). 
Q,. Mamilius Vitulus. 
Third year of the first Punic war. The two consuls 
lay siege to Agrigentum, which >s taken after a 
siege of seven months. 
26i Coss. L. Valerius Flaccus. 

T. Otacilius Crassus. 
Fourth year of the first Punic war. The Carthagini- 
ans ravage the coast of Italy. 
260 Coss. Cn. Cornelius Scipio Asina. 
C. Duilius. 

Fifth year of the first Punic war. The Romans first 
build a fleet. The consul Duilius gains a victory 
by sea over the Carthaginians. 
259 Coss. L. Cornelius Scipio. 

C. Aquilius Floras. 
Sixth year of the first Punic war. The consul Cor- 
nelius attacks Sardinia and Corsica. His colleague 
carries on the war in Sicily. 
256 Coss. A. Atilius Calatinus. 

C. Sulpicius Paterculus. 
Censs. C. Duilius. 

L. Cornelius Scipio. 
Seventh year of the first Punic war. The two con- 
suls carry on the war in Sicily, but without much 
success. 

857 Coss. C. Atilius Regulus (Serranu?;. 
Cn. Cornelius Blasio II. 
Diet. Q. Ogulnius Gallus. 
Mag. Eq. M. La;torius Plancianus. 
Eighth year of the first Punic war. The eoasul Atili- 
us gains a naval victory off Tyndoris. 



256 Coss. L. Manlius Vulso Longus. 
Q. Cffidicius. Died. 
M. Atilius Regulus II. 
Ninth year of the first Punic war. The two consuls. 
Manlius and Regulus, defeat the Carthaginians by 
sea and land in Africa. Success of the Romas 
arms in Africa. Manlius returns to Rome with 
part of the army. Regulus remains in Africa. 
255 Coss. Ser. Fulvius Pastinus Nobilior. 
M. jEmilius Paullus. 
Tenth year of the first Punic war. Regulus contin 
ues the war in Africa with great success, defeats the 
Carthaginians, and takes Tunis, but i6 afterward 
defeated by the Carthaginians under the command 
of Xanthippus, and taken prisoner. The Romans 
equip a large fleet, which defeats the Carthaginians, 
and carries off" from Africa the survivors of the 
army of Regulus ; but on its return to Italy it te 
wrecked, and most of the ships are destroyed. 
254 Coss. Cn. Cornelius Scipio Asina II. 
A. Atilius Calatinus II. 
Eleventh year of the first Punic war. The Roman*, 
in three months, build another fleet of 220 ship*. 
They take Panormus. 
253 Coss. Cn. Servilius Csepio. 

C. Sempronius Blassus. 
Censs. D. Junius Pera. Abdicated. 

L. Postumius Megellus. Died. 
Twelfth year of the first Punic war. The two con- 
suls ravage the coast of Africa. On their return to 
Italy, the Roman fleet is again wrecked. The sec- 
ate resolve not to build another fleet. Tib. Corun- 
canius the first plebeian Pontifex Maximus. 
252 Coss. C. Aurelius Cotta. 

P. Servilius Geminus. 
Cents. M\ Valerius Maximus Messala. 

P. Sempronius Sophus. 
Thirteenth year of the first Punic war. The two eo*- 
euls carry on the war in Sicily. Capture of Himerst* 
251 Coss. L. Csscilius Metellus. 
C. Furius Pacilus. 
Fourteenth year cf the first Punic w«r. The tw* 
consuls carry on the war in Sicily. 
250 Cose. C. Atilius Reguius (Serranus) II. 
L. Manlius Vulso (Longus) II. 
Fifteenth year of the first Punic war. Great victory, 
of the proconsul Metellus at Panormus. Regulns 
gent to Rome to solicit peace, or, at least, an ex- 
change of prisoners. The Romans, on the contra- 
ry, resolve to prosecute the war with the greatest 
vigor. A new fleet built. The two consuls lay 
siege to Lilybseum. 
[Arsaces founds the Parthian monarchy.] 
249 Coss. P. Claudius Pulchsr. 
L. Junius Pullu8. 
Did. M. Claudius Glicia. Abdicated. 

A. Atilius Calatinus. 
Mag. Eg. L. Caecilius Metellus. 
Sixteenth year of the first Punic war. The eonstrl 
Claudius defeated by sea. He is commanded by 
the senate to nominate a dictator, and nominates, 
in scorn, Glicia, who had been his scribe, but wbe 
is compelled to resign. The fleet of the other con- 
sul is wrecked. The dictator Atilius Calatinu* 
crosses over into Sicily, being the first dictator 
who carried on war out of Italy. 
248 Coee. C. Aurelius Cotta II. 

P. Servilius Geminu6 II. 



ROMAN HISTORY. 



248 Seventeenth year of the first Punic war. The con- 
suls carry on the war in Sicily. 
247 Coss. L. Ceecilma Metellus II. 
jfjb N. Fabiua Buteo. 

Censs. A. Atilius Cul.-itinn^ A ^JL J 

A. Mauhii8 Torquatus Atticus. 
to! ■ Eighteenth year of the first Punic war. Hamilcar 
Barca appointed general of the Carthaginians. He 
ravages the coast* of Italy. The citizens at the cen- 
sus are 951,881 
[Birth of Hannibal. J 
246 Coss. AT. Otaciliu* Crassua 1L 
M. Fabius l.n inua. 
Diet. Ti. Coruncanius. 
Mag. Eg. M. Fulvius Flaccus. 

Nineteenth year of the tirst Punic war. During this 
year, and for several successive years, the war is 
chiefly defensive. Both parties are exhausted with 
the struggle. Ilamikar carries on the war with 
great skill. 
245 Coss. M. Fabius Buteo. 

C. Atilius Bulbus. 
Twentieth year of the first Punic war. 
244 Coss. A. Manlius Torquatus Atticus. 
C. Sempronius Bh«sus II. 
Twenty-first year of the first Punic war. 
243 Cobs. C. Fundanius Fundulus. 
C. Sulpicius Callus. 
Twenty-second year of the first Punic war. Tne con- 
sul Fundanius defeats Hamilcar in Sicily. A sec- 
ond pntitor appointed for the first time. 
242 Coss. C. Lutatius Catulus. 

A. Postumius Albinus. 
Twenty-third year of the. first Punic war. The Ro- 
mans again build a fleet. 
241 Coss. A. Manlius Torquatus Atticus II. 
Q. Lutatius Cerco. 
Ctttss. C. Aurelius Cotta. 

M. Fabius Buteo. 
Twenty-fourth and last year of the first Punic war. 
The proconsul Catulus defeats the Carthaginians 
by sea, oil' the Agates. Peace made with the Car- 
thaginians. Sicily becomes a Roman province. 
Revolt and conquest of the Falisci. War of the 
Carthaginians with the mercenaries. The citizens 
at the census are 251,000. 
240 Coss. C. Claudius Centho. 

M. Sempronius Tuditanus. 
A colony sent to Spolctium. The Sardinians revolt 

from Carthage. 
Livius Andronicus begins to exhibit tragedies at 
Rome. 

•239 Cost. C. Manlius Turrinus. 
Q. Valerius Falto. 
Q. Ennius, the poet, born. 
238 Coss. Ti. Sempronius Gracchus. 
P. Valerius Falto. 
The Romans carry on war with the Boii and Liguri- 
ans. The Floralia instituted. Conclusion of the 
war of the Carthaginians against their mercenaries 
after it had lasted three years and four months. 
The Carthaginians arc obliged to surrender Sar- 
dinia and Corsica to the Romans. Hamilcar sent 
Into Spain. 

237 Cots. L. Cornelius Lentulue Caudinus. 
Q. Fulvius Flaccus. 
War continued with the Boii and Ligurians. 
836 Coss. P. Cornelius Lentulus Caudiaus. 



C. Licinius Varus. 
Censs. L. Cornelius Lcntulua Caudinu*. 

Q. I.utatiua Oreo. I>itd. 
The Transalpine Gaula cross the Alpa on the invita- 
tion of the Boii ; but, id consequence of diaaenalon* 
with the Boii, they return home. 
The Romans carry on war with the I.iguruna and 
Corsicans. 
235 Coss. T. Manlius Torquatua. 
C. Atilius Bulbus II. 
The Sardinians rebel at the instigation of the Cartha- 
ginians, but are subdued. The temple <#f Janus k 
shut for the second time. 
The poet Naevius flourished. 
234 Coss. L. Postumius Albinus. 

Sp. Carvilius Maxima-. 
Censs. C. Atilius Bulbus. 

A. Postumius Albiuu*. 
War with the Ligurians, Corsicans, and Sardinia^ 
who were secretly urg. d by the Carthaginian! I* 
revolt. 
Birth of M. Porcius Cato. 
233 Coss. Q. Fabius Maximus Verrucosus. 
M'. Pomponiua Matho. 
War witli the Licurinns and .-'.irdiniari*. 
232 Coss. M. Ahnilius Lepidus. 

M. Publicius Malleolus. 
The two consuls rnrry on war in Sardinia t^a) 
agrarian law of the tribune C. r laminius. 
231 Cost. M. Pomponius Matho. 
C. Papirius Maso. 
Diet. C. Duilius. 
Mag. Eq. C. Aurc'.iua Cotta. 
Censs. T. Manlius Torquatus. Abdicated. 

Q. Fulvius Flaccus. Abdicated. 
The Sardinians and Corsicans subdued. Sp. CarvuY 
ua divorces his wife, the first instance of divorce at 
Rome. Other dates arc given for this event 
230 Cess. M. .f.milius Barbula, 
M. Junius Pera. 
Cents. Q. Fabius Maximus Verrucosus 

M. .Sempronius Tudiunue. 
War with the Ligurians. 
229 Coss. L. Postumius Albinus II. 

Cn. Fulvius Ccntumaluf. 
War with the Illyrians, who ar^ easily subdued. 
Death of Hamilcar in Spain, who is succeeded fat 
the command by Hasdrubal. 
228 Cose. Sp. Carviliu* Maximus II. 

Q. Fabius Maximus Verrucosus II. 
Tostumius, the proconsul, who had wintered in niyr- 
icum, makes peace with Teuta, queen of the IHrri- 
ans. First Roman embassy to Greece. Hasdnibai 
makes a treaty with the Romans. 
227 Coss. P. Valerius Flaccus. 

M. Atilius Ret-ulu?. 
Number of praetors incrca^d from two lo foar. 
226 Coss. M. Valerius Mcssal*. 

L. Apustius Fullo. 
225 Coss. L. .Emiiius Papue. 

C. Atilius Regulua. aVgrfl in **ttU. 
Cckss. C. Claudius Centho. 

M. Junius Pera. 
Wii with the Gacls. The Transalpine Gauls 
crosa the Alps and join the Cisalpine Gaula. Their 
united forces defeated by the consul jEmilnw. The 
consul Atilius falls in the battle. 
Q. Fabiua Pictor, the historian, served in the Gatte 



984 



CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES OF 



war. He was a contemporary of the historian L. 
Cincius Alimentus. 
224 Coss. T. Manlius Torquatus II. 
Q. Fulvius Flaccus II. 
Diet. L. Caecilius Metellua. 
Mag. Eq. N. Fabius Buteo. 

Second year of the Gallic war. The Boii submit. 
Plautus, perhaps, began to exhibit in this year. See 
the article Plautus. 
223 Coss. C. Flaminius. 

P. Furius Philus. 
Third year of the Gallic war. The consul Flaminius 
crosses the Po and defeats the Insubrians. 
222 Coss. Cn. Cornelius Scipio Calvus. 
M. Claudius Marcellus. 
Fourth and last year of the Gallic war. The Insubri- 
ans, defeated by the consul Marcellus, submit to the 
Romans. The consul Marcellus wins the spolia 
opima. 

221 Coss. P. Cornelius Scipio Asina. 
M. Minucius Rufus. 
Diet. Q. Fabius Maximus Verrucosus. 
Mag. Eq. C. Flaminius. 

War with the Istri, who are subdued. Hannibal suc- 
ceeds Hasdrubal in the command of the Carthagin- 
ian army in Spain. 
220 Coss. L. Veturius Philo. 

C. Lutatius Catulus. 
Censs. L. jEmilius Papus. 

C. Flaminius. 
The censors place the libertini in the four city tribes. 
Flaminius makes the Via Flaminia and builds the 
Circus Flaminius. The citizens at the census are 
270,213. 

219 Coss. M. Livius Salinator. 

L. ^Emilius Paulus. 

Second Illyrian war against Demetrius of Pharos, 
who is conquered by the consul jEmilius. Hanni- 
bal takes Saguntum after a siege of eight months, 
and winters at Carthago Nova. 

The poet Pacuvius born fifty years before Attius. 

First medical shop opened at Rome by Archagathus, 
a Greek, to whom the Romans granted the jus Qui- 
ritium. 

218 Coss. P. Cornelius Scipio. 

Ti. Sempronius Longus. 
Second Punic War. First year. Hannibal began 
his march from Carthago Nova at the commence- 
ment of spring, and reached Italy in five months. 
He defeats the Romans nt the battles of the Ticinus 
and the Trebia, and winters in Liguria. Cn. Scipio 
carries on the war with success in Spain. 
L. Cincius Alimentus wrote an account of Hannibal's 
passage into Italy. 
21? Coss. Cn. Servilius Geminus. 

C. Flaminius II. Slain in battle. 
M. Atilius Regulus II. 
Diet. Q. Fabius Maximus Verrucosus II. 
Mag. Eq. M. Minucius Rufus. 
Diet. L. Veturius Philo. 
Mag. Eq. M. Pomponius Matho. 
Second year of the second Punic war. Hannibal 
marches through the marshes into Etruria, and de- 
feats Flaminius at the battle of the Lake Trasime- 
nus. Fabius Maximus, elected dictator by the peo- 
ple, will not risk a battle. Hannibal marcheB into 
Apulia, where he passes the winter. The war con- 
tinued in Spain. 



216 Coss. C. Terentius Varro. 

L. iEmilius Paulus II. Slain in battle. 
Diet. M. Junius Pera. 
Mag. Eq. Ti. Sempronius Gracchus. 
Diet, sine Mag. Eq. M. Fabius Buteo. 
Third year of the second Punic war. Great defeat 
of the Romans at the battle of Canna3, on the 2d 
of August. R.evolt of Capua and many other cities, 
The war continued in Spain. Death of Hiero. 
215 Coss. Ti. Sempronius Gracchus. 

L. Postumius Albinus III. Slain in battle. 
M. Claudius Marcellus II. Abdicated. 
Q. Fabius Maximus Verrucosus III. 
Fourth year of the second Punic war. The war be- 
gins to turn in favor of the Romans. Marcellus 
gains a victory over Hannibal near Nola. The Ro- 
mans conquer the Carthaginians in Sardinia. Suc- 
cess of P. and Cn. Scipio in Spain. Treaty of Han- 
nibal with Philip, king of Macedon. The sumptua- 
ry law of the tribune C. Oppius. 
214 Coss. Q. Fabius Maximus Verrucosus IV. 
M. Claudius Marcellus III. 
Censs. M. Atilius Regulus. Abdicated. 

P. Furius Philus. Died. 
Fifth year of the second Punic war. Hannibal in the 
neighborhood of Tarentum. Marcellus is sent into 
Sicily. He besieges Syracuse, but turns the siege 
into a blockade. War continued in Spain. 
213 Coss. Q. Fabius Maximus. 

Ti. Sempronius Gracchus H. 
Diet. C. Claudius Centho. 
Mag. Eq. Q. Fulvius Flaccus. 

Sixth year of the second Punic war. Hannibal con 
tinues in the neighborhood of Tarentum. Marcel- 
lus continues the siege of Syracuse. Successes of 
P. and Cn. Scipio in Spain. They think of cross- 
ing over to Africa. War between the Romans and 
Philip. 

212 Coss. Q. Fulvius Flaccus III. 

Ap. Claudius Pulcher. 
Seventh year of the second Punic war. Hannibai 
takes Tarentum. Marcellus takes Syracuse. P» 
and Cn. Scipio defeated and slain in Spain. Insti* 
tution of the Ludi Apollinares. 
Death of Archimedes. 
211 Coss. Cn. Fulvius Centumalus. 

P. Sulpicius Galba Maximus. 
Eighth year of the second Punic war. Hannibal at- 
tempts in vain to raise the siege of Capua. The 
Romans recover Capua. P. Scipio is sent into 
Spain toward the end of the summer. The iEtoli- 
ans desert Philip and conclude a treaty with the 
Romans. 

210 Coss. M. Claudius Marcellus IV. 
M. Valerius Lasvinus. 
Diet. Q. Fulvius Flaccus. 
Mag. Eq. P. Licinius Crassus Dives. 
Censs. L. Veturius Philo. Died. 

P. Licinius Crassus Divee. Abdicated. 
Ninth year of the second Punic war. Hannibal fighto 
a drawn battle with Marcellus. In Sicily, Lsevinus 
takes Agrigentum. In Spain, Scipio takes Cartha- 
go Nova. The citizens at the census are 137,108. 
209 Coss. Q. Fulvius Flaccus IV. 

Q. Fabius Maximus Verrucosus V. 
Censs. M. Cornelius Cethegus. 

P. Sempronius Tuditanus. 
Tenth year of the second Punic war. The consul 



ROMAN HISTORY. 



Fabitis recovers Tarentum. In Spain, Scipio gains 
a victory near Baecula. In thia year the number 
of Roman colonies was thirty. 
208 Coss. M. Claudius Marcellua V. Slain in battle. 

T. Quinctius (Pennus Capitolinue) Crispinus 
Died. 

Diet. T. Manlius Torquatus. 
Mag. Eq. C. Servilius, 

Eleventh year of the second Punic war. The two 
consuls defeated by Hannibal near Venusia; Mar- 
cellus is slain. Continued success of Scipio in 
Spain. Hasdrub.il crosses the Pyrenees and win- 
ters in Gaul. 
207 Coss. C. Claudius Nero. 

M. Livius Salinator II. 

Diet. M. Livius ,-aiinator. 

Mag. Eq. Q. Cucilius Metellus. 

Twelfth year of the second Punic war. Hasdrubal 
crosses the Alps and marches into Italy ; is defeat- 
ed on the Metauius and slain. The Romans carry 
on the war in Creeoe against Philip: they take 
Oreum, in Eubcea. Continued success of Scipio 
in Spain. 

Livius Androniciu mm probably still alivo in this 
year. 

JOS Coss. L. Veturius Philo. 

Q. Csecilius Metellus. 
Thirteenth year of the .^cond Punic war. The con- 
suls march into Rrattii. Hannibal remains inactive. 
Scipio becomes master of Spain | he crosses over 
into Africa, and makes a league with Syphax. 
Coss. P. Cornelius mtjtt | Yfricanus). 

P. Licinius Crassus Dives. 
Diet. Q. Cseciliu* MetellW. 
Mag. Eq. L. Veturius Philo. 

Fourteenth year of Dm second Panic war. The war 
continued in Bruttii. Scipio crosses over into Sic- 
ily, where he passes the winter. Peace concluded 
between Rome and Philip. 
$04 Coss. M. Cornelius Cethegus. 

P. Semprotiius Twditanu?. 
Cents. M. Livius Salinator. 

C. Claudius Nero. 
Fifteenth year of the second Punic war. The war 
continued in Bruttii. Hannibal conquered near 
Croton. Scipio crosses over to Africa. The citi- 
zens at the census are 214,000. 
Ennius, the poet, is brought to Rome by the qurestor 
Cato, from Sardinia. 
203 Coss. Cn. Servilius Cswpio. 
C. Servilius. 
Diet. P. Sulpicius < ialba Maximus. 
Mag. Eq. M. Servilius Pulex Geminus. 
Sixteenth year of the second Punic war. Scipio 
prosecutes tin war with success in Africa. Defeat 
of the Carthaginians and Syphax ; Syphax is taken 
prisoner Hannibal leaves Italy, and crosses over 
to Africa. 

302 Coss. M. Servilius Pulex Geminus. 
Ti. f laudius Nero. 
Diet. C. Servilius. 
Mag. Eq. V. ,3£lius Partus. 

Seventeenth year of the second Punic war. Hanni- 
bal is defeated by Scipio at the decisive battle of 
Zama. The Carthaginians sue for peace. After 
this year no dictator was appointed for 120 years, 
till Sulla. 

Death of the poet Ne&vius 



201 Cots. Cn. Cornelius Lentulus. 
P. jEUus Partus. 
Eighteenth and last yrnr of the second Punic war 

Peace granted to the Carthaginians. 
200 Cost. P. Sulpicius Calba Maximum II. 
C. Aurclius Cotta. 
Renewal of the war with Philip, king of Macedonia 
Sulpiciua sent into Creech War with the Injubri- 
an Gauls. Colony sent to Venusium. 
190 Coss. L. Cornelius I.cntulu*. 
P. Villius Tappulus. 
Censs. P. Cornelius Scipio Africanut. 

P. /Elius Partus. 
War continued against Philip and the Gauls. Hulpt- 
rius succeeded in the command in Greece by Vil- 
lius. Colony sent to Narnia. 
198 Coss. Sex. .Elius P«?tus Catus. 

T. Quinctius Flnmininua. 
War continued against Philip and th" Caul*. ViMua 
is succeeded by Flamininus. 
197 Coss. C. Cornelius Cethegus. 
Q Minucius Rufus. 
War continued against Philip and the Gauls. Defeat 
of Philip by Flamininus at the battle of Cynoscepha- 
lffi, in the autumn. Peace concluded with Philip. 
Number of proctors increased to six. Lex Porcia 
de provocatione. 
196 Coss. L. Furius Purpureo. 

M. Claudius Marccllus. 
War continued against the Gauls. The consuls de- 
feat the Insubrians and the Boii. Flamininus pro- 
claims the independence of Creece at the Isthmian 
games. Hannibal takes refuge at the court of An- 
tiochus. Triumviri Epuloneb created by the Lex 
Licinia. 

195 Coss. L. Valerius Flaccus. 
M. Porcius Cato. 
War continued against the Gauls. Flamininus march- 
es against Nabis, the tyrant of Sparta. Liberation 
of Argos. Order restored in Spain by the consul 
Cato. The Lex Oppia repealed. 
Birth of Terence. 
194 Cost. P. Cornelius Scipio Africanus II. 
Ti. Sempronius Longus. 
Censs. Sex. A",lius Partus Catus. 

C. Cornelius Cethegus. 
War continued against the Gauls. Flamininus and 
Cato return to Rome, and triumph. The Romans 
found several colonies this year, in Campania, Lu- 
cania, Apulia, and Bruttii. In this year the sena- 
tors receive separate seats at the Roman games. 
The citizens at the census arc 143,704. 
193 Coss. L. Cornelius Merula. 

Q. Minucius Thermus. 
War continued against the Gauls. Ambassadors sent 
to Philip. 
192 Coss. L. Quinctius Flamininus. 

Cn. Domitiua Ahenobarbus. 
War with the Gauls continued. Philip crosses over 

into Greece on the invitation of the vEtoliana. 
The Famulus of Plautus probably represented in thia 
year. 

191 Coss. P. Cornelius Scipio Nasica. 
M\ Acilius Glabrio. 
Wu with A.vtiochvs. The consul Acilius defeats 
Antiochus at Thermopylae. The Romans defeat the 
fleet of Antiochus. He winters in Phrygia. The 
consul Cornelius defeats the Boii, who submit. The 



386 



CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES OF 



colony of Bor.onia founded in their country in the 
following year. 
191 The Pseudolus of Plautua probably represented in 
this year. 

190 Coss. L. Cornelius Scipio (Asiaticus). 
C. Laelius. 

The consul L. Scipio crosses into Asia, and deleats 
Antiochus at the battle of Magnesia. Peace made 
with him, but not ratified till B.C. 188. 
ISP Coss. M. Fulvius Nobilior. 

Cn. Manlius Vulso. 
Censs. T. Quinctius Flamininus. 

M. Claudius Marcellus. 
The consul Fulvius subdues the .Etolians. Peace 
made with them. The consul Manlius conquers 
the Galatians in Asia Minor. The citizens at the 
census are 253,318. 
Ennius accompanies Fulvius into jEtolia. 
168 Coss. M. Valerius Messala, 
C. Livius Salinator. 
Manlius remains in Asia, and ratines the peace with 
Antiochus. He returns home through Thrace and 
Macedonia, and is attacked by the Thracians. 
187 Coss. M. Gemilius Lepidus. 
C. Flaminius. 
The two consuls carry on war against the Ligurians. 
L. Scipio accused of embezzlement in the war with 
Antiochus, and is condemned. He was accused 
by the Petillii.. tribunes of the plebs, at the instiga- 
tion of Cato. 
186 Coss. Sp. Postumius Albinus. 

Q. Marcius Philippus. 
War continued against the Liguriane. The Senatus- 
consultuiu de Bacchanalibus. 
185 Coss. Ap. Claudius Pulcher. 

M. Sempronius Tuditami3. 
War continued against the Ligurians. P. Scipio Af- 
ricanus accused by M. Nsevius. He retires from 
Rome before his trial. 
164 Coss. P. Claudius Pulcher. 

L. Porcius Lieinus. 
Censs. L. Valerius Flaccue. 

M. Porcius Cato. 
War continued against the Ligurians. Cato exer- 
cises his censorship with great severity ; expels 
Flamininus from the senate, and deprives L. Scipio 
of his equus publices. 
Death of Plautus. 
183 Coss. M. Claudius Msrcelius. 
Q. Fabius Labeo. 
War continued against the Ligurians. Death of Scip- 
io Africanus. (The year of hie death is Tariously 
stated.) Death of Hannibal. 
182 Coss. Cn. Baebius Tamphilus. 
L. JSmilius Paulus. 
War continued against the Liguriana. Two praetors 
sent into Spain. 
181 Coss. P. Cornelius Cethegu*. 

M. Baebius Tamphilus. 
War continued against the Ligurians. The Ligures 
Ingauni submit to the Romans. Lex Cornelia Bse- 
bia de ambiiu. The sumptuary law of the trib- 
une Orchius. Discovery of the alleged books of 
Numa. 

180 Coss. A. Postumius Albums. 

C. Calpurnius Piso. Died. 
Q. FulTius Flaccus. 
War continued ezRinst the Ligurians. The Ligures 



(B.C. 



178 



176 



175 



174 



173 



171 



170 



Apuani transplanted to Samnium. Colony sent t* 
Pisa. The Lex Annalis of the tribune Villius fixe* 

the age at which the magistracies might be held. 

Cots. L. Manlius Acidinus Fulvianue. 
Q. Fulvius Flaccus. 

Censs. L. .Emilius Lepidus. 

M. Fulvius Nobilior. xJntAfcuji > 

War continued against the Ligurians. They are de- 
feated by the consul Fulvius. Tib. Gracchus, the fa- 
ther of the two tribunes, subdues the Celtiberians ia 
Spain. Death of Philip, king of Macedonia, and ac- 
cession of Perseus. The citizens at the census are 
273.294. 

Caecilius, the comic poet, flourished. 
Coss. M. Junius Brutus. 

A. Manlius Vulso. 
War with the Istrians. 
Coss. C. Claudius Pulcher. 

Ti. Sempronius Gracchus. 
Subjugation of the Istrians by the consul Claudia*, 
who also defeats the Ligurians. Colonies founded 
at Luna and Lucca. The consul Gracchus carries 
on war against the Sardinians, who had rerolted, 
Coss. Q. Petillius Spurinus. Slain in battle, 
Cn. Cornel. Scipio Hispallus. Died. 
C. Valerius Lsevinus. 
War continued against the Ligurians. The coast* 
Petillius defeated and slain by the Ligurians. Grac- 
chus subdues the Sardinians. 
Coss. P. Mucius Scaevola. 

M. .Smilius Lepidus II. 
War continued against the Ligurians, who are defeat 
ed by the consuls. Gracchus returns to Rome, ami. 
triumphs over the Sardinians. Origin of the pror- 
erb Sardi venales. 
Coss. Sp. Postumius Albinus Paullulus. 

Q. Mucius Scasvola. 
Censs. Q.. Fulvius Flaccus. 

A. Postumius Albinus. 
The censors order the streets of Rome to be paved 

The citizens at the census are 269,015. 
Coss. L. Postumius Albinus. 

M. Popillius Laenas. 
Popillius defeats the Ligurians. 
Ennius is now in his 67th year. 
Coss. C. Popillius Laenas. 

P. iEhus Ligus. 
Eumenes comes to Rome to denounce Perseus. 
Coss. P. Licinius Crassus. 

C. Cassius Longinus. 
War with Perseus. First year. The consul Lieia- 
ius carries on the war with success against Per- 
seus. He winters in Bceotia and Thessaly. 
Coss. A. Hostilius Mancinus. 

A, Atilius Serranu6. 
Second year of the war against Perseus. The cobboL 

Hostilius Mancinus commands in Macedonia. 
Birth of the poet Accius or Attius. 
Coss. Q. Marcius Philippus II. 

Cn. Servilius Caepio. 
Censs. C. Claudius Pulcher. 

Ti. Sempronius Gracchus. 
Third year of the war against Perseus. The coaaal 
Marcius commands in Macedonia. The Lex Voco- 
nia. The libertini placed in the four city tribes by 
the censor Gracchus. The citizens at the 
are 312,805. 
Death of Ennius. 



ROMAN HISTORY. 



168 Cots. L. JSatiMa* Panhn u. 

C. Licinius Craseus. 
Fourth and last year of the war against Perseus. 
The consul afeaflfea RaVfcaa, defeats Pereeus at the 
battle of Pyr'm, B] *M Mi of June. Perseus short- 
ly afterward take* prisoner. End of the Macedo- 
nian monarchy. War with the IUyrians : the war 
is ended in 30 days. 
Death of Cajcilius, the comic port. 
167 Cose. Q. ^Elms Partus. 

M. Junius Paaaaa. 
jEmilius Pauhis Mhl th» affairs of Greece. He de- 
stroys seventy towns in Epirus. More than 1000 
principal Aclmjmn ar.- sent to Rome : among them 
is the historian Polybius. 
166 Coss. M. Claudius M<ir< < Hue. 
C. Sulpicius QaBMh 
The consuls defeat tb- Alpine Gauls and the Liguri- 
ane. 

The Andria of Ten ure exhibited. 
165 Cofs. T. Manlius Torquatu.*. 
Cn. Octavius. 
The Htcyra of Te twmn exhibited. 
164 Coss. A. Manlius Torquatus. 

Q. Cassius LonninuF. Died. 
Cense. L. jEmilius Paulus. 

Q. Marcius Philippus. 
The citizens at the censu? an flMMal 
163 Coss. Ti. Sempronius Gracchus II. 
M'. Juventius Thalna. 
The Corsicans rein 1. bal tn subdued by the consul 
Juventius. 

The Heainontimorumrn** of T< tvneo exhibited. 
162 Coss. P. Cornelius Snpin Mala* Abdicated. 
C. Marcius Figulug. Abdicated. 
P. Cornelius I.entulus. 
Cn. Domitius Abenobarbus. 
1*31 C<w. M. Valerius Meseala. 

C. Fannius Strnbo. 
The philosophers and rhetoricians banished from 
Rome. The sumptuary law of the consul Fannius. 
The Eunuchus and f'hormio of Terence exhibited. 
160 Coss. L. Anicius Gal! us. 

M. Cornelius Cethcgus. 
The Pontine marshes drained. Death of L. /Emilius 
Paulus. 

The Adelphi of Terence exhibited at the funeral 
games of ^Emilius Paulus. 
159 Coss. Cn. Cornelius Polabella. 
M. Fulvius Notiilior. 
Censs. P. Cornelius Seipio Nasica. 

M. Popillms Lsenas. 
The citizens at the census are 338,314. A water- 
clock set up at Rome by the censor Scipio. 
Death of Terence. 
158 Coss. M. ./Emilius Lepidua. 

C. Popillius l.tenas II. 
157 Coss. Sex. Julius Cajsar. 

L. Aurehus Orestes. 
Ariarathes V. Philopator comes to Rome. A colony 
was founded at Auximum, in Picenum. 
156 Coss. L. Cornelius Lentulus Lupus. 
C. Marcius Figulus II. 
The consul Marcius carries on war against the Dal- 
matians. 

153 Coss. P. Cornelius Scipio Nasica II. 
M. Claudius Marcellus II. 
The consul Scipio subdues the Dalmatians. The 



Athenians send an emh...y to Rome. con.l.Ha C 
cf the philosopher. Diogenes. fritohiUs, and Car 
neadc s. to obtain a remission of B« fin* of 500 ft* 
ents, which they had hem sentenced t„ Jmy after 
the war with Perseus. 
154 On*, Q. Opimiu... 

L Postumius Albinus. Ditd. 
M'. Acilius Glabrio. 
Censs. M. Valerius Messala. 

C. Cassius Longinu*. 
The consul Opirnius is sent against the Oxyhii. Traiu- 
alpine Gauls. The citizens at the census are 324,00t 
The poe t Pacuvius flourished. 
153 Cost. Q. Fulvius Nobilior. 
T. Annius Lubcu*. 
In this year the consuls for the first time enter oa 
their office on the 1st of January. War with th*- 
Celtiberians in Spain begins. It is conductod ua 
successfully by the consul Nobih< r 
152 Coss. M. Claudius Marcellus DDL 
L. Valerius Flaccus. Died. 
The consul Marcellus conducts thr war hi Spain wi* 
more success. 
151 Coss. L. Licinius LtuHftM. 

A. Postumius Albinus. 
The consul Lucullus and the mWMJ Sulpicius Galba 
conduct the war in Spain. Lucullus conquers the 
Vaccan, Cantabri, and other nations | but Gnlha ■ 
defeated by the Lusitanians. Return of the Achat- 
an exiles. 

Postumius Albinus, the consul, was a writer of Roma 

history. 

Coss. T. Quinctius Flamininus. 

M'. Acilius Ralluis. 
Galba, at the beginning of the year, most tr« achcrona 
ly destroys the I.usitanianc. Viriathus wu am oaf 
the few who escaped. 
Cato, a:t. e'4, brought dow n his (J, i^'ine* u> Uiia period-. 
Coss. L. Marcius Censorinu*. 
M'. Maniliuti. 

Third Punic Was. Firat year. The ronsuU land 
in Africa. Death of Masmissa, a±L iO. The Lex 
Calpurnia of the tribune L. Calpurnius Pi»o <U reps 
tundi* (malTersation and extortion by the gorera 
ors of the provinces), which was the first law oa 
the subject. A pseudo Philippup, namt-d Andria- 
cus, appears in Macedonia, but is defeated and slaia 
within a year. 
Death ot Cato, *et. b3. 

L. Calpurnius Piso, the. author of trvc law dr repetvr- 

dis, was an historian. 
Cost. Sp. Postumius Albinus Magnu*. 

L. Calpurnius Piso Ci&sonius. 
Second year of the third Punic wwr. The parudo- 
Philippus defeated and taken prisoner by Q. Metei- 
lus, the prartor. Success of Vinafhua in LusitanU 
Birth of Lucilius. 

Coss. P. Cornelius Scipio Africans .EmiUanus. 

C. Lirius Drusus. 
Censs. L. Cornelius Lentulus Lupus. 

L. Marcius Censorinus. 
Third year of the third Punic war. Scipio crosses 
over to Africa. War declared between Rome and 
the Achaeans. Continued success of Viriathua ia 
Lusitania. The citizens at th<» cen«us are 3X2,000. 
146 Coss. Cn. Cornelius Lentulus. 

L. Mummius Achaicus. 
Fourth and last year of the third Punie war. Carthage 



150 



149 



148 



147 



CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES OF 



146 taken by Scipio and razed to the ground : its terri- 
tory made a Roman province. The Achaeans de- 
feated by Mummius, Corinth taken, and the Roman 
province of Arhaia formed (but vid. p. 000 of Ta- 
bles). Continued success of Viriathus in Lusitania. 

Cassias Hemina, the historian, flourished. 

C. Fannius, the historian, serves with Scipio at Car- 
thage. 

145 Coss. Q. Fabius Maximus iEmilianus. 
L. Hostilius Mancinus. 
The consul Fabius commands in Spain against Viria- 
thus, and carries on the war successfully. 
144 Coss. Ser. Sulpicius Galba. 
L. Aurelius Cotta. 
Fabius continues in Spain as proconsul. 
143 Coss. Ap. Claudius Pulcher. 

Q. Caecilius Metellus Macedonicus. 
Commencement of the Numantine war. The consul 
Metellus commands in Nearer Spain, to carry on 
the war against the Numantines. The pr<etor Q. 
Pompeius continues in Further Spain, to carry on 
the war against Viriathus and the Lusitanians. Me- 
tellus prosecutes the war with success, but Pom- 
peius is defeated by Viriathus. Another pretender 
in Macedonia defeated and slain. 
142 Coss. L. Caecilius Metellus Calvus. 

Q.. Fabius Maximus Servilianus. 
Cense. P. Cornelius Scipio Africanus (.SSmilianus). 

L. Mummius Achaicus. 
Q. Metellus continues in Nearer Spain as proconsul. 
The consul Servilianus, in Further Spain, carries 
on war against Viriathus. The citizens at the cen- 
sus are 328,442. 
M. Antonius, the orator, born. 
Fannius, the historian, serres in Spain. 
41 Coss. Cn. Servilius Caepio. 
Q. Pompeius. 
Fabius Servilianus remains as proconsul in Further 
Spain : is defeated by Viriathus, and makes a peace 
with him, which is ratified by the senate. The con- 
sul Pompeius succeeds Metellus in Nearer Spain : 
his unsuccessful campaign. 
340 Coss. C. Laelius Sapiens. 

Q. Servilius Caepio, 
Caepio succeeds Fabius in Further Spain, renews the 
war with Viriathus, and treacherously causes his 
assassination. Pompeius continues as proconsul in 
Nearer Spain ; i3 defeated by the Numantines, and 
makes a peace with them, but afterward denies that 
he did so. 
Crassus, the orator, bom. 

Attius, set. 30, and Pacuvius, set 80, both exhibit in 
this year. 
139 Coss. Cn. Calpurnius Piso. 

M. Popillius Laenas. 
Caepio remains as proconsul in Further Spain. The 
consul Popillius succeeds Pompeius in Nearer 
Spain. 

138 Coss. P. Cornelius Scipio Nasica Serapio. 
D. Junius Brutus (Callaicus). 
The consul Brutus succeeds Caepio in Further Spain : 
he subdues Lusitania. Popillius remains as consul 
in Nearer Spain, and is defeated by the Numantines. 
137 Coss. M. J2milius Lepidus Porcina. 

C. Hostilius Mancinus. Abdicated, 
Brutus remains in Further Spain as proconsul, end 
completes the subjugation of Lusitania. The con- 
sul Mancinus succeeds Popillius in Nearer Spain : 



B.C. 

he is defeated by the Numantines, and makes a 
peace with them, which the senate refuses to ratify. 
136 Coss. L. Furius Philus. 

Sex. Atilius Serranus. 
Censs. Ap Claudius Pulcher. 

Q. Fulvius Nobilior. 
Brutus remains in Further Spain as proconsul, and 
subdues the Gallaeci. The proconsul Lepidus, who 
had succeeded Mancinus in Nearer Spain, is defeat- 
ed by the Vaccsei. The citizens at the census are 
323,923. 

135 Coss. Ser. Fulvius Flaccus. 

Q, Calpurnius Piso. 
The consul Piso succeeds Lepidus in Nearer Spain, 
but carries on the war without success. The con. 
sul Flaccus defeats the Vardasi in niyricum. 
134 Coss. P. Cornelius Scipio Africanus jEmilianus II. 
C. Fulvius Flaccus. 
Scipio is elected consul to end the Numantine war, 
He receives Nearer Spain as his province, and car* 
ries on the war with vigor. Servile war in Sicily : 
the consul Fulvius sent against the slaves. 
Sempronius Asellio, the historian, served at Numantia. 
133 Coss. P. Mucius Scaevola. 

L. Calpurnius Piso Frugi. 
Numantia taken by Scipio and destroyed. The consul 
Piso defeats the slaves in Sicily. Tib. Gracchus, 
tribune of the plebs, his legislation and murder. 
132 Coss. P. Popillius Lsenas. 
P. Rupilius. 

End of the Servile war in Sicily. Return and tri- 
umph of Scipio. 
131 Coss. P. Licinius Crassus Mucianus. 
L. Valerius Flaccus. 
Ccnss. Q. Caecilius Metellus Macedonicus. 

Q. Pompeius Rufus. 
The consul Crassus carries on war with Aristonicufe 
in Asia. The affairs of Sicily settled by Rupilius, 
the proconsul. C. Papirius Carbo, tribune of the 
plebs, brings forward laws which are opposed by 
Scipio Africanus and the aristocracy. Both cen- 
sors plebeians for the first time. The citizens are 
317,823. 

130 Coss. C. Claudius Pulcher Lentulus. 
M. Perperna. 

Aristonicus defeats and slays Crassus. He is defeat- 
ed and taken prisoner by the consul Perperna. 
129 Cose. C. Sempronius Tuditanus. 
M'. Aquillius. 

The consul Aquillius succeeds Perperna in Asia. Ar- 
istonicus put to death. The consul Sempronius car- 
ries on war against the Iapydes. Death of Scipio 
Africanus, at the age of 56. 
128 Coss. Cn. Octavius. 

T. Anniue Luscus Rufus. 
127 Coss. L. Cassius Longinus Ravilla, 

L. Cornelius China. 
126 Cess. M. jEmilius Lepidus. 

L. Aurelius Orestes. 
The consul Aurelius puts down a rebellion in Sardinia. 
C. Gracchus goes to Sardinia as quaestor. M. Ja» 
nius Pennus, tribune of the plebs, carries a law or- 
dering all aliens to quit Rome. The Ludi Stecul»« 
res celebrated for the fourth time. 
125 Coss. M. Plautius Hypseeus. 
M. Fulvius Flaccus. 
Ccnss. Cn- Servilius Csepio. 

L. Cassius Longint.6 Rarilla. 



ROMAN HISTORY. 



185 The consul liaecus subdues the Salluvii in Trans- 
alpine Gaul. L Opimius, the praetor, destroys Fre- 
gelte, which had revolted. Aurelius remains in 
Sardinia with Gracchus. The citizens are 390, 73G. 
124 Cobs. C. Cassius Lnnginus. 

C. Sextius Calvinus. 
War in Transalpine Gaul continued. The consul 
Calvinus defeats flu Allobroges and Arverni. C. 
Gracchus returns to Rome from Sardinia. 
123 Coss. Q. Caicilius Metellus (Balearicus). 
T. Quinctius Flaminiuus. 
C. Gracchus, tribune of the plebs, brings forward his 
Leges Sempronhe. A colony sent to Carthage. 
Sextius Calvinus remains in Transalpine Gaul as 
proconsul. The i onsul Metellus subdues the Ba- 
varian islands. 
L. Ccelius Antipat.r, the historian, flourished in the 
time of C. Gracchus. 
122 Coss. Cn. Domitius Ahenobarbus. 
C. Fannius Strabo. 
C. Gracchus tribune of the plebs a second time. Com- 
pletion of the conquest of the Salluvii in Transal- 
pine Gaul, and foundation of Aquas Sextiaj by the 
proconsul Sextius Calvinus. 
121 Coss. L. Opimius. 

Q. Fabius Maximus (Allohrogicus). 
Death of C. Gracchus. The proconsul Domitius de- 
feats the Allobroges. The consul Fabius likewise 
defeats the Allobroges and Arverni, who submit to 
the Romans. 
120 Coss. P. Manilius. 

C. Papirius Carbo. 
Censs. L. Calpurnius Kite Frvgi 

Q. Caecilius Metcilus Balearicus. 
119 Coss. L. Caacilius Metellus (Dalmaticus). 
L. Aurelius Cotta. 
C. Marius tribune o( the plebs. 
The orator L. Crassus (sst. 21) accuses Carbo. 
118 Coss. M. Porclus Cato. Du.d. 
Q. Marcius Rex. 
The consul Marcius conquers the Stceni, a Gallic na- 
tion. A colony founded at Narbo Martius. Death 
of Micipsa. 

117 Coss. P. Caicilius Metellus Diadematus. 
Q. Mucius Bawrahh 
The consul Metellus subdues the Dalmatians. Ambas- 
sadors are sent to Numidia, who restore Adherbal. 
116 Coss. C. Licinius Get*. 

Q. Fabius Maximus Eburnus. 
Birth of Varro. 
115 Coss. M. /Emilius ricaurus. 

M. Cajcdius Metellus. 
Censs. L. Caicilius Metellus Dalmaticus. 

Cn. Domitius Ahenobarbus. 
The citizens at the census are 394,336. 
114 Coss. M. Acilius Balbus. 

C. Porcius Cato. 
The consul Cato defeated by the Scordisci in Thrace. 
Birth of the orator Hortensius. 
113 Coss. C. C«cilius Metellus Caprarius. 
Cn. Papirius Carbo. 
Commencement of the war against the Cimbri and 
Teutoni. They defeat the consul Carbo near No- 
reia, but, instead of penetrating into Italy, cross into 
Gaul. The consul Metellus carries on the war suc- 
cessfully against the Thracians. 
112 Coss. M. Livius Drusus. 

L. Calpurnius Piso Cassonius. 



H2 Jugurtha kills Adherbal. The consul Drusua com- 
mands in Thrace, and defeat* tin- ScordiacL 
111 Cost. P. Cornelius M0Q Nnaica. Dud. 
L. Ciilpurnius Besua. 
Jccukthink Wab. First year. The consul Calpur 
nius Bestia is bribed by Jugurthn, and K nt.u him 
peace. 

110 Coat. M. Minuciuu Rufua. 

Sp. Postumius Albinus. 
Second year of the Jugurthine w ar. Jugurtha come* 
to Rome, but quits it again secretly, in . on^qumce 
of the murder of Massiva. The consul Album* com- 
mands in Africa, but returns to R«M to hold tho 
comitia, leaving his brother Aulus in the command. 
The consul Minucius fights against the Thracians. 
109 Coss. Q. Caecilius Metellus (Numidicus;. 
M. Junius Planus. 
Censs. M. ACmilius Scaurus. Abdicated. 

M. Livius Drusus. Died. 
Third year of the Jugurthine w M r. Aulus it d. iV«t*d 
in January by Jugurtha, and concludes a peace, 
wliich the senate refuses to ratify. The consul 
Metellus sent into Africa, and carries on the war 
with success. The consul BOuM is defeated by 
the Cimbri. The proconsul Minucius defeat* the 
Thracians. 
Birth of T. I'omponius Atticus. 
108 Coss. Ser. Sulpicius Galba. 

[«, Hortensius. Condemned. 
M. Aurelius Scaurus. 
Censs. Q_. Fabius Maximus Allohrogicus. 

C. Licinius Geta. 
Fourth year of the Jugurthine war. Metellus con- 
tinues in the command as proconsul, and defeat* 
Jugurtha. 

107 Coss. L. Cassius Longinus. Slain. 
C. Marius. 

Fifth year of the Jugurthine war. The consul Mnnus 

succeeds Metellus in the command. The consul 
Cassius defeated and 6lain by the Cimbri and their 
allies. 

106 Coss. C. Atilius Serranus. 

Q. Hervilius Cajpio. 
Sixth and last year of the Jugurthine war. Marina 
continues in the command as proconsul. Jugurtha 
is captured. Birth of Cn. 1'ompeius on the 30th 
of September. 
Birth of Cicero at Arpinum on the 3d of January. 
105 Coss. P. Rutilius Rufus. 

Cn. Mallius Maximus. 
The Cimbri defeat Q. Servilius Ca-pio, proconsul, 
and Cn. Mallius, consul. 
104 Coss. C. Marius IF. 

C. Flavius Fimbria. 
Triumph of Marius. Preparations against the Cim- 
bri, who march into Spain. The Lex Domitia of 
the tribune Cn. Domitius Ahenobarbus gives to the 
people the right of electing the priests. 
103 Coss. C. Marius III. 

L. Aurelius Orestes. Died. 
Continued preparations against the Cimbri. 
The Tcreus of Attius exhibited. 
Death of Lucilius. 
102 Coss. C. Marius IV. 

Q. Lutatius Catulus. 
Censs. Q. Caecilius Metellus Numidicus. 

C. Caicilius Metellus Caprarius. 
The Cimbri return from Spain into GauL Marius 



990 



CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES OF 



completely defeats the Teutoni at the battle of 
Aquae Sextiee. The consul Catulus stationed in 
Northern Italy. A second servile war arises in 
Sicily, and was ended by the proconsul Aquilius 
in B.C. 99. It was badly conducted by L. Lucul- 
lus and C. Servilius. 
101 Coss. C. Marius V. 

M'. Aquilius. 

Marius joins the proconsul Catulus in Northern Italy. 
They defeat the Cimbri in the Campi Raudii, near 
Verona. The consul Aquilius sent against the slaves 
in Sicily. 
ICO Coss. C. Marius VI. 

L. Valerius Flaccus. 

Sedition and death of L. Appuleius Saturninus, the 
tribune of the plebs. Banishment of Metellus Nu- 
midicus. Birth of C. Julius Caesar on the 12th of 
July. 

99 Coss. M. Antonius. 
i A. Postumius Aibinus. 

Return of Metellus Numidicus to Rome. The servile 
war in Sicily ended by M'. Aquilius, the proconsul. 
98 Coss. Q. Ca?cilius Metellus Nepos. 
T. Didius. 

■ . War with the Celtiberians breaks out. Didius com- 
mands in Spain. Q. Sertorius serves under him. 
Lex Csecilia. 
37 Coss. Cn. Cornelius Lentulus. 
P. Licinius Crassus. 
Censs. L. Valerius Flaccus. 
M. Antonius. 

Didius remains in Spain as proconsul, and fights suc- 
cessfully against the Celtiberians. 
96 Coss. Cn. Domitius Ahenobarbus. 
C. Cassius Longinus. 
Ptolemaius, king of Cyrene, dies, and leaves his king- 
dom to the Romans. 
95 Coss. L. Licinius Craesus. 

Q. Mucius Scsevola. 
Pirth of Lucretius. 
94 Coss. C. Coelius Caldus. 

L. Domitius Ahenobarbus. 
93 Coss. C. Valerius Flaccus. 

M. Herennius. 
92 Coss. C. Claudius Pulcher. 
M. Perperna. 
Censs. Cn. Domitius Ahenobarbus. 

L. Licinius Crassus. 
Sulla, propraetor, is sent to A9ia ; he restores Ario- 
barzanes to the kingdom of Cappadocia, and re- 
ceives an embassy from the king of the Parfhians, 
the first public transaction between Rome and Par- 
thia. 

91 Coss. L. Marcius Philippus. 
Sex. Julius Caesar. 
M. Livius the tribune of the plebs. His legislation. 
He attempts to give the franchise to the Italian al- 
lies, but is assassinated by his opponents. 
Death of the orator Crassus. 
§0 Coss. L. Julius Cassar. 

P. Rutilius Lupus. Slain. 
The Marsic or Social War. The Lex Julia of the 
consul gives the franchise to all the Latins. 
fi9 Coss. Cn. Pcmpeius Strabo. 

L. Porcius Cato. Slain. 
Censs. P. Licinius Crassus. 

L. Julius Caesar. 
Successes of the Romans in the Marsic war. Aecu- 



lum taken. The franchise granted to all the coa. 
federate towns of Italy, and the Latin franchise to 
the Transpadani. The new citizens enrolled by the 

census in eight new tribes. 
Cicero serves under Pompeius in the Marsic war. 
88 Coss. L. Cornelius Sulla (Felix). 

Q. Pompeius Rufus. Slain. 
End of the Marsic war. The Samnites alone continue 
in arms. Sulla receives the command of the war 
against Mithradates. This occasions the civil wars 
of Marius and Sulla. Marius expels Sulla from 
Rome, and receives from the tribes the command 
of the Mithradatic war. Sulla marches upon Ronus 
with his army, enters the city, and proscribes M* 
rius and the leading men of his party. 
Cicero hears Philo and Molo at Rome. 
87 Coss. Cn. Octavius. Slain. 

L. Cornelius China. Abdicated. 
L. Cornelius Merula. Slain. 
Sulla crosses over to Greece to conduct the war 
against Mithradates. He is opposed by Archelaiis. 
the general of Mithradates ; lays siege to Athens. 
The consul Cinna espouses the side of Marius. 
Cinna and Marius enter Rome, and massacre their 
opponents. The consul Octavius. the orator M, 
Antonius, and other distinguished men, put %&> 
death. 

Sisenna, the historian, described these times. 
Birth of Catullus. 
86 Coss. L. Cornelius Cinna II. 

C. Marius VII. Died. 
L. Valerius Flaccus II. 
Censs. L. Marcius Philippus. 
M. Perperna. 

Death of Marius, set, 70. Sulla continues the war 
against Mithradates; takes Athens on the 1st of 
March ; defeats Archelaiis in Bceotia. Flaccus, who 
is elected consul in Marius's place, receives the 
command of the Mithradatic war, and crosses over 
to Asia ; he is murdered by Fimbria. 
Birth of Sallust. 
85 Coss. L. Cornelius Cinna III. 
Cn. Papirius Carbo. 
Sulla begins to treat with Archelaiis respecting the 
terms of peace. Fimbria prosecutes the war ia 
Asia with success against Mithradates. 
84 Coss. Cn. Papirius Carbo II. 

L. Cornelius Cinna IV. Slain. 
Peace concluded between Mithradates and Sulla. 
After the conclusion of the peace, Sulla marches 
against Fimbria, who kills himself. 
83 Coss. L. Cornelius Scipio Asiaticus. 
L. Norbanus Balbus. 
Sulla returns to Italy at the beginning of tho year. 
Civil war between him and the Marian party. Cn. 
Pompeius (set. 23) takes an active part in Sulla's 
favor. Q_. Sertorius flies to Spain. The Capitol 
burned on the 6th of July. L. Mureua, the pro* 
preetor, renews the war against Mithradates. 
82 Coss. C. Marius. Slew himself. 

Cn. Papirius Carbo III. Slain. 
Diet. L. Cornelius Sulla Felix. 
Mag. Eq. L. Valerius Flaccus. 
Victories of Sulla and his generals. Capture of Pra> 
neste, and death of the younger Marius, the consul. 
Sulla is undisputed master of Italy. He is appoint- 
ed dictator for an indefinite period ; proscribes hi» 
opponents. Cn. Pompeius ia sent to Sicily, to car* 



ROMAN HISTORY. 



ry on war a 4 aiu.«t the Marians. Q. Sertorius holds 
out in Spain. 
82 Birth of P. Terentius Vairo Atacinus, the poet 

Birth of C. Licinius Calvua, the orator. 
81 Coss. M. Tuilitis Dccula. 

Cn. Cornelius Dolabclla. 
Sulla continues dictator. His legislation. Successful 
campaign of Cn. Pompaiw in Africa; returns to 
Rome, and triumphs. 
Cicero's (tet. 2G) oration Pro Quintio. 
Valerius Cato, the grammarian and poet, flourished. 
80 Coss. L. Cornt liu.-i Bulla Felix II. 

Q. Caecilius Metollus Pius. 
Sulla continues dictator, but holds the consulship as 
well. Siege and capture of Mytilene, in Asia : C. 
Julius Cffisar (a»t 20) was present at the siege. 
Cicero's (set. 27) (.ration Pro Scz. Roscio Amerino. 
79 Coss. P. Servilius Vatia (Isauricus). 
Ap. Claudius P abator. 
Sulla lays down his dictatorship. Metelluj, procon- 
sul, goes to Spain to oppose Sertorius. 
Cicero (ait. 28) goes to Athens. 
78 Coss. M. jEmilius Lepidus. 

Q. Lutatius Catulus. 
Death of Sulla, ret. CO. The consul Lepidus attempts to 
rescind the laws of Sulla, but is opposed by his col- 
league Catulu." Met' Ihi? continues the war against 
Sertorius. P. Servilius Vatia is sent as proconsul 
against the pinftM i m Um "southern coasts of Asia 
Minor. 

Cicero (ast. 20) hear* Molo at Rhodes. 
Sallust's history tofM from this year. 
77 Coss. I). Junius Brutus. 

Mam. &milius Le pidua Livianus. 
Lepidus takes up aim.- i- u. i.-atcrl by Catulus nt the 
Mulvian bridge, and retires to Sardinia, where he 
dies in the course of the year. Sertorius is joined 
by M. Perperna, Ifcc h.iiate. of Lepidus. Cn. Pom- 
peius is associated w ith Melellus in the command 
against Sertorius. 
Cicero (est. 30) returns to BflOMh 
76 Coss. Cn. Octavius. 

L. Scrihonius Curio. 
Metellus and Pw pa im curry on the w«r against Ser- 
torius unsuccessfully. 
Cicero (aet. 31) engaged iu pleading causes. 
Birth of Asinius Pollio. 
75 Coss. L. Octavius. 

C. Aurelius Cotta. 
War with Sertorius continued. The proconsul P. 
Servilius Vatia, who was sent against the pirates 
in B.C. 78, subdues the Isaurians, and receives the 
surname of Isauricus. The proconsul C. Scribo- 
nius Curio commands in Macedonia, subdues the 
Dardani, and ppnetrates as far as the Danube. 
Cicero (oat. M) quaestor in Sicily. 
74 Coss. L. Licinius Lucullua. 
M. Aurelius Cotta. 
War with Jtm tonus continued. Renewal of the war 
with Mithradates : Lucullus appointed to the com- 
mand ; he carries on the war with success, and 
relieves Cyzicus, which was besieged by Mithra- 
dates. 

Cicero (tet. '.>■>) returns from Sicily to Rome. 
73 Coss. M. Terentius Varro Lucullus. 
C. Cassius Varus. 
War with Sertorius continued. Mithradates is de- 
feated by Lttcnllus near Cyzicus. Commencement 



of the war in Italy against the ( 
ed by Hpartacus. The con»ul M. I.ucullu« aucceeds 
Curio in Macedonia, and nuUliw« the lU»si in this 

or tin: following year. 
72 Coss. L. Oellius Poplicola. 

Cn. Cornelius Lentulus Clo.lianun. 
Murder of Sertorius ; defeat and death of Perpcraa; 
end of the war in Spain. Lucullus follow. Mithr*- 
dates into Pontu-. The two consuls are defeated 
by Spartucus. 
71 (Joss. P. Cornelius Lentulus Sura. 
Cn. Aufidius Orestes. 
War with Mithradates rontinue.l. Mithradates flies 
into Armenia to his son in law Tigranei. Sparta- 
cus defeated and slain by M. I.icinius Crassus. pr»- 
tor. Pompeius, on his return from Spain, falls iu 
with and destroys some of the fuqitivcs. 
70 Coss. Cn. Pompeius Magnus. 

Licinius Crassus Dives. 
Cetiss. L. Gcllius Poplicola. 

Cn. Cornelius Lentulus Clodianus. 
War with Mithradates continued, but no active oper- 
ations this year. Lucullus is engnced in rezulstioc 
the affairs of Asia Minor: Mithradates remains in 
Armenia. Pompeius restores to the tribunes the 
power of which they bad been deprived by Sulla. 
The Lex Aurelia enacts that the judices are to be 
taken from the senators, erjuites. and tr.buni ovarii, 
instead of from the senators exclusively, as Sulla 
had ordained. 
Cicero (ajt. 37) impeaches \\ rres ; he delivers th.- 
orations In U. CrriUum Divinalio and Actio 1. iu 
Verrcm. 
Birth of Virgil. 
60 Coss. Q. Hortcnsius. 

d. Cwcilius Metellus (Crcticus). 
War with Mithradates continued. Lucullus invades 
Armenia, defeats Tigram-s, and takes Tigranocert* 
The Capitol dedicated by Q. Cutulus. 
Cicero (mt. 38) curule a-dile. 1 1 i «« orauons Pro Af. 
Fonttio and Pro A. Cacina. 
Gd Coss. L. Cajcilius Metellus. Vied. 
Q. Marcius Hex. 
War with Mithradates continued. Lucullus defeat* 
Tigranes and Mithradates on the Arsanias, and lays 
siege to Nisibis. Q. Metellus. proconsul, conducts 
the war in Crete. 
67 Coss. C. Calpurnius Piso. 

M'. Acilius (jlabrio. 
War with Mithradates continued. Mutiny in th«« army 
of Lucullus. lie murchcs back to Pontus. whither 
Mithradntcs bad preceded hirn. and had defeated C 
Triarius. the legate of Lucullus. The war against 
the pirates is committed to Cn. Pompeius by th.: 
Lex dabinia. Metellus concludes the war in Crcfcj 
cither in this or the following year. L. Roscius 
Otho. tribune of the plebs, carried a b\w that the 
equitcs should have separate seats in the theatre. 
M. Terentius Varro serve* under Pompeius in the 
war neainst the pirates. 
Go Coss. M'. /Emilius Lepidus. 
L. Volcatius Tullus. 
War with MithradHtes continued. The conduct of it 
is committed to Cn. PompeiiiB4>y the Lex Manilla. 
He had already brought the war against the pirates 
to a close. lie invades Armenia, and make* peace 
with Tigranes. Mithradates retires into the Cim- 
merian Bosporus. 



992 



CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES OF 



66 Cicero (set. 41), praetor, delivers the orations Pro 

Lege Manilla and Pro A. Cluentio. 

65 Coss. P. Cornelius Sulla. ) „. _ 

„ . . " _ > Did not enter uvon office. 
P. Autronius Paetus. > 

L. Aurelius Cotta. 

L. Manlius Torquatus. 

Censs. Q. Lutatius Catulus. Abdicated. 

M. Liciniu8 Crassus Dives. Abdicated. 

War with Mithradates continued. Pompeius pursues 

Mithradates, and fights against the Albanians and 

Iberians. Catiline's first conspiracy. Caesar (set. 

35) is curdle eedile. 

Birth of Q. Horatius Flaccus. 

M Coss. L. Julius Caesar. 

C. Marcius Figulus. 

Censs. L. Aurelius Cotta. 

Pompeius returns from the pursuit of Mithradates. 
He makes Syria a Roman province, and winters 
there. 

Cicero's (a3t. 43) oration in Toga Candida. 
*3 Coss. M. Tullius Cicero. 
C. Antonius. 

Death of Mithradates. Pompeius subdues Phoenicia 
and Palestine, and takes Jerusalem after a siege of 
three months. Catiline's second conspiracy detect- 
ed and crushed by Cicero. Birth of Augustus. 

Cicero (aet. 44) delivered many orations in his consul- 
ship. Those which are extant were delivered in 
the following order : (1.) De Lege Agraria ; (2.) 
Pro C. Rabirio : (3.) In Catilinam ; (4.) Pro Mu- 
rena. 

62 Coss. D. Junius Silanus. 

L. Licinius Murena. 
Defeat and death of Catiline. Pompeius returns to 
Italy. Caesar (set. 38) is praetor: Cato is tribune 
of the people. 
Cicero's (set. 45) oration Pro P. Sulla. 
<51 Coss. M. Pupius Piso Calpurnianus. 
M. Valerius Messala Niger. 
Triumph of Pompeius on the 28th and 29th of Sep- 
tember. Trial and acquittal of P. Clodius. Caesar 
(set 39), propraetor, obtains the province of Fur- 
ther Spain. 
Cicero's (aet. 46) oration Pro Archia. 
?0 Coss. L. Afranius. 

Q. Caecilius Metellus Celer. 
Caesar's victories in Spain. He returns to Rome. 
His coalition with Pompeius and Crassus, usually 
ealled the First Triumvirate. 
59 Coss. C. Julius Caesar (aet. 41). 
M. Calpurnius Bibulus. 
The agrarian law of Caesar. The acts of Pompeius 
in Asia ratified. Caesar receives the provinces of 
Cisalpine and Transalpine Gaul and Illyricum for 
five years. 
Cicero's (aet. 48) oration Pro L. Flacco. 
Birth of T. Livius, the historian. 
53 Coss. L. Calpurnius Piso Caesoninue. 
A. Gabinius. 

Caesar's (set. 42) first campaign in Gaul ; he defeats 
the Helvetii and Ariovistus. P. Clodius is tribune 
of the plebs. 
Cicero (aet. 49) is banished. 
57 Coss. P. Cornelius Lentulus Spinther. 
Q. Caecilius Metellus Nepos. 
Caesar's (aet. 43) second campaign in Gaul. He de- 
feats the Belgae. The superintendence of the an- 
nona committed to Pompeius, with extraordinary 



B.C. 

powers, for five years. Ptolemaeus Auletes comes 

to Rome. 

Cicero (aet. 50) recalled from banishment. 
56 Coss. Cn. Cornelius Lentulus Marcellinus. 
L. Marcius Philippus. 
Caesar's (aet. 44) third campaign in Gaul. He eok- 
quers the Veneti in the northwest of Gaul. Caesar 
met Pompeius and Crassus at Luca in April, and 
made arrangements for the continuance of their 
power. Clodius is curule aedile. 
Cicero's (aet. 51) orations, (1.) Pro Sextio ; (2.) In Vm* 
tinium ; (3.) De Haruspicum Responsis ; (4.) De Pre- 
vinciis Consularibus ; (5.) Pro M. Calio Rufo ; (6.) 
Pro L. Cornelio Balbo. 
55 Coss. Cn. Pompeius Magnus II. 
M. Licinius Crassus II. 
Censs. M. Valerius Messala Niger. 

P. Servilius Vatia Isauricus. 
Caesar's (tet. 45) fourth campaign in Gaul. He cross- 
es the Rhine : he invades Britain. Assignment of 
the provinces to the triumvirs by the Lex Trebo- 
nia. Caesar receives the Gauls and BJyricum foi 
five years more ; Pompeius the Spains, and Craa- 
8us Syria. Ptolemaeus Auletes restored to Egypt 
by A. Gabinius. 
Cicero (eet. 52) composes his De Oratore. His speecit 

In Pisonem. 
Virgil (aet. 16) assumes the toga virilis. 
54 Coss. L. Domitius Ahenobarbus. 
Ap. Claudius Pulcher. 
Caesar's (aet. 46) sixth campaign in Gaul. His second 
expedition into Britain t war with Ambiorix in the 
winter. Crassus marches against the Parthians. 
Cicero (aet. 53) composes his De Republica. His ora- 
tions Pro M. Scaur o, Pro Plancio, Pro C. Rabiri* 
Postumo. 
53 Coss. Cn. Domitius Calvinus. 
M. Valerius Messala. 
Caesar's (eet. 47) seventh campaign in Gaul. He again 
crosses the Ehine. Defeat and death of Crassus 
by the Parthians. 
Cicero (aet. 54) elected augur. 
52 Coss. Cn. Pompeius Magnus III. Sole consul for the 
first part of the year. 
Ex Kal. Sextil. Q. Caecilius Metellus Pius Scipio. 
Caesar's (aet. 48) eighth campaign in Gaul. Insurrec- 
tion in Gaul ; Caesar takes Alesia and Vercingetcj* 
rix. Death of Clodius in January : riots at Rome: 
Pompeius sole consul. 
Cicero's (aet. 55) oration Pro Milove. He composes 

his De Legibus. 
Death of Lucretius. 
51 Coss. Ser. Sulpicius Rufus. 

M. Claudius Marcellus. 
Caesar's (aet. 49) ninth campaign in Gaul. Subjuga- 
tion of the country. The consul Marcellus pro* 
poses measures against Caesar. 
Cicero (aet. 56) goes as proconsul to Cilicia. 
50 Coss. L. .ffimilius Paulus. 

C. Claudius Marcellus. 
Censs. Ap. Claudius Pulcher. 

L. Calpurnius Piso Caesoninus. 
Caesar (aet. 50) spends the year in Cisalpine GauL 

Measures of Pompeius against Caesar. 
Cicero (aet. 57) leaves Cilicia, and reaches Brundisl- 

um at the end of the year. 
Death of Hortensius. 
Sallust is expelled the senate. 



ROMAN HISTORY. 



49 Coss. C. Claudius Marcellus. 

L. Cornelius Lentulus Crus. 
Diet, without Mag. Eq. C. Julius Caesar. 
Commencement of the civil war between Cajsar (iet 
51) and Pompeius. Caesar marches into Italy, and 
pursues Pompeius to llrundisium. Pompcius leaves 
Italy in March, and crosses over to Greece. Ca>ear 
goes to Piomc, and tb'ii proceeds to Spain, where 
he conquers Afrunius and Petreius, the legati of 
Pompeius. He returns to Rome, is appointed dic- 
tator for the nlntltinil at the consuls, resigns the of- 
fice at the end of 11 days, and then goes to Brun- 
disium, in order to cross over into Greece. 
Cicero (aet. 58) comes to Rome, but crosses over to 
Greece in the month of June. 
■48 Coss. C. Julius Osnr 11. 

P. Scrvilius Vatia lsauricua. 
Caesar (aet. 5:2) lands in Greece, defeats Pompeius at 
the battle ol Pbarsalia in the month of August. 
Murder of Pompeius (aet. 58) before Alexandrea. 
Caesar comes to Egypt : Alexandrine war. 
Cicero (aet. 59) returns to Italy after the battle of 
Pharsalia, and am r«fl at Brundisiurn. 
47 Diet. C. Julius Caesar II. 
Mag. Eq. M. Antonius. 
Coss. Q.. Fufius Catenas. 
P. Vatinius. 

Caesar (aet. 53) dictator the wiioie year. The cousuls 
Calenus and Vatinius were only appointed at the 
end of the year. Caesar concludes the Alexandrine 
war, marches into Fontus, and conquers Pnarna- 
ces ; arrives in Italy in September. He crosses 
over to Africa before the end of the year, to carry 
oa war against the Pompeians. 

Cicero (aet. GO) meets Caesar at Brundisium, is par- 
doned by him, and returns to Rome. 
46 Coss. C Julius Caesar III. 

M. /Emilius Lepidue. 

Caesar (aet. 54) defeats the Pomprians at the battle of 
Thnpsus in April. Death of Cato, aet 48. Caesar 
returns to Rome and triumphs. Reformation of 
the calendar by Qajmr. 

Cicero (aet. 61) composes his Brutus and Partitiones 
Oratorut. His orations Pro Marcello and Pro Li- 



Sallust praetor, and accompanies Cas6ar in the Afri- 
can war. 
45 Diet C. Julius CVsar III. 

Mag. Eq. ML .F.rniliua Lepidus. 
Cos. without colleague. C. Julius Caesar IV. 
Coss. Q. Fabius Maximus. Died. 
C. Caninius Rebilus. 
C. Trebonius. 
Caesar (aet. 55) defeats the Pompeians in Spain at the 
battle of Munda in March. Triumph of Cresar. 
He is made consul for ten years, and dictator and 
censor for life. 
Cicero (aet G2) divorces Terentia ; marries Publilia ; 
loses his daughter Tullia ; divorces Publilia. He 
composes his Orator, Academica, De Firiibus. His 
oration Pro Dcioiaro. 
44 Diet. C. Julius Caesar IV. 

Mag. Eq. M. iEinilius Lepidus II. 
Mag. Eq. C. Octavius. 

Mag. Eq. Cn. Domitius Calvinus. Dia not enter upon. 
Coss. C. Julius Caesar V. Assassinated. 

M. Antonius. 

P. Cornelius Dolabella 

63 



BC. 

44 McBDE»0FC\KiAH(»'t5»;)onthel5U>ofMareh. Oe- 

tavianua, on the death of Coar, comes from Apol- 
lonia to Rome. M. Antonius withdraw* from Kumr, 
and proceeds to Cisalpine Gaul at the end of Not cm- 
ber, to oppose D. Brutus : he U declared * publie 

enemy hy the senate. 
Cicero (*t. 63) composes his Tu$culan* Dirputatio- 
nes, De Xatura Ptorum, De Dirinatione, l*t Fato, 
De Amiciiia, Lk. Senertuu, De Oloria. Top**, De Of- 
ficiis. His orations Philippv a I., in the senate , Pkt- 
Uppica II. (not spoken); phdippica III., in the sen- 
ate; Philippica IV., before the people 
43 Cost. C. Vibius Pansa. BUL 
A. Hirtius. Slain. 

C. Julius Cit-sar Oclaviaous. Abdicated. 

C Carrinas. 

Q. Pedius. Died. 

P. Ventidius. 

Siege of Mutina : death of the consuls Pans* and Hir- 
tius. M. Antonius is deflated, and flies to Gaul. 
Octavianus comes to Home, nnd is elected consul. 
The murderers of Casar outlawed. Second Tmi- 
CMVirate formed by Octavianus, Antonius, and le- 
pidus: they tuke tin; title Triumviri lleipublira Con- 
stituenda: they proscribe their enemies. 

Cicero (ret. 64) proscribed and put to death ; the re- 
maining Philippic orations delivered in this year. 

Birth of Ovid. 

Death of Laberius, the nomographer. 
42 Coss. L. Munatius Plancus. 

M. jEmilius Lepidus II. 
Cengs. I* Antonius Pietas. 

P. Sulpicius. 

War in Greece, between the triumvirs and the repub- 
lican party. Battle of Philippi, and death of Ca#- 
eius. Second battle of Philippi, and death of Bru- 
tus. Birth of Tiberius, afterward emperor. 

Horace (aet 23) fights at the battle of Philippi. 
41 Coss. L. Antonius Pietas. 

P. Servilius Vatia Isauricus II. 

War of Perusia. The consul L. Antonius and Fulvia, 
the wife of M. Antonius, oppose Octavianus. An- 
tonius is besieged in Perusia toward the end of the 
year. 

40 Coss. Cn. Domitius Calvinus II. Abdicated. 
C. Asiuius Pollio. 
L. Cornelius Balbus. 
P. Canidius Crassus. 
Capture of Perusia. Death of Fulvia. Reconciliation 
between Octavianus and M. Antonius, who conclude 
a peace at Brundisium ! M. Antonius marries Octa- 
via, the sister of Octavianus. Labienus and the 
Parthiuns invade Syria. 
Cornelius Nepos flourished. 
39 Coss. L. Marcius Censonnus. 
C. Calvisius Sabinus. 
Octavianus and Antouius have an interview with Sex. 
Pompcius at Miscnum, and conclude a peace with 
him. M. Antonius spends the winter at Athens. 
Ventidius. the legntus of Antonius. defeats the Par- 
thians i death of Labienus. Birth of Julia, the 
daughter of Octavianus. 
Horace (a«t. 26) is introduced to Maecenas by Virgil 
and Varius. 
38 Coss. Ap. Claudius Pulchcr 
C. Norbanus Flaccus. 
War between Octavianus and Sex- Pompeius. Octa- 
vianus marries Livia. Ventidius again defeats the 



994 



CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES OF 



B.C. 

Parthians, and drives them out of Syria. Death 
of Paconi8. Sossius, the lcgatus of Antonius, con- 
quers the Jews. 
38 Horace (set. 27) is engaged upon the first book of his 

Satires. 
37 Coss. M. Agrippa. 

L. Caninius Gallus. Abdicated. 
T. Statilius Taurus. 
Antonius comes to Italy. Renewal of the Triumvi- 
rate for another period of five years. Octavianus 
employs thi9 year in preparations against Sex. Pom- 
peius. Agrippa crosses the Rhine. 
Varro (ait. 80) composes his De Re Rustica. 
36 Coss. L. Gellius Poplicola. Abdicated. 
M. Cocceius Nerva. Abdicated. 
L. Munatius Plancus II. 
C. Sulpiciu3 Quirinus. 
Defeat of Sex. Pompeius, who flies to Asia. Lepidus 
ceases to be one of the triumvirs. M. Antonius in- 
vades the Parthian dominions late in the year, and 
is obliged to retreat with great loss. 
35 Coss. L. Cornificius. 

Sex. Pompeius. 
Sex. Pompeius (set. 39) is put to death in Asia. Oc- 
tavianus defeats the Illyrians. 
34 Coss. L. Scribonius Libo. 

M. Antonius. Abdicated. 
L. Sempronius Atratinus. 
Ex Cat. Jul. Paul. iEmilius Lepidus. 

C. Memmiu8. 
Ex Kal. Nov. M. Herennius Picens, 
Octavianus defeats the Dalmatians. Antonius invades 

and subdues Armenia. 
.Death of Sallust. 
33 Cass. Imp. Cajsar Augustus II. Abdicated. 
L. Volcatius Tullus. 
P. Autronius Paatus. 
Ex Kal. Mai. L. Flavius. 
Ex Kal. Jul. C. Fonteius Capito. 

M'. Acilius (Aviola). 
Ex Kal. Sept. L. Vinucius. 
Ex Kal. Oct. L. Laronius. 
Rupture between Octavianus and Antonius. Both 
parties prepare for war. In this year Octavianus 
is called, in the Fasti, Imperator Caesar Augustus, 
though the titles of Imperator and Augustus were 
not conferred upon him till B.C. 27. Agrippa tedile. 
Horace (eet. 32) probably publishes the second book 
of his Satires. 
32 Coss. Cn. Domitius Ahenobarbus. 
C. Sosius. 

Ex Kal. Jul. L. Cornelius. 
Ex Kal. Nov. N. Valerius. 
Antonius divorces Octavia. War declared against 

Antonius at the conclusion of the year. 
Death of Atticus. 
31 Coss. Imp. Cfesar Augustus III. 

M. Valerius Messala Corvinua. 
Ex Kal. Mai. M. Titius. 
Ex Kal. Oct. Cn. Pompeius. 
Antonius defeated at the battle of Actium on the 2d 

of September. Octavianus proceeds to the East. 
Horace (ajtat 34) probably publishes his book of 
Epodes. 

30 Coss. Imp. Caesar Augustus IV. 
M. Licinius Crassua. 
Ex Kal. Jul. C. Antistius Vetus. 
Ex Id. Sept. M. Tullius Cicero. 



Ex Kal. Nov. L. Seenius. 
Death of Antonius (set. 51) and Cleopatra. Egypt 

made a Roman province. Octavianus passes the 

winter at Samos. 
Octavianus sole ruler of the Roman World; 
Cornelius Gallus, the poet, appointed pr»fect of 

Egypt. 

29 Coss. Imp. Ctosar Augustus V. 
Sex. Appuleius. 

Ex Kal. Jul. Potitus Valerius Messala. 
Ex Kal. Nov. C. Furnius. 

C. Cluvius. 

Octavianus returns to Rome and celebrates three tri- 
umphs, Dalmatian, Actian, Alexandrine. Templs 
of Janus closed. 
28 Coss. Imp. Caesar Augustus VI. 
M. Agrippa II. 
Census taken by the consuls. The citizens at the 

census are 4,164,000. 
Death of Varro. 
27 Coss. Imp. Cassnr Augustus VII. 
M. Agrippa III. 
Octavianus receives the title of Augustus, and accepts 
the government for ten years. Division of the prov- 
inces between him and the senate. Augustus goea 
into Spain. Messala triumphs on account of his 
conquest of the Aquitani, probably in the preceding 
year. 

Tibullu8 accompanied Messala into Aquitania. 
26 Coss. Imp. Csasar Augustus VIII. 
T. Statilius Taurus II. 
Augustus conducts the war in Spain. Death of Cor- 
nelius Gallus. 
25 Coss. Imp. Csasar Augustus IX. 
M. Junius Silanus. 
Augustus continues to conduct the war in Spain, and 
subdues the Cantabri. The Salassi subdued by A. 
TerentiuB Varro, and the colony of Augustus Prse- 
toria (Aosta) founded in their country. The tem- 
ple of Janus shut a second time. Marcellus mar- 
ries Julia, the daughter of Augustus. 
24 Coss. Imp. Csesar Augustus X. 
C. Norbanus Flaccus. 
Augustus returns to Rome. .Elius Gallus marches 

against the Arabians. 
Virgil is now employed upon the jEneid. 
Horace (eet. 41) publishes the first three books of his 
Odes in this or the following year. 
23 Coss. Imp. Caesar Augustus XI. Abdicated. 
A. Terentius Varro Murena. Died. 
L. Sestius. 
Cn. Calpurnius Piso. 
Augustus is invested with the tribunician power for 
life. Death of Marcellus. An embassy from the 
Parthians : Augustus restores the son of Phraates, 
but keeps Tiridates at Rome. 
22 Coss. M. Claudius Marcellus jEserninus. 
L. Arruntius. 
Censs. L. Munatius Plancus. 

Paul. ^Emilius Lepidus. 
Conspiracy of Murena detected and punished. Can- 
dace, queen of the .Ethiopians, invades Egypt. Re» 
volt of the Cantabri in Spain. 
21 Coss. M. Lollius. 

Q. jEmilius Lepidus. 
Augustus goes to the East, and spends the winter at 
Samos. Agrippa marries Julia, the daughter of 
Augustus and widow of Marcellus, 



ROMAN 

B.C. 

20 Coss. M. Appuleius. 

F. Silius Nervu. 
The Parthiana restore the Roman standards. Ambas- 
sadors come to Augustus from the Indians. Augus- 
tas winters again at Samoa. Birth of C. Ca-sar, the 
grandeon of Augustus. 
19 Coss. C. Sentius Saturninus. 

Q. Lucretius Vespillo. 
Ex Kal. Jul. M. Vinucius. 
Augustus returns to Home. The Cantabri are finally 

subdued. 
Death of Virgil. 
18 Coss. P. Cornelius l.etj tulus Marcellinus. 
C. Cornelius Lentulua. 
Augustus accepts the empire for five years. The 

Lex Julia of Augustus De Maritandis Ordinibus. 
Death of Tibullua. 

Horace (ait. 47) publishes the first book of hia Epis- 
tles about this time. 
17 Coss. C. Furnius. 

C. Junius Silanus. 
The Ludi Saculares celebrated. Birth of L. Caesar, the 

grandson of Augustus. Agrippa is sent into Asia. 
Horace (ast. 48) write? his Carmen Saculare. 
16 Coss. L. Domitius Ahenobarbus. 
P. Cornelius Seiplo. 
Ex Kal. Jul. L. Tarius Rufus. 
Agrippa is in Asia, where his friendship is cultivated 
by Herod. The 8*OMH defeat the Iioman army 
under Lollius. Augustus sets out for Gaul. 
35 Coss. M. Livius Drusua Libo. 
L. Calpurnius Piao. 
Augustus remains in Gaul. TiberilU and Drusus sub- 
due the Ra?ti r.nd Vindelici. 
14 Coss. M. Licinius ( -hhsus. 

Cn. Cornelius Lentulus Augur. 
Augustus remains in Gaul. 
13 Coss. Ti. Claudius Nero (afterward Ti. Coesar Augus- 
tus). 

P. Quinctilius \htub. 
Augustus returns from Gaul, and Agrippa from Asia. 
Horace (a;t. 52) public s the fourth book of his Odes. 
12 Coss. M. Valerius Messala Barbatus Appianus. Died. 
P. Sulpirius Quirinus. Abdicated. 
C. Valgius Rufus. Abdicated. 
C. Caninius Rebilus. Died. 
L. Volusius Saturninuf. 
Death of Agrippa in March, in his 51st year. Death 
of Lepidus. Augustus becomes pontifex maximus. 
11 Coss. Q. Mttom Tubero. 

Paul. Fabius Maximus. 
Drusus carriea ( B war ngainat the Germans, and Ti- 
berius against the Dalmatians and Pannonians. Ti- 
berius marries Julia. Death of Octavia, the sister 
of Augustus. 
10 Coss. Julius Antoniua. 

Q. Fabius Maximum Africanus. 
Augustus t> in Gaul. He returns to Rome at the end 
of the yenr with Tiberius and Drusus. Birth of 
Claudius, afterward emperor. 
9 Coss. Nero Claudius Drusus Germanicus. Died. 

T. Qninctius (Pennu3 Capitolinus) Crispinus. 
Drusus sent against the Germans, and dies during the 
war. 

The history of Livy ended with the death of Drusus. 
8 Coss. C. Marcius Censorinus. 
C. Asinius Gallus. 
Augustus accepts the empire a third time. The month 



STORY. W5 

B.C. 

of BcxtilU receive* his mine. Tlbcrim succeed* 
his brother in the war ogninst the German*. Cen- 
sus taken by Augustus. Death of Mtrcenas 
Death of riorace, oj. .'.7. 
7 Cow. Ti. Claudius Nero II. 

Cn. Calpurnius Pii-o. 
Tiberius return* to Home from Gcrmauy, but »uoo 
afterward seU out again to the F.vnc country 
C Cots. D. I.aJius Balbua. 

C. Antiatiua Vetus. 
Tiberiua receives the tribunirian power for fire year*, 
and retirea to Rhodea, where he remained arvra 
yeara. 

i> Coss. Imp. Civsur Augiihtus XII. 
L. Cornelius Sulla. 
C. Caisar receives the toga virilU. 
4 Coj». C. Calvisius Sabinus. 
L. Passicnus Rufus. 
Birth or Jesus Christ. IVnth of Herod, king o: 
Jud^a. 

3 Coss. L. Cornelius Lentulua. 

M. Valerius Messalinua. 
Birth of Gulba, afterward BJUJpfllW. 
2 Cost. Imp. Ca;sar Augustus XIII. Abdicated. 
M. Plautius Silvanus. Abdicated. 
ti. Fabricius. 
L. Caninius Galium. 
L. Ciesar receives tlir to. a \iri!i«. Banishment w 
Julia. 

Ovid publishes hia poem De Arte Amo.ndi. 
I Coss. Cossus Cornelius Lentulus. 
L. Calpurnius Piso. 
Birth of Jesvs Christ, according to the common 
era. C. Cesar is sent into the East 

L.D. 

1 Coss. C. Caesar. 

L. ASmDitu l'aului. 

War in Germany. 

2 Coss. P. Vinuciua. 

P. Alfenius Varus. 

Kx Kal. Jul. P. Cornelius Lentulua Scipla 

T. Quinctius Crispinui Valcria- 
nua. 

Interview of C. Ciesar with Phraatea, king of Parthia. 

L. Caesar dies at Maaeilia, on his way to Spain. Tw 

bcriu8 returns to Rome. 
Vellcius Paterculua aervrs under C. Ca»«ar. 

3 Coss. L. jElius Lamia 

M. Servilius. 

Ex Kal. Jul. P. Silius. 

L. Volusius Haturninut. 
Augustus nceepts the empire fur a fourth period of 
lev years. 

4 Cost. Sex. A'.'.ius Catua. 

C. Sentius S:iturninue. 

Ex Kal. Jul. C. Clodius Licinus. 

Cn. Sentius Saturninui. 
Death of C. CsaMK in Lyria. Tiberiua adopted by Ao- 
gu6tus. Tiberius sent to carry on the war against 
the Germans. 
Vellcius PatcrcuhiH aervea under Tiberiua in Ger- 
many. 
Death of Asinius Pollio. 

5 Coss. L. Valerius Mcssnla Volesus. 

Cn. Cornelius Cinna Magnus. 
Ex Kal. Jul. C. Ateius Capito. 

C. Vibins Postumna. 
Second campaign of Tiberius in Germany. 



CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES OF 



4 Cos*. M. .Emilias Lepidus. 

L. Ai-runtius. Abdicated. 
L. Nonius Asprenas. 
Third campaign of Tiberias in Germany. Revolt of 
the Pannonians and Dalmatians. 

7 Coss. A. Licinius Nerva Silianus. 

Q. Caecihus MeteDus Creticus. 
Germ aniens is sent into Germany. First campaign 

of Tiberius in IHyricum against the Pannonians and 

Dalmatians. 
Velieius Paterculus quaestor. 

8 Coss. M. Furius CamiEua. 

Sex. Nonius Quinctflianus. 
Ex Eal. Jul L. Apronius. 

A. Vibius Habitus. 
Second campaign of Tiberius in Blyricum. 

9 Coss. C. Poppseus Sabinue. 

Q. Sulpiciu3 Camerinus. 

Ez Eal. Jul. M. Papius Mutilus. 

Q. Poppseus Secundue. 
Tnird and last campaign of Tiberius in Filyricum. 
Subjugation of the Dalmatians. Defeat of QuintO- 
ius Varus, and destruction of his army. The Ro- 
mans lose all their conquests in Germany east of 
the Rhine. Birth of Vespasian, afterward emperor. 
Exile of Ovid. 

10 Coss. P. Cornelius Doiabefla, 

C. Junius Silanus. 

Ex Eal. JUL Ser. Cornelius Lentulus Mahigi- 
nenrifl. 

Tiberias again sent to Germany. 

11 Coss. M. .Emilias Lepidus- 

T. Statilius Taurus. 
Ez Eal Jul. L. Cassius Longinus. 
Tiberius and Germ aniens cross the Rhine, and carry 
on war in Germany. 

12 Coss. Germanicus C^sar. 

C. Fonteius Capito. 

Ez Eal. Jul. C. Visellius Varro. 
Tiberius returns to Rome and triumphs. 
Birth of Caligula. 
Ovid publishes his Tristia. 

13 Coss. C. Silius. 

L. Munatius Tlnnmn 
Augustus accepts the empire a fifth time for ten years. 

14 Coss. Sex. Pompeius. 

Sex. Appuleius. 

Census taken : the citizens are 4,197,000. Death of 
Augustus at Nola. in Campania, on the 19th of Au- 
gust in the 76th year of his age. 

"Tibebtts (set. 56) succeeds Augustus as emperor. 
Revolt of the legions in Pannonia and Germany. 
Death of Agrippa Postumus, the grandson, and of 
Julia, the daughter, of Augustus. 

15 Cess. Drusus Caesar. 

C. Norbanus Flaccus. 
Tiberii 2. — Germ aniens carries on war against the 
Germans. 
15 Coss. T. Statilius Sisenna Taurus. 
L. Scribonius Libo. 
Ez Eal. Jul. P. Pomponius Grsecinus. 
Tiberii 3. — Germanicus continues the war in Germa- 
ny, but is recalled by Tiberius. Rise of Sejanus. 
17 Coss. C. Caeciiius Rufus. 

L. Pomponius Flaccus. 
Tiberii 4. — Germanicus returns to Rome and tri- 
umphs. He is sent into the East. Great earth- 
quake in Asia War in Africa against Tacfarinas. 



18 Com. TL Caesar Augustus III. Abdicated. 

Germanicus Caesar IL 

L. Seius Tubero. 
Tiberii 5. — Germanicus is in the East- 
Death of Ovid and of Livy. 

19 Coss. M. Junius Silanus. 

L. Norbanus Balboa. 
Tiberii 6. — Germanicus visits Egypt, and return* to 
Syria, where he dies in his 34th year. Drusus car- 
ries on war in Germany with success. The Jews 
are banished from Italy. 

20 Coss. M. Valerius Meseala. 

M. Aurelius Cotta. 
Tiberii 7.— Agrippina, the wife of Germanicus, comes 
to Rome. Trial and condemnation of Piso. 

21 Coss. TL Caesar Augustus IV. 

Drusus Caesar H. 
Tiberii 8. — Junius Blaesus is sent into Africa against 
Tacfarinas. 

22 Coss. D. Haterius Agrippa. 

C. Sulpicius Galba. 

Ex Eal. Jul. M. Cocceius Nerva. 

C. Vibius Runnns. 
Tiberii 9. — The tribunician power is granted to Dru- 
sus. 

23 Coss. C. Asinius Poliio. 

C. Antistius Vetus. 
Tiberii 10.— Death of Drusus : he is poisoned by Se- 
janus. 

24 Coss. Ser. Cornelius Cethegua. 

L. Visellius Varro. 
Tiberii 11. — End of the African war by the death of 

Tacfarinas. 
Birth of the elder Pliny. 

25 Coss. M. Asinius Agrippa. 

Cossus Cornelius Lentulus. 
Tiberii 12. — Cremutius Cordus, the historian, is ac- 
cused, and dies of voluntary starvation. 

26 Coss. C. Calvisius Sabinus. 

Cn. Cornelius Lentulus Gaetulicus. 
Ex Eal. Jul. Q. Marcius Barea. 

T. Rustias Nummias Gallaa. 
Tiberii 13.— Tiberius withdraws into Campania, and 
never returns to Rome. Poppaeos Sabinus carries 
on war successfully against the Thracians. 

27 Coss. M. Licinius Crass us FrugL 

L. Calpurnius Piso. 
Tiberii 14. 

28 Coss. Ap. Junius Silanus. 

P. Silius Nerva. 

Suf. Q. Junius Bbesus. 
L. Antistius Vetus. 
Tiberii 15.— Death of Julia, the grand-daughter of Au- 
gustus. Agrippina, the daughter of Germanicus, is 
married to Domitius Ahenobarbus : Nero was the 
issue of this marriage. Revolt of the FrisiL 

29 Coss. L. Rubellius Geminus. 

C. FuSus Geminus. 
Suf. A. Plaunus. 

L. Nonius Asprenas. 
Tiberii 16.— Death of Livia, the mother of Tiberius. 

30 Coss. M. Vinucius. 

L. Cassius Longinus. 
Suf. C. Cassias Longinus. 
L. Naevius Surdinua. 

Tiberii 17. 

Asinius Gallus is imprisoned. 

Velieius Paterculus writes his history in this year. 



ROMAN HISTORY. 



31 Coat. Ti. Caesar Augustus V. 

L. iEliug Scjanus. 
Suf. vn. Id. Mai. Faust. Cornelius Sulla. 

Sextidius Catullinus. 
Kal. Jul. L. Fulcinius Trio. 
Kal. Oct. P. Mcmraius Regulus. 
Tiberii 18.— Fall and execution of Sejanua. 

32 Coss. Cn. Domitius Ahenobarbus. 

M. Furius Camillus Scribonianug. 
Suf Kal. Jul ,\. Vitellius. 
Tiberii 19— Birth of Otho. 

33 Coss. Ser. Sulpicius Galba (afterward C*s. Aug.). 

L. Cornelius Sulla Felix. 
Suf. Kal. Jul. L. Salvius Otho. 
Tiberii 20.— Agrippina and her son Drusus arc put to 
death. 

Death of Asinius Gallus and of Cossius Severus. 

34 Coss. L. Vitellius. 

Paul. Fabiufl Peraicus. 
Tiberii 21. 
Birth of Persius. 

35 Coss. C. Cestius (Julius OwntllU B 

M. Servilius Nonianus. 
Tiberii 22. 

36 Coss. Sex. Papinius Allicnue. 

Q. Plautius. 
Tiberii 23. 

37 Coss. Cn. Acerronius Proculus. 

C. Petronius Pontius Nigrinus. 
Suf. Kal. Jul. C. Cu:snr Augustus Germanicus. 

Ti. Claudius (aftencard Cses. 
Aug.). 

Death of Tiberius uvt It), March lfith. 
Caligula emperor Ot. 25). lie puts to death Tibe- 
rius, the son of Drusus. Birth of Nero. 

38 Coss. til. Aquilius .lulianus. 

P. Nonius Asprenas. 
Caligula? 2.— Death of Drusilla, the eieter of Caligula. 
Birth of Josephus. 

39 Coss. C. Csesar Augustus Germanicus H. 

L. Apronius Ctesianus. 
5a/. Kal. Ftbr. Sanquinius Maxiinus. 

Jul. Cn. Domitiu8 Corbulo. 
Sept. Domitius Afer. 
Caligulie 3.— Herod Antipas, tetrarch of Galilee, If 
deposed, and his dominions given to Agrippa. Ca- 
ligula sets out for Gaul. 

40 Cots. C. Cwsur Augustus Germanicus HI. (Sole con- 

W) 

Suf. Id. Jen. L. Gellius TopHcola. 

at. Cocceiu8 Nerva. 
(Kal Jul. Sex. Junius Celer. 

Sex. Nonius Quinctilianus.) 
Caligula? 4. — Caligula is at Lugdunum (Lyon) on the 
let of January. His mad expedition to the Ocean: 
he returns to Rome in triumph. 
Philo Judnnis is sent from Alcxandrea as an ambas- 
sador to Caligula. 
The poet I,ucan is brought to Rome. 

41 Cos». C. Cat-sar Augustus Germanicus IV. 

Cn. Sentius Saturninus. 
5a/. vit Id. Jan. Q. Pomponius Secundum. 
Caligula (set. 29) I in, January 24th. 
Claudius erapero, ret. 49). Agrippa receives Judea 
and Samaria. T\ Germans defeated by Galba and 
Gabinius. 

Seneca publishes hi* lv Ira Libri tree. He is exiled 
in this year. 



42 Cost. Ti. Claud. Cast. AtJf Q mmnicuj K 

C. Csecina Laigttf. 
Suf. Kal. Mart. (<\ ftbhu rri*pua). 

Claudii » Mt (mil fa ooBqaered and divided iale 

two provinces. Deaths of Pa** and Arria. 
Asconius Pedinnus flourished. 

43 Cobs. Ti. Claud. C*.. Aug. Germanicus III 

L Vit. Hius |i. 
Suf Kal. Mart. (p. Valerius AsUt). 
Claudii 3.-Expodition of Claudius into Britain 
-Martial born March 1st. 

44 Cost. I. Quinctius Crispim,, Srcundua. 

M. StHtilius Taurus. 
Claudii 4.-Clnudiui return*, to Homo md triumphs 
Death of Agrippa, king of Jud.-i. 

45 Cots. M. Vinucius II. 

Taurus Statiliua Corvinus. 
Suf M. Cluvius Rufus. 
PoWpdlM Silvanus. 

Claudii 5. 

Domitius Afer flourished. 

46 Cots. . . . Valerius Asinticu* II. 

M. Junius Silanus. 
Suf P. Suillius Rufu?. 
P. Ostorius Scapula. 

Claudii C. 

47 Cos*. Ti. Claud. Cum. AUf G< rmanicus IV. 

t> Vitellius III. 

Suf. Kal. Mart. (Ti. Plnutius SUvanoa .FJia 
nus.) 

Claudii 7.— Ludi Steculares celebrated. Corbulo com- 
mands in Lower Germany, nnd reduces the Friiil 
to submission. 

48 Coss. A. Vitellius (afterward Aug.). 

L. Vipstnnus Poplicola. 
Suf. Kal. Jul. L Vitellius. 

(C. Cnlpurnius Piao.) 
Censt. Ti. Claudius Cies. Aug. Germanicus. 
L. Vitellius. 

Claudii It IftamMm, the wit'.; of Claudius, is put to 
death. 

49 Cots. Q. Vcranius. 

C. (A.) Pompeius Gallus. 
(Suf. L. Mcmmius Pollio. 
Q. Allius Maximus.) 
Claudii 9. — Claudius marries Agrippiua. 
Seneca recalled from exile. 

50 Coss. C. Antistius Vctus. 

M. Suillius Nerulinus. 
Claudii 10 — Claudius adopts Domitius Ahenobarbua 
(afterward the Emperor Nero), the son of Agrippi- 
na. In Britain, the Silures an- defeated by Ostori- 
us, and their loader, Cnractacus, is captured. 

51 Coss. Ti. Clnud. C;*:s. Aug. Germanicus V. 

Ser. Cornelius Orfitus. 
Suf. Kal. Jul. (C. Minicius Fundanus. 

C. Vetennius Sevcrua.) 
Kal. A'cc. T. Flavius Vespasianua (after- 
ward Ca-s. Aug.). 
Claudii tL — Nero receives the toga virilis. Burma 
appointed pra'fect of the praetorians by the infha- 
ence of Agrippina. 

52 Coss. Faustus Cornelius Sulla. 

L. Salvius Otho Titianus. 
(Suf. Kal. Jul. Servilius Barea Soranus 
C. Licinius Mucianua.) 
Kal. Not. L. Corneliue Sulla. 

T. Flavius Sabinus. 



90S 



CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES OF 



A.D. 

Claudii 112. 
53 Coss. D. Junius Silanus. 

Q. Haterius Antoninus. 
Claudii 13. — Nero marries Octavia. the daughter of 
Claudius. 
34 Coss. M. Asinius Marcellus. 
M\ Acilius A viola. 
Claudius (set 63) poisoned October 12th. 
Nebo emperor (at 17). Corbulo appointed to the 
command in Armenia, and continues in the East 
some years. 
55 Coss. Nero Claud. Cehs. Aug. Germanicus. 
L. Actistius Vetus. 
Neronis 2. — Britannicus (set 14) is poisoned. 
"56 Coss. Q. Volusius Saturninus. 
P. Cornelius Scipio. 
Neronis 3. 

Seneca publishes his De dementia Libri II. 

57 Coss. Nero Claud. Caes. Aug. Germanicus II. 

L. Calpurnius Piso. 

Suf. L. Casius Martialis. 
Neronis 4. 

58 Coss. Nero Claud. Cajs. Aug. Germanicus III. 

M. Valerius Messala. 
Neronis 5. — Corbulo drives Tigranes out of Armenia, 
and takes Artaxata. his capital. Nero is in love with 
Poppaea Sabina, the wife of Otho. Otho is sent into 
Lusitania, where he remained ten yeara. 

59 Coss. C. Vipstanus Apronianus. 

C. Fonteius Capito. 
Neronis 6.— Agrippina, the mother of Nero, is mur- 
dered by his order. 
Death of Domitius Afer. 
<50 Coss. Nero Claud. Ca?s. Aug. Germanicus IV. 
Cossus Cornelius Lentulus. 
Neronis 7.— Complete subjugation of Armenia by Cor- 
bulo. The Quinquennalia instituted by Nero. 
€1 Coss. C. Petronius Turpilianug. 
C. Caesonius Partus. 
Neronis 8. — Insurrection in Britain under Boadicea : 
she is conquered by Suetonius Paullinus. Galba 
commands in Spain, where he continued till he 
was elected emperor. 
Birth of Pliny the younger. 
*2 Coss. P. Marius Celsus. 

L. Asinius Gallus. 
Suf. L. Annaeus Seneca. 
Trebellius Maximus. 
Neronis 9.— Nero divorces Octavia, and puts her to 
death shortly afterward He marries Poppaea Sa- 
bina. Death of Burrus, the praetorian prsefect 
Death of Persius. 

63 Coss. C. Memmius Regulus. 

L. Virginius Rufus. 
Neronis 10. 

Seneca completes his Naturalc* Quastionts after this 
year. 

64 Coss. C. Laecanius Bassus. 

M. Licinius Crassus FrugL 
Neronis 11.— Great fire at Rome. First persecution 
of the Christians. 

65 Coss. A. Licinius Nerva Silianua. 

M. Vestinus Atticus. 
Neronis 12. — Piso's conspiracy against Nero detected 

and suppressed. Death of Poppasa Sabina. 
Seneca the philosopher, and Lucan the poet, put to 

death. 

66 Coss. C. Lucius Telesinus. 



C. Suetonius Paullinus. 
Neronis 13. — Tiridates comes to Rome, and receive* 
the crown of Armenia from the emperor. Nero 
then goe6 to Greece. The Jewish war begins, and is 
continued for some years. It is finished in A.D. 70. 
Martial comes to Rome. 
67 Coss. L. Fonteius Capito. 
C. Julius Rufus. 
Neronis 14. — Nero, in Greece, enters the contests at 
the Olympic games. He puts Corbulo to death- 
He returns to Rome at the end of the year. Ves- 
pasian conducts the war against the Jews. 
6S Coss. Silius Italicus. Abdicated. 

Galerius Trachalus. Abdicated. 
Nero Claud. Cses. Aug. Germanicus V. (wiikom 
colleague). 

Suf. Kal. Jul. M. Plautius Silvanus. 

M. Salvius Otho {aftcransri 
Caes. Aug.). 
Suf. Kal. Sept. C. Bellicus Natalis. 

P. Cor. Scip. Asiaticus. 
In Gaul, Vindex revolts, and proclaims Galba em- 
peror. Nero (set, 30) kills himself on June 9th. 
Galea empei or. Vespasian continues the war against 
the Jews. 

69 Coss. Ser. Sulpicius Galba Cajsar Augustus IL 

T. Vinius (Junius). Slain. 

Ex Kal. Mart. T. Virginius Puifus. 

L. Pompeius Vopiscus. 
Ex Kal. Mai. M. Caelius Sabinus. 

T. Flavius Sabinus. 
Ex Kal. Jul. T. Arrius Antoninus. 

P. Marius Celsus U. 
Ex Kal. Sept. C. Fabius Valens. 

A. Licin. Case. Condemned. 
Ex pr. Kal. Nov, Roscius Regulus. 
Ex Kal. Nov. Cn. Caecilius Simplex. 

C. Quinctius Atticus. 
Galba (set. 73) is slain January 15th. Otho had formed 

a conspiracy against him. 
Otho (set. 36) emperor from January 15th to hi* 
death, April 16th, was acknowledged as emperor 
by the senate on the death of Galba. 
Vitellius (set. 54) was proclaimed emperor at Co- 
logne on January 2d, acknowledged as emperor by 
the senate on the death of Otho, and reigned tiB 
his death, December 22d. 
Vesf asian (set. 60) was proclaimed emperor at Al- 
exandrea on July 1st, and was acknowledged s* 
emperor by the senate on the death of Vitellius. 
On the death of Galba followed the civil war between 
Otho and Vitellius. The generals of Vitellius march 
into Italy, and defeat the troops of Otho at the bat- 
tle of Bedriacum. Thereupon Otho put an end to 
his own life at Brixellum, April 16th. Vitellius is 
in Gaul at the time of Otho's death ; he visits the 
field of battle toward the end of May, and then pro- 
ceeds to Rome. Meantime the generals of Vespa- 
sian invade Italy, take Cremona, and march upon 
Rome. They force their way into Rome, and kill 
Vitellius, December 22d. The Capitol burned. Tbo 
war against the Jews suspended this year. 

70 Coss. Imp. T. Flavius Vespasianus Augustus II. 

T. Caesar Vespasianus. 

Ex Kal. Jul. C. Licinius Mucianus IL 

P. Valerius Asiaticus 
Ex Kal. Nov. L. Annius Bassus. 

C. Caecina Psetus. 



ROMAN ] 

A.D. 

70 Vespasiani '.!.— Vespasian proceeds to Italy, andleayes 

his son Titus to carry on the war against the Jews. 
Titus takes Jerusalem, after a siege of nearly five 
months. Insurrection in Batavia and Gaul, headed 
by Civilis; it commenced in the preceding year, 
before the capture of Cremona. It is put down in 
this year by Cerialis. 

71 Coss. Imp. T. Flavius Vespasianus Augustus III. 

M. Cocceius Nerva (afterward Imp. Cms. Aug.). 
Ex Kal Mart. T. Caesar Domitianus. 

Cn. Pedius Castus. 
C. Valerius Festus. 
Vespasiani 3.— Titua returns to Italy. Triumph of 
Vespasian and Titus. The temple of Janus closed. 

72 Coss. Imp. T. Flavins Vespasianus Augustus IV. 

T. Cresar Vespasianus II. 
Vespasiani 4. — Commagene is reduced to a province. 

73 Coss. T. Caesar Domitianus II. 

M. Valerius Messalinus. 
Vespasiani 5. 

74 Coes. Imp. T. Flavius Vespasii.nus Augustus V. 

T. Caesar Vespasianus III. Abdicated. 
Ez Kal. Jul. T. Ctesar Domitianus III. 
Cense. Imp. T. Flavius Vespasianus Augustus. 

T. Caesar Vespasianus. 
Vespasiani 6. — Censors appointed lor the last time. 
The dialogue De Oratvribua is written in the 6th of 
Vespasian. 

75 Coaa. Imp. T. Flavius Vespasianus Augustus VL 

T. Caesar Vespasianus IV. 

Ex Kal. Jul. T. Caesar Domitianus IV. 

M Licinius Mucianus III. 
Vespasiani 7.— Temple of Peace completed. 
70 Coss. Imp. T. Fiorina V espasianus Augustus VII. 
T. Caesar Vespasianus V. 
Ex Kal. Jul. T. Caps. Domitianus V. (T. Plau- 
tiu« SUvanus -■Elianus II.). 
Vespasiani 8. -Birth at Hadrian. 

77 Cosa. Imp. T. Flavius Vespasianus Augustus VIII. 

T. Caesar Vespasianus VI. 
Ex Kal. Jul. T. Caisar Domitianus VL 
Cn. Julius Agricola. 
Vespasiani 9 — Pliny dedicates his Historia SaiuralU 
to Titus, when consul for the sixth time. 

78 Coss. L. Ceionius Commodus. 

D. Novius Priscus. 
Vespasiani 10 —Agricola takes the command in Brit- 
ain : he subdues the Ordovices, and takes the island 
of Mona. 

79 Coaa. Imp. T. Flavius Vespasianus Augustus IX. 

T. Caesar Vespasianus VII. 

Death of Vespasian (<*L 69), June 23d. 

Titus emperor (tut. 38). Second campaign of Agric- 
ola in Britain. Eruption of Vesuvius on August 
24th, and destruction of Herculaneum and Pompeii. 

Death of the elder Pliny (set. 56) in the eruption of 
Vesuvius. The younger Pliny was now 18. 

80 Coss. Imp. Titus Caesar Vespasianus Augustus VIII. 

T. Caesar Domitianus VII. 
Suf. L. ^Elius Plautius Lamia. 

Q. Pactumeius Fronto. 
Suf. M. Tillius (Tittius) Frugi. 
T. Vinicius Juliauus. 
Titi 2 —Great fire at Rome. Completion of the Am- 
phitheatre (Colosseum) and Baths commenced by 
Vespasian: Titus exhibits games on the occasion 
for 100 days. Third campaign of Agricola in Brit- 
ain : he advances as far as the Frith of Tay. 



81 Coaa. L. Flavius fc'ilva Nonins Baaaur. 

Asiniua Pollio Verrucosus. 

Ez Kal. Mai. L. Vettiua Paullua. 

T. Junius Monunua. 
Death of Titus (set 40) on S.-ptrmb<T 13th. 
Domitian emperor (*et. 30). Fourth campaign of 
Agricola in Britain. 

82 Cots. Imp. Cueear Domiuanua Augu«tua VIM. 

T. Flavius Sabinus. 
Domitiani 2.— The Capitol r».tor.-d. Filth campaign 
of Agricola in Britain. 

83 Coss. Imp. Caesar Domitiar.as Augustus IX 

Q. Pctilius Rufus IL 
Domitiani 3.— Expedition of Domitian against the 
Catti. Sixth campaign of Agricola in Britain: h* 
defeats the Caledonians. 

84 Cost. Imp. Cuesar Domitianus Augustus X. 

Ap. Junius Sabinus. 
Domitiani 4. — Domitian returns to Borne and tri- 
umphs; he assumes the title of Ormanicus, and 
receives ten consulships and the censorship Cor 
life. Seventh campaign of Agricola in Britain : ho 
defeats Ga'.gacus. 

85 Cost. Imp. Ca'sar Domitianus Augustus XI. 

T. Aurelius Fulvus. 
Domitiani 5.— Agricola recalled to Rome. 

86 Cots. Imp. Caesar Domitianus Augustus XII. 

Ser. Cornelius Dolabrlla Pctronianus. 
Suf C. Steins Campanus. 
Domitiani 6. — The Dacian*. under Decebalus, make 
war upon the Romans. Birth of Antoninus Phma. 
67 Cota. Imp. Caesar Domitianus Augustus XIII. 
A. Volusius Saturninus. 
Domitiani 7. 

88 Cott. Imp. Ca'sar Domitianus Augustus XIV. 

L. Minucius Rufus. 
Domitiani 8.— The Ludi Saculsrcs ctlebratrd. 
Tacitus praetor. 

89 Cota. T. Aurelius Fulvus 11. 

A. Sempronius Atratinuc. 
Domitiani 9. 

Quintilian teaches nt Rome. 

Tacitus leaves Rome four years before the death of 
Agricola. See A.D. 93. 

90 Cots. Imp. Csssar Domitianus Augustus XV. 

M. Cocceius Nerva II. 

Domitiani 10. — The philosophers expelled from 
Rome. Domitian defeated by the Qundi and Mar- 
comanni. He purchases a peace of Decebahu. 

Pliny (set. 29) praetor. 

91 Cota. M'. Acilius Glabrio. 

M. Ulpius Trajanus (iifitrvard Imp. Cas*. Aug.). 
Suf. Q. Valerius Vcgetus. 
P. Met(iliua Secundus). 
Domitiani 11.— Domitian celebrates a triumph on a.- 
count of hi* pretended victory over the Daciana. 
Insurrection of L. Antoniua in Germany, who la 
defeated by the generals of Domitian. 

92 Cosa. Imp. Caesar Domitianus Augustus XVI. 

Q. Volusius Saturninus. 

Ez Id. Jan. L. Vcnu'lciua Apronianua). 

Ez Kal. Mai. L. Stertiniu* Aritu*. 

TL 

Ez Kal. Sept. C. Junius Silanu*. 

a Arr 

Domitiani 12. 

93 Cosa. Pompeius Collcga. 

CornelUs Priscus. 



CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES OF 

A.D. 




X.TJ. 

93 Suf. M. Lollius Paullinus Valerius Asiaticus 

Saturninus. 
C. Antius Aulus Julus Torquatus. 
Domitiani 13. — Sarmatian war. Domitian set forth 
in May, A.D. 93, and returned in January, A.D. 94. 
Death of Agricola (set. 56). 
Jo8ephua (sat. 56) finishes his Antiquities. 

94 Coss. L. Nonius Torquatus Asprenaa. 

T. Sextius Magius Lateranus. 
Suf. L. Sergius Paullus. 
Domitiani 14. 

Statius publishes his Thebais about this time. 

95 Coss. Imp. Csesar Domitianus Augustus XVII. 

T. Flavius Clemens. 
Domitiani 15.— The consul Clemens put to death. 
Persecution of the Christians. 

96 Coss. C. Manlius Valens. 

C. Antistius Vetus. 
Domitian (aet. 44) slain September 18th. 
Nerva emperor (aet. 63). 

97 Coss. Imp. Nerva Caesar Augustus III. 

T. Virginius Rufua III. 
Nervae 2. — M. Ulpius Trajanus is adopted by Nerva. 
Frontinus is appointed Curator Aquarum. 

98 Coss. Imp. Nerva Caesar Augustus IV. 

Nerva Trajanus Caesar II. 

Ex Kal. Jul. C. Sosius Senecio. 

L. Licinius Sura. 
Ex Kal. Oct. Afranius Dexter. 
Death of Nerva (aet. 65), January 25th. 
Trajan emperor (set 41). Trajan, at his accession, 

is at Cologne. 
Pliny is appointed Preefectus jErarii. 

99 Coss. A. Cornelius Palma. 

C. Sosius Senecio (II.). 
Trajani 2.— Trajan returns to Rome. 
Martial publishes a second edition of book x. of his 
Epigrams. 

100 Coss. Imp. Caesar Nerva Trajanus Augustus III. 

Sex. Julius Frontinus III. 

Ex Kal. Mart. M. Cornelius Fronto. 

Ex Kal. Sept. C. Plinius Caecilius Secundus. 

Cornutu8 Tertullus. 
Ex Kal. Nov. Julius Ferox. 

Acutius Nerva. 
L. Roscius ^Slianus. 

Ti. Claudius Sacerdoe. 

Trajani 3. 

Pliny, consul, delivers his Panegyricus in the senate 
in the beginning of September. Pliny and Tacitus 
accuse Marius Priscus. 

Martial probably published book xi. at Rome in this 
year. In the course of the year he withdrew to 
Spain, from which he had been absent 35 years. 

101 Co8$. Imp. Csesar Nerva Trajanus Augustus IV. 

Sex. Articuleius Psetus. 

Ex Kal. Mart. Cornelius Scipio Orfitus. 

Ex Kal Mai. Baebius Macer. 

M. Valerius Paullinus. 
Ex Kal. Jul. C. Rubrius Gallus. 

Q. Cselius Hispo. 
Trajani 4.— First Dacian war. Trajan commands in 
person, and crosses the Danube. Hadrian quaestor. 

102 Coss. C. Sosius Senecio IIL 

L. Licinius Sura II. 

Ex Kal. Jul. M'. Acilius Rufus. 

C. Cfficilius Classicus. 
Trajani 5.— Dacian war continued. 



103 Coss. Imp. Caesar Nerva Trajanus Augustus V. 

L. Appius Maximus II. 

(Suf. C. Minicius Fundanus. 
C. Vettennius Severus.) 
Trajani 6.— Trajan defeats the Dacians, and grants 
peace to Decebalus. He returns to Rome, tri- 
umphs, and assumes the name of Dacicus. 
Pliny arrives at his province of Bithynia in Septem> 
ber. 

104 Coss Suranus. 

P. Neratius Marcellus. 
Trajani 7. — Second Dacian war. Hadrian serves un- 

der Trajan in this war. 
Pliny writes from his province to Trajan concerning 

the Christians. 
Martial (set. 62) publishes book xii. at Bilbilis, in Spain, 

105 Coss. Ti. Julius Candidus II. 

C. Antius Aulus Julius Quadratus II. 
Trajani 8.— Dacian war continued. Trajan builds a 
stone bridge over the Danube. 

106 Coss. L. Ceionius Commodus Verus. 

L. Titius Cerealis. 
Trajani 9.— End of the Dacian war, and death of De- 
cebalus. Dacia is made a Roman province. Tra- 
jan returns to Rome, and triumphs a second time 
over the Dacians. Arabia Petraea conquered by 
Cornelius Palma. 

107 Coss. L. Licinius Sura IIL 

C. Sosius Senecio IV. 
Suf. .... Suranus II. 

C. Julius Servilius Ursus Serviamw. 

Trajani 10. 

108 Coss. Ap. Annius Trebonius Gallus. 

M. Atilius Metilius Bradua. 
Suf. (C. Julius Africanus. 
Clodius Cri8pinus.) 
L. Verulanus Severus. 

Trajani 11. 

109 Coss. A. Cornelius Palma II. 

C. Calvisius Tullus II. 
Suf. P. Mlius Hadrianus (afterward Imps 
Caes. Aug.). 
M. Trebatius Priscus. 

Trajani 12. 

110 Coss. Ser. Salvidienus Orfitus. 

M. Peducaeus Priscinus. 
Suf. (P. Calvisius Tullus. 
L. Annius Largus.) 

Trajani 13. 

111 Coss. M. Calpurnius Piso. 

L. Rueticus Junianus Bolanus. 
Suf. C. Julius Servilius Ursus Servianus IL 
L. Fabius Justus. 

Trajani 14. 

112 Coss. Imp. Caesar Nerva Trajanus Augustus VI. 

T. Sextius Africanus. 
Trajani 15. 

113 Coss. L. Publicius Celsus II. 

C. Clodius Crispinus. 
Trajani 16. — The column of Trajan erected. 

114 Coss. Q. Ninnius Hasta. 

P. Manilius Vopiscus. 
Trajani 17.— Parthian war. Trajan leaves Italy in the 
autumn, and spends the winter at Antioch. 

115 Coss. L. Vipstanus Messala. 

M. Pedo Vergilianus. 
Trajani 18. — Parthian war continued. Trajan con- 
quers Armenia. Great earthquake at Antioch at 



ROMAN HISTORY. 



1001 



ID. 



the beginning of the year. Sedition of the Jews in 

Greece and F.gypt. 
Martyrdom of Ignatius. 

116 Coss. (jEmiliua) .Elianus. 

(L.) Antistius Vetua. 
Trajani 19.— Parthian war continued. Trajan takes 
Cteaiphon, and sails down the Tigris to the ocean. 
Revolt of the Parthians suppressed by the generals 
of Trajan. Trajan assumes the name of Parthicus. 

117 Coss. Quinctius Niger. 

C. Vipstanus Apronianus. 

Ez Kal. Jul \\. r.rucius Clarus. 

Ti. JuliiM Alexander. 
Sedition of the hfm in Oyrcneand Egypt suppressed. 
Trajan (ait. M) dies it Selinus, in Cilicia, on his re- 
turn to Italy \u.jn-t *th. 
Hadrian cmo< r«C ( «t. 42). He was at Antioch at 
the death of Trajan. 

118 Coss. Imp. C;e?ar Trajanus Hadrianus Augustus II. 

Ti. Claudius Fuscus Salinator. 

Hadriani 2— Hadrrm cumes to Rome: he sets out 
for Mcesia, in consequence of a war with the Sar- 
matians ; a conspiracy against him discovered and 
suppressed j h<- returns to Italy, and intrusts the 
command of Daria to Marciue Turbo. 

Juvenal flourished 

119 Coss. Imp. Caesar Trajanus Hadrianus Augustus III. 

C. Junius Rusticus. 
Hadriani 3. — Turbo is appointed praetorian pra-fect 
in the place of Attianns, i,n<i Clarus in the place of 
Simili9. 

130 Coss. L. Catilius Severus 

T. Aurelius Fulvus (afiervard Imp. f'ys. Anto- 
ninus Aug Fius) 
Hadriani 4.— Hadrian hfgina a journey through all the 
provinces of the empire. He visits Gaul and Ger- 
many. 

121 Coss. M. Annius Verua II. 

Augur 

Hadriani 5. — Hadrian visits Britain and Spain. He 
passes the winter at Tarraco, in Spain. Birth of 
M. Aurelius. 

122 Coss. If. Acilius^viola. 

C. Corellius Pansa. 
Hadriani 6.— Hadrian visits Athens, where he passe* 
the winter. 

123 Coss. Q. Articuleius IVtinus. 

L. Venuleius Apronianus. 
Hadriani 7. 

124 Coss. M'. Acilius Glabrio. 

C. Bellicius Torquatui. 
Hadriani 

125 Coss. Valerius Asiaticus II. 

Titius Aquihnus. 
Hadriani 9 — Hadrian is at Athena. 

126 Coss. M. Annius Verus III. 

. . . Eggius Ambibulus. 
Hadriani 10 —Birth of Pertinax. Death of Similia- 

127 Coss. T. Atilius Titianua. 

M Squilla Gallicanus. 
Hadriani 11. 

128 Coss. L. Nonius Torquatus AsprenM IL 

M. Annius Libo. 
Hadriani 12. 

129 Cost- P. Juventius Celaua II. 

Q. Julius Balbus. 
Suf. C. Neratiua Marcelluj II. 
Cn . Lolliua Gall us. 



A.n. 

Hadriani 13-Hadrian paaaea the winter at Athens 

130 Com. a Fabius Tatullimu. 

M. Flariue Aprr. 
Hadriani 14 —Hadrian rii.U Judca and Fgypt 

131 Coss. Scr. OcUviua La-nag Pontlanua. 

M. Antonius Hufinim. 
Hadriani 15.— Hadrian visits Syria. The Jewish war 

begins. 

132 Coss. C. Scrius Augurinu- 

C. T:ebius Sergianu*. 
Hadriani lG.-Tlie Jewish war continues. The Rdic 
turn Perpetuus* promulgated. 

133 Coss. M. Antonius Hiberus. 

Niimmiu* Sisenna. 
Hadriani 17.— Tlie Jewi.«h war continues. 

134 Coss. C. Julius Servilius Uraui Pervianus III. 

C. Vibius Jurentius Varus. 
Hadriani 13 — The Jewish war continues. 

135 Cots Luporcua. 

Atticus. 

Suf. . . . Pontianus. 
. . . Atilianus. 
Hadriani 19.— The Jewish war continues. 

136 Coss. L. Ceionius Commodu* Verus. 

Sex. Vetulenua Cirira Pompeianua. 
Hadriani 20 — The Jewish war ended. Hadrian adopU 
L. iElius Verus. and confers upon him the title of 
Caesar. 

131 Cost. L. /Elius Verus Cmsar DL 

P. Ccelii.s Balbinus Vihullu* Pius. 
Hadriani 21. 

138 Coss. Niger. 

Camerinua. 

Death of L. Verus, January 1st Hadrian aJopt* 
Antoninus Piua, and gives him the title ofC*4ar, 
February 25th. Death of Hadrian (tel. rg) t Jury 
10th. 

Antoninus Pits emperor (a;t. 51). 

139 Coss. Imp. T. JHL Cesar Ant Augustus Pius n. 

C. Bruttius Pra-aena H. 
Antonini 2. 

110 Coss. Imp. T. A Cirsar Ant. Augustus Piua ITL 

M. ifllius Aurelius Verus Ctvsar (afteneard Imp. 
Augustus). 
Antonini 3. 

141 Coss. M. Peduc«U3 Stloga Pri»cinu*. 

T. Hoenius Scverus. 
Antonini 4.— Death of Faustna. 

142 Coss. L Statiua Quadratus. 

C. Cuapius Rufinua. 
Antonini 5. 

143 Coss. C. Belliciu a Torquatus. 

Ti. Claudius Atticua Hcrode*. 
Antonini 6. 
Fronto flourished. 

144 Cots. P. Lollianus Avitua. 

C. Gavius Maximus. 
Antonini 7. 

VaJcntinua, the ht retic, flouriahed. 

145 Coss. Imp. T. vEl. Cs>«. Ant Aug. Piua IV. 

M. Aurelius Craar II. 
Antonini 8 

146 Coss. Sex. Frurius Claru* II. 

Cn. Claudius Severn*. 
Antonini 9.— Birth of Severus. 

147 Coss. C. Anuiua Largua, 

C. Prast. Pacatus Meaaalinn*. 
Antonini 10.— M. Aureliu* marrier Faustina, the ea~ 



CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES OF 



peror's daughter, and receives the tribunician pow- 
er. The Ludi Sasculares celebrated. 

Galen (set 17) begins to study medicine. 

Appian published bis Histories about this time. 

148 Coss. Torquatus. 

Salvius Julianus. 
Antonini 11. 

149 Coss. Ser. Scipio Orfitus. 

Q. Nonius Priscus. 
Antonini 12. 

150 Coss Gallicanus. 

. . Antistius Vetus. 
Antonini 13. 

Marcian, the heretic, flourished. 

151 Coss. Sex. Quintilius Condianue. 

Sex. Quintilius Maximus. 
Antonini 14. 

Justin Martyr publishes his Apology. 

152 Coss. M. Acilius Glabrio. 

M. Valerius Homullus. 
Antonini 15. 
Hegesippus flourished. 

153 Coss. C. Bruttius Praesens. 

A. Junius Rufinus. 
Antonini 16. 

154 Coss. L. iElius Aureiius Commodus (afterward Imp. 

Cses. Aug.). 
T. Sextius Lateranus. 
Antonini 17. 
Birth of Bardesanes. 

155 Coss. C. Julius Severus. 

M. Junius Rufinus Sabinianus, 
Ex. Kal. Nov. Antius Pollio. 

Opimianus. 

Antonini 18. 

156 Coss. M. Ceionius Sih'anus. 

C. Serius Augurinus. 
Antonini 19. 

157 Coss. M. Civica Barbarus. 

M. Metilius Regulus. 
Antonini 20. 

158 Coss. Sex. Sulpicius Tertullua. 

C. Tineius Sacerdos. 
Antonini 21. 

159 Coss. Plautius Quintilius. 

Statius Priscus. 
Antonini 22. 

Galen (jet. 29) at Pergamus. 

160 Coss. Ap. Annius Atilius Bradua. 

T. Clodius Vibius Varus. 
Antonini 23. 

161 Coss. M. jElius Verus Caesar HI. 

L. jElius Aureiius Commodus II. 

Death of Antoninus Pius (set. 74), March 7. 

M. Aurelius (set. 39) emperor. He associates with 
him in the empire L. Verus (ast 31). There are 
thus two Augusti. Birth of Commodus, eon of M. 
Aureiius, on August 31st. 

162 Coss. Q. Junius Rusticus. 

C. Vettius Aquilinus. 
Suf. Q. Flavius Tertullus. 
Aurelii 2.— War with the Parthians. Veres sets forth 
to the East, to conduct the war against the Parthi- 
ans. M. Aureiius remains at Rome. 

163 Coss. M. Pontius Lselianus. 

Pastor. 

Suf. Q Muatius Priscus. 
Aurelii 3. — Parthian war continued 



164 Coss. M. Pcmpeius Macrinus. 

P. Juventius Celsus. 
Aurelii 4. — Parthian war continued. Marriage of Ve- 
rus and Lucilla. 

165 Coss. M. Gavius Orfitus. 

L. Arrius Pudens. 
Aurelii 5. — Parthian war continued. 

166 Coss. Q. Servilius Pudens. 

L. Fufidius Pollia. 
Aurelii 6. — Parthian war finished. Triumph of 3t, 

Aurelius and Verus. Commodus receives the titk 

of Caasar. 
Martyrdom of Polygarp. 

167 Coss. Imp. Cass. L. Aur. Verus August. III. 

M. Ummidius Quadratus. 
Aurelii 7.— A pestilence at Rome. War with the Has- 
comanni and Quadi. Both emperors leave Rome,, 
in order to carry on this war, and winter at Sir- 
mium. 

Galen (set. 37) practices medicine at Rome during the 
pestilence. 

168 Coss. L. Venuleius Apronianus II. 

L. Sergius Paullus H. 
Aurelii 8. — The barbarians submit to the empercsr^ 

but soon renew the war. 
Athenagoras writes his Apology. 

169 Coss. Q. Sosius Priscus Senecio. 

P. CcbIius Apollinaris. 
Aurelii 9.— Death of Verus (aBt. 39). 

170 Coss. M. Cornelius Cethegus. 

C. Erucius Clarus. 
Aurelii 10. — Aureiius continues the war against &» 
Marcomanni. 

171 Coss. T. StatiiiuB Severus. 

L. Alfidius Herennianus. 
Aurelii 11. 

172 Coss Maximus. 

Orfitus. 

Aurelii 12.— Aureiius continues the war against Cke 
Marcomanni ; he assumes the title Germ anient 
which is also conferred upon Commodus. 

173 Coss. M. Aureiius Severus II. 

Ti. Claudius Pompeianuf . 
Aurelii 13. 

174 Coss Gallus. 

Flaccua. 

Aurelii 14. — Aureiius continues the war against the 
Marcomanni. Victory over the Quadi. Uiraefe 
of the Thundering Legion. (Vid. p. 131, b.) 

175 Coss. Calpurnius Piso. 

M. Salvius Julianus. 
Aurelii 15. — Peace concluded with the Marcoma»m 
and the other barbarians. Revolt of Cassiua Avidi- 
us in the East : he is slain after three months. Au- 
reiius goes to the East. Commodus receives tbe 
toga virilis. De3th of Faustina. 

176 Coss. T. Vitrasius Pollio II. 

M. Flavius Aper II. 
Aurelii 16. — Aureiius visits Athens on his return front 
the East. He triumphs on December 23d wilb 
Commodus. 

177 Coss. Imp. L. Aureiius Comm odus Aug. 

M. Plautius Quintilius. 
Aurelii 17. — Commodus receives the tribunician pow- 
er. Persecution of the Christians in Gaul. 
Irenseas becomes Bishop of Lyon in Gaul. 

178 Coss. Gavius Orfitus. 

Julianus Rufuf. 



ROMAN HISTORY. 



Aurelii 18—lienewal of the war with the Marcoman- 
ni and the northern barbarians. Aureliua sets out 
with Commodus to Germany. Earthquake at 
Smyrna. 

179 Coss. Imp. L. Aurelius Commodus Aug. II. 

P. Marcius Verus. 

Ex Kal. Jul. ]>. H.jhius Pertinax (afterward 
Imp. Caes. Aug.). 
M. Didius Severus Julianua (after- 
ward Imp. Caja. Aug.). 
Aurelii 19.— Defeat of the Marcomanni. 

180 Coss. C. Bruttius Pra^ene. 

Sex. Quintilius Condianus. 
Death of M. Aurelius (a>t. 58) at Viudobona (Vienna) 

or Sirmium, March 17th. 
Commodus (mt 19) emperor. Commodus makes 

peace with Dm Marcomanni and other barbarians, 

and returns to Rome. 

181 Coss. Imp. M. Aurelius Commodus Antoninus Aug. III. 

L. Antistius Burma. 
Commodi 2. 

182 Coss. MamerUnu-. 

Rufus. 

Ex Kal. Jul. Jimilius Juncua. 

Atihus Severus. 

Comrnodi 3. 

183 Coss. Imp. M. Aurelius Commodus Antoninus Aug. IV. 

C. Aufidius Victorinus II. 
Ex Kal. Febr. L. 'futilius Pontius Gentianus. 
Ex Kal Mai. M. Ilerennius Secundus. 

M. Kgnalius Postumus. 

T. Pactumeius Magnus. 

L. Septinuus F 

Commodi 4. — Conspiracy of Lucilla, the sister of 
Commodus, against the emperor, but it is sup- 
pressed. 

184 Cose. L. Cossonius EffWi M;<rulht« 

Cn. Papirius ..Elianua. 
Suf. C. Octnvius Vindex. 
Commodi 5.— Ulpius Marcellus di (eafa the barbarians 
in Britain. 

183 Coss. Maternus. 

Bradua. 

Commodi 6. — Death of Perennu. 
Birth of Origin. 

186 Cos*. Imp. M. Aurelius Commodus Antoninus Aug. V. 

(M\ Aciliue) Glabrio II 
Commodi 7. 

187 Coss Crijpinufl, 

JElianus. 

Commodi 8. 

188 Coss. Fuscianus II. 

M. Scrvilius Silanus II. 
Commodi 9.— Birth of Caracalls 

189 Coss. Junius Silanus. 

SerYilius Siianus. 
Commodi 10.— Death of Clcander. 

190 Coss. Imp. M. Aurelius Commodus Antoninus Aug. VI. 

M. Perronius Septimianus. 
Commodi 11. 

191 Cost. (Caes)ius Pedo Apronianus. 

M. Valerius Bradua (Mauricus). 
Commodi 12. — Fire at Rome. Commodus assumes 
the name of Hercules. 

192 Cms. Imp. L. ,f]lius Aurelius Commodus Aug. VII. 

P. Heh ius Pertinax II. 
Commodi 13. — Commodus (set. 31) slain on Decem- 
ber 21st. 



193 Cost. Q. Sottus Kalco. ^ -| 
C. Julius Krucius Clarus. 

Suf. I laviua Claudius Sulpicianua. 

I.. Fal.iud Cilo Sepuraianua. 
Suf. K<d. M, lt . sihus Mes*ai». 
Suf. Kal. Jul. M\iiu. 

Probus. 

Pkktinax ( iC t. Go ) , mperor, reigned from January 
1st to March 2*h, when ho was slain. Th. rcapoti 
the pra-tonan troops put up the empire to »*le. 
which was purchased by M. Didius Bah iu. Juhanoa. 

tXJLUmn (a-t. W) emperor, r.-icrncd from Marrh '>ih 
to June 1st 

okptimius Skvk*C8 (wt 46) is proclaimed emperor 
by the legions in Paunonia. He comet to Rom* 
and is acknowledged as emperor by the senate. 
After remaining a short time at Rome he proceeds 
to the Fast, where the legions had declan d 1', 



nius Niger emperor. Severus rout. r< the mle of 



Caesar upon Clodius Albinu* in Britain. 
191 Cost. Imp. C*ea. L. Scptimius Severn* Au;ut.tu« II. 
D. Clodius Albinu8 Ca-sar. 
Severi 2 — Defeat and death of Niger. Se virus lay* 
siege to Byzantium, which continue* to hold ouJ 
after the death of Niger. 

195 Cost. Scapula Teriullu*. 
Tineius Clemens. 

Severi 3.— Siege of ByzanUum ( ontinucd. Svveruj 
crosses the Euphrates, and subdues the MetojK>u. 
mian Arabians. 

196 Coss. C. Domitius Dexter EL 
L. Valerius Mesaala Thrasia Priseus. 

Severi 4.— Capture of Byzantium. Severn* return* 
to Rome. lie confers the title of C» ».ar upon bis 
son Bassinnu*. whom he calU M. Aureliua Antoni 
nus, but who is better known hy his nit knumc Car- 
acalla. Sevcrus proceeds to Gaul to oppose Alt* 
nus. 

197 Cots. Ap. Claudius Luteranue. 
Rufinus. 

Severi 5. — Albinus defeated and plain by Severu*. 
February 19th. Sererus proceeds to the Fast t» 
carry on war against the Parthiani. 

198 Cost Saturninus. 

Callus. 

Severi 6. — Severus curries on the Parthian war » itfc 
success : he takes Ctesiphon. Caracalla is declared 
Augustus, and his brother, L. Septimiua Geta. Cae- 
sar. 

199 Con. P. Cornelius Annulinua IL 
M. Aufidius Pronto. 

Severi 7. — Severus lays siege to Atra, but is repulsed- 

200 Cost. Ti. Claudius Severus. 
C. Aufidius Victorinus. 

Sevori 8. — Severus continues in the Fast 

201 Cost. L. Annius Fabianus. 
M. Nonius Arrius Mucinus. 

Severi 9. — Severus continues in the Fast with Cara- 
calla. Caracalla receives the toga virilis. 

202 Coss. Imp. Caes. L. Septim. Severus Aug. III. 
Imp. Cats. M. Aurel. Antoninus Aug. 

Severi 10.— Persecution of the Christiana. Severn* 
returns to Rome. He celebrates the Decennalk 
and the marriage of Caracalla and Plauulla. 

203 Coss. C. Fulvius Plautianus II. 
P. Septimius Geta. 

Severi 11. — Plautianus slain. The arch of Severn*, 
celebrating his victories, is dedicated in this year. 



1004 



CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES OF 



A.D. 

Origen (aet 18) teaches at Alexandres. 
204 Coss. L. Fabius Cilo Septimianus II. 
M. Annius Flavius Libo. 
Seven 12.— The Ludi Sseculares are celebrated. 
905 Coss. Imp. Caes. M. Aurel. Antoninus Ang. II. 
P. Septimius Geta Caesar. 
Seven 13. 

206 Coss. ML Nummius Albinus. 

Fulvius ^Emilianus. 
Severi 14. 

207 Coss Aper. 

. . . Maximus. 
Severi 15. — War in Britain. 
Tertullian publishes his work against Marcion. 
203 Coss. Imp. Cass. ML Aurelius Antoninus Aug. HI. 
P. Septimius Geta Caesar II. 
Severi 16. — Severus goes to Britain with hie two sons 
Caracalla and Geta. 

209 Coss. Civica Pompeianus. 

Lollianus Avitus. 
Severi 17. — Severus invades Caledonia. Geta re- 
ceives the title of Augustus. 
Tertullian writes his treatise De PaUio. 

210 Coss. M\ Acilius Faustinus. 

Triarius Rufinus. 
Severi 13.— The wall in Britain completed by Seve- 
rus. 

Papinian, the jurist and the prefect of the praetorians, 
was with Severus in Britain. 
311 Coss. (Q. Hedius Rufus) Lollianus Gentianus. 
Pomponius Bassus. 
Death of Severus (set. 64) at Eboracum (Y ork), Feb- 
ruary 4 th. 

Caracalla (set. 23) emperor ; but his brother Geta 
(aet 22) had been associated with him in the em- 
pire by their father. Caracalla and Geta return to 
Rome. 

Tertullian publishes his letter ad Scapulam. 

212 Coss. C. Julius Asper ft 

C. Julius Asper. 

Caracallae 2.— Geta murdered by his brother's orders. 
Papinian and many other distinguished men put to 
death. 

213 Coss. Imp. M. Aurelius Antoninus Aug. IV. 

D. Coelius B albinus II. 

Suf. (M. Antonius Gordianus (afterward Imp. 
Caes. Aug.). 
HeMus Pertinax.) 
Caracallae 3. — Caracalla goes to Gaul. 

214 Coss Messalla. 

Sabinus. 

Caracallae 4. — Caracalla attacks the Alemanni, visits 
Dacia and Thracia, and winters at Nicomedia. 

215 Coss Laetus EL 

Cerealis. 

Caracallae 5. — Caracalla goes to Antioch and thence 
to Alexandres. 

216 Coss. Vatius Sabinus II. 

Cornelius Anulinus. 
Caracallae 6. — Caracalla passes the Euphrates and 
makes war against the Parthians. He winters at 
Edessa. 

217 Coss. C. Bruttius Pnesens. 

T. Messius Extricatus II. 

Caracalla (set 29) slain near Edessa, April 8th. 

Macrinus (ffit. 53) emperor. He confers the title of 
Csesar upon his son Diadumenianus. He is de- 
feated by the Parthians, and purchases peace by the 



A.D. 

payment of a large sum of money. He then re- 
tires to Syria. 
Dion Cassius is at Rome at the time of Caracalla'i 

death. 

218 Coss. Imp. Cass. M. Opil. Sev. Mac. Aug. DL 

C. Oclatinus Adventus. 
Suf. Imp. Caes. M. Aurelius Antoninus (Ela- 
gabalus) Aug. 
Sedition of the army during their winter in Syria : a 
great part espouse the cause of Elagabalus. Ma- 
crinus is defeated near Antioch, June 8th, and is 
shortly afterward put to death. 
Elagabalus (aet 14) emperor. He winters at Nice- 
media. 

Dion Cassius is governor of Pergamus and Smyrna. 

219 Coss. Imp. Caesar M. Aurelius Antoninus (Elagabalus) 

Aug. n. 
Q. Tineius Sacerdos IL 
Elagabali 2. — Elagabalus comes to Rome. 

220 Coss. Imp. Caes. M. Aurel. Anton. (Elagabalus) Aug. 

HL 

P. Valerius Eutychianus Comazon II. 
Elagabali 3. 

221 Coss. Gratus Sabinianus 

Claudius Seleucus. 
Elagabali 4. — Elagabalus adopts and confers the title 
of Caesar upon Bassianus Alexianus (set. 13), better 
known by the name of Alexander Severus. 

222 Coss. Imp. Caes. M. Aurel. Anton. (Elagabalus) Aug. 

IV. 

M. Aurelius Alexander Caesar. 
Elagabalus (set 18) slain March 11th. 
Alexander Severus emperor (aet. 14) 
The jurists Ulpian and Paulus are among the coun- 
sellors of Alexander Severus. 

223 Coss. L. Marius Maximus II. 

L. Roscius J£lianus. 
Alexandri 2. 

224 Coss. Claudius Julianus II. 

L. Bruttius Quinctius Crispinus. 
Alexandri 3. 

225 Coss Fuscus II. 

Dexter. 

Alexandri 4. 

226 Coss. Imp. Caes. M. Aur. Sev. Alex. Aug. IL 

Marcellus II. 

Alexandri 5. — The Parthian empire overthrown by 

Artaxerxes (Ardishir), who founds the new Persian 

kingdom of the Sassanidae. 
Origen at Antioch. 

227 Coss Albinus. 

Maximus. 

Alexandri 6. 

228 Coss Modestus U. 

Probus. 

Alexandri 7. — Ulpian killed by the soldiers. 
Origen a presbyter. 

229 Coss. Imp. Caes. M. Aur. Sev. Alex. Aug. III. 

Cassius Dio H. 
Alexandri 8. 

Dion Cassius consul a second time : after his second 

consulship, he retired to Bithynia 
Origen composes several works at Alexandre*. 

230 Coss. L. Virius Agricola. 

Sex. Catius Clementinu6. 
Alexandri 9. 

231 Coss. . . . Claudius Pompeianus. 

T. Fl. . . . Pelignianus. 



ROMAN HISTORY. 



1006 



Alexandri 10.— Alexander marches against the Per- 
sians. 

Origen leaves Alexandrea and settles at Cajsarea. 

232 Coss Lupus. 

Maximus. 

Alexandri 11.— Alexander defeats the Persians in Mes- 
opotamia, and returns to Antioch. 

Gregory of Neoca^area is the disciple of Origen at 
CaBsarea. 

233 Coss Maximus. 

Paternus. 

Alexandri 12.— Alexander rL . t urns to Rome and tri- 
umphs. 
Birth of Porphyry. 

234 Coss Maximus II. 

(C. Ccelius) I'rbanus. 
Alexandri 13. — Ale xander carries on war against the 
Germans, 

235 Coss. Severus. 

Quinctianus. 

Alexander (set. 27) slain by the soldiers in Gaul, Feb- 
ruary 10th. His mother Mamma?a slain along with 
him. 

Maximinus emperor. 

Origen writes his De Mnrtyriu. 

236 Coss. Imp. Maximinus Pius Aug. 

Africanus. 

Maximini 2. — Maximinus defeats the Germans. 

237 Coss. (P. Titius) MpNM 

(L. Ovinius Rusticus> Cornelianus. 
Suf. Junius .^linnus 

Messius Gallicauus. 
Maximini 3. — Maximinus again defeats the Germans 
and winters at Sirmium. 

238 Coss Pius 

Proculus Pontianus. 
Suf. Ti. Claudius Julianus. 
. . Celsus JEhanus. 
Gordianus I. anil II.. father and son, were proclaim- 
ed emperors in Africa, and are acknowledged by 
the senate : they were proclaimed in February and 
were slain in March Alter their death, M. Clo- 
dius Pupienus Maximus and D. Cadius Batbinus 
are appointed emperors by the senate: they confer 
the title of Ca?sar upon Gordianus, a grandson of 
Gordianus I. Maximinus hears of the elevation of 
the Gordians in his winter quarters at Sirmium, and 
forthwith marches toward Italy. When he reaches 
Hemona, about 240 miles from Sirmium, he hears 
of the elevation of Maximus and Balbinus. He 
reaches Aquileia (o0 miles from Hemona), and is 
there slain by his soldiers, along with his son Maxi- 
mus, in April. Maximus, the emperor, was then at 
Ravenna i he returns to Rome, and is slain along 
with Balbinus, about the middle of June. The sol- 
diers proclaim 
Gobdiant.-' III. emperor (set 12). 

239 Coss Imp, Ca-s. M Antoniua Gordianus (III.) Aug. 

M. Acilius Aviola. 
Gordiani t, 

Philostratu? flourished. 

240 Coss Sabinus IL 

Venustus. 

Gordiani 3— Sedition in Africa suppressed. 

241 Cos. Imp. Cass. M. Antonius Gordianus (III.) Pius 

Fel. II. 

Gordiani 4.— Gordian marries the daughter of Misith- 
eue, and sets out to the East to carry on the war 



against the Persians. Sapor I. succec.U his father 
Artaxerxes aa King of Persia. 
242 Coss. C. Vcttius Atticus. 

C. Asinius I'ru-lrxtatus. 
Gordiani 5.— Gordian, with the assistance of hu fa 

ther in-law Misitheus, defeats the Persians. 
Plotinus is in Persia. 
213 Coss. L. Annius Arrianus. 

C. Ccrvonius Papu*. 
Gordiani 6.— Death of Misitheus. 

244 Coss. (L. Artncnius) taapMuM 

(A. Fulviua) A-'.milianus. 
Gordian (u-t. IB) is slain by the contrivance of Phil 
ip, the praitorian pnefect in Mesopotamia, in the 
spring. 

Philippus I. emperor. Philip confers the title of Cs»- 
sar upon his son. the young, r Philip, an J returns to 
Rome. 

Plotinus is at Rome. 

245 Coss. Imp. Cuusar M. Julius Philippus Augustus. 

. . . Junius Titianus. 
Philippi 2.— War with the Carpi, on the Danul*. 

246 Coss Projscn*. 

Albinus. 

Philippi 3. 

Origen (ajL CI) composes his work against Cclsua 
about this time. 

247 Coss. Imp. Ca?sar M. Julius rhi'.ippus Augustus II. 

M. Julius Philippus Ca-sar. 
Philippi 4. — Philip bestows the rank >.f Augustus upon 
his son, the younger Philip. 
243 Coss. Imp. Ca-sar M. Julius Philippus (I.) Aug. 111. 

Imp. Ca-sar M. Julius Philippus (II.) Aug. II. 
Philippi 5.— The Ludi Savculares are celebrated. 
Cyprian is appointed Bishop of Carthage. 

249 Coss. (A. Fulvius) jEmilianus II. 

. . Junius Aquilinus. 
The two Philips arc slain in September or October, 
at Verona. 

Decius emperor. He confers the title of Ca »ar upon 
his son Herennius Utruscuj. 

250 Coss. Imp. Ca-sar C. Messius Quintus Trajanus De- 

cius Aug. II. 
Annius Maximus Gratug. 
Decii 2. — Great persecution against the Christians, ir. 
which Fabianus, bishop of Rome, perishes. 

251 Coss. Imp. Cwsar C. Messius Quintus Trnjanus De- 

cms Aug. III. 
Q. Herennius Ftrueeus Messius Decius Ciesar. 
Decius carries on war against the Goths. He is slain 
in November, together with his son Herennius 
Etruscus. 

Gallus Trebonianus emperor. The title of Augu* 
tus is conferred upon Hostilianus, a younger sob 
of Decius. Gallus confers the title of Caesar upon 
his son Volusianus. 

252 Coss. Imp. Cxs. C. Vibius Trebonianus Gallus Aug. II 

C. Vibius Volusianus Caesar. 
Galli 2.— Volusianus is elevated to the rank of Augus- 
tus. Gallus returns to Rome. Commencement ol 
a great pestilence, which rages for 15 years. Death 
of Hostilianus. 

253 Coss. Imp. Cwsar C. Vibius Volusianus Augustus IL 

M. Valerius Maximus. 
Galli 3.— jEmilianus is proclaimed emperor in Mco- 
sia. Valekianus is proclaimed emperor in Raetia. 
Death of Origen (aet 68). 

254 Coss. Imp. Ctea. P. Licinius Valerianua Augustus II 



1006 



CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES OF 



AD. 

Imp. Cffls. P. Licinius Gallienus Augustus. 
jEmilianus marches into Italy. Gallus and Volusia- 
nus slain by their own troops in February. jEmil- 
ianus slain by his own troops in May. Valerianus 
emperor. His son Gallienus is made Augustus. 

255 Coss. Imp. Cces. P. Licinius Valerianus Augustus III. 

Imp. Caesar P. Licinius Gallienus Augustus II. 
Valeriani et Gallieni 3. — Tho barbarians begin to in- 
vade the empire on all sides. The Gotha invade 
Illyricum and Macedonia. Gallienus is in Gaul. 

256 Coss. (M.) Valerius Maxim us II. 

(M\ Acilius) Glabrio. 
Val. et Gallieni 4. — The Franks invade Spain. 

257 Coss. Imp. Cssar P. Licinius Valerianus Aug. IV. 

Imp. Caesar P. Licinius Gallienus Aug. III. 
(Suf. a. d. XL K. Jun. M. Ulpius Crinitus. 

L. Domitius Aurelia- 
aus (afterward Imp. 
Caes. Aug.). 

Val. et Gallieni o. — Aurelian defeats the Goths. 
358 Coss. Memmius Tuscus. 

Bassus. 

Val. et Gallieni 6.— Valerian sets out for the East, to 
carry on war against the Persians. Persecution of 
the Christians. While the empire is invaded by the 
barbarians, and Valerian is engaged in the Persian 
war, the legions in different parts of the empire pro- 
claim their own generals emperors. These usurp- 
ers are known by the name of the Thirty Tyrants. 
Postumus is proclaimed emperor in Gaul. The 
Gotbs take Trapezus. 
Martyrdom of Cyprian. 

'359 Coss ^milianus. 

Bassu3. 

Val. et Gallieni 7.— The Goths plunder Bithynia. 
5160 Coss. P. Cornelius Sajcularia II. 
. . Junius Donatus (II.). 
Val. et Gallieni 8.— Saloninus, the son of Valerian, put 
to death by Postumus. Valerian is taken prisoner 
by Sapor, the Persian king. The Persians are driv- 
en back by Odenathus, the ruler of Palmyra. In- 
genuuB and Regalianus are proclaimed emperors. 

261 Coss. Imp. Caesar P. Licinius Gallienus Aug. IV. 

L. Petronius Taurus Volusianus. 
Gallieni 9. — Macrianus, Valens, and Calpurnius Piso 
are proclaimed emperors : the two latter are easily 
put down, but Macrianus marches from Syria to at- 
tack Gallienus. 

262 Coss. Imp. CsBsar P. Licinius Gallienus Aug. V. 

Faustinus. 

Gallieni 10. — Aureolus is proclaimed emperor: be de- 
feats and slays Macrianus, with his two sons, in Il- 
lyricum. The Goths ravage Greece and Asia Minor. 
The Persians take and plunder Antioch. 

263 Coss Albinus H. 

Maximus Dexter. 
Gallieni 11. 

Porphyry is at Rome in this and the following year. 

264 Coss. Imp. Ctssar P. Licinius Gallienus Aug. VI. 

Saturninus. 

Gallieni 12. — Odenathus is declared Augustus. First 
council upon Paul of Samosata. 

265 Coss. P. Licinius Valeriana Valeriani Aug. f. II. 

(L. Caesonius) Lucillus (Macer Bufinianus.) 
Gallieni 13. — Postumus continues emperor in Gaul, 

and repels the barbarians : he associates Victorinus 

with him in the empire. 
Death of Dionysius of Alexandres. 



266 Coss. Imp. Caesar P. Licinius Gallienus VII. 

Sabinillus. 

Gallieni 14. 

267 Coss Paternus. 

Arcesilaus. 

Gallieni 15.— Odenathus is slain, and is succeeded by 
his wife Zenobia, who governs with Vabalathus. 
Postumus is slain : many usurpers in succession 
assume the empire in Gaul : it is at last in posses- 
sion of Tetricus. 

268 Coss Paternus II. 

Marinianus. 

Gallienus slain in March by the arts of Aureolus. 
Claudius II., surnamed Gothicus, emperor. Aureo- 
lus slain. Claudius defeats the Alemanni. 
Porphyry retires to Sicily. 

269 Coss. Imp. Caesar M. Aurelius Claudius Aug. II, 

Paternus. 

Claudii 2.— Claudius gains a great victory over the 
Goths. Zenobia invades Egypt. 

270 Coss Antiochianus. 

Orfitus. 

Claudius again defeats the Goths. Death of CJaidius, 
at Sirmium, in the summer. Aurelian proclaimed 
emperor at Sirmium, and Quintillus, the brother 
of Claudius, at Rome. Quintillus puts an end to 
his own life. 

Aurelian emperor. He comes to Rome, and then 
proceeds to Pannonia, to repel the barbarians. Be- 
fore the end of the year he returns to Italy, to at- 
tack the Marcomanni and Alemanni, who are in 
Italy. 

Death of Plotinus in Campania. 
Paul of Samosata deposed. 

271 Coss. Imp. Caesar L. Domitius Aurelianus Aug. 1L 

Ceiouius Virius Bassus II. 
Aureliani 2. — Aurelian defeats the Marcomanni and 
Alemanni in Italy. Aurelian returns to Rome, and 
begins to rebuild the walls. 

272 Coss Quietus. 

. Voldumianus. 

Aureliani 3. — Aurelian goes to the East, and makes 
war upon Zenobia, whom he defeats and besiege* 
in Palmyra. Hormisdas succeeds Sapor as King 
of Persia. 

Manes flourished. 

273 Coss. M. Claudius Tacitus (afterward Imp. Caesar 

Aug.). 
. . Placidianus. 
Aureliani 4. — Aurelian takes Zenobia prisoner. He 
proceeds to Egypt, and puts down the revolt of 
Firmus. Varanes I. succeeds Hormisdas as King 
of Persia. 

Longinus put to death on the capture of Palmyra. 

274 Coss. Imp. Caesar L. Domitius Aurelianus Aug. ILL 

C. Julius Capitolinus. 
Aureliani 5.— Aurelian goes to Gaul to put down Tet- 
ricus, who had reigned there from the end of A.D, 
267. Submission of Tetricus. Aurelian returns to 
Rome and triumphs: both Zenobia and Tetricus 
adorn his triumph. Aurelian founds a temple to 
the Sun. 

275 Coss. Imp. Ca3sar L. Domitius Aurelianus Aug. IV. 

T. Nonius Marcollinus. 
Suf. Aurelius Gordianus. 

Vettius Cornificius Gordianus. 
Aurelian slain in March. After an interregnum of six 
months, M. Claudius Tacitus is proclaimed emperor. 



ROMAN 

A.D. 

Tacitus emperor. 
276 Cots. Imp. Ciwsar M Claudius Tacitus Aug. II. 

vEmilianus. 

Suf. jf,lius Mcorpinnus. 
Death of Tacitus. Florianus, the brother of Tacitu?, 
is proclaimed emperor at Rome, and M. Aureliue 
Probus in the Hast. Florianus sets out to the East 
to oppose Probus, but is slain at Tarsus. 
Probus emperor Y.iranes II. succeeds Varanes I. 
as King of Persia. 
877 Coss. Imp. Ca-sar M Aurclius Probus Aug. 
M. Aurelius Taullinus. 
Probi 2.— Probus defeats the barbarians in Gaul. 
1*78 Coss. Imp. Ciesar M Aurelius Probus Aug. II. 

Lupus. 

Probi 3.— Probus defeats the barbarians in Illyricum. 

279 Coss. Imp. Caesar M. Aurclius Probus Aug. III. 

Nonius Paternus II. 

Probi 4.— Probus reduces the Ieaurians and the Blem- 
myee. Saturoinus revolts in the East. 

280 Coss Messalla. 

Gratus. 

Probi 5. — Saturninus is slain. Probus returns to 
Rome, and then proceeds to Gaul, where he puts 
down the revolt of Proculus and Bonosus, either in 
this year or the following. 

Cyrillus is Bishop of Antioch. 

281 Coss. Imp. Caesar M. Aurelius Probus Aug. IV. 

Tiberianus. 

Probi 6. 

282 Coss. Imp. Caesar M. Aurelius Probus Aug. V. 

Victorimis. 

Probus is slain at Sirmium in .September. 
Cakus emperor. 

283 Coss. Imp. Ctes. M. Aurclius Cams Aug. 

M. Aurelius Carinus Can Aug. f. Cwsar. 

Suf. M. Aurelius Numerianus Cari Aug. f. 
Cassar. 
Matrouianue. 

Carinus and Numerianus, the sons of Carus, are as- 
sociated with their father in the empire. Carinus 
is sent into Gaul : ami Carus, with Numerianus, pro- 
ceeds to the East. Carus subdues the Sarmatians 
on his march from Sirmium to the East. Carus 
carries on the war against the Persians with suc- 
cess, but dies near Ctesiphon. 

284 Coss. Imp. Ctes. M. Aurelius Carinus Aug. II. 

Imp. Cbjs. M. Aurelius Numerianus Aug. II. 
Suf. C. Valerius Diocletianus (afterward Imp. 
Aug.). 
Annius Bassus. 
(Suf. M Aur. Valer. Maximianus [afterward 
Imp. Cn'8. Aug.] 
M. Junius Maximus.) 
Jiumerianus return? from Persia with the army, but 
is slain by A per at Perinthus in the beginning of 
September. 
Diocletian emperor. 

285 Coss. Imp. Cws. C. Valerius Diocletianus Aug. II. 

Aristobulus. 

Diocletiani A — War between Diocletian and Carinus 
in Mcesia. Carinus is slain. Diocletian winters at 
Nicomedia. 
®6 Coss. M. Junius Maximus If. 
Vettius Aquilinus. 
Diocletiani 3 — Maximianus is declared Augustus on 
April 1 st, and is sent by Diocletian into Gaul. Max- 
imianus defeats the barbarians in Gaul. 



HISTORY. 



1007 



287 Coss. 'mp. Cws. C. Val DiocMianua Aug. III. 

Imp. Ca-a M. Aur. Val. Maximianus Aug. 
Diocletiant 4 | Maximiani I — Maximianus again de- 
feaU the barbarian* in Gaul. Carauaiua uiumn 

the purple in Britain. 

288 Coss. Imp. Cast. M. Aur. Val. Maximiaau* Aog. II. 

Poraponiui Jnnuariui. 
Diocletiani 5: Maximiani 3. — Prepant.ons <<f Maxim 
ianus against Carausiua. 

289 Coss. M. Macrius Bassus. 

L. Ragonius Quintianu*. 
Diocletiani 6 : Maximiani 4.— Naval war between Ca* 
rausius and Maximianus. CarauMua d<TraU Max 
imianus. 

Mamertinus delivers his Panrgyricui Marimiono. 

290 Coss. Imp. Cjei. C. Valerius Diocletianus Aug. IV. 

Imp. Cws. M. Aur. Val. Maximianus Aug. III. 
Diocletiani?: Maximiani 5. — The emperor* grant 

peace to Cantusius and allow l,in> to retain lnd>- 

pendent sovereignty. 
Lactantius flourished in the n-ign of Diocletian. 

291 Coss Tibcriar.iH II. 

Cassius Dio. 

Diocletiani 8 : Maximiani 6 — Diocletian and Maximi- 
anus have a conference nt Milan. Maximianus cwl 
ebratcs the Quinquennalin. 

Mamertinus delivers the Gtnchliaa.' Mszinuano. 

292 Coss Hannibalianus. 

Asclepiodotua. 

Diocletiani 9 : Maximiani 7.— Con$tantiu* O*lorus and 
Galerius are proclaimed Cajsars j and the govern- 
ment of the Roman world is divided between the 
two Augusti and the two Ccsars. Diocletian had 
the government of the East, with Nicomedia as hij 
residence: Maximianus. Italy and Africa, with Mi- 
lan as his residence : Conatantius. Britain. Gaul, and 
Spain, with Treves as his residence : Galerius, Illyr- 
icum, and the whole line of the Danube, with Sir- 
mium as his residence. 

293 Coss. Imp. Caes. C. Valerius Diocletianus Aug. V. 

Imp. C»»s. M. Aur. Val. Maximianus Aug. IV. 
Diocletiani 10 ! Maximiani r>. — Carauaius is slain by 
Allectus, who assumes the purple, and maintains 
the sovereignty in Britain for three years. Varanea 
III. succeeds Varanes II. as King of Persia, and ia 
himself succeeded by Nar.«es in the course of tin 
same year. 
291 Coss. Fl. Val. Constantius Ciesnr. 

Gal. Val. Maximianus Ciwar. 
Diocletiani 11 : Maximiani i, 

295 Coss Tuacus. 

Anulinus. 

Diocletiani 12 : Maximiani 10 —Defeat of the Carpi. 

296 Coss. Imp. Csps. C. Valerius Diocletianus Aug. VL 

Fl. Val. Constantius Cwsar II. 
Diocletiani 13: Maximhni 11 — Constantias recovers 
Britain. 

Arnobius published his work Adcertus Gentes. 

297 Coss. Imp. Ca-s. M. Aur. Val. Maximianus Aug. V. 

Gal. Val. Maximianus Ca.-sar II. 

Diocletiani 14: Maximiani 12. — Diocletian defeat* 
Achilleus in Egypt Maximianus defeats the Quio 
quegentiani in Africa. Galerius carries on wtr 
against the Persinns unsuccessfully. 

Eumenius delivers the Panegyrxcnt Comtantio. 

298 Ct»ss. Anicius Faustus (If.). 

Virius Gallus. 
Diocletiani 15: Maximiani 13.— Galerhu collect* fresh 



CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES OF 



A.I). 



forces and defeats the Persians in Armenia. Narses 
concludes a peace with the Romans. 
1299 Coss. Imp. Caes. C. Valerius Diocletianus Aug. VII. 

Imp. Caes. M. Aur. Val. Maximianus Aug. VL 
Diocletiani 16 : Maximiani 14.— Defeat of the Marco- 
manni. 

Eumenius delivers his oration Pro Instaurandis 
Scholis. 

300 Coss. Fl. Val. Constantius Caesar III. 

Gal. Val. Maximianus Caesar III. 
Diocletiani 17 : Maximiani 15. 

301 Coss Titianus II. 

Nepotianus. 

Diocletiani 18 : Maximiani 16.— Hormisdas II. suc- 
ceeds Narses, king of Persia. 

302 Coss. Fl. Val. Constantius Caesar IV. 

Gal. Val. Maximianus Caesar IV. 
Diocletiani 19 : Maximiani 17. — Diocletian and Max- 
imianus triumph. 

303 Coss. Imp. Caes. C. Valerius Diocletianus Aug. VIII. 

Imp. Caes. M. Aur. Val. Maximianus Aug. VII. 
Diocletiani 20 : Maximiani 18.— Persecution of the 
Christians. Diocletian celebrates the Vicennalia at 
Rome. 

304 Coss. Imp. Caes. C. Valerius Diocletianus Aug. IX. 

Imp. Caes. M. Aur. Val. Maximianus Aug. VIII. 
Diocletiani 21 : Maximiani 19. — Diocletian enters upon 
his consulship at Ravenna on January 1st, and is at 
Nicomedia at the close of the year. 

305 Coss. Fl. Val. Constantius Ctesar V. 

Gal. Val. Maximianus Caesar V 
Diocletian abdicates at Nicomedia on May 1st, and 
compels Maximianus to do the same. Constantius 
and Galerius, the Caesars, are declared Augusti ; and 
Severus and Maximinus Daza are declared the 
Caesars. 

Constantius I. and Gaxekius emperors. 

306 Coss. Imp. Caes. Fl. Val. Constantius Aug. VI. 

Imp. Caes. Gal. Val. Maximianus Aug. VI. 
Suf. P. Cornelius Anulinus. 

Constantii 2 : Galerii 2. — Death of Constantius at 
York, in Britain. Constantinus, who was in Brit- 
ain at the time, assumes the title of Caesar, and is 
acknowledged as Caesar by Galerius. Severus, 
the Caesar, was proclaimed Augustus by Galerius. 
Maxentius, the 6on of Maximianus, is proclaimed 
emperor by the praetorian troops at Rome, but his 
authority is not recognized by the two Augusti and 
the two Caesars. The commencement of Constan- 
tine's reign is placed in this year, though he did not 
receive the title of Augustus till A.D. 308. 

Constantinus I. begins to reign. 

Vopiscus publishes the life of Aurelian. 

307 Coss. M. Aur. Val. Maximianus IX. 

Fl. Val. Constantinus Caesar. 

Constantini 2 : Galerii 3. — Severus is defeated and 
slain by Maxentius in Italy. Galerius makes an un- 
successful attack upon Rome. 

Licinius is declared Augustus by Galerius. Galerius 
confers the title of Filii Augustorum upon Constan- 
tine and Maximinus. 

308 Coss. M. Aur. Val. Maximianus X. 

Imp. Caes. Gal. Val. Maximianus Aug. VII. 
Constantini 3 : Galerii 4 : Licinii 2. — Galerius de- 
clares Constantine and Maximinus Augusti. There 
are thus four Augusti : 1. Galerius. 2. Licinius. 
3. Constantine. 4. Maximinus, besides the usurper 
Maxentius. 



A.D. 

309 First year after consulship of M. Aur. Val. Maximia- 

nus X. 
Imp. C. G. V. Maximi- 
anus Aug. VIL 
Constantini 4 : Galerii 5 : Licinii 3. — Sapor II. suc- 
ceeds Hormisdas II. as King of Persia. 

310 Second year after consulship of M. Aur. Val. Maximi- 

anus X. 
Imp. C. G. V. Maxim- 
ianus Aug. VIL 
Constantini 5 : Galerii 6 : Licinii 4.— Maximianus, the 
colleague of Diocletian, is put to death at Massilia. 
Euraenii Panegyricus Constantino. 

311 Coss. Imp. Caes. Gal. Val. Maximianus Aug. VIII. 

(Imp. Caes. Val. Licinianus Licinius Aug.) 

Constantini 6 : Licinii 5. — Edict to stop the persecu- 
tion of the Christians. Death of Galerius. Licinius 
and Maximinus divide the East between them. 

Eumenii Gratiarum Actio Constantino. 

312 Coss. Imp. Caes. Fl. Val. Constantinus Aug. II. 

Imp. Caes. Val. Licinianus Licinius Aug. II. 

Constantini 7 : Licinii 6.— War of Constantine and 
Maxentius. Constantine marches into Italy. Max- 
entius is finally defeated at Saxa Rubra, not far from 
the Cremera, and perishes in his flight, in the Tiber, 
Oct 27. The Jndictions commence Sept. 1st 

Iamblichus flourished. 

313 Coss. Imp. Caes. Fl. Val. Constantinus Aug. III. 

Imp. Caes. Val. Licinianus Licinius Aug. III. 
Constantini 8 : Licinii 7. — Constantine and Licinius 
meet at Milan ; Licinius marries Constantia, the 
sister of Constantine. War between Licinius and 
Maximinus : the latter is defeated at Heraclea on 
April 30th, and dies a few months afterward at Tar- 
sus. Constantine and Licinius thus become the 
sole Augusti. Edict in favor of the Christian*. 
Death of Diocletian. 

314 Coss. C. Ceionius Rufius Volusianus II. 

Annianus. 

Constantini 9 : Licinii 8. — War between Constantine 
and Licinius. Licinius is defeated first at Cibalis in 
Pannonia, and afterward at Adrianople. Peace is then 
concluded on condition that Licinius should resign 
to Constantine Ulyricum, Macedonia, and Achaia. 

315 Coss. Imp. Caes. Fl. Val. Constantinus Aug. IV. 

Imp. Caes. Val. Licinianus Licinius Aug. IV. 
Constantini 10 : Licinii 9. 

316 Coss Sabinus. 

Rufinus. 

Constantini 11 : Licinii 10 

317 Coss Gallicanus. 

Bassus. 

Constantini 12 : Licinii 11. — The rank of C?esar is con- 
ferred upon Crispus and Constantine, the sons of 
the Emperor Constantine, and upon Licinius, the 
son of the Emperor Licinius. 

318 Coss. Imp. Caes. Val. Licinianus Licinius Aug. V. 

Fl. Jul. Crispus Caesar. 
Constantini 13 : Licinii 12. 

319 Coss. Imp. Caes. Fl. Val. Constantinus Aug. V. 

Fl. Val. Licinianus Licinius Caesar. 
Constantini 14 : Licinii 13. 

320 Coss. Imp. Caes. Fl. Val. Constantinus Aug. VI. 

Fl. CI. Constantinus Caesar. 
Constantini 15: Licinii 14. — Crispus defeats the Frank* 
in Gaul. 

321 Coss. Fl. Jul. Crispus Ctesar II. 

Fl. CI. Constantinus Caesar 11. 



ROM AX HISTORY. 



1009 



A.D. 



Conatantini 16 : Licinii 13. 
Nazarii Pantgyrious Constantino. 

322 Coss. Fetronius Probianue. 

Aniciu* Julianus. 
Con6tantini 17 : Licinii 16.— Conetantine defeat* the 
Sarmatiaus, and pursues them across the Danube. 

323 Coss. Acilius Severus. 

Vettius Rufiuua. 
Constantini 13 — War between Constantinc and Li- 
cinius. Constantine defeats Licinius near Adriano- 
ple on July 3d, and again at Chalcedon on Septem- 
ber 18th. Licinius surrenders hiniBelf to Constan- 
tine. Constantiua, the eon of Constantinc, is ap- 
pointed Causar November 8th. Constantine is now 
sole Augustus, and his three sons, Crispue, Con- 
stantine, mid Constantius, are Caesars. 

324 Coss. FL Jul. Crispus C;esar III. 

Fl. CI. Constantinus Cossar III. 
Constantini 19.— Liciniua is put to death by command 
of Constantino. 

325 Coss Pauliinus. 

Julianus. 

Constantini 20. — The Vicenoalia of Constantinc. The 
Christian council of Nicaea (Nice) : it is attended 
by 318 bishops, and adopts the word oftoovatov. 

326 Coss. Imp. C*es. Fl. VaL Constantinus Aug. VII. 

Fl. Jul. Constantinu* Cassar. 
Constantini 21. — Constantine celebrates the Vicenna- 
lia at Rome. Crispus and the younger Liciniua 
are put to death. Constantine leaves Rome, and 
never returns to it again. 

32? Coss Constantinus. 

Maximu*. 

Constantini 22.— Death of Fausta. Constantine founds 
Helenopolis, in honor of hi3 mother Helena 

328 Coss Januarinus. 

. Justus. 

Constantini 23. 

Libanius (a?t. 14) is at Antioch. 

329 Coss. Imp. Cais. 11. Val. Constantinus Aug. VIIL 

Fl. CI. Constantinus CcBsar IV. 
Constantini S 1 , 

330 Coss. Gallicanus. 

Symmachus. 

Constantini 20.— Dedication of Constantinople, which 
Constantine makes the capital of his empire. 

331 Coss. (Annius) Baseus. 

Ablavius. 

Constantini 2b'. — Birth of Julian. 
Birth of Hieronymus (St. Jerome). 

332 Coss Pacatianus. 

Uilarianus. 

Constantini 27.— War with the Goths: they are de- 
feated by Constantine Caasar. 

333 Coss. Fl. Jul. Delmatius (aftericard Casar). 

Zenophilus. 

Constantini SB*— Constans, the son of Constantine, is 
made Cteaa*. Famine and pestilence in Syria. 

334 Coss. L. Ranius Acontius Optatus. 

Anicius Paullinus. 
Constantini 29.— The Sarmatians receive settlements 
in the empire. Calocrerus, a usurper in Cyprus, is 
slain by Delmatius. 

335 Coss. Julius Constantius. 

Ceionius Rufus Albinus. 
Constantini 30.— The Tricennalia of Constantine. 
Delmatius or Dalmatius, and Hanniballianus, the 
nephews of the emperor, are made Cffisars. A 
64 



freah distribution of the province* made anion*; 
the tire Clears. 
Athanaaius, bishop of Alexandre*, i* depoaed by the 

council at Tyre, and |0M into exile 

336 Cots. Fl. Popilliu* Ncpotiunu*. 

Facundu*. 

Constantini 31.— Marriage of Conjtantiu*. 

337 Coss Felicianu*. 

T. Fabius Titian u*. 
Death of Cunstantiuc in May : be i* baptized before 
bis death by Kuaebiu* of Nicomedia. lie wa* at 
the time making preparations for war with the 
Persian*. 

Constantinus EL, Constanti i s IL, and Constans 
are declared Au^usti. Tlie Cu-eor* Dclmntius and 
IlHnniballianus, and the other relation* of the loto 
emperor, are put to death. 

33d Coss Ursu*. 

Poleniiu*. 

Constantini II., Con6tantii II., Conatantia 2 — Cons tan 
tiu* carries on the war against the Persian*. Kirat 
siege of Nisibiu by tlie Persian*. 
Athanasius returns from exile. 
339 Cost. Imp. Cais. PI Jul. Constantius Aug. II. 
Imp. Ca-s. PL Jul. Constana Aug. 
Constanhni IL, Constantii IL, Constanti* 3 — Const** 
tiu8 carries on tlie war against the Peraian*. Con- 
6tantine is at Treves, and Constans at Jnrmium. 

310 Coss Acindyuus. 

L. Aradiu* Val. Proculus. 
Constautii II., Constanti* 4. — War between Constan- 
tino II. and Constans. Constantine II. i* defeated 
and slain : Constans, in consequence, become* »ole 
emperor of the We*4 
Acacius succeeds Kuaebiu* aa Hwbop of Ca*aarca. 

341 Coss. Antonius Marcellinus. 

Pttronius Probinu*. 
Constantii II., Constanti* .">.— Constan* carrie* on war 
against the Fruuks. A law u£;unst pngnn sacrifices 
promulgated. Arian synod of Antioch. Athanaaius 
is deposed by tlie synod of Antioch: he goee to 
Rome, and is protected by Constana. 

342 Coss. Imp. Ca;*. Fl. Jul. Constantiua Aug. III. 

Imp. Ca'!. PL Jul. Constana Aug. D. 
Con6tantii II., Conatantia 6.— Constana defeat* the 
Franks. Sedition at Constantinople. 

343 Cots. M. Ma-cius Memmiu* Furiu* Placidu*. 

(Fl. Pisidius) Romulu*. 

Constantii IL, Constanti* 7 — Conntan*. in Britain, car- 
ries on war against the Pict* and Scot*. 

Firmicus Maternus addresses hi* work Dc Errors 
Profanarum Rtligionum to Constantiua and Con- 
stans. 

344 Cos* LeoPtius. 

Salluatiu*. 

Constantii II., Constant.* 8.-Karthquake in Pontu*. 

345 Coss Amantius 

Albinus. 

Constantii II., Constanti* 9.-Earthquake« in Greece 
and Italy. 

346 Coss. Imp. Ca*. PL Jul. Constantiua Aug. IV. 

Imp. Ca;*. Fl. Jul. Constans Aug. III. 
Constantii II.. Constanti* 10,-Second .icge of Niaibis 

by the Persians. 
Libanius is at Nicomedia. 

347 Coss Rufinua 

Kusebius. 

Constantii JL, Constanti* ll.-Council of Sardica, 



CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES OF 



A.D. 

which pronounced the Council of Nice to be suffi- 
cient 

Athanasius restored by the Council of Sardica. 
Themistius's oration :rt/)i (piXavOpuziaS. 

348 Coss. FL Philippus. 

Fl. Salia. 

Constantii II., Con3tantis 12.— The Persians invade 

Mesopotamia : battle of Singara. 
Prudentius born. 

349 Coss Limenius. 

Aco Catuiinus. 
Constantii II., Constantis 13. 

Libanius's Panegyric upon Constantius and Constans. 
Athanasius returns to Alexandrea. 

350 Coss Sergius. 

Nigrinianus. 

Constantii II. 14.— Death of Constans at Helena. 

Magnen tius assumes the purple at Augustodunum 
(Autun), in Gaul, Ncpotianus at Rome, and Vetra- 
nio at Mursa, in Pannonia. Nepotianus Is slain in 
28 days after his elevation. Constantius marches 
to the West, and deposes Vetranio in December, 10 
months after his elevation. Third siege of Nisibis 
by the Persians during the absence of Constantius 
in the West. 

351 Coss. Magnentius Aug. 

Gaiso. 

Constantii II. 15. — Constantius appoints his cousin 
Gallus Caesar, and sends him to the East to conduct 
the war against the Persians. Magnentius appoints 
his brother Decentius Caesar. War between Con- 
stantius and Magnentius. Constantius defeats Mag- 
nentius at the battle of Mursa. Julian abandons 
Christianity. 

352 Coss. Decentius Csbs. 

Paullus. 

Constantii II. 16.— Constantius drives Magnentius into 
Gaul. Revolt of the Jews. 

353 Coss. Imp. Caes. Fl. Jul. Constantius Aug. VI. 

Fl. Jul. Constantius Gallus Caasar II. 

Constantii II. 17. — Magnentius is defeated by Constan- 
tius in Gaul, and puts an end to his own life. Mar- 
riage of Constantius and Eusebia. Gallus acts with 
cruelty at Antioch. 

Ammianus Marcellinus in the East with Ursicinus. 

Libanius is at Antioch. 

354 Coss. Imp. Caes. Fl. Jul. Constantius Aug. VII. 

Fl. Jul. Constantius Gallus Csasar III. 

Constantii II. 18— Constantius is in Gaul in the early 
part of the year, and winters at Milan. By his or- 
ders Gallus is put to death at Pola, in Istria. 

Ammianus Marcellinus is at Milan. 

Birth of Augustine. 

355 Coss. Fl. Arbitio. 

Fl. Lollianus. 

Constantii II. 19. — Silvanus assumes the purple in 
Gaul, but is slain. Julian is declared Ca38ar, and 
appointed to the command of Gaul. Synod of Mi- 
lan, by which Athanasius is condemned. 

Gregory of Nazianzus and Basil of Ceesarea study at 
Athens together. 

356 Coss. Imp. Cajs. Fl. Jul. Constantius Aug. VIII. 

Fl. CI. Julianus Caesar. 
Constantii II. 20.— First campaign of Julian in Gaul. 
Athanasius is expelled from Alexandrea, and retires 
to the desert. 

357 Coss. Imp. Caes. Fl. Jul. Constantius Aug. IX. 

Fl. CI. Julianus Caesar II. 



Constantii II. 21. — Second campaign of Julian : he de- 
feats the Alemanni, and crosses the Rhine. Con- 
stantius visits Rome. 

Ammianus Marcellinus is at Sirmium. 

358 Coss Datianus. 

Neratius Cerealis. 

Constantii II. 22.— Third campaign of Julian : he de- 
feats the Franks, and again crosses the Rhine. Con- 
stantius crosses the Danube, and carries on war 
against the Quadi. Earthquake at Nicomedia 

Aurelius Victor flourished. 

359 Coss. Fl. Eusebius. 

Fl. Hypatius. 

Constantii II. 23. — Fourth campaign of Julian: he 
crosses the Rhine a third time, and lays waste the 
country of the Alemanni : he winters at Paris. Sa- 
por invades Mesopotamia, and takes Amida after a 
long siege. Synods of Ariminum and Seleucia. 

Ammianus Marcellinus serves in the war against Sa- 
por. 

360 Coss. Imp. Caes. Fl. Jul. Constantius Aug. X. 

Fl. CI. Julianus Cassar III. 
Constantii II. 24. — Julian is proclaimed Augustus by 
the soldiers at Paris. Constantius winters at Con- 
stantinople, and carries on war in person against 
Sapor. Successes of the Persians, who take Sin- 
gara. Constantius winters at Antioch. 

361 Coss. Fl. Taurus. 

Fl. Florentius. 

Preparations for war between Constantius and Julian. 
Constantius sets out for Europe, but dies on his 
march in Cilicia. Julian meantime had moved 
down the Danube to Sirmium, and heard of the 
death of Constantius before reaching Constantinople, 

Julianus emperor. 

Aurelius Victor still alive. 

362 Coss. CI. Mamertinus. 

Fl. Nevitta. 

Juliani 2. — Julian spends the first part of the year at 

Constantinople and then sets out for Antioch, where 

he winters. He favors the pagans. 
Julian wrote his Casares and many of his other work* 

in this year. 
Libanius is patronized by Julian. 
Athanasius, who had returned to Alexandrea, is driven- 

out again by Julian. 

363 Coss. Imp. Cess. Fl. CI. Julianus Aug. IV. 

Fl. Sallustius. 

Julian attempts to rebuild the temple of Jerusalem. 
He set3 out from Antioch against the Persians, en- 
ters Mesopotamia, takes several towns, crosses the 
Tigris, but is obliged to retreat through want of 
provisions : in his retreat he is slain. 

Jovian emperor. He is compelled to conclude a dis- 
graceful peace with the Persians : he winters af 
Ancyra. 

Athanasius is restored by Jovian. 

364 Coss. Imp. Caes. Fl. Jovianus Aug. 

Fl. Varronianus Joviani Aug. f. N. P 
Jovian dies in February. 

Valentinian I. is proclaimed emperor on February 
6th. He associates his brother Valens with him 
in the empire. Valentinian undertakes the govern- 
ment of the West and gives to Valens the East 

Eutropius concludes his history. 

365 Coss. Imp. Caes. Fl. Valentinianus Aug. 

Imp. Cess. Fl. Valens Aug. 
Valentiniani I., Valentis 2. — Valentinian sets out for 



ROMAN HISTORY. 



1011 



AD 



Gaul to rep.-) the A te— n L Revolt of Precophu 
in the East War between Valens and Procopius. 
Libanius fjsjfc .">)) composes his Funeral Oration on 
Julian. 

366 Coss. Fl. Gratianus TTrtWUflllMil Aug. f. N. P. 

Dagalaiphu." 

Valentiniani I , FsJcotJfl 3. — The Alerar,nni are defeat- 

ed in Gaul. Pmcnpius is defeated and slain. 
Apollinarius, the heretic, flourished. 

367 Coss. Fl. Lupicinus. 

Fl. Jovinus. 

Valentiniani 1., Tateetia \. — Valens carries on war 
against the Goths. In Britain Theodoaius defeats 
the Picts and Scots. Ghatianvs, the son of Valen- 
tininn, is declared Augustus. 
363 Coss. Imp. Caes. Fl Valentinianus Aug. II. 
Imp. C*s. Fl. Valens Aug. II. 

Valentiniani I . Valentis 9: Gratiani 2.— Second cam- 
paign of the ( iothic war. The Alemanni take and 
plunder Moguntiacum. Valentinian crosses the 
Rhine and defeats the Alemanni. 

369 Coss. Fl. Valentinianus Valentiniani Aug. f. N. P. 

Victor. 

Valentiniani I.. Yalentis 6: Gratiani 3. — Third cam- 
paign of the Gothic war. Valentinian fortifies the 
Rhine. 

370 Coss. Imp. C:es. Fl Valentininnus Aug III. 

Imp. Cjes. Fl. Valens Aug. III. 
Valentiniani I., Valentis 7 : Gratiani 4. — Vnlens con- 
cludes a pei.e with the Gotha. Irruption of the 
Saxons : they are routed by Severus. 

371 Coss. Imp. Cms. PI Gratianus Aug. II. 

Sex. Anicius Petronius Probus. 
Valentiniani I., Valentis 8 : Gratiani . r >.— Valentinian 
passes the Rhine 

372 Coss. Fl. Domitius ModestM. 

Fl. Arintheu9. 
Valentiniani I., Valentis i) : Gratiani 6. — Revolt of 
Firmus in Mnuretania. 

373 Coss. Imp. Ca?s. Fl. Valentinianus Aug. IV. 

Imp. Ca?s. Fl. Valens Aug. IV. 
Valentiniani I.. Valcntis 10 : Gratiani 7.— Thcodcsius 

sent against 1 irmus. 
Death of Afhanasius on May 2d. 

374 Coss. Imp. Chrb. Fl. Gratianus Aug. III. 

C. Equitius Valens. 
Valentiniani I . Velenfis II: Gratiani 8—The Quadi 
and Sarmati:u.s invade Pannonia. Murder of Para, 
king of Armenia, by order of Valens 

375 Coss. Pes' Consulttlnm Gratiani III. 

Equitii. 

Valentiniani l, Valentis 12 : Gratiani 9.— Valentinian 
goes to Carnuntum and represses the barbarians. 
He dies at Bregetio November 17th. 

Valentinian It., the younger son of Valentinian L, 
is proclaimed Augustus. 

Ambrosius bishop of Milan. 

Epiphanius writes J lrp! oipfdWV. 

376 Coss. Imp. Ca:s. Fl. Valens Aug. V. 

Imp. Ctes. Fl. Valentinianus (II.) Aug. 
Valentis 13 : Gratiani 10 : Valentiniani II. 2. -The 
Huns expel the Goths. The Goths cross the Dan- 
ube, and are allowed hy Valens to settle in Thrace. 
Theodosius slain at Carthage. 

377 Coss. Imp. Cass. Fl. Gratianus Aug. IV. 

Fl. Merobaudes. 
Valentis 14 : Gratiani 11 : Valentiniani ft. 3. -The 
Goths rebel : war with the Goths. 



4.- The 



378 Com. hup. PL V.ilen* Au«,. V. 

Imp. Fl. Valentinianus (II.) Aug. IL 
Valentis l r > : (Irntiani 12: \ aletitiruani II. 
Goths ddbjj the tU BHDM with immense 
near Adrianople ■ Valens falls in the battle. Ora- 
lian hn.l previously defeated th<> Ixoticrtaca Ale- 
TTiimni ;it Ar .i ntariH, and advancing to Uio as 
listHnc of V;,l-::s '•• 1 "... hi -ird of th- de-uh ••( 
the latter. 

Atnmianus Marco Minus concludes his history. 
The Chmni'c.) > 'Hi- renymvi t-.-M nt the dkath of 
Vnlens. 

37i) Coss. D. Magnus Auaonius. 

Q. Clodius Hermcgeniknua Olybrio*. 
Gratiani 13: Valentiniani II. ." < Theodosii I. 1. 
Tiikodosius L is proclaimed Aujm-tua by GralUnus, 
and placed over the East. Thcodoaiua defeats tbn 
Goths. The Lombard* appear. ArUxeraes suc- 
ceeds Sapor II. r.s king of the Persians. 
Ausonius returni thanks to (iratiun. who had appoint- 
ed him consul (ad (irciianum wicrum act'} pro 
coneulatu). 

380 Coss. Imp. Fl Grulianus Au K '. V. 
Imp. PL Theodoaius (1.) Aug. 

Gratiani 14 : Va!< ntiniani II. : Theodosii I. 2.— The 
odosiua again defeats the Gotli9. He expels the 
Arians from the churchc. and is zealous fcr the 
Catholic faith. 
Death of Basil of Ca'sarcu. 

381 Coss. PL Syagrius. 
Ft Eacberius. 

Gratiani l. r > : Valentiniani IL 7 | Theodosii L 3 — Death 
of Athanaric, king of the Visigoth*. Council of 
Constantinople. 
Gregory of Xazianzus is declared biihop of Constan- 
tinople : he withdraws into retirement, and Nccta- 
rius i* chosen in his stead. 
362 Coss. Antonius. 

Afranius Syagrius. 
Gratiani 16: Valentiniani IL 8: Theodosii L 4 — 

Peace with the Goths. Alaric logins to reign. 
Ausonius broucht down his IMI to th»- cons'ils of 
this year. 
393 Coss. PL Mcrobaudes li. 
PL Saturninus. 
Valentiniani II. 9: Theodosii I. .-..-Aucauius li pro- 
claimed Augustus by his futhcr Theodoaius. Re- 
volt of Maximus in Britain. War between Gratia- 
nus and Maximus in Gaul. Gratianus is slain. 
Theodosius makes a peace with Maximus, by which 
Maximus is acknowledged emperor of Spain, Gaul, 
and Britain, and Valentinian is secured in the pos- 
session of Italy and Africa. Accession of tape r Mm 
king of Persia. 
384 Coss. Fl. Ricomer. 

Fl. C'learchus. 
Valentiniani II. 10: Theodosii I 6.- Birth of Hono- 
rius, the son of Theodosius. Treaty with Persia. 
Symmachu?. prefect of the city, addresses the em- 
perors, urging them to replace the altar of Victory 
in the senate ; but is opposed by Ambrose. 
3Sr> Coss. Imp. Ft Arcadius Aug. 
Bnuto. 

Valentiniani IL lit Theodosii I. 7. -Sacrifices pro- 
hibited in the East by a law of Theodosius. 

Augustine is at Milan. 
336 Coss. PL Ilonorius Theodofcii Aug 
Euodius. 



f N. P. 



CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES OF 




n. 



± = T. 'i at A^^z-z'z- 
3SS Cost. Imp FL 
Cynegias. 

Vfcientiniairi H 14 : Theodoea L 10.— War between 
The : i c-si ii or. i I i axitz~_s. Maximns is at A c co- 
le-la : his s:n Victcr is slais. ir Gaul by Arfaogastes. 
the ret-erai ::' The: orsiiis. Tce:o:sic.i — .acers a: 
MVvr. A:o~sicr. :: Tararr:; IV , kirg o: ?srrl=_ 

YL PramoQx& 

— Isics L.rcce, He 

ir. toe 




Cos*. Imp. F_ V 



(H) Aug. IV. 



IL 1- . Tbecicsci I li. — Massacre a: 
fay order of Theodosine : be is in con- 
ezcl-cec from the church at MLar iy 
Ami: rose :.r eLtbt -oaths The t-eucj'.e .:: Seritts 
at Alexandre* is destroyed. 
Death of Gregory off ■ 

391 Ccst. Taharzs. 

a Aarehas 

Yaiestfaaani IL 17 : Theodosh L 13.— Tbeodorins re- 
r^mi *iz C ~ r "T-^.rtir. it _ c- . 

392 C-*s. Imp. FL Areadias Aug. IL 

FL PuoLacis. 

The-: o: sot I. 14.— Vil;i zcciar. LLis slat- :y Ar'ztrasres. 

vrL: raise s Ftozntts :: the ettarLrf c: the West. 
Hieronymas writes lis wort Dt Viris Hi ifi ikmu 
333 Cos*. Imp. FL Theariknjjia X) Aug. in. 
Alwun liF"!'" * 
Theodosii L 15. — EoxoBir5 
by his father Theodosins. Preparations for 



Jr. J> 



Ctf*. Imp. FL Areadiios Aug ILL 
Imp. FL Eonorius Aug LL 

L 16.— War between Theodows sad Eu- 
Victcry :: TLeoi : scs rear Aqucleta : £-- 
Ar: ; r^sres Lol-S himsrh" tw: Lays 





O'.y "arias. 



Death of Theodosias at Mian 

AxcABrrs sr.lt arc. Hoxoarcs t'_ 11. emperors : 
Areadias of the East, and Honorios of the West. 
H-'Z:r/ii :s i irrmittei to the care of StcLchc. 
"■"■niayi iw" In nil 1 1 Areadias ie at fcrat g u w taaeJ 
ry F;-r.--£ — L; is -La or. N;-era:«er. arc aber. :v 
Eutropias. Alaric rarages Thrace and the north 
of Greece. StCicho crosses the Alps to attack hem. 

'Claudia*, the poet, nourished. 

Socrates, tie ecclesiastical 



Cost. Imp. FL Arcadia* Asg. IV. p 
Imp. FL HoDorias Aug. IIL f «*m 
Arcadh e; Honorii 2. — Alaric ravages the ■ 

Dt ILL Consul** Hmmti ii Aug. 

Rnjamv*. Hieronymas (St. J croim ) eonti 



c.:zce Birth c: 



397 Cast FL Cesarias. 

Nonius Atticas. 

lorii 3.— BeTolt of GOdo m 
it scarcity of food at 
the danghfcr of Areadias. 
its —r.:es -Ep-, iv„ 4) 
Death of Ambrose. 
Hieronymns (St. Jerome) < 
3." 5 Czsi. Imp. F- Hor.orius Aag. IV. 
FL Eutychianus. 
Arcadii et Honors A — Marriage of 
Maria, the daaghter of Strhcho. 
of Gfldo. 

Ciaudians Dt IV. Consult** Honorii Aug^ ZpukaLa- 

mum. Honorii Aug. et MvU, Dt BtUo GUdonico. 
Chrys:s: ~ so: eeds Nestorias as bishop of Cob- 



393 Con. 

FL Malfans Theodorma. 
Area&et HoBoril 5 — Birth of Pnleheria. the i 

daughter of Areadias. TrlbigHdus : 

F LL of Eutropius in his own 

haniwhed to Cyprus, 

death at Chalcedoc Accession of 

kmg of Persia. 
CtaBdian's fm FL Mailii Theodori cons* 



410 Chat F_ Snlicho. 




Arcadii et Hooorii 6.— Revolt of Gainw : he is de- 

feated, and rehres beyond the Danube. 
CT—ili ii 's In Primum CoxsMlatmm FL Scuickonis. 

SMpkius Severas nourished 

401 Cost. FL Vmcentias. 

FL Fravirta. 

ArcadS et Honorii 7. — Gams ia slaia in Thrare, and 
his bead is brought to Constantinople. Binh of 

Theodosius EL, die son of Areadias. 

402 Cyst. Imp. FL Areadias Ang. V. 

Imp FL Honorias Ang. V. 
Arcadii et Honorii 8. — Alaric inrades Italy, 
ffierooymua writes J dr. Rninvm. and 

403 Cost. Imp. Fl. Theodosias (IL> Aug. 

FL Ramoridos. 
Arcadii et Hooorii 9.— Battle of I 

of Alaric 
Claadians Dt Bdlo Getieo. 



by 

he is: 

404 Cjss. Imp. FL Honorias Aug. VL 



of Eudoxia : a to* 



Arcadii et Eonorii 10. — Ravages of the 

Death of Eudoxia. 
daudian'3 De VI. Grnsvlat* Honorii Aug. 

Chrysosiom is banished 
~.z L:5s. F_ 5rL c-: LL 



Arcadii et Honorii 11.— The ravages of the I 
co at i nn e. Radagaisos invades Italy, bat is < 

by 



ROMAN HISTORY. 



101.1 



Chryaostom is in nafe at Cucusne. 

406 Coss. Imp. Fl. Arcadius Aug. VI. 

Aniciua lVtronius Frobue. 
Arcadii et Honorii 12-The ravages of the Isaurians 

continue. The Vandals enter Gaul. 
Chrysoatom is in exilo at Arabissus. 
Hieronymus writes Adversus Vigilantium. 

407 Coss. Imp. Fl. Honorius Aug. VII. 

Imp. Fl. Theodoaius (II.) Aug. II. 
Arcadii et Honorii 13— The ravngea of the Isaurinns 
continue. Revolt of Constantine in Britain. Death 
of Chryaostom m hi* \v«y from Arabissus to Pityus. 

408 Coss. Aniciua Bussus. 

Fl. Philippus. 
Honorii 15: Theodosii II. 1.— Death of Arcadius and 
accession of Theodosius II. (est 7). Stilicho is 
alain at Ravenna. Alaric invades Italy and besieges 
Rome : he retina on the payment of a large aura 
of money. 
-.'09 Coss. Imp. Fl. Honorius Aug. VIII. 

Imp. Fl. Theodoaius (II.) Aug. lit 
Honorii 15 : Theodosii II. 2.— Alaric besieges Rome 
a second time, and by his influence Attalus is 
proclaimed emperor in place of Honorius. Pla- 
cidia, the daughter of Theodosius L, is taken pris- 
oner by Alaric. Revolt of Gerontius in Spain : he 
proclaims Ma- imus emperor. The Vandals invade 
Spain. 

410 Coss. FL Varan 

(Tcrtullus). 

Honorii 16: Theodosii II. a. — Attalus is deposed. 
Alaric besieges Rome a third time, which he takes 
and plunders. Death of Alaric near Rhegium, on 
his way to Sicily. He is succeeded by Ataulphua. 

The history of Zosimua ends. 

Birth of Proclua. 

411 Cos. Imp. Fl. Theodoaius (II.) lag. W. without col- 

league). 

Honorii 17: Thoodc^iill 4.— War between the usurp- 
ers Constnntim. and Gerontius. Expedition of Con- 
atantius, the general of Honorius, against Constan- 
tine and Gan I f .us Death of Constentine and Ge- 
rontius. 

412 Coss. Imp. Fl. Honorius Aug. IX. 

Imp. PL Theodosius (II.) Aug. V. 
Honorii 18 : Theodosii II. 5. — Jovinus is proclaimed 

emperor in Gaul. Ataulphus makes peace with 

Honorius and enters Gaul. 
Cyril succeed* Thcophilus at Alexandres. 

413 Cost. Lucius. 

Heraclianus, Slain in office. 
Honorii IS : Theodosii II. 6. — Jovinus id slain in Gaul 
by Ataulphus. Heraclianus revolts in Africa and 
invades Italy, but is defeated and slaiu 
314 Coss. fl Conatantius. 
Fl. Constans. 

Honorii fX) . Theodoaii IL 7. — Marriage of Ataulphus 
and Placidia, the daughter of Theodosius 1. Af 
talus is again proclaimed emperor by Ataulphua. 
Ataulphus passes into Spain. Pulcheria, the sister 
of Theodosius II., is proclaimed empress at Con- 
stantinople. Persecution of the Christians in Persia. 
415 Coss. Imp. Fl. Honorius Aug. X. 

Imp. Fl. Theodosius (II.) Aug. VI. 

Honorii 21 : Theodosii If. 8.— Ataulphus w slain in 
Spain, and is succeeded by Wallia 

Oroaius writes his Apologia contra. Pelagium dc Ar- 
bitrii lAbsrtatt. 



416 CW. Imp. Fl. Theodoaius (II , An- VII. 

Junius Quartus Palladiua 
Honorii 22: Theodoaii 0. 9.-WaJfa make. , 

with Houoriua, rcatorei tu him Ida alatrr PUddla. 

and surrenders Attalua. 
Pelagius is in Palestine, when- Hi< runymua (St. J« 

rome) is still alive. 
Rutiliua Numatianu* wri: | !, , /•. , .rrinm. 

417 Co5j. Imp. Fl. Honoriua Au:: M 

Fl. Conatantius II. 
Honorii 23: Theodosii II. lO.-Ilonoriua, fffaohal no 
children, gives his sister Placidia In mania r tn 
Conatantius. W«T of thfl (Mb* in Spain. 
Oroeiua ends hi* history. 
418* Cose. Imp. Fl Honoriua Aug. XII. 

Imp. FL Theodosius (II ) Aug. VIII. 
Honorii 21: Theodoaii II. 11. — The Goth* »-..S<lua 
Spain, and return to Oral: d.;:th of Wallir. who 
is succeeded by Theodorie L Aquitania ia ceded 
to the Gotha, whose king resides at Toloaa. 
119 Cbsa. Monaxiue. 
Plintas. 

Honoru 25 j— Theodoaii If. 12 — Birth of Valentinlan 
III., the son of Conatantius and Placidia. War be- 
tween the Sucvi and Vandals in Spain. 

420 Coss. Imp. FL Theodoaius (II.) Aug. IX. 

Fl. ConaUuitiua III. 
Honorii 2(i: Tluodo-ii II. 13 — Acceaaioo of Varanea 
V., king of Persh. Persecution of the Christiana 
in Persia. 

421 Coss. Euatathius. 

Agricoln. 

Honorii 27: Theodobii II. 14.— ConsUntiua ia dcclar- 
ed Augustus, but dies at the cud of seven months. 
Theodosius marries Eudocia (originally named 
Athenais). War with the Persians. 

422 Coss. Imp. Fl. Honorius Aug. XIII. 

Imp. Fl. Theodosiua (II.) Aug. X 
Honorii 28: Theodoaii II. 1".— Birth of Eudoxia, U» 
daughter of Theodoaius and Eudocia. Peace con- 
cluded with the Persian". 

423 Coss. Aaclepiodotua. 

Fl. Avitua Marinianue. 
Honorii 29: Theodcii IE aft Ffaattl of Houoriua ia 
AuguaL 

424 Coss. Caatinus. 

Victor. 

Theodoaii II. 17. — Val« ntininn, the son of ConcUn- 
tius and Placidia. is appointed Creaar by Theodo- 
aius at Thessalonica. Joannes immediutcly as- 
sumes the purple at Ravenna. 
423 Coss. Imp. FL Theodosius (II.) Aug. XI. 

Fl. Placidius Valrntinianus ('a-sar. 
Theodoaii II. 18 1 Valentiniani III. I. — ViUnDOUi 
III. is declared Augustus, and placed over the Wcet- 
Defcat and death of the usurper Joannes. Aftiua 
attacks the Goths in Gaul. 
Philostorgius concludes his history. 
496 Coss. Imp. FL Theodosius (II.) Aug. XII. 

Imp. FL Placidius Valentinianus (III ) Aug. U. 
Theodosii II. 19: Valentiniani III. 2. 
Proclus studies ftt Alexnndreo. 
4-27 Coss. Hierius. 

Ardaburius. 

Theodosii II. 20; Valentiniani III. 3.— Revolt of Booi 
facius in Africa. 
428 Coss. Fl. Felix. 

Taurus. 



1014 



CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES OF 



Theodosii II. 21 . Valentiniani III. 4.— Aetius carries 
on war in Gaul against the Franks. Death of Gun- 
deric, king of the Vandals, and accession of Gen- 
seric. 

Nestorius, the heretic, appointed patriarch of Con- 
stantinople. 

429 Coss. Florentius. 

Dionysius. 

Theodosii EL 22 : Valentiniani III. 5.— The Vandab 
cross over into Africa under their king Genseric : 
they were called into Africa by Bonifacius. 

430 Coss. Imp. Fl. Theodosius (II.) Aug. XIII. 

Imp. Fl. Placidius Valentinianus (III.) Aug. HL 
Theodosii IL 23: Valentiniani HI. 6— Bonifacius is 

reconciled with Placidia. War of Bonifacius with 

the Vandals. Siege of Hippo. 
Death of Augustine (jet. 75). 

431 Coss. Bassus. 

Fl. Antiochus. 
Theodosii IL 24 : Valentiniani HL 7. — Capture of 
Hippo. Defeat of Bonifacius, who leaves Africa. 
The Vandals masters of the greater part of Africa. 
Council of Ephesus. 
Nestorius is deposed at the council of Ephesus. 
332 Coss. Aetius. 

Valerius. 

Theodosii EL 25 : Valentiniani III. 8.— War between 
Bonifacius and Aetius. Death of Bonifacius. 

433 Coss. Imp. FL Theodosius (II.) Aug. XIV. 

Petronius Maximus. 
Theodosii II. 28 : Valentiniani HL 9. 

434 Coss. Arioviudus. 

Aspar. 

Theodosii H. 27 : Valentiniani HI. 10t— Attila and his 
brother Bleda become kings of the Huns. Honcria 
(aet. 16), the sister of Valentinian, is banished from 
Constantinople on account of incontinsncy : she is 
said, in consequence, to hare written to Attila to 
offer herself as his wife, and to invite him to invade 
the empire. 

Vincentius Lirinensis writes Aacersus Hureiicos. 

435 Coss. Imp. Fl. Theodosius (II.) Aug. XV. 

Imp. FL Flacid. Valentinianus (HI.) Aug. IV. 
Theodosii II. 23 : Valentiniani IH. 11.— Peace with 
Genseric. Aetius defeats the Burgundians in Gaul. 
433 Coss. Fl. Anthemius Isidorus. 
Senator. 

Theodosii II. 29 : Valentiniani III. 12. — War with the 
Burgundians and the Goths in Gaul. Thecdoric, 
king of the Goths, lays siea;e to Narbo. 

437 Coss. Aetius IL 

Sigisbuldus. 

Theodosii EL 30 : Valentiniani HL 13.— The war with 
the Burgundians and Goths continues. Aetius de- 
feats the Burgundians, and raises the siege of Nar- 
bo. Genseric persecutes the Catholics in Africa. 
Valentinian comes to Constantinople, and marries 
Eudoxia, the daughter of Theodosius. 

Proclus in Athens. 

438 Coss. Imp. FL Theodosius (II.) Aug. XVI. 

Anicius Acilius Glabrio Faustu3. 
Theodosii H. 31 : Valentiniani HI. 14.— The war with 
the Goths continues. The Codex Theodosianus is 
published. 

433 Coss. Imp. FL Theodosius (H) Aug. XVII. 
Festus. 

Theodosii II. 32 : Valentiniani III. 15.— Theodoric, 
who is besieged at Tolosa, sallies forth and defeats 



A.D. 

Litorius, the Roman general. Peace is made witi 
the Goths. Carthage is taken by Genseric. 
Nestorius is still living in exile. 

440 Coss. Imp. Fl. Placid. Valentinianus (III.) Aug. V. 

Anatolius. 

Tneodosii II. 3:] : Valentiniani III. 16. — Genseric in- 
vades Sicily. 
Leo is made Bishop of Rome. 
Salvianus publishes his work De Gubernatione Dei. 

441 Cos. Cyrus {without colleague). 

Theodosii II. 34: Valentiniani HI. 17. —War with the 
Vandals. The Huns, under Attila, pass the Danube 
and lay waste Illyricum. 

442 Coss. Eudoxius. 

FL Dioscorus. 
Theodosii II. 35: Valentiniani III. 18. — The Huns con- 
tinue their ravages in Illyricum and Thrace. 

443 Coss. Petronius Maximus II. 

Paternus s. Paterius. 
Theodosii II. 36 : Valentiniani IH. 19. 

444 Coss. Imp. Fl. Theodosius (II.) Aug. XVIH. 

Albinus. 

Theodosii II. 37 : Valentiniani III. 20.— Eudocia re- 
tires to Jerusalem. 

445 Coss. Imp. Fl. Placid. Valentinianus (III.) Aug. VI. 

Nonius s. Nomus. 
Theodosii II. 38 : Valentiniani III. 21. 

446 Coss. Aetius III. 

Q. Aurelius Symmachus. 
Theodosii II. 39 : Valentiniani III. 22.— In Spain, the 
Vandals defeat Vitus, the Roman general, and laj 
waste the Roman dominions. The Britons beg as- 
sistance of Aetius to defend them against the Picte 
and Scots, but it is refused them. 

447 Coss. Callepius s. Alypius. 

Ardaburius. 

Theodo sius II. 40: Valentin. ani III. 23. — Attila crosses 
the Danube, and lays waste the provinces of the 
Eastern empire in Europe : he penetrates as far a? 
Thermopylae Arrival of the Saxons in Britain. 

448 Coss. Runus Prsetextatus Postumianus. 

Fl. Zeno. 

Theodosii II. 41 : Valentiniani III. 24.— Embassies to 
and from Attila. Rechiarius, the king of the Suevi. 
ravages the Roman dominions in Spain. 

Priscus, the Byzantine writer, accompanies the em- 
bassy to Attila. 

449 Coss. Protogenes. 

Asterius. 

Theodosii II. 42 : Valentiniani III. 25. — A new embas- 
sy is sent to Constantinople. Council of Constan- 
tinople, which condemns Eutyches. Council of 
Ephesus, which condemns Flavianus. 

450 Coss. Imp. FL Placid. Valentinianus (III.) Aug. VII. 

Gennadius Avienus. 

Valentiniani III. 26: Marciani 1. — Death of Theodo- 
sius, who left no children. 

Marcian is declared emperor of the East : he marries 
Pulcheria. Attila threatens both the Eastern and 
Western empires. 

451 Coss. Imp. Fl. Marcianus Aug. 

Adelphius. 

Valentiniani III. 27 : Marciani 2.— Attila invades GauL 
He is defeated at Chalons by Aetius and Theodoric, 
the king of the Goths. Theodoric falls in the battle, 
and is succeeded by his son Torismond. CounciJ 
of Chalcedon, at which Marcian was present. 

452 Coss. Asporacius. 



ROMAN HISTORY'. 



1016 



Fl. Here u lan us. 
Valentinianilll. 28: Marciani 3. — Attila invades Italy, 

and takes Aquileia after a siege of three months '; 

after ravaging the whole of Lombardy, he rccross- 

ea the A] v < Death of Torismond. and accession 

of Theodoric II 
Leo, bishop of Rome, was gent as ambassador to Attila. 

453 Coss. Vincomalus. 

Opilio. 

Valentinianilll. 29; Marciani 4.— Death of Attila and 
dispersion of hi | army. Death of Pulcheria. 

454 Coss. Aetius. 

Studiui. 

Valentiniani III. 30 : Miirciani 5.— Aetius is slain by 
Valentinian. 

*55 Coss. Imp. Fl. Placid. Valentiniauus (III.) Aug. VIII. 

Procopbm Anthemius (aftencard Imp. Aug.). 
Marciani 8. — VaWnthtfcm is slain in March by Pctro- 

nius Maximus, whose wife he had violated. 
Maximus is proclaimed emperor of the West, but 
is slain in July, when Genseric was approaching 
Rome. 

Genseric takes and plunders Rome. 
Avitus is proclaimed in Gaul emperor of the West, 
in July, through the means of Theodoric II., king 
of the Goths. 
Leo intercedes with Genseric. 
456 Coss. Varanes. 

Joannes. 

Marciani 7.— Theodoric invades Spain, conquers the 
Suevi, and kills their king Rechiarius. Ricimer, 
the commander of Avitus, gains a naval victory 
over Genseric. Avitus is deposed by means of Ri- 



Sidonius Apollinaris, the son-in-law of Avitus, writes 
his Pantgyricus Avito. 

457 Coss. Fl. Constautinns. 

Rufus. 

Leonis 1 : Majoriani 1.— Death of Marcian at the be- 
ginning of the year. 

Leo I., emperor of the East, is raised to the empire 
by Aspar. 

Majorian, emperor of the West, is raised to the em- 
pire by Ricimer. 

458 Coss. Imp. Fl. Leo (I.) Aug. 

Imp. Jul. Majorianus Aug. 

Leonis 2 1 Majoriani 2.— The Vandals land in Africa 
and are defeated. Naval preparations of Majorian 
against the \ 'andais. Majorian crosses the Alps in 
the winter, in order to settle the affairs of Gaul be- 
fore invading Africa. Earthquake at Antioch. Ac- 
cession of Firoze or Peroses as a king of Persia. 

Sidonius Apollinaris addresses his Panegyricns Mojo- 
riano 

459 Coss. Patricius. 

Fl. Ricimer. 

Leonis 3 : Majoriani 3.— Majorian defeats Theodoric 
II., king of the Goths ; peace is concluded between 
Majorian and Theodoric. 

460 Coss. Magnus. 

Apollonius. 

Leonis 4 ! Majoriani 4.— Majorian marches into Spain, 
intending to pass over into Africa, but his fleet is 
completely destroyed by the Vandals at Carthage- 
na. Majorian concludes a treaty with Genseric ; 
he returns to Gaul, and winters there. 

461 Coss. Severinus. 

Dagalaiphus. 



Leonu 5 : Majoriani 5.~Majorian return, to luly 
where he U deposed and put to death by order r 
Ricimer, who raise* Libius Severn, to the- •mpiro 
Sevebui emperor of the Writ 
4C2 Coss. Imp. Fl. Leo (I.) Aug. II. 

Imp. Lib. Scverus Aug. 
Leonis C : Beveri 2—Gen.cric renew, the war. KM 
ravages Italy. Theodoric II. renew, the war in 
Gaul, and obtains possesion of Narbo. 

463 Coss. Fl. Ca-cina Basilic 

Vivi&nua. 

Lconi. 7: Beveri 3.— Theodoric IL attempts to ofc. 
tain poss.j- fc ,..:i of th« whole of the R.in.n domin- 
ion in Gaul, but is defeated by ^gidiu* Theodoric 
rules over the greater part of Spain. 

464 Coss. Ruen'cus. 

Fl. Anicius Olybrius. 
Leonis 8 : Beveri 4.— Death of Xgidioa. 

465 Coss. Fl. Basiliacus. 

Ilerminericus s. Arminericua, 
LeonU 9.— Death of Scverui. No emperor of the 
West is appointed for this and the following year | 
Ricimer keeps the power in his own hands. 

466 Cuss. Imp. Fl. Leo (I ) Aug. III. 

(Tatianua.) # 
LeonU 10.— Theodoric II. is .lain by hie brother Eo- 
ric, who succeeds him. 

467 Coss. Pusteus. 

Joannes. 

Leonis 11 ! Anthemii L— Ilicim.-r applies to Leo to 
appoint an emperor of the Wet: Lc> appoint. 
Procopius Anthemius. 

Anthemr-3 emperor of tho We*t Ho givci his 
daughter in marriage to Ricimer. 

Sidonius Apollinaris comes to Rome. 

468 Cos. Imp. Proc. Anthemius Aug. II. (icuhout eol 

league). 

Leonis 12: Antlumii 2. — War with Genseric. The 
Roman forces land in Africa, but the expedition 
fails through the misconduct of Ba.ili.cu*. 

Sidonius Apollinaris writei hi. Panegyricui .AntAemio 
bis Consuli. 
46D Coss. Fl. Marcianus. 

Fl. Zeno (afteru-j.rd Imp. Cae*. Aug.). 

Leonis 13 ; Anthemii 3. — Zeno, the Uaurian, after 
ward the emperor, marrii 1 * Ariadne, the daughter 
of Leo. Thi3 excites the jealosy of the powerful 
minister Aspar. 

470 Coss. Jordanes. 

Severus. 

Leonis 14": Anthemii 4.— Euric, king of tho VUigoth*, 
takes Arelate and Massilin, and defeat* the Britons, 
who had come to the aeri«tanco of the provincials. 

471 Coss. Imp. Fl. Leo (I.) Aug. IV. 

Anicius Probianus. 
Leonis 15: Anthemii 5.— Aspar i< --lain by order of 
Leo. 

472 Coss. Fcstus. 

Marcianus. 

Leonis 16.— War between Ricimer and AnthemioB. 
Ricimer appoints Anicius Olybbivs emperor, and 
lays siege to Rome, which he takes by storm in 
July : Anthemius perishes in the assault. Both Ric- 
imer and Olybrius die later in the year. 

473 Cos. Imp. Leo (I.) Aug. V. (witkout eelUtgue). 
Leonis 17. — Leo associates with him in the empire 

his grandson Leo. Gltcbbius U proclaimed em- 
peror in the West. 



1016 



CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES OF ROMAN HISTORY 



A.D. 

474 Cos. Imp. Leo (II.) Aug. (wiikovi. colleague). 

Death of Leo I., and accession of Leo II. The latter 
associates his father with him in the empire. Leo 
II. dies toward the end of the year, and is succeed- 
ed by Zeno. Glycerius is deposed, and JcLrc3 
Nepos appointed emperor of the West 

475 Cos. Imp. Zeno Aug. II. (without colleague). 
Zenonis 2. — Julius Nepos is deposed by Orestes, who 



makes his own sou Roarcxvs Augustclvs en> 
peror of the West 
476 Coss. Fl. Basiliscus II. 
Armatus. 

Zenonis 3.— The barbarians invade Italy under Odo- 
acer. Orestes is defeated and slain. Romulus Au- 
gustulus is deposed. Odoacer is acknowledged as 
King of Italy. End of the Western Empibe. 



The preceding Chronological Tables have been drawn up chiefly from the Fasti Hellenici and Fasti Romani of Mr. 
Clinton, from the Grriechischt and Rdmische Zeittafeln by Fischer and Soetbeer, and from the Annales Veterum Reg- 
norum at Populorum by Zumpt. 



PARALLEL FEARS. 



».c 


, c.c 


. OL. 


77 




1. 1 


77. 


) 


2 


77- 


( 


3 


77; 


1 


4 


771 


1 


2.1 


77 


I 


2 


77( 


) 


3 


76£ 




4 


76* 
767 




3. 1 
o 


76f 




3 


765 




4 


764 




4.1 


763 




2 


762 


3 


761 




4 


760 




5. 1 


759 




o 


758 




3 


757 




4 


756 




6.1 


755 




o 


754 




3 


753 


1 


4 


752 


o 


7.1 


751 


g 


2 


750 


4 


3 


749 


5 


4 


748 


6 


8.1 


747 


7 


2 


746 


8 


3 


745 


9 


4 


744 


10 


9.1 


743 


11 


2 


742 


12 


3 


741 


13 


4 


740 


14 


10. 1 


739 


15 


2 


738 


16 


3 


737 


17 


4 


736 


18 


11.1 


735 


19 


o 


734 


20 


3 


733 


21 


4 


732 


22 


12.1 


731 


23 


2 


730 


24 


3 


729 


25 


4 


728 


. 26 


13.1 


727 


27 


2 


726 


28 


3 


725 


29 


4 


724 


30 


14.1 


723 


31 


2 


722 


32 


3 


721 


33 


4 


720 


34 


15.1 


719 


35 


o 


718 


36 


3 


717 


37 


4 


716 


38 


16. 1 


715 


39 


2 


714 


40 


3 


713 


41 


4 


712 


42 


17.1 


711 


43 


2 


710 


44 


3 


709 


45 


4 


708 


46 


18. 1 


707 


47 


2 


706 


48 


31 


705 


49 


4 


704 


50 


19. 1 


703 


51 


2 


702 


52 


3 


701 


53 


4 


700 


54 


20. 1 


699 


55 


D 


698 


56 


3 


697 


57 


4 


696 


58 


21. 1 


695 


59 




694 


60 


3 


693 


61 


4 


692 


62 


22. 1 


691 


63 


2 


690 


64 


3 







1 01.. 




6! 




688 


6( 




i>-<7 


6" 




m 


68 




tin." 


6! 




684 


?! 


24 1 


883 


71 


g 


68'-' 


m 


3 


681 


•j 




6*0 


74 


25 j 


679 


75 




678 


7i' 


3 


677 


77 


A 


676 


78 


26 1 


675 


79 


2 


674 


HQ 


3 


673 


81 




672 


.m 


27 1 


671 


83 


o 


(370 


84 


3 


66B 


85 


4 


666 


86 


28. 1 


667 


87 


2 


tint; 


88 


3 




89 




664 


90 


M j 


663 


91 


2 


66 2 


• )■> 


3 


661 


93 




660 


94 


30 1 


654 


95 


2 


658 


M 


3 


657| 


97 


4 


650 


nx 


31. 1 


655 j 


99 


2 


654 


100 


3 


653, 


101 


4 


652 


102 


32. 1 


651 


io:ij 




650 ! 


104! 


3 



649 10.' 



6481 106! 33. 1 



647 


107. 


560 


194 


55.1 


646! 108' 3 


559 


195 


o 


645 


I 109! 4 


558 


196 


3 


fit! 


110 34. 1 


557 


197 


4 


643) 111 2 
642 1121 3 


556 


198 56.1 


555 


199 




641 


113 


4 


554 


200 


3 


640 


114 


35.1 


553 


201 


4 


639 


115 


! o 


552 


202 


57.1 


63rt 


116 


3 


551 


203 


2 


637 


117 


4 


550 


204 


3 


636 


118 


36.1 


549 


205 


4 


6.13 


119 


S 


548 


206 


58. 1 


634 


120 


3 


547 


207 


2 


633 


121 


4 


546 


208 


3 


632 


12-2 


37.1 


545 


209 


4 


631 


123 




544 


210 


59. 1 


630 


124 


! 


543 


211 


2 


629 


125 




542 


212 


3 


628 


126 


38.1 


541 


213 


4 


6271 127 
626' 12S* 


2 


540 


214 


60. 1 


3 


539 


215 


2 


625 


129 


4 


538 


216 


3 


624 


130 


39.1 


537 


217 


4 


633 


131 


2 


536 


218 


61.1 


632 


UN 3 


535 


219 




621 


133 


4 


534 


220 


3 


620 


134 


40.1 


533 


221 


4 


619 


135 


2 


532 


222 


62.1 


618 


136 




531 


333 


2 


617| 137 
616 138 


4 


530 


224 


3 


41.1 


529 


225 


4 


615 


139 


2 


528 


226 


63. 1 


614 


140 


3 


527 


227 


2 


613 


141 


4 


526 


228 


3 


612 


142 


42. 1 


525 


229 


4 


611 


143 


2 


524 


230 


64.1 


610 


144 


3 


523 


231 


2 


609 


145 


4 


522 


232 


3 


60S 


146 


43. 1 


521 


233 


4 


607 


147 


2 


520 


234 


65. 1 


606 


148 


3 


519 


235 


2 




149 


4 


518 


236 


3 


60 1 


150 


44.1 


517 


237 


4 


603 


151 


2 


516 


238 


66.1 




1018 



PARALLEL YEARS. 



B.C. 
167 
16ft 

165 
164 
163 
162 
161 
160 
159 
158 
157 
156 
155 
154 
153 
152 
151! 
150 
149 
145 
147 
146 

us; 

144 
143 
142 
141 
140 
139 
135 
137: 
136 
135 
134 
133 
132! 
131 
130 
1291 
128 
127 
126, 
125 
124 
1231 
122 
121 
120 
119 
118. 
117; 

lie; 

115' 
114 1 
1131 
112 
111 
110 
109| 
103 
107, 
106 
105! 
104! 

103; 

102' 
101! 
100; 



u.c; ol. ji 

587 2 

588 3; 
«J89 4 
590154. 1: 
591 2i 
592i 3 I 
593j 4; 
594 155. 1 i 
595: 2.| 
5961 3| 

597i 4 :.; 

598 155. 1 
599i 2 I 
600* 3 ! 

601 4N 

602 157. 1 
603; 2 ! 

604 ' 3!! 

605 4 

606 153. 1 
607: 2 
608) 3 
609! 4 
610 159. 1M 
61li 2' 
612! 3 ! 
613; 4! 

614 160. 1 

615 2! 
616] 3 
617! 4' 

618 161. 1 i 

619 2i 
620; 3 ! 
621! 4| 

622 162.1! 

623 ! 2!i 
624i 3 : 

625 4 

626 163. 1 

627 2! 
623 1 3 

629 4 

630 164.1 
631j 2 1 

632 3 

633 4 

634 165. 1 

635 2 
636! 3 
637 1 4] 
638 166. 1 ! 
639! 2j 
640j 3 

641 4 

642 167. 1 

643 2 
6441 3 

645 4 

646 168.1 

647 2 
648! 3 
6491 4 

650 169. 1 

651 i 2 

652 3 

653 4 

654 170. 1 

655 2 

656 3 
657| 4 
658 171. 1 
659; 2 
660; 3 
661! 4 
662 172. 1 1 
663i 2 
664 3 
665i 4 

666 173. 1 

667 2 

668 3 
669! 4 
670 174. 1 
671! 2 

672 3 

673 4 

674 175.1 
675j 2 
676 3 
677j 4 
678 176. 1 



B.C. I 
75 

73| 

71 
70 

69; 
68 1 
67j 
66 
65| 
64 
63 
62{ 
61 
60| 
59: 
55 
57 
56; 

55; 

54! 
53, 
52 
51 

50; 

49 i 
45 
47 
46| 
45' 
44 
43 
42j 
41 
40 i 
39' 
38; 
37 

i 
i\ 

32 
31 
30 

29: 



2: 

26{ 
25; 
24 
23 1 
22 j 
21! 
20! 
191 
18 j 
17! 
16) 
15 
14 
13 
12; 
111 
10] 
9 
8! 

I 

1 

2 
1 

I D. 
1 
2 

3 
4| 



OL. 

2 
3 
4 

652 177. 1 
683 2 
684) 3 
685j 4 

686 178. 1 

687 2 

688 3 
6891 4 
690 179.1 I 
69lj 2; 
692 3 
693; 4 
694 180. 1 i 
695; 2! 
696; 3 
697! ' 4 
698 131.1 
699! 2 
700: 3 
70l| 4 : 
7024182.1 
703, 2 
704 3 
705j 4; 
706 133.1 
707. 2 
708 3! 
709| 4' 

710 134. 1 

711 2j 

712 3 
7l3j 4 ! 
714185.1 

71a 21 

716l 3 j! 
7171 4! 

718 156.1 

719 2i 
720; 3 
721| 4 1 
722187.1 
723 2) 
724; 3: 
725 4 
7-26 1-5. 1 
727> 2 
728 3! 
729! 4 
730 15?. 1 
731; 2 

732 3 

733 4 
734;190. 1 
735, 2 
736' 3 
737| 4 
738191.1 
739, 2 
740j 3 
741; 4 
742; 192. 1 
743; 2 

744 3 

745 4 

746 193. 1 



2 
3 
4 

750 194. 1 
75l! 2 
752 ; 3 
753: 4 

754 195. 1 

755 2 

756 3 
757! 4 

758 196. 1 

759 2 
760, 3 
76li 4 
762 .197.1 
7631 2 

764 ! 3 

765 4 

766 193.1 
767i 2 
768! 3 
769; 4 



a.d.; 

17 
18 

19 

20, 
21 

22 
23 
24 

25j 
26 
27| 
28 
29 
30 
31 
32 
331 
34 
35' 
36 
37 
38 
39 
40! 
41! 
421 
43! 
44 
45j 
46' 
47 
481 

£9 

50, 
51 
52 
53i 
54! 
55! 
56! 

I 1 

591 
60! 
611 
62 
63 
64' 
65; 
66; 
67 
68 
69 
70 
71| 
72 
73 
74 

76 
77| 
73 



A,D. 



U.C.! OL. 

770 199. 1 

771 2 

772 3 

773 4 

774 200.1 

775 2 

776 3 
777| 4 
778 201.1 
779j 2i 
780: 3 i| 

781 4; 

782 202.1 ! 

783 2 

784 3 
785; 4 
786 203. 1|! 125 
787j 2 
788i 3 
789; 4 

790 204. 1 

791 2 

792 3 
793j 4 

794 205. 1 

795 2 
796i 3 
797j 4 
798 205. 1 
799! 2 
800 3 
801! 4| 



U.C. I OL. 

862 -22-2. 1 

863 2 

864 3 

865 4 
8661223. 1 

2 
3 
4 

870 224. 1 



868; 



871 
572 

573 



4.B. 
201 
•20-2 
•202 
204 
205 
206 
207 
208 961! 



r.c. ol 

954 245. 
955 

956! 
957 

955 246. 

959! 



209 962 247. 

210 963 : 

211 964; 
2121 965 

874 225.1|l 213! 966 248. 

875 i 2 214! 967 j 



876 j 
577 

S78 226. 1 217 970 249. 



215 j 968 
216! 969! 



B7S 
880! 

882 227. 1 i 221! 974 250. 



218 97H 

219 972! 

220 973; 



5? 



883! 2 
884! 3 
835 4 
856 228 1 

887 j 2 

888 ! 3 
889; 4 
890,229. 1 
891i 2 
892) 3 
893 4 



1 j! 321 

2 322 

3 323 

4 324 

802 207.1:1 141; 894 230.1 j 233! 936-253. l;l 325 



SSB y75; 

223, 976i 

224 j 977i 

225 : 978 251. 

226 979 

227 ; 950. 
228j 98lj 

229 : 982 252. 

230 953 
231 i 984! 
232! 985; 



A.D. 
293 
294 



297 



1046 268. 1 



i04" 



295 1048 

296 1049 



1050 269. 1 



298:1051 

299 1052 

300 1053 

301 1054 



1055 
1056 
1057 
3051 1058 271.1 
306! 1059 

307 1060 

308 1061 

309 1062 

310 1063 

311 1064 
31211065 
313! 1066 273.1 
314 106' 
315|106S 
316 



2 j 318U071 
3 ; ! 319il072 
4 II 320ll073 



803. 

8041 3 
805| 4 
806 [208. 1 

so; 



3C5 



3i 



142 
143 
144 
145 
146 



2 234 987 



896 31 
897| 4! 
898 231. 1 ; 



147 900 



100' 
101! 
102 
103 
104 
105 
106 
107 
108. 



810 209. 1 

811 2 
812| 3 
813! 4 
814 210.1 
815| 2 
816 3 
817; 4 
318 211.11 
819, 2,! 
820 3 
821 ! 4 

822 212. 1 

823 2 
8241 3 
325! 4 

826 213. 1 

827 : 2 
8281 3 
829: 4 
830 214. 1 
83L 2 
332 3 
833; 4 
834 '215. 1 
835 2 
8361 3 
8371 4 
838 216. 1 
839j 21 
840: 3! 
84ll 4 
842 217. 1 i 
843, 2! 
344! 31 
845! f 
846 213. 1 j 
847; 2! 
848( 3! 
849| 4 
850 219. 1 
8511 2 1 
852 3 1 
3531 4 1 
854 220. 1 i 
855; 2 
8561 3| 
857 4 

221.1 
859' 2 
860, 3 
86l! 4! 



148 
149! 
150i 
151 
152 
153 
154 
155 
156 
157 
158 
159 
160 
161 
162 
163 
164 
165 
166 
167 
168 
169 
170 

it: 

172 
173! 

23 

175 
176! 
1771 
178 
179 
150 
181 
182 
183! 
184i 
185 
186 
187 
188 
189 
190 
19ll 
192j 
193 
194; 
195 
196! 
197: 
195 
199; 
2001 



3 

901! 4 
902 232. 1 
2 
3 
4 

906 233. 1 1 

907 2|| 246! 999 
3 11 247:1000 



2351 988! 

2361 9891 

237i 990 254. 

238 ; 99l| 

239! 992, 

240 993! 

241 994:255. 
242| 995; 



243 , 996: 

244 997 

245: 9961256. 



908 



9W234. 1 



919 
920 
921 



2 
3 
4 

235.1 



918 236. 1 



2 
3 
4 

922 237. 1 

923 2 

924 3 
925j 4; 
926 238.1 
927! 2 
9281 3 
929| 4 
930 239. 1 
931! 



2481001! 
249;1002.257 
250;i003. 
251! 1004! 

252 1005! 

253 1006 258. 

254 j 1007; 
25511008 



256 1009! 



1010 259 
1011! 
1012! 
1013 

1014 260, 
26211015 
26311016; 

264 1017! 

265 1018;261, 
266; 10l9j 
267il020j 
268 1021; 
269, 1022.262 
270 1023 



327 
328 
329 



3 

• 4 
270.1 
2 
3 
4 



3 
4 

272.1 
2 
3 
4 



A.D.IT7.C; OL. 

385 1138 291. 1 

386 1139 

387 1140 
1141 



1142 292.1 
11431 2 



1144 
1145 



1148 
1149 



1146 293. 1 

1147 2 



1150 294. 1 

1151 9 



1152 
1153 
1154 



402 1155 



3 
4 

295. 1 
2 
3 
4 



1156 
1157 
40511158 296.1 

2 j 406|ll59 

3 407 1160 
4; 408:1161 



1 317 1070 274. 1 4091162 297. 1 



1074, 
1075: 
1076 
1077 
1078 
1079 
1080 
1081 
1052 



2 
3 
4 

275. 1 
2 
3 
4 



41011163 
411 ',1164 
4121165 
41311166 298. 1 
41411167 

415 U68 

416 1169 



1 417 j 1170 299. 1 



3 
4 

277.1 



932! 3H 271 j 1024' 

9331 4.i 2721025! 

934 240.1 I 273 1 026,263 
935 



330 1083 

331 1084 

332 10851 4 

333 1086 278. 1 
334! 1087 

335 1088 

336 1089 



337 j 1090 279.1 
338 1 1091 
339:1092 
340 1093 
341|1094 280.1 
342 1095 
34311096 
344il097 
345! 1098 
346;1099 
347|1100 
3481101 
349 1102 
35011103 
3511104 
352:1105 
353' 1106 
354jll07 
35511108 
3561109 



2 
3 
4 

281.1 
2 
3 
4 

282.1 
o 

3 
4 

283.1 
2 
3 
4 

35711110 284.1 



358 1111 
359|1112 



937 j 



274 102 
2751028; 
27611029! 
938 241.1! 277 1030:254. 
' 278 1031; 
279 1032 
2801033, 

281 1034 265. 

282 1035: 

283 1036! 

284 1037j 
946 243.1:1 285 1038 266. 
947; 2 II 286 1039! 
948 3 1| 287jl040! 
949; 4 j 2881041! 
950 244. 1 ; i 289 10421267. 
95l| 2 290 1043i 
952 1 3; 291:1044; 
953 4 j! 292 1045 



2 
3 
4 

285.1 



940; 3 
941! 4 
942 242. 1 
943 1 2 

944 ! 3 

945 4 



3601113 
36l!lll4 

362 1115 

363 1116 
3641117 

111 365!1118 

2 i| 366! 1119 
3|| 3671120 
4 (I 3681121 
1 ;! 369 ,1122 287.1 
2 II 3701123 
3 ! ! 371:1124 
4]| 372 1125 

1 373 1126 

3 374jll27 

3 JI 375 1128 
4 1| 376 1129 
ill 377 1130 

2 ji 378 1131 
3 1| 379 1132 

4 380 1133 
ill 381 1134 
2j 382 1135 

3 I 383 1136 
4 II 384.1137 



418 1171 

419 1172 
4201173 



3 
4 

42111174 300.1 
2 
3 
4 

2 
3 
4 



422! 1175 
4231176 

424 117 

425 1178 301 
4261179 
427 1180 
4281181 
429 1182 302.1 



430 1183 

431 1184 

432 1185 



433:1186 303. 1 



43411187 
4:35 1188 
1189 



436 
437 
438 
4391192 
440lll93 



441(1194 305. 1 
442 1195 2 



1197 



3 
4 

286.1 



3 
4 

288.1 
2 
3 



443 
444 
445 
446 
447 

448 1201 
449 
450 
451 



123:. 



1204 

45211205 



4.5311206 303.1 



454 1207 
455! 1206 
456|l209 
457)1210 309. 1 
458 ! 1211 
459 1212 
460 1 1213 



3 
3 
4 

1190 304.1 

1191 2 



1198 306. 1 

1199 2 



3 
4 

1202 307.1 

1203 2 



46l!l214j3l0.1 



462jl215 

463 1216 

464 1217 



4651218 311.1 



466 
I 467 [220 
4; 468 1221 



259. 1 
o 
3 
4 

290.1 



46911222 312. 1 
2 
I 
4 



470:1223 

471 1224 

472 1225 
473:1226 313.1 



4741227 
4751228 
47611229 



THE ATHENIAN ARC HONS EPONYMI, 



OL. 


B.C. 




71 


496 


Ilipparchus. 




495 


Philippus. 




494 


Pythocritus. 




493 


Themistocl-s 


72 


492 


Diognetus. 




491 


Hybrilides. 




490 


Phasnippus 




489 


Aristides. 


73 


488 


Anchiaes. 




487 







486 







485 


Philocrrite<- . 


74 


481 


Lcostratus. 




483 


Nicodemus. 




482 


Themistoclea ! 




481 


Cebria f 


75 


480 


CalliHdeB. 




479 


Xanthippus. 




478 


Timosthenci. 




477 


Adimautua. 


76 


476 


Phtedon. 




475 


Dromoilitb- 




474 


Ace6toride?. 




473 


Menon. 


"27 


472 


Chares. 




471 


Praxiergus. 




470 


Demotion. 




469 


Apsephion. 


78 


468 


Theagenidea. 




467 


Lysistratus. 




466 


Lysanias. 




465 


Lysitheus. 


79 


464 


Archidemidca. 




463 


Tlepolemu< 




462 


Conon. 




461 


Evippus. 


m 


460 


Phrasiclide? 




459 


Philoclor" 




458 


Bion. 




457 


Mnesithidet. 




456 


Calliaa. 




455 


Sosistratus. 




451 


Ariston. 




453 


Lysicrati -. 
Chajrephaii-'r 




452 




451 


Antidotua. 




450 


Euthydemu*. 




449 


Pedicus. 


83 


448 


Philiscur. 


447 


Timarchides. 




446 


Callimachua. 




445 


Lyaimachidc^. 


81 


444 


Praxiteles. 




443 


Lysanias. 




442 


Diphilus. 




441 


Timocles. 


£5 


440 


Morychidea 




439 


Claucides. 




433 


Theodonis. 




437 


Euthymenes. 


86 


43G 


Lysimachu?. 


435 


Antiochide?. 




434 


Crates. 




433 


Apseude8. 


87 


432 


Pythodorus. 


431 


Euthydemua. 




430 


Apollodorua. 




429 


Epaminon. 


88 


428 


Piotimus. 




427 


Eucles (Euclides) 



FROM B.C. 496 TO fcC. 292. 



OI.. 


B.C. 






426 


Euthynua. 




425 


Stratocles. 


89 


424 


Isarchu?. 




423 


Amynias. 




422 


AJeiBWL 




421 


Aristion. 


90 


420 


Aatyphilus. 




419 


Archias. 




418 


Antiphon. 




417 


Euphemus. 


91 


416 


Arimnestus. 




415 


Chabrias. 




414 


Pisander. 




413 


Clcocritus. 


92 


412 


Calliaa. 




411 


Theopompus. 




410 


Glaucippus. 




409 


Diodes. 


93 


408 


Euctemon. 




407 


Antigenes. 




406 


Calliaa. 




405 


Alexias. 


94 


404 


(Pythodoruf ). 




403 


Euclides. 




402 


Micon. 




401 


Xensenetus. 


95 


400 


Laches. 




399 


Ariatocratee 




398 


Ithycles. 
Suniades. 




397 


96 


106 


Phormion. 




395 


Diophantue. 




394 


Eubulidea. 




:vx) 


Dt:ino*txatus 


97 


302 


Philoclea. 




391 


Nicotcles. 




390 


Ponioatratu?. 




389 


Antipater. 


98 


:*88 


Pyrrhion. 




387 


Theodotua. 




386 


Mystichide.v 




385 


Dcxitheus. 


99 


:J84 


Diotrephes. 




38:; 


Phanoatratua. 




382 


Evnnder. 




381 


Dcmophilu*. 


100 


380 


Pytheas. 




379 


Nicon. 




378 


Nauainicu6. 




377 


Calliaa. 


101 


376 


Charisandei . 


375 


Ilippodamaa. 
.Socratidea. 




374 




373 


Asteua. 


102 


372 


Alcisthenes. 


371 


Phrasiclidt-P. 




370 


Dysnicetua. 




369 


Lysistratus. 


103 


:*68 


Nausigenes. 




367 


Polyzelua. 




366 


Cephiaodorui? 




365 


Chion. 


104 


364 


Timocrate8 


363 


Chariclidca 




362 


Molon. 




361 


Nicophemua. 


105 


360 


Callimedes. 


359 


Euchariatua. 




358 


Cephisodotua 



OL B.C. 

357 A(5»thoclc«. 

106 356 Elpinea. 
355 Callistratut 
354 Diotimua. 
353 Thcodemuf. 

107 352 Arifltoderaua 
351 Theasalus. 
350 Apollodorua 
349 CBllimarhui. 

ia a 348 Thcophilus. 

347 TheraUtaclc*. 

316 Archias. 

345 Eubulua. 
(09 344 Lyciacua. 

343 Pythodotu/ 

342 rtosigenca. 

311 Nwom.u-lnu 

110 340 Theophraatus 
:i39 Lysiuiachidct-. 
338 Chffirondas. 
337 Phrynichua. 

111 336 Pythodcmui 
335 Eraenetua. 
334 Cteaiclca. 
333 Nicocrati'a. 

L12 33*J Nicctaa (Nieeratuty. 
331 Aristophanes 
330 Ariatophon. 
329 Cephiaophoi- 

113 328 EuthycntiM 
327 Hegemon. 
326 Chrcmcs. 
325 Anticlee. 

114 321 Hegesiaa. 

323 Cephisodoruv 
322 Philoclei. 
321 Archippus. 
I! 5 :120 Ni-a-chmua. 
319 Apollodorua 
318 Archippus. 
317 Demogenefi 
JIG 316 Democlidc*. 
315 Praxibulua. 





314 


Nicodorua. 




313 


Theophraatua 


117 


312 


Polcmon. 


311 


Fimonides. 




310 


Hieromncmon. 




.309 


Demetrius. 


118 


308 


(liarinus. 




307 


AoaxknftM 




306 


Corcebusi 




305 


Xenippua. 


119 


304 


Phcreclea. 




303 


Leoatratua. 




302 


Nicoclea. 




301 


Calliarchua 


120 


300 


Ilegcmachua. 




299 


I'.uc temon- 




298 


Mnesidemuj. 




297 


Antiphatca. 


121 


296 


Niciaa. 




295 


Nico6tratu«. 




294 


Olympiodorua. 




293 




122 


292 


rhUippof. 




291 






290 
2b9 





LISTS OF KINGS. 



I. KINGS OF EGYPT. 



1. Psammetichus 

2. Neco 

3. Psammia 

4. Apries 

5. Amasis 

5. Psammenitua 



Yrs. 

reigned 54 
» 16 
« 6 

25 

.. 44 

«' 



III. 



1. Deioces 

2. Phraortes 

3. Cyaxares 

4. Astyages 



1. Gyges 

2. Ardys 

3. Sadyattes 



2. EURYSTHENSS. 

3. Agis L 

4. Echestratus. 

5. Labotas. 

6. Doryssus. 

7. Agesilaus L 

8. Archelaus. 

9. Teleclus. 

10. Alcamenes. 

11. Polydorus. 

12. Eurycrates. 

13. Anaxander. 

14. Eurycratides. 

15. Leon. 

16. Anaxandrides 

17. Cleomenes 

18. Leonidas 

19. Plistarchus 

20. Plistoanax 

21. Pausanias 

22. Agesipolis I. 

23. Cleombrotus L 

24. Agesipolis II. 

25. Cleomenes II. 



26. Areus 1. 

27. Acrotatus 

28. Areus II. 

29. Leonidas II. 

30. Cleombrotus II. 
Leonidas again. 

31. Cleomenes III. 

32. Agesipolis III. 



II. KINGS OF MEDIA. 

Yrs. 

reigned 53 
« 22 
" 40 
35 



KINGS OF LYDIA. 

Yrs. 

reigned 38 
« 49 
" 12 



B.C. B.C. 
671-617 
617-601 
601-595 
595-570 
570-526 
526-525 



B.C. B.C. 
709-656 
656-634 
634-594 
594-559 



B.C. B.C. 
716-678 
678-629 
629-617 



4. Alyattes 

5. Croesus 



Yrs. 

reigned 57 
14 



B.C. B.C 
617-560 
560-546 



IV. KINGS OF PERSIA. 



Cyrus 

Cambysea 

Smerdis 

Darius I. Hystaspifi. 
Xerxes I. 
Artabanus 

Artaxerxes I. Longimanus 

Xerxes II. 

Sogdianus 

Darius II. Nothus 

Artaxerxes II. Mnemon 

Ochus 

Arses 

Darius III. Codomannus 





Yrs. 




B.C. B.C. 


reigned 30 





559-529 




7 


5 


529-522 







7 


522-522 


<■ 


36 





521-485 




20 





485-465 







7 


465-465 


41 


40 





465-425 


41 





o 


425-425 


11 





7 


425-425 




19 





424-405 




46 





405-359 




21 





359-338 


U 


2 





338-336 




4 11 


336-331 



V. KINGS OF SPARTA. 
1. Abistodemtjs. 

2. Pbocles. 

3. Soils. 

4. Eurypon. 

5. Prytanis 

6. Eunomus. 

7. Polydectes. 

8. Charilaus. 

9. Nicander. 

10. Theopompus. 



11. Zeuxidamus. 
32. Anaxidamus. 

13. Archidamus I. 

14. Agesicles. 

15. Ariston. 

16. Demaratua. 

17. Leotyehides 



Yrs. B.C. BC. 

520 

29 520-491 

11 491-480 

22 480-458 

50 458-408 

14 408-394 

14 394-380 

9 380-371 

1 371-370 

61 370-309 



44 309-265 
[1] 265-[264] 
[8j [264]-[256j 



Yrs. B.C. B.C. 



1G 



236-220 



VI. KINGS OF MACEDONIA. 

Yrs. m. B.C. B.C. 



1. Perdiccas I. 

2. Arga?us. 

3. Philippus L 

4. Aeropus. 

5. Alcetas. 

6. Amyntas I. 

7. Alexander I. 

8. Perdiccas II. 

9. Archelaus 

10. Orestes and Aeropus 

11. Pausanias 

12. Amyntas II. 

13. Alexander II. 
Ptoleraaeus Alorites 

14. Perdiccas III. 

15. Philippus II. 

16. Alexnnder III. the Great 

17. Philippus III. Aridseus 
Olympias 

18. Caseander 

19. Philippus IV. 







540]- f 500] 






500J-[454j 






454]- 413 


reigned 14 





413-399 


" 5 





399-394 


1 





394-393 


24 





393-369 


2 





369-367 


3 





367-364 


5 





364-359 


23 





359-336 


" 13 





336-323 


7 





323-316 


1 





316-315 


19 





315-296 


1 





296-295 



18. Archidamus II. 

19. Agis II. 

20. Agesilaus n. 



21. Archidamus III. 

22. Agis III. 

23. Eudamidas I. 

24. Archidamus IV. 

25. Eudamidas II. 

26. Agis IV. 

27. Eurydamidas. 
23. Archidamus V. 



20. Demetrius Poliorcetes 

21. Pyrrhus 

22. Lysimachus 
Ptolemaeus Ceraunus 
Meleager 
Antipater 
Sosthenes 
Ptolemteus 
Alexander 
Pyrrhus again 

23. Antigonus'Gonatas 

24. Demetrius II. 

25. Antigonus Doson 

26. Philippus V. 

27. Perseus 



reigned 22 

" 42 
29 
37 

23 



491-469 

469-427 
427-398 
398-361 



361-338 
338-330 



4 244-240 



Yrs. m. B.C. B.C 

reigned 7 294-287 

7 287-286 

" 5 6 286-280 



3 280-277 



44 283-239 

10 239-229 
9 229-220 

42 220-178 

11 178-167 



1. Seleucus I. Nicator 

2. Antiochus I. Soter 

3. Antiochus II. Theos 

4. Seleucus II. Callinicus 



VD. KINGS OF SYRIA. 

Yrs. B.C. B.C. 

reigned 32 312-280 

19 280-261 
15 261-246 

20 246-226 



LISTS OK KINGS. 



5. Seleucus II! t'traunug 

6. Antiochus III. the Great 

7. Seleucua IV Philopator 

8. Antiochus IV l.piphanes 

9. Antiochus V. F.upator 

10. Demetrius 1. Soter 

11. Alexander Bala 

12. Demetrius II Nirator) 
Antiochus VI. S 
Trypho ) 

13. Antiochus VII. Sldetes 
Demetrius II. Nicator (agRin) 
Seleucus V. 



S3 



Antiochus VIII. < irypus ) 
Antiochus IX. Cyzicenus $ 
Seleucus VI. 

Antiochus X Eum bci | 
Philippus 

Demetrius III. Euc«rut 
Antiochus XI. Epiphanes 
Antiochus XII Dionysus , 
Tigranes, kins ol Armenia 
Antiochus XIII. Amuticus 



Tr». B.C. B.C. 

reigned 3 996-983 

36 223-187 

12 187-175 

11 176-164 
2 164-162 

12 162-150 
5 150-146 

146-137 

9 137-128 
128-125 
125-125 

125- 95 



95- 83 



83- 69 
69- 65 



12. Ariarathos VII. 

13. Arehclaua 



Yr. Br B.r. 
10 42- M. 

A,D 

30 36- U 



xiii. kings of parthia. 



'l"he kings of Parthia arc given in chronologic) 
under Arsaces. 

XIV. KJNG3 OF PERSIA (SABSANIDJEj 
A list of these kings is given on p. 777-9. 



VIII. KINGS OF EGYPT. 



Yr3. 

reigned 38 (40) 
36 (38) 



B.C. B.C. 
323-285 
285-247 
247-222 
222-205 
205-181 
181-146 

146-117 

117- 81 



1. PtolemsBUS I. Soter 

2. Ptolemama II. Philadelphus 

3. Ptolemaeus III. Evergetes 

4. Ptolemfeus IV. Philopator 

5. Ptolemaeus V. Epiphanes 

6. Ptolemaeus VI. Philometor 

7. Ptolemaeus VII. Evergetes II. 

or Physcon 
S. Ptolemaeus VIII Soter II. or 
Lathyrus 
[Ptolemaeus IX. Alexander I.] 
Cleopatra. 

Ptolemaeus X. Alexander II. 

9. Ptolemaeus XI. Dionysus or 

Auletea 

10. Cleopatra 
[Ptolemajus XII. 
Ptolemaeus XIII.] 

IX. KINGS OF PERGAMUS. 

Yr*. B.C. B.C. 

1. Phileta3rus reigned 17 SBO-STO 

2. Eumenes I. ~ 263-^41 

3. Attains I « 9*1-197 

4. Eumenes II. ±1 

5. Attains II. PWtadnlphtw " « Jg"^ 

6. Attalus III. Philometor HW * 



81- 80 

80- 51 
51- 30 



X. KINGS OF BITHYNIA. 

Yrs. 



B.C. B.C. 



1. Zipoetes. 

2. Nicomedes L 

3. Zielas 

4. Prusias L 

5. Prusias II. 

6. Nicomedes II Epiphanes 

7. Nicomedes III. Philopator 



reigned [28] 278 -[250] 
» [221 [250H228 
[48 228 -[180] 
(31] [180]- 149 
N 58 149 - 91 
17 91- 74 



XI. KINGS OF PONTUS. 



Ytb. B.C. B.C. 



1. Ariobarzanes I. 

2. Mithradntes I. 

3. Ariobarzanes II. 

4. Mithradat.s H. 

5. Mithradatcs III. 

6. Ariobarzanes III. 

7. Mithradates IV. 

8. Pharnaces I. 

9. Mithradates V. Evergetes 

10. SlithradatM VI. Eupator 

11. Pharnaces II. 



reizned 26 
•« 35 
36 

« [26] 
- [50] 
T341 



363 
337 
302 
266 
[2401 
[190] 
36] [156] 
57 120 
16 63 



- 337 

- 302 

- 266 
-[240] 
-[190] 
-[156] 
-[120] 

- 63 

- 47 



XII- KINGS OF CAPPADOCIA 



Vrs. B.C. B.C. 



1. DatHnu-s. 

2. Ariamnes I. 

3. Ariarathes I. 

4. Ariarathes II. 

5. Ariamnes II. 
0. Ariarathes III. 

7. Ariarathes IV. 

8. Ariarathes V. 

9. Ariarathes VI. 

10. Ariobarzanes I. 

11. Ariobarzanes II. 



XV. KINGS OF RUMK 



1. Romulus 

2. Numa Pompilius 

3. Tullus Uostilius 

4. Ancus Marcius 

5. L. Tarquinius Priscu* 

6. Serviua Tullius 

7. L. Tarquiniua Superbus 



Tn. B.C. B.C. 

reigned 38 753-715 

43 715-673 
39 873-911 

24 641-616 
•* 3« 616-.7Tfe 

44 5?*-534 

25 5J4-510 



XVI. EMTERORS OF ROME. 



Augustus 

Tiberius 

Caligula 

Claudius 

Nero 

Galba 

Otho 

Vitclhus 

Vespasian 

Titus 

Domitian 

Nerva 

Trajan 

Hadrian 

Antoninus Pins 

{ M. Aurelius 

) L. Verus 
C'ommodus 
Pertinax 
Julianus 

Septimius Severus 

C Caracalla 

) Geta 

Macrinus 

Elagabalus 

Alexander Severus 

Maximinus 

f Gordianus I. ? 

I Gordianus II. J 

r Pupienus Maximus ) 

\ Ralbinus J 

Gordiamia III. 

Philippus 

Decius 

Trebonianus Galium 
jEmilianus 
f Valerian 

Gallienus 
Claudius II. 
Aurelian 
Tacitus 
Florianu* 
Probua 
Cams 

f Carinua { 
\ Numerianus } 
C Diocletian 
, Maximian 
Constantiua I. Chlorus 
( Galerius 

1 Constantinc I. the Great 
( Licinius 

t Constantine II. 

2 Constantiua II. 
( Constans I. 
Julian 

Jovian 



reigned 23 

13 
14 



a.i>. a i> 
M 

14- 37 

4: 

41- 54 
M- 6f 



».'<- m 

<o- -o 

19- 81 
-1- 96 
96- * 

t»--ii: 

117-131 
■ OB-MI 
19 161-180 
8 161-499 

12 1KM9J 
193-193 
193-199 

16 193-211 

6 811-417 

1 211-212 

1 217-218 

4 218-222 

13 22J-235 
3 235-23K 



reigned 7 315-303 



220-162 
162-130 
130- 96 
93- 63 
63- 4 



238 -23n 

238-238 

6 238-244 
5 244-24«» 

2 24'i-251 

3 251-254 
2511-253 

7 253-260 

15 253-268 

2 268-270 

5 270-275 
1 275-27C 

276-276 
C 276-282 
1 282-283 

1 283-284 

21 284-305 

19 286-305 

1 305-306 

6 305-311 
31 306-337 

16 3<r7-323 

3 3:n-340 
24 337-361 
13 337-350 

2 361-363 
1 363-364 



WESTERN EMPIRE. 

Yr*. A.P. A.P 

Vlentini.nl. }J 
G rati an „ 
Valentinian II. 

Theodosiua L (Emperor ot the West 

aa well as of the East) '' * 

Honorius 

Theodosiua II. (Emperor of the West 
aa well as of the East) 



367-383 
375-392 

392-395 
295-423 



2 423-425 



1022 



LISTS OF KINGS. 



Valentinian III. 

Petronius Maximas 

Avitus 

Majorian 

Libius Severue 

Anthemius 

Olybrius 

Glycerius 

Julius Nepos 

Romulus Augusiulus 



Yrs. A.D. A.D. 

reigned 30 425-455 
455-455 

" 1 455-456 

4 457-461 
« 4 461-465 

5 467-472 
« 472-472 

473- 474 

474- 475 

475- 476 



EASTERN EMPIRE. 





Yrs. A.D. A.D. 


Valens 


reigned 14 


364-378 


Theodosiu8 I. 


16 


378-395 


Arcadius 


" 13 


395-408 


Theodosius II. 


42 


408-450 


Marcian 


7 


450-457 


Leo I. Thrax 


17 


457-474 


Leo II. 




474-474 


Zeno 


ic n 


474-491 


Anastasius I 


" 27 


491-518 


Justin I. 


« 9 


518-527 


Justinian L 


« 39 


527-565 


Justin II. 


13 


565-578 


Tiberius II. 


4 


578-552 


Mnuricius 


" 20 


582-602 


Phocas 


8 


602-610 


Heraclius I. 


31 


610-641 



Constantine III., also called ) 
Heraclius II. > 
Heracleonas 
Constans II 

Constantine IV. Pogonatus 
Justinian II. Rhinotmetue 
Leontius 

Tiberius Absimarua 
Justinian II. (again) 
Philippicus or Philepicus 
Anastasius II. 
Theodosius III. 
Leo III. Isauros 
Constantine V. Copronymus 

[Artavasdes, usurper.] 
Leo IV. Chazarus 
Constantine VI. 
Irene 

Nicephorus 
Stauracius 
Michael I. Rhangabe 
Leo V. Armenius 
Michael II. Balbus 
Theophilus 
Michael III. 
Basil I. Macedo 
Leo VI. Sapiens 

Constantine VII. Porphyrogenitus 
Alexander, colleague of Constan- ) 

tine VII. 
Roman us I. Lecapenus, collesgu 

ef Constantine VII. 



641-641 

641-641 

27 641-668 

17 668-685 

10 685-695 

3 695-698 

6 698-704 

7 704-711 

2 711-713 

3 713-716 
1 716-717 

24 717-741 

34 741-775 



775-780 
780-797 
797-802 
802-811 
811-811 
811-813 
813-820 
820-829 
829-842 
842-867 
867-886 
886-911 
911-959 



1 



1 911-912 
25 919-944 



Constantine VIII., Stephanus, } 

sons of Romanus I., reigned > reigned 

five weeks ) 

Romanus II. " 

Nicephorus II. Phocas " 

Joannes I. Zimisces M 

Basil II., colleague of Joannes I. > „ 

for seven years > 

Constantine IX., colleague of Basil ^ M 

II. for forty-nine years > 

Romanus III. Argyrus " 

Michael IV. Paphlago " 

Michael V. Calaphates a 
Zoe and Theodora 

Constantine X. Monomaehus " 

Theodora (again) " 

Michael VI. Stratiotieue 41 

Isaac I. Comnenus " 

Constantine XI. Due as " 

Romanus IV. Diogenes " 

Michael VII. Ducas " 

Nicephorus III. Botaniates " 

Alexis or Alexius I. Comnenus *' 
Joannes II. Comnenus or Calo- J; 

Joannes 5 

Manuel I. Comnenus " 

Alexis I. or Alexius II. Comnenus " 

Andronicus I. Comnenus *' 

Isaac II. Angelus " 

Alexis or Alexius III. Angelus " 

Alexis or Alexius IV. Angelus " 

Alexis or Alexius V. Ducas " 



LATIN EMPERORS OF CONSTANTINOPLE. 

Yrs. A.D. A.D. 

Baldwin I. reigned 1 1204-1205 

Henry " 10 1206-1216 

Peter " 1217- 

Robert " 7 1221-1228 

Baldwin II. " 33 1228-1261 



Yr«. 


A.D. A.D. 




J-l'i— 


4 


959- 963 


6 


963- 963 


7 


969- 976 


56 


969-1025 


52 


976-1028 


6 


1028-1034 


7 


1034-1041 




1041-1042 




1042-1042 


12 


1042-1054 


2 


1054-1056 


1 


1056-1057 


2 


1057-1959 


g 


1 0=59-1 OfiT 


4 


1067-1071 


7 


1071-1078 


3 


1078-1081 


37 


1081-1118 


25 


1118-1143 


38 


1143-1181 


2 


1181-1183 




lle.j-llo*> 


10 


1185-1195 


8 


1195-1203 


1 


1203-1204 




1204-1204 



GREEK EMPERORS OF NICiEA. 

Yrs. 

Theodorus I. Lascaris reigned 16 

Joannes III. Vatatzes " 33 

Theodorus II. Lascari6 " 4 

Joannes IV. Lascaris " 1 

Michael VIII. Palgeologus " 1 



A.D A.D. 
1206 1222 
1222-1255 
1255-1259 

1259- 1260 

1260- 1261 



GREEK EMPERORS OF CONSTANTINOPLE AGAIN. 

Yrs. A.D. A.D. 

Michael VIII. Palaeologus reigned 21 1261-1282 

Andronicus II. Palasologus " 46 1282-1328 

Michael IX. Palaeologus (associated 
with Andronicus II. in the em- 
pire). 

Andronicus III. PalreologUB 
Joannes V. Cantacuzenue 
Joannes VI. Palzeologua 
Manuel II. Pabeologus 
Joannes VII. Palaeologus 
Constantine XIII. Palsologiu 



13 


1328-1341 


13 


1342-1355 


36 


1355-1391 


34 


1391-1425 


23 


1425-1448 


5 


1448 1453 



TABLES 

OP 

MEASURES, WEIGHTS, AND MONEY 



1024 



TABLES OF WEIGHTS AND MEASURES. 































•o 






VO 


<M 
















CO 


N 






t* 


r-l 


l@ 














"# 


GO 




o 


CO 


oo 


CM 




CO 




»o 






00 


co 


CO 


) — 


r« 


CM 


i—i 


«o 




CO 


CM 








r- 1 


CO 


co 


CO 


rH 


O 


CO 




o 


o 


o 






*0 


© 


© 




CO 


i— i 




co 




m 


co 


CO 




rH 


CO 


cb 


£^ 


GO 




© 




CO 


co 


cb 


© 



CM 




CO 


CO 


o 


CM 




CO 


to 


CM 




CM 




CO 


co 


CM 




o 


CO 


© 




o 


rH 


CM 




CO 


CO 





VO O 

CM CO 

rH }>. 

rH CO 

O rH 





© 


o 




rr 


o 


o 




CO 


T— ( 


>o 


CO 


CM 




io 


o 


T— ! 


rH 


rH 


CO 



>H 



C^ 

o 
<1 





















H 
H 


1*1 


r-!« 

rH 


















^3 
!** 


« 
K 


CO 


rH 




o 














rH 


Afet 

CO 


rH 




o 

<i 

O 
#^ 














Ha 


rH 


rH 


—In 

»o 










Of 


O 




—If 

rH 


H«S 


-|« 

rH 


CO 




8= 

o 


O 

«o 




o 

£ 

o 








Ol|W 
r-l 


CM 


CO 


CO 




<1 

gT 
o 




-t— 


Q_ 

p 


I— 1 


rH 


H- 

H 


rH 


CM 


c i— 
co" 


< 

GO 




'3 
< 


u 
o 

Cv> 




rH 




«|u> 


•f|«> 
rH 


CM 


CM 


H* 


M|«i 


c^> 
o 
r< 
s> 


\- 
to 

9 


<a 


-If 

rH 


«|35 
rH 


Hm 

iH 


CM 


-If 

CM 


HN 

CM 


CO 


01 


CM 

rH 


c 


CM 


-l« 

CM 


CM 


CO 


rH 


— if 

rH 


O 


CO 


GO 


rH 

CM 


M 


CM 


rH 




■#1 


co 


GO 


© 


o 


CM 

rH 


CO 
CO 


CO 
rH 


r 

CM 


rH 


CO 


o 




CM 


CO 


GO 


o 

CM 


<M 


CM 


CO 



TABLES OF WEIGHTS AND MEASURES. 



r-t 00 Tt* CM «3 

CO O CM Ci CM tj< 

CM H CO O 

o a* 5* o a rf 

cm cb 



CM 



§| O fcs rH 

O O CM CO 

O GO ^ CM 

O O CM 



CO O CM 

O CO to 

R m m 

m cm *• 



be 

5 



o a 

s 



8 - b 
S I 5 



El 



CD = 

U P 

h > s E 

o p so 



5 I = 

lis 

o 



III 



5 * 2 8 

J 5 s s 

* * - 5 



3 • g BO 

J 1 a $2 
4BS8 a 

£ 8 3 s - 

s § S 5T5 
o « a ' 

a a rt« 



2 « ~ 



4 



4 J 

| ] 

J ■ 

I I 

I I 

•; * 

H s 



>• 2 - 



M 
*-) 

CO <3 < ° 
H 4 It 

6 ill 

• 2 

o 

5 =-3 

o s 

■ 
•5 

31 9 
9 S 

II* 

1:1 



HI 



C C 



3 « C 

||| 

c § | . 
.2 c » 



TABLES OF WEIGHTS AND MEASURES. 



CO O CO '—i 
»— J CO CO 

o o o o 



CO j H *© 
t— ( CD »— ' 



rf i-l ett 



1-1 «£> 

o o 



|> 


00 


CD 


o 


GO 




■<* 


T— 1 






r— 1 


OS 


o 


o 


<— < 


T— ( 


o 


o 


o 


o 


o 









5 




CD 


o 


•CO 






> CD 




si 


Oi 


o 




IS 






r-t 


C\> 




1—1 






> 


o 


<— 1 


CM 




OS 




3" 


) OS 



GO 

21 

<t — 



Si 

g 

BO 



o 

I- 

M 



v '<o 



o 
53 



2 
< 

C 
- 



?^ 
v 53 
b 
e 

55 
C 



O 

'o 



53 

I 



53 

« I 

■S I * 



O 
O 



CM 



CM 



CO 



1> 



si 



^o 



o o 
o o 

co r to 



o | o 
o o 
00 i to 
CO 



o o 

o o 

o o 

:-. -~ 



o 



TABLES OF WEIGHTS AND MEASURES. 



ion 



p 






00 


o 






cm 












? } 






o 




o 


do 








1— « 










* 





— 


CO 


o 




O 




i 


o 






M 


IQ 






-X) 



CO 


h» 


b 


CO 












CO 




3-s 


OS 


GO 










CO 




o 




CO 












CM 




C5 


GO 


(0 


CO 




00 


o 




© 


o 




o 


OJ 




GO 


o 




o 


o 




CM 








o 






© 


o 


CM 




CO 


oS 


















GO 


















m 



3 



to 

o 

h3 



CM 



o 

O o 

o o 

2 o 



CO 



I a 



o I 



w o 

la 
i i 



4 ~ 

CO 

o ~ 
•£ it 



_= -3 



i i 



11 II " 

a e ©_= 

Sets 



12-1 
|tfS 

= 3 

sill 





> 


n tr 1 1 


e I 1 






»> u ir. 




o 


i 13 s 


S3 

<j 


s 
1 


v ■ T 
•5 c§ 


a 


c 


hi 


H 

O 


only diffci 









| E 
3 c 

2 1 

« J 
|| 

o . 

. 2; 



is 



-"5 3"= 



"5 = 5 £ 
> .= 2 

= B.Si 9 

***** 
£ S 



TABLES OF WEIGHTS AND MEASURES. 




TABLES OF WEIGHTS AND MEASURES 



\0V) 

























- 










CO 




++ 










«| 




CJ 


00 






co 


uo 






db 


CM 




00 


00 


o 


00 


IQ 


CJ 




~= 






o 


CO 


ib 




o 




»o 








■ 


00 


00 


CJ 


CO 


00 


o 


:o 




' 










f— « 


ci 










oi 






















0) 






















M 








00 














B 

o 


J 














CO 


s 


: 


CM 

































































o 


CI 




00 
















*^ 




CO 
























a 








w 


• 


*• 






<— 1 


—1 








































































Ma 








CO 


o 


C) 










•5 




OS 


CO 




CO 








V 


o 

• 


CM 


CO 


CO 


CO 


CO 


to 


CI 


c> 








^ 


c-j 




O) 




Mj 


|Q 




/ 






o 


o 




OA 


te 




00 


CJ 


= 










Ci 


CO 






SI 


IQ 




a 








el 


CO 








co" 


-r 














CI 


IQ 


CI 






















10 
























: 1 



H 

Pi 

I 



* 

15 

J-l 
T3 
cJ 

o* 

rt 

o 

eu 
S 

«i 
O 

<U 

P 

o 

s 

1 

h 

O 















turia 


*3 
/. 








CO 

B 




| 
p 


=: 

o 












H 

<J 

Pi 


pi 
i 


E 
O 
hH 
I—" 


o 
o 


o 
o 








1 
o* 

CO 




CM 


© 
o 

Ci 


o 
o 

00 








t> 

H 

U 

■« 


CJ 


-r 


o 
o 
<* 


o 
o 
■— 






u 


■~t 


CO 




§ 

g 


a 
o 

s 




-t— 














Simple 


o 

p 




CO 


CI 
.— > 


— < 

Ci 




o 
•3 


Actus 




— 


o 

CO 


o 


o 


j:.',0ou 


48,000 




CM 


CO 
CO 




CO 
00 
CM 


CO 
»^ 


o 

1 


o 
© 

CO 


O 

00 


o 
o 

CM 


o 
o 
to 

CO 


j 14,400 


1 28,000 


a 
o 

r<? 
5q 


o 

3 

o_ 
a 


5 

j o 



I s 



-5 «= 

I 



"3 S 



c 

. o 

I* 

l| 

li 

1-= 
Pi 

it 

* 3^5 



1030 



TABLES OF WEIGHTS AND MEASURES. 



CO o 

O «*4 OJ 

o o o 



CO w 

O r-i 



3> 
o 

■e- 

O 



o 

§- 



I- 



o 



s- 

4 

- 

s 

o 



o 



55- 



a. 

X! 




n 



i MS I 



I C | «5 

j rH | H 



(S3 



EM 



H 
H 
H 

£^ 
r- 

M 

o 



8 I 



TABLES OF WEIGHTS AND MEASURES 







so 


























imate. 




.2 
cu 




-I" 






















1 




(0 


























a 
5 


a 

j 






„ 




„ 








































M 






e 


























m 




00 






CO 


















a 


o 


o 


1—1 






o 




© 


© 




B 


















* 








* N 




SB 


























1 
























o 




g 






















1-1 




5 

























^2 
■*-> 

o 
U 



I 

O 
-»■» 



2 
a 
3 

I 

■*-> 
a> 

D 
< 



a 



1 00 

o 





- 


o 






i 







TABLES OF WEIGHTS AND MEASURES. 




TABLES OF WEIGHTS AND MEASURES. 



103S 




1034 



TABLES OF WEIGHTS AND MEASURES. 



TABLE XI 

GRECIAN WEIGHTS. 
— — — — — — — — — 

1. Ratios of the three chief Systems. 



iEginetan : Euboic or old Attic :: 6 : 5 

JEginetan : Solonian or later Attic* :: 5 : 3 

Euboic : Solonian : : 138} : 100 

or:: 100 : 72 
or:: 25 : 18 



The iEginetan Talent =6000 iEginetan Drachmas =7200 Euboic =10,000 Solonian 
Euboic 44 =5000 " =6000 44 = 8333} 44 

Solonian* 44 =3600 44 =4320 44 = 6000° 41 



* Also called the Attic Silver TalerJ. When Attic weights are spoken of without any further distinction, thc3e 
are generally intended. 



2. iEginetan Weights. 


Exact.* 


Approximate. 


lb. 


oz. 


grs. 


lb. 


oz. 


grs. 


Obol ('O/SoXos) 






18-472f 




M 


20 




(i 


II 


110-831 




1 
4 


CI 


600 j 100 j Mina (Mi/5) 


1 




145-83}f 


»l 


it 




36,000 | 6000 | 60 | Talent (Takavrov) . . 


95 






100 




l( 



* In this and the other tables the English weights used are those of the avoirdupois scale as fixed by statute ; 
namely, the grain = the Troy grain, the ounce = 437£ grains, the pound = 16 ounces = 7000 grains, 
t Or £ of an ounce. 



3. Enboic or Attic Commercial Weights. 


Exact. 






Approximate, 


.„. 


oz. 


grs. 




lb. 


oz. 


grs. 


Obol 




i 


it 
1 

79 


II 
II 

5 
2 


15-393^ 
92-3611} 
48-611} 
291-631 


it 

n 

80 


it 

ii 


151 

93} 
ii 
ii 


600 100 | Mina 

36,000 | 6000 j 60 | Talent 





* See Diet, of Antiq., p. 933, b., 934, a. It is here assumed that the Attic commercial mina was exactly 138} sOrer 
drachmae, not 138, as stated in the decree. The difference is not quite half a grain in the drachma. 



4. Attic Commercial Weights Increased." 


Exact 






| Approximate. 




oz. 




grs. 




lb. 


oz. 


grs. 


1 Mina — 150 Drachmae (silver) . 
5 Minae — 6 Minae (commercial) . 
1 Talent=65 Mina? (commercial 





1 88f 


14 
' ; 


350 
291-6| 
145-8} 




1} 

7* 

* o 

90 




ii 
it 
ii 



* See Diet of Antiq., page 934, a. 

t Here, as in the preceding table, the commercial mina is taken as equal to 138} drachmae, not 138. 



5. Attic Silver Weights. 






Exact. 




Approximate. 


lb. 


oz. | grs. 




lb. 


oz. 


grs. 


Obol 












11-08334 

1 

44 | 66-5* 
15 J 87-5f 








12 
70 






<( 
it 




ii 
ii 
1 

60 


II 

ll 

" 








600 | 100 


| Mina 


36,000 | 6000 


| 60 j Talent 


57 


" 1 



* This value is, if any thins:, too small. Bockh makes it 67-4. Respecting other scales of weight, see Pondera, 
in Diet, of Antiq. 
t Or £ of an ounce. 



TABLES OF WEIGHTS AND MEASURES. 



10 

O O-} 10 

m et 

h oo o 



H CQ 91 



CO 0} 



co co 



_t ed *h »o 



CO 
OJ 



l£ j 

i i 

a, 

O I 



^ ! 
< 



© 

Se 



o 

SO 

-O 



<1 .2 



o 


to 




■ 


o 

*o 


olu 


•a 

g 


trob 




Te 


>bo 






H« 
1—) 



§ 

t3 



cj o 



t- j 2 



Oi 



OJ 



I 

a. 
<1 



I 



* 



?> CO 

o* co 



01 





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